“READERS FORUM” JUNE 7, 2018
We hope that today’s “Readers Forumâ€Â 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 support the current State GOP political platform that states marriage is between one man and one woman?
Please take time and read our articles entitled “STATEHOUSE Files, CHANNEL 44 NEWS, LAW ENFORCEMENT, READERS POLL, BIRTHDAYS, HOT JOBS†and “LOCAL SPORTSâ€.  You now are able to subscribe to get the CCO daily.
If you would like to advertise on the CCO please contact us CityCountyObserver@live.com.
Tickets On Sale Tuesday, June 12 in Evansville for Sesame Street Live! Let’s Party!
Tickets On Sale Tuesday, June 12 in Evansville for Sesame Street Live! Let’s Party!
An All-New, Interactive Stage Production Inspired by the Iconic, Emmy® Award-Winning Television Program
 Everyone’s invited to take part in the sunniest and funniest street celebration in Sesame Street Live! Let’s Party! The inaugural production under Feld Entertainment’s new partnership with the non-profit educational organization, Sesame Workshop features favorite Sesame Street pals Elmo, Abby Cadabby, Big Bird and more in a brand-new sensory adventure live on stage. Sesame Street Live! Let’s Party! visits Evansville on September 28 for two performances at Old National Events Plaza. Tickets go on sale June 12, 2018.
From the moment the curtain rises, parents and children alike will be on their feet dancing along to a pop-infused soundtrack with new Sesame Street friends and live emcees Casey and Caleb. Planning a party isn’t easy when everybody has a different idea of fun, but with some help from the audience, it becomes the ultimate reflection of what friendship plus teamwork can accomplish.
Party guests will sing along to new and familiar songs, like “I Love Trash†and “C is for Cookie,†with Oscar the Grouch and Cookie Monster; dance to the beat with Elmo; explore a wintry wonderland when Abby Cadabby’s magic goes awry; take flight with Big Bird to learn about some of his fabulous feathered friends; and discover new cultures in an interactive Spanish lesson with Rosita. A unique, up-close-and-personal pre-show experience will be offered at an additional charge prior to select performances, allowing families the opportunity to tour the on-stage neighborhood of their favorite, furry friends before they arrive for the main show.
The fun doesn’t end there. A variety of interactive activities give children the chance to create, discover and learn as they help decorate for the upcoming party.
Tickets for Sesame Street Live! Let’s Party start at $15. All seats are reserved, and tickets are available at Old National Events Plaza box office or by calling 1-800-653-8000 or online at www.ticketmaster.com. For group rates and information, reach out to 317-888-0963. Stay current on the latest developments in social media:
Facebook: Â www.facebook.com/SesameStreetLive
Twitter: @SesameStLive # sesame street live
YouTube: www.youtube.com/SesameSteetLive
Instagram: @SesameStreetLive
 About Feld Entertainment
Feld Entertainment® is the worldwide leader in producing and presenting live touring family entertainment experiences that bring people together and uplift the human spirit. Properties include Monster Jam®, Monster Energy Supercross, Disney On Ice, Disney Live!, Marvel Universe LIVE!, Sesame Street Live!, DreamWorks Trolls The Experience (coming Fall 2018) and Jurassic World Live (coming Fall 2019). Across the brand portfolio, Feld Entertainment has entertained millions of families in more than 75 countries and on six continents. Visit feldentertainment.com for more information.
 About Sesame Workshop
Sesame Workshop is the nonprofit media and educational organization behind Sesame Street, the pioneering television show that has been reaching and teaching children since 1969. Today, Sesame Workshop is an innovative force for change, with a mission to help kids everywhere grow smarter, stronger, and kinder. We’re active in more than 150 countries, serving vulnerable children through a wide range of media, formal education, and philanthropically-funded social impact programs, each grounded in rigorous research and tailored to the needs and cultures of the communities we serve. For more information, please visit sesameworkshop.org.
OBITUARY FOR POLITICAL AND COMMUNITY LEADER MARK OWEN
Obituary Of Mark Owen
He is preceded in death by his parents, Estil and Norma (Sartore) Owen.
Memorial contributions can be made to St. Vincent De Paul, 767 E Walnut St, Evansville, IN 47713.
Vectren Continues Electric Network Upgrades To Support Downtown Evansville Revitalization
As revitalization efforts continue in Evansville’s downtown, Vectren Energy Delivery of Indiana – South (Vectren) is committed to supporting those efforts by increasing the reliability of its downtown electric network. Several projects are currently in progress to ensure Vectren’s infrastructure can support Evansville’s growing downtown.
This year, crews will complete five grid modernization and expansion projects in downtown Evansville. Two of the projects consist of underground cable replacement, which will include replacing aging infrastructure and retrofitting existing manholes lids for added safety. Another two projects are to replace network transformers serving several downtown-area buildings.
Finally, Vectren is currently constructing a new underground circuit on Second Street that will provide service to the Post House, a $40 million mixed-use development that will be located next to Bru Burger. The new circuit will eventually continue down Second Street to tie into another circuit and support upgrades being completed by Evansville Water and Sewer.
“This is an exciting time for our community as businesses locate and/or expand in the heart of downtown Evansville,†said Brad Ellsworth, president of Vectren Energy Delivery of Indiana-South. “This modernization work is part of our Smart Energy Future strategy and will ensure Evansville’s network is capable of meeting local energy demands as the City’s comprehensive downtown Master Plan continues to unfold.â€
Generally, customers will notice projects beginning when crews have placed signage in the area. These projects and others in Vectren’s southwestern territory are part of the company’s Smart Energy Future Strategy. Customers can learn more about Vectren’s grid modernization plan and its customer benefits at www.vectren.com/smartenergyfuture.
National Court Leaders Gather In Indy To Discuss Opioid Crisis
Katie Stancombe for www.theindianalawyer.com
Court leaders from across the country met in Indianapolis on Tuesday to brainstorm how the judiciary can best respond to the nation’s opioid epidemic.
The National Judicial Opioid Task Force met for two days to discuss solutions on how the courts can effectively serve families, individuals, and communities impacted by the crisis.
Task force co-chairs Indiana Chief Justice Loretta Rush and director of the Administrative Office of the Tennessee Courts Deborah Taylor Tate discussed the epidemic’s impact on the courts and best practices and resources to address the challenges.
Formed in September 2017, the task force aims to work alongside state, local, and federal agencies to tackle the opioid epidemic’s ongoing impact on the justice system.
“The issue that comes before us with the opioid epidemic is unlike anything I’ve seen,†Rush said. “There’s really no docket that’s not affected by it. Setting up a framework from a national perspective for the judges to take back to their states is urgent.â€
The 29-member task force consists of chief justices, state court administrators and other court leaders from across the country focused on three key categories of the issue — children and families, civil and criminal justice, and collaboration and education.
One main point Rush discussed is the current need to provide resources and tools that best fit different communities in each state. She said she thinks communities are the starting point for finding solutions.
“There’s not a one-size-fits-all answer to this,†she said. “Communities are just struggling right now in regards to meeting the needs of response.â€
Members also discussed training the judiciary using best practices informed by prevention and treatment. Rush said that sums up the content of an upcoming statewide opioid summit to be presented by the Indiana judicial branch in July.
The summit will include training on the science of addiction, evidence-based treatments for substance use disorders including medication-assisted treatment, available resources, and an opportunity for stakeholders to discuss the crisis in their communities.
“I’ve never seen another issue come up in my life as a judge that was more important to work together to find answers than this one,†Rush said. “There’s a lot of work to do.â€
There Might Be a Cheaper Drug, But Pharmacists Can’t Tell You That
Legislators were motivated to act on the issue “because it affects the ordinary consumer,†said Richard Cauchi, the health program director for the National Conference of State Legislatures.
“As a consumer, you would have no idea how this works,†he said. “Even if you were aware of the issue, it would be hard to know when the person across the counter says, ‘This is $20.’ They would pay the $20, because what is the option?â€
Cauchi said the rapid spread of bills among state legislatures is remarkable. “States are sovereign entities; they don’t work in tandem. It’s notable,†he said.
Many consumers know of pharmacy benefit management companies through their brand names, such as Express Scripts, CVS Caremark and OptumRX. The companies, sometimes referred to as pharmacy benefit managers, manage prescription drug plans and serve as go-betweens for pharmacies and health insurance companies.
The gag clauses are inserted into contracts with pharmacies by pharmacy benefit management companies, and they prohibit druggists from telling patients or caregivers about lower prices or cheaper drug options, such as generic drugs. Patients never know that there could be a less expensive way to get their medicines, because their neighborhood pharmacist can’t talk about it lest she violate those contracts.
States have been leading the fight against the gag clauses, although President Donald Trump, in his address May 11 on lowering drug prices, also pledged to put an end to the practice, “which punishes pharmacists for telling patients how to save money,†adding, “this is a total rip-off, and we are ending it.â€
Kennedy said he’s “heard from constituents who have run into this problem, and in many cases, I don’t think they are fully aware. It’s not until after the fact that they think about it, particularly the senior citizens.â€
Pharmacist Robert Iacobucci Jr., who owns White Cross Pharmacy in North Providence, Rhode Island, sells medicine mostly to nursing homes and long-term care facilities. He doesn’t get many walk-in patients. But he still wants to be able to tell patients and caregivers about cheaper prices and bristles at the restrictions placed on him by pharmacy benefit managers.
“There’s no other profession in the world where you can’t tell your customer how to best utilize their money,†he said.
Independent pharmacies are leading the charge against the gag rules, because unlike the big chains, they are not corporately intertwined with the pharmacy benefit managers.
Anthony Reznik, director of government affairs for Independent Pharmacy Alliance, a trade group based in New Jersey representing 3,000 independents mostly in the Northeast, said lawmakers “on both sides of the aisle are amazed this is for real.â€
He said most of his members are afraid to speak to the media or anyone else about the situation because they are concerned they will “get kicked out of the network†of insurance companies.
“It could be the end of their business,†he said. “They are just too scared to talk about it. But the situation is real.â€
Pharmacy benefit managers such as Express Scripts, CVS Caremark and OptumRX have recently embraced the anti-gag-rule efforts. Several of the companies have described the gag rules as an “outlier†practice, a description at which Reznik scoffs.
But the companies also don’t want to be restricted.
In February, the Pharmaceutical Care Management Association, which represents pharmacy benefit managers, sued to block an anti-gag-rule law in North Dakota, one of the first states to enact such a law. The complaint said the law imposes “onerous new restrictions on pharmacy benefit managers†and could require disclosure of “proprietary†trade secrets. The case is still pending.
Greg Lopes, spokesman for the association, would not speak on the record about gag rules and referred questions to the organizations’ public statement issued in response to the Trump administration proposal.
“We support the patient always paying the lowest cost at the pharmacy counter, whether it’s the cash price or the copay,†the group statement said.
State Rep. George Keiser, a North Dakota Republican who chairs the state House committee that oversees insurance issues, said he can say “with certainty†that pharmacy benefit management contracts did contain gag clauses recently — that’s what led his Legislature to pass legislation.
“They weren’t disclosing it to the customer, but they were disclosing it to me and other legislators,†he said in an interview. “They argued, ‘We have to have formularies, we have to be able to control them, that’s how we manage costs,’†he said, referring to lists of covered drugs and prices.
But, Keiser said, compared with the examples of cheaper prices provided to the lawmaker off the record by pharmacists, “it was clear that was not in the best interests of the consumer.â€
Walk Through The World Of Hollywood’s Wild West In The Eiteljorg Museum Of American
By Emily Ketterer
TheStatehouseFile.com
INDIANAPOLIS — Take a walk through the world of Hollywood’s wild west in the Eiteljorg Museum of American Indians and Western Art’s limited-time exhibit, “The Reel West.â€
Visitors can walk along a trail of Hollywood stars paying tribute to the famous Western film and TV actors and see props and costumes belonging to those well-known films and shows including: “True Grit,†“Brokeback Mountain,†“Bonanza,†“Django: Unchained†and more.
“The main thing we’re going for in this exhibit is to look at how Westerns have shaped how we as a society think about the world around us,†said Johanna Blume, associate curator of western art history and culture.
At the entrance to the exhibit, guests are greeted by the original “The Lone Ranger†costume worn by Clayton Moore in the 1955 TV series
“One of the things I love is a lot of people are surprised when they first see it and it’s blue because, on black and white television, it always looked like he was wearing all white,†Blume said.
As guests go through the exhibit, they are presented with the chronology of Western film as well as various themes showcased in a Western film including morality, diversity, and identity.
“Westerns are really about these moral struggles and this idea of good versus evil and right versus wrong and how to be a good person in the face of adversity,†Blume said. “We also need to look at diversity in Westerns, and most importantly representation and misrepresentation.â€
The process for planning an exhibit such as this one begins years in advance. Blume said the idea came almost four years ago.
“I did a lot of background research about what films are even important, what films do we want to talk about,†Blume said, “Then you have to think about, okay we really want to talk about this film and it would be really cool to have that object from that film, so how do we go about finding it? Does it still exist?â€
The items on display come from movie studios and private collectors. Costumes in the exhibit range from Hailee Steinfeld’s costume from the 2010 remake of “True Grit†to the robot head from the 1935 science fiction Western, “The Phantom Empire.â€
A highlight is the “wall of hats.†The display features cases full of various hats from different films and a wall photo collage of famous Western characters with their headgear with the title, “White hats vs. Black hats: Which would you choose?â€
“Early on, I was like, ‘I’m picturing a wall of hats,’†Blume said. “We wanted to play around with the idea of a white hat and a black hat. The white hats are the good guys and black hats are the bad guys.â€
In addition to the famous items, visitors can participate in the exhibit with its different interactive features.
Trailers from five different movies are played in a theatre-like setup at the front of the exhibit and guests can watch a variety of clips from films and TV shows throughout the attraction on interactive touch-screen TVs.
“You can’t do an exhibit about movies and not show them,†Blume said.
Guests can also create their own Western characters on a storyboard and make a Western film scene using magnetic characters on a western scene backdrop. As visitors exit the exhibit, they can have a photo-op with cutouts of a Western film star, John Wayne and actor Jamie Foxx as Django from “Django: Unchained.â€
Blume said the exhibit received a positive response from visitors after its opening.
Indianapolis resident and a longtime Western film and TV fan, Thomas Nichols said his favorite part of the exhibit is “The Lone Ranger.â€
“The exhibit was well done, very well done,†Nichols said.
Donna Femrite from Dallas, Texas said she was amazed by the large collection of items in the exhibit.
“It’s fascinating just because I love antiques and just the collection and the memorabilia,†Femrite said. “The extent of this collection is quite extraordinary.â€
The western film brings a nostalgia element, Blume said.
“A lot of people are familiar with these titles,†Blume said. “A lot of people, especially the baby boomer generation, remember these from their childhoods.â€
“The Reel West†exhibit will host a number of events, including Western film screenings and a Western trivia night before closing on Feb. 3, 2019.
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Summer Learning Experience for ‘Students
Welcome to the 28 students attending the annual Health Science Institute at Deaconess (co-sponsored by @EVSC1). This two-week long educational program allows high-achieving high school students with an interest in health care to experience health care careers first hand.