The race for the County Commissioner in the Republican primary has become very interesting to watch. Oddly enough it isn’t because the candidates vying for this seat are conducting a negative and personal in your face campaign against each other.  In fact, each candidate has been very respectful towards each other. To their credit, they have focused on discussing the issues that affect the citizen of Vanderburgh County. Vanderburgh County Republican party is fortunate to have three quality candidates running for the County Commissioner seat.
IN SUPPORT OF STEVE HAMMER FOR VANDERBURGH COUNTY COMMISSIONER
A Call to Congressional Candidates!
A Call to Congressional Candidates!
by Gail Riecken, CCO State House Editor
Michael Leppert in his StatehouseFile article on Sixth District US Congress candidate Greg Pence slams Mr. Pence for not being up for his race. Among the issues Leppert cites is Pence’s total reliance on the name of his famous brother.
http://thestatehousefile.com/commentary-name-greg-pence-not-ballot/35523/
Name recognition is a big asset, but really, shouldn’t it be for something more than your family.
At the same time, I read Leppert’s article, I also read an article how President Trump is promising Michiganders he’ll prioritize needed waterway improvements on the St. Lawrence Seaway.
https://www.maritime-executive.com/article/trump-wants-to-fix-pinch-point-for-great-lakes-shipping#gs.SRSG8X0
So, I say, if any Congressional or State legislative candidate, for that matter, wants to do something really big, something that gains him/her “kitchen table†name recognition, that person should advocate with the President and, yes, the Vice-President, that southern Indiana and the Ohio River locks and dams need just as much attention as the St Lawrence Seaway.
For years the Corps of Engineers has been trying to get more money for the dams on the Ohio River. (One construction project, that some feel was poorly designed, has sucked up all the monies and seems to stall the argument for improvements on other locks and dams.) What has remained is a policy of basic maintenance, only, for the other dams.
To quote the Corps of Engineers, “ Within five years, over half of the current navigation structures will be past their structural design life.†The Corps considers “the modernization of the Ohio River system a top local, regional, national priorityâ€.
http://www.lrd.usace.army.mil/Missions/Civil-Works/Navigation/Ohio-River/
As a matter of fact, I don’t see how one can prioritize the Great Lakes and the St Lawrence Seaway over the Ohio River. The Ohio River carries over 220 million tons of freight (year 2010). Both the Seaway and Ohio are integral parts of the economic health of our country.
http://midamericafreight.org/rfs/network-inventory/waterways/top-commodities-by-waterway/
How could candidates do something worthwhile to earn name recognition? Pledge support and advocacy for improvements along with one or more of the compacts of the 6 states bordering the Ohio River; visit the Corps and solicit their help and advocacy; travel to the state legislator and national legislator conferences and lobby targeted Electeds,(Canada used to be active for the St Lawrence Seaway at these conferences and probably still is); and visit Governor Holcomb and secure his active support.
Backing a candidate for office should be more about the actions that a candidate takes to benefit our area and less about who his/her brother or father is or the fact the candidate looks good in public. Those attributes haven’t won us a seat at the allocation table for what we need on Ohio. How about asking a candidate to take a stand and tell us what he/she will do for southern Indiana and the Ohio River.
EPD SWAT CHALLENGE BONDS THE COMMUNITY WITH OFFICERS
People of all ages participated in the fun, challenging 5K, with different obstacles, like climbing walls and jumping over cars. The Swat Challenge provides a way for the community to get together with the men and women who keep us save 24-7.
Officers like Kenny Dutschke were left in awe of the outpouring of support from the community. “This is our biggest even so far, this morning we had over 400 people registered to come out and support us in here in the community and it feels awesome.â€
From 8 to Noon waves of 30 to 50 people ran in the course. No one is too small or old to be involved in the Swat Challenge, which offers a variety of obstacles. Participant Cameron Ellison said, “Climbing a wall where you had to climb up the side of a parking garage, swimming through a dumpster, going under little tunnels, jumping over hurdles, jumping over cars, I think that banged up my knees a bit but it was pretty fun.â€
There was no quitting, EPD Officers were on hand to provide encouragement throughout the course. Ellison said, “Oh it felt really great, at each different event having the officers there cheering you on, it really encouraged me to push forward through it so I think that’s what gave me the motivation to finish.
LOVE THE 90’S AT THE FORD CENTER
PRESENTED BY: HOT 96
AN ALL-STAR REVOLVING LINEUP THAT INCLUDES SALT N PEPA, All
4 One, ROB BASE, SUGAR RAY’S MARK MCGRATH, Young MC, Biz
Markie AND MORE
RETURNS TO FORD CENTER – FRIDAY, JULY 13
TICKETS ON SALE FRIDAY, MAY 4 AT 10 AM
Evansville, IN – Kicking off in 2016 and quickly racking up hundreds of shows across the United States, the UK, Australia and New Zealand, the hugely-successful I LOVE THE 90’s TOUR will continue its reign in 2018 with new stops across the United States. In just two years, the tour has become one of the most sought-after live events, selling out arenas and tickets worldwide with its rotating lineup of the 90’s’ most iconic acts. The New Year promises fans the same unbelievable live experience with a lineup that includes crowd favorites Salt N Pepa, Sugar Ray’s Mark McGrath, Rob Base and additions such as All 4 One, Young MC, Biz Markie and more.
The I Love the 90’s Tour went international in 2017, inviting UK, Australian and New Zealand fans to join the nostalgia-filled party. With live sets from Vanilla Ice, Salt N Pepa, Color Me Badd, Coolio, Tone Loc and Young MC, the international tour started 2018 with the biggest party on dancefloors across the world. November’s AUS/NZ tour announcement of the party set off a frenzy when thousands upon thousands of fans took to the web to buy tickets, shutting down ticketing sites and selling more than 20,000 tickets in just 48 hours.
Tickets can be purchased at Ford Center Ticket Office, Ticketmaster.com or by phone 800.745.3000
Ford Center is managed by VenuWorks of Evansville, LLC. For more information on Ford Center visit:www.thefordcenter.com www.facebook.com/fordcenterevansville www.twitter.com/thefordcenter.
Charges: 7 Teppanyaki Restaurant Owners Failed To Report Sales Tax
IL for www.theindianalawyer.com
Seven Asian restaurants around Indiana did not report sales of more than $8 million, and their owners have been criminally charged with failing to remit nearly $675,000 in sales and food and beverage taxes to the state, authorities said Thursday.
Marion County Prosecutor Terry Curry announced felony charges against owners of the eateries — two in Indianapolis along with locations in Fort Wayne, Lafayette, Marion, Plainfield and Terre Haute. The owners were charged with evading sales and food and beverage taxes from 2014 to 2016. Each is charged with racketeering — Level 5 felony corrupt business influence — and multiple counts each of felony theft and felony failure to remit taxes held in trust. Those charged are:
• Shuai Li, co-owner of Teppanyaki Grill Supreme Buffet, 9701 E. Washington St. Indianapolis.
• Chunhua Wang, owner of Teppanyaki Grill Super Buffet, Inc., 2641 Maple Point Drive, Lafayette.
• Guo Wu Wu, owner of Teppanyaki Supreme Buffet 285, Inc., 285 E. Coliseum Boulevard in Fort Wayne.
• Jin Qui Zhao, owner of Teppanyaki Buffet, Inc., 1310 W. 38th St., Marion.
• Ji Rong Lin, owner of Hokkaido Japanese Buffet, Inc., 380 S. Highway 41, Terre Haute.
• Sheng Yi Li, owner of Teppanyaki West, Inc., located at 5390 W. 38th St., Indianapolis.
“The filing of these charges is yet another example of our work to hold accountable those who we believe are playing by their own rules, often to the disadvantage of other businesses in our community,†Curry said in a statement. “We committed to re-establishing the ability of our office to investigate and prosecute complex white-collar crime. We have also built successful partnerships with agencies such the Indiana Department of Revenue, and together we will continue to expand this work on behalf of taxpayers.â€
Department of Revenue Commissioner Adam Krupp hailed the cooperation of Curry’s office, Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department, the Marion County Sheriff’s Office, Indiana State Police and DOR’s own forensic auditors.
“Today’s charges are a reminder that compliance with the tax laws of Indiana is a primary focus at all levels of government,†Krupp said.
Authorities began investigating the business practices of the restaurants in October 2014 and allege that each used nearly identical business practices, with owners “cash skimming†to conceal and underreport cash sales. The restaurants are believed to have underreported the percentage of cash sales, which allegedly constituted 46 percent of sales. However, the restaurants typically reported to the Indiana Department of Revenue that cash sales were less than five percent of their sales.
Through a separate civil forfeiture action, $40,185.68 in previously seized assets has been collected for forfeiture to local law enforcement agencies. The criminal cases have been assigned to Marion Superior Criminal Division 2. Initial hearing dates have not yet been scheduled.
Commentary: The Loudest Bullfrog In The Swampland
By John Krull
TheStatehouseFile.comÂ
INDIANAPOLIS – Soon, if the fates are kind, it all will be over.
This Republican U.S. Senate primary campaign has been one of the ugliest and most dispiriting in the country and in the state’s history.
The three candidates – former Indiana Rep. Mike Braun, U.S. Rep. Luke Messer and U.S. Rep. Todd Rokita – have done nothing to speak to what one of the founders of the GOP, an obscure fellow by the name of Abraham Lincoln, referred to as “the better angels of our nature.â€
Instead, they have spent all their time attacking each other.
Just a few days ago, Rokita’s campaign published a supposed “children’s†book attacking Messer called, “Oh, The Places You’ll Forget.†It was filled with nasty and not particularly funny references to Messer’s residency. (He has a home in the D.C. area, where his children go to school, and another weekend place in Tennessee.)
Not to be outdone, Braun has released a campaign commercial that attacks Rokita as “Todd the Fraud.†The spot doesn’t mince words. It calls Rokita a liar and a cheat.
There is a reason this race is so mean-spirited – one that only makes the nastiness more depressing.
There isn’t a millimeter’s worth of difference among the candidates on the “issues,†such as they are.
They all want to embrace President Donald Trump’s agenda. They’re in favor of building the wall, of kicking everyone who isn’t a direct descendant of the Puritans at Plymouth Rock out of the country and of nominating Trump for the Nobel Peace Prize and carving his image into Mount Rushmore.
Because they don’t disagree on anything substantive, they can’t have a debate, civil or otherwise, over the “issues.†They can’t make their campaign a contest of ideas.
So, to differentiate their candidacies from the others, they have turned to character assassination. Each candidate wants to make his opponents seem like unworthy vehicles to represent the cause – again, such as it is – they all embrace.
If this race were an aberration, that would be disheartening enough.
But it’s not likely to be the only primary race that is this vicious and this insipid.
We live in a time of relentless partisanship. Both Democrats and Republicans are inclined to see any deviation from creed – regardless of how innovative, common-sense or effective – as something akin to blasphemy.
And they seek out ways to punish infidels.
To some degree, this is the case with both parties, but it is particularly true of the Republican Party.
At one time, the GOP was the laboratory for innovation in public policy. It was the party’s whole-hearted commitment to discovering and implementing new ways to solve problems that fueled the rise of creative and effective Republican leaders from Ronald Reagan to Mitch Daniels.
Things have changed.
The unholy influence of dark money from so many special-interest groups – many of which are merely shell organizations designed to hide the clear and narrow financial interests of their funders – has made the party more a vehicle for enforcing doctrine, however hidebound or ultimately self-defeating, than anything else.
The party leadership and the party apparatus now exist to make sure that Republicans everywhere march in lockstep.
The seat that Braun, Messer, and Rokita seek to win was held by former U.S. Sen. Richard Lugar for 36 years. Lugar lost his seat not to a Democrat, but to a Republican-backed and funded by outside special-interest groups who wanted to punish Lugar for daring to think for himself.
Add to this unfortunate development the arrival of Trump and his shattering of any limits on personal invective and we have the makings of a truly toxic stew.
If the president of the United States calls anyone who disagrees with him, Republican or Democrat, a liar or a crook or a degenerate, politicians further down the food chain will follow suit.
Mike Braun, Luke Messer, and Todd Rokita aren’t bad guys.
But not one of them is strong enough to swim against the tide and stand for something other than personal ambition – for anything other than a desire to be the loudest bullfrog in the swampland.
That’s why the best the rest of us can hope for is that this swim in the cesspool will end.
And it will — soon, but not soon enough.
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 bias, opinion or editing.
Harrison High School Announces 2018 Athletic Hall of Fame
Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony is Friday, September 7 Â
 Evansville, Ind. (May 3, 2018) – Harrison High School has announced the 2018 Athletic Hall of Fame Inductees. The Hall of Fame induction is every three years and began in 2012, with the second class in 2015. After over 100 nomination submissions this year, the 2018 Harrison High School Athletic Hall of Fame class consists of the following:Â
- Rick Atkinson ‘66 – graduated from Harrison High School as the all-time career leading scorer in basketball; captain of the IU Hoosiers Men’s Basketball team during the 1969-70 season.
- Steve Parrish ‘67 – played Div. I football and baseball at the University of Kentucky.  University of Kentucky school record for single-game receptions (football). All-SEC in baseball (‘71).
- Mike Shoulders ‘67 – Harrison school record for interceptions. Inducted into the 2016 Greater Evansville Football Hall of Fame. City Champion in Long Jump and IACC Champion at DePauw.
- Brent Kell ‘91 – Evansville Press Co-Player of the Year in basketball (‘90-91); led nation (Division I) in three-point % (.504) in NCAA Men’s Basketball during the 1993-94 season while playing at University of Evansville.
- Joel Thomas ‘93 – played Division I-A football at Murray St; member of the ‘94-95 University of Southern Indiana Men’s Basketball Division II NCAA National Champions.
- Derek Barnett ‘98 – Evansville Courier and Press Player of Year (1997) in football; Two-time First Team All-State; Parade High School All-American; Three-year starter at Indiana University in football.
- Bryce Brown ‘07 – FIVE-time IHSAA state champion in 110 High Hurdles (2) and 300 Low Hurdles (3).  Big 12 Conference Champion and Division I NCAA All-American at Texas Tech.  Inducted into the Indiana Track and Field Hall of Fame in 2017.
- Andy Rice – Head Harrison Baseball Coach 1992 – 2012; 2000 IHSAA State Runner-Up; most baseball career wins in school history.Â
- 2012 Boys Golf Team – IHSAA Golf State Champions (2012).
“We are truly excited to induct this collection of amazing talent into our Athletic Hall of Fame. We are also excited to announce the addition of First Federal Savings Bank as our principal sponsor. First Federal Savings Bank will help us continue to provide an outstanding ceremony not only for the class of 2018 but our future classes moving forward. I would also like to thank the steering committee and the voting panel for their hard work and attention to detail during this process,†said Andre Thomas, Harrison High School Athletic Director.Â
The Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony sponsored by First Federal Savings Bank will take place at the Crescent Room (Milestones) on Friday, September 7 at 4 p.m. The honorees will be publicly honored at halftime of the Harrison versus North football game that evening at Romain Stadium. Tickets to attend are $30/person or $50/couple (dinner and game tickets included). To make your reservation please call 812-473-1434.
 Daily Scriptures for the Week of May 7, 2018Â
 Daily Scriptures for the Week of May 7, 2018Â
MONDAY
“Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest.†Matthew 11:28 NIVÂ
TUESDAY
“for it is God who works in you to will and to act in order to fulfill his good purpose.â€
Philippians 2:13 NIVÂ
WEDNESDAY
“Rejoice always, pray continually, give thanks in all circumstances; for this is God’s will for you in Christ Jesus.â€
1 Thessalonians 5:16-18 NIVÂ
THURSDAY
“Don’t let anyone look down on you because you are young, but set an example for the believers in speech, in conduct, in love, in faith, and in purity.â€
1 Timothy 4:12 NIVÂ
FRIDAY
“Very truly I tell you, whoever hears my word and believes him who sent me has eternal life and will not be judged but has crossed over from death to life.â€
John 5:24 NIVÂ
SATURDAY
“Fight the good fight of the faith. Take hold of the eternal life to which you were called when you made your good confession in the presence of many witnesses.†1 Timothy 6:12 NIVÂ
SUNDAY
“No discipline seems pleasant at the time, but painful. Later on, however, it produces a harvest of righteousness and peace for those who have been trained by it.â€
Hebrews 12:11 NIVÂ
FOOTNOTE: Submitted to the City-County Observer by Karen SeltzerÂ
ADOPT A PET
Cooper – Cooper is 9 years old and very, very pretty. He was surrendered because his owner was moving and said they couldn’t take him. He is really looking forward to his [permanent] second chapter of his life! His adoption fee is $40 and he’s neutered, microchipped, vaccinated, and ready to go home today. Contact Vanderburgh Humane at (812) 426-2563 for adoption details!
HOT JOBS IN EVANSVILLE
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