We are excited to invite you to an afternoon of enchanting music at WPL! The Evansville Philharmonic Orchestra will be hosting their New Traditions Diversity Series performance in our Browning Gallery, and we can’t wait to share this wonderful event with you.
Event Details:
Date: Sunday, November 12, 2023
Time: 2:00 – 4:00 PM
Location: Browning Gallery (lower level)
The event will feature the talented members of the Eykamp String Quartet, including Jack Bogard (violin), Michael Chu (violin), Mark Hatlestad (viola), and Graham Cullen (cello). They will be performing works by underrepresented composers, including pieces by Danish String Quartet/Nikolaj Busk, Lamberto Piumi, Piotr Szewczyk, and Allison Loggin-Hull. Additionally, Elizabeth Robertson (Oboe) and Ross Erickson (Percussion) will join the quartet for a mesmerizing performance.
Admission is free, and this event is open to all ages. We encourage you to bring your friends and family for a delightful afternoon of music and culture.
Let’s celebrate diversity in music together and make this event a memorable one! We hope to see you there to enjoy this unique musical experience.
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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.
 On November 9th, around 9:35 p.m., Evansville Police Officers were dispatched to the Four Freedoms Monument on the Riverfront for an assault in progress. The reporter said that he had been assaulted by an individual, so he stabbed the attacker.Â
Officers arrived on scene and located the stabbing victim. Officers began life-saving measures until AMR arrived. He was transported to a local hospital for further treatment. The reporter stayed on scene and cooperated with officers.Â
This investigation is still active, and no arrests have been made at this time. If anyone has information regarding this incident, please contact the Adult Investigations Unit at (812) 436-7979.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 focused 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.
WASHINGTON —Today, U.S. Senator Mike Braun called on Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Secretary Mayorkas to resign or be impeached, slamming the Biden administration’s dereliction of duty of the southern border crisis.
There have been 2 million illegal immigrants stopped at the border and 600,000 “gotaways†this year. One-hundred sixty nine people on the terrorist watchlist were stopped by Border Patrol, and Secretary Mayorkas could not say how many got through, or if Hamas terrorists were in the country.
Last week Sen. Braun joined a group of Republican senators in a letter to President Biden expressing concern over the 169 people on the terror watchlist stopped at the border and calling on Biden to take action to reinstate the border policies of the Trump administration. The White House has not responded.
“He has been purposely detached from this because it’s coming from the White House and it started immediately after Biden got elected. By the way, I think he ought to resign immediately or be impeached. I mean that is dereliction of the worst kind and this has been happening for months.Â
Braun at the Border
“I and about 16 or 17 other senators were there right after Biden got elected and we had just had record low from the Trump administration. You didn’t even know what a ‘gotaway’ was. Now that’s up to 600,000 a year and these are the people that fly into Mexico and pay the big fees to the cartels, over 100 nationalities and the carnage that was just described along with the chaos, that’s becoming a real issue and I think that will be litigated in 24. The good news is our own conference in the Senate is elevating that to maybe the most important issue and it ought to be.
Margaret Musgrave And Nancy Drake Raised $31,000 To Purchase Automated External Defibrillators (AEDs)
Margaret Musgrave and Nancy Drake Raised $31,000 To Purchase Automated External Defibrillators (AEDs) for EPD.
Heartbeats for Heros, a volunteer organization headed by Margaret Musgrave and Nancy Drake, successfully raised $31,000 to purchase Automated External Defibrillators (AEDs) for the Evansville Police Department.
The Vanderburgh County Prosecutor’s Office was the largest donor to this cause – contributing $10,000.
Please join Heartbeats for Heros, the Evansville Police Department, and the Prosecutor’s Office for a press conference on November 14th at 10 am hosted in the Prosecutor’s Grand Jury Room – Room 108 of the Civic Center.
All media, county and city officials, and officers are welcome.