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Below find Gov. Eric J. Holcomb’s public schedule for January 6, 2020.
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Monday, January 6: 16th Annual Statehouse Prayer Service
WHO:Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Gov. Holcomb
Chief Justice Loretta Rush
Speaker of the House Brian Bosma
Senate President Pro Tem Rodric Bray
DCS Director Terry Stigdon
WHAT:Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â The governor will give remarks.
WHEN:Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â 12:00 p.m., Monday, January 6
WHERE:         Indiana Statehouse – South Atrium
200 W. Washington St.
Indianapolis, IN 46204
State Rep. Ron Bacon Retires From House Seat
Chandler, Ind. (Jan. 3, 2020) – State Rep. Ron Bacon (R-Chandler) announced his retirement as the state representative for House District 75 at the end of his term this year.
Bacon was elected in 2010 and has served House District 75, which includes portions of Warrick, Pike and Spencer counties for the past decade.
Major initiatives Bacon has been working over the past 10 years:
·      Health
o  Protecting mothers and their unborn
o  Keeping the dignity of fetal remains
o  Ensuring licensure and regulations for the medical and health fields are updated
o  Combatting the drug epidemic
o  Keeping high school and college students healthy
o  Tackling various mental health issues
o  Expanding health care to telehealth
o  Addressing vaping and e-liquid concerns
·      Safety
o  Keeping Hoosiers safe in any mode of transportation
o  Keeping student-athletes safe
o  Streamlining Emergency Response
o  Roadside maintenance
o  Clarifying and updating hunting and gun laws
·      Environment
o  Protecting Hoosier homes from mine subsidence
o  Promoting a green way to produce energy
o  Tackling local sewage and water issues
o  Standing up to bullying
·      Education
o  Fairness for teachers in evaluations
o  Promoting teacher pay raises
o  Providing teacher scholarships
·      Government
o  Cutting red tape
o  Tax cuts across multiple sectors including business and agriculture
o  Ensuring fiscal responsibility and paying off the state’s debt without accumulating more
o  Bringing broadband to rural Indiana
o  Protecting religious freedom
o  Infrastructure funding for road and bridge improvements
“It has been an honor to serve House District 75 for the past 10 years,†Bacon said. “I will continue serving the great Hoosiers living in my district until the end of my term this year. I have fought allergies for decades and due to my increased sensitivity to mold and mildew, my physicians have recommended I spend less time in the Statehouse, which is a contributing factor to my allergies. I have a passion for public service, so I plan on continuing to serve at the local level.â€
Bacon intends to run for a local elected position. This will not be the first local position Bacon has run for as he has been on the county council and was coroner before taking on the state representative position.
By John Krull
TheStatehouseFile.comÂ
PARIS, France – Everyone is polite.
Most people I’ve encountered in Europe over the holiday season don’t ask an American traveling here about the anger, discord, and dysfunction plaguing U.S. politics. Those that do want to talk about it raise the subject gently, almost with hesitation.
Early in my trip, here in Paris, I chatted with a man at a café. His family, like mine, had wandered off to enjoy the Parisian evening while we each nursed after-dinner drinks and waited for the bill.
After we shared a few introductory commiserations, I asked him how the rail strike had affected life here. He said it just made everything harder over the holidays. The streets and sidewalks were more crowded, which meant getting everywhere – particularly by car – became more difficult and took longer.
I asked if the French government and the strikers were going to be able to get together to solve the problem.
He shrugged, then said, “probably not soon.â€
There was too much ego involved, he said. Too many people on both sides looking for a victory rather than a solution.
He shrugged again.
Then he asked me, at first gently, about U.S. politics. He wanted to know specifically about the impeachment proceedings and more generally about President Donald Trump.
As he talked, he grew more voluble. He said the U.S. president seemed to be angry all the time, that he started and stopped trade wars and broke agreements without much notice or thought and that he didn’t seem to be willing to work with anyone.
Were things going to settle down again at some point?
This time, I shrugged and said, “probably not soon.â€
And for the same reasons that the rail strike won’t be settled quickly.
Too much ego. Too much focus on wins, not solutions.
Then we shrugged at the same time, and chuckled.
Such is life.
On the train from Salzburg to Munich, my wife and I sat next to a couple from Singapore. They had been skiing in the Austrian alps and were headed to Munich to fly home.
We chatted about our children and our lives. Their oldest was studying in London. Our oldest just had wrapped up a semester studying in Scotland.
We traded information about our careers. The husband worked in finance and traveled a great deal in Asia and elsewhere in the Pacific for work.
When he found out I was a columnist who wrote about politics, he lifted an eyebrow. After a bit, he inquired – again, gently – about the American political scene. He asked about the impeachment but, again, more generally about the volatility in U.S. politics.
Were things ever going to settle down?
Once more, I shrugged.
We’re entering an election year, I told him. That’s rarely a time for American political leaders to find ways to come together.
I asked him about how the instability – particularly the president’s on-again, off-again trade war with China – had affected people in his part of the world.
“It’s done a lot of damage – hurt a lot of people,†he said.
No one knows what to expect from the United States now, he explained.
The American economy was the largest in the world, he said. What happens in the United States affects everyone everywhere, he added.
Then he asked, do Americans understand that?
I shrugged again.
Some do.
Others don’t.
The day after that chat on the train, I visited the Nazi concentration camp at Dachau.
I was struck by a bronze plaque at the entrance to the memorial expressing gratitude to the United States for liberating the camp, its prisoners and, by extension, humanity from the grip of Nazi tyranny. The language on the plaque was dignified, but heartfelt.
That’s how the world saw us 75 years ago.
As leaders.
As liberators.
Now?
Not so much.
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.
ABSOLUTES
Gavel Gamut By Jim Redwine
We begin 2020 with the death of Iranian commander Qasem Soleimani. President Trump ordered the drone/airstrike. The President said:
“The attack was necessary because Soleimani was planning massive attacks
against U.S. personnel in Iraq and throughout the Middle East.â€
America has been heavily involved in the Middle East since World War II. Our role until 1990 was mainly diplomatic with some force of arms as a threat. In 1990 we invaded Iraq and re-invaded Iraq in 2003 although we have not completely disengaged since our first incursion.
After the 911 attacks of 2001, we invaded Afghanistan in the hopes of quelling further attacks by Al-Qaeda members who were using Afghanistan to plan operations in Syria, Iraq and elsewhere. In 2014 America intervened militarily and diplomatically in the Syrian Civil War.
Iranian college students stormed the U.S. Embassy in Tehran, Iran in 1979 and held 52 American hostages until 1981. All were released. The U.S. has had a prickly relationship with Iran since but it has been almost totally a war of words and sanctions.
If we point to 1990 as the metaphorical “Firing on Fort Sumterâ€, we have been engaged in military actions in the Middle East for 30 years. The strike on Soleimani may expand and extend our involvement. A calculation of costs and benefits of our 30 years of war is far beyond my knowledge. How does one evaluate the lives lost when there is no accounting for them? Did we eliminate terrorists or innocents, a future dictator or someone who might find a cure for cancer? We cannot know. We surely have expended trillions of dollars of the national treasure, but would we have spent it any more wisely at home?
Over the last 30 years, what have we done with our lives and treasure within our own country? More particularly what have we, and I mean me too, accomplished in our system of criminal justice? If America seeks to punish foreigners for transgressions and seeks to force other countries to behave as we think best, what are we doing and how have we done on imposing justice upon and modifying the behavior of our fellow citizens whom we convict of crimes? These issues, while always at play, rise up as salient as the New Year ensues.
Instead of war with Iraq, Afghanistan, Syria and Iran can we think about the legal system and Chris, Danny, Jackie, and Jason? Is it logical to compare the behavior of countries to the behavior of individuals? Is it relevant? Is it meaningful or just another method of hoping instead of helping?
Each of the people named were at one time considered by our legal system to be in need of rehabilitation, much as America thinks of those named Middle Eastern countries. And while I have dealt with thousands of our fellow citizens in our legal system as lawyer, prosecutor and judge, this New Year season I have been musing about these four above-named survivors of my attempts at punishment and rehabilitation. In essence, these four were given the opportunity to modify their own behavior and they did. Each is now a productive citizen and of more import to me, each is now my friend. Do I deserve any credit; no. Do they; yes.
But if society had continued to demand a pound of flesh from these, and so many others who have turned their lives around, each of them might have returned our slings and arrows with ballistic behavior. Yes, society held each to account just as we must do with other countries. But giving individuals and nations an opportunity for redemption might be worth contemplating.
For more Gavel Gamut articles go to www.jamesmredwine.com
Or “Like†us on Facebook at JPegRanchBooks&Knitting
The University of Evansville’s Schroeder School of Business has risen from 71 to 52 (#3 among small private schools) in the Poets & Quants for Undergrads Best Undergraduate B-School rankings, the leading online publication for undergraduate business education news.
The rise is based on feedback from Class of 2017 graduates. The “Academic Experience” as rated by UE alumni accounts for 33% of the final ranking score, and scores in that component ranked UE 28th overall, up from 64 last year. “These high alumni rating scores are indicative of the life-transforming student experience provided by the University of Evansville and the Schroeder School,” said Ben Johnson, UE’s interim Schroeder Family Dean. “It is a testament to our faculty, staff, and administrators across campus.”
According to the Poets & Quants website, UE’s scores were “buoyed by solid career outcome results… The school performed well in that category by doing something that might seem simple on the surface but is not always that easy. It got its students jobs.” 95% of the Class of 2018 who were seeking jobs were employed full-time within three months of graduation.
The rankings are based on a representative survey of more than 13,000 recent graduates and school-reported data across 88 schools focusing on admissions standards, academic experience, and employment placement. Recent graduates were also asked about the ability of faculty to connect with students. The Schroeder School did well in this area, receiving an A for mentoring students and an A+ for faculty’s availability outside of the classroom.
Schroeder School graduates have found employment across the country in companies such as Cisco Systems, Fiat Chrysler, Disney, and many more.
Opportunity For Students To Page At The Statehouse by State Representative Wendy McNamara |
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Students looking to learn about our state government are invited to participate in the House Page Program during the 2020 legislative session, which kicks off Jan. 6 and concludes mid-March. Hoosiers between the ages of 13 and 18 who serve as Pages get a unique look at the legislative process. While spending a day at the Statehouse in Indianapolis, students will help local lawmakers and tour government offices. Participants receive an excused absence from school, and groups can participate together. For more information and to apply, click here or call 800-382-9841. Spots fill up fast, so apply soon! |
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The University of Evansville head men’s golf coach Jim Hamilton has announced the signing of Michael Ikejiani to a National Letter of Intent to begin playing for the Purple Aces in the fall of 2020.
A native of Ontario, Canada, Ikejiani qualified for the Ontario U19 Boys Championship, the Canadian Amateur and the Ontario Open last summer. He won the Golf Ontario Champion of Champions Tournament and captured a fall series Canadian Junior Golf Association event.
“I am very excited to have Michael join our program,” Hamilton said “not only is he an accomplished golfer but also an outstanding student and person.”
Ikejiani’s outstanding play helped him to become recognized as a member of the prestigious 2019-20 Golf Ontario Provincial Junior Boys Team, which consists of the seven best junior players in Ontario.