Knox County – Tuesday night, October 31, at approximately 11:15 p.m., Trooper Buchanan was traveling north on US 41 near Hart Street when he spotted a 2006 Chevrolet SUV traveling north in the southbound lanes. Trooper Buchanan drove through the grassy median, activated his emergency lights, and stopped in the passing lane blocking the path of the wrong-way vehicle. The driver of the wrong-way vehicle slowed down but struck the front end of Trooper Buchanan’s patrol car causing minor damage. The driver was identified as Vanessa Gadsden, 61, of Vincennes. Gadsden displayed signs of impairment and failed field sobriety tests. A preliminary chemical test revealed she was under the influence of cannabinoids and oxycodone. A blood sample was also sent to the Indiana Department of Toxicology for further evaluation. Gadsden was arrested and taken to the Knox County Jail where she is currently being held on bond.
Arrested and Charges:
Vanessa Gadsden, 61, Vincennes, IN
Driving While Intoxicated, Class A Misdemeanor
Reckless Driving, Class A Misdemeanor
Arresting Officer: Trooper Brock Buchanan, Indiana State Police
Assisting Officer: Trooper Tanner Hurley, Indiana State Police
On November 1, 2023, community leaders will gather at BALLY’S-Evansville today to observe the City-County Observer bestowing three (3) “Community Service Awards†and a “Male and Female” Of The Year Awards” to deserving individuals or organizations who are well-known leaders and volunteers throughout our community.
It’s with extreme pleasure and pride, that we announce our two (2) well-deserving “Persons  Of The Year ” award.† The winner of the 2023 “Man Of The Year is the renowned Television and Radio legend  MIKE BLAKE. The 2023 CCO “FEMALE of The YEAR” award winner is a community leader and political icon. CONNIE ROBINSON.
The City-County Observer recently announced our three (3) deserving “Community Service Award†winners for 2023. They are the well-respected Daniela Vidal Chancellor of IVY Tech Community College and the Honorable Vanderburgh County Superior Court Judge, Tom Massey, and Southwestern Indiana Building and Construction Trades Council Selected CCO “2023 Organization Of The Year”
Steve Hammer and County Commissioner Ben Shoulders are Co-Chairmen of the 2023 “Community Services Award Luncheon” Â They are also excited to announce that D. William Moreau a highly regarded and nationally known attorney and newspaper President/Publisher of the Indiana Citizen newspaper shall be the event Keynote Speaker.
This year’s event Master of Ceremonies will be the Memorial Baptist Church mega preacher and publisher of “Our Times” newspaper, Dr. Adrian Brooks.
Today’s awards luncheon will be held at Bally’s-Evansville in Walnut rooms A and B. Registration begins at 11:30 a.m., and the event will officially start at noon
For the last 10 years, this “Awards Luncheon” was sold out. We had to turn away 7 groups of people who wanted a table at this event.
Women4Change taps the next generation in work for improvements to women’s healthcare
By Maggie McGuire, TheStatehouseFile.com
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The Indiana Maternal Mortality Review Committee found that 79% of pregnancy-related deaths were preventable. In 2021, the infant mortality rate for Indiana was above the national average at 6.7%; the national average is 5.4%, which is similar to developing nation rates.
Photo by Kei Scampa, Pexels.
The causes of these deaths range from lack of access to medical attention to lack of housing to lack of mental health support. In response, a group of women came together seven years ago and decided they wanted to make a change for mothers and their babies.
They created Women4Change in the wake of the 2016 election, with maternal mortality as one of their causes. JoAnn Hoskins, Women4Change board chair, has been with the organization from the start. Their goals started small but have expanded as their cause has picked up attention.
“These are innocent lives being lost in the care of mothers and babies. Those deaths are completely preventable,†Hoskins said. “That should terrify everybody, frankly.â€
The group provides both civic and general education to all—women and men, Republicans and Democrats, elderly and students. The topics are addressed at events such as speeches and rallies as well as through newsletters and hearings on bills that directly impact maternal health care.
“First of all, the most important piece of this is that we have to learn to be civil with each other. Our whole goal is really to start educating people, and so we have a couple of things we really focus on,†Hoskins said.
2023 State of Women Conference
Each year, the organization partners with other groups—such as Lost Mothers and Navigate Maternity, both committed to improving maternal care—to put on the State of Women Conference. This year, the event was hosted on the IUPUI campus on Oct. 19. The event was sold out with 120 people attending, many of them college students.
“We want to learn from what has worked elsewhere to improve maternal health for all women, but especially for women of color who are much more likely to die during pregnancy and up to one year postpartum,†said Women4Change board co-chair Deborah Hern Smith in a press release.
The conference hosted three keynote speakers along with several break-out sessions. The first keynote topic covered the Lost Mothers program; the second was a woman who shared her story of almost dying during a high-risk pregnancy and how she has used that experience to create hope; the third was about how marginalized communities are more at risk and the lack of housing for all new mothers.
“We had great examples. The second keynote gave her talk as someone who nearly died in childbirth because they [the doctors at the ER] weren’t listening,†Hoskins said.
“We were all on the edge of our seats. [After she was done], they had a follow-up for women who had similar experiences. Immediately, four women ran right up there … That many women ran up there to say, ‘I have a story too; it’s not uncommon.’â€
That keynote speaker, Ariana McGee, used her experience to start putting together kits to help high-risk pregnancies monitor their vitals. The kit includes a scale to monitor water weight influxes, a blood pressure cuff, and a way to send the information to their doctor’s office. It is currently covered by Medicaid and Medicare. The project is named Navigate Maternity and focuses on all women but is available specifically to marginalized Americans.
“She says this is going to save lives, and there is no doubt about it,†Hoskins said.
Future generations
Seven years later, Women4Change is still developing the spread of their outreach. The group has started chapters on several college campuses. Specifically, IUPUI’s chapter has picked up in popularity. It was a driving force of the conference this year.
“We have planted a few other [chapters], but IUPUI is going gangbusters. They just do fantastic stuff. They have all kinds of activities, independent thoughts and ideas of things,†Hoskins said. “They lead the charge in putting together this conference. That’s why we had it on the IUPUI campus, so these young women could be a part of the process.â€
Many of the students involved have gone so far as to change their major to law or political science. Some have had internships with Indiana’s Women4Change or a hands-on role within their school’s chapter. Sophomore MaKayla Waugh is the current director of communication for the IUPUI chapter.
“Women4Change at IUPUI and Women4Change Indiana have impacted me as an epidemiology major, aspiring physician, and Hoosier woman to advocate for change for maternal and infant health, underrepresented communities, voting, and by understanding the social determinants of health, specifically in Indiana,†Waugh said.
Waugh was introduced to Women4Change during her freshman year at IUPUI. One of her biology professors serves on Indiana’s Women4Change board and is one of the advisors for the campus chapter. Waugh’s current role is to promote the organization and the events it is hosting through social media, branding and newsletters.
“I see this organization as one that will continue to thrive and build upon the work and success of previous women,†Waugh said. “We continue to advocate, educate, collaborate and activate members of our community to register to vote, use their voices, and aid their community through volunteering and advocacy.â€
Another project Women4Change will incorporate this upcoming year is voting parties, in the form of educational practice. Before primaries begin, the group will have specific days for people to do polling station activities. At each location, a crew will be set up to help people decide whether they will need a mail-in ballot or will be physically at the polls. From there, the individual will receive a checklist based on their decision. The next table helps register and/or order the ballot. Several more activities walk them through what to expect on voting day, and by the end, the individual knows what their voting plan is and how to follow through with it.
“The idea was that people might be intimidated by the voting process, that they don’t know how to vote, so they’re too embarrassed to say that, so they just don’t vote,†Hoskins said. “We gave them reassurance.â€
The group plans to continue improving old programs while simultaneously developing new ones. Education remains its core goal, and there is an understanding that new challenges may present themselves in the legislature.
“Like tomorrow we’re meeting with our whole group to start looking at the bills that are coming up in 2024,†Hoskins said. “I will tell you, 2024 is going to be our biggest effort. It has to be; we have to get young people involved.â€
FOOTNOTE: Editor’s note: This story was updated to correct JoAnn Hoskins’ title. She is the Women4Change board chair.
EVANSVILLE, IND. (10/31/2023) The University of Evansville’s (UE) Dunigan Family School of Nursing has announced the recent achievement of full accreditation status from the Accreditation Commission for Education in Nursing (ACEN) through Spring 2031. This accreditation signifies the school’s commitment to excellence in nursing education and its dedication to preparing students for successful careers in the field.
Notably, the ACEN Board of Commissioners, in their assessment of the school’s nursing program, identified a remarkable area of program strength. The Dunigan Family School of Nursing’s students benefit from a rich and diverse learning experience that encompasses educational activities exploring a wide range of cultures, ethnic differences, and societal distinctions.
One of the standout features contributing to this program’s strength is the unique opportunity for students to study abroad while pursuing their nursing education. By taking nursing courses in foreign countries, students broaden their horizons, gain a global perspective, and enhance their cultural competence. Importantly, they can achieve their Bachelor of Science in Nursing (BSN) degree within eight semesters, making this an exceptional and efficient pathway for aspiring nurses.
“We are thrilled to receive full accreditation status from ACEN, which underscores our unwavering commitment to excellence in nursing education,” said Dr. Jerrilee LaMar, Associate Professor and Nancy McFadin Mueller Chair in Nursing. “We are especially proud of our unique programs that offer students the chance to explore diverse cultures and international perspectives while working towards their BSN. This distinction reaffirms our mission to prepare our students for success in the field of nursing, both locally and globally.”
Freedom, Indiana – Andrew Horning is seeking the Libertarian Party of Indiana’s nomination for Indiana’s US Senate seat in 2024.
OK, so by now most of us should know that our gaslighting, bankrupt government is just a puppet of a corrupt, global crony crime ring, that it’s stealing from everybody with inflation, and is going to default on Social Security and Medicare pretty soon. Even The Fed, which has a monopoly money press, is a trillion dollars negative (they’re calling it “deferred assetsâ€), and we’re all charging toward the cliffs of World War III.
So we’re headed toward poverty, violence and death by the millions. It’s not like we haven’t been amply warned.
George Washington’s Farewell Address was full of strong warnings against political parties, permanent military establishments, spending and debt, internecine conflicts, government intervention in commerce, for sustaining a virtuous and constitutional republic, and, “…it is our true policy to steer clear of permanent alliances with any portion of the foreign world.â€Â That inspired Jefferson’s “…peace, commerce, and honest friendship with all nations – entangling alliances with none.â€
Other Presidents, and innumerable constitutionalists and libertarians (not just me!), notably including Eisenhower and JFK, have repeated warnings against political interventions, as well as corruption and takeover by external agencies and corporations.
But despite the revelations of our government’s deception, corruption and catastrophic, mass-fatality failures over more than a century of unconstitutional abuse of power and transgenerational theft of public wealth, We The People still use our votes to confirm approval of economic, cultural, global and militarized suicide, as if in a twisted form of Stockholm Syndrome.
Our nation’s Declaration of Independence says, “…that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed.â€Â Up to now, we’ve been literally fat, and relatively happy. But can’t we see what’s next?
It’s bad enough that the Cassandras who’ve been repetitiously right are deemed “a wasted vote†on Election Day. What’s tragic is that the people who’ve proven to be consistently and destructively wrong over and over are called, “incumbents,†“winners,†“successful,†and “The Honorable…â€
Happily, We The People are waking up. We’re losing faith in the charlatans, and starting to see the global authoritarian puppetmasters who own and operate the inherently divisive, unconstitutional “Two Party System.â€Â The Dakota wisdom, “when you see that your horse is dead, dismount,†may be today’s epiphany. Independent and “third party†candidates are winning at last. There are already twenty Libertarians holding public office in Indiana today (though few know it). RFK Jr.’s candidacy might really shake things loose.
But the rich and mighty proposing we give up our wealth and rights to grant them more power to fix “existential,†“national security,†environmental, economic or individual rights problems, have created, owned and operated those problems to their own benefit for decades. And they are still in charge.
There is a simple fix. Fire them. All of them. The parties, staffers, bundlers, lobbyists, kingmakers and puppet masters, CIA, WEF, WHO, Eisenhower’s military-industrial complex and technological and scientific elite, JFK’s secret societies, Big Ag, Big Pharma… they all need to be knocked down to individual human scale …and accountability.
I’m putting that option, and a constitutional republic, on the ballot for 2024. And what I mean by that is all written down so there’s no hedging, prevaricating, or going back on what I said.
The University of Southern Indiana Pathways to USI Program is inviting prospective high school students to campus for Discover USI, happening Sunday and Monday, November 12-13 on campus. The event is free and open to high school students, ninth through eleventh grade. Registration is required and is open through Friday, November 3.
At the multi-day event, students will be able to attend USI activities, including the first home USI Men’s Basketball game of the 2023-24 season, live in on-campus housing and attend select USI classes.
“I am excited to offer our first Discover USI program through Pathways. This program is a great way for high school students to explore USI’s campus, connect with USI faculty and engage with USI students and activities,†says Dr. Brandi Neal, Director of Pathways to College Program. “The Discover USI program speaks directly to our Strategic Plan in elevating the University’s visibility and reputation by exposing prospective students in a more intentional and engaging way.â€
The Pathways to College Program provides scholars with holistic services and support to meet students’ needs through inquiry, transition, graduation and post-graduation. It strives to enhance educational opportunities through inclusive comprehensive programs and individual mentoring. The Pathways to College Program has several components, one in which engages high school students with campus, activities, students and faculty. In addition, Pathways focuses on the transition from high school to college through a summer bridge Pre-Screagle Institute program.
To register for Discover USI, complete the Qualtrics form. For more information on the Pathways to USI Program, visit USI.edu/pathways. For questions, email Dr. Brandi Neal, Director of Pathways to College Program, at brneal@usi.edu.
Business relocates to the Fifth Third Center at 20 NW Third Street.
ANNOUNCEMENT – October 31, 2023: McClarney Financial Group has relocated to a new home at 20 NW 3rd Street and will host a grand opening on November 1. Their office is located in the Fifth Third Building in Downtown Evansville, Suite 940.
Travis McClarney founded McClarney Financial Group 13 years ago. The new location comes at a time of growth for the firm. Their services include financial planning, wealth management, asset protection and risk management, and business planning.
Travis and his wife, Courtney, were born and raised in Evansville. They love everything the city has to offer and are excited to be in the heart of Downtown Evansville. The new location will help them continue to serve their clients by providing them with clarity and peace of mind about their finances.
“Since day one our mission has been to protect and maximize wealth for all our clients. Our new location is great for our business, with Downtown coffee and lunch options just steps away. The parking garage is a bonus on rainy days!†said McClarney. “New businesses like McClarney Financial Group opening in Downtown Evansville speak to the work of the EID and our ongoing efforts to build a more vibrant neighborhood. We congratulate Travis and Courtney on the opening of their new location and look forward to many years of future growth and success,†said Adam Trinkel, executive director, of EID.
McClarney Financial Group is currently accepting new clients. Schedule an appointment with Travis by calling the office at (812) 909-2061 or emailing him at travis@mcclarneyfinancial.com.
The Purple Aces are trying to make their way into the Missouri Valley Conference Tournament in the final match of the 2023 regular season
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NASHVILLE —Â The University of Evansville men’s soccer team will play its final regular season match of 2023 on Wednesday night.
Evansville earned a crucial three points in the Missouri Valley Conference postseason race on Friday night against the Bradley Braves. The Aces earned their second conference win and second shutout of the MVC season on their senior night. Senior forward Kai Phillip added his ninth goal of the season in UE’s 1-0 win while graduate goalkeeper Jacob Madden had his third clean sheet of the year.
Evansville hopes to get their first road win in Valley play this week as they travel to Belmont for the final game of the season. The Aces last played the Bruins in Nashville during the 2021 fall season prior to Belmont joining the Missouri Valley Conference. In the two team’s 15-game series, UE holds the edge with 12 wins and last won in Tennessee in 2016. Evansville won the team’s final meeting in 2022 in the MVC Tournament Semifinals, posing a 1-0 shutout against the Bruins at Missouri State.
Belmont comes into Wednesday’s game with an 8-6-2 overall record and a 3-4 conference record. The Bruins are coming off a tough 5-0 loss to the winners of the MVC Regular Season, Western Michigan. The 5-0 loss was the most goals conceded by Belmont since a similar defeat at UNC Wilmington on Oct. 13, 2019. The Bruins are led by sophomore forward Brock Kiper and graduate midfielder Jansen Wilson. Kiper leads the team in goals with 5 along with 4 assists while Wilson has 5 assists and 4 goals on the season.
The Aces are in a multiple-tie scenario heading into Wednesday. With seven points, the Aces are tied with Northern Illinois for the final spot in the tournament. A win against the Bruins would secure a spot in the tournament for UE. A result against Belmont could also secure Evansville the final seed of the tournament if NIU either ties or loses to Bowling Green.