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IS IT TRUE JULY 3, 2017

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IS IT TRUE that the State of Illinois blew the deadline of passing a budget by July 1, 2017 and is now moving into its third year without a budget?…having their debt downgraded to junk ratings is now imminent which will make infrastructure and maintenance improvements more expensive by raising the interest rates to banana republic levels?…Illinois still is not caught up on $16 Billion in routine expenses and another Billion in fees and penalties?…the financial meltdown of Illinois is run from Chicago and the rest of the state is locked into the bus hat Chicago drove off a cliff?…Chicago is also being assisted to fight street crime by the federal government because they can’t seem to keep murders and shootings down to video game levels?…it is a sad state of affairs across the Wabash River?

IS IT TRUE last week the City of Evansville was grappling with a request to allocate $100,000 tax dollars for the purpose of helping poor people with repairs to their homes?…one writer even opined that $100,000 is like buying a cheeseburger to a city with a budget of over $300 Million and the writer is correct?…what the writer conveniently ignores is that $100,000 tossed into the sea of disrepair that makes up several areas of Evansville isn’t even enough to repair broken mailboxes much less a significant number of homes?…it is enough to show favoritism to a fraction of a percent of the people struggling with dilapidation and favoritism or downright cronyism is always at play when public money assists private problems?…from “who gets a “Front Door Pride” house to who gets to rent a $180,000 house at below market rate, to what contractors get approved to do the repairs at inflated prices, there is always the appearance of cronyism and corruption with such programs?

IS IT TRUE that former DMD Director Tom Barnett gave the CCO a tour of some of the areas of worse dilapidation once?…Director Barnett’s statement to the CCO was that Evansville has 10,000 houses that need over $100,000 in repairs to be habitable?…that amounts to a billion dollar problem with dilapidated houses?…$100,000 is 0.01% of what was needed to address this problem 7 years ago?…what the magnitude of this problem should drive home is that there is no damn money for nonsensical things like penguin exhibits, ball fields, and welfare hotels but our elected leaders keep obsessing over fun and games which the roofs fall in?…tossing $100,000 at a crony driven housing assistance program makes about as much sense as putting a cup of boiling water into the Ohio River to warm it up in January?…it does however make more sense than spending millions on a penguin park?…saving the money for real collective benefit is even better?…we know the hungry sharks are circling the potential for $100,000 if graft,to be authorized, and it probably will be, but it just perpetuates irresponsible management to do so?

Todays “READERS POLL” question is: Would you join a positive and non-violent protest in support of the City of Evansville Police and Firemen receiving an increase in salaries and healthcare benefits?

We urge you to take time and click the section we have reserved for the daily recaps of the activities of our local Law Enforcement professionals. This section is located on the upper right side of our publication.

If you would like to advertise or submit and article in the CCO please contact us City-County Observer@live.com

EDITORS FOOTNOTE:  Any comments posted in this column doesn’t represents the views or opinions of our advertisers.

CHANNEL 44 NEWS: Poseyville Girl Collecting Blankets for Homeless Vets

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Poseyville  Girl Collecting Blankets for Homeless Vets

  

One Poseyville girl is looking to give back this holiday. Hayleigh Lethem has been collecting blankets for homeless veterans.

She says she was struck by how much she could do after volunteering earlier in the year. She’s already collected more than a hundred blankets and is looking for more.

Hayleigh Lathem says, “When I get my goal that’s just going to be amazing. It’s just going to be awesome and I know I’m going to make my goal. There’s been some people that have been like you’re not going to get your goal but I know I can.”

Hayleigh has received the Individual Service Award from the National Junior Honors Society for her efforts.

Blankets can be dropped off at the Posey County Sheriff’s office if you would like to help Hayleigh hit her goal of 400 blankets.

TUNING OUT THE FAKE NEWS MEDIA

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TUNING OUT THE FAKE NEWS MEDIA

Making Sense by Michael Reagan

The stock market is soaring.

The economy is improving and employment is up.

But all you get from the Fake News Media (FNM) every night is more Trump bashing.

Night after night, as one phony scandal involving the president, his family or his administration fizzles into nothing and is replaced by another, TV and cable channels bring on their biased reporters to bash Donald Trump.

No wonder everyone’s I meet is bummed – especially those who watch nothing but the FNM’s TV and cable channels.

I can always tell someone who watches nothing but the FNM, because when you meet them they ask, “So what do you think about your president now?”

I also run into people all the time who didn’t vote for Trump and want to feel good about the president.

But when they turn on their TVs or pick up their shrinking newspapers, all they get are negative news stories about Trump.

I’m waiting for the fakers at CNN, MSNBC or the New York Times to do a hard-hitting investigation exposing how the president ties his shoes wrong every morning.

It sure would be nice if there were a place to go where you could just get honest news and analysis, not fake news and opinion.

But what paper can you read, or what station can you watch, where you can trust what you are told?

There’s no one in the media world anymore that makes you feel good about anything to do with the country, the economy or politics.

The FNM sure aren’t doing it. They can’t find positive news anywhere because, like rabid liberal dogs, they won’t let go of non-stories like the Russian-Trump collusion fable.

It’s been going on for almost a year now, right?

And still there’s no proof that Trump or his campaign colluded with the Russians to affect the 2016 election – or affect anything else, right?

But as that undercover Project Veritas video of CNN news producers proved this week, the FNM don’t let truth or facts deter their mission to destroy Trump.

They only care that the bogus Russian stories and their other Trump bashings bring them higher ratings or readers’ eyeballs.

Negative stories about Trump or what he is trying to do to protect America from terrorists or drain the swamp in Washington is all the FNM has time to talk about.

Take ObamaCare, please. Everyone agrees it is a disaster that needs to be fixed, but somehow everything the president and Republicans want to do to fix it is morally wrong or stupid.

All the FNM talk about is that Republicans haven’t voted for their healthcare bill yet — and that if they pass it, it will mean the end of America as we know it.

The FNM’s journalists also parrot – without the slightest bit of skepticism – the absurd claims by socialists like Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren that the GOP bill (which hasn’t been finalized yet) is so mean it’ll quickly kill a couple hundred thousand poor, sick or disabled Americans.

The Fake News Media have been feeding us so much garbage about Trump for so long, the American people don’t know what or who to believe.

Now we have CNN firing three top investigative journalists for their fake story about some alleged connections between Trump officials and a Russian investment fund.

CNN says the trio resigned. Fine.

CNN says it retracted their story because it wasn’t properly vetted and didn’t meet their “editorial standards.” Good.

More reporters will probably get the ax at CNN, but the network’s already shaky credibility as a news source has been seriously damaged even among liberals.

For more than a year CNN has been on a mission to destroy Trump and make a buffoon of him, but all they’ve done was prove they were the Fake News Channel Trump always said they were.

—

Copyright ©2017 Michael Reagan.

Arnold Gets Off To Fast Start; Red-Hot McPeek’s Ellis Juvenile Entrant To Be Determined

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Trainer Rusty Arnold got off to a great start at Ellis Park, winning a $40,000 maiden turf race with Calumet Farm’s 3-year-old filly English Affair and a $41,000 allowance race on grass with Preston Madden’s Derby Champagne on Saturday’s opening card.
Arnold trained English Affair’s mom, the talented Lady Melesi. The trainer particularly remembers Lady Melesi narrowly losing in Churchill Downs’ Dogwood Stakes 17 years ago. As noted in the official Equibase race chart, the stakes wound up being hand-timed and the chart-callers were the ones determining the margins and order of finish. Arnold recalls that the photo-finish operator had a heart attack, and there was never a picture to determine the outcome. (As an aside, finishing sixth in that Dogwood was Spain, who later at 56-1 odds would win the Breeders’ Cup Distaff).
“That’s how far back I go with the filly,” Arnold said. “Then Watts ended up selling Lady Melesi years ago, and one of the group of babies that Calumet sent me two years ago was this baby by English Channel out of Lady Melesi. Just coincidence.”
English Affair Was Second In Her First Two Starts.
“She was a little slow to come around,” Arnold said. “We ran her at Belterra first time out because we wanted to get her off to a good start. It came off the turf; we ran her anyway, and she ran pretty good and got some education. Ran back at Indiana and had kind of second-start-itis. She didn’t want to load, threw a little fit in the gate, got way back and came running. I was really impressed with her (at Ellis). She was kind of in trouble down on the rail. Didn’t have a place to go, switched to the outside and finished up and finished really strong. She’s a typical English Channel — she’s going to get better with age. We think she’s got a future. She’s made huge strides.”
Two races later, Arnold and jockey Brian Hernandez teamed again to win the entry-level allowance feature with Derby Champagne. That gelding is one of three horses Arnold trains for Madden, the master of historic Hamburg Place whose grandfather was the legendary John E. Madden, breeder, owner and trainer of Derby winners around the turn of the 20th century.
“We’ve a couple of 2-year-olds for him that we really like, a Blame and an Uncle Mo,” Arnold said. “They’re not close to the races yet. But he called me like a year ago, and this was the first horse I ever had for him. That was a pretty solid race at Ellis Park — it wasn’t the old easy place to go. Pretty good bunch. I think you’ll see that with the money being added down there.”
McPeek Will Be In EP Juvenile — Horse To Be Determined
Trainer Kenny McPeek does not plan to run Friday night’s Bashford Manor winner Ten City or Debutante heroine Sunny Skies back in the 2-year-old stakes at Ellis Park on Aug. 20. But that doesn’t mean McPeek won’t have horses in the $75,000 Ellis Park Juvenile and Debutante.
While Ten City and Sunny Skies are expected to train up to the 1 1/16-mile Iroquois and Pocahontas at Churchill Downs’ September meet, McPeek said he’s got more youngsters in the barn to put on display.
“I’ve got some others that can run in those races anyway,” he said by phone of the Ellis races. “I’ve got a bunch of 2-year-olds that are going to run in the next few days and weeks. I’ll end up having something for them, but it’s a matter of which one.”
Of Ten City, McPeek said, “He might be the best horse I’ve ever had my hands on. He does everything, goes out like a 5-year-old already. So it’s pretty easy to get excited about him. What I don’t want to do is beat him up over the summer and run in blistering heat. I want to keep him under wraps for a little while.”
McPeek runs a pair of 2-year-olds in Tuesday’s maiden race at a mile on turf, carded as the fifth race (post time 2:42 p.m. Central). It’s a formula he’s long used at Ellis, wanting the longer distance rather than looking for grass. Rushin Tothecircle ran once at Churchill, going five-eighths on dirt, breaking slowly and finishing last to the ultra-impressive Copper Bullet, the Bashford Manor runner-up. Eclipsed Moon is a $400,000 yearling making his debut off some impressive works at Keeneland.
“As far as the group as a whole, yes, it’s exceptional,” McPeek said of his 2-year-old crop. “It will still be later in the year when they’re all ready.”
McPeek knows well how tough a maiden race at Ellis can be. He was sixth in a mile dirt race last August with Senior Investment, who this year won Keeneland’s Grade 3 Stonestreet Lexington Stakes before taking third in the Preakness. The 10-length winner in that maiden race was Not This Time, who in his next two starts won Churchill Downs’ Grade 3 Iroquois by 8 3/4 lengths and narrowly lost the Breeders’ Cup Juvenile.
Jockey Robby Albarado not only won both 2-year-old stakes Friday at Churchill but swept the card’s third stakes with the Ben Colebrook-trained bourgeoning sprint star Limousine Liberal taking the Kelly’s Landing. In addition to McPeek’s treasure trove, Albarado also rides some very promising 2-year-olds for trainer Dale Romans, the pair teaming to win a maiden race by 10 lengths at Ellis last summer with Not This Time.
“I’ve got quite a few of them,” Albarado said. “It’s promising to have these 2-year-olds for the future. Kenny’s 2-year-olds were impressive. And Limousine Liberal, in an overnight handicap, not to be disrespectful of anyone but it was a breath of fresh air for him (versus graded stakes). It was nice to do it on that stage, the last night of racing.”
Winning will make a person forget the weather. And in between the Bashford Manor and Debutante, Churchill experienced an hour delay when a storm blew through. “What rain? I didn’t see any rain,” joked Albarado. “Actually I was worried about myself freezing up, my body freezing up. I stayed on the vibrating machine in the little workout room, kept stretching.”
At some point, Albarado’s 2-year-old mounts could stack up for the same race and decisions will have to be made — a great problem to have for a rider. “By the time the route races come along in the fall, whether Keeneland’s Breeders’ Futurity or Churchill’s Iroquois, by then we’ll have a good line on who’s who,” he said. “First time out, all of them were impressive. I can’t split them.”
Betting Up 62 Percent On Ellis’ Opening Card
Total betting on Saturday’s opening card was $1,789,882 — up 62 percent over the $1,106,508 wagered on last year’s first day of racing. That breaks down to $232,276  bet on Ellis at Ellis (up 14 percent over 2016) and $1,557,715 bet off track on Ellis’ nine-race card (up 72 percent percent over last year’s $903,119). Another $300,993 was bet at Ellis on other racetracks, a number that does not show up in the all-sources total but which was up 10 percent, the track said.
“It was just a delightful and great day,” said track president Ron Geary. “We worked hard the whole year to get to this position. We launched a bunch of new things, the new video and tote board and a lot of interior improvements. We’re very excited. Obviously we got our purse money up, and that helps a lot. But I think our team executed quite well. We thought we’d have a good meet; this is certainly a good indicator. But we’ll see what happens in the next 30 race dates, see if it rains or anything like that.”
Sidelined Jockey Francisco Torres Visits Ellis Park
Jockey Franciso Torres just needs his surgeon’s clearance to resume getting on horses after sustaining a broken neck for the fourth time in his long career on March 28 in a spill at New Orleans’ Fair Grounds. He was supposed to meet with his Indianapolis surgeon on Wednesday, but said the doctor canceled because of a heavy surgery schedule and can’t fit him in until Aug. 1.
“I said, ‘Are you serious? That’s another month,’” said Torres, who was visiting Ellis Sunday. “Meanwhile, I emailed the surgeon in New Orleans (who did the actual surgery) to see if he can see me before Aug. 1. I’m waiting to hear back. If he’ll see me before Aug. 1, I’ll make a trip down there. But I think things happen for a reason. If he can’t see me, it’s another month I can heal. But, believe me, I am anxious to get back.”
Torres keeps a photo on his phone of the hardware in his neck — the latest being a titanium plate and eight screws. “The surgeon said, ‘Cisco, you’ll never break your neck again,’” he said.
He showed how he has maintained complete flexibility in his neck. “If you’d told me (before) that they’d fuse my neck (and he could continue riding), I’d have told you you’re a liar,” Torres said. “What hurt the most was my tailbone. I broke my tailbone also. That hurt for a good two months. I’m just getting over that now.”
We Want You To Sing The National Anthem
Do you sing or know someone who does? Ellis Park is looking for talented singers to audition to sing the National Anthem for our live races this summer. To audition, email aerkman@ellisparkracing.com or call 812-435-8903.
Photo below: Jockey Brian Hernandez guides English Affair to victory in a grass maiden race Saturday at Ellis Park. Credit: Coady Photography. Jockey Francisco Torres, sidelined with his fourth neck fracture, was a visitor at Ellis Park. (Jennie Rees photo)
Trainer Rusty Arnold got off to a great start at Ellis Park, winning a $40,000 maiden turf race with Calumet Farm’s 3-year-old filly English Affair and a $41,000 allowance race on grass with Preston Madden’s Derby Champagne on Saturday’s opening card.
Arnold trained English Affair’s mom, the talented Lady Melesi. The trainer particularly remembers Lady Melesi narrowly losing in Churchill Downs’ Dogwood Stakes 17 years ago. As noted in the official Equibase race chart, the stakes wound up being hand-timed and the chart-callers were the ones determining the margins and order of finish. Arnold recalls that the photo-finish operator had a heart attack, and there was never a picture to determine the outcome. (As an aside, finishing sixth in that Dogwood was Spain, who later at 56-1 odds would win the Breeders’ Cup Distaff).
“That’s how far back I go with the filly,” Arnold said. “Then Watts ended up selling Lady Melesi years ago, and one of the group of babies that Calumet sent me two years ago was this baby by English Channel out of Lady Melesi. Just coincidence.”
English Affair was second in her first two starts.
“She was a little slow to come around,” Arnold said. “We ran her at Belterra first time out because we wanted to get her off to a good start. It came off the turf; we ran her anyway, and she ran pretty good and got some education. Ran back at Indiana and had kind of second-start-itis. She didn’t want to load, threw a little fit in the gate, got way back and came running. I was really impressed with her (at Ellis). She was kind of in trouble down on the rail. Didn’t have a place to go, switched to the outside and finished up and finished really strong. She’s a typical English Channel — she’s going to get better with age. We think she’s got a future. She’s made huge strides.”
Two races later, Arnold and jockey Brian Hernandez teamed again to win the entry-level allowance feature with Derby Champagne. That gelding is one of three horses Arnold trains for Madden, the master of historic Hamburg Place whose grandfather was the legendary John E. Madden, breeder, owner and trainer of Derby winners around the turn of the 20th century.
“We’ve a couple of 2-year-olds for him that we really like, a Blame and an Uncle Mo,” Arnold said. “They’re not close to the races yet. But he called me like a year ago, and this was the first horse I ever had for him. That was a pretty solid race at Ellis Park — it wasn’t the old easy place to go. Pretty good bunch. I think you’ll see that with the money being added down there.”
McPeek will be in EP Juvenile — horse to be determined
Trainer Kenny McPeek does not plan to run Friday night’s Bashford Manor winner Ten City or Debutante heroine Sunny Skies back in the 2-year-old stakes at Ellis Park on Aug. 20. But that doesn’t mean McPeek won’t have horses in the $75,000 Ellis Park Juvenile and Debutante.
While Ten City and Sunny Skies are expected to train up to the 1 1/16-mile Iroquois and Pocahontas at Churchill Downs’ September meet, McPeek said he’s got more youngsters in the barn to put on display.
“I’ve got some others that can run in those races anyway,” he said by phone of the Ellis races. “I’ve got a bunch of 2-year-olds that are going to run in the next few days and weeks. I’ll end up having something for them, but it’s a matter of which one.”
Of Ten City, McPeek said, “He might be the best horse I’ve ever had my hands on. He does everything, goes out like a 5-year-old already. So it’s pretty easy to get excited about him. What I don’t want to do is beat him up over the summer and run in blistering heat. I want to keep him under wraps for a little while.”
McPeek runs a pair of 2-year-olds in Tuesday’s maiden race at a mile on turf, carded as the fifth race (post time 2:42 p.m. Central). It’s a formula he’s long used at Ellis, wanting the longer distance rather than looking for grass. Rushin Tothecircle ran once at Churchill, going five-eighths on dirt, breaking slowly and finishing last to the ultra-impressive Copper Bullet, the Bashford Manor runner-up. Eclipsed Moon is a $400,000 yearling making his debut off some impressive works at Keeneland.
“As far as the group as a whole, yes, it’s exceptional,” McPeek said of his 2-year-old crop. “It will still be later in the year when they’re all ready.”
McPeek knows well how tough a maiden race at Ellis can be. He was sixth in a mile dirt race last August with Senior Investment, who this year won Keeneland’s Grade 3 Stonestreet Lexington Stakes before taking third in the Preakness. The 10-length winner in that maiden race was Not This Time, who in his next two starts won Churchill Downs’ Grade 3 Iroquois by 8 3/4 lengths and narrowly lost the Breeders’ Cup Juvenile.
Jockey Robby Albarado not only won both 2-year-old stakes Friday at Churchill but swept the card’s third stakes with the Ben Colebrook-trained bourgeoning sprint star Limousine Liberal taking the Kelly’s Landing. In addition to McPeek’s treasure trove, Albarado also rides some very promising 2-year-olds for trainer Dale Romans, the pair teaming to win a maiden race by 10 lengths at Ellis last summer with Not This Time.
“I’ve got quite a few of them,” Albarado said. “It’s promising to have these 2-year-olds for the future. Kenny’s 2-year-olds were impressive. And Limousine Liberal, in an overnight handicap, not to be disrespectful of anyone but it was a breath of fresh air for him (versus graded stakes). It was nice to do it on that stage, the last night of racing.”
Winning will make a person forget the weather. And in between the Bashford Manor and Debutante, Churchill experienced an hour delay when a storm blew through. “What rain? I didn’t see any rain,” joked Albarado. “Actually I was worried about myself freezing up, my body freezing up. I stayed on the vibrating machine in the little workout room, kept stretching.”
At some point, Albarado’s 2-year-old mounts could stack up for the same race and decisions will have to be made — a great problem to have for a rider. “By the time the route races come along in the fall, whether Keeneland’s Breeders’ Futurity or Churchill’s Iroquois, by then we’ll have a good line on who’s who,” he said. “First time out, all of them were impressive. I can’t split them.”
Betting up 62 percent on Ellis’ opening card
Total betting on Saturday’s opening card was $1,789,882 — up 62 percent over the $1,106,508 wagered on last year’s first day of racing. That breaks down to $232,276  bet on Ellis at Ellis (up 14 percent over 2016) and $1,557,715 bet off track on Ellis’ nine-race card (up 72 percent percent over last year’s $903,119). Another $300,993 was bet at Ellis on other racetracks, a number that does not show up in the all-sources total but which was up 10 percent, the track said.
“It was just a delightful and great day,” said track president Ron Geary. “We worked hard the whole year to get to this position. We launched a bunch of new things, the new video and tote board and a lot of interior improvements. We’re very excited. Obviously we got our purse money up, and that helps a lot. But I think our team executed quite well. We thought we’d have a good meet; this is certainly a good indicator. But we’ll see what happens in the next 30 race dates, see if it rains or anything like that.”
Sidelined jockey Francisco Torres visits Ellis Park
Jockey Franciso Torres just needs his surgeon’s clearance to resume getting on horses after sustaining a broken neck for the fourth time in his long career on March 28 in a spill at New Orleans’ Fair Grounds. He was supposed to meet with his Indianapolis surgeon on Wednesday, but said the doctor canceled because of a heavy surgery schedule and can’t fit him in until Aug. 1.
“I said, ‘Are you serious? That’s another month,’” said Torres, who was visiting Ellis Sunday. “Meanwhile, I emailed the surgeon in New Orleans (who did the actual surgery) to see if he can see me before Aug. 1. I’m waiting to hear back. If he’ll see me before Aug. 1, I’ll make a trip down there. But I think things happen for a reason. If he can’t see me, it’s another month I can heal. But, believe me, I am anxious to get back.”
Torres keeps a photo on his phone of the hardware in his neck — the latest being a titanium plate and eight screws. “The surgeon said, ‘Cisco, you’ll never break your neck again,’” he said.
He showed how he has maintained complete flexibility in his neck. “If you’d told me (before) that they’d fuse my neck (and he could continue riding), I’d have told you you’re a liar,” Torres said. “What hurt the most was my tailbone. I broke my tailbone also. That hurt for a good two months. I’m just getting over that now.”
We want you to sing the National Anthem
Do you sing or know someone who does? Ellis Park is looking for talented singers to audition to sing the National Anthem for our live races this summer. To audition, email aerkman@ellisparkracing.com or call 812-435-8903.
Photo below: Jockey Brian Hernandez guides English Affair to victory in a grass maiden race Saturday at Ellis Park. Credit: Coady Photography. Jockey Francisco Torres, sidelined with his fourth neck fracture, was a visitor at Ellis Park. (Jennie Rees photo)

Bridgmohan Mulling Staying In Kentucky For The Summer; Counterforce Takes Allowance Feature Under Hernandez

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Jockey Shaun Bridgmohan won on two of his three mounts Sunday at Ellis Park, including a $41,000 turf allowance on the LNF Foxwoods’ late-running Sensitive.
Afterward — and before winning the night cap on Kielbasa 25 minutes later — Bridgmohan said he might just wind up staying in Kentucky for the summer, rather than being based at Saratoga in upstate New York, as he’s done in recent years.
“If I’m on live horses, I’m here to win races,” said Bridgmohan, who lives in Oldham County. “If it (Ellis) continues to be good to me, I might just change my mind (about Saratoga). I don’t have a preference where I go, as long as where I go I can do well. It might be a good spot. If I want to stay, this is home for me in Kentucky. I’m under no pressure to make any drastic move.”
The economics of Saratoga are a little different for him than some riders, however, as he also has a home there.
Bridgmohan picked up the mount on Sensitive from Florent Geroux, who rode late Saturday in New Jersey and it wasn’t clear if he could make it to Ellis in time. But Bridgmohan rides a lot for winning trainer Brad Cox, who will have a full division at Ellis as well as Churchill Downs this summer.
Sensitive, a daughter of the Airdrie Stud stallion Divine Park, had to fan nine-wide on the far turn but wore down the leaders for a half-length victory over Valentine Wish. She covered the mile over very firm turf in 1:33.05, not far off the course record of 1:32.60, and paid $11.40 to win as the third choice in the field of 12 fillies and mares.
“She was always traveling great for me the whole time,” Bridgmohan said. “All I had to do at the end was just give her some daylight. Once I did and knuckled down on her, she gave me what I wanted.”
In beating older fillies in her first start of the year, the 3-year-old Sensitive was running at her fourth track and with her fourth different rider in four starts. Sensitive was trained last year by Michael Dickinson, racing on the East Coast.
Counterforce takes second-level allowance
Odds-on favorite Counterforce split horses in the stretch to win the $42,000 second-level allowance feature by a length over Bourbon Cowboy. Most of six horses at various times looked like the winner, with 2 3/4 lengths separating the field with less than a mile to go. But Counterforce was the last to exert himself, covering the six furlongs in 1:10.60. It was length back to All Shacked Up.
“That was a decent race,” said Brian Hernandez Jr., winning the race for trainer Steve Asmussen and owner Ron Winchell. “This horse ran big his last two races, and today we were fortunate enough to work out the trip and got the best of them.”
Counterforce won Oaklawn’s Bachelor eight races back as a 3-year-old in his third start, then was second in Pimlico’s Chick Lang before finding the water deeper in graded-stakes company. In four races this year against allowance company, he’s had a good fourth, better third, close second and then the win.
Cannon knocks out first victory of meet on 2-year-old filly
Stan Bernstein’s Belles Orb, a daughter of 2013 Kentucky Derby winner Orb, won the first 2-year-old filly race of the season, battling favored Mrs. Rocco throughout before edging away late for a length victory, while covering five-eighths of a mile in 59.37 seconds. Belles Orb paid $7.60 to win as the second choice in the field of 10. It was another three-quarters of a length back to third-place Party Club, owned by the Churchill Downs Racing Club.
“She’s very professional,” said Declan Cannon, who rode Belles Orb for trainer Eddie Kenneally. “The rail helped me. I had a lot left coming close to the wire. I think she’ll improve a lot for the run. She had a nice experience today, so more to come. I work a lot of 2-year-olds for Eddie. When he said he might be able to get me on her, I was thrilled. I’m just glad to get a winner early in the meet here, because getting on the board early is important.”
Sprinting out: Joe Rocco Jr. swept the early double with Prado’s Smoking for trainer Helen Pitts-Blasi and Casanova for trainer Mike Tomlinson (missed a third winner by a nose) …. Winners of Sunday’s three post-racing “Kids on the Track” footraces were 5-year-old Derek Woehler, 9-year-old Kolten Boyles and 12-year-old Chase Rubenacker. The kids’ races will be held after the final horse race each Sunday of the meet… Ellis Park has special holiday cards Monday and Tuesday…. Saturday July 8 is one of the meet’s most popular promotions, with jockeys racing camels and ostriches. Reservations for reserved seats can be made by calling 812-435-8918 or reservations@ellisparkracing.com.

Photos: Sensitive (outside) gave jockey Shaun Bridgmohan his first of two wins Sunday at Ellis Park after battling runner-up Valentine Wish most of the race. (Credit: Coady Photography). Foot races are held for kids after the horse racing concludes on Sundays at Ellis Park. (Credit: Damon Bagwell)

ARE WE STILL SEPARATE?

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Gavel Gamut By Jim Redwine
www.jamesmredwine.com
(Week of 03 July 2017)

ARE WE STILL SEPARATE?

Although I wrote the first few Gavel Gamuts in 1990 the every-weekly column began in April 2005, about 700 articles ago. In light of our current political and cultural dissonance I thought it might be interesting to revisit the following thoughts from over a decade ago to assess what changes may have occurred. This Birthday Greeting to America was first published July 04, 2005. I hope those of you who read it then and those who are considering it for the first time will find it worthwhile in our on-going conversation of Separate versus Equal. Also, Peg and I are returning to Osage County, Oklahoma for this Fourth of July. Maybe we’ll find the bus station is now just a memory.

Happy Birthday to U.S.!

Let’s Have a Party and Invite Everyone!

The United States Supreme Court has occasionally succumbed to popular opinion then later attempted to atone for it. The Dred Scott (1857) and Plessy v. Ferguson (1892) cases come to mind as examples of institutionalized injustice with the partial remedy of Brown v. Board of Education (1954) being administered many years later.

In Dred Scott, the U.S. Supreme Court decided that American Negroes had no rights which the law was bound to protect as they were non-persons under the U.S. Constitution.
And in Plessy, the Court held that Mr. Plessy could not legally ride in a “whites only” railroad car. The Court declared that laws that merely create distinctions but not unequal treatment based on race were constitutional. SEPARATE BUT EQUAL was born.
Our original U.S. Constitution of 1787 disenfranchised women, and recognized only three-fifths of every Black and Native American person, and even that was only for census purposes. Our Indiana Constitution of 1852 discouraged Negro migration to our state in spite of Posey County Constitutional Convention Delegate, Robert Dale Owen’s, eloquent pleas for fair treatment for all.

Were these documents penned by evil men? I think not. They were the result of that omnipotent god of politics, compromise, which is often good, but sometimes is not. Should you have read this column recently you may recall that I strongly encourage compromise in court, in appropriate cases.

However, as one who grew up in a state where the compromise of the post Civil War judges and politicians led to the legal segregation of schools, restaurants, and public transportation, I can attest that some compromises simply foist the sins of the deal makers onto future generations.

When I was 6 years old, my 7 year old brother, Philip, and I made our first bus trip to our father’s family in southern Oklahoma.

We lived on the Osage Indian Nation in northeastern Oklahoma. It sounds exotic but our hometown, Pawhuska, looked a lot like any town in Posey County.
In 1950 our parents did not have to worry about sending their children off with strangers except to admonish us not to bother anyone and to always mind our elders.
When mom and dad took us to the MKT&O (Missouri, Kansas, Texas and Oklahoma) bus station it was hot that July day. Oklahoma in July is like southern Indiana in July, WITHOUT THE SHADE TREES!

My brother and I were thirsty so we raced to the two porcelain water fountains in the shot gun building that was about 40 feet from north to south and 10 feet from east to west.
Phil slid hard on the linoleum floor and beat me to the nearest fountain. And while I didn’t like losing the contest, since the other fountain was right next to the first one, I stepped to it. “Jimmy, wait ‘til your brother is finished. James Marion! I said wait!” Dad, of course, said nothing. He didn’t need to; we knew that whatever mom said was the law. “Mom, I’m thirsty. Why can’t I get a drink from this one?”
brother up there.”

Of course, the next thing I wanted to do was use the restroom so I turned towards the four that were crammed into the space for one: “White Men”, “White Ladies”, “Colored Men”, and “Colored Women”. After mom inspected us and slicked down my cowlick again, we got on the bus and I “took off a kiting” to the very back.

I beat Phil, but there was a man already sitting on the only bench seat. I really wanted to lie down on that seat but the man told me I had to go back up front. And as he was an adult, I followed his instructions.

Philip said, “You can’t sit back there. That’s for coloreds. That’s why that colored man said for you to go up front.”

That was the first time I noticed the man was different. That was, also, the point where the sadness in his eyes and restrained anger in his voice crept into my awareness.
As a friend of mine sometimes says, “No big difference, no big difference, big difference.”
And if all this seems as though it comes from a country far far away and long long ago, Posey County segregated its Black and White school children for almost 100 years after 600,000 men died in the Civil War. In fact, some of Mt. Vernon’s schools were not fully integrated until after Brown was decided in 1954.

And, whether we have learned from our history or are simply repeating it may depend upon whom we ask. Our Arab American, Muslim, Black, Native American, and Hispanic citizens, as well as several other “usual suspects”, may think the past is merely prologue.
Sometimes it helps for me to remember what this 4th of July thing is really about. It’s our country’s birthday party; maybe we should invite everyone.

There is nothing equal about separate.

 

EDITOR FOOTNOTE: For more Gavel Gamut articles go to:
www.jamesmredwine.com

Civic Center, METS, Trash Pickup Notices

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The Civic Center will be closed Tuesday, July 4, 2017 for Independence Day. The Civic Center will resume regular business hours on Wednesday, July 5, 2017.

The Metropolitan Evansville Transit System will be closed Tuesday, July 4, and METS buses will not operate that day. Regular bus service will resume on Wednesday, July 5.

Republic Services will operate on a regular schedule Monday, July 3, 2017, but there will be no residential trash or recycling collections on Tuesday, July 4. Trash and recycling collections will resume on Wednesday, July 5, on a one-day delay.

Notice of Vanderburgh County Redevelopment Commission Meeting

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The Vanderburgh County Redevelopment Commission will hold a meeting on Wednesday July 19, 2017 at 9:00 a.m. in Room 307 of the Civic Center Complex at 1 N.W. Martin Luther King, Jr. Blvd. in Evansville, Indiana.

TRUMPS TWITTER

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