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Requiem For A Queen

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Requiem For A Queen

In the immense fanfare and ceremony that accompanied Winston Churchill’s funeral in 1965, Queen Elizabeth delivered a small but telling gesture.

John Krull, publisher, TheStatehouseFile.com

Only two wreaths were placed on Churchill’s grave when he was laid to rest.

Handwritten notes accompanied both.

The first was from Churchill’s widow, Clementine. It said, simply, “To my darling Winston, Clemmie.”

The other was from the queen. It, too, was plainspoken.

“From the Nation and Commonwealth, in grateful remembrance, Elizabeth R,” it read.

The note was, of course, a tribute to the leader who had carried Great Britain through its greatest trial.

But it also was something more than that, a quiet statement of the monarch’s own belief in the importance of honoring one’s duty and loving one’s country and people.

The queen was not yet 40 when Churchill died. But she already had occupied for more than a decade the throne of what was once the world’s greatest power and empire. She had weathered crises both personal and political and soldiered through them with determination and dignity.

Hers was not destined to be a reign filled with glory.

She came to the throne when Great Britain shifted from being the world’s colossus to becoming just another member of the community of nations. It was largely on her watch that the British empire first shrank, then disintegrated and dissolved.

That loss of status, coupled with decades of economic and cultural upheaval, easily might have toppled another monarch and even ended the monarchy in Britain altogether.

Certainly, that was a challenge for Elizabeth.

During her reign of 70 years—the longest in British history—there was persistent questioning about the value and legitimacy of the monarchy in what was increasingly an egalitarian and even populist modern age.

When one superpower during the long Cold War era, the United States, asserted that all were created equal and the only just system was a meritocracy and the other, the Soviet Union, argued that the nation’s bounty should be divided according to need rather than worth, what role did a system based on inherited privilege and an inherent notion that some people are just born to rule have to play? How could a monarchy, even the idea of kings and queens, be justified?

It seemed an absurd system.

In many ways, it was.

And is.

But what preserved and even redeemed it was the woman herself.

As the descendant, on my mother’s side, of Scotch-Irish peasants who in the 18th century fled the often capricious cruelties of the British crown and settled in America before this land was even its own nation, I never have had much interest in the trappings of monarchy. The soap-opera-like dramas featuring members of the royal family over these past decades bored me when I couldn’t ignore them.

I could not figure out what made their dysfunction more fascinating than that of any other family.

That’s because I am, to my core, a democrat with a small “d,” a firm believer that all people have the same right to seek out life’s blessings. That is, to me, the essential promise of America.

But I would be less than honest if I did not acknowledge profound respect for Elizabeth II, respect that aligns easily with my egalitarian principles.

That’s because of who the woman was.

She saw herself not as the nation’s ruler but as its servant, the person fate selected to serve as the human embodiment of the United Kingdom. The call that spoke to her during her long years of service was that of duty rather than an opportunity.

Despite all its privileges, hers must have been an often lonely and isolated existence.

But she did not complain. She went about her work, meeting her responsibilities to the nation she loved, right up to the time of her death, asking a new prime minister to form a government when she was only hours from meeting her own end.

Thus, Elizabeth did what she always did. She brought her people back together in times of dissension and turmoil.

Her fortitude, her dignity and her unshakable resolve become ever more admirable in a world that often seems to place a greater value on notions of entitlement than it does on principles of self-sacrifice.

Queen Elizabeth II has died.

Long live the queen.

And may she rest in peace.

FOOTNOTE: John Krull is director of Franklin College’s Pulliam School of Journalism and publisher of TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students. The opinions expressed by the author do not represent the views of Franklin College.

Banterra Bank School of Business Lecture Series To Feature Global Leader In Transforming People, Organizations

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Banterra Bank School of Business Lecture Series
to Feature Global Leader in Transforming People, Organizations

SEPTEMBER 9, 2022 

EVANSVILLE, IN –– Jeremie Kubicek, chairman of GiANT Worldwide and CEO of GiANT TV, will be the guest speaker for the Banterra Bank School of Business Lecture Series at 6 p.m., Sept. 12, in Vectren Auditorium, at Ivy Tech’s Evansville campus. The event is open to the public for $10 a ticket.

This presentation is a part of an annual series, sponsored by Banterra Bank. Extend Group, Evansville-based consultants specializing in human and organizational development partnered with Ivy Tech to bring Kubicek to campus for this event.

“We are delighted to welcome Jeremie Kubicek,” said Daniela Vidal, chancellor of the Ivy Tech Evansville region. “Through our work with EXTEND GROUP, Ivy Tech is already a beneficiary of Kubicek’s philosophy, and we are excited to make his personal message available to our students and business professionals in the community.”

Kubicek has built an international network of experts around bold, new thinking to attract and retain employees. He has made it his mission to provide the tools leaders can use to elevate people and transform their lives.

“In light of the last several years, I see that people are yearning for two specific things – hope and peace,” Kubicek said. “As leaders, we can’t give away something we don’t possess ourselves. I want to give people these practical tools, so they in turn can unlock the potential of people they lead.”

Shawn Collins, Founder of EXTEND GROUP and a certified GiANT consultant said, “This is a rare opportunity to hear an acknowledged master at crafting organizations everyone wants to work for. “If you have a responsibility for leading others, I urge you to put this event on your calendar.”

Two Additional Opportunities:

  • Sept. 13, 8 a.m.: Kubicek will join @530 on Main, a podcast hosted by Collins along with Mike Davis, VPS Architecture. The event will stream live via Youtube and Facebook.
  • Sept. 13, 11:30 a.m.: Kubicek will join attendees and be featured at the Evansville Rotary Club.

For additional information, contact Jamie Purcell, assistant professor of Business Administration, jpurcell26@ivytech.edu

SHANGHAIED

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SHANGHAIED

GAVEL GAMUT By Jim Redwine

SEPTEMBER 10, 2022

On February 04, 2022, Russian President Vladimir Putin, on an invitation from Chinese President Xi Jinping, attended the China Winter Olympic Games in Beijing. Twenty days later Russia invaded Ukraine. Nancy Pelosi, the Speaker of the United States House of Representatives, in response to an invitation, visited Taiwan over China’s objections on August 2, 2022, and China immediately responded with massive military maneuvers around Taiwan.

Russia has now been at war with Ukraine for over six months. Ukraine has been supplied with many billions of dollars’ worth of military hardware by America before and during the war. Taiwan has recently received a pledge of over one billion dollars’ worth of military aid from the U.S. The U.S. has long supported Taiwan’s independence from China which claims Taiwan as part of China.

Russia and China share some common borders on the eastern and western edges of both countries and share one main nemesis, America. On September 15 and 16, 2022 Xi and Putin will meet face to face at the Shanghai Cooperation Organization Summit in the city of Samarkand, Uzbekistan. The United States is not invited.

It is possible Russia and China just want to confer on the relative merits of their national ballet companies and the ten billion cubic meters of national gas Putin promised to Xi in their February meeting. Or perhaps Putin and Xi want to compare notes on how each can continue in power beyond the traditional terms of prior Chinese and Russian presidents.

On the other hand, I suggest the two leaders may be getting together to discuss their largest common problem, us. Not much information was released from their conference in Beijing in February and almost no advanced agenda has been published for their Shanghai Cooperation Organization Summit. My suspicion is the name “Shanghai” was not chosen idly. It may be that China is reminding the United States of the practice of tricking or forcing sailors to serve on merchant ships sailing to Shanghai in the 1800s as was often done by American, British, and French merchants. Perhaps it is meant as an otherwise inscrutable warning to America to butt out of Ukraine and Taiwan.

As for me, I think Pelosi or anyone else ought to have the right to visit Taiwan and, I think, Ukraine’s territorial integrity should be respected. Of course, I find it difficult to analyze the motivations of China, Russia, or even my own country when it comes to engagement in foreign wars unless one is attacked. It seems to me our Constitution’s provision for military defense, not offense, makes sense. But then I am not in charge of our foreign policy. If I had been, Viet Nam, Iraq, and Afghanistan might have unfolded differently, and maybe Ukraine and Taiwan too. Those are matters our elected leaders are much more informed upon, I hope.

For more Gavel Gamut articles go to www.jamesmredwine.com

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Join The HCBS Provider Community Facebook Group

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The Family and Social Service Administration values partnership with service providers to understand the deepest needs, explore the wildest dreams, generate blue-sky ideas and create a roadmap to make them real.

FSSA created the Indiana HCBS Provider Community Facebook group where providers are seen, heard and valued. FSSA is here for the deep work. When the situation calls for bandages or quick fixes, we pair it with commitment to solving the real problems with providers. Indiana HCBS Provider Community is a tool to help FSSA and providers connect and build partnership every day. To join the group please click here or search for Indiana HCBS Provider Community on Facebook

Indiana HCBS Provider Community is a strategic effort by FSSA to invest in and connect daily with service providers with thoughtfulness, and sustained effort to build a system with and by Medicaid providers, agency owners and staff, who change lives with boots on the ground.

Let’s come together on Indiana HCBS Provider Community Facebook group to:

  • Find answers to Medicaid provider FAQs.
  • Receive guidance and examples of provider practices that support choice and autonomy for Hoosiers.
  • Learn new business development skills to grow competitively as an Indiana Medicaid provider.
  • Learn how to become certified as a minority-owned business.
  • Share success stories to highlight providers doing excellent work.
  • Megaphone to FSSA where we can support providers.

Please consider joining the Indiana HCBS Provider Community Facebook group as community and belonging are the future of economies and society.

UE Women’s Golf Opens 2022-23 Season On Sunday

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UE Travels To Redbird Invitational

 EVANSVILLE, Ind. – Action gets underway this weekend for the University of Evansville women’s golf team, who opens the 2022-23 campaign at the Redbird Invitational in Normal, Ill.

Weibring Golf Club is the host course for the event with Sunday’s opening day beginning with an 8 a.m. shotgun start and 36 holes of play.  Monday’s final found commences at 8:30 a.m.  Par will be 72 and the yardage is set at 6,010.

Joining the Purple Aces in the event will be Eastern Kentucky, Illinois State, Northern Illinois, IUPUI, Bradley, Butler, Drake, Loyola, Bowling Green, Indiana State, Ball State, UNI, Valparaiso and Southern Indiana.

Last season saw the Aces finish on a high note, earning their second-best finish at the Missouri Valley Conference Championship.  Led by Mallory Russell, UE finished in fifth place in the tournament.  Russell tied for 4th place in the event, marking her highest finish of the season.  She led the team with a 78.46 stroke average.

Seniors Allison Enchelmayer and Alyssa McMinn completed last year with averages of 79.63 and 79.74, respectively.  For Enchelmayer, this weekend marks a homecoming as she is a native of Bloomington, Ill.  Her junior season was highlighted by a strong outing at the Indiana State Invitational where a final-round score of 75 helped her secure an 8thplace finish.

McMinn was playing her best golf as last season concluded, earning top 20 finishes in each of the final three events.  After tying for 9th at the Murray State Invite, McMinn tied for 19th at the MVC Championship.  Caitlin O’Donnell returns for her 5th season with the program.  The 2021-22 season saw her record a pair of top 10 efforts last fall including a 7thplace outing at the Butler Fall Invitational.

Magdalena Borisova put forth a solid freshman campaign last year and improved as the season moved along.  After posting an 84.20 average in the fall, Borisova wrapped up the spring with an 80.21.  Her top finish was a tie for the 4thposition at the Indiana State Invitational.  Carly Frazier was another who evolved as the season progressed.  Her spring was highlighted by a season-low round of 76 at the Golfweek/AGT Intercollegiate.

Three freshmen join the UE squad this year including Kate Petrova (Moscow, Russia), Destynie Sheridan (Fort Branch, Ind.) and Grace Vandenburg (Mishawaka, Ind.).

EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT

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EPD

 

EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT

MEDIA

Rokita Appeals Court’s Pause On Trans Athlete Law

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Rokita Appeals Court’s Pause On Trans Athlete Law

INDIANAPOLIS—Attorney General Todd Rokita has filed an appeal of a district court’s preliminary injunction against enforcing a new state law in the case of a 10-year-old trans female wanting to play on a girls’ softball team in the Indianapolis Public Schools district.

Signs not permitted in the Senate Chamber during public testimony on HB 1041 in summer 2022 piled up in Statehouse hallways.

The unidentified student’s mother challenged the law earlier this summer under Title IX and the Equal Protection Clause with the help of the ACLU of Indiana.

“Forcing female student-athletes to compete against males in women’s sports is an absolute assault on girls’ equality of opportunity and even their physical safety,” Rokita said. “Males possess certain physiological advantages that make them faster and stronger, and it’s unconscionable to ignore these scientific realities. The Left must stop sacrificing women’s well-being on the altar of transgender woke-ism.”

Gov. Eric Holcomb originally vetoed the bill that would only allow participation in school sports based on biological sex. However, during the special session this summer, the Indiana House of Representatives voted 67-28 and the Indiana Senate voted 32-15 to override his veto

“The presumption of the policy laid out in HEA 1041 is that there is an existing problem in K-12 sports in Indiana that requires further state government intervention,” Holcomb wrote in his explanation of the veto. “It implies that the goals of consistency and fairness in competitive female sports are not currently being met. After thorough review, I find no evidence to support either claim even if I support the overall goal.”

According to a July 26 press release about the ACLU lawsuit, Ken Falk, legal director at the ACLU of Indiana, said, “When misinformation about biology and gender is used to bar transgender girls from school sports, it amounts to the same form of sex discrimination that has long been prohibited under Title IX, a law that protects all students—including trans people—on the basis of sex.”

Indiana isn’t the only state facing lawsuits from similar laws. According to CBS News, “eight states—Alabama, Arkansas, Mississippi, Montana,  South Dakota, West Virginia, Florida, and Tennessee—have passed their version of the bills into law, preventing transgender girls from competing on the sports teams of their choice, with South Dakota’s ban coming from the executive order.

FOOTNOTE: Tabby Fitzgerald is a reporter at TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.

Rokita Fighting For Protecting Girls’ Sports

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Attorney General Todd Rokita this week continued his vigorous defense of a new law requiring participants in girls’ sports to be, in fact, biological girls.

On Sept. 6, Attorney General Rokita filed an appeal of a district court’s preliminary injunction against enforcing the law in the case of a 10-year-old biological male wanting to play on a girls’ softball team in the Indianapolis Public Schools district.

With the help of the leftist American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), the student’s mother challenged the law earlier this summer under Title IX and the Equal Protection Clause.

“Forcing female student-athletes to compete against males in women’s sports is an absolute assault on girls’ equality of opportunity and even their physical safety,” Attorney General Rokita said. “Males possess certain physiological advantages that make them faster and stronger, and it’s unconscionable to ignore these scientific realities. The Left must stop sacrificing women’s well-being on the altar of transgender woke-ism.”

By its terms, Title IX does not protect “gender identity,” Attorney General Rokita notes in his appellant’s brief. It instead prohibits both discrimination and denial of equal opportunities “on the basis of sex,” a biological characteristic determined by reproductive function.

“Self-identifying as a girl . . .  does not negate the advantages that come from being born male,” the brief states. “That means transgender athletes born male will outperform athletes born female who have equivalent levels of dedication, training, and skill, displacing those female athletes from rosters and podiums. It would turn Title IX on its head to construe the statute to privilege gender identity, an unprotected characteristic, at the expense of sex, the protected characteristic.”

FOOTNOTE:  The City-County Observer posted this article without bias or editing.