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Court is in session: Popular jockey back at 56 at Ellis Park

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‘My age doesn’t define me. Actually it exemplifies my experience and my fortitude to stay in the game and be as competitive as I am’ — Jon Court
  Jon Court is a six-time Ellis Park champion jockey and the only rider ever to win the meet title five years in a row. The winner of 4,035 North American races (which does not include his victory in the $1 million Japan Cup Dirt in 2003) and more than $100 million in purses, Court remains a force at age 56. The next time Court wins at Ellis Park, it will be his 600th victory at the track. His career record at Ellis is 599 wins, 477 seconds and 407 thirds out of 3,298 mounts, for purse earnings of $9,449,887.
Court recently discussed riding and the upcoming Ellis meet, which runs Saturday through Labor Day, with racing Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays, plus this Monday and Tuesday and Sept. 4. There is no racing Saturday, Sept. 2 to allow for Kentucky Downs’ opener.
Last year you suffered a fractured rib and missed the first part of the Ellis meet but still wound up eighth in the standings with 16 wins. This year you come into Ellis off a pretty good meet at Churchill Downs.
You never know what will transpire from one meet to the next. I came off a really good Oaklawn (27 wins), came to Churchill and really had kind of slim pickings. But I was able to hold my own and get started, hold my own throughout the meet. Now we roll on into Ellis. That’s my circuit, and I’m looking forward to it — a lot of us are. I’ve been doing it a long time now. You take it how it comes, and I welcome that meet opening up.
You’re riding a fair amount for D. Wayne Lukas. If you teamed to win the Kentucky Derby next spring, you’d be a combined 139 years old, blowing past the record 127 combined age of Charlie Whittingham and Bill Shoemaker when Ferdinand won in 1986. How is it you keep going?
I don’t know if you get stigmatized or if it’s the stereotype of what 50 is. But I’ve been taking exceptional care of myself. I know what I have to do and what’s got to be done. Now it’s just a part of my life. I take that extra initiative to keep myself healthy, fit and in the game. I’m not trying to go out here and slaughter them. But I want to be a feared competitor in every opportunity I have to ride.
You’re a good sport when we tag @AARP when Tweeting about you.
My age doesn’t define me. Actually it exemplifies my experience and my fortitude to stay in the game and be as competitive as I am. Yes, I do get AARP literature in the mail, and I actually embrace that and just enjoy where life is taking me on a day-to-day basis.
At this point of your career, how much is brains and how much is physical skill? And how has that changed from, say, 30 years ago?
It’s always going to be physical. You have to have your physical skills up to par. You adjust as time goes on. Your body changes, and your mind does, too. I’m a lot more relaxed at this stage of my career and my life. At the same time, this is a competitive game, and it still eats at you (to get beat). I was telling a young rider today that it will eat at you in the early stages and throughout your career. Because if you have that competitive edge in you, it’s going to tinker with your mind. (But) you keep your physical body in shape, and your mind will fall into place where you put it.
Ellis Park, where you won the title in 1998 through 2002, was your gateway to what has been a very successful career in Kentucky, one that allowed you to ride in California for five years before returning in 2009, again winning the title. How do you feel about riding at Ellis Park?
I’ve always enjoyed Ellis Park. It has its own atmosphere. It’s good racing, good Kentucky racing and it’s a special place where we spend the summer. I look forward to the meet getting started. We always have a good time at Ellis Park.
Talk about the change in the jockey colony the past few years.
Ellis Park has kept pace, with the purses increasing over the years. It’s keeping the talent here. A lot of riders who would move on to other states, are staying home in the Blue Grass State, and have good reason to do so. The last several years, the depth of the talent at Ellis Park has increased. A lot of the top riders at Churchill are staying home and riding at Ellis.

Allen’s homer gives Evansville 5-4 win

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Josh Allen’s second walk-off home run of the season gave the Evansville Otters a dramatic 5-4 victory over the Florence Freedom to open the weekend series at Bosse Field in front of 3,278.

Allen’s two-out homer in the ninth off Florence’s Matt Kaster came after the Freedom tied the game at 4-4 in the top half of the inning when Collins Cuthrell hit a solo home run off Randy McCurry.
The game was delayed 30 minutes because of a brief shower and once it started, it was Florence taking an early lead.
In the second, a Cuthrell sacrifice fly scored both Andrew Godbold and Jordan Brower, giving the Freedom a 2-0 lead.
An inning later, Jose Brizuela hit a solo home run to extend the advantage to 3-0.
Evansville had an answer in the bottom half of the inning when Allen scored Brandon Soat on an RBI ground out, cutting the deficit to 3-1.
John Schultz’s RBI double in the fifth made it 3-2. Soat hit a two-run home run in the sixth, scoring Nick Walker, which gave the Otters a 4-3 lead.
McCurry earned the victory and improved to 1-1 after blowing a save opportunity. He pitched an inning, giving up one earned run off a hit.
Diego Ibarra started for Evansville and went six innings, giving up three earned runs off six hits. He struck out six and walked two. Kyano Cummings pitched the seventh and eighth and he struck out two.
Kaster took the loss, pitching 2/3 innings before giving up the game-winning homer to Allen.
Offensively, Soat finished 2 for 5 with two runs and two RBIs for Evansville. Allen was 2 for 4 with two runs and two RBIs and Schultz was 1 for 4 with an RBI.
The Otters improved to 24-18 while the Freedom fell to 30-13.
Saturday is a doubleheader at Bosse Field with game one on Poster Pickup Day beginning at 5:35 p.m. Game two will be played approximately 30 minutes after the conclusion of game one. Posters from the first three decade promotion nights will be available for fans who missed the previous games.
Tickets are still available by going to evansvilleotters.com or calling 812-435-8686.

Both games will be streamed live on Otters Digital Network and over the air on 91.5 FM WUEV. Lucas Corley (play-by-play) and Bill McKeon (analysis) will call the action.

The Evansville Otters are the 2006 and 2016 Frontier League champions. Group packages and single game tickets are now on sale. For more information, visit evansvilleotters.com or call 812-435-8686.

Sobriety Checkpoint Planned around 4th of July Holiday

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The Evansville-Vanderburgh County Traffic Safety Partnership, the Governor’s Council on Impaired and Dangerous Driving and the Indiana Criminal Justice Institute (ICJI) would like to remind all Indiana motorists to celebrate the Fourth of July responsibly by driving safe and sober.For as many good memories as the Fourth of July holiday can provide, it can also create recurring nightmares for families. Nationwide, impaired-driving deaths increased by 3 percent in the United States from 2014 to a total of 10,265 in 2015.

“That’s 10,265 mothers, fathers, children, siblings, friends, grandparents, and so many more,” said Dave Murtaugh, executive director of the Indiana Criminal Justice Institute. “It’s one person killed every 51 minutes in the United States.”

During the 2016 July Fourth holiday weekend (6 p.m. Friday, July 1 through 6 a.m. Monday, July 5) there were 146 drug or alcohol related crashes, 85 of which involved a driver with a reported blood alcohol concentration of .08 or greater. Crashes involving alcohol or prescription and illegal drugs during this period resulted in 82 injuries and 6 deaths.

Sheriff David Wedding explained, “With all the excitement and fun this Fourth of July, keeping an eye on an intoxicated friend may not seem like a priority. Please don’t wait for someone else to take action if a person is about to drive away drunk.” Sheriff Weddng added, “If you plan on drinking, make arrangements to get home beforehand. Do not put your friends and family in the position of having to take your keys.”

Throughout the extended holiday weekend sheriff’s deputies, police officers and state troopers will be conducting saturation patrols looking for drunk drivers. Additionally, the Sheriff’s Office will conduct a sobriety checkpoint on Monday, July 03, 2017 from 11:00 pm until 3:00 am. The location for Monday’s checkpoint was chosen based on local traffic collision data. Analysis of data captured around the Independence Day holiday last year indicated three geographical areas within Vanderburgh County accounted for the majority of reported hit and run crashes. The upcoming checkpoint will be located within one of those areas. Hit and run crashes are often the result of impaired drivers who try to avoid arrest by fleeing the scene.

The Evansville-Vanderburgh County Traffic Safety Partnership conducts sobriety checkpoints in an effort to detect and deter impaired drivers (thereby reducing the occurrence of alcohol and drug related traffic crashes). Funding for saturation patrols and local sobriety checkpoint operations is provided by the ICJI through a grant from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA).

 

CHANNEL 44 NEWS: Two Tri-State Hospitals Agree To Talk

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Deaconess and Methodist Hospital Create Partnership

Two Tri-State hospitals have agreed to talk about how they can work together. Methodist Hospital in Henderson and Deaconess Hospital have entered into a letter of intent to discuss business practices, treatments, and other health care…

JULY 1, 2017 ‘READERS FORUM”

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Whats on your mind today?

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.

Injunction Encourages Minors To “Go It Alone” Through The Emotionally And Physically Overwhelming Procedure Of An Abortion

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abortion
abotation

ARE WE STILL SEPARATE?

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Gavel Gamut By Jim Redwine

www.jamesmredwine.com

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 United States of America!

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?”

“Son, look at that sign.  It says ‘colored’.  Philip, quit just hanging on that fountain; let your 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.

For more Gavel Gamut articles go to:

www.jamesmredwine.com

LINK TO NEW HARMONY GAZETTE

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New Harmony Gazette 7-17

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