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YESTERYEAR-Fendrich Cigar Company

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Herrmann  Fendrich opened a tobacco products company in Evansville in 1855. After a fire destroyed the Fendrich plant on Main Street in 1910, a new factory was built on Oakley Street behind Willard Library. For decades, the company employed thousands of people, mostly women who rolled millions of cigars by hand each week, as well as salesmen who helped turn such cigar labels as La Fendrich and Charles Denby into internationally recognized names. The firm relocated to Pennsylvania in 1969, and the Evansville plant is now occupied by Berry Plastics.

FOOTNOTES: We want to thank Patricia Sides, Archivist of Willard Library for contributing this picture that shall increase people’s awareness and appreciation of Evansville’s rich history. If you have any historical pictures of Vanderburgh County or Evansville please contact please contact Patricia Sides, Archivist Willard Library at 812) 425-4309, ext. 114 or e-mail her at www.willard.lib.in.us.

Niemeier and Decker sweep GLVC awards

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University of Southern Indiana senior shortstop Kyle Niemeier (Evansville, Indiana) and senior right-handed reliever T.J. Decker (Brazil, Indiana) swept the weekly Great Lakes Valley Conference awards after helping the Screaming Eagles to five victories last week. Neimeier and Decker won the GLVC Player of the Week and Pitcher of the Week awards, respectively, for the first time in their careers at USI.

Niemeier led the USI hitters with a blistering .571 batting average (8-14), while scoring nine runs and driving in four RBIs. He also had two doubles and a triple amongst his eight hits last week.

The senior shortstop’s triple came in USI’s come from behind 11-8 victory over Saint Joseph’s College on Senior Day, scoring the tying and game-winning runs in the four-run seventh inning.

For the season, Niemeier is hitting a career-best .357 with 37 runs scored, 30 RBIs, 10 doubles, two triples, and eight stolen bases. He posted a 14-game hitting streak that is tied for second-best on the team this season.

Decker closed the door on three of the four USI victories over Saint Joseph’s Friday and Sunday, posting three saves and a 0.00 ERA in 5.2 innings of work. He struck out 10 batters in the three games, tying a career-high by fanning five in two of the three appearances.

The highlight of Decker’s week came in his first appearance against the Pumas when he struck out five of the six batters he faced to preserve the 4-2 win.

With the five victories last week, four coming in conference play, Niemeier and Decker helped move the Eagles into first place in the GLVC East Division by one game over the University of Indianapolis and back into the Collegiate Baseball Newspaper/ABCA Top 30 poll at number 26.

USI finishes the regular season this weekend when it travels to play the University of Indianapolis in a GLVC four-game series Friday and Saturday. First pitch Friday is noon (CDT), while Saturday is 11 a.m. (CDT).

EVSC State of our Schools Presentation

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State of our Schools Presentation at Rotary Club Meeting

Noon,  Tuesday May 3

Tropicana Conference Center (Entrance Just North of Tropicana Parking Garage)

Making Connections… Maximizing Potential

 

Superintendent David Smith will present the Evansville Vanderburgh School Corporations State of Our Schools tomorrow at noon, at the Rotary Club Meeting.  The event is in the Tropicana Conference Center, just north of the parking garage.

 

MAY 2 “IS IT TRUE” ?

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IS IT TRUE yesterday Alex Schmitt called a new conference and charged that Cheryl Musgrave had a conflict interest issue concerning the IU Medical School?  …Mrs. Musgrave made the following statement pertaining to Mr. Schmitt allegations towards her?  …Mrs. Musgrave stated ” The people of Vanderburgh County know me and know what I stand for.”  “These wild smears by Mr. Schmitt are totally false”.  “Alex Schmitt is a desperate, unemployed and sued political candidate that doesn’t pay his bills.’  “On Tuesday, I’m confident the voters will make the right call”?  …all we can say about this is let the voting begin?

IS IT TRUE about a year and half ago DMD Director Kelly Coures recommend to the ERC that they purchase the vacant and dilapidated CWS building located at 800 N. Main?  …he used just under $600,000 of our hard earned tax dollars to purchased this concrete block  building on the behalf of the ERC located in the crime ridden and seedy part of town?   …we now hear Mr. Coures has applied for three (3) remodeling permits for mold removal, dry wall replacement and new heating and air conditioning replacement. concerning this building?  …we can’t wait to see how many more thousand of dollars DMD Director Coures  and ERC Board will waste on bringing this building up to city codes?  …we encourage you to drive down to 800 North Main and tell us that you would have invested just under $600,000 in this old vacant and dilapidated CWS building?  …we wonder why the DMD  Director and ERC felt that this property should be purchased at a price  well over assessed value? …we also wonder why the Mayor gave his DMD Director Coures  and the ERC Board his support and approval to purchase this building without any reasonable plans to do with it once the city buys it?

IS IT TRUE we wonder if the Mayor, City Council members,  ERC Board,  DMD staff or any well heeled investor would invest just under $600,000 of their personal money to purchase the vacant CVS building located on North main without any plans to develop it into a profitable venture?

IS IT TRUE we read with interest a public relation article published in Sundays  Evansville Courier and Press written by the Chancellor of Ivy Tech Community College Southwest and Wabash Valley Jonathon Weinzapfel?  …we question his statement that “Ivy Tech is presently “creating a pathway to success for its students”?  …presently Ivy Tech graduation rates are extremely low and the drop out rate for enrolled students are extremely high? …it time for IVY Tech to hire a new state wide President to re-direct the schools educational offerings and start correcting the student drop out rate problems?  …by doing so, we believe that the State of Indiana political power brokers will decide to include Ivy Tech medical students in their future plans to participate in the soon to be built Evansville IU Medical School?

IS IT TRUE we hope former Indiana Lieutenant Governor Dr. Sue Ellsperman will become the next president of Ivy Tech Community College system because she is  the “ideal candidate” for this position?  …as the new IVY Tech president she will “start creating a pathway to success” for its students day one? …that Dr.  Ellsperman has a Doctoral Degree in Industrial Engineering and was the founding Director of the Center for Applied Research and Economic Development of the University of Southern Indiana? …we believe that former Lt. Governor Dr, Sue Ellsperman is extremely  well qualified to take IVY TECH to the next level?

IS IT TRUE for the next several months the City County Observer shall draw one lucky person name that appears in the April, and May 2016 CCO Birthday posts will be eligible for a prize. The winners will receive a copy of book written by six time Olympic Qualifier and World Record holder for the 5000 meter Anne Audian. Her book is entitled “UNCOMMON HEART.” The drawing will be held each Friday and announced on the following Monday. The retail value of Anne’s book is around $20.

IS IT TRUE this week BIRTHDAY DRAWING WINNER is JOE PATERSON? …anyone that knows JOE PATERSON please have hIm contact us at City-County Observer@live.com. so we can get his birthday present to him?

FOOTNOTE: Todays “READERS POLL” primary election polling question: Who do you endorse in the Republican primary race for District 77 State Representative?   Our next “IS IT TRUE” will be posted on this coming Wednesday?

Please take time and read our newest feature articles entitled “HOT JOBS” and  “Local Sports.”

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

Copyright 2015 City County Observer. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed

Alberta Matlock Was A Truly Remarkable And Respected Public Servant

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With the passing of Alberta Matlock last Tuesday, Evansville lost a truly remarkable and respected public servant The former Democratic City Clerk has been missed by visitors to her former office since her health forced her retirement after winning her fifth term in office.

There was no easy path in life that smoothed her way to the respected place in Evansvillians’ hearts that she occupied.  Marrying young, she didn’t finish high school.  As a divorcee with children to care for, Alberta worked in the laundry at the Evansville State Hospital, as a caregiver to the elderly, and as a hostess at Western Ribeye.  It was while she was working at the restaurant that she met Betty Knight Smith, who was Vanderburgh County Clerk at the time.  Betty saw something exceptional in Alberta and soon offered her a job in the Clerk’s office.  Alberta worked there for five years, making quite a good impression on everyone she met there from judges,to attorneys, and the general public.  She was efficient, courteous, and friendly toward everyone she encountered regardless of their political affiliation.

In 1994, Alberta was urged by her friend and mentor, Betty Knight Smith, to run for City Clerk.  Alberta was hesitant at first, concerned that her lack of education would hinder her election.  In the end, Betty convinced her that she had the most important qualifications for the office, efficiency, ability to supervise others, and the admiration of nearly everyone she came in contact with.  With the assurance that she had job security in the County Clerk’s Office, Alberta decided to run for City Clerk.  She won, and the rest is history.

She took special delight in performing weddings, trying to make each one special and sometimes keeping in touch with the couples she married.  She also took pleasure in swearing in new police officers and firemen.  She was the recipient of too many awards to name.  Every Christmas her office gave a party and gifts to the children of St. Vincent’s Daycare.  Alberta sang beautifully and often won local karaoke contests. She especially loved Patsy Cline. One of her last trips was with her daughter and granddaughters to the Grand Ole Opry.

Alberta Matlock was preceded in death by one son.  She leaves behind a son, daughter, grandchildren, and great-grandchildren, along with many admirers.  She will be missed.  She Was A Truly Remarkable And Respected Public Servant!

The Second Amendment, Life, and Liberty

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The Second Amendment, Life, and Liberty

By Richard Moss MD

I want you all to know that I appreciate our 2nd amendment and the right we have as Americans to defend ourselves. I have a concealed carry permit and take full advantage of that. Indeed, I consider our second amendment one of our great blessings as citizens. It is unique to this nation.
I tie it directly to our Declaration of Independence and those words that have come to define our nation and gave birth to it,

“…that we are endowed by our creator with inalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness…” The 2nd amendment is implied in those words. Life and Liberty and the 2nd amendment are intimately entwined. For what good is the right to life and liberty if you cannot defend it against those who would take it from you including criminals, terrorists and a despotic government.
The right to self-defense and to bear arms is a primary, natural right. It coexists equally in importance with the right to life and liberty. They are necessary complements. These rights are God-given and inalienable. They are our birthrights and cannot be taken away by man or government.

The Second Amendment is critical to any understanding of the nation and its founding spirit.  It exists because of the value placed by the framers on life and individual sovereignty.  It was also seen as a bulwark against tyranny, of an all-powerful, central government, a grave concern for the founders who had just fought a war against tyranny in the form of the British Crown.

It is consistent with a society that embraces autonomy and freedom and rejects coercive state power.  History has given us regimes that enjoyed a monopoly on firearms, such as Nazi Germany, the Soviet Union, and others, and they have been its most violent and brutal, even genocidal.

The Second Amendment, as part of our Bill of Rights and Constitution, supersedes legislation, and can only be altered through the laborious amendment process.  Simple majorities and standard legislative practice do not come in to play here.  These rights are inalienable and cannot be taken away or tampered with through simple majorities.

It is unfortunate that liberals and President Obama use every mass killing as an excuse to attack our 2nd Amendment and law-abiding citizens – as we saw after the recent terrorist attack in San Bernadino California. There is no law they could pass that would eliminate those tragic killings. Indeed, California has the strictest gun laws in the country. And there is no 2nd amendment at all in France where horrific mass shootings have occurred.

If liberals were serious about controlling gun violence, they would secure our southern border, stop importing refugees from Syria, stop releasing violent felons and criminal illegal aliens into our streets, or terrorists from Guantanamo. They would end sanctuary cities. And they would call radical Islamic terror by its name instead of wishing it away. And they would stop liberal politicians from destroying our inner cities where most gun violence occurs.

I will defend our Constitution and our 2nd amendment.
I thank God I live in a country where I can protect my loved ones and myself. Thank You.

Richard Moss MD
Congressional Candidate, Indiana’s 8th district. Republican Party

FOOTNOTE:  This letter was posted by the CCO without opinion, bias or editing.

Pence Argues Email Privacy Ruling Should Apply To Him, Too

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Pence Argues Email Privacy Ruling Should Apply To Him, Too
Hayleigh Colombo , IBJ Staff

Gov. Mike Pence is using a recent Indiana Supreme Court decision to argue that he should not be required to release documents that have been deemed by law to be public records.

The Indiana Supreme Court ruled April 19 that it won’t compel lawmakers to release their emails to the public, even though it said the Access to Public Records Act applies to the General Assembly. The court said the separation of powers in the Indiana Constitution means the courts should not tread on lawmakers’ turf.

Now, Pence wants that same logic applied to him.

Indianapolis attorney William Groth sued Pence last year over documents relating to the Republican governor’s lawsuit related to illegal immigration. Pence was seeking to overturn an executive order by President Obama that deferred removal of about 4 million illegal immigrants. Seventeen other states also sued.

Groth asked a court to decide whether Pence’s heavy redaction and denial of those records was permissible under the Indiana Access to Public Records Act.

But Pence’s lawyers said last week the court should “decline to interfere in the executive’s internal operations” as it did with the Legislature in the recent case, Citizens Action Coalition of Ind. vs Koch.

“Just as the judiciary should not ‘intermeddle’ with the legislature’s determination of what constitutes its own work product, the judiciary should also not ‘intermeddle’ with the executive’s determination of what constitutes its own work product, deliberative material, or privileged material,” according to the filing submitted by Barnes & Thornburg LLP, which is representing the Governor’s Office.

Groth said his lawyer informed him that the lawsuit was dismissed Friday by the Marion Superior Court. He said the dismissal did not mention the Koch case, so he can’t be sure if Pence’s argument clinched the decision, but that he will likely appeal.

Pence’s lawyers filed their argument in the case on April 22, three days after the Supreme Court ruled in the Koch case.

In the Koch case, Citizens Action Coalition and two other groups the tried to get access to emails between utility companies and Rep. Eric Koch, R-Bedford, who is chairman of the House Energy Committee. The Supreme Court found that determining whether those documents counted under the APRA as legislative work is a “non-justiciable question,” meaning a matter it cannot adjudicate.

In the immigration case, Groth requested the contract the governor entered into with Barnes & Thornburg, who sued for the state instead of Indiana Attorney General Greg Zoeller, as well as copies of firm’s invoices. He also sought emails between the Texas Attorney General, who led the suit, and Pence’s office.

But the documents Groth received back were “heavily redacted,” he said, so he complained to the Public Access Counselor and ultimately filed the suit.

Public access advocates say their fears about the recent Indiana Supreme Court decision are already coming true.

Kerwin Olson, executive director of the Citizens Action Coalition, said he was worried the Supreme Court case would have negative, far-reaching implications, and this appears to be one of them.

“The Pence administration is already citing Koch as an additional authority to deny releasing government documents,” Olson said. “It’s quite astonishing and troubling. It further shuts the door to accountability and transparency in government when we should be going the opposite direction.”

The Pence administration declined to comment on the case because it involved “ongoing litigation.”

Groth said the governor’s assertion in the case is ironic given his recent veto of a bill involving the transparency of private university police departments.

Pence said at the time that “limiting access to police records in a situation where private university police departments perform a government function is a disservice to the public and an unnecessary barrier to transparency.”

“Less than a month later, he’s seeking to take advantage of the Supreme Court’s ruling to argue that he too should be exempt from complying with open government requirements,” Groth said.

Steve Key, executive director of the Hoosier State Press Association, said the implications of Pence’s request are troubling.

“If the judiciary takes this position, it would eviscerate the Access to Public Records Act because every agency would argue that a judge shouldn’t judge whether a document should be released under an APRA request if the agency’s position is that the record is part of its internal operations,” Key said. “The public’s ability to hold government officials accountable would be greatly hamstrung by such a policy.”
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Drug Has Taken Deadly Toll, And Left Health And Law Enforcement Officials Scrambling

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Vials of a confiscated synthetic amphetamine called flakka that killed 61 people in Broward County in a little more than a year. States have been reworking drug laws to make it easier to classify synthetic drugs as illegal.
It’s been four months since anyone in Broward County, Florida, has died from an overdose of alpha-PVP, known as flakka, a crystal-like synthetic drug meant to imitate cocaine or methamphetamine. But the drug has already taken a deadly toll, and left health and law enforcement officials scrambling to stem a new public health crisis.

In small doses, flakka elicits euphoria. But just a little too much sends body temperatures rocketing to 105 degrees, causing a sense of delirium that often leads users to strip down and flee from paranoid hallucinations as their innards, quite literally, melt. If someone survives an overdose, they are often left with kidney failure and a life of dialysis.

Flakka is among a growing number of addictive and dangerous synthetic drugs being produced easily and cheaply with man-made chemicals in clandestine labs in China. But because the drugs were largely unregulated when they first hit the market, some states have struggled to combat them. Now legislators, health professionals and police are trying to eradicate the drugs by making it easier to qualify them as illegal and ramping up the criminal penalties for selling them.

Since 2010, when synthetic drugs started becoming popular in the U.S., 32 states have passed laws to make it easier to classify synthetic drugs as illegal. This year, the District of Columbia and Florida passed similar measures, and in at least 10 other states, changes to controlled substance laws took effect, according to the National Alliance for Model State Drug Laws (NAMSDL).

Among the most popular synthetic drugs in the U.S. are synthetic cathinones, known commonly as bath salts, and synthetic cannabinoids, essentially smokable imitation marijuana products, which are sold in stores using kid-friendly branding like Scooby Snax.

It had been difficult for states to classify synthetic drugs as illegal, a process known as scheduling, because drugs are typically banned based on the compounds they contain. Under that system, manufacturers can change a molecule of an illegal synthetic drug, essentially rendering it legal.

“It does seem to some extent that everybody’s a step behind what’s being produced,” said Jonathan Woodruff, an attorney with NAMSDL.

While the federal Drug Enforcement Administration is working to permanently add 10 synthetic cathinones, including alpha-PVP, to its list of scheduled drugs, some states have also been moving to modify how they schedule drugs.

This year, Florida and the District of Columbia enacted laws that change the way they schedule synthetic drugs. Rather than making the drugs unlawful based on their chemical makeup, the new laws classify drugs based on the type of drug and the reaction it causes.

The approach means that any drug that mimics an already illicit substance will automatically be illegal. The change will enable Florida to quickly prosecute drug cases and stomp outbreaks of new drugs, said James Hall, an epidemiologist with Nova Southeastern University.

“It bans substances before they appear or before we even know about them,” Hall said. “So it breaks this vicious cycle of a new drug appearing, finally getting it scheduled or banned and then another one rushing in to takes its place.”

These laws alone won’t stop the spread of synthetic drugs. But public health advocates are hopeful the Florida law will help prevent another flakka, from which 61 people in Broward County died between September 2014 and mid-December 2015.

In the District of Columbia, where in September 603 people were taken to the hospital after ingesting synthetic cannabinoids, the new law, which went into effect this month, is also expected to make it easier for police and prosecutors to charge and convict drug dealers.

Chasing Synthetics
In DeKalb, Illinois, one of the first places to adopt a similar law in 2012, City Attorney Dean Frieders said flakka and other synthetic cathinones like bath salts haven’t taken hold there. (A statewide law in the same vein was passed in 2015.)

But the city of almost 44,000 people, which is home to Northern Illinois University, did face a growing problem with retail sales of synthetic marijuana products, which are said to elevate mood and relax the user but have also been known to cause extreme anxiety, paranoia and hallucinations, as well as rapid heart rate, vomiting and violent behavior.

The ordinance not only banned the synthetic substances, but allowed city officials to suspend or revoke the tobacco and liquor licenses of businesses that sold the drugs, which Frieders said was effective.

“A business just can’t relocate to a different corner,” he said.

States are also sanctioning businesses for the sale of synthetic drugs to cut down on sales and adverse health reactions, Woodruff said.

The District of Columbia has shut down four stores that sold the fake marijuana products, which has led to a substantial decline in people needing medical attention after injecting them, said Robert Marcus, communications director for the District attorney general. The number of people transported to hospitals in the city after consuming synthetic marijuana dropped to 110 in February, down 82 percent in five months.

What’s Next?
Broward County officials say they expect the new scheduling of synthetic drugs to be helpful, but they relied on a different approach to largely eliminate flakka: working with the DEA to pressure the Chinese government, which last fall made it illegal to produce it and 115 other synthetic substances.

Heather Davidson, a prevention specialist for the United Way in Broward County, said officials in South Florida are at a “resting point” with flakka-related emergencies. But, she said, some dealers are passing off real methamphetamine and cocaine as the synthetic drug, even though those drugs are more expensive and have been around longer, because flakka has become so popular.

Broward’s flakka problem came to a head last year when county hospitals saw 360 cases related to the drug in one month. By December that number had dropped to 54, an 85 percent drop in five months.

“We still hear anecdotally that people are searching for flakka, that users are still wanting to find it,” Davidson said. “And I believe that another synthetic drug or synthetic compound will take its place.”

One of those compounds might be synthetic opioids, which are gaining popularity as it becomes more difficult to get prescription opioids like oxycodone and morphine in the wake of the nation’s painkiller- and heroin-addiction crisis. Those drugs, largely produced in Mexican labs, are made with fentanyl, a synthetic drug that is a hundred times more powerful than morphine and 50 times stronger than heroin. Davidson and others worry they will be behind the next epidemic.

Already nine people have died from fentanyl-based drugs this year in Pinellas County, Florida.

“Heroin you need to cultivate. You need fields, you need workers, you need labor,” Davidson said. “With something like a synthetic drug, you just need a laboratory and chemical compound and a base and you’re able to create it very cheaply.”