What: Memorial Theatre Department (Reitz Memorial High School) presents The Ghoul Friend, a Mystery Comedy by Gene Donovan. Join us for a night at Lonesome Lake, where the strangely peculiar guests at Green Willow Lodge experience a ghostly legend… or is it?
Who: Directed by Beth Edmondson, Director of Theatre. The Play is by Gene Donovan.
Where it will play: Reitz Memorial High School Auditorium, 1500 Lincoln Ave, Evansville, IN 47714.
When it will play: Thursday November 21, 2013 at 7:00 PM, Saturday November 23, 2013 at 7:00 PM and Sunday November 24, 2013 at 2:30 PM. All times CST.
Admission: Adults: $8.00, Students and Seniors $6.00.
Ticket/information contact: For ticket information, please call the Memorial Theatre Department box office at (812) 463-2269, or email us at mhstheatre@evdio.org. Advance ticket orders are available online by going to www.seatyourself.biz/mhstheatre. Tickets will also be available two hours prior to each performance at the box office.
— Blake Morales
Business Manager,
Reitz Memorial Theatre Department
Reitz Memorial High School
1500 Lincoln Ave
Evansville, IN 47714
Posey County Government’s formal offer to Midwest Fertilizer Corporation was signed yesterday in the City of Mt. Vernon with local elected officials, company representatives and fans of the project eager to see this step completed. The project will bring over $2.1 billion in investment, 200 high-wage jobs and 2,500 construction jobs over a period of three years to Posey County in Southwest Indiana, the largest economic development project currently in the State of Indiana. Midwest’s CEO Mike Chorlton says the county is a perfect fit for the project and won out over numerous U.S. sites and two Canadian provinces.
Midwest Fertilizer is a new business with many well-known U.S., Japanese and European companies as strategic partners owning 45 percent of the firm. A partner in the new company is the Fatima Group, which is one of the largest and most well-respected industrial concerns in Pakistan.  The new Posey County plant  will manufacture nitrogen-based fertilizers solely for the U.S. market. Midwest Fertilizer Corporation expects to have all permits ready and able to break ground by March of 2014.
“This project has been a team effort by many, many people in our region; and, will be a game changing investment and employer to Posey County and the region,” said John Taylor, Executive Director for the Posey County Economic Development Partnership. Taylor also added that the project will most likely lead to other business, including maintenance and trucking companies.
The site location for the plant will be the intersection of Mackey Ferry Road and Sauerkraut Lane in the western part of the county.
Picture (L-R) Syed Ahsen Uddin, Director Technology and Mike Chorlton, CEO Midwest Fertilizer Corporation.Â
Evansville Police arrested a 15 year old on several weapons charges after he was involved in a verbal dispute with another juvenile at the Fall Festival.
After officers separated the two, a witness told police that the suspect had threatened to get a gun from his car and come back. Officers were able to monitor the suspect as he walked to his car.
During the investigation into the threat, officers located a handgun in the suspect’s car. The serial number had been filed off.
The juvenile was arrested for Possession of a Handgun by a Child, Possession of a Handgun Without a Permit within 1,000 feet of a School, and Possession of a Handgun with an Altered Serial Number. He was placed at the Youth Care Center.
Shades 4 U Foundation is Recipient of Golden Tee Tournament Fundraiser
By Scottie Thomas
Boston’s Restaurant this past weekend (Friday, October 4th, 2013) hosted a Golden Tee Tournament for its guests in the bar. A major portion of the registration fees went to The Shades 4 U Foundation, a local charity that helps communities fight Child Sexual Abuse (CSA). Child Sexual Abuse affects 40-60 million Americans, as most cases go unreported.
Planning the event since this summer, Assistant Manager Chris Deckard and General Manager Chris King jumped on board to create a fun-packed, successful and entertaining evening for a great cause. The Finals of the Golden Tee Tournament came down to Mr. Mike Cannon and Mr. Mike Rare, with Rare winning in the end.
The money was raised was $500.00 even which was donated that night and received by two of the Executive Board members, Wezley Whobrey & Scott Sieg. The funds raised will go towards trainings, education on Child Sexual Abuse clinical assessments, research and the development of Awareness & Prevention Programs. According to the National Traumatic Stress Network (NCTSN), ‘one out of every four girls and one out of every seven boys before the age of eighteen is sexually molested.’
For more information on the establishment or the event, call (812) 853-3400 and for more information on The Shades 4 U Foundation visit http://shades4ufoundation.wix.com/main or Like us on Facebook.
IS IT TRUE the CCO seems to have opened a can of worms yesterday when we published the shortcomings of the Evansville City Council’s vote to just carte blanche raise the sewer rates and keep the 35% surcharge in place for the people in the county that are on the city system?…this deal of the elected representatives of the City raising prices disproportionally on people who cannot vote for or against them sounds very much like the convention hotel assertions that “you city folks aren’t paying for this, it is our visitors who are paying Innkeepers taxesâ€?…the way the City is treating the County is exactly like our visitors to hotels are treated and that is like powerless subjects of a legislated monopoly?…the water and sewer hardware and services are paid for by the ratepayers?…the problem with what is being done is that there are two classes of customers (ratepayers)?…one class of customers (city dwellers) can vote the rascals out if they are dissatisfied with their work and the others (county dwellers) have no say over those who vote themselves a slice of their income?…rationally speaking the rates should be equal for all customers with any surcharge based on distance or volume of use?…with the $540 Million – $810 Million combined sewer problem sitting on the doorstep it is time to make the fee schedule for sewer and water fair and rational?…if the truth is told it is the City that has combined sewers?…we wonder just how it would play inside the city limits if the rates were only increased in the neighborhoods that have combined sewers?…that thought should motivate fairness going forward?
IS IT TRUE it is looking like the debt ceiling of the federal government is about to be raised so that the countries bills can be paid on an ongoing basis for a while without another peeing contest between the President and Congress?…the bill from the House does indeed raise the debt limit which will keep the federal debt serviced and the “essential†services of government running?…this bill is not expected to fund the government in its present form and that may be a good thing as much of what the government buys is unmitigated waste and it is time for a spending review?…it seems like every time the federal government does something or buys something like the ObamaCare website it costs too much and is unreliable?…these habits seem to have rubbed off on the American people but this is still something they do not like?…the reality of the situation is that Democrats, Republicans, and the President of the United States all are feeling the tar and feathers of public opinion for their failure to negotiate in good faith to reach an agreement to re-open the government of the USA?…the American people may be distracted by life and somewhat uninterested in the day to day shenanigans of government but for the most part they are realists who understand that both parties are playing politics with the country and will exact a toll on those who have been a part of it from the Tea Party right up through the most liberal factions in Congress?
IS IT TRUE that coinciding with the 37% approval rate of President Obama was the exposure that 5 dead United States servicemen and women’s families will not be getting the $100,000 honorarium that military families are always granted for the purpose of handling the funeral arrangements and travel associated with giving fallen heroes a proper burial?…this happened on the heels of our federal government issuing a permit for an immigration rally on park lands that were closed to World War II veterans just 24 hours earlier?…there are things in government that are wasteful, there are things in government that are irresponsible, but for the first time in a long time the choices made by our government with respect to what to refuse to pay for in the government shutdown are disgusting?…the approval rating of President Obama (37%) and the Congress (10.5%) reflect that disgust?
IS IT TRUE this whole exercise debt deal in congress has stimulated some thoughts about why many regular people are highly partisan?…the only reasons for blind party allegiance are laziness, ignorance, greed, and group think?…none of these reasons are positive and none strengthen our country?
It happens every day. Businesses pick up and leave one state and move to another. So do citizens. They do it not because it’s easy or fun. They do it either to run from someplace or to run to someplace.
And businesses and people around the world are doing the same thing.
Which is why the GOP must start talking about Detroit. And mobility.
There was a day not long ago when Americans wanted to move to Detroit. Detroit changed the way we thought of ourselves. The cars made there represented the freedom to go where we wanted, when we wanted.
It was the Silicon Valley of its day; engineers, designers, and workers of all kinds flocked there. By 1960, nearly 2 million people called the city home, and it boasted the highest per capita income in the nation.
That Detroit is dead.
The city’s population is now 700,000, with a 25 percent slide in the last decade alone. That’s not a population decline — that’s an exodus.
People and businesses didn’t just move from Detroit, they fled. And what they were fleeing was liberalism, the accumulated detritus of 50 straight years of Democratic leadership. They kept fleeing until there was so little left for city leaders to tax — so little business left there from which to extract revenue — that Detroit was forced to declare bankruptcy.
Detroit is the Left’s Ground Zero. And it was caused not by a terrorist strike or an invading army but by a combination of union greed, government incompetence, bad policies, broken promises, outright corruption, and a lot of bad faith.
How bad are things today? The city is facing $20 billion in debt and unfunded liabilities. In 1950, the city had 296,000 manufacturing jobs. Today, there are fewer than 27,000. One-third of Detroit’s 140 square miles is vacant or derelict, with over 78,000 abandoned homes.
Government leaders stripped the economic motor — business — out of Motor City, and there was nothing left but a burned-out chassis. And the real victims were those who didn’t have the means to flee — who didn’t have the ability to escape Detroit’s slow-motion suicide.
In 1999, 34.8 percent of Detroit’s children lived in poverty. A staggering 60 percent of its children live in poverty today. They are stuck in a dysfunctional city, with little hope of escaping the maze of federal programs that run their lives.
It’s a cruel irony that the town that embodied the notion of mobility, that manufactured the cars that powered our interstate highway system and our suburbs, now functions as a de facto prison for hundreds of thousands of young people.
That’s the thing about big-government types: They don’t seem to understand that they need business to finance all their programs. And that the biggest losers when a city like Detroit empties are the people who can’t afford to leave.
Which is why we who care about the future of America must start telling the story of Detroit. And the story of Texas. While America lost 2.5 million net jobs in the past five years, Texas created 530,000. Over the last ten years, Texas has created 33 percent of the net new jobs in America. That’s 33 percent!
Leaders there call it the Texas Model. Many of us call it the American model. It’s pretty simple: Treat people who come to your state to start and grow businesses as friends, not enemies. Enact policies that make it easy to start and grow businesses — policies like lawsuit-abuse reform, predictable and effective regulations, low taxes, and accountable schools that can train a competitive workforce.
It’s not just Texas that’s growing. You can tell a lot about prosperity in America by looking at where people are moving to. And from. The South and the Sunbelt are growing, while the Northeast and the Midwest continue to shrink. Of the top ten fastest-growing metro areas last year, four were in Texas; the others were San Jose, Raleigh, Las Vegas, Orlando, Charlotte, and Phoenix. All except San Jose are in business-friendly states. Areas such as Cleveland, Providence, Detroit, and Buffalo were among the biggest population losers.
One vision is attracting people and capital. The other is repelling them. One works. The other doesn’t.
Which is why you’d think our leaders in Washington, D.C., would fire their economists and copy what’s working in places like Texas. But instead they’re doubling down on the policies that failed Detroit, and imposing them on the entire nation. And much of the nation is suffering Detroit-like consequences.
Last month, the unemployment rate dropped to 7.3 percent. But it dropped only because 312,000 Americans dropped out of the labor force — because 312,000 Americans gave up on their future.
The numbers are worst for young people. Fifty percent of recent college graduates are unemployed or underemployed. Many are taking jobs they could have landed without going to college in the first place. Some are hiding out in grad school. And a record number are huddled in their parent’s basements, waiting for the economy to pick up.
At a stage in life when they should be excited about what they’re doing, this generation of graduates is known for what they’re not doing. They’re not entering the workforce. They’re not moving into their own homes.
African Americans have been hurt the most by this economy; their unemployment rate is 12.6 percent. It’s a staggering 40 percent for young African Americans.
This is the tragic price Americans of all races and ages are paying for too much government and regulation. These numbers are a grim reminder that too much government wrecks economies and lives. The way it wrecked Detroit.
And that too much government sucks the life out of life. The way it did in Detroit.
These are stories conservatives must tell, the stories of Detroit and Texas. We must talk about why people — and businesses — are voting with their feet and moving from some states to others.
We must start talking about the human costs of all this government. About the real-life victims of all this government.
We must tell the story of the EPA, and how this one bureaucracy is hampering our ability to create a revolution in energy production in America — a revolution that could transform our economy. And transform lives by creating millions of good- paying new jobs. And transform America’s balance sheet by creating hundreds of billions of dollars in revenue to our nation’s treasury — all while making us less dependent on oil from countries intent on doing us harm.
Our government stands in the way. And our energy revolution remains unborn.
We must tell the story of how jobs are created — and destroyed. And we must name names, point out the good guys and the bad guys.
It wasn’t conservatives who betrayed the people of Detroit; it was that city’s liberal leaders, who made false promises to their own people; and the UAW, which drove auto plants south; and the public-employee unions, which treated that once-great city like an ATM, and kept withdrawing money until there was no more money left to withdraw.
It is people like us who think about how to fill ATMs. And as anyone with an iota of common sense knows, it is harder to fill ATMs than empty them. Filling them takes patience, sacrifice, hard work, and — dare I say the word? — love.
It is the people who believe in big government — and the big bureaucracies that go with it — who endlessly ponder how to spend that money. Most of them have never met a payroll, or even run a hotdog stand.
It is the poor, the vulnerable, and the young who suffer the most when economies stop working. But increasingly, it is also ordinary middle-class Americans who could never have imagined they’d be out of work for months, let alone years.
It’s time to start talking about Detroit and about the other catastrophes to come if this nation doesn’t address our $17 trillion debt, our stratospheric unfunded liabilities, and bureaucracies that only seem to grow in scale and scope. And if local leaders don’t honestly address their own unfunded pension liabilities, which at last count came to a whopping $574 billion for all U.S. cities and counties.
It’s time to start talking about how all this debt and all this government create static lives. Our economy is stalled. So are the lives of the majority of Americans. And the lives of young people — and recent college graduates especially — aren’t starting.
These tragedies are the consequence of government, not business. Our nation is stuck not because government is doing too little, but because it is doing too much.
Maybe we should lead with this impassioned plea to our leaders on Capitol Hill: “Washington, D.C.: Please, don’t Detroit America.â€
Indiana – Catch the latest edition of the “Indiana State Police Road Show†radio program every Monday morning at your convenience.
Download the program from the Network Indiana public website at www.networkindiana.com. Look for the state police logo on the main page and follow the download instructions. This 15 minute talk show concentrates on public safety and informational topics with state wide interest.
The radio program was titled “Signal-10†in the early sixties when it was first started by two troopers in northern Indiana. The name was later changed to the “Indiana State Police Road Show†and is the longest continuously aired state police public service program in Indiana.
Radio stations across Indiana and the nation are invited to download and air for FREE this public service program sponsored by the Indiana State Police Alliance and Cops for Kids, a subsidiary of the Indiana State Police Alliance.
This week’s show features Stephanie Stewart, Manager of Community Partnerships (LETR) at Special Olympics, Indiana. Miss Stewart discusses her role in the Indiana Special Olympics as well as past and future events involving law enforcement.
THE GLOBAL SOAP PROJECT collects soap from hotels across the country that would usually get discarded. The soap then is cleaned, melted back into bars, and distributed throughout the world to places where soap is a luxury item.
Tropicana Evansville will announce their participation in THE GLOBAL SOAP PROJECT at a Press Conference on Friday, October 11, 2013 at 10:30AM in the Tropicana Hotel Lobby. The founder of THE GLOBAL SOAP PROJECT, Mr. Derreck Kayongo, will be present to speak about the organization and Tropicana’s involvement.
The Evansville African American Museum brings Mr. Kayongo to our community as the featured speaker at the Fifth Annual Colour of Humanity Gala on Friday, October 11. The Gala will be held at Tropicana’s Executive Conference Center.
Tropicana Evansville General Manager, Ward Shaw, is pleased with Tropicana’s participation, saying, “With nearly 350 hotel rooms, our guests leave behind plenty of used bars of soap. The Global Soap Project will allow our amenities to extend beyond the pleasure of our guests and help those who are in need.â€
To illustrate Ward Shaw’s point, a week’s worth of used bar soap from the Tropicana Hotel and the Le Merigot Hotel will be on display at the Press Conference.
To learn more about THE GLOBAL SOAP PROJECT, visit http://www.globalsoap.org/
For more information, contact Stacey McNeill, Tropicana Evansville Director of Marketing, at 812-433-4069 or Stacey.Mcneill@TropEvansville.com
Tropicana Entertainment Inc is a publicly traded company that, through its subsidiaries, owns and operates eight casinos and resorts in Indiana, Louisiana, Mississippi, Nevada, New Jersey and Aruba. Tropicana properties collectively have approximately 6,046 rooms, 7,121 slot positions and 231 table games. The company is based in Las Vegas, Nevada.