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June 11 – June 17

This Week in Indiana History


zoo June 11, 1988 The Indianapolis Zoo opened in its new location at White River Park.  It had moved from its original site in Washington Park.

June 13, 1893  Antoinette Leach was granted the right to practice law by the Indiana Supreme Court, becoming the state’s first female attorney.

Leach


GRC Memorial June 14, 1936 President Franklin D. Roosevelt was in Vincennes to dedicate the George Rogers Clark Memorial. In his speech, the President said that Clark “saved for us the fair land between the mountains and the Father of the Waters.”

June 17, 1884 Tri-State College opened in Angola. Originally named for its location in Indiana and its proximity to Michigan and Ohio, the school is now known as Trine University. Trine

Our Where in Indiana from last week was a photo of Cole Porter’s childhood home in Peru.

CP Home

Where in Indiana?

Do you know where this photograph was taken?

Visit us on Instagram to submit your answer.

June 11

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Indiana Statehouse Tour Office

Indiana Department of Administration

Guided Tours of the Indiana Statehouse are offered Monday through Saturday.  For more information, contact us.

(317) 233-5293
captours@idoa.in.gov


Statehouse Virtual Tour

Indiana Quick Quiz

1. The song “Stardust” by this Indiana artist has been recorded more than 1,500 times?

2. Adopted as the first State symbol in 1913, what is the name of Indiana’s official state song?

3. Before he was working for the New Order and General Snoke, this actor grew up in Mishawaka?

4. Robert Wise from Winchester, won four academy awards, including Best Director and Best Picture for what two films?

Answers Below


Did You Know???

The Indiana Statehouse was featured on Journey Indiana!


Answers

1. Hoagy Carmichael

2. On the Banks of the Wabash Far Away

3. Adam Driver

4. West Side Story and The Sound of Music

Otters fall to Boomers on Saturday night

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Evansville, Ind. – The Evansville Otters were held to two runs, stranding six runners in scoring position to fall to the Schaumburg Boomers 5-2 Saturday night at Bosse Field.

The Otters put a runner in scoring position in eight of nine innings with eight total hits but could only manage two hits.

Noah Myers started Evansville off with a double to lead off the 1st inning. Dakota Phillips banged a double off the wall to score Myers and give the Otters a 1-0 lead.

Schaumburg took the lead in the third inning with two singles, two walks and a hit batter costing Evansville two runs.

The Boomers extended the lead with four base hits in the fourth inning plating two more runs.

Evansville cut the lead to two in the sixth inning as Jeffrey Baez led off with a base hit and Jacob Olson’s sacrifice fly scored Baez.

Schaumburg added one more insurance run in the eighth.

Jhon Vargas kept Evansville in the game coming out of the bullpen in the fifth inning. In his first relief appearance of the season, he limited the Boomers to just four hits over five innings of work allowing one run.

Bryan Rosario stole a base in the second inning for his 24th bag of the season. He continues to lead the Frontier League in stolen bases. He also extended his on-base streak to 16 games.

Evansville wraps up the series against Schaumburg Sunday evening at Bosse Field. A 5:05 PM CT first pitch kicks off River City Pride Night and a Dog Days of Summer with discounted hot dogs and fans encouraged to bring their dogs.

All home and road Otters games this season are televised on FloSports with audio-only coverage available for free on the Evansville Otters YouTube page.

UE’s Baer Wins Israel National Championship In 100 Breaststroke

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NETANYA, Israel – University of Evansville rising senior Alon Baer (Gesher HaZiv, Israel) has had a very decorated career as a member of the UE men’s swimming and diving program over the past three years.  Now, he can add the title of “National Champion” to his list of achievements, as Baer took home the individual title in the men’s 100-Meter Breaststroke event earlier today during the 2023 Israeli Championships at the Wingate Institute in Netanya, Israel.

Baer posted a time of 1:01.85 to best Kristian Pitshugin by 0.32 seconds and take home the individual title in the men’s 100-Meter Breaststroke.  Baer also placed second in the 50-Meter Breaststroke, finishing just 0.07 seconds behind Pitshugin to take home the silver in the event with a time of 28.46 seconds.  It has continued a strong week in the pool at the Israeli Championships for Baer, who also placed fifth in the men’s 200-Meter Breaststroke on Wednesday.

“In prelims, I placed third with a time of 1:02.63,” said Baer after winning the 100-Meter Breaststroke.  “I opened as hard as I could in the final, going 28.67 in the first 50, and managed to hold on for the win!”

Baer became Evansville’s first-ever Mid-American Conference individual champion this past March, as he took home the MAC title in the 200-Yard Breaststroke.  Baer earned first-team All-MAC honors for his efforts at the MAC Championships, while also capturing Academic All-MAC honors for his work both in and out of the pool this year.  Baer is the school-record holder in both the 100- and 200-Yard Breaststroke events at UE, and he was earned the Acespys’ award for “Best Male Athlete” in UE’s season-ending awards ceremony.

EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT

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EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT

MEDIA

FOOTNOTE:  EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT information was provided by the EPD and posted by the City-County-County Observer without opinion, bias, or editing.

Senators Braun and colleagues introduce bipartisan “Promising Pathway Act” to help patients with ALS

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mike braun
mike Braun

Senators Braun, Gillibrand, and colleagues introduce bipartisan Promising Pathway Act to help patients with ALS and other life-threatening diseases get treatments

The bipartisan bill will help patients with ALS and other life-threatening diseases like DIPG get access to life-saving treatments

WASHINGTON – Today, Senators Mike Braun, Kirsten Gillibrand, Lisa Murkowski, Kevin Cramer and Roger Wicker are introducing the Promising Pathway Act, a bill to help Americans with ALS and other life-threatening diseases such as DIPG get early access to promising treatments.

Americans diagnosed with ALS are typically given 3 years to live. ALS has no cure, but there are promising treatments. The promising Pathway Act allows ALS patients to receive early access to treatments under provisional approval while research continues for full FDA approval.

The bill will also help patients with other life-threatening such as Diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma (DIPG).

Treatments eligible for provisional approval under PPA must have substantial evidence of safety and early evidence of positive therapeutic outcomes.

The promising Pathway Act would also open up the door to provisional approval for treating other terminal diseases with limited to no current treatment options.

“Americans with life-threatening and terminal diseases like ALS don’t have time to waste on a bureaucratic journey through red tape, only to be denied access,” says Senator Braun. “I’m proud that the Promising Pathway Act is now a bipartisan solution to help these Americans get access to life-saving treatments.” – Sen. Braun

“Patients with life-threatening illnesses can’t wait for years for the FDA to approve new drugs. They need treatment as soon as possible, and this bill would help make sure they get it. The Promising Pathway Act would open a provisional FDA approval pathway for drugs and therapies that treat conditions where the disease progresses rapidly and few to no treatment options exist while continuing to ensure that these new therapies are safe and effective.”—Sen. Gillibrand

“Red tape bureaucracy delays access to treatment for ALS patients, and those with conditions don’t have time to wait. The FDA’s complex approval process for drugs and therapies only adds to the stress of patients and families weighing various treatment options. Removing barriers and establishing a rolling, priority pathway for the approval of lifesaving treatments is the least we can do.”—Sen. Cramer

“I AM ALS appreciates the bipartisan efforts of Senators Braun and Gillibrand with the Promising Pathway Act. We look forward to working with the Senators along with the FDA, clinical experts, and our own community to ensure that people facing rare, rapidly progressing, fatal diseases like ALS always have access to quality treatments pathways.” - Andrea Goodman, I AM ALS CEO

“While the FDA is the gold standard for drug review and approval, the agency can exercise greater flexibility when making decisions for patients facing aggressive terminal diseases like ALS. Given that most people diagnosed with ALS will be dead in three years, patients and their families do not have time to wait for promising therapies through the long trial approval process. The Promising Pathways Act gives patients the opportunity to make decisions critical to their health, where few opportunities currently exist.”—Steve Gleason, Founder of both Team Gleason and Answer ALS and is a living with ALS

“We support Congressional efforts to expedite access to healthcare innovation for vulnerable patients with serious diseases. In our discussions with FDA regarding Barth syndrome, an ultra-rare life-limiting disease, FDA has acknowledged the need for new approval pathways where traditional efficacy studies are not feasible or ethically possible. The Promising Pathways Act is a vital initiative to bridge this gap for those affected.”— Reenie McCarthy, CEO of Stealth BioTherapeutics


“The Promising Pathways Act is a bipartisan solution to delivering high-quality and lower-cost drugs to American families. By creating a more streamlined approval pathway for drugs that treat rare diseases, drug developers will be able to more effectively deliver life-saving cures to millions of patients in need of care. This legislation is key to creating a Personal Option that puts people in control of their health care.”— Charlie Katebi, Senior Policy Analyst, Americans for Prosperity

“The Promising Pathway Act represents more than just an accelerated and ethical drug pathway.  For children fighting terminal cancers, the Promising Pathway Act represents the first hope we may have at giving them life.  PPA accelerates cures, refocuses therapies on the correct patients and creates an incentive for companies to invest in rare diseases in ways that we’ve never had before.”—Keith Desseriech, the Cure Starts Now

“We thank Senator Braun and the bipartisan group of cosponsors for their efforts to compassionately remove red tape for those with rapidly progressing terminal illnesses. The Promising Pathway Act is a sensible way to give patients and their families access to additional treatments, innovative drugs or biologics, and hope for the future. There’s a compelling and demonstrated need for expedited access to treatments, and allowing this through the PPA is the right thing to do.”—Robin Walker, senior federal affairs director for the Foundation for Government Accountability (FGA)

“The Polen Family wholeheartedly support the Promising Pathway Act and commend Corey for his tireless efforts in shaping this vital legislation. The PPA is a significant step forward in empowering individuals providing opportunities to fight for their lives and to secure access to safe, promising therapies.  We are proud to #StandForCorey in championing this important cause.”—The Polen Family

“The Promising Pathway Act offers a transformative solution to the critical challenges faced in accelerating the search for a cure for brain cancer and other deadly diseases. With three decades of experience working closely with brain cancer patients, I have witnessed the hurdles posed by the lengthy and costly journey from lab to patient, as well as the complexities of accessing potentially beneficial drugs that may contribute to breakthrough treatments.”— Al Musella of the Musella Foundation

“The Promising Pathway Act empowers the entire healthcare ecosystem to work more closely together to ensure smart and timely review of important new therapies and reinforces the adoption of innovative pre and post-marketing 21st century regulatory science.”— Peter Pitts

“We believe this potential pathway may provide timely access for patients grappling with rare, life-threatening diseases by striking a delicate balance between the need for urgency and a strong commitment to ensuring the safety and effectiveness of treatments.”—Meredith Manning, PharmEssentia President, The Americas

“The Promising Pathway Act has the potential to transform the search for cures for deadly diseases by addressing critical challenges to development and patient access. By further streamlining the approval process for rare disease treatments, the Promising Pathway Act empowers drug developers to more efficiently deliver treatments to patients in desperate need. It stands to revolutionize healthcare and provide hope for patients with life-threatening diseases that currently lack suitable treatment options.”— Anish Bhatnagar, M.D., Chief Executive Officer of Soleno Therapeutics.

The Promising Pathway Act has enormous support among patient communities.

The Promising Pathway Act creates a provisional approval pathway for promising treatments for diseases like ALS that progress rapidly, have few or no treatment options, and result in death.

BACKGROUND:

  • Promising Pathway Act (PPA): this bill would expedite beneficial outcomes for patients by requiring the FDA to establish a rolling, real-time, priority review pathway for drugs intended to treat, prevent, or diagnose serious or life-threatening diseases or conditions.
  • Under this pathway, FDA would grant time-limited, provisional approval to drugs that demonstrate substantial evidence of safety, and relevant, early evidence of efficacy. Drug sponsors would be allowed to incorporate scientifically-substantiated surrogate endpoints and real-world data to demonstrate the efficacy of the drugs under review. The period of provisional approval is time-limited and effective for a two-year period.
  • Drug sponsors may request provisional approval status renewal for subsequent two-year periods (up to a total of eight years) and can apply for full approval at any time. PPA would require patient registries for all provisionally approved drugs to track patient usage until the drug is fully approved.
  • The FDA would review the drug and renew provisional approval status based on real world data collected in the patient registries—which track patient usage of provisionally approved drugs—until the drug receives full approval or provisional approval expires. Under this provisional approval pathway, those with rapidly-progressing terminal illnesses would have access to drugs that provide their only hope for treatment, and real-world data collected from these patients would be incorporated into the drug approval process.

 

 

STALKER TURNED KILLER PLEADS GUILTY TO 45 YEARS FOR MURDER

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STALKER TURNED KILLER PLEADS GUILTY TO 45 YEARS FOR MURDER

June 9, 2023

Evansville, IN – Prosecutor Diana Moers announces that, on June 9, 2023, Clifton Bryant Fletcher pleaded guilty to murder and agreed to 45 years executed in the Indiana Department of Correction for killing a woman whom he regularly stalked.

On December 4, 2022, EPD officers received 911 calls for a woman shot by a man in a white Tahoe. The victim was found deceased, and officers collected .45 caliber shell casings at the crime scene. Prior to the shooting, the victim was on her way home from a new boyfriend’s house. She was on the phone with a friend, who told police that Fletcher had been following her despite her telling him she did not want to speak with him. It was later discovered that Fletcher had been loaned a white Tahoe, and a .45 caliber semi-automatic handgun was found in that vehicle. Police records indicate that Fletcher had previously pointed a gun at the victim and threatened to kill her and himself.

Prosecutor Moers congratulated her deputy, Josh Hutcheson, EPD Detective Aaron McCormick, and EPD patrol officers for delivering an airtight case that resulted in the defendant having little choice but to plead guilty as charged.

“I want to thank Detective McCormick for his exceptional investigatory work, which was instrumental in the guilty plea and allowing the family of the victim to avoid the trauma of a trial,” said Prosecutor Moers, “This tragedy demonstrates that stalking is a dangerous behavior that can lead to violent, even fatal, action; the Prosecutor’s Office strongly encourages stalking to be taken seriously and reported to law enforcement. We will continue to vigorously prosecute those who incite terror in others’ lives through the harassment, violence, and intimidation that comes with being stalked.”

Sentencing is set for June 28, 2023, before Magistrate Judge Celia Pauli of the Vanderburgh Circuit Court.

 

USI McNew Named 1st-Team Academic All-American

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EVANSVILLE, Ind. – University of Southern Indiana graduate catcher Lucas McNew (Floyds Knobs, Indiana) was named first-team Academic All-American by the College Sports Communicators (CSC). McNew becomes USI’s first student athlete to earn an NCAA Division I Academic All-America honor and the seventh Eagle in the history of USI Baseball.
 
To be eligible for the CSC Academic All-America Award, a student-athlete must be a starter or important reserve with legitimate athletic credentials and at least a 3.5 cumulative grade point average (4.0 scale). They must have reached a sophomore athletic and academic standing at the institution and must have completed at least one full academic year at the institution.
 
The honor caps off an award filled season for McNew. He was named pre-season All-Ohio Valley Conference, second-team All-OVC, and CSC Academic All-District in addition to the Academic All-American.
 
McNew, a USI graduate with a bachelor’s degree in management and a master’s degree in business administration, started all 55 games in his final season. He batted .310 with 44 runs scored, 44 RBIs, 11 doubles, two triples, and five home runs, in addition to posting a team-best 18 multi-hit games and tied for the team-lead with 12 multi-RBI games.
 
The .307 career hitter finished his USI career tying for 13th all-time with 212 hits; ranked fifth in home runs (25); fifth in RBIs (170); sixth in doubles (51); and tied for 14th in runs scored (142). He also was a versatile player during his career, seeing action in six different positions (catcher, first base, second base, third base, right field, and left field) throughout his five seasons.
 
McNew and the Screaming Eagles ended the programs first season at Division I and in the OVC with an appearance in the conference tournament, an 8-15 league record, and a 17-38 overall record.

Indy Peace Fellowship launches campaign to build community and reduce gun violence

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By Kyra Howard, TheStatehouseFile.com

  • Jun 9, 2023 

he Indy Peace Fellowship, an initiative started in 2022 by the Indy Public Safety Foundation and the Indianapolis Office of Public Health and Safety, has kicked off a multiple-month campaign to let community members know how they can join ongoing efforts to reduce gun violence.

The #IChoosePeace campaign is the first of its kind for the Indy Peace Fellowship. Its launch coincides with June’s national gun violence awareness month and will continue through October.

Dane Nutty, president and CEO of the Indy Public Safety Foundation said June is just the start for this year’s plans for the fellowship.

Over the next few months Indy Peace Fellowship will host and attend events across the city. Nutty said outreach will focus on building community and directing individuals to resources to cover their basic needs.

“So we might be connecting individuals with food resources, transportation resources, a lot of social determinants of public health and safety that end up, kind of, down the line being causes for violence,” said Nutty. “So a lot of that is raising awareness, having our staff out there at the communities that might have the most significant challenges in the city of Indianapolis and just making sure that we have that availability.”

‘Pledge wall’ showing various statements on the Indy Peace Fellowship website.

Screenshot by Kyra Howard, TheStatehouseFile.com.

The Indy Peace Fellowship has also established an online wall as part of  #IChoosePeace where people can share their pledge for choosing peace and a tab to get involved on their site.

Some pledges are motivated by wanting a safer community for loved ones. Other people share stories of loss that motivated them to make the pledge.

One person said they were choosing peace for their friends and family. “I choose peace for my family and friends in my community. I vow to be a servant leader in my neighborhood and practice peaceful solutions.”

A woman said she wanted “To foster a safe and happy environment for my grandchildren and children everywhere.”

One individual highlighted the pain for losing loved ones. “I have had 2 classmates die from gun violence, they should have graduated 2023.”

June is the campaign  kick-off but the fellowship will work to increase awareness and create collective action through October. October is Domestic Violence Awareness Month and one of the busiest months for homicides and non-fatal shootings in Indianapolis according to Nutty.

Indy Peace Fellow also has a life coach program in which individuals can participate. The program aims to offer hope and opportunity according to their website.

“Our main focus is intervening with individuals who have a high risk of committing or being a victim of gun violence,” said Nutty. “We utilize a 12- to 18-month life coach model that provides very intensive engagement and intervention to make sure that we’re identifying and meeting what needs they may have in their life that are leading them towards that choice.”

The Indy Peace Fellowship now has an ongoing relationship with the city of Indianapolis. Mayor Joe Hogsett helped announce the kickoff of the Indy Peace Fellowship campaign. He attended the kick off event along with other Indy Peace fellowship partners on May 31st at the Indianapolis Central Library. This is just one part of Hogsett’s effort to reduce gun violence and continue his public safetyinitiative.

“It was a natural fit for us to work alongside the city to kind of leverage the benefits of a city agent and a nonprofit working on such a significant issue in our city,” said Nutty. “We have a very good relationship with the mayor’s office and the Office of Public Health and Safety and help connect the community with both of those organizations.”

FOOTNOTE:  Kyra Howard is a reporter for TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.Â