Evansville, In.:  Although the result on the ice was not what they had hoped for, losing 6-3, the Thunderbolts played an exciting game on Tuesday morning at Ford Center, with 7,621 in attendance for this year’s Education Day game against the Rivermen, setting a new franchise single-game attendance record. The Thunderbolts next home game will be on Saturday, November 18th against the Quad City Storm, puck drop at 7:00pm CT.
After a first period that saw the Rivermen go ahead 1-0 on a goal from Cayden Cahill, followed by a 5 minute rush of three goals from Joseph Widmar and Ryan Nolan twice, the Thunderbolts found themselves down 4-0 at the game’s halfway point. Following a change in goal with Sean Kuhn taking over for Michael Herringer, the Thunderbolts got going and scored to get back to within 4-1 as Scott Kirton scored on a power play from Colton Kalezic and Chays Ruddy at 16:07.
Only 2:55 into the third period, a rush to the net from Kalezic resulted in a shot going in off a Peoria defender to make it a 4-2 game, assisted by Matt Dorsey and Ruddy. Minutes later at 6:55, Mike Gelatt made it a 5-2 game for the Rivermen, before Evansville answered back as Kalezic scored once again from Mike Ferraro and Brendan Harrogate at 8:25 to bridge the gap to 5-3. One final goal came from an empty net strike from Nolan for the Rivermen, rounding out a hat trick and a 6-3 final score. Although they came up short, the Thunderbolts made a game out of it late and will look to carry that momentum into Friday night’s game in Knoxville, and hopefully have made many new hockey fans out of the thousands of kids who came to their first game today.
Kalezic led the way with two goals and one assist, Kirton added one goal, and Ruddy finished with two assists.  Herringer finished with 12 saves on 16 shots, while Kuhn stopped 10 of 11 shots faced in relief. The Thunderbolts and Rivermen meet once again on Friday, December 8th at Peoria Civic Center.
Individual game tickets and group packages are on sale for this 2023-24 season. Season tickets for the 2023-24 season are also on sale. Call 812-422-BOLT or visit our all-new website (www.evansvillethunderbolts.com) for details.
FOOTNOTE: Â EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT information was provided by the EPD and posted by the City-County-County Observer without opinion, bias, or editing.
FOOTNOTE: Â EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT information was provided by the EPD and posted by the City-County-County Observer without opinion, bias, or editing.
 November 15th, will be the last day of the Kicks for Kids shoe giveaway program that was made possible by the teamwork efforts of Cops Connecting with Kids, Rally Point Events, and Shoe Sensation.Â
We will start the day off at Tekoppel Elementary School at 8:00 a.m. and then head over to McGary Middle School at noon to finish off the shoe giveaway.Â
By the end of this shoe giveaway, 2,129 students from 6 different EVSC schools will have a new pair of shoes provided by this program. Please feel free to join us at the schools tomorrow to see the excitement on the students’ faces as they pick out their new pair of shoes!Â
In race after race after race in which abortion became a focal point—even those in which it really should have had no bearing—the message was clear.
Reproductive rights now are a dividing line, an issue that has the potential to redefine and realign party loyalties. Those who support reproductive rights now are as determined and combative as the single-issue anti-abortion crusaders or zealots—depending upon one’s point of view—have been for decades.
That much became clear as the results rolled in.
Even in red states, abortion proved to be a potent force.
In Ohio, which landed decisively for Donald Trump in both the 2016 and 2020 presidential elections, voters backed a measure to enshrine reproductive rights in the state constitution, overruling a Republican-backed state law in the process.
In Kentucky, incumbent Democratic Gov. Andy Beshear ran against a well-connected and well-funded Republican opponent, Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron, and won decisively in a deep red state Trump carried by 26 points three years ago. Beshear pledged repeatedly to preserve reproductive rights.
Closer to home, here in Indiana Indianapolis Mayor Joe Hogsett, a Democrat, beat back a challenge from Republican Jefferson Shreve, even though Shreve’s campaign war chest doubled Hogsett’s.
Even though mayors have nothing—nothing—to do with abortion law, the issue became a central one in the race, forcing Shreve to play defense. Instead of using his more than $14 million in campaign funds to dissect Hogsett’s record over two terms in office, Shreve found himself cutting spots in which he tried—ineffectively—to deliver a civics lesson about the different responsibilities of municipal, state and local governments.
But that’s because circumstances forced him to do so.
The Dobbs decision handed down by the U.S. Supreme Court in June of last year has energized new groups of voters. That decision overturned Roe v. Wade, which had established abortion as a constitutionally guaranteed right for a half-century. The court did so even though the three new justices who provided the votes necessary to strip away the right all had pledged during their confirmation hearings that they considered Roe “established law.â€
Much of the opposition to the Dobbs decision sprang from the substance of the decision itself—the fact that, for the first time in U.S. history, the Supreme Court had voted to take away an individual right rather than expand individual liberties.
Some of it also came from the way the decision came about—the disingenuousness of Justices Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh and Amy Coney Barrett when they answered questions about abortion before the U.S. Senate and the Machiavellian machinations of then U.S. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Kentucky, to put all three on the bench.
Wherever the anger comes from, it is real.
And it is a force.
That is the overriding lesson from this year’s balloting.
The implications for campaigns as we head into presidential, gubernatorial and Senate races next year could be profound.
Democrats will look at Andy Beshear’s victory in one of the reddest states in America and deduce that discussing abortion opens a path to victory anywhere. That lesson will be reinforced by Ohio voters’ emphatic decision to establish abortion rights in their state constitution and a strong showing by Democrats in Virginia state legislative races.
Expect Democrats in the coming year to talk about abortion and reproductive rights at every opportunity, convinced they have an issue that resonates with voters.
As if on cue, the Democratic leader in the Indiana House of Representatives, Rep. Phil GiaQuinta of Fort Wayne, issued a statement after Ohio’s decision became clear:
“Midwesterners don’t like the government telling them what they can and can’t do, plain and simple. This includes reproductive freedom. Ohio and Indiana both lean conservative, yet when given a choice, Ohioans voted for the right to choose. Currently, the Indiana Constitution does not grant Hoosiers the right to citizen-led ballot initiatives. To truly represent Hoosiers and grant them a voice, Indiana lawmakers must enshrine the right to be heard at the ballot box in our constitution.”
And Republicans?
Well, they can try to deliver civics lessons.
Perhaps Jefferson Shreve can advise them on how well that works.
FOOTNOTE: John Krull is director of Franklin College’s Pulliam School of Journalism and publisher of TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students. The views expressed are those of the author only and should not be attributed to Franklin College.
ST. LOUIS– After averaging 10.5 points per game and leading the University of Evansville men’s basketball team to a 2-0 start, Chuck Bailey III has been named the Missouri Valley Conference Freshman of the Week.
Bailey averaged 10.5 points, 2.5 rebounds and 2.0 assists per game. He got things started against Miami Ohio with nine points and two rebounds. Bailey had an efficient performance, going a perfect 2-for-2 from the field and 5-for-6 from the line. He added two assists.
In the win over UHSP, Bailey played just 12:59, but was effective for the duration of his time on the floor. Bailey connected on 5 of his 9 attempts to score 12 points along with three rebounds and two assists.
Next up for the Aces is a trip to Southeast Missouri State on Wednesday evening in Cape Girardeau.
SAN ANTONIO, TX – Senator Mike Braun spent the day touring the southern border at Eagle Pass, TX with the Indiana Sheriff’s Association, members of local law enforcement such as the Maverick County Sheriff, and Border Patrol.
No community is immune from the border crisis, and Indiana law enforcement have to deal with many of the problems that begin right here on the southern border.
Senator Braun also asked members of local law enforcement and Border Patrol about the national security risk of our southern border, after FBI Director Christopher Wray testified that the border presented a serious terrorist threat to the U.S.
Texas Border Czar Mike Banks told Senator Braun that people of 169 nationalities had been stopped at the southern border trying to enter the United States illegally.
Last week, Senator Braun called on Department of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, who has presided over record illegal immigration as President Biden’s top border official, to resign or be impeached.
“Two years ago I visited a southern border at its breaking point, with Border Patrol unable to deal with the hundreds of thousands of immigrants trying to enter our country illegally. Since then it’s only gotten worse. Our southern border is both a humanitarian crisis and a national security crisis, with one border official telling me that 169 different nationalities have tried to cross in the last year. With over 600,000 ‘gotaways’ entering the country per year, who knows how many people who mean to do us harm have come in through the southern border. Congress needs to act fast to secure our border, and President Biden needs to wake up to this dire emergency he’s created.†– Senator Mike Braun