VANDERBURGH COUNTY RECENT BOOKING RECORDS
 NOTICE OF REGULAR BOARD MEETINGÂ
Notice is hereby given that the Evansville-Vanderburgh Airport Authority District Board’s Regular Board Meeting will be:Â
DATE: Monday, November 27, 2023Â
TIME: 4:00 pm, Local TimeÂ
PLACE: Evansville Regional AirportÂ
7801 Bussing DriveÂ
Evansville, IN 47725Â
Regina Hermann. PresidentÂ
Evansville-Vanderburgh Airport Authority DistrictÂ
7801 Bussing Drive Evansville, IN 47725 • Phone: 812.421.4401 Fax: 812.421.4412 • www.flyevv.comÂ
Medical Office Asst Float Deaconess Health System  3.5  – Evansville, IN
Assists in coordinating patient payments, posting charges, issuing receipts and posting payments and other duties as assigned. Float Job Duties may include: 4 days ago
Patient Care Technician Deaconess Health System  3.5  – Newburgh, IN
We require ACLS and encourage certifications and continued education. We are a 32 bed unit consisting of private rooms. Schedule: Full Time – 72, Day/Evening. 2 days ago
Outreach Phlebotomist Deaconess Health System  3.5  – Evansville, IN
Current driver’s license and clean driving record. We pride ourselves in retaining our top talent by offering work environments that support professional… 2 days ago
IL RN Deaconess Illinois  3.5  – Marion, IL
Deaconess Illinois is part of the largest employer in the tristate region, and operates under the direction of a local board, with a local focus. 2 days ago
Emergency Services Technician Deaconess Health System  3.5  – Newburgh, IN
As an Emergency Services Tech, you will play a critical role in continuing the healing mission of Deaconess. Schedule: Full Time – 72, Evening. 2 days ago
Team Leader RN CAH – Emergency Room Deaconess Health System  3.5  – Morganfield, KY
Easily apply
Current licensure as a Registered Nurse in the state of practice. Minimum two years nursing experience and at least one year nursing experience in specialty… 4 days ago
Diabetes Clinician PRN/Supplemental (RN) Deaconess Health System  3.5  – Evansville, IN
Current unrestricted state nursing license which allows work in both Indiana and Kentucky (licensed in both states or compact license). 4 days ago
Registered Nurse – Surgical Trauma ICU (PRN/Supplemental) (RN) Deaconess Health System  3.5  – Evansville, IN
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All rooms are monitored and eight rooms are equipped to provide hemodialysis at bedside. STICU also specializes in open heart recovery, AAA and carotid artery… 4 days ago
Clinic RN, LPN, CMA or RMA – rooming nurse Deaconess Health System  3.5  – Boonville, IN
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Active LPN license in state of employment. Active RN license in state of employment. Current certification/license from one of the below: 5 days ago
Pharmacy Technician Deaconess Health System  3.5  – Evansville, IN
$16.00 – $20.34 an hour Must be licensed or qualify for license in the State of Indiana. Deaconess Health System is the largest employer in the tri-state region, and operates under the… 3 days ago
MOBERLY, Mo. – The No. 5-ranked Vincennes University Trailblazers faced another tough test Saturday night, closing out the 2023 Moberly Area Community College Thanksgiving Classic against host and No. 12-ranked Moberly Area.
The Trailblazers led throughout most of the game but found themselves in a back-and-forth battle in the second half before pulling away at the end to pick up the 76-67 victory over the Greyhounds.
Vincennes got off to a running start over the host Greyhounds Saturday night, scoring the first seven points of the game and later building a 23-9 lead midway through the first half of play.
Moberly Area looked to answer back before halftime and used an 11-2 scoring run to cut the deficit down to five.
VU would get the lead back to eight before the halftime break, heading into the locker room holding a 30-22 lead over Moberly.
Moberly Area struck first to start the second half, with the Greyhounds using a 9-0 run to take their first lead of the game at 41-40.
The Trailblazers would grab the lead back and take a 55-48 lead before the Greyhounds again answered back with a 13-2 scoring run to take a 61-57 lead with under seven minutes to play.
Vincennes would swing the momentum back with a 13-4 scoring run of their own to take a 70-65 lead with under two minutes remaining.
After a Moberly layup cut the VU lead down to just three, the Trailblazers closed out the game at the free throw line, scoring the final six points of the night to come away with the 76-67 victory over the Greyhounds.
“Mostly it was just guts,†VU Hall of Fame Head Coach Todd Franklin said. “We’re running on fumes right now and we haven’t had a practice day in a week where we’ve had anywhere near everybody on the floor and even if they were, they were just getting through it.â€
The Trailblazers entered the night with only 10 active players, with sophomores Victor Lado (Louisville, Ky.) and starter Kris King (Washington, D.C.) out with illness Saturday night.
Vincennes picked up some big performances first by freshman Lebron Thomas (Bishopville, S.C.) who led the Blazers with 26 points, eight rebounds and seven assists and hit 13 out of 16 free throw attempts to help seal the victory.
Sophomore Ryan Oliver (Antioch, Tenn.) stepped into the lineup for Kris King and finished with 18 points, four rebounds and a pair of assists, including hitting four big three-pointers in the second half.
The story of the night however was sophomore Michael Osei-Bonsu (Bolingbrook, Ill.) who controlled the glass all night to finish with 17 points and an outstanding 18 rebounds for the Blazers, his third double-double of the season.
Sophomore Karyiek Dixon (Enfield, London, UK) just missed out on a double-double of his own, ending with eight points and 11 rebounds, while also collecting three big blocks.
“To play tonight, in this game, without Kris, because we thought he could help us as a stretch four against their style of play,†Franklin added. “And you take him out completely, I can’t be prouder that our guys had the resolve to do it.â€
“You look at the big three tonight with Lebron, we never took him out,†Franklin said. “He played 40 minutes and he’s been under the weather a bit like all of them. Ryan Oliver chased their scorer around defensively and you’ve got to play him all over the floor because he can hit from 25, 26, 27 feet out consistently. Ryan’s job was to chase him, don’t give him a right-hand drive. You’re fighting off screens and it’s a tremendous effort. Then for him to still have the legs to bust those shots in the second half, when we needed a guy to do it, because they were giving it. We had hurt them in the other areas, so we were imploring him to do that and then he did.â€
“We went to those areas to attack and knew if they were going to come off, we put him in the spots and he drilled them and those were huge,†Franklin added. “Then you have Michael. He just dominated the glass. That man just ate that glass. And you know we’re eating the glass big when Karyiek has 11 and it doesn’t sound like much. But Michael, anything that was up there, he got it. Those three guys were just stalwarts and stalwarts down the stretch.â€
“I thought Alphonse gave us some really good minutes in the first half that were key when we had two fouls on Karyiek and Michael,†Franklin said. “I thought Karyiek started to get some things done on the glass as the game went along and made some big plays there. Just across the board. But I can’t say anything but positive things about this group in terms of their toughness and resolve because I knew we would try to fight today. I really did and I thought that if we could fight and do things right that we would have a pretty good chance. But I just didn’t know if we were going to be capable and man, we were. I’m just really proud of them.â€
The Trailblazers will return home for their next game, Saturday, Dec. 2, when VU hosts Elgin Community College from Elgin, Ill. into the Physical Education Complex. Tip-off time next Saturday is scheduled for 7 p.m. eastern.
“Like everything else, we just want to take away the fact of the intensity level that you have to play with,†Franklin said. “What we’re expecting and what we’re demanding. When we’re pushing, why we’re pushing. I think it’s becoming clearer all the time what it takes to play for us. I think it’s a misnomer, everybody thinks it’s hard to play for us, it’s not hard to play for us. You’ve just got to know your job and you’ve got to work every day to get as good at your job as you can. You’ve got to know those assignments, so when you go into the game you can just play the heck out of it.â€
“We don’t want scared and we don’t want tentative,†Franklin added. “And we don’t want where you’re not knowing your job. We try to keep your job pretty simple and pretty repetitive every day and if you don’t do that, then we ain’t happy. But once you get across that bridge and understand what that is, I always think that’s the best way to play, not only winning wise, but it’s the most fun way to play. So we’re trying to get them across that bridge and tonight was another one of those steps of guys learning so you can get the best out of them and when the game is over you know that you’ve emptied the tank correctly and you can start trusting the guy next to you.â€
“Hopefully we’ve built some trust and we’ve still got some guys that have a ways to go there,†Franklin said. “They’re still learning and we’re up and down some with it. But I think that’s the key. That’s the key to our team and it’s always the key to our team. That’s why when those guys get it, the swear by it and they’d always come back and play for us. It’s not that hard, once you understand and we’re in that process of getting that. Because you can see how important that is. Those are the things that win and lose these basketball games. Knowing your job and doing the heck out of it. You don’t have any fear of that other bunch, you are going to go at them.â€
“We don’t want to play in fear,†Franklin added. “We want to play aggressive, but smart. I think you can see some of those things tonight from Ryan. Whether he made those shots or not, he stepped into those shots at the right time. They were the right shot. He was ready at the right time and you shoot that ball like you mean to hit the bottom of that net at that point. That’s when you do it. He did that and you see what happens. You give yourself a chance to be a good player and if you don’t, then you leave the game thinking, ‘well, I did everything I could. I was prepared. I busted it. I knew what I was doing. I attacked it.’ If I fall short, I know I’m not going to be happy about it, but I’ll go back to work and try to be better tomorrow. That’s it and it’s really simplistic when you say it but it’s hard to get everybody to that. I think we’re building to that and I think when we get to that we are going to be a hard team to beat. Obviously, we’re a pretty hard team to beat right now.â€
VINCENNES BOX SCORE
VINCENNES (76): Â Ryan Oliver 7-14 0-0 18, Kent King 0-3 0-0 0, Lebron Thomas 6-15 13-16 26, Michael Osei-Bonsu 8-12 1-1 17, Karyiek Dixon 4-9 0-2 8, Damarien Yates 1-4 0-0 3, Gerard Thomas 0-1 0-0 0, Mathieu Nader-Kalombo 0-7 0-0 0, Alphonse Muteba 1-3 2-3 4, Team 27-68 16-22 76.
VU (9-0) – 30    46 – 76
Moberly Area – 22    45 – 67
Three-point goals: VU 6 (Oliver 4, L. Thomas, Yates). Rebounds: VU 50 (Osei-Bonsu 18). Assists: VU 16 (L. Thomas 7). Steals: VU 7 (Osei-Bonsu 2, Dixon 2). Blocked shots: VU 4 (Dixon 3). Turnovers: VU 16. Personal Fouls: VU 12. Fouled out: None.
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.
By Marilyn Odendahl
The Indiana Citizen
November 25, 2023
Before they try to sway lawmakers, activists first have to decide how they will advocate – mass protest, march, sit-in or informed discussion.
And when the issue is as contentious, and potentially embarrassing, as the desire to stop charging state sales tax on feminine hygiene products, determining how to push for change can be especially tricky.
MADVoters Indiana, a nonpartisan grassroots organization, plans to ramp up its advocacy for eliminating the “tampon tax†by holding a rally in January as the 2024 legislative session gets underway and then testifying at committee hearings during the session. But the group started its effort by hosting a Period Action Day on Wednesday at the Statehouse and focused on educating and informing through simple conversations.
Bills and amendments to end the sales tax on menstrual products that have been introduced in the Indiana General Assembly have been mostly met with silence. During the 2023 session, state Sens. Shelli Yoder, D-Bloomington and Kyle Walker, R-Indianapolis, authored House Bill 259, which would have eliminated the sales tax on feminine hygiene products, but it never received a hearing.
More than an inconvenience, the sales tax is a financial burden with one in four menstruating women in Indiana struggling to pay for feminine products, according to information from MADVoters. Each year, the sales tax costs Hoosier women an estimated $5.6 million.
In planning the action day, Chelsea McDonnell, co-founder of MADVoters Indiana, said her organization wanted to focus on educating and helping people understand the burden of the sales tax. The nonprofit picked a day when several interim study committees were meeting, so many lawmakers would be in the building.
“We tried to take a more holistic approach to reaching people,†McDonnell said. “That includes treating the whole person and in order to do that, we have to be willing to meet people where they are and educate them and be the ones that start the conversation in a positive manner.â€
The approach contrasted with the protesters who filled the Statehouse when the legislature was debating controversial bills that would restrict abortion and ban transgender girls from participating in girls’ sports. At those times, the protesters waved handmade signs and yelled continually, while legislators were inside their chambers debating the bills.
Advocating for change is part of civic engagement, but does one form of public demonstrating work better than others?
Katie Blair, director of advocacy and public policy for the American Civil Liberties Union of Indiana, said the different ways to raise awareness and push an issue all have their place. An advocacy day, like the Period Action Day, can do a lot to teach people about a topic or problem and build momentum to advance legislation. However, “when things take a right turn at the Statehouse,†then a protest can be an effective response.
“I think they both serve different purposes but very important purposes,†Blair said.
Questions lead to education
Several other organizations joined MADVoters to support Period Action Day, including the ACLU of Indiana, Women4Change, Love HER League and the All-Options Pregnancy Resource Center. Staff members and volunteers from the different groups passed out brochures, collected emails and talked to anyone who stopped by.
Also, MADVoters was collecting donated packages of pads and tampons which would then be given to abused and battered women. The table piled high with boxes and bags underscored McDonnell’s point that paying for these products month after month is a hardship for low-income women and girls.
Amanda Eldridge, a MADVoters volunteer, was working at the game table. T-shirts, pens, stickers and small, zippered cloth bags stuffed with pads were spread across the tabletop. A couple of trivia boards posed questions about menstruation and the sales tax.
The trivia game, Eldridge said, helped start conversations about feminine hygiene products and period poverty which, admittedly, are not the usual topics of public discussions. People often got the answers to their trivia questions wrong and that led them to ask more questions.
A handful of Democratic legislators milled around the tables and talked to their constituents. McDonnell said her group invited all state senators and representatives to the event and sent emails asking each of them to eliminate the tax on feminine products.
McDonnell speculated the loss of revenue for state coffers was fueling the resistance to changing the tax code. “Money is the main motivator,†she said, and lawmakers do not want to give up those dollars by ending the sales tax on feminine products.
She also acknowledged legislators might be reluctant to debate lifting the sales tax because they are uncomfortable and squeamish over talking about women’s monthly menstruation cycles.
“I’m sure that’s a part of it in some ways,†McDonnell said. “But, you know, if all these people were able to talk about abortion for months, I don’t know why we can’t talk about periods, which we need those in order to get pregnant.â€
Senate Minority Leader Greg Taylor, D-Indianapolis, spent some time at the event. He said the first step to removing the sales tax on menstrual products is to determine the fiscal impact on the state. Also key to moving the legislation forward is showing how the tax affects every Hoosier household, bolstering the argument that many will benefit if the sales tax is nixed.
Taylor liked the approach MADVoters was taking to advance the issue. He said engaging in calm discussion to educate and build understanding “has always been more successful†than confrontation and demanding support.
“With all the frustrating politics that we have across the country going to today, it is nice to see this type of peaceful protest, so to speak, information-gathering for legislators,†Taylor said. “For me, you tune out people who just get in your face and holler, because it’s really not providing any good information.â€
Pressure tactic, making an impact
Blair noted the message can be lost if the advocacy day or protest is not well-organized and well-attended. Legislators will interpret that low turnout as a lack of interest in the issue. Conversely, mobilizing large groups to rally at the Statehouse can show “you have an army behind you.â€
And when large groups are waving signs, yelling and chanting, that can scuttle controversial bills by showing lawmakers that “legislation cannot pass in the dark,†Blair said. She pointed to the rash of anti-Critical Race Theory bills that sprouted during the 2022 General Assembly session. Protests that rose in response helped block that legislation.
Blair said lawmakers need to know people are watching the Statehouse. “It’s really critical for this not to feel like it’s something that’s just happening behind closed doors without the voice of Hoosiers,†she said.
Along with calm conversations, MADVoters was using a pressure tactic during the action day.
The organization encouraged women to gather their sales receipts from the purchase of feminine products and submit them with a tax refund request to the Indiana Department of Revenue. McDonnell explained that mailing the receipts to the revenue department would emphasize the financial burden of the tax.
She did not see the potential for the effort to backfire, since it would show legislators how much tax revenue is collected on the products. Instead, she said, the extra work created in the revenue department by having to open each envelope, pull out the form and input the information into the computer, would foster more calls for change.
“I think this will be a good way to wake people up who aren’t necessarily involved, but who will be involved in the process of filing these things,†McDonnell said. “And then you also have to think about the legislators who might be getting phone calls, (from revenue officials who say), ‘I don’t ever want to deal with this at work again. Can we do something about this?’â€
Megan Flynn, a third-year law student at New York University who was representing the national organization Period Law, was working at the receipt table, helping women fill out the paper refund forms. The 28-year-old has participated in Black Lives Matter protests, been a regular at the Women’s March, joined a community activist group to raise awareness about reproductive rights, and talked to legislators about asylum and immigration issues.
The large protests and marches can make an impact, when “they are so widespread and in strategic locations where they can’t be ignored,†Flynn said. But she sees the kind of advocacy practiced during the Period Action Day as doing more to bring about change.
“The times when I feel like I have the most impact is not really those protest-type situations, but when I get to talk to legislators or their staff directly, which can be really hard to find those opportunities,†Flynn said. “I have written a lot of postcards and done a lot of phone calling and can feel there’s not a lot of validation as to what impact that is having.â€
Dwight Adams, a freelance editor and writer based in Indianapolis, edited this article. He is a former content editor, copy editor and digital producer at The Indianapolis Star and IndyStar.com, and worked as a planner for other newspapers, including the Louisville Courier-Journal.
Evansville erases 20-point deficit to pick up overtime win
Aces defeat Mocs by a final of 85-77Â
NOVEMBER 25, 2023
CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. – Trailing by as many as 20 points in the second half, the University of Evansville men’s basketball team staged one of the largest rallies in Missouri Valley Conference history to defeat Chattanooga in overtime by a final of 85-77 inside McKenzie Arena.
With 11:40 remaining in regulation, the Purple Aces trailed Chattanooga by a 62-42 margin. From that point on, UE outscored the Mocs by a 43-15 margin to pick up the improbable road win. Chattanooga was shooting 53.3% (24-of-45) from the field and 47.8% (11-of-23) at that point. Over the final portion of regulation and overtime, the defense for UE held the Mocs to 4-for-24 from the field and 3-of-18 from long range (both 16.7%). The comeback by Evansville tied the 8th-largest comeback in MVC history.
“This was a huge win for us; our guys never gave up and we continued to battle regardless of how many points we were down,†Purple Aces head coach David Ragland explained. “We challenged the group with about 11:40 left and said, “Do we believe?â€Â Seeing the looks in their eyes, we could see that they believed and they responded the right way.â€
Evansville’s win gives the program its best start since an identical 5-0 mark to open the 2017-18 campaign while matching the win total from the entire 2022-23 season. Anchoring the comeback was Ben Humrichous. He finished with a game-high 28 points, 18 of which came during the Aces comeback. He was 11-for-21 from the floor while draining five triples. Antonio Thomas finished with 11 points while Tanner Cuff and Chuck Bailey III scored 10 and 9, respectively. Cuff picked up his first double-double at UE, hauling in 11 rebounds.
Yacine Toumi hit his second triple of the season to open the scoring as the Aces began the day with a 7-2 lead. Ben Humrichous and Antonio Thomas added baskets in the early stretch. The Mocs rallied right back with seven in a row to take their first lead of the afternoon at 9-7 five minutes in. Cam Haffner tied the score with a floater, but the Chattanooga run continued as they tacked on five more to go up 14-9. In total, the Mocs outscored UE by a 12-2 margin.
Ben Humrichous hit from downtown and Tanner Cuff added his first basket of the day as the Aces tied it up at 14-14 at the 13:09 mark. Another 3-pointer put Chattanooga back on top, but UE staged a rally of its own to go up 24-20 near the midway point of the period. Gage Bobe hit a triple to highlight the run.
Things continued to go back and forth with Humrichous’ second long ball of the day knotting the score at 29-29 with exactly four minutes showing on the clock. Over the final minutes of the stanza, the Mocs would retake the advantage and head to halftime up by a 40-36 score. Humrichous had a game-high 10 points in the opening 20 minutes.
In the win over Ball State, Evansville outscored the opposition by a 17-0 margin in the opening moments of the latter half. It was a different story on Friday with UTC doing the damage. Six in a row by the Mocs, coupled with a 0-for-7 start by the Aces, made it a 46-36 contest in the first three minutes. After Evansville scored four in a row, Chattanooga reeled off 13 consecutive points to cap off a 19-4 run to open the half and go up 59-40.
Chattanooga extended the lead to 20 (62-42) before the Aces fought back. Bobe’s second triple completed a 7-0 run to cut the deficit to 13 with 9:13 left in the contest. Two minutes later, Humrichous made it ten Evansville points in a row with another triple to cut the Mocs lead to 62-52. Rudy Fitzgibbons III ended a scoreless stretch that exceeded five minutes with a three, but the Aces posted the next four to make it a 65-56 game entering the final five minutes.
Another triple by the Mocs reestablished the double figure lead on the ensuing possession, but Tanner Cuff immediately drained a three to make it a 9-point game once again. With 3:31 on the clock, Joshua Hughes nailed a triple that got his squad within six tallies. As the contest entered its final two minutes, Humrichous took full control. With 2:06 remaining, his triple made it a 3-point game and, following a Chattanooga turnover, he was true from outside once again to tie the score at 68-68 with 98 ticks left.
Two free throw misses by the Mocs gave the ball back to UE and Humrichous converted a jumper to give the Aces their first lead since the first half. UTC knocked down a pair of free throw tries with 33 seconds left to send the game into overtime.
Riding the wave of momentum from their comeback, the Aces got right back to work in overtime. Humrichous had a 3-point play to get things started while Antonio Thomas hit a pair of free throws to make it a 75-70 game less than a minute in. Thomas added a field goal and Cuff converted a pair of free throws to cap off a 9-0 run to open the OT period. Chattanooga posted its first overtime points with 1:02 remaining, but the UE lead was too much to overcome. As the clock reached zeroes, Evansville finished off an 85-77 triumph.
Five Mocs reached double figures with Honor Huff tallying 17. Sam Alexis registered 10 points while hauling in a game-high 15 boards. Evansville finished with a 41-39 rebounding edge while outshooting the Mocs by a 42.6%-40.6% tally.
Tomorrow, the Aces complete the Coke Zero Sugar Classic against Southeast Missouri State. Tip is set for 1 p.m. CT.
This week, Hoosier lawmakers gathered at the Statehouse in Indianapolis for Organization Day, which is the official start to the 2024 legislative session. Session kickoff is an exciting and important opportunity to meet with fellow policymakers to discuss issues facing our communities and state, and make plans for the session ahead. |
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Lawmakers won’t return for session until Jan. 8 and must complete their work before the March 14 deadline. Please stay connected with me as January approaches and proposals for new laws come before the legislature for consideration. I can be reached at h76@iga.in.gov or by calling 317-232-9600.
Another great resource to stay involved and informed is by visiting iga.in.gov, which is the Indiana General Assembly’s website providing helpful information on proposals for new laws, and on committee hearings and session meetings.I look forward to working hard on behalf of our community and delivering results for House District 76. |