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TREZZ HOMBREZZ PAY HOMAGE TO ZZ TOP AT 421 LOUNGE!
TREZZ HOMBREZZ PAY HOMAGE TO ZZ TOP AT 421 LOUNGE!
Complete with beards, sunglasses and loads of talent, TreZZ HombreZZ delivers the look and sound of a classic ZZ Top experience from the first note to the very last. This ZZ Top tribute band pays reverence to the original Texas band’s influence this weekend at Tropicana Evansville’s 421 Lounge!
Formed in 2011, TreZZ HombreZZ precisely executes cuts from ZZ Top’s best-selling albums, 1983’s Eliminator and 1985’s Afterburner, as well as other well-known albums. Songs include “Gimme All Your Lovin’,” “Legs,” “Got Me Under Pressure,” “Sharp Dressed Man,” “Sleeping Bag,” “Cheap Sunglasses” and much, much more!
Come hear TreZZ HombreZZ rock the house at 421 Casino Lounge on Friday and Saturday, March 8 & 9 from 8PM – 1AM!  Must be 21 years of age or older. No admission fee, just a two-drink minimum for a night of fun!
For more information, contact Bobbi Warren, Bobbi Warren Productions, at 812-401-0094 or bobbi.warren@att.net.
About Tropicana Evansville
Tropicana Evansville is a multi-million dollar entertainment complex located on the scenic banks of the Ohio River in southwestern Indiana.  The single-level 24-hour casino encompasses 45,000 square feet of gaming space featuring over 1,100 slot games, over 30 table games, a dedicated Poker Room and a High Limit Room. Accommodations include a 243-room hotel tower and a 95-room boutique hotel. The property showcases an ultramodern entertainment lounge, four dining options, four bars, a conference center, riverfront event center, and a 1,660-vehicle attached parking garage.
Must be 21. Gambling Problem? Call 1-800-9 WITH IT. For more information, visit www.tropicana.net or:
Facebook – https://www.facebook.com/tropicanaevansville
Twitter – https://twitter.com/TropicanaEV
YouTube – https://www.youtube.com Tropicana Evansville Casino
Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/tropicanaevansville
Snapchat – @tropevansville
Indiana Men’s and Women’s Swimming & Diving Capture Big Ten Titles in Same Season for First Time in History
 BLOOMINGTON, Ind. – For the first time in school history, both Indiana University men’s and women’s swimming and diving teams captured the Big Ten Championship in the same season.
The Hoosier men won the team’s 27th Big Ten title and third-straight conference crown, a feat not accomplished since 1983-85. The IU women’s squad won the team’s sixth Big Ten championship, the first for the team since 2011.
At the conference championships, the two Indiana teams combined to win 20 Big Ten titles and 38 medals overall – both league-best totals. The Hoosiers combined to win six of the 10 relays at the Big Ten Championships and three of the six diving events.
Individually, Vini Lanza became the first man in Big Ten history to be named Swimmer of the Championships for the third-straight season. The senior won five conference titles on the week, along with a pair of silver medals.
The Hoosiers also had a pair of divers earn the highest honor possible in the Big Ten, as both Jessica Parratto and James Connor were named Diver of the Championships. Parratto won the 1-meter and platform dives, as well as a bronze medal in the 3-meter. Connor made the most of his week, taking gold in his two events, the 1-meter and 3-meter dives. On the men’s side, IU has had the Diver of the Championships six of the last eight seasons.
Indiana also had a league-best 15 swimmers and divers named First-Team All-Big Ten, three more than Michigan.
Lilly King ended her Big Ten career with three more league titles, winning both the 100 and 200 breaststroke events for the fourth-straight time. King also helped Indiana win the women’s 200 medley relay for the second-straight year. In her gold medal win in the 100 breast, King broke all the records, posting the fastest time in history with a mark of 55.88.
Combined, the Hoosiers set one American record, one NCAA record, three Big Ten records, six Big Ten Meet records, seven school records, and six pool records. The teams also amassed an impressive 14 NCAA A cuts, 186 NCAA B cuts, 31 NCAA Zones qualifying scores and recorded 136 career-best performances.
Up next for the Indiana University men’s and women’s swimming and diving teams will be the NCAA Championships later this month in Austin, Texas.
The No. 2-ranked Hoosier men will look to build on a tremendous showing at the 2018 NCAA Championships, where the team won four NCAA titles en route to a third-place finish, the best for the program in 43 years. For the third-straight season, Indiana finished as the top Big Ten team at the NCAA Championships – the best stretch for IU since accomplishing the feat for 15-straight seasons from 1964-78.
On the women’s side, King will look to win her fourth-straight NCAA crown in both the 100 and 200 breaststroke events. As a team in 2018, the Hoosiers (8th Place) posted the program’s third-straight top-10 finish at the NCAA Championships for the first time since accomplishing the feat from 2008-10. The top-10 finish was the ninth in school history.
Be sure to keep up with all the latest news on the Indiana men’s and women’s swimming and diving teams on social media – Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram.
—
Scott Burns
Commentary: A Friendship That Moves Mountains
By John Krull
TheStatehouseFile.comÂ
INDIANAPOLIS – Paul Farmer and Todd McCormack don’t need much encouragement to start teasing each other.
They have been doing it for decades.
They started long before Farmer was a world-famous infectious disease doctor, Harvard University professor and subject of an award-winning book, Tracy Kidder’s “Mountains Beyond Mountains.†And long before McCormack was one of the driving forces behind sports programming powerhouse IMG.
It began even before they became co-founders of Partners in Health, a $170 million-a-year organization that brings medical care to some of the poorest and most endangered places on earth.
No, their pattern of joshing each other began 40 years ago, when they were freshmen at Duke University. They met when they moved into their dorm. They began a friendship that has saved lives around the globe.
They take their work more seriously than they do their role in it.
When I ask them, before an audience of students and community members at Franklin College, what drew them together, McCormack offers up a joke.
Maybe it had something to do with the fact, he says, “that we both were dumped by our girlfriends on the same day†and needed to commiserate together.
After the laughter dies down, Farmer and McCormack dive deeper. They say theirs began as a friendship of ideas. They traded books and arguments back and forth in a near-frenzy. They both had a passion for social justice.
The moment, though, that they acknowledge a great seriousness of purpose, they revert to school-boy teasing again. Farmer reminds McCormack that he got the better grade in calculus. McCormack tweaks Farmer about picking up his dry cleaning.
In many ways, theirs was an unlikely pairing.
Farmer lived a large part of his childhood in a salvaged tuberculosis testing bus with his parents and five siblings. His father worked as a teacher, his mother as a cashier at a grocery store. They parked the bus in a trailer park in rural Florida.
McCormack is a self-identified “rich kid from Cleveland.†When he was young, his family summered in Scotland, where he, a competitive golfer, played some of the finest courses in the world.
The differences in their upbringing became source material for their teasing, but not an obstacle to their friendship.
When Farmer found both great need and his life’s work in alleviating suffering and poverty in Haiti, he asked McCormack to help.
They were young, not long out of college. With two other friends their age or younger and older Boston philanthropist Tom White, they founded Partners in Health.
Out of that youthful initiative has grown an enterprise that has built hospitals, provided essential medical care and strengthened health-care systems in Haiti, in Peru, in Rwanda and elsewhere.
They complemented each other. Farmer, in addition to being one of the finest medical minds of his generation, had a visionary’s gift for identifying need and determining hands-on ways to meet it. McCormack had a keen understanding of organization and finance.
They understood each other.
They trusted each other.
When they set aside the joking, their reverence for each other is clear. McCormack speaks of Farmer’s “vision†and “commitment†in hushed tones. Farmer describes McCormack as “chivalrous.â€
To call them friends, Farmer continues, is misleading.
“More like brothers,†he says.
As they talk, I can’t help but think about the audacity of their lives.
When they were young – so young – they set out to save lives and maybe even save the world. They both say that they and Partners in Health haven’t done enough, but the truth is that thousands – maybe even tens of thousands or hundreds of thousands – of people are alive today who wouldn’t have been if not for their efforts.
What drives them?
Faith.
Much of that faith is religious, but much of it also is based in human beings’ ability to honor their best instincts.
There’s a quote on the Partners in Health website. It’s from Margaret Mead, and it reads:
“Never underestimate the power of a small group of committed people to change the world. In fact, it is the only thing that ever has!â€
That was true 40 years ago when two college freshmen became friends.
And, those friends say, it’s still true today.
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.
Nominations For The 2019 Arts Awards Open Now
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Insulin Prices Expected to Drop
Insulin prices could be going down.
Indy-based company Eli Lilly and Company is announcing to sell a half-price version of its popular insulin injection, Humalog.
This comes as a number of other drug makers are under fire over the rising cost of insulin.
According to a recent study, the cost of insulin for treating Type-1 Diabetes in the United States has nearly doubled during a five-year period.
Two U.S. senators launched an investigation into the rising costs, but drug makers say they have to keep prices high because of the rebates they pay to insurance companies.
Comments
Obituary for Joyce Ann Clements
Friends unable to attend may send a condolence to the family at www.KoehlerFuneralHome.com.
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HOT JOBS IN EVANSVILLE
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$50M HHGregg suit attacks insiders for accepting customer deposits to very end
Gregf Andrews for www.theindianalawyer.com
A lawsuit quietly wending its way through a Marion County court zings former HHGregg CEO Bob Riesbeck and three other insiders of the failed chain, alleging they allowed it to continue accepting customers’ deposits on merchandise long after its tailspin cast doubt on whether it had the financial wherewithal or inventory to fulfill the orders.
The suit, which was filed by unsecured creditors of the appliance and electronics chain and seeks more than $50 million in damages, charges the defendants’ behavior violated the state’s consumer protection laws and constituted a breach of their fiduciary duties to the company.
The deposits represented the upfront payment for merchandise — either by cash or credit card — which was supposed to be followed by the swift delivery to shoppers’ homes. The approach is standard in the retail industry but can turn problematic when a company rapidly loses liquidity, leaving it short of cash just as nervous suppliers begin to restrict shipments.
The continued acceptance of the deposits — which HHGregg was able to treat like interest-free loans — saddled the company “with tens of millions of dollars in unwarranted and unnecessary liabilities and recklessly caused the permanent destruction of the company’s value as a going concern,†according to the complaint.
The financial baggage scared away suitors that otherwise might have bought all or part of the company, according to the suit, which uses internal company documents to provide a blow-by-blow account of the chain’s final months, as executives evolved from viewing financial struggles as temporary to concluding there was no way out.
Indianapolis-based HHGregg racked up more than $270 million in losses from 2014 until the spring of 2017, when it filed for bankruptcy and shut down, ending 62 years in business. The chain — done in by overexpansion and a collapse in sales of consumer electronics — at its peak operated 228 stores and employed more than 5,000 workers.
Fighting for cash
Creditors filed the suit in an attempt to put a dent in their losses by accessing one of HHGregg’s only remaining large assets — its directors’ and officers’ liability insurance coverage. Court records don’t reveal the amount of HHGregg’s D&O coverage, though an attorney for the company has said it’s in the tens of millions of dollars.
The case was filed by the committee of unsecured creditors, a group appointed as part of HHGregg’s Indianapolis bankruptcy case. It filed the 41-page suit last July, though its existence has not been previously reported. The defendants are Riesbeck, Chief Financial Officer Kevin Kovacs, Vice President Lance Peterson and longtime board member Benjamin Geiger.
Attorneys at the Indianapolis law firm Bose McKinney & Evans LLP representing the defendants asked Indiana Commercial Court Judge Heather Welch to dismiss the case without a full-blown trial, but in January she declined.
She seemed unsympathetic to defendants’ argument that they merely were continuing to operate the business as normal when they accepted the customer deposits, calling that an “overly-simple characterization.â€
Riesbeck and Jim Moloy, a partner at Bose McKinney & Evans representing the insiders, declined to comment. But in a response to the suit filed Feb. 13, Bose McKinney & Evans argued that the board is protected by the Indiana business judgment rule — which offers broad leeway to directors who act in good faith — and that executives were obligated to follow the board’s direction and did so.
In another filing, the attorneys called the suit “farfetched†and “incredible,†asserting that had HHGregg stopped accepting deposits by October 2016, as the suit suggests it should have, that would been tantamount to shutting down the company.
“The board cannot be faulted for their desire to see HHGregg continue or their hope that the 2016 Christmas season would return HHGregg to profitability,†the filing said.
Further, the attorneys argued, “The premise of the committee’s claims — that consumers made deposits and never received either their merchandise or refunds — is false. Virtually, all of HHGregg’s customers were eventually made whole.â€
But Adam Cole, a partner representing the plaintiffs with Chipman Brown Cicero & Cole LLP in New York City, disagreed. He said that, in the bankruptcy case, thousands of customers still are owed about $1 million for undelivered merchandise.
He said the big losers were HHGregg and its lenders, which had to provide refunds once the company landed in bankruptcy, as well as the credit card companies, which reversed charges when deliveries did not occur. The provider of HHGregg’s private-label credit card, Synchrony Bank, provided more than $13 million in customer refunds, and Discover, Visa and Mastercard provided millions more, according to the lawsuit.
When HHGregg sought bankruptcy protection in March 2017, it had $50 million in unfilled customer deposits, in addition to $56 million borrowed under its line of credit, court records show.
A financial adviser for HHGregg found that, as of that month, the number of unfilled deposits was 69,882. And despite the chain’s boasts of rapid delivery, 61 percent of those deposits had aged at least 30 days and 42 percent had aged at least 90 days, the suit says.
But attorneys for the HHGregg insiders said the level of deposits the company held when it filed for bankruptcy was entirely consistent with historical averages and did not represent a spike.
story continues below
“Clearly, it was not the customer deposits, in isolation, that prevented a going concern sale of HHGregg,†the attorneys wrote, adding that what killed the company “was its inability to adapt to changing consumer preferences and remain profitable in an exceedingly competitive environment.â€
Searching for buyer
The company in February 2017 enlisted investment bankers to find potential investors that would provide a capital infusion or buy all or part of the chain, but suitors “determined the value of HHGregg as a going concern was virtually zero due to the crushing weight of customer deposits,†according to the lawsuit.
The suit says one of the suitors was an investment group assembled by former HHGregg Executive Vice President Gregg Throgmartin, whose family founded the company.
In mid-February, the Throgmartin group said it “could operate the company, reestablish supplier relationships, provide equity, and form a new banking relationship,†the suit says.
But its tone shifted as it learned more about the customer deposits, and a month later it notified HHGregg it was pulling out, according to the suit.
“Gentleman — we have worked extremely hard to make the math make sense, but after the last report regarding customer deposits we see no way to have a go forward business. We are formally stepping out of the process and wish you luck.â€
Throgmartin, who is executive chairman and CEO of suburban Los Angeles-based Skin Laundry, a chain of stores offering walk-in laser facials, did not respond to requests for comment.
The suit says HHGregg management gave thought to the propriety of continuing to accept customer deposits as liquidity problems grew. It quotes Riesbeck at one point acknowledging an “ethical dilemma of putting consumers’ cash at risk†and potential “expos[ure] from a D&O perspective or with [the] Attorney General,†the state official charged with enforcing consumer protection laws.
Paying off debt
The plaintiffs seek damages based only on alleged breaches of fiduciary duty, but they also highlight a variety of other actions by company officials they consider misleading.
For example, they note that, as steep losses began piling up, the company went to extraordinary lengths to pay off its credit line at the end of every quarter so it could report to investors that it was debt-free.
The company had a $300 million credit line with Wells Fargo, and before 2016 that balance rarely climbed above $35 million, according to the suit. Even after it ballooned to $80 million in January 2016, the company managed to find the cash to pay it off as of March 31 and June 30.
But by September of that year, the no-debt streak was in jeopardy. To keep it going, management negotiated a barter transaction with the Connecticut-based advertising agency Icon International under which it agreed to buy a block of HHGregg’s inventory at or below cost for $3.5 million in cash. As part of the deal, HHGregg committed to buying more than $40 million in advertising services in the coming year.
As Dec. 31 approached, Riesbeck and Kovacs looked for new ways to raise cash and explored providing $10 million in gift cards to Icon in return for an infusion. HHGregg wasn’t able to work out a deal, and the company ended the quarter with $30 million in debt.
Meanwhile, because the credit line was collateralized by inventory and inventory was falling, the amount the company could borrow was plummeting. As of Dec. 31, its borrowing limit was just $94 million.
In February 2017, as HHGregg’s problems deepened, Riesbeck threatened to quit unless his salary was increased from $700,000 to $1.75 million, according to the suit, which says he also sought raises for other top executives.
According to the suit, on March 2, the board’s compensation committee denied the request, “primarily due to their belief that this management team caused the company to be filing Chapter 11.â€
In a filing, attorneys for the insiders deny the lawsuit’s description of the salary discussion. The filing says HHGregg’s outside attorneys advised company officials that they should develop a key employee retention plan. Such plans are common in bankruptcy cases and typically include compensation increases to discourage top executives from leaving while a company is going through the reorganization process.•