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LABOR OF LOVE SUMMIT FOCUSES ON MATERNAL HEALTH AMID INCREASE IN INFANT MORTALITY RATE

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Hoosier History Highlights: Indiana Becomes the 19th State

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December 11 – December 17

The Week in Indiana History


Capitol

1816  President James Madison signed a Congressional resolution admitting Indiana to the Union as the 19th state.  The new state government would be centered in the capital city of Corydon.  Jonathan Jennings won the election to serve as the state’s first governor.


bricks 1909     Workers placed the last of 3.2 million ten-pound bricks on the 2½-mile oval track at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway.  It has been called “The Brickyard” ever since.

1917     Thirty Indiana delegates attended the National American Women’s Suffrage Association Meeting in Washington, D. C.  Women from around the nation met for the three-day event at Poli’s Theater.  The Hoosier group was led by Mrs. R. E. Edwards of Peru, president of the Indiana Franchise League.


1920     Football player George Gipp died of strep throat in his senior year at Notre Dame.  Called “The Gipper” by Coach Knute Rockne, he is considered one of the most versatile athletes ever to play the game. 


1958     Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr., spoke to a crowd of 4,000 at Cadle Tabernacle in Indianapolis.  The 29-year-old Baptist pastor was welcomed to the city by Mayor Charles Boswell.  King told the crowd, “If democracy is to live, segregation must die.”


Cernan1972     Eugene Cernan, Commander of Apollo 17, walked on the moon, becoming the last (or most recent) person to do so.  He graduated with an engineering degree from Purdue University.  When he died in 2017, Purdue President Mitch Daniels called him a “pioneer in aviation and one of the greatest Boilermakers of all time.”

Follow this link to subscribe to Hoosier History Highlights and to view archived editions

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Indiana Statehouse Tour Office

Indiana Department of Administration

Visitors are welcome at the Indiana Statehouse Monday through Saturday.  For more information, please contact the tour office.

(317) 233-5293
touroffice@idoa.in.gov


quiz

1.  The city of Corydon is found in which Indiana county?

2.  The authors of the original Indiana constitution often worked outside under what type of tree?

3.  On what official date did Indiana join the Union?


essay
LII

1st Place:  Yuto Hotta from John H. Castle Elementary School in Warrick County

2nd Place:  Nora Jansen from Sugar Grove Elementary School in Johnson County

3rd Place:  Antonio Zoppo from Sunnyside Elementary School in Marion County

4th Place:  Caleb Calhoun from Childs Academy in Monroe County

Follow this link to view the Indiana Statehood Day 2022 video


Answers:  1. Harrison County   2. Elm Tree   3. December 11, 1816

Board of School Trustees of the Evansville Vanderburgh School Corporation

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The Board of School Trustees of the Evansville Vanderburgh School Corporation will meet for the regularly scheduled Board meeting Monday, December 12, 2022 at 5:30 PM in the Board Room of the EVSC Administration Building located at 951 Walnut Street, Evansville, IN. Board meetings can also be observed by tuning to EVSC’s radio station, 90.7 WPSR or live streamed online at https://www.wpsrhd.com/.

Prior to the regularly scheduled Board meeting, three members of the Board, along with district administrators, will hold a Town Hall beginning at 5:00 PM. This Town Hall is for Vanderburgh County residents to speak directly with Board members in attendance about issues involving EVSC schools. The Town Hall will be held in the Technology and Innovation Center located at 951 Walnut Street, Evansville, IN. Members of the public who would like to attend the Town Hall should register by completing the Town Hall Registration Form located on our website at district.evscschools.com.

EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT

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EPD

EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT

EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT

FOOTNOTE: This information was provided by the EPD and posted by the City-County-County Observer without opinion, bias, or editing.

 

Eagles conclude season-opening meet with five top-10 finishes

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BLOOMINGTON, Ind. – University of Southern Indiana Men’s and Women’s Track & Field completed its first meet in the NCAA Division I era Friday night in the Hoosier Open hosted by Indiana University at Gladstein Fieldhouse. Five Screaming Eagles were able to earn top-10 finishes in their first meet of the 2022-23 campaign.
 
Leading the women was sophomore Gabrielle McGregor (Louisville, Kentucky) who placed 10th in the shot put with a toss of 10′ 58″. On the men’s side, junior Kyle Crone (Maryville, Illinois) leaped a 10th-best 19′ 10.25″ in the long jump while junior Josh Kaminski (Lafayette, Indiana) recorded a sixth-place finish in the shot put with a throw of 44′ 9.5″.
 
On the track, junior Lee Moore Jr. (Matteson, Illinois) earned a 10th-place finish in the 200 meters with a time of 25.30 seconds while sophomore Trace Manzi (Evansville, Indiana) earned a personal-best time of 37.77 seconds to nab sixth place in the 300 meters.
 
NEXT UP FOR THE EAGLES:
The Eagles have a long wait until their next meet when USI competes in the Bellarmine Open on January 20 in Louisville, Kentucky.

Attorney General Todd Rokita Leads Multistate Coalition To Victory As Investment Firm Withdraws

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After Attorney General Todd Rokita co-led a multistate effort to stop The Vanguard Group Inc. from imposing woke ideologies onto the business models of utility companies, the firm has withdrawn its participation in the Net Zero Asset Managers initiative.

“Vanguard’s involvement in this leftist vendetta held the potential to cause real harm to Hoosier investors and energy consumers — affecting everything from retirement accounts to electricity bills,” Attorney General Rokita said. “By working together, fellow likeminded attorneys general and I have achieved an important win for free enterprise on behalf of our states.”

The Vanguard Group Inc. recently sought renewal of a blanket authorization for acquisitions of voting securities of publicly traded utilities. When the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission granted that authorization in 2019, however, it did so on assurances from Vanguard that it would refrain from investing “for the purpose of managing” utility companies.

Vanguard also guaranteed at that time that it would not seek to “exercise any control over the day-to-day management” of utility companies nor take any action “affecting the prices at which power is transmitted or sold.”

The firm’s recent environmental activism, however, implied that it would use its financial influence to manipulate the activities of utility companies in its portfolio.

On Wednesday, Vanguard issued a statement announcing its withdrawal from the Net Zero Asset Managers initiative. The company promised to “provide the clarity our investors desire about the role of index funds and about how we think about material risks, including climate-related risks — and to make clear that Vanguard speaks independently on matters of importance to our investors.”

The coordination with the Net Zero Asset Managers initiative represented another example of so-called “ESG investing” — an emphasis on environmental, social, and governance issues by investment managers.

ESG strategies are designed not to maximize financial returns for clients but rather to impose leftist social and economic agendas that otherwise could not win approval at the ballot box.

Along with Utah Attorney General Sean Reyes, Attorney General Rokita has led the multistate effort to intervene in the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission’s handling of this case.

“Vanguard’s announcement this week is an encouraging first step,” Attorney General Rokita said. “But Vanguard must do more to demonstrate that it is not attempting to impose its own leftist climate change policies on private companies and investors. We aren’t done.”

Senator Becker Receives Senate Committee Assignments

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STATEHOUSE (Dec. 10, 2022) – State Sen. Vaneta Becker (R-Evansville) has been appointed by Senate President Pro Tem Rodric Bray (R-Martinsville) to serve on three committees for the 123rd Indiana General Assembly.

Becker will serve on the Senate Committees on Health and Provider Services, Local Government and Public Policy.

“The health and well-being of Hoosiers is always a top priority of mine each session,” Becker said. “It is important to me to work within these committees to move legislation that addresses issues facing our communities and ensures our state is healthy.”

Committee hearings can be viewed online by visiting iga.in.gov. Legislative calendars, agendas, vote tallies and proposed legislation can also be found on this site.

The 2023 legislative session ceremonially began with Organization Day on Nov. 22. The Senate is scheduled to reconvene for session Jan. 9.