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IT’S A NERDS NIGHT OUT AT TROPICANA EVANSVILLE!

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Let’s travel back to the advent of MTV with the latest and greatest geeks gone wild – the ‘80s tribute band — the RetroNerds!

Adorned in tube socks, pocket protectors and poindexter-style taped-up glasses, they’re live in concert at Tropicana Evansville’s 421 Casino Lounge for the first time this weekend!

Known for their quirky, period-correct geeky attire and amazing energy — which lead vocalist Jason Nelson claims comes from his “proprietary mix of peanut M&Ms, Swedish Fish and sugar” – the RetroNerds are astute musicians and eggheads of music to the max.

Between them, these rocket scientists of rhythm have performed for two Presidents, hold several music degrees, teach in various school districts, and have even played with the St. Louis Philharmonic.

And can they put on a unique show?  TOTALLY!  See them perform in sync with original MTV videos on multiple background screens featuring Prince, Culture Club, Devo, Queen, David Bowie, The Clash’s “Rock the Casbah” and Thomas Dolby’s “She Blinded Me With Science.”

Bassist Mike Steinkamp, sums it up, “You can’t fake enthusiasm.  People can tell right away if you’re going through the motions.  Our enjoyment comes through the music and the zany antics you’ll witness on stage.”

Catch the RetroNerds from 7PM-10:30PM, Friday and Saturday, August 24-25.  Then dance into the night with DJ Ace as he pulls you onto the dance floor with his polished mix of tunes from 11PM-2AM.  No admission fee, just a two-drink minimum for a night of geeky fun!

 

Adopt A Pet

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Mia is a 1-year-old female American Staffordshire (“pit bull”) mix! She is the mom to the “Spice Girls” puppies, who have all been adopted. Mia’s adoption fee is $110 and includes her microchip, vaccines, and spay – no more puppies for her! Contact Vanderburgh Humane at (812) 426-2563 for adoption details!

Otters to host Military Appreciation Night Saturday, August 25 at 6:35 p.m.

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The Evansville Otters will host Military Appeciation Night, presented by the Evansville VA Health Care Center, a Marion (IL) VA Health Care System Facility, on Saturday, August 25 at 6:35 p.m. when the Otters continue their series against the River City Rascals.
Fans are invited to attend and enjoy a night of Evansville Otters baseball at Bosse Field as the Otters welcome and recognize veterans and active members of all branches of the military.
The game will feature two free tickets for each veteran or active military member. Plus, retired and active military personnel will receive discounts in the gift shop.
The Otters will be wearing special-themed jerseys for Military Appreciation Night, and following the game, there will be a game-worn jersey auction.
Veterans and active military members can enter to win one of the special-themed jerseys.
The Otters will also host an on-field recognition for all retired and active military personnel during pregame ceremonies.
The Otters do not want any fan, veteran or active military member to miss out on Military Appreciation Night at Bosse Field.
First pitch from Bosse Field is set for 6:35 p.m. with gates opening an hour before gametime.
The Otters are looking forward to having fans join the affordable, family fun this season at historic Bosse Field.
The Evansville Otters are the 2006 and 2016 Frontier League champions. Season tickets, group outing packages, and single game tickets are on sale now for the 2018 season.
Tickets can be purchased online at evansvilleotters.com, by calling 812-435-8686, or at the Bosse Field box office.

Serengeti Empress in Debutante, Tobacco Road in Juvenile

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Corey Lanerie swept Ellis Park’s pair of 2-year-old stakes but in completely different fashion Sunday: Serengeti Empress led all the way to an electrifying 13 1/2-length blowout over the late-running Include Edition in the $75,000 Ellis Park Debutante. A race later, Tobacco Road wore down stablemate Whiskey Echo to take the $75,000 Ellis Park Juvenile by three-quarters of a length.
Lanerie won four races out of five mounts on the card to take the lead — 24-22 over Shaun Bridgmohan — in the jockey standings for the first time this meet, for which he missed the first six days following the death of his wife, Shantel.
“When I came back here, I didn’t know how well I would do after Shantel’s passing, just if people would give me back my mounts right away,” Lanerie said. “It’s been a blessing. I took off where I left, kind of kept on winning. My business didn’t seem to linger at all. Once I saw I had a little chance, I kind of made it a goal to try to do it and be leading rider for Shantel.”
Debutante: Serengeti Empress shows what she is in romp
Trainer Tom Amoss loved Serengeti Empress even before the 2-year-old filly won her first start by 5 1/2 lengths July 4 at Indiana Grand. He was extremely disappointed when the daughter of Alternation was fourth in Saratoga’s Grade 3 Schuylerville, a race in which Hall of Fame jockey Javier Castellano dropped the whip turning for home.
“We classified her as one of the best in the barn,” Amoss said by phone from New York after Serengeti Empress’ 13 1/2-length laugher over the late-running Include Edition in the $75,000 Ellis Park Debutante. “A big disappointment at Saratoga when Castellano dropped the stick on her and just quit riding her. I’ve never figured out what went wrong in that race. But she came back to show what she was today.”
Serengeti Empress rolled through testing fractions of 22.21 seconds for the first quarter-mile, 45.29 for the half and 1:09.66 for three-quarters of a mile before finishing the seven furlongs in 1:22.29. She paid $4.80 as the 7-5 favorite in the field of 11 two-year-old fillies.
“My filly broke really well right from the gate,” Lanerie said. “She was in hand pretty much all the way around there. When I got to the quarter pole, I kind of pushed the button and she went on and finished all the way to the wire. I had plenty left on the gallop-out. She was so far in front by herself that I think she was getting a little lost. I was keeping her busy. But she didn’t need any encouragement today. She was going to win.
“The sky’s the limit, I think. Tom has done a fantastic job with her, him and his team. I’m sure he’ll get her as far as he can go and do his best. She’s a good one.”
Vickie Foley, trainer of Alexis Harthill’s Include Edition, said she was “loving it,” seeing the fast pace. “But that filly didn’t come back at all,” she said wistfully. “She’s a runner.”
Include Edition trailed the field for half the race, having to come six-wide on the turn. She took second by 1 1/2 lengths over 107-1 shot Lucky Girasol, who won a $16,000 maiden-claiming race at Ellis Park July 29.
Said James Graham, rider Include Edition, who came from well back to win her debut July 15 at Ellis Park: “She tries. She’s just not that quick early. Like in her first race, you say, ‘Oh yeah, maybe a little green and stuff.’ Sent her away a little bit, couldn’t keep up. I tucked in, saved a little ground, made a huge run around the turn. I passed everybody and I looked up and Corey’s 15 in front!
“I think she’ll be better at two turns, and she’s in the growing stage. I like her, I like what she might be able to become. She got a little bit of an education. They were so bunched up in turn and said, ‘OK, I can’t wait and try to go on and hope to kick home.’ Because she’s not quick, she’s just steady. She ran her race, tried her butt off.”
Amoss bought Serengeti Empress for $70,000 for Joel Politi of Columbus, Ohio, at Keeneland’s 2017 September yearling sale. He said the filly will return to his Churchill Downs base and could be pointed for that track’s Grade 2, $200,000 Pocahontas Stakes, whose winner gets an automatic berth and entry fees paid in the $2 million Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Fillies on Nov. 2, also at the Louisville track.
Asked what he liked about Serengeti Empress before she ran, Amoss said, “
“Super intelligent. Went through all of her drills without blinking an eye. I mean, every time we challenged her she was up to it. So when we made her first start with her, it was more because that’s where the maiden race (at Indiana Grand) appeared at that time. We wanted to go to Saratoga, which we kind of pushed that issue together because they were close together. Just happened to have a maiden race at Indiana Grand as opposed to Ellis, so that’s where we ended up.”
Rounding out the field were Shanghai Rain, Somewhere, Profound Legacy, Kristizar, Bivian B, Spice It Up, Wakeeta and La Coyota.
Juvenile: Tobacco Road keeps up comparisons to Lookin At Lee
Corey Lanerie completed his sweep of the stakes by guiding Tobacco Road from eighth to a three-quarters of a length triumph over Whiskey Echo in the $75,000 Ellis Park Juvenile, with Hall of Famer Steve Asmussen training both horses. Manny Wah finished another head back in third in the field of 10 two-year-old colts and geldings.
“He had a completely different trip from the filly,” Lanerie said, referring to Serengeti Empress’ front-running 13 1/2-length romp over Include Edition in the $75,000 Ellis Park Debutante a race earlier. “He doesn’t have as much speed as she did. He broke really good, and then the speed just kind of ran away from him. I had to kind of keep him busy the first quarter of a mile. Once he found his stride around the turn, from the three-eighths to the quarter pole, I could tell I had a lot of horse. It was just trying to time it right and get him to the front at the right time.
“Actually at the quarter pole, I thought I had the two in front of me with ease. I hadn’t really asked my horse. I didn’t think the two in front, that they had that much. When I got to his (Whiskey Echo’s) hip, he proved me wrong. I got a little worried at the eighth pole. And then by the sixteenth pole I was kind of taking control and getting away from them.”
After three races, Tobacco Road has followed the identical path as Lookin At Lee, the 2017 Kentucky Derby runner-up ridden by Lanerie. Both horses are trained by Asmussen and owned by Lee Levinson’s L and N Racing. Both horses finished fifth at Churchill Downs in their first start, won at Ellis in their second and took the Ellis Park Juvenile in their third. Tobacco Road just now needs to run out $1.1 million and be at least second in a Triple Crown race to keep up the comparisons.
“It was a good day,” Levinson said by phone from Tulsa. “The comparisons continue. The best part was how he finished, because he was pulling away at the end. Boy, can you imagine at a distance? You never know but, boy, he sure looks like he’s got distance, doesn’t he?
“… When he came around the turn, you could just see him coming. He was catching them with every stride. We were pretty excited. We thought we had a great chance. But you never know, watching those races. How many times have you watched and they’re coming up like gangbusters and just stop?”
Mitch Dennison, Asmussen’s assistant trainer at Ellis Park, has had Tobacco Road in his care all summer and said the winner was showing a lot in his timed workouts in company.
“He’s very competitive and he always just has his ears up, is very happy and has kept very good weight,” he said.
Though the early pace (22.47, 45.66) was similar to what Serengeti Empress set in the Debutante, the boys finished much slower, with Tobacco Road wrapping up the seven furlongs in 1:23.99. after the six furlongs slowed down to 1:11.02. But there also was more competition for the lead, with Manny Wah and Whiskey Echo right up on the pace battling long shot S S. Trooper.
Whiskey Echo, the program favorite who went off second choice behind Tobacco Road, won his first start at Belmont Park and then was third in Saratoga’s Grade 3 Sanford Stakes. Asmussen said by phone that both colts will go to Churchill Downs and be considered for that track’s Grade 3, $150,000 Iroquois, whose winner receives an automatic berth and entry fees paid to the $2 million Breeders’ Cup Juvenile on Nov. 2 at the same track.
“They’re both really nice colts, obviously,” Asmussen said. “We felt good about our chances going in. Whiskey Echo off the third in the Sanford, I thought this was the perfect spot for him. And then when Tobacco Road ran so well there a couple of weeks ago, it was obvious to run him back at Ellis. But both colts ran well and handled more ground, and that’s kind of what it’s all about right now.”
Said Shaun Bridgmohan, rider of runner-up Whiskey Echo: “The horse tried really hard. He gave me what he had. The winner came on the outside and got us all. But me and Channing (Hill, on Manny Wah) were running right along. The winner just outgamed us today.”
Overanalyzer finished fourth, followed by Mine Inspector, S S Trooper, Shanghaied Roo, Pradar, Lady’s Weekend and Veritas.

“IS IT TRUE” AUGUST 20 2018

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IS IT TRUE that the 138th Annual Indiana Democratic Editorial Convention held last weekend at the French Lick Resort was a rousing success?  …a record number of Democrats around the State attended this event?  …former State Repersentsentive Gail Riecken and past Evansville Mayor Jonathon Wienzapfel were seen talking with many State officeholders and party leaders attending this event?  …political watchers are speculating that the former Democratic Mayor of Evansville could be posturing to run for a State or Federal office in the future?

IS IT TRUE that Courier and Press writer Jon Webb is channeling the City-County Observer these days and we applaud his efforts?…he aptly pointed out that the ribbon cutter team that showed up at the new downtown medical school must have been on a full dose of adrenaline induced delusion?… Mayor Winnecke even stated that Evansville has “PEAKED” and Webb took him to task for such hyperbole?… Webb went so far as to opine that he surely hoped that Evansville is not at its PEAK since poverty is getting worse, shootings are at their 2nd highest ever behind 2017, heroin has replaced meth as the drug of choice, and utility bills are off the charts?…the truth is that the population of Evansville “PEAKED” about 60 years ago along with national economic relevance?… Jon Webb is exactly right that shiny baubles do not replace crumbling infrastructure and cultural degradation?…we at the CCO do think the IU Medical School does have transformative capacity if the powers that be at IVY Tech can find a way to include their nursing students in the downtown campus too?

IS IT TRUE that it is sometimes instructive to do some comparisons and the time has come to compare Evansville to Fargo, North Dakota that has such bad weather that it is virtually frozen 3 months every year?…in 1960 when Evansville really was “PEAKING” the population was 141,543 and Fargo was a sleepy little town of 46,662 making Evansville 3 times the size of Fargo?

IS IT TRUE that time Evansville also had triple the economy of Fargo?…since that time Fargo has expanded the state university, established a research arm in that university, assured that the entire city has bandwidth that exceeds 1Gbps, and grown to a population of 122,359 that exceeds Evansville’s current population of 119,477?…in a short 60 years Fargo that had nothing but wheat and Bison has blown by Evansville by concentrating on substance instead of fun and games?… Fargo is not the first city to leave Evansville in the dust and it will not be the last as long as the movers and shakers of Evansville deeply believe that silliness is transformative?

IS IT TRUE the silliest false claim ever made by local leaders was that moving Roberts Stadium from Boeke Road to the new downtown Ford Center would immediately constitute the creation of many new jobs?….to think that moving a job from point A to point B created a new job takes a special kind of stupid?

IS IT TRUE that a compliance audit was recently conducted by the Housing and Urban Development Office of the Inspector General concerning the Evansville Housing Authority?  …that the Federal auditors stated that the EHA did not comply with federal guidelines during the renovations of hundreds of low-income housing units?  …we find that the comment made by the EHA CEO to the Evansville Courier and Press that the audit issues will be settled with little or no consequence to the agency to be insulting to the people conducting the audit  …that an official from the Office of the Inspector General told the Evansville Courier and Press that EHA “lacked a sufficient understanding of HUD’s requirements for housing quality standards and conflicts of interest. It also lacked an adequate quality control process?”  …we are surprised that the EHA Executive Director Rick Moore had the gall to publically state he disagreed with the conclusions of the Housing and Urban Development Office of Inspector General? …several years ago Mayor Winnecke cut a quiet deal with an out-of-state for-profit entity to purchase the assets of the City of Evansville not-for-profit EHA with a promise that this transaction will allow EHA to make the major improvement to the housing units lived in by the economically disadvantaged citizens of Vanderburgh County?

IS IT TRUE that Evansville City Councilwoman Missy Mosby voluntarily locked herself in a big dog cage last Wednesday?  …that Missy Mosby is a long time volunteer at ‘It Takes a Village No Kill Animal Rescue,’ locked herself in a dog cage along with her own dog Lil’ Skipper to help raise money for “It Takes A Village” animal rescue shelter?  …Ms. Mosby set a goal of raising $3,000 in donations before she would be let free?  …we are happy to report that Missy was let out of the cage when she raised an astonishing $5,000 to help raise enough money will help the shelter improve the dog playground at “It Takes A Village” animal rescue shelter? …we give five (5) cheers to Missy Mosby for raising money for ‘It Takes a Village No Kill Animal Rescue”?

Todays“Readers Poll” question is: Are you concerned that the EHA did not comply with federal guidelines during the renovations of hundreds of low-income housing units?

Please take time and read our articles entitled “STATEHOUSE Files, CHANNEL 44 NEWS, LAW ENFORCEMENT, READERS POLL, BIRTHDAYS, HOT JOBS” and “LOCAL SPORTS”.  You now are able to subscribe to get the CCO daily.

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

FOOTNOTE: City-County Observer Comment Policy.  Be kind to people. No personal attacks or harassment will not be tolerated and shall be removed from our site.

We understand that sometimes people don’t always agree and discussions may become a little heated.  The use of offensive language, insults against commenters will not be tolerated and will be removed from our site

 

Vanderburgh County Board of Commissioners Meeting

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civic center

AGENDA

Vanderburgh County Board of Commissioners

August 21, 2018, at 3:00 pm, Room 301

  1. Call to Order
  2. Attendance
  3. Pledge of Allegiance
  4. Permission to Open Bids for VC18-08-02: Street Resurfacing in Kingsmont Subdivision & Arrowood Subdivision 
  5. Action Items 
    1. Resolution CO.R-08-18-011: Amending the Burkhardt Road TIF Economic Development Area Plan
    2. Memorandum of Understanding between The City of Evansville and Vanderburgh County for the 2018 Byrne Justice Assistance Grant Funds 
    3. Purchasing Department: Approval to Award Batteries for Various Departments (RFP-01-003-18) to Distributors Warehouse Inc. 
    4. Public Hearing RQAW Jail Study
  6. Department Head Reports
  7. New Business
    1. 2019 Calendar
    2. Joint Vanderburgh and Warrick County Commission Meeting to Discuss INDOT Lloyd Expressway Plans
    3. Jail Blue Ribbon Committee will meet on Thursday, August 23, 2018 at 1:30 p.m. in Room 318
  8. Old Business
  9. Consent Items
    1. Contracts, Agreements and Leases
      1. Community Corrections: Professional Services Agreement with Southwestern Behavioral Healthcare, Inc. 
      2. Burdette Park: Contract with American Locker for New Lockers for the Aquatic Center
    2. Approval of August 7, 2018 Meeting Minutes
    3. Employment Changes 
    4. County Auditor: 
      1. 8/6/18-8/10/18 & 8/13/18-8/17/18 Claims Voucher Report 
      2. Request to Surplus a Computer 
    5. County Clerk: July 2018 Monthly Report 
    6. County Treasurer: July 2018 Monthly Report 
    7. County Engineer: 
      1. Financial Commitment Letter for the Reconstruction of Oak Hill Road between Heckel Road and Millersburg Road
      2. Financial Commitment Letter for  the Rehabilitation of the Franklin Street Bridge over Pigeon Creek
      3. Financial Commitment Letter to Request INDOT “Local Trax” Funds for the Construction of a Railroad Bridge on Mill Road over the CSX Railroad Tracks
      4. Department Report
      5. Claims
      6. Pay Request #8 Phoenix Commerce T.I.F. for the sum of $2,250.00
      7. Pay Request #43 U.S. 41 Expansion T.I.F. for the sum of $655,092.78
    8. Weights and Measures: July 16-August 15, 2018 Monthly Report 
  10. Public Comment
  1. Rezoning
    1. First Reading of Rezoning Ordinance VC-7-2018

Petitioner: Jack Strassweg, Member of SS&K, LLC

Address: 728 E. Baseline Road

Request: Change from AG to C-4 with UDC

    1. Final Reading of Rezoning Ordinance VC-6-2018

Petitioner: Robert & Kimau Faulkner

Address: 1809 Allen Lane

Request: Change from AG to C-2

  1. Adjournment

There Has to be More From the IU Med Center

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There Has to be More From The IU Med Center
by Gail Riecken-CCO Statehouse Editor
Jon Webb (Courier &Press) recently wrote a thoughtful, and certainly, liberating article on the new IU Medical Center.
He has made it easier to talk candidly about what the Center should mean for our area in the years to come – not just what it means to us today.
For the IU Medical Center, now a central feature of downtown Evansville’s economy should be part of our vision for raising some of the poorest in our community from the ALICE 43%(  Asset Limited, Income Constrained – folks that don’t have the buying power in personal income for basic necessities).
Reducing poverty in our area means higher wages and higher wages involves training and education.
That means students attending classes at the Center should include the 43%.
And that means the Center has a to include Ivy Tech.
And including Ivy Tech means there has to be classroom space on campus and the students have to be a part of any collaborative training program with other attendees.
And …let’s not stopped there.
It means our K-8 school system has to develop a meaningful educational program introducing students to training at the Center, including internships and more associate degree tracts.
And it means there has to be a program where young people with lessened abilities and/or disabilities, who are capable to work in a medical/hospital environment, are trained for paid employment.
And I am sure there are more thoughts about including those in the 43%.
We should feel confident that the Center is working for us; that the 50 plus million we are paying (with interest)  becomes the incentive for a comprehensive workforce development program that offers opportunity and hope for our young people, including those in the 43%.
A Fellow Kiwanian recently offered this Thought for the Day:  “ Management of attention through vision is the creation of focus”.  We need that kind of attention today. We need to do more to face a serious problem in our area; we need leaders to focus on the 43%.
By prioritizing reducing poverty in ways that become generational and transformational  (not only providing affordable housing), our community will surely reap the benefits of the IU Medical Center.

Commentary: A Farewell To The Queen

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By John Krull
TheStatehouseFile.com 

INDIANAPOLIS – Somehow, it’s fitting that the Queen of Soul and the King of Rock ’n’ Roll died on the same date.

Thanks to Aretha Franklin and Elvis Presley, Aug. 16 forever will be known, to quote a song from my youth, as the day the music died.

We don’t agree about much as a country and a people now. We find some of the silliest reasons imaginable to turn disagreements into arguments, arguments into fights into brawls and brawls into wars.

But most of us did agree about Elvis.

And Aretha.

More important, we agreed that we wanted to live in a country where stories like theirs were possible.

We wanted an America in which the son of an ex-convict Southern sharecropper and day laborer could vault from working as a truck driver to becoming a king.

And we wanted a land in which a black, teenage, unwed mother could leap from being in the choir in her father’s church to becoming a queen.

Elvis and Aretha became royalty the same way – through hard work, by breaking down barriers and by being talented.

So talented.

Many tributes have been written to the natural force of Aretha’s voice. It was a marvel, an instrument of incredible range and flexibility, so supple and so powerful at the same time.

But many people are born with great voices.

That doesn’t make them great singers.

That doesn’t make them Aretha.

What defines the great, great singers – and Aretha Franklin was one of the greatest – is a fierce intelligence. In addition to superb musicianship, they must have such a deep understanding of life that they literally can live a lyric – and make the audience live it, too.

That can come from nowhere but a profound sense of our shared humanity, of the pieces of life that link everyone.

Aretha Franklin may have climbed heights that allowed her to pal around with presidents and other potentates, but it was clear she never forgot what it was like to be a black, unwed, teenage mother in a segregated America. She never forgot what it was like to be disregarded and disparaged.

That was why she could sing about respect – R-E-S-P-E-C-T – with the urgency she did. She knew what it felt like to have other people look past her.

She had lived the lyric.

And she made us – black and white, male and female – live it, too.

The late Otis Redding of “(Sittin’ On) The Dock of the Bay” fame, himself no slouch as an interpretative singer, wrote “Respect” and recorded it first.

When he heard Aretha’s version, Redding shook his head in dismay and admiration.

“The little girl cut me,” he said and laughed.

Redding knew genius when he heard it.

He knew Aretha had taken the song – and, with it, the audience – places he hadn’t and maybe couldn’t.

That’s the thing about genuine artists such as Aretha.

They show us things about our own lives and souls – and about the lives and souls of others. They remind us that we all breathe and bleed, live and love, rejoice and cry.

They give us lessons in empathy, often to a great beat that we can dance to.

I’m a democrat with a small “d.” I believe that, regardless of how we pray, the color of our skin or who we love, we’re all born into and swim in the same broad river of humanity. For that reason, I’ve never had much use for royalty or for the trappings associated with it.

But I am and always have been a fan of the King of Rock ’n’ Roll.

And I’m more than happy to bow down before the Queen of Soul.

Perhaps it was a coincidence that Elvis and Aretha both died on Aug. 16. Maybe it was a quirk of fate. Possibly a message from the universe.

All I know is that, for a lot of us, that date will be the day the music died, the anniversary of when the King and the Queen left us.

Long may they reign.

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.

The City-County Observer posted this article without opinion, bias or editing.