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Today’s Dedication Ceremony for The Stone Family Center for Health Sciences

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Dedication Ceremony for Stone Family Center for Health Sciences

The Stone Family Center for Health Sciences in Evansville has been completed after three years of construction.

A dedication ceremony and ribbon cutting was held to celebrate the completion of the center this morning.

As part of the celebration, Lt. Governor Suzanne Crouch and Indiana University President Michael McRobbie came to the ceremony to show their support.

Officials say the project wouldn’t have been possible without the support of people in the community and their belief in the project.

Mr. and Mrs. Stone were recognized as the lead donors of this project, having given the community $15 million to complete it.

Thanks to their donation, USI, IU, and UE students will be able to achieve their academic goals at this new facility.

Stone Family Medical Center Grand Opening Thursday

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Stone Family Medical Center Grand Opening Thursday

A sign is in place for the Stone Center for Health Sciences in downtown Evansville. Thursday, city leaders and the IU Board of Trustees will gather for a dedication ceremony.

The ceremony will start at 10 a.m. and a ribbon cutting will be at 11:30 a.m. The facility is a collaboration between the University of Evansville, the University of Southern Indiana and the IU School of Medicine.

Building tours will begin immediately after the ribbon cutting.

Evansville Mayor Lloyd Winnecke will be presiding over the ceremony.

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Advisory: Riverside Dr To Close-Drivers Should Use Alternate Routes

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Drivers who use Riverside Dr to enter downtown Evansville will encounter delays during the morning commute.

The delays are due to ongoing infrastructure work on Riverside Dr.

Drivers should avoid the area and use alternate routes. Drivers should use Lloyd, Walnut, Lincoln, or Washington Ave to access downtown.

Intoxicated Motorist Arrested after Vehicle Rollover on Old State Road

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On Wednesday, August 08, 2018 at approximately 5:07 PM the Vanderburgh County Sheriff’s Office responded to the area of Old State Road and E. Evergreen Road upon report of a motor vehicle crash with injury.

Upon arrival, deputies located an overturned white 1999 Toyota CRV SUV. A witness reported that the vehicle had been traveling northbound when the driver lost control, entered a ditch and then overturned. Another witness helped the driver, later identified as Jesse Williams, take off his seatbelt and exit the vehicle. Responding firefighters removed a passenger from the vehicle.

Mr. Williams was uncooperative with the deputies on-scene. He yelled obscenities and refused to follow requests or commands. Mr. Williams denied he was the driver and instead blamed his injured passenger for the crash. Mr. Williams appeared intoxicated and smelled of alcoholic beverages. Although he denied having been drinking, Mr. Williams’ passenger admitted that they had been drinking all day.

Mr. Williams and his passenger were transported to the hospital for treatment of minor injuries. Once at the hospital, Mr. Williams refused treatment and refused to submit to a blood alcohol test. A check of his driver’s license status revealed that Mr. Williams had never received a driver’s license. Mr. Williams was later transported to the Vanderburgh County Jail and is being held without bond.

“READERS FORUM” AUGUST 9, 2018

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We hope that today’s “Readers Forum” 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?

 WHATS ON YOUR MIND TODAY?

Todays“Readers Poll” question is: Do you feel that the IU Medical school will have a major economic impact on downtown Evansville?

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

Patrick and Lisa Shoulders Donated Public Fountain to the Stone Family Medical Center

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Patrick and Lisa Shoulders Donated Public Fountain to the Stone Family Medical Center

Public fountains named “Healing Arts”, made possible by a gift from Patrick and Lisa Shoulders to the Stone Family Medical Center and the City of Evansville, will be dedicated on Thursday, August 9, 2018, at 5:30 p.m., at the Medical Education Complex located at Sixth & Walnut Streets, Evansville, Indiana. 

The dedication ceremony will include comments from the Mayor, the President of Indiana University, and the donors.

FOOTNOTE: Pat Shoulders played an important role in bringing the I U Medical School to Downtown Evansville.  As a member of the Indiana Board of Trustees he lobbied state political and educational leaders in order to convince them to approve the I U Medical School for Evansville.

Let’s Get A Hate Crimes Law

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Let’s Get A Hate Crimes Law

by Gail Riecken CCO StateHouse Editor

Last week Governor Eric Holcomb announced his intentions to promote another hate crimes bill in Indiana. His comments came just after the recent incident in Carmel where a synagogue was horribly vandalized with Nazi symbols.

Both Republican and Democrat leadership followed up with an endorsement of the Governor’s actions.

House Speaker Brian Bosma explained, “The Interim Study Committee on Corrections and Criminal Code will take another look at the issue of bias-motivated crimes and identify opportunities for legislative consensus. Indiana judges already have the ability to enhance sentences based on a criminal’s motivation when presented with evidence of bias, but perhaps more needs to be done to clarify and highlight this existing provision.”

House Democrat Minority Leader Rep.Terry Goodin responded, “But this is Indiana, where we find it easier to talk about stopping hate crimes instead of actually doing something about it. The governor announcing his support is one thing. Getting the Republican majorities in both the House and Senate to act is another.”

Goodin is right. Hate crimes bills aren’t new to Indiana politics. They fail when gender identity is added to the language.

I’m not going to hold my breath that the Governor will succeed and gain consensus, but I am going to support any effort to move this issue beyond present law.

I have never understood why social conservative legislators can’t separate what ought to be law to protect innocent people whatever the gender they are from what they, the social conservatives, personally can’t accept as anyone’s lifestyle.

There is no doubt defacing a sacred building is deplorable but crimes against individuals just because their gender is different from what they were born is equally deplorable.

DEVIN NUNES: FROM DAIRYMAN TO DISGRACE

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DEVIN NUNES: FROM DAIRYMAN TO DISGRACE
by Blair Bess, July 31, 2018
After railing against the FBI, the intelligence community, and the Department of Justice, the character of Rep. Devin Nunes (R., Calif.), Chair of the House Select Committee on Intelligence, is increasingly being called into question. In fact, when character counts, the sum of the man just doesn’t add up.
A new set of potential improprieties by Nunes has emerged as a result of reporting by McClatchy’s Kate Irby. Irby details the possible unethical use of campaign funds by Nunes’ political action committee, New Pac. Funds used to pay for private jet transportation, tickets to sporting events, meals in high-end restaurants and hotels in Las Vegas, and $15,000 for a single day of winery tours, including a limo and beachfront hotel accommodations.
Not to worry. There’s still plenty of cash in his campaign coffers. Nearly $7.4 million dollars in fact. All to mount a re-election campaign in a district in which he’s held sway since 2003.

That’s a remarkably odd amount of money given that, in previous campaigns, Nunes typically raised between $1.5 – $2 million dollars. There are roughly 348,000 registered voters in Nunes’ 22nd Congressional District, which translates to about $20.11 per vote, or roughly four times the amount he spent in elections past.

So why has Nunes felt compelled to fill his campaign war chest with that much money while defending a “safe seat” in a historically red bastion of the Republican party?

Maybe Nunes is just a generous, likable guy who likes to spread the wealth around.

So generous and likable that in March and June of 2017, he transferred $300,000 to the National Republican Congressional Campaign for contributions to various races around the country. Guess it pays to have friends. And lots of them. Especially when being investigated by an Ethics Committee dominated by fellow Republicans and having your Republican colleagues remain, mum when others in government are questioning your actions.

Since taking on the “Deep State” and becoming Mr. Trump’s prat boy, Nunes is now a darling among far-right conservatives throughout the country, receiving an impressive amount of small individual contributions. That’s in addition to the $63,000 he’s gotten from the Koch Brothers; $71,000 from the Wine and Spirits Wholesalers of America Association (guess Devin likes wine, remember the $15,000 tour?) and many others. And, of course, the $74,500 he garnered from California Dairies, Inc.

Dairy is an important product in Nunes’ agriculture-reliant district. And yet, while riding off into the sunset, leaving his district behind on a quixotic mission to restore law and order throughout the land, his clueless leader has been imposing tariffs that will have a severe negative impact on farmers – almond, pistachio, walnut, and dairy farmers among them. Even Nunes’ father and brother’s dairy operation in Iowa will be affected.

The president has called Nunes “a man of tremendous courage and grit,” who may someday be recognized as a “Great American Hero.” That comment is probably making a lot of Americans grit their teeth, among them the almond, pistachio, and walnut growers who have consistently helped return Nunes to the office.

According to bakersfield.com, almond growers will see tariffs on exports to China rise from 10 to 25 percent. Many of those farmers and growers might like to voice their concerns to their congressman. Good luck. Nunes reportedly hasn’t held a town hall meeting in the district in seven years. Probably because he’s been spending more time in the Deep State rather than the State of California.

That dairy farm in Iowa? That’s where the Nunes Campaign Committee’s Treasurer, Toni Dian Nunes – the candidate’s mom – lives. As Treasurer for the campaign, she received a notification, earlier this year, from the Federal Election Commission requesting “information essential to full public disclosure” about three potentially illegal campaign contributions, one of which was made by a pistachio grower from a district bordering Nunes’ own. While that pistachio grower’s contribution was peanuts in comparison to that of California Dairies, it’s probably safe to assume he made it in hopes that his neighbor would stand up for him and others in his industry. Nutty thought.

Devin Nunes is as wanton, wasteful, and potentially as unethical as any other swamp dweller Donald J. Trump swore to throw out of Washington. Nunes was not elected to forsake constituents for the national stage, launch inexplicable and confounding witch hunts, or stand shoulder-to-shoulder with leaders who impose tariffs that are harmful to those at home, while simultaneously putting the national security of our country at risk.

Recent polls indicate Nunes is no longer meeting the expectations of his constituents. For good reason. Nunes willingly chose to lie down in the swamp, as have a significant number of his Republican colleagues in Congress. Clawing their way out may prove to be a very sticky proposition for many of them come Election Day.

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