1 SE Martin Luther King Jr Blvd, Evansville, IN
Evansville Gun, Knife & Outdoorsmen Show
3300 E Division St, Evansville, IN
- Friday:Â 3:00pm – 8:00pm
- Saturday:Â 9:00am – 5:00pm
- Sunday:Â 9:00am – 3:00pm
- General: $6.00
- Children under 12: Free
- Free Parking
Free Coffee - Must be 18 or older to enter.
Indiana Law Schools Buck First-Year Enrollment Dip
First-year enrollment in J.D. programs in Indiana law schools rose 3.2% in 2019 over 2018 while the overall J.D. enrollment across the US slipped 0.27%, according to data released by the American Bar Association.
Indiana University Maurer School of Law, Indiana University Robert H. McKinney School of Law and Notre Dame Law School collectively enrolled a first-year class of 639 students in 2019, up from the 619 enrolled in 2018. Valparaiso Law School did not provide any data since it is no longer accepting new students and is planning to close after the 2020 spring semester concludes.
Nationally, the 1L class ticked down from 38,390 in 2018 to 38,285 in 2019. Total enrollment at all ABA-approved law schools across the country rose 1.2% to 112,882. In Indiana, total enrollment hit 1,898, a 0.5% increase from 2018.
The ABA is viewing the enrollment figures as a sign that the number of students at law schools is leveling out. Comparatively, from 2010 to 2015, the number of new law students dropped 29 percent.
Indiana’s enrollment profiles of the 2019 first-year class, according to the ABA Section of Legal Education and Admissions to the Bar, are as follows:
IU Maurer
- Completed applications: 1,790
- Offers of admission: 679
- Number of enrollees: 169
- Median LSAT: 162
- Median undergraduate grade point average: 3.79
- Number of women: 97
- Number of men: 72
- Minorities: 28
- IU McKinney
- Completed applications: 923
- Offers of admission: 575
- Story Continues Below
- Number of enrollees: 256 (196 full-time, 60 part-time)
- Median LSAT: 154
- Median undergraduate GPA: 3.50
- Number of women: 122
- Number of men: 140
- Minorities: 48
- Notre Dame
- Completed applications: 2,753
- Offers of admission: 662
- Number of enrollees: 214
- Median LSAT: 165
- Median undergraduate GPA: 3.74
- Number of women: 109
- Number of men: 105
- Minorities: 59
- The 1L class data is reported under the Standard 509 of the Standards and Rules of Procedure for Approval of Law Schools. The spreadsheets, explanatory information and the ABA’s database of Standard 509 reports are available at www.abarequireddisclosures.org.
Commentary: My Christmas List
By Mary Beth Schneider
The StatehouseFile.com
INDIANAPOLIS—It’s all well and good to say “all I want for Christmas is you.†But we all know that truth be told, we want so much more.
Trouble is, much of it cannot be wrapped in pretty paper and tied with a bow. And most of it wouldn’t fit under the Christmas tree. But what wonderful gifts they would be.
So, Santa, if you’re listening: I want a president who doesn’t call opponents juvenile names and who doesn’t Tweet insults. I want a president who supports our allies instead of coddling dictators. I want a president who doesn’t lie every single day, including on easily disproven things such as whether he signed a bill into law that actually was passed under a predecessor or whether any new sections of a border wall have been constructed.
I want traffic lights that are synchronized. (Start with West Street, please.)
I want politicians who put country over party, principles over partisanship and who seek to understand the needs of all their constituents, not just those who wrote them checks. And I want independently-drawn legislative and congressional districts that lead to fair representation.
I want blue jeans that fit perfectly even after they are washed. (Just saying.)
I want health care that is universal and affordable. And I want life-saving drugs such as insulin to be at a minimal cost. After all, the people who invented insulin in 1923 – Frederick Banting, James Collip and Charles Best – sold the patent for one dollar because they felt it was unethical to profit from a discovery that saves lives. A life very precious to me has required insulin since she was a child; it shouldn’t cost hundreds of dollars each month.
I want a facial moisturizer that really does eliminate wrinkles. (Asking for a friend.)
I want people to realize that the only fake news is lies completely made up. Reporters are human and make mistakes – but take it from me, they agonize over them and strive every day to get important stories out and to get them right. And I want people to know that good journalism doesn’t come for free. Subscribe to as many sources as you can – but especially to your local newspaper. In most communities, there is no one else to cover your mayor, your council, your schools, your community.
I want to win the lottery. (Hey, it could happen!)
I want the Statue of Liberty to represent our present, not our past. I have Dutch ancestors who came to what later became New York in the 1600s, seeking a new world. I have Irish ancestors who fled famine in the 1800s. I have Hungarian ancestors who came in the early 1900s, fleeing oppression. For the most part, they came with almost nothing. Some, like my grandmother, couldn’t speak English. Yet they built homes and lives, and the nation is richer for people like them.
I want zero calorie chocolates. (So long as they taste like 200-calorie truffles.)
I want children to go to school without once having to wonder if that bang is from a slammed locker or an active shooter, and parents who don’t have to kiss them goodbye in the morning, wondering if that is the last kiss.
I want to go through life without once being told “ok boomer.†(Seriously.)
I want a government and corporations to realize we have very little time – if that is, we have any left at all – to address climate change before our world no longer sustains life as we know it.
And I want to be more grateful for the gifts I’ve already got.
So I’m grateful for the gift of a father, who loved me no matter what and thought everything I did was just great.
And I’m just as grateful for the gift of a mother who, while she always loves me, definitely doesn’t think everything I do is perfect. It taught me to take responsibility for my shortcomings and to try to do better.
I’m grateful for the gift of a son and daughter who have given me years of memories and the pleasure of knowing so much more are in store. And I’m grateful for a husband who has shared all that with me.
And I’m grateful for the gift of writing and the knowledge that some people enjoy it, too.
Merry Christmas. I’m wishing, too, for your Christmas wishes to come true.
FOOTNOTE: Mary Beth Schneider is an editor at TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalists.
YULETIDE
YULETIDE
Gavel Gamut By Jim Redwine
Yuletide is the Germanic term for the season that begins with the Winter Solstice, usually about December 21 or 22. For 2019 the fleeting moment when Earth’s true North Pole was at its maximum tilt away from the sun occurred on Saturday, December 21 at 10:19 p.m. Central Standard Time. The winter or hibernal solstice marked the twenty-four hour period of the calendar year with the least sunlight and the beginning of longer daylight days. Humans probably have always celebrated this event. It is the true “new†year.
For many people, the end of the year’s gradually darkening after the Summer Solstice, about June 20 or 21 each year, is a time to reflect on the past and hope for the future. One need not be superstitious to experience a period of introspection when darkness turns to light. Nature provides the perfect metaphor.
For Peg and me as leftovers from the turbulence of the 1960’s retrospection often includes the days of Jim Crow and America’s legal system. These painful recollections were once again seared into our psyches when we happened to come upon the 2018 movie Green Book while surfing television shows for something of value, that is, something other than the cacophony of vile opinions claiming to be news.
Green Book is based on events from 1962. Dr. Don Shirley (1927-2013) was an African-American pianist who decided to engage in his own sociological experiment concerning racism in America. Instead of designing a laboratory environment where rats are manipulated and observed followed by conjectural opinions, Shirley literally put some real skin in the game, his. He hired a white Italian-American from New York City to be his driver and event manager then, with a white cellist and white bass player, the four of them dove into America before the Civil Rights Act of 1964. It was not pretty. Believe me, I remember
I was born in 1943 in the legally segregated state of Oklahoma. I lived the good life of a middle-class white kid and a young man with hardly a thought about why everyone I went to school or ate out with looked like me. If I ever had a passing observation of this phenomenon until after Brown vs. The Topeka Board of Education in 1954 I do not recall it.
Then in 1957 Oklahoma used “all deliberate speed†to comply with the United States Supreme Court’s decree that its previous decree that Separate but Equal was no longer constitutional. Turns out the Judicial Branch is no more virtuous than the other two. Not surprised? Me neither.
Anyway, the public schools of Oklahoma initiated their version of integration and the “colored†kids from Booker T. Washington School across Bird Creek from the rest of us came to school with the rest of us. Of course, public transportation, restaurants, restrooms and water fountains remained pristinely white until after the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Jim Crow still reigned.
Green Book transported Peg and me back to those not so thrilling days of yesteryear. Don Shirley was kept back by the dominant white culture to those dark days symbolized by the Winter Solstice. Perhaps whoever erected the Stonehenge paean to the coming light had their own demons to quell. My guess is there is in human nature a certain element of dark mentality that is constant and that each generation must re-learn and deal with that fact.
Of course, for one to recognize the darkness in our souls we must have the ability to appreciate the possibilities of the coming light. When the light finally expels the dark, if it ever does, we will be able to dispel the competition between good and evil by not just hiding from the long night but reveling in the light.
Happy New Year!
For more Gavel Gamut articles go to www.jamesmredwine.com
Or “Like†us on Facebook at JPegRanchBooks&Knitting
HAMRICK TOWING EXPANDING AND HAS SEVERAL JOB OPENINGS
HAMRICK TOWING EXPANDING AND HAS SEVERAL JOB OPENINGS
Hamrick Towing is expanding and has immediate openings for several positions.
According to the firms President John Hamrick said “there are several full-time positions that he needs to fill right away.
Mr. Hamrick also stated that these positions offer paid vacations and holidays. Performance bonuses are offered to those who excel in the workplace. Â Also, the hourly pay is very competitive. An Equal Opportunity employer.
The Following List Of Full-Time Positions Are Posted Below:
1) Five (5) Tow Truck drivers
2) Paint and Bodyman
3) Welder
4) Dispatcher
5) Diesel Mechanic
Finally, Mr. Hamrick said; “that the workplace environment is employee-friendly with a downhome attitude.â€
Interested applicants need to immediately apply in person at Hamrick Towing located at 1277 Maxwell Avenue from thee hours 10;00 to noon Monday through Friday. No phone calls, please.