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Obituary for Sina Ray Davis

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Obituary for Sina Ray Davis

MASON BROTHERS FUNERAL HOME-EVANSVILLE 

Sina Ray Davis was born in Chicago, Illinois on May 8, 1938. She went home to be with the Lord on March 31, 2019. Sina Ray Davis attended the Zion Temple A.M.E. Zion Church. She was a loving mother of eight children.

Sina attended Rosenwald High School where she was a majorette. She was always active and enjoyed playing softball for the church. She worked for Brown Badgett Enterprise until her day of retirement.

Sina was preceded in death by her loving mother, Viola Eva Hughes, and her father, Mr. Joseph “Joe” Hughes. She was also preceded in death by her loving husband, James “Bighead” Davis who passed in 1993.

She leaves to cherish her memory, daughters: Delores Yates, Sarah Davis, Laurine Davis, and Tonia (Marshall) Bass; sons: James (Denise) Davis, Antonio (Denise) Davis, John (Tammy) Davis, Craig (Misty) Davis; honorary sons: Jeff Rutledge, Frankie Hughes, William Watkins Jr., and Charles Hollingsworth Jr.; twelve grandchildren; twelve great-grandchildren; three sisters-in-law; longtime family friends: Brown Jr. and Sue Cumbee Badgett; and a host of nieces, nephews, cousins, and friends.

Funeral services are Saturday, April 6, 2019, at 1:00 pm at Zion Temple A.M.E. Zion Church at 205 N. Church Street in Madisonville with a Saturday visitation from 11:00 am until service time. Wake service will be on Friday, April 5, 2019, from 4pm-7pm at Zion Temple A.M.E. Zion Church. Burial at Eastside Odd Fellows Cemetery. Arrangements are entrusted to Mason & Sons Funeral Home. Condolences may be left at www.masonbrothersfs.com

Aces Baseball plays host to UT-Martin Wednesday

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On the heels of their first Missouri Valley Conference sweep in two years, the University of Evansville plays host to Tennessee-Martin Wednesday night at Charles H. Braun Stadium.

The Aces (14-9), who swept conference rival Bradley in Peoria this past weekend, have won five in a row, their longest winning streak since 2016. The Skyhawks (11-16) come into Wednesday night’s contest winners of three of their last four, including Sunday’s series-sealing win over Morehead State at home.

The pitching matchup will be a showdown of freshman right-handers, with Evansville sending Shane Gray (1-0, 3.33 ERA) out to the hill and UT-Martin countering with Seth Petry (1-0, 5.11 ERA).

First pitch from Braun Stadium is at 6 p.m.

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EPD REPORT

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EPD REPORT

IS IT TRUE APRIL 3, 2019

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We hope that today’s “IS IT TRUE” will provoke honest and open dialogue concerning issues that we, as responsible citizens of this community, need to address in a rational and responsible way?

IS IT TRUE that the political deal made to enable one of the Gary, Indiana casinos to move to a location in Terre Haute there was a provision that was going to pay the City of Evansville a sum of $6 million to compensate us for the anticipated loss of business from people who will choose the new Terre Haute casino because of location?

IS IT TRUE the latest version of the political deal has removed that $6 million for City of Evansville that would put a lot of cash into the tax coffers of the City of Evansville? …the casino at French Lick was scheduled to get $2.5 million over several years if this deal passes and that has not changed?

IS IT TRUE the CCO does not understand how something that had been calculated and agreed to by elected public officials can be cast aside so easily?…the CCO feels that some of the local people in a positions of political power like Evansville Mayor Lloyd Winnecke, Ways and Means member-State Representative Hollie Sullivan, Lt. Governor Suzanne Crouch from Vanderburgh County and Governor Eric Holcomb should intervene and get that $6 million that was originally supposed to be allocated back to  the City of Evansville? …”it’s a well-known fact that the Governor has final say over the plans to move two Gary casinos to more lucrative locations”?  …if the legislature eliminates the provision of Evansville receiving the $6 million dollars the Governor can veto the actions taken by the State Legislative body?

IS IT TRUE according to the Indy Star the Chairman and CEO of Spectacle Entertainment, Rod Ratcliff have contributed more than $1 million to the Republican Governors Association since 2016?   ..the Indy Star reported that the RGA became a financial lifeline for Indiana Governor Eric Holcomb in 2016 after his campaign got a late start and was then restricted from accessing the campaign funds of his predecessor, now-Vice President Mike Pence?

IS IT TRUE the Indy Star also reported: “that since 2016, Rod Ratcliff’s companies have given $577,500 to the Republican State Leadership Committee, a national organization that helps down-ballot statewide and legislative candidates”?  …”this group reportedly gave more than $550,000 to the campaigns of Holcomb’s lieutenant governor, Suzanne Crouch, and the Indiana House Republican Campaign Committee, which is led by House Speaker Brian Bosma”?

IS IT TRUE that our readers feel when elected officials get a backdoor $500,000 political contributions that it should be considered illegal? …as we all know, it looks like politicians and real people have two sets of laws?  … it looks like politicians can legally get away with things that regular people and businesses can’t?

IS IT TRUE over the year’s governmental watchdogs have expressed concerns that amendments made to casino gaming laws were seemingly motivated by corporations or individuals giving donations to the right political person or political group? …we wonder why hasn’t one of these governmental watchdog groups hasn’t asked the proper enforcement authorities to look into any possible ethical wrongdoing in anyone in elected office or the gaming business?

IS IT TRUE it was announced yesterday by the Indiana Firebird-Evansville head football coach Nick Hart that there will not be an Indiana Firebirds indoor football team at the Ford Center this year?  …all we can say to the never tested coach of the Indiana Firebirds-Evansville Nick Hart is why didn’t he realize that the NGL was a “no go” a long time ago?   … Coach Hart should have gotten a hint that the NGL was in trouble when the home and practice uniforms were never ordered, when the home games playing turf was never ordered, when the arrangement to house his out-of-town players during the season never happened, when the management of the Ford Center didn’t post the schedule of games to be played at Ford Center and most important was why wasn’t he and other employees of the NGL weren’t paid for their services?

IS IT TRUE  the news that the Indiana Firebirds-Evansville will not be playing at the Ford Center this year is no surprise to the City-County Observer and our readers because we been projecting this news for several months?  …looks like the CEO of the Ford Center and our City officials have egg on their faces because they didn’t properly vent this proposed arena football deal?  …they could have saved face if they only read the numerous articles we published during the last several months concerning the legal and financial challenges that the National Gridiron Football Leauge were experiencing?

IS IT TRUE that the newly appointed Evansville Region Representative of the United States Senator Mike Braun is doing a credible job?  …Steven W. Hammer is working day and night carrying the message that the United States Senator from Indiana Mike Braun is a man of his word by following through with his campaign promises?  …we give five  (5) cheers to Steve Hammer and the United States Senator Mike Braun?

IS IT TRUE that Lori Lightfoot, a former U.S. attorney, has been elected Mayor of Chicago? …she will be the first black woman and first openly gay person to lead the nation’s third-largest city?  …Lightfoot beat Toni Preckwinkle, also a black female candidate, in the runoff election Tuesday?   …the two competed after emerging as the top vote-getters among a record 14 candidates in the mayoral election in February?

Todays “Readers Poll” question is: If your an elected official and someone gives your campaign $500,000 what do you feel they expect you to do from them?

Please go to our link of our media partner Channel 44 News located in the upper right-hand corner of the City-County Observer so you can get the up-to-date news, weather, and sports. We are pleased to provide obituaries from several area funeral homes at no costs.  Over the next several weeks we shall be adding additional obituaries from other local funeral homes.  Please scroll down the paper and you shall see a listing of them.

.If you would like to advertise on the CCO please contact us at City-County Observer@live.com

FOOTNOTE:  Any comments posted in this column do not represent the views or opinions of the City-County Observer or our advertisers.”READERS FORUM” 

 

 

 

Commentary: ‘Exoneration,’ Then And Now

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Commentary: ‘Exoneration,’ Then And Now

TheStatehouseFile.com 

 

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Oliver North started yelling.

He and I, along with several off-duty police officers, were riding in a van. He was on a book tour.

This was in 1993, during the early days of Bill Clinton’s presidency, and several years after North had emerged as a national figure in the waning days of Ronald Reagan’s administration.

North had captured America’s attention by testifying before Congress about his contacts with foreign governments and agents in the complicated scandal known as the Iran-Contra affair. The scandal involved breaking American law to sell weapons to Iran and channel the funds to the Contras, a right-wing rebel group in Nicaragua.

During his testimony, North acknowledged that, as a member of Reagan’s national security team, he’d lied to Congress and even other members of the administration about his Iran-Contra dealings.

But he also displayed a potent charisma, a personal magnetism that transformed him overnight from a midlevel White House staffer into a man on horseback leading the rebel hordes as they stormed the castle.

In some ways, he was Donald Trump before Trump turned to politics.

What prompted North to start yelling was a question I asked him.

When we talked, he was preparing to run for Virginia’s U.S. Senate seat. I asked him how he, as a U.S. senator, would react if a member of Bill Clinton’s national security team did what North had done – lied to Congress about a matter of national security.

North erupted.

As the van rolled along, he stood up from his seat and leaned over me. There was no comparison, he yelled. He loved America, he said. That alone justified anything he might have done.

When North’s role in the Iran-Contra affair was first disclosed, he was fired from the Reagan administration and charged with committing 16 felonies. He initially was convicted on three of them, including accepting money illegally and obstructing a congressional inquiry.

But North had testified to Congress under a pledge of limited immunity. His defense team argued, on appeal, that the prosecution had used North’s congressional testimony against him, thus violating the limited immunity agreement.

The appeals court agreed, and North’s conviction was overturned.

Most people would call that getting off on a technicality, but North didn’t.

He said the court’s ruling “exonerated” him.

I’ve thought about that long-ago conversation as I move through the nation’s capital. The talk here now is all about the special counsel’s report submitted by Robert Mueller III and summarized with astonishing rapidity and brevity by Attorney General William Barr.

It’s another case of yet another charismatic man on horseback claiming that his love of America entitles him to ignore America’s laws while proclaiming that legal technicalities “exonerate” him.

North did run for the Senate the year after he talked with me.

He lost.

Part of the reason was that his lies caught up with him. Once the light generated by his televised testimony faded and the American people could think about what he’d said, they weren’t as enthralled by North’s charm.

They realized he was arguing he was above the law.

The Republican he wanted to succeed in the Senate, John Warner, refused to endorse him. Former First Lady Nancy Reagan called North a liar on national television.

North went on to a long career of preaching to the right-wing choir on Fox News and conservative talk radio. He’s now the president of the National Rifle Association.

In none of these places was his record of treating the truth as a disposable commodity considered an obstacle to employment.

It appears now that a more complete version of the Mueller report soon will be released to Congress and the American public.

The bet here is that, once people have a chance to see it and ponder its findings, they will be less likely to accept the contentions of the president and his team that the report “exonerates” him and them.

Their contention, after all, amounts to an admission that, while they didn’t cooperate with the Russians to sway the 2016 election, they did allow themselves to be used by the Russians in that effort.

They weren’t conspirators.

They were dupes.

As in the case of Oliver North, the dust will settle.

It always does.

FOOTNOTE:  John Krull is director of Franklin College’s Pulliam School of Journalism, host of “No Limits” WFYI 90.1 Indianapolis and publisher of TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.

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Indiana Firebirds Will Not Play in 2019 Season

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Indiana Firebirds Will Not Play in 2019 Season

The Indiana Firebirds will not have a 2019 season. The National Gridiron League sited a ‘potential change in ownership’ for the reason the Firebirds will not be playing this year.

According to the Evansville Ford Center’s website, eight home games were removed from the site.

44News is told there is a potential 2020 season.

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Igleheart Brothers, Inc. By Pat Sides

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This view of the Igleheart Brothers plant is dated August 1951, soon after the massive grain storage elevators in the center of the photo were built. The business evolved from a modest flour mill the Igleheart family opened in downtown at Fifth and Locust streets in 1856.

In 1904, the mill relocated to 1600 First Avenue, where it manufactured the successful Swans Down brand of cake flour. Igleheart Brothers merged with General foods in 1926, a partnership that produced the first instant cake mix by the mid-1950s.

The new grain storage elevators significantly enlarged the company’s storage capacity, making Evansville one of the nation’s major grain receiving centers. The large plant is now gone, but the elevators still stand. 

Ivy Tech Community College Speaker Series to Feature Chamber CEO Tara Barney

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President and CEO of the Southwest Indiana Chamber Tara Barney, will be the culminating speaker in the 2019 School of Business Speaker Series at Ivy Tech Community College on Wednesday, April 10. This presentation in the annual series sponsored by Banterra Bank, will be at 6 p.m. in Vectren Auditorium.  It is free and open to the public.

Barney will present the keynote address, “Intentional Collisions.”  She said the topic will address how to apply the science of “thinking outside the box” by seeking out spontaneous opportunities to build a stronger community in the workplace. “As you put yourself out there with diverse thinkers, you will find your superpower, your unique leadership skill,” Barney said. She will address how to pick up some ideas on how to identify it, harness it, and hone it to build your personal career brand.

A public reception is planned prior to this presentation at 5:30 p.m. in the foyer of the auditorium.

Barney serves as the President & CEO of the Southwest Indiana Chamber and works with 18 other staff members to serve over 1,500 chamber members. Prior to joining the Southwest Indiana Chamber in March 2018, she served in a similar position with the Quad Cities Chamber of Commerce for seven years. The Quad Cities Chamber is a business and economic development organization serving a bi-state metropolitan area of 400,000 west of Chicago along the Illinois and Iowa border and worked effectively with more than 30,000 businesses, including several Fortune 500 companies.

Prior to her role at the Quad Cities Chamber of Commerce, she was the President and CEO of the Iowa Quad Cities Chamber of Commerce (formerly known as DavenportOne). The latter organization merged with the Illinois Quad City Chamber in 2010, thus achieving a long-standing interest of the business and civic community to have a single, regional business organization overseeing economic and community advancement.

Through Quad Cities Chamber predecessor organizations, she has nearly 20 years of extensive chamber experience and in working on economic and community development initiatives.  When residing in Ohio, Barney held various roles in economic development with the Cities of Columbus and Toledo in both the public and private sector.  Prior to her tenure in the Quad Cities, Barney resided in Southwest Florida and served on the business attraction staff of the Lee County/Fort Myers Florida Economic Development Office.

Barney holds a Bachelor of Arts degree in Public Administration from Miami University and a M.P.A. from the John Glenn College of Public Policy at The Ohio State University where she was the recipient of the Pacesetter Award.

For additional information, contact Jamie Purcell, instructor of Business Administration, at  jpurcell26@ivytech.edu.