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CHANNEL 44 NEWS: DATA BREACH COMPROMISES MEDICAID INFORMATION IN INDIANA

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Data Breach Compromises Medicaid Information in Indiana

A data breach may have compromised personal information for anyone in Indiana who gets healthcare through Medicaid. The agent for the Indiana Health Coverage Programs says a link that went out earlier this year may have caused some patient…

Gov. Holcomb Announces Four Governor’s Fellows 

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INDIANAPOLIS—Governor Eric J. Holcomb today announced four young men and women to serve as the 2017-2018 Governor’s Fellows.

The Governor’s Fellowship is a highly selective, year-long program for talented young men and women who have an interest in serving in state government.  Fellows are full-time paid employees who participate in various state agencies on a rotating basis over the course of a year and learn firsthand how polices are made and implemented.

The 2017-2018 Governor’s Fellows include:

Christopher Anderson

Christopher Anderson graduated from Marian University in 2017 with a bachelor of science degree in biology and minors in pastoral leadership and Spanish. He interned for Ethics Integration and was the founder and president of Students for Sustainable Stewardship at Marian University. Christopher received the Student Government Association Leadership Award as well as the Senior Biology Recognition of Excellence Award.

James Suess

James Suess graduated from Wabash College in 2017 with a bachelor’s degree in rhetoric and a minor in religion.  As an undergraduate he was a class facilitator and held a number of leadership positions within the Beta Theta Pi Fraternity.  He co-hosted a radio talk show and serves as a volunteer and advisor for the nationally-ranked We The People team at Cathedral High School.

Colin Thompson

Colin Thompson graduated from Wabash College in 2017 with a bachelor’s degree in French and minors in business and political science. He was a member of the Wabash College Student Senate where he helped craft a new constitution for the student body. Colin enjoys photography and has photographed multiple on-campus events for The Bachelor, the Wabash College student newspaper.

Olivia Walker

Olivia Walker graduated from Indiana State University in 2017 with a degree in political science and a minor in legal studies.  She has worked as an intern in the Terre Haute City Clerk’s Office, Eric Holcomb for Indiana, and Cogswell & Associates.  She was an active college student as a residential assistant for the political science living community and a supplemental instructor for a Leadership, Ethics, & Democracy class. Olivia also served as the marketing manager for the Sycamore Yearbook at Indiana State University.

St. Vincent Hospital For Women & Children Birth Records

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Jessica and James Thurston, Princeton, Ind., daughter, Karsyn Lilyann Mae, June 26

Lauren and Grant Racer, Mount Vernon, Ind., son, Hinckley Stone, June 26

Sarah and Oscar Duncan IV, Mount Vernon, Ind., son, Oscar Merrell V, June 26

Emily Burkhardt and Justin Harris, Poseyville, Ind., son, Ezra Eli Robert, June 26

Susan Allen and Gaige Porter, Evansville, son, Josiah Damian, June 26

Destiney Padgett and Jamond Heldt, Princeton, Ind., son, Kaceton Robert, June 26

Hannah O’Daniel and Kyle Galbraith, Mount Carmel, Ill., son, Jace Collin, June 26

Iris Irvine, Evansville, daughter, Charlisse Natalynn, June 27

Katelin and Matthew Bradley, Newburgh, Ind., daughter, Lillian Marie Sarahfaye, June 27

Brittaney Kohlmeier and Sidney Johnson, Oakland City, Ind., son, Sterling David Keith, June 27

Brittney and Philip Smith, Ekron, Ky., son, Mark Kenneth, June 28

Debra and William Grumbo, Evansville, daughter, Gracelynn Rose, June 28

Elizabeth Hennessy-Spencer and Justin Spencer, Henderson, Ky., daughter, Ivy Elizabeth, June 29

Valerie and Jason Utley, Newburgh, Ind., son, Camden Brian, June 29

Rachel and Mark Coumes, Evansville, son, Sebastian Charles Warren, June 29

Emily and Cory Bridges, Henderson, Ky., daughter, Ella Mae, June 29

Amanda and Christopher Conn, Evansville, son, Rudolph Charles, June 29

Amanda Hill and Josh Trail, Evansville, daughter, Aubrey Marie , June 29

Jessica Young and Kier Pedersen, Evansville, daughter, Emberly Anne Marie, June 29

Nina and Cody Smith, Cannelton, Ind., son, Sullivan Eugene, June 30

Keisha and Jeffrey Cronin, Elberfeld, Ind., daughter, Stella Joy, June 30

April Wilhite and Anthony Flowerdew, Evansville, daughter, Skylar Renee, Jul. 1

Owner Sold On Not Selling Adventist After Allowance Victory 

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Fort Wise Treaty the first winner sired by BC Classic winner Fort Larned;
Favored Eclipse Moon also impresses in defeat in both 2-year-olds’ debut

HENDERSON, Ky. (Tuesday, July 4, 2017) — Adventist was a late edition to next week’s Fasig-Tipton Horses of Racing Age sale in Lexington. But he didn’t stay in the auction long, with owner Jeff Treadway telling trainer Mike Maker that the 4-year-old colt was coming out after capturing Ellis Park’s $42,000 second-level allowance feature by 1 3/4 lengths over Zambian on Tuesday’s special July 4 card.

Reached by phone in Louisville, Maker said shortly after the race that he wasn’t sure what Adventist’s next start might be because he might be sold. A few minutes later and after an exchange of text messages with Treadway, Maker still didn’t know where Adventist might run, but that he was coming out of the sale.

Adventist won his first start by 11 1/4 lengths then was third in New York’s Withers, Gotham and Wood Memorial but was detoured from the Kentucky Derby to Belmont Park’s Peter Pan a week later, finishing fourth. The colt took second in the Ohio Derby but then was seventh in the West Virginia Derby and two subsequent allowance races.

Sent to Maker at Gulfstream Park for a new start on grass, the son of Any Given Saturday won a 7 1/2-furlong turf allowance, then had a pair of seconds at 1 1/16 miles.

“They had high hopes for him all along, and he’d been kind of an underachiever,” Maker said. “They were hoping the surface change would kind of turn him around… We finally got the performance we were expecting. Maybe he’s just a true miler.”

Adventist settled into mid-pack on the fence under jockey Corey Lanerie, tipping to the outside rounding out of the far turn and wrestling command in the final eighth-mile of the mile turf race. Zambian was bottled up behind horses before Shaun Bridgmohan found a seam on the inside, prevailing in the four-horse logjam for second over Go Navy Go and Allidoisdreamofyou in the field of eight older horses.

Adventist paid $6 to win after completing the mile in 1:33.23 — 0.63 seconds off the 12-year-old course record over firm turf that has been producing glib times.

“The first time I saw him was today,” Lanerie said. “Nobody says anything; they just leg you up and let you go. It worked out well. He was the best horse. He was fun to ride.

“I was watching the 6 horse (Zambian, a Churchill Downs allowance winner), as I thought he was the horse to beat. He was looking for room to go, so I ducked to the outside, tried to come around and make it tight where he wouldn’t have anywhere to go and he’d have to come around me. It seemed to work out.”

Lanerie, who won three races on Tuesday’s card, will miss defending his titles in this Saturday’s ostrich and camel race, instead riding in Iowa at Prairie Meadows’ stakes festival. “I don’t know who is more disappointed, me or my wife,” he joked.

2-year-old spotlight: Fort Wise Treaty

Two youngsters who appear to have big futures were on display in Ellis Park’s fifth race Tuesday for 2-year-olds running a mile on turf. Fort Wise Treaty and jockey Shaun Bridgmohan got through on the rail to edge favored Eclipsed Moon, who rallied on the outside only to come up a neck short.

Fort Wise Treaty, a $170,000 OBS April 2-year-old purchase owned by Mark Breen of Connecticut, did a lot of things right in his first start. Breaking from post 7, the colt settled nicely in mid-pack and was content to be on the inside, where he stayed the rest of the way, getting through traffic while finishing in 1:36.60, his last eighth-mile coming in under 12 seconds. Fort Wise Treaty paid $13.60 to win as the third choice.

“He ran great; he had a great ride, I can tell you that,” trainer Brad Cox said by phone. “The intent was to start short on dirt, but he just wasn’t giving it to us in the mornings like we were looking for. We thought maybe we’d run him long on the turf and maybe he’d be a little more competitive. And that seemed to work. He got a great trip. Obviously the horse who was second looks like a really nice horse and had a wide trip. I sure don’t want to run again him next time. But it was a good effort. I was proud of the horse.”

Said Bridgmohan: “Brad did a phenomenal job. He was very professional, was there every time I needed him. All I had to do was just find him some room, and I did. And he gave me what he had.”

Fort Wise Treaty is the first winner for the Adena Springs stallion Fort Larned, winner of the 2012 Breeders’ Cup Classic at Santa Anita for Kentucky-based trainer Ian Wilkes and jockey Brian Hernandez Jr.

Eclipsed Moon, the odds-on favorite in the field of 12, broke last and had to come six-wide around the far turn. Jockey Robby Albarado said there was a lot to like in defeat.

“His mom was a runner,” he said of the Dehere mare Beautician. “I was second on her in the (2009) Breeders’ Cup Juvenile in California. He’s a nice colt. He didn’t break well, so I gave him a good experience. I had to go wide because they were like quails out there, those 2-year-olds stopping. They were all over the place. I didn’t want to get him stopped, especially a big horse. He ran well. The top two horses are nice horses. That was a good showing first time out.”

It was another two lengths back to the pacesetting Rushin Tothecircle, Eclipsed Moon’s stablemate in trainer Kenny McPeek’s barn.

Cox said Fort Wise Treaty will stay at Ellis Park, where his assistant Tessa Bisha oversees that division, with the Aug. 20 Ellis Park Juvenile at seventh-eighths of a mile a possibility.

“I wouldn’t hesitate to maybe try him on the Poly (synthetic surface) or dirt at the right distance,” he said. “I don’t want to shorten him up much. I would maybe try seven-eighths on the Poly or on the dirt, if the race came up the right way. If there’s a grass race, I prefer the grass with him, to be honest.”

Court guides Indy Hill to allowance triumph

Calumet Farm’s well-bred 3-year-old colt Indy Hill needed 10 starts to win a race, but now has taken two straight after prevailing in a $41,000 first-level allowance by a length over Crawford.

“He was right there with the speed, and when we turned for home, I had enough pony to finish it up,” said jockey Jon Court, who is 2 for 2 on Indy Hill.

With his pedigree, being by Calumet’s Breeders’ Cup Turf winner English Channeland out of a mare by Belmont Stakes winner A.P. Indy, one might expect Indy Hill to be a distance horse. But he seems to have found a home as a turf sprinter, covering 5 1/2 furlongs in 1:01.20 after pressing fractions of 21.45 for the first quarter-mile and 43.54 for the half.

“I got off the duck right away, then the reality of just riding every day set in. I had seconds and thirds. This is my second win,” said Court, who later would get his third of the young meet and 602nd victory at Ellis Park. “I’m fortunate at this stage of my career that I’m as competitive and riding as active as I am…. I’ve got some good business. Just have to keep on keepin’ on, try to find fast ones.”

Racing resumes Friday with the first race at 12:50 p.m. Central.

Photo below: Fort Wise Treaty (Shaun Bridgmohan up) edges favored Eclipsed Moon (Robby Albarado) in the first race for both horses at a mile on turf at Ellis Park on Tuesday. Credit: Coady Photography

Oh, Baby! Borel Says He’s Happier Than With Derby Victories

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Oh, Baby! Borel Says He’s happier Than with Derby victories
Hall of Fame Jockey Riding High With Pending Fatherhood He Thought
He’d Never Experience. ‘This Is just Unbelievable, Listening To Him Kick.
HENDERSON, Ky. (Tuesday, July 4, 2017) — A year ago this holiday weekend, Calvin Borel was a visitor on the Churchill Downs backside, his first time at a racetrack since he suddenly retired with little explanation three months earlier at Oaklawn Park. The Hall of Fame jockey said he was just “chilling,” trying to decide what he wanted to do with his life after the relationship with a long-time girlfriend disintegrated.
A lot has changed since then. Borel resumed riding last Aug. 27 at Ellis Park, the fans’ love-fest with the jockey picking right up where it left off. If his business was slower to resume, it certainly is picking up speed. In two days of riding at Ellis Park — he missed Saturday’s opener for his induction into the Louisiana Sports Hall of Fame and did not have a mount Tuesday — he has won three of eight starts with a pair of seconds, including one by a nose. All three wins were horses trained by his long-time friend, Buff Bradley.
But here’s the 50-year-old jockey’s life-altering event: His fiancee, Renay Falkner, is pregnant with Borel’s first child, a boy due in late September or early October. He also plans to adopt Falkner’s 2-year-old son, Stephen. Borel estimates he’s known Falkner for 20 years, including when she was an exercise rider for his brother Cecil.
This is how happy Borel is these days: He says even more than winning his three Kentucky Derbys — and anyone who watched the jockey’s unrestrained emotion and raw joy with Street Sense in 2007, Mine That Bird in 2009 and Super Saver in 2010 in America’s greatest race knows just how high that happiness bar is.
“Life is good. I love the girl I’m with. I won three Kentucky Derbys, and I was happy,” he said. “But this is just unbelievable, listening to him kick at night.”
It was a feeling Borel didn’t think he’d ever experience, because of the toll on his body from reducing and the constant dehydration to make weight to ride during a career that began in 1983.
“Actually, I didn’t think I could ever have a kid,” said Borel, a two-time Ellis Park riding champion who has 5,173 career victories, ranking 28th on the all-time list. “The doctor said once I quit reducing, maybe I could. I don’t know if it just happened when I quit for awhile, and then we got together. It was kind of a mistake, but it was a good mistake — something I wouldn’t trade for the world.
“We’ve always been friends,” Borel said of Falkner. “When I came back to ride, we got together and one thing led to another. We get along so good. She has a little boy. He’s like my own. You know I love kids. This is just a dream come true. I’ve been there, win the Derby and did everything I wanted to do. But I love to ride, now. And she knows it and doesn’t want me to quit. It’s my passion. As long as I stay healthy, I’m going to ride. But they will have a good childhood, I promise you.”
Bradley, who gained his 500th and 501st career wins Monday with Borel aboard, has noticed a marked change in his friend from last year. When Borel came to visit last July 4th weekend, he stayed at Bradley’s farm in Frankfort, Ky., the trainer putting him to work mowing paddocks. Next thing you knew, Borel was riding Bradley’s pony, then galloping and working horses.
“You could tell he just didn’t know where he was going, what he wanted to do,” Bradley said. “I think he just needed the time to figure out himself. I think he knew he missed his riding.
“Just seeing Calvin now, he’s almost like a little kid again, he’s so happy about the baby coming. He’s showing pictures of the ultrasound — something you don’t always expect out of Calvin. I think it’s given him a new meaning and fulfilling another part of his life. He’s always been very motivated with his riding, but I think now he feels like he’s doing it for more than just himself.”

What’s Quackin’ at cMoe?

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ArtMaker Grand Opening
July 12th – ALL DAY

 

Come celebrate the NEW 3rd floor gallery, ArtMaker, where families can play, create, and experiment! ArtMaker mixes a traditional art studio, wood shop, and science lab into one space. Children can follow their own interests and learn science through art or art through science. Using real materials and tools, children pick a project, solve problems, and learn the importance of trial and error. Excited yet? Well there’s even more to do! We can’t wait till you come visit the new ArtMaker studio.

cMoe Member families will get a sneak peek and exclusive opportunity to create in the space first! Member families are invited to the ribbon cutting on Tuesday, July 11th at 1pm. To become a cMoe Member Family, visit our website!

The Museum greatly acknowledges the tremendous investment from the Arts Council of Southwestern Indiana in advancing art and STEM education at the Children’s Museum and to Berry Global, AstraZeneca, the Marty & Dottie Miller Fund, the Women’s Fund of Vanderburgh County and The Grainger Foundation for separate contributions that they made to help with the exhibit.

Adopt A Pet

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Caroline is a 2-year-old female black cat. She is the mom to the “Little House on the Prairie” kittens, who are also up for adoption. Year after year, people flock to adopt cute little kittens and their moms are left behind. Don’t let that happen to Caroline! Her adoption fee is $30 and includes her spay, microchip, vaccines, and more. Contact Vanderburgh Humane at (812) 426-2563 or adoptions@vhslifesaver.org for details!

 

Adopt A Pet

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Timon & Pumbaa – Timon and Pumbaa are just about the most ADORABLE bonded pair of male guinea pigs you ever saw in your life. They are just over a year old. They are Peruvian/Abyssinian mixes with amazing color & hair. It has to be said… Timon looks a little bit like he’s wearing a certain Presidential toupee. He is very Instagram-worthy. The adoption fee is $30 for both and they must go together. (Cage & supplies not included.) Contact Vanderburgh Humane at (812) 426-2563 or adoptions@vhslifesaver.org for details!