As an active part of the Evansville community, UE is excited to offer every student countless opportunities to get involved through community service.
During the 2011-12 academic year, UE students reported more than 19,000 hours of service to the Evansville community, helping to ensure that they will leave the Evansville community better than they found it. Over the course of the year, our students took part in service activities that included:
â—¾Landscaping
â—¾Tutoring
â—¾Mentoring
â—¾Serving Meals
â—¾Cleaning
â—¾Building Homes
â—¾Assisting and Visiting the Elderly
â—¾And Much More!
To get involved, all you have to do is visit the Office of Community Service Initiatives in the student life suite of Ridgway University Center. There, you will find an extensive list of service sites in the Evansville area that can connect you with a meaningful community service opportunity.
For more information, please stop by, or call the Office of Community Service Initiatives at 812-488-2538.
USI students from engineering and business disciplines have come together once again for this year’s summer Technology Commercialization Academy (TCA). This is the second year for the program, which piloted in 2012.
Academy participants work full time to develop ideas and business strategies around commercialization of several Naval Surface Warfare Center, Crane Division (NSWC Crane) patents. This year’s TCA has been expanded to include more students and additional time for independent work.
In this year’s Academy, students explored NSWC Crane military patents for radio intelligence, the intuitive interface initiative, and the fire control laser model. From radio intelligence technology, students have developed four tentative final products: a wristband that will track children, wait times for rides, and cash and ticketing information in amusement parks; an inventory tracker for retail establishments and warehouses; a device to track customers inside stores; and a device for institutions that will track people and help identify potential emergency or disaster situations using location patterns.
Students in the Academy, which kicked off on May 13, meet for two hours each day with faculty and spend another six hours each day working on their projects. Students utilize USI resources to develop a manufacturing plan and produce prototypes of selected technologies. They also complete preliminary market research and feasibility analyses. The Academy includes four teams of four students, each with two business and two engineering students.
The first segment of the TCA will conclude with final product pitches. Teams with high-potential technologies will have the opportunity to continue in the Academy for an additional five weeks, wrapping up in mid-July. With the additional time, teams are encouraged to license and further develop their technologies, form startups, and reach out to potential customers and investors.
Growth Alliance for Greater Evansville (GAGE) in collaboration with USI came up with the Academy idea in their Tech Transfer Committee. The academy was made possible through a Lilly Endowment Sustaining Grant secured by Dr. Mohammed Khayum, dean of the Romain College of Business, and Dr. Scott Gordon, dean of the Pott College of Science, Engineering, and Education.
“This is an extremely important project for us to gain insights into and increase the pace of technology transfer between Crane, USI, and others in southwestern Indiana,†said Dr. Khayum.
Debbie Dewey, president of GAGE, delivered the closing remarks at last year’s final presentations. “This project has been transformational for USI, Crane, GAGE, and our region,†she said.
If you go
Each team in the 2013 TCA will pitch its final idea and unveil a prototype at 10 a.m., Friday, June 14, in the atrium of the USI Business and Engineering Center on campus. Interested businesses, local media, and others from the community are invited to attend.
Hear live music from local musicians at this summer’s Dig Into Music concert series at Central Library. All performances begin at 7:00 pm and take place in the Library’s lobby (*July 10 concert will be in Browning Events Room).
June 12 Monte Skelton
June 26 Kennedy Rose
July 10 The Vintage Rendition*
July 24 Zion
August 7 Andy Norvell
August 21 Likewise
For more information, call (812) 428-8246 or visit evpl.org. Admission is free to this concert series, which is made possible by the Public Library Friends.
(Lynnville, IN) – Representative Larry Bucshon (R-IN) will join over 40 Vietnam and Desert Storm Veterans and their families to honor Sarah Paul, a veteran counselor at the Veteran Center in Evansville, IN. Bucshon will present Paul with a plaque honoring her commitment to helping the brave men and women who have served in combat. During her time at the Vet Center, Paul has spent countless hours helping veterans and their families cope with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD).
Who: Rep. Larry Bucshon
Sarah Paul
Vietnam and Desert Storm Veterans and their Families
What: Honor Veteran Counselor Sarah Paul of Evansville
When: Saturday, June 7, 2013 from 11:00 AM – 12:00 PM CDT
Where: Lynnville Park – 405 W State Route 68 Lynnville, IN 47619
BACKGROUND:
Sarah Paul obtained a Bachelor of Science Degree in Nursing from the University of Evansville and a Masters certificate in gerontology. She is certified by the American Nurses Association as a psychiatric and mental health nurse. Prior to transferring to the Vet Center in 1993, Sarah worked in the Mental Health Clinic at the Evansville Outpatient Clinic for 5 ½ years, being awarded the Secretary’s Hands and Heart Award. Sarah is a qualified sexual trauma counselor and is the women veteran’s coordinator for the Vet Center.
Since joining the state legislature in 2010, I have worked to secure funding for the Boonville bypass project. Having grown up in Southern Indiana, started a business in Boonville and been engaged in the local community through various association leadership positions, I am glad to see this project coming to fruition.
Since the development of the Alcoa Warrick Operations plant along the Ohio River in the 1950s, the people of Boonville have contemplated the creation of a bypass; relief from the disruption of dirty, loud coal trucks driving through their historic downtown square. With the collaboration of the state legislature, Lieutenant Governor Sue Ellspermann, the generosity of Alcoa and the collaboration of the community, this vision has finally become a reality and bids for the $14 million project will begin in December of next year.
Once completed, this 4.2 mile bypass will divert coal trucks to the west of Boonville instead of requiring them to drive through the heart of the town. Having heard these trucks for years, I know first-hand the trouble they can cause, particularly to other businesses. Their presence rattles store-front windows, impedes traffic and creates a lingering layer of dust and dirt on historic buildings.
However, it is important to remember that this project has never been about Alcoa directly. Alcoa serves as Warrick County’s largest employer. They are greatly esteemed and appreciated throughout the community and have routinely partnered with communities, investing a total of more than $550 million.
In fact, Alcoa and their subsidiaries will be donating several parcels of land for this particular project. Residents love having this industry as a staple in their community, which plays a very big role in the identity of this region.
Coal mines are highly prevalent in the area and are a vital part of the economy not only in southwest Indiana but also throughout the country. Frankly, this area needs the coal industry. The creation of a bypass is by no means an attempt to malign this industry, but I think most of us can agree that it will be mutually beneficial when coal trucks do not have to drive through Boonville on a daily basis.
This project is just one example of the commitment Indiana has made to building, maintaining and improving infrastructure in our state. This past session, we successfully passed a balanced budget that kept spending in check, but also increased funding for our priorities like education, transportation infrastructure and public safety.
In looking at transportation funding, an additional $250 million will be provided per year for state and local roads and bridges. Forty-seven percent of these funds will be distributed to local units with no strings attached. In addition, we reserved $400 million in the Major Moves 2020 fund over the biennium for future transportation infrastructure needs. Towns across Indiana will reap the benefits of this significant investment for years to come.
As always, feel free to connect with me on my website at www.in.gov/h75 or by phone at 317-232-9674. I look forward to seeing the progression of the Boonville Bypass and the positive impact it will have on the community.
A new youth basketball league is coming to Evansville. The Evansville Police Department’s “Choose not to Lose” program will be teaming up with members of the Greater St. James Church to bring the “Difference Makers Youth Baksetball League” to the church recreation center this summer.
This league will be “basketball with a purpose”. Members of the church and police department will be working together as basketball coaches. They will also be working together as “life coaches” for the players. There will be discussions on issues facing today’s youth before each game. The goal is to encourage positive choices and to provide positive role models to the players.
There will be a middle school and high school league. All incoming middle schoolers and high schoolers are able to sign up. The sign- ups will be at the Greater St. James Church at 484 S. Governor on the follwing dates: Tuesday June 11th, Thursday June 13th, Tuesday June 18th, and Thursday June 20th. There will be a “draft” after the sign-ups are complete. The fee to particiapte is $10 and the players receive a jersey.
More information can be obtained by calling Tom Pore from the church at 425-7771 or by contacting the EPD at 436-5744.
Evansville Police and Vectren crews were called to a hit and run accident scene in the 500 block of W. Louisiana.
Witnesses told officers that a green minivan being driven by a white male left the roadway and struck a utility pole. The minivan then struck a house. The driver was picked up by another person and left the area in a maroon 4-door car.
When officers checked to minivan, they found an active meth lab in the front seat. The Meth Suppression unit was called to the scene to dispose of the meth lab.
Power was knocked out to the surrounding area due to the damage to the pole. Vectren crews were called out to repair the pole adn restore power.
No injuries were reported and the suspect was not located.
Evansville Police arrested 43 year old Robert C. Williams after he threw a loaded gun into the Ohio River while being questioned by police.
Officers found an intoxicated Williams in the lower portion of Dress Plaza just after 12:00am this morning. The Plaza is closed after 11:00pm.
As officers tried to identify him, Williams pulled a .357 revolver from under his leg and threw it into the river. Officers handcuffed Willliams and then recovered the gun from the river.
Williams was arrested for Posssession of a handgun wothout a permit, Public Intoxication, and Trespassing.