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“Sour Truth” Lemonade Stand on Today

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The YWCA of Evansville and several male community leaders will host the annual “Sour Truth” Lemonade Stand on Tuesday, April 2, 2019, to call attention to the persistent and sizable gap between men’s and women’s wages. According to the latest US Census Bureau on average, full-time working women earned 80 cents for every dollar earned by men. In Indiana, the wage gap between men and women is even greater. Indiana ranks 49th in the nation at 73%. The nationwide gap is even worse for women of color with African-American women earning 63% and Latina women earning 54% of men’s wages. Over a lifetime of work, this loss adds up, as women lose out on over $500,000 in a lifetime due to the wage gap.

Prominent male community leaders including Billy Bolin (EPD), Jim Ryan (Old National), Jonathan Weinzapfel (Ivy Tech), Ben Shoulders (Old National), Court Kull (5/3 Bank), Ben Trockman (Old National), Abraham Brown (La Campirana), D’Angelo Taylor (USI), Alex Burton (EVSC), Logan Staples (German American), and Sean Jeffries (German American) be serving at the lemonade stand themed, “It’s not about apples and oranges, it’s about the sour truth.” The YWCA uses the lemonade stand to increase awareness about “the sour truth” about the wage gap between men and women.

The lemonade stand will be located along Main Street between 2nd and 3rd street next to Zuki restaurant during the lunch hour. The public is welcome to stop by the stand to learn more about this issue.

YWCA has also partnered with Amy Word-Smith to add another event to this year’s Equal Pay Day lineup. “Truth and Trivia” will be held from 5:30 p.m. – 8:00 p.m. at Lamasco Bar and Grill where women are encouraged to share their “sour truth” stories about the wage gap. There will be a special women-themed trivia night and women will receive 20% off the price of their food all day.

“Equal pay for equal work sounds like common sense to most people, yet 56 years after President Kennedy signed the Equal Pay Act into law the pay gap persists and women continue to be short changed,” said Erika Taylor, YWCA CEO. “When women are short changed, families are short changed. We encourage businesses to pay women fairly, push for laws that will enforce current equal pay legislation and educate women on how to negotiate for highersalaries.”

April 2nd symbolizes the day when women’s wages catch up to men’s wages from the previous year. Every year in April, thousands of women’s, civil rights, labor, and communityorganizations from across the United States come together for a national day of action promoting fair pay known as Equal Pay Day. The YWCA is encouraging the community to wear red on April 2nd to show that women are “in the red” with their pay.

The YWCA supports equal pay for equal work and opposes compensation practices thatare discriminatory. “We believe that employers should create compensation programs that aredesigned to ensure appropriate treatment of all employees and those compensation programs should be determined by the market and employer needs. The YWCA encourages organizations to perform compensation audits to ensure that compensation practices aren’tdiscriminatory,” said Erika Taylor.

YWCA Evansville invites everyone to join the Equal Pay Day twitter storm from 2:00 p.m.– 4:00 p.m. CST by posting information and facts about women’s pay. Participants are encouraged to follow @ywcaevansville on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram to view and share posts using the hashtags #SourTruthEVV #PayEquityEvansville and #EqualPayDay.

The YWCA is dedicated to eliminating racism, empowering women and promoting peace, justice, freedom and dignity for all. The YWCA has been serving the Evansville area since 1911 and from its inception has provided housing and services for women and girls. The Evansville YWCA is a member of the YWCA of the U.S.A., the oldest and largest women’s membership movement in the country.

Over the years, YWCA programs have changed to meet the evolving needs of women and girls. In 1979, the YWCA opened the first domestic violence shelter in Evansville. Other current programs include the domestic violence shelter, the YES! Sober Living program, Emergency Shelter for homeless women and children, and an after-school and mentoringprogram, called Live Y’ers, for at-risk girls in grades three through 12. Special advocacy programs and events for the general public are also offered. Visit www.ywcaev

Moscow Ballet Returns December 12, 2019

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MOSCOW BALLET
GREAT RUSSIAN NUTCRACKER
“Gift Of Christmas Tour”
December 12th!

TICKET PRE-SALE

Presale is Monday, April 1 at 10:00am
through Thursday April 4, at 10:00pm.

USE CODE: PARTY

Presale tickets available online through Ticketmaster at the button below,
or at the Old National Events Plaza’s Box Office.
The Moscow Ballet Great Russian Nutcracker
is coming to the Aiken Theatre on December 14th at 7:00pm.

Seats are $82, $72, $52, $42 and $32.
Platinum are $178 and Gold Circle $113

STIFEL’S BRYAN RUDER TO HOST FREE SEMINAR ON IRA DISTRIBUTION PLANNING

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Bryan Ruder, AAMS®, AIF®, Associate Vice President/Investments with Stifel’s Evansville, Indiana, office, will host an informative free seminar titled “IRA Distribution Planning: How Decisions Today Affect You and Your Heirs.”  The seminar will take place on Tuesday, April  23 at 6:15 p.m. at the American Red Cross, located at 29 Stockwell Road in Evansville.

Topics to be covered will include how and when to take required minimum distributions (RMDs) from individual retirement accounts (IRAs), IRA beneficiary planning, guidelines for inherited IRAs, how to make qualified charitable distributions from IRAs, and how the stretch IRA may affect the IRA owner and heirs.

To reserve a seat, please call (812) 475-9353 or stop by the Stifel office at 3000 E. Morgan Avenue.

 

 

Secretary Perdue in Indiana TODAY

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U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Sonny Perdue will be in Indiana TODAY Tuesday, April 2nd to participate in a dialogue at Purdue University, visit the National FFA Center, and tour Second Helpings, Inc.

Secretary Perdue to participate in a dialogue with Purdue University President Mitch Daniels

WHAT: Secretary Perdue will participate in a dialogue and audience Q&A session with the President of Purdue University, Mitch Daniels. Following the event, Secretary Perdue will hold a media availability.

WHEN: Tuesday, April 2nd beginning at 9:00am ET.

WHERE: Stewart Center, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN 47907

Secretary Perdue to visit National FFA Center

WHAT: Secretary Perdue will visit the National FFA Center. Following the visit, Secretary Perdue will hold the media availability.

WHEN:  Tuesday, April 2nd beginning at 12:45pm ET.

WHERE: National FFA Center, 6060 FFA Drive, Indianapolis, IN 46268

Secretary Perdue to visit Second Helpings, Inc.

WHAT: Secretary Perdue will visit Second Helpings, Inc, an Employment and Training (E&T) site. Following the visit, Secretary Perdue will hold a media availability.

WHEN: Tuesday, April 2nd beginning at 2:30pm ET.

WHERE: Second Helpings, Inc., The Eugene and Marilyn Glick Center, 1121 Southeastern Ave., Indianapolis, IN 46202

 

Disciplinary Commission: AG Hill claiming he is above ethics rules

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Olivia Covington for www.theindianalawyer.com

The Indiana Supreme Court Disciplinary Commission has accused Attorney General Curtis Hill of seeking special treatment in the disciplinary proceedings brought against him, arguing in court filings that Hill’s case must go before a hearing panel to protect the public interest.

The commission filed a response Friday to Hill’s previous motion to decline the appointment of a hearing officer or panel. The officer or three-person panel would serve as the “trial judge” in the disciplinary proceeding and could make a recommendation on sanctions to the Supreme Court, which has the sole authority to impose discipline.

In response to the commission’s motion to appoint a three-master hearing panel — which is usually only done for judicial discipline — Hill argued the consequences of allegations that he drunkenly groped four women at a legislative party in March 2018 were best left to voters in a political forum, rather than to a court in a judicial forum. He also said that because a special prosecutor declined to charge him with criminal conduct, a disciplinary proceeding would be unwarranted and “unprecedented.”

The commission, however, rejected each of those assertions in its response Friday, arguing instead that the disciplinary proceedings against Hill are independent of criminal proceedings brought by a prosecutor or ethical proceedings brought against state officials. Inspector General Lori Torres found Hill’s alleged misconduct did not violate state ethics rules, though both she and special prosecutor Daniel Sigler said they believed the accounts of Hill’s four accusers.

Additionally, the commission said the four women’s decision to seek civil redress against Hill and the state has no bearing on whether the disciplinary action can proceed.

“The respondent’s motion (to decline a hearing panel), by any measure, is an extraordinary request for the Court to ignore its long-established rules and procedures and grant an ordering ending the case summarily, despite his statement that the allegations are contested,” the commission wrote. “In short, the respondent has requested a special procedure, or rather, non-procedure, just for him.”

Multiple lawyer ethics attorneys have told Indiana Lawyer they have never seen a disciplinary proceeding where a hearing officer or panel was not appointed. In his motion, Hill pointed to Matter of Haith, 49S00-9707-DI-422, in which the Supreme Court declined to appoint a hearing officer. According to Hill’s motion, Haith was subsequently dismissed, but the Disciplinary Commission has argued that Hill’s reliance on Haith makes his motion an inappropriate motion to dismiss.

If a hearing officer were not appointed, some ethics attorneys have said the disciplinary proceeding could conceivably be heard directly by the Supreme Court justices. However, the justices typically appoint hearing officers to make findings of fact and conclusions of law before the high court makes a final decision on sanctions.

To bolster its argument in favor of appointing a hearing panel, the Disciplinary Commission cited to numerous attorney discipline cases in which lawyers were disciplined for conduct that was not charged, for which they were acquitted or that occurred outside of their official duties. Among the cases cited was Matter of Riddle, 700 N.E.2d 788, 793 (Ind. 1998), in which the court held that, “… (T)his Court may find a violation of the Rules of Professional Conduct even where there has been no criminal charges against or criminal conviction of respondent.”

“The reason that criminal charges are not a requisite for asserting a violation of Rule 8.4(b) is because the nature and purpose of discipline proceedings are fundamentally different from those of the criminal justice system,” the commission wrote, citing Matter of Roberts, 442 N.E.2d 986 (Ind. 1983).

Hill’s motion against a hearing officer or panel relies heavily on special prosecutor Sigler’s decision not to press criminal charges. In announcing his decision, Sigler said he could not prove the “intent” element of battery, an element the commission said in its Friday motion was misapplied.

“As a general intent crime,” the commission wrote, “battery requires that the actor merely has knowledge he is engaged in the conduct and does not require ‘intent’ of harm.”

Even so, the commission’s response notes Sigler warned against reading conclusions into his report that weren’t there. But according to the commission, Hill has inappropriately read the report as exonerating him.

Hill “asserts that the Commission is being disrespectful to the special prosecutor by asserting a Rule 8.4(b) violation when the prosecutor declined to file a criminal charge,” commission attorneys wrote in a footnote. “It is the respondent who has shown disregard for the special prosecutor’s report by ignoring the special prosecutor’s warning.”

In the March 19 disciplinary complaint, Hill is charged with violations of Rules of Professional Conduct 8.4(b) and (d), which relate to his fitness as a lawyer and prejudice to the administration of justice. The AG argued his alleged misconduct, if true, would neither reflect adversely on his fitness nor prejudice the administration of justice. Further, he argues the “offensive personality” charge brought against him under Admission and Discipline Rule 22 is “void for vagueness.”

The Disciplinary Commission, however, said that as Indiana’s chief legal officer, the attorney general has duties that are “extremely far reaching and important to the welfare of the State of Indiana and the enforcement of the law.” As support for its argument, the commission cited to Matter of Seat, 588 N.E.2d 1262, 1264 (Ind. 1992), in which a deputy prosecutor was disciplined for drunken driving.

“It is not logical to determine that a deputy prosecutor’s criminal conduct is prejudicial to the administration of justice for a single offense of Operating While Intoxicated, and then conclude that the conduct of the Attorney General, who has committed multiple acts of battery and/or an act of sexual battery is not,” the commission wrote. “The conduct of the Attorney General will have an exponentially greater impact on diminishing public confidence and will result in a greater prejudice to the administration of justice.”

In addition to resubmitting its request for the Supreme Court to appoint a hearing officer, the Disciplinary Commission also urged the justices to issue specific rulings or opinions on each of the arguments Hill and his attorney, former commission director Donald Lundberg, raise in their motion against a hearing officer or panel.

“What his motion boils down to is that the respondent seeks special and favorable treatment by the Court that no other lawyer would ever obtain,” the commission concluded. “He seeks this Court, in essence, to declare that he is a lawyer whose conduct is above the Rules of Professional Conduct, simply because he is the Attorney General. The Commission can think of nothing that would deepen the mistrust of the judicial system, diminish the esteem of the Supreme Court and prejudice the administration of justice more than if the Court were to grant the respondent’s motion.”

It’s not clear what effect a sanction against Hill might have on his ability to serve as attorney general. If he were suspended or disbarred, he would seemingly be precluded from performing the legal duties of his position, at least temporarily.

Hill has vehemently denied the allegations of sexual misconduct and has expressed confidence that the disciplinary matter, if it proceeds, will be resolved in his favor. The case is In the Matter of: Curtis T. Hill, Jr., 19S-DI-00156.

For more on the unique questions raised by the disciplinary complaint against Hill, read the April 3 edition of Indiana Lawyer.

ADOPT A PET

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Peter Barker is a 1-year-old Hound mix. He likes other dogs & previously lived with children. He was only surrendered for financial reasons. His adoption fee is $110. Contact Vanderburgh Humane at (812) 426-2563 for adoption details.

 

OBITUARY OF ARTHUR W. CALLIS

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OBITUARY OF ARTHUR W. CALLIS

at Koehler Funeral Home in Boonville, Indiana.

Boonville, IN. – Arthur W. “Art” Callis, 87, of Boonville, Indiana passed away peacefully on Sunday, March 31, 2019, at his home surrounded by his loving family.
Art was born on March 15, 1932,

in Boonville, Indiana, the son of the late Roye H. and Rebecca (Wilson) Callis.

Art graduated from Boonville High School in 1951. He was a long time member of Main Street United Methodist Church. He served a number of terms on the Warrick County Council. With Habitat for Humanity, he also helped build a number of houses for the community.

Art was an avid follower of Cardinals baseball and IU basketball. He enjoyed golfing and was a true outdoorsman who loved gardening, hunting, and fishing. He retired from Whirlpool Corp. During the Korean Conflict, he served in the U.S. Army as a military policeman.

He is survived by his wife, Irene; son, Mark Callis; daughters Mona Callis (Staci) and Donna Buxton (Greg); grandchildren, Matt Buxton (April), Jessica McLemore (Bobby), Andy Callis (Nikki); great-grandchildren, Aubrey & Brenna Buxton, Cole & Gia McLemore, Jace Callis; brothers, George Callis, Arvil Callis; sisters, Mary Heidorn and Ruth Keethers; and many beloved nieces and nephews.

He is preceded in death by his son, Steve Callis; brothers, Roye Callis Jr., Earl Callis, Alfred Callis, James Callis; sisters, Ann Stanley, Mildred Stork, Clara Robbins, Margaret Kolley, and Naomi Splittorff.

Visitation will be from 4 P.M. to 7 P.M. Thursday, April 4, 2019, at Koehler Funeral Home in Boonville, Indiana.

Services are 10 A.M. Friday, April 5, 2019, at Main Street United Methodist Church in Boonville, Indiana with Pastor Greg Pimlott officiating, followed by a burial at Mt. Olive Cemetery.

Memorial contributions may be made to Main Street United Methodist Church.
The family would like to give special thanks to all of their Kindred Hospice nurses.
Koehler Funeral Home of Boonville, Indiana is entrusted with care.

To send flowers to the family of Arthur W Callis, please visit Tribute Store.

OBITUARY OF VICTORIA LEE NEWSOME

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OBITUARY OF VICTORIA LEE NEWSOME

by KOEHLER FUNERAL HOME-CHANDLER AND BOONVILLE

Boonville, IN. – Victoria Lee Newsome, 53, of Boonville, Indiana passed away on Friday,

March 15, 2019, at Transcendent Health Care North in Boonville, Indiana.

Victoria was born in Westover, Massachusetts on June 6, 1965, to the late Arthur Bruce and Carol Lee (Heath) Newsome.

Victoria was a very caring and loving person.

She is survived by her sister, Judy McKenzie of Kingman, AZ.

To send flowers to the family of Victoria Lee Newsome, please visit Tribute Store.

VANDERBURGH COUNTY FELONY CHARGES

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 Below are the felony cases to be filed by the Vanderburgh County Prosecutor’s Office today.

Candice Ray Harris: Possession of methamphetamine (Level 6 Felony)

Paul Anthony Martin: Intimidation (Level 5 Felony), Intimidation (Level 5 Felony), Criminal recklessness (Level 6 Felony), Criminal recklessness (Level 6 Felony)

Vernon A. Vance: Possession of methamphetamine (Level 6 Felony)

Tyra Renee Fox: Theft (Level 6 Felony)

Jeremy James Frey: Dealing in methamphetamine (Level 3 Felony), Possession of methamphetamine (Level 5 Felony), Operating a motor vehicle without ever receiving a license (Class C misdemeanor), Operating a motor vehicle without financial responsibility (A infraction)

Cory Lee Cardin: Failure to register as a sex or violent offender (Level 5 Felony), Failure to register as a sex or violent offender (Level 6 Felony)

Eagles take the nightcap to earn a split

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University of Southern Indiana Baseball remained tied for second in the Great Lakes Valley Conference after splitting a doubleheader with Missouri University Science & Technology Sunday afternoon at the USI Baseball Field. USI lost the opener, 9-4, but bounced back to win the nightcap, 6-1.

The Screaming Eagles move their record to 17-9 overall and 10-4 in the GLVC, while the Miners go to 17-8, 10-4 GLVC.

Game 1:
The Eagles fell behind early and was unable to make up the difference in falling in the opening game, 9-4.

After the Miners built a 2-0 lead with single tallies in the second and third, USI cut the deficit in half, 2-1, in the fifth when freshman centerfielder Bryson McNay(Sellersburg, Indiana) scored on a fielder’s choice. Missouri S&T responded with a pair of runs in the top of the sixth for the 4-1 advantage before USI senior first baseman Nathan Kuester (Rockport, Indiana) crushed a solo shot to center field to get the Eagles to 4-2.

The Miners re-extended the lead to three runs, 5-2, with a tally in the seventh and sealed the Eagles’ fate in game one with four more in the ninth for a 9-4 decision.

USI senior right-hander Austin Gossmann (Avon, Indiana) started and suffered his first loss of the season. Gossman allowed five runs on 11 hits and a walk through 6.2 innings of work, while tying a season-high 11 strikeouts.

Game 2:
USI freshman catcher Lucas McNew (Floyds Knobs, Indiana) hit a two run bomb in the first inning and senior right-hander Austin Krizan  (Mt. Vernon, Indiana) threw seven strong innings to lead the Eagles to a 6-1 victory in the nightcap.

McNew hit his team-best seventh home run in his first at-bat, a two-run blast to left center, to put the Eagles up 2-0 and all of the runs USI would need in the nightcap. USI followed with a run in the fourth and three more in the sixth to lead, 6-0, after six frames. Senior second baseman Jacob Fleming (Evansville, Indiana) highlighted the three-run sixth with a two-run single to complete the rally.

USI junior rightfielder Manny Lopez (Santo Domingo, D.R.) led the Eagles at the plate in game two, going three-for-three with a run scored and a RBI.

Krizan (4-0) moved into a tie for first on the team in wins by pitching a strong seven innings, allowing one run on five hits and one walk. The senior right-hander also tied a career-best with eight strikeouts in the victory.

USI junior right-hander Tyler Hagedorn (Evansville, Indiana) finished the game for Krizan, scattering a hit and a walk in two innings of work.