VanderburghCountyCommissioners-APC
Aces drop 70-63 game against Panthers
CEDAR FALLS, Iowa – In a contest that went right down to the wire, the University of Evansville men’s basketball team came up just short with UNI taking a 70-63 win inside the McLeod Center on Tuesday.
For the third time in his career, Yacine Toumi scored a career-high 20 points. He hit 9 of his 16 field goal tries and tallied 6 boards, 3 assists, 2 steals and a block. Chuck Bailey III scored 14 points while Tanner Cuff was one shy of his career mark, registering 13 points. Cam Haffner scored six points, including consecutive triples in the second half that kept the Purple Aces right in the thick of the battle. Tytan Anderson and Nate Heise led the way for the Panthers with 15 points each.
“I thought the guys had the right mindset over the last two days coming into this game. The response was spot on; that is how you want to play – giving yourself an opportunity to win,†UE head men’s basketball coach David Ragland said. “This is a hard place to win, especially with the start that we had, but if you take away the opening segments of each half, it is much closer.â€
It was UNI getting the early jump, hitting three of their opening four attempts to take a 7-0 lead. Yacine Toumi took a feed from Kenny Strawbridge Jr. to score Evansville’s first points of the game. The early run for the Panthers continued as they opened an 11-2 advantage and maintained a 9-point lead, up 17-8 at the 12:11 mark.
Over the next four minutes, Evansville took control along with its first lead of the night. Scoring eight in a row while hitting four out of five attempts, Cam Haffner took it coast-to-coast and fed Toumi for the go-ahead basket with 7:49 on the clock. UE’s defense UNI to 0-for-5 with a turnover during that stretch. Seconds after the Aces jumped in front, a triple by UNI opened a 5-0 spurt.
Gage Bobe knocked down a triple to make it a 1-point game and the Aces remained within a handful of points over the ensuing stretch before Chuck Bailey III found his groove. His 3-point play got UE within a pair with 1:42 remaining and, following a Panthers miss, Tanner Cuff converted a layup to tie the game. Bailey got the job done once again in the final minute, nailing a 3-pointer to send the Aces to the break with a 31-28 lead.
Evansville had a strong finish to the half; after falling behind by an 11-2 margin, the Aces outscored UNI by a 29-17 margin over the final 15:11 of the first period.
It took just a few seconds for UNI to tie the game in the second half, converting a 3-point play in their opening possession. That would be the first of ten in a row by the Panthers to open the second half and a 38-31 lead. Strawbridge got Evansville on the board with a 3-pointer and Toumi followed with a jumper that cut the deficit back to two.
UNI went back up by eight points as the game entered its final nine minutes, holding the Aces scoreless for close to three minutes and holding a 51-43 edge. That is when Cam Haffner took matters into his own hands. Consecutive triples by the sophomore cut the gap down to two at 51-49. Cuff recorded a triple with just over six minutes remaining that made it a 54-52 game. With just under five minutes remaining, the Aces had the ball and a chance to take the lead, but a turnover led to a UNI triple on the other end. Another three by the Panthers extended the lead to 60-55 with three minutes on the clock.
Cuff connected on his fifth bucket of the contest to get UE within a possession, but each time the Aces rallied, UNI had the answer. Late free throws saw them complete the game with a 70-63 win. Evansville outshot UNI by a 44.6%-41.5% margin but it was the Panthers with the 37-30 rebounding edge.
Two home games are on the schedule for the Purple Aces when they host Illinois State at 1 p.m. Saturday before welcoming UIC on Jan. 31 in a 7 p.m. match-up.
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January 22, 2024
Mayor Stephanie Terry
1 N.W. Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd.
Civic Center Complex, Room 302
Evansville, Indiana 47708
RE: | Vanderburgh County Area Plan Commission
Our Client No. 2019.004 |
Dear Mayor Terry:
After lengthy review and careful consideration, the Board of Commissioners has determined that it is in the best interests of the citizens of Vanderburgh County to seek new leadership for the Area Plan Commission. Over the past several years, it has become clear to us that the current Executive Director, Mr. Ron London, and legal counsel have a totally different vision and conflicting legislative goals from those of the elected officials and policymakers.Â
We further believe that he has repeatedly exceeded the scope of his duties as Executive Director and openly promoted his own personal agenda rather than merely registering differing opinions.
It is our hope that the City and County can come together to seek new leadership and new legal counsel in the Area Plan Commission which will promote our common goals and vision for this community.
Respectfully,
THE BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS OF VANDERBURGH COUNTY, INDIANA
_______________________________________
Cheryl Musgrave, President   Â
_______________________________________________
Justin Elpers, Vice President
_______________________________________
Ben Shoulders, Member
cc:Â Members of Vanderburgh County Council
    Members of Area Plan Commission
 EVANSVILLE, Ind. – On January 24-25, 2024 Evansville will conduct its annual Point-in-Time (PIT) count of people experiencing homelessness in the community, including sheltered and unsheltered homeless men, women, children, and families. Mandated by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), the count provides a snapshot of the number and characteristics of people experiencing homelessness in Evansville. The Aurora Homeless Outreach Team conducts the count with support from area homeless shelters and agencies, in conjunction with the Region 12 Homeless Services Council and Commission on Homelessness for Evansville and Vanderburgh County.Â
WHO – Aurora Homeless Outreach Team and other agencies, including United Caring Services, Ozanam Family Shelter, House of Bread and Peace, Evansville Rescue Mission, YWCA Evansville, & Dorothea McGregor.Â
WHEN – The count begins Wednesday, January 24, 2024, at 12:00 p.m., and concludes at noon on Thursday, January 25, 2024.Â
WHERE –Â
Shelters: Evansville’s United Caring Services initiates a white flag, so any and all can come to the shelter for the night. Evansville Rescue Mission hosts White Flag for men. (it makes counting the majority easier). The shelter staff completes the survey forms for each person and enters the info into HMIS (Indiana’s homeless data tracking system). Shelter Programs not on the HMIS system receive paper forms to complete and send to Aurora for entry into HMIS.Â
Street: Aurora’s Homeless Outreach Team goes out on the streets with survey forms in hand, to places where it is known that homeless people congregate or stay. The outreach team completes the forms and enters the information into HMIS. Street counts are conducted by this team in nine other surrounding counties in the region. In addition to Vanderburgh, the region also includes Knox, Warrick, Daviess, Spencer, Pike, Dubois, Perry, Posey, and Gibson.Â
About the Point-in-Time Count The annual point-in-time count is mandated by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) for communities receiving its funds for programs to aid people experiencing homelessness. The count includes sheltered and unsheltered people experiencing homelessness on a single night in January, including emergency shelters and transitional housing, locations unfit for habitation, and hotels paid for by non-profit agencies in lieu of emergency shelter. HUD aggregates the local data each year as a snapshot of homelessness nationally. HUD utilizes PIT data in its strategic planning for future programs to address homelessness.Â
The University of Southern Indiana’s New Harmony Gallery of Contemporary Art (NHGCA) is proud to present Survival Blankets: Learning from Ancestors, featuring paintings, sculpture and video by St. Louis artist Juan William Chávez.
Survival Blankets: Learning from Ancestors will be on display from January 20 through March 2. A closing reception will be held from 3 to 5 p.m. on March 2 with an artist talk at 3 p.m. Gallery hours are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday.
Survival Blankets: Learning from Ancestors is a painting exhibition built upon Chávez’s Survival Blanket series. The paintings are drawn with ink on raw linen using dry and wet techniques that produce a variety of lines that flow with movement, as well as bleed and vibrate. A blanket is depicted within a landscape where plants, animals and sacred objects are carefully arranged and in dialogue with each other. Objects like Peruvian pottery, potatoes, mate gourds, and plants are seen with dogs, llamas, condors and pollinators.
Chávez creates an inner world for observations, reflecting and listening to learn from his ancestors. This series of paintings is accompanied by a video and sculpture that are connected to Chávez’s Native Bee Sanctuary located in St. Louis, Missouri.
Chávez is an artist, activist and Director of Northside Workshop. He has exhibited at ArtPace, San Antonio, Texas; Van Abbemuseum, Eindhoven, Netherlands; McColl Center for Art, Charlotte, North Carolina; Tube Factory Artspace, Indianapolis, Indiana; and Contemporary Art Museum, St. Louis, Missouri.
His work was included in El Museo’s survey of contemporary Latinx art, Estamos Bien – La Trienal 20/21 and Counterpublic Triennial 2023 in St. Louis, Missouri. Chávez’s interdisciplinary approach to art has gained the attention and support of prestigious institutions like the John Simon Guggenheim Foundation, Creative Capital, ArtPlace America, Andy Warhol Foundation and Art Matters Foundation. In 2023 Chávez was announced as lead artist by Bloomberg Philanthropies’ $1 Million Public Art Challenge for the City of Orlando.
He holds a Bachelor of Fine Arts from the Kansas City Art Institute and a Master of Fine Arts from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago.
The NHGCA at University of Southern Indiana promotes discourse about, and access to, contemporary art in the southern Indiana region. The NHGCA is a proud outreach partner of the University of Southern Indiana.
This exhibition is made possible in part by the Efroymson Family Fund, Arts Council of Southwestern Indiana and the Indiana Arts Commission, which receives support from the State of Indiana and the National Endowment for the Arts.