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General Colin Powell offers lessons on failure, leadership

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On the eve of his inauguration as the fourth president of the University of Southern Indiana, sitting across from General Colin L. Powell, USA (Ret.) on the eve of his 82nd birthday, Dr. Ronald Rochon told a buoyed crowd inside the freshly-opened Screaming Eagles Arena that it was a night he would never forget.

It was also a night that—full disclosure—made him a little tense.

“I’ve been nervous all day,” Rochon admitted, prompting laughs from the Romain College of Business Innovative Speaker Series audience and a joke from Powell that the president should “drop down and give 10.”

“I’ll give you five,” Rochon countered.

In the end, no pushups were attempted. Instead, the audience watched and listened as a man shaped on the south side of Chicago in the 1970s sought the insights and advice of a man brought up in the South Bronx in the 1940s.

Over the course of an hour, Powell offered his thoughts on everything from diversity in higher education (“If you are a public school and you do not have a student body that reflects what the public looks like, then you’re not doing your job”) to division in the Middle East (“I see no solution in sight… I think it’s going to continue to be a problem for a long, long period of time, and there’s no immediate solution.”)

He weighed in on Russia, China and North Korea. On immigration and segregation. On partisan politics and why he won’t be running for president. “It wouldn’t work, politically. I didn’t have the passion in me to be a politician,” Powell said.

He even humored a question about aliens, playfully placing his finger to his lips as if he had a secret.

But one of the more relatable moments of the evening came when the Four-Star General and former Secretary of State, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and National Security Advisor opened up about something many try, sometimes at serious costs, to hide: failure. “Every young person should fail,” Powell said. “I did things wrong, and I had to be corrected. But doing wrong doesn’t mean there’s anything wrong with you. It’s just, do it right next time.”

That message hit home for Darlene Short, a sixth-grade language arts teacher at Castle North Middle School who brought a group of 50 students to the program.

“Success happens through failures,” she said. “You don’t automatically always get things easily. And so, I loved that he talked about that, because our “A” students, they can’t make a “B” without just falling apart sometimes.”

“I was one of those kids. I got “As” and “Bs” in high school, and now in college, it’s a lot harder,” added Claudia Labhart ’22, a USI student majoring in biology and German. “I’m maybe not doing as good, but it’s not the end of the world. You just have to keep moving, and that was really inspirational. That’s something I feel like I’ll think about a lot now.”

Brandon Ragland, who was a teenager the first time he heard Powell speak in Evansville, attended Thursday’s event with his 16-year-old daughter, Jazmine, a student at Harrison High School. “I think that he pretty much put it in my daughter’s mind that, hey, that’s part of the ingredients of your success. It kind of reiterates what I try to share with her a lot. I always say, ‘I don’t speak from a platform of perfection, it was because of my problems that I’ve had that I can be able to find solutions now.’”

Even in his retirement from public service, Powell continues to look for solutions, too. He’s passionate about education and spoke about the school he opened at his alma mater, City College of New York, about a mile from where he was born in Harlem. He’s been to each of the 12 schools in the United States that bear his name.

“It means more to see my name over an elementary school than it does to wear a medal,” Powell said. “What I remind myself all the time is that I can’t change anything in the past…The only thing I really can change is the future. And the future that is in this country, they are our children. And we can’t afford to waste that.”

Just weeks ago, some of those children—Darlene Short’s students from Castle North—were reading about Powell in their classroom. Thursday, they sat feet away from him, waving as he prepared to go on stage. (He waved back.)

“This is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. No other sixth-grade class is going to have the opportunity to read about a person in their textbook and then go actually hear him speak. To make that connection, that real-world connection, is invaluable,” Short said.

Powell, who wrote an instant New York Times best seller about leadership (It Worked for Me: In Life & Leadership), shared a story that changed his mindset on the topic decades ago when he was a first lieutenant. He’d been so caught up about his own promotion that he failed to give one of the men in his unit the boost in rank he had earned. “I was ashamed of myself,” Powell said.

Powell with USI ROTC

He never forgot his error. But, instead of worrying, he learned. “I always remember that I’m second,” said Powell. “Whether you’re in the Army, in the band, any human occupation where you’re leading people. Remember, it’s the people you’re leading who are the important ones. You can be replaced overnight, easy.”

No one, however, can replace the history Colin Powell has both made and been a part of while serving 35 years in the United States Army and under four U.S. presidents. Which is why, just before the night ended, Powell, once the brigade commander of the 101st Airborne Division nicknamed the “Screaming Eagles,” earned another honor to add to his vast collection: an honorary Doctor of Laws degree from the University of Southern Indiana.

“I’m deeply honored. I really appreciate it,” Powell said, in closing. “I hope I can get back here sometime.”

The Romain College of Business Innovative Speaker Series is sponsored by the Romain College of Business and the USI Foundation. Previous speakers include T. Boone Pickens, legendary entrepreneur and philanthropist in 2013; Dr. Ben Bernanke, former chairman of the Federal Reserve in 2015; and Dr. Oscar Salazar, founding chief technology officer of Uber in 2017.

VANDERBURGH COUNTY RECENT BOOKING RECORDS

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http://www.vanderburghsheriff.com/jail-recent-booking-records.aspx

“READERSB FORUM” APRIL 6, 2019

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We hope that today’s “READERS FORUM” will provoke honest and open dialogue concerning issues that we, as responsible citizens of this community, need to address in a rational and responsible way?

WHAT”S ON YOUR MIND TODAY?

Todays “Readers Poll” question is: How would your rate Vice President Mike Pence performance so far?

Please go to our link of our media partner Channel 44 News located in the upper right-hand corner of the City-County Observer so you can get the up-to-date news, weather, and sports. We are pleased to provide obituaries from several area funeral homes at no costs.  Over the next several weeks we shall be adding additional obituaries from other local funeral homes.  Please scroll down the paper and you shall see a listing of them.

.If you would like to advertise on the CCO please contact us at City-County Observer@live.com

FOOTNOTE:  Any comments posted in this column do not represent the views or opinions of the City-County Observer or our advertisers.”READERS FORUM” 

Another GLVC sweep for USI Softball

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Another GLVC Sweep For USI Softball

USI (23-13, 11-3 GLVC) began the day with a 2-0 win in the opener before defeating the Cardinals, 11-5, in the nightcap.

Game 1
USI capitalized on a Leonhardt double to lead-off the third inning and score the first run, while Leonhardt’s RBI-double in the seventh gave her more than enough ammo to earn her 14th win of the year. Senior outfielder/pitcher Caitlyn Bradley (Forest, Indiana) drove in the first run with a sacrifice fly.

Leonhardt (14-4), meanwhile, continued her domination of opposing hitters as she struck out 10 batters while scattering four hits throughout seven innings of work to earn her eighth complete-game shutout of the year—Leonhardt also has had two combined shutouts this season. She has held the opposition scoreless in eight of her last nine starts and is currently sporting a 0.29 ERA in GLVC-only games.

Game 2
USI scored runs in the first, fourth, fifth, sixth and seventh innings to breeze by William Jewell, 11-5, in the second game. Bradley had an RBI-single to push across the first run of the contest in the top half of the first inning, while a four-run fourth frame put the Eagles on top, 5-0.

Junior outfielder Allison Schubert (Nicholasville, Kentucky) had an RBI-single to start the scoring in the fourth frame, while a sacrifice fly by senior second baseman Claire Johnson(Pittsboro, Indiana) increased USI’s advantage to 3-0.

Leonhardt followed with a two-run double to make the score 5-0; while RBI-doubles by junior shortstop Taylor Ricketts (Georgetown, Kentucky) and freshman third baseman Mary Bean(Schaumburg, Illinois) in the fifth inning put the Eagles up 7-0.

William Jewell (16-14, 5-7 GLVC) took advantage of some defensive miscues in the last half of the fifth frame to score four runs, but a two-run single by sophomore first baseman Haley Shouse (Borden, Indiana) in the sixth, followed by RBI-singles off the bats of freshman Elissa Brown (Brownsburg, Indiana) and Bradley in the seventh, put an end to any thoughts of a William Jewell rally.

Senior pitcher Haylee Smith (Florence, Kentucky) earned the win in the circle, while Bradley was credited with her first save. Smith (4-1) gave up four runs, just one earned, off four hits in four-and-a-third innings of work, while Bradley allowed just one unearned run in two-and-a-third innings of work.

Up next
USI travels to Kansas City, Missouri, to take on Rockhurst University in a GLVC doubleheader. The Hawks (18-13, 7-5 GLVC) split a GLVC twin bill with visiting Bellarmine University Friday afternoon.

Same-Sex Birth Certificate Case Stalls At 7th Circuit, Putting Families In Limbo

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Marilyn Odendahl for www.theindianalawyer.com

Both Jackie Phillips-Stackman and her wife, Lisa, carry copies of their daughter’s birth certificate with them wherever they go as they wait for the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals to issue an opinion that they fear could upend their family.

The Phillips-Stackmans are part of a lawsuit brought by married female couples against the state of Indiana for not allowing both women’s names to be listed on their children’s birth certificate. After the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Indiana granted summary judgment to the women in 2016, the Indiana Attorney General filed an appeal to the 7th Circuit.

Oral arguments in Henderson v. Adams, 17-1141, were presented May 22, 2017 to the panel of Judges Joel Flaum, Frank Easterbrook and Diane Sykes. Since then, the case has sat in Chicago, where it is now one of the oldest cases on the 7th Circuit’s docket.

The delay is keeping the Phillips-Stackman family and other married lesbian couples in limbo. While Indiana has been permitting both women in same-sex marriages to be identified as the parents on their offsprings’ birth certificates, the couples wonder what would happen if the appellate court reverses the lower court.

Some worry the state would remove the non-birth mother’s name from the birth certificates already issued to married lesbian couples. Such a step could negate the non-birth mothers’ legal parental rights to their children.

Jackie Phillips-Stackman described the situation as “very unnerving.”

Collins Fitzpatrick, circuit executive for the 7th Circuit, confirmed Henderson is one of the oldest cases at the Chicago court still awaiting a ruling. He said the judges are not required to render an opinion, but the tradition of the 7th Circuit has been to issue a decision in every case.

Fitzpatrick alluded that the slowdown might be caused by the vacancies that were not filled until recently, as well as the process the judges engage in when crafting their rulings.

The appellate court had at least one open seat dating back to August 2011. By September 2017, the vacancies had ballooned to four. Beginning in October 2017, the 7th Circuit welcomed the first of four new judges, bringing the court to its full complement of 11. The first new judge to join the Chicago court was Notre Dame Law School professor Amy Coney Barrett, who filled the Indiana seat vacated when Judge John Tinder retired in the summer of 2015.

Also, Fitzpatrick said, the judges on a panel can have a lot of back-and-forth after the oral arguments. In writing the opinions, the panel will discuss and pass the drafts amongst themselves, which can lengthen the time needed to reach a decision.

However, little more than a month after the Henderson oral arguments, the U.S. Supreme Court issued a per curiam decision on a similar birth certificate case from Arkansas. In Pavan v. Smith, 582 U.S.___ (2017), the court ruled the state could not prohibit female married couples who conceive children through artificial insemination from putting both mothers’ names on the birth certificate.

The basis of the Supreme Court’s decision in Pavan was its landmark ruling in Obergefell v. Hodges, 135 S. Ct. 2584 (2015). In that case, the majority held the Constitution entitled same-sex couples to civil marriage on “the same terms and conditions as opposite-sex couples.”

During the Henderson oral argument, the women’s legal team likewise pointed to Obergefell and made a similar assertion. The panel was skeptical, repeatedly contending Indiana’s parenthood statute was based on biology, which same-sex couples cannot overcome.

In June 2018, the women’s attorneys filed a motion for additional briefing in light of Pavan. The lawyers asked for permission to submit further briefing not to exceed 3,000 words, but the 7th Circuit never responded.

The Phillips-Stackman family brings an unusual twist to the case and demonstrates how science is testing, if not outpacing, the law. Jackie Phillips-Stackman is the biological mother, but her embryos were implanted in her wife, making Lisa the birth mother. Prior to the birth of their daughter in October 2015, Phillips-Stackman called the health department to see if she could also be listed on the birth certificate and was advised she should consider formally adopting what is, in fact, her biological baby.

Even though Indiana now recognizes both women as parents, Phillips-Stackman and her wife keep their daughter’s birth certificate handy in case they have to prove their parenthood.

Phillips-Stackman knows well the fear that can come with being in limbo. Her daughter was born with a rare chromosomal deletion and had to spend time in intensive care. Even though Phillips-Stackman was legally married to the birth mother, she was not seen as legally the baby’s parent, which put her at risk of, among other things, having her insurance company deny coverage to the infant.

Those who are fighting married female couples on the birth certificate issue are not trying to preserve families, Phillips-Stackman said. They are “really just trying to tear families apart.”

Fitzpatrick said attorneys on either side could file a motion for an expedited decision although, he added, “such a motion would be extremely rare.”

The attorneys representing the women are Karen Celestino-Horseman, of counsel, Austin & Jones PC; Raymond Faust of Norris Choplin & Schroeder LLP; Richard Mann and Megan Gehring, both of Richard A. Mann, PC; and William Groth of Fillenwarth Dennerline Groth & Towe LLP.

Celestino-Horseman said her clients are holding their breath and wondering what could happen if the 7th Circuit does not affirm the district court’s ruling.

The case has been waiting for an opinion from the appellate court longer than it was litigated in the Southern Indiana District Court. With the original complaint filed in February 2015, the dispute has been in contention for more than four years. Celestino-Horseman anticipates that if the 7th Circuit issues a reversal, she and her colleagues will get a “flood of calls” from women wanting to know what to do.

Indiana Attorney General Curtis Hill’s office declined to answer questions about the Henderson case. Indiana Lawyer asked what the Attorney General’s office is doing to ensure married lesbian couples are being listed as parents on their children’s birth certificates and whether it would revoke those birth certificates if the 7th Circuit ruled against the women, but the state’s top lawyer directed the inquiries to the Indiana State Department of Health.

The health department said the birth certificates are listing as parents both women who are married to each other at the time their child is born. Also, the long form has two fields labeled with the generic “parent’s name” rather than “mother” and “father.”

To Jackie Phillips-Stackman, the biggest frustration of this case is the issue of fairness. She pointed out, heterosexual couples who undergo in vitro fertilization are listed as the parents with no questions asked, even when neither the man nor the woman is biologically related to the child.

“I think, if anything, our family is just as important as anyone else’s,” she said.

TWO AUSPICIOUS DAYS

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TWO AUSPICIOUS DAYS

by Gavel Gamut By Jim Redwine

www.jamesmredwine.com

The seven day period beginning April 08 and ending April 15 has two important days, one joyous and one sad. April 08 is Peg’s birthday. Please wish her happiness and strength as she deals with having me home a lot more now. As to the other significant anniversary, Abraham Lincoln died on April 15, 1865. As if paying our taxes on April 15 was not already sad enough.

Of course, there is a certain historic connection between federal income taxes and President Lincoln. He helped institute the first federal income tax to pay for the Civil War, which was fought to preserve the Union. However, after the Civil War ended the income tax was also ended until 1916 when it was made permanent by the 16th Amendment to the Constitution.

Kentucky, Indiana and Illinois claim Lincoln for our own but hardly anyone lays claim to the income tax. As Peg and I will wait until 11:59 p.m. on April 15 to pay ours we assume we will have a lot of fellow travelers. It is widely accepted that the major need for America to impose taxes on itself is to pay for wars or the preparation for potential wars. Oh, we expend a lot for various other things too such as salaries and expense accounts for Congress people, Executive Branch workers and judges, health care and the clean up after celebrations such as inaugurations and ticker-tape parades to honor sports teams. I am assured by those involved in these endeavors our hard earned money is well spent.

If you are like me you put Presidents George Washington and Abraham Lincoln in a separate rarified class from other presidents. And while George Washington never visited Posey County, Indiana as did Abraham Lincoln (thanks to my friend and historian Jerry King for this information), I note Washington managed to birth our nation without a federal income tax. Anyway, I forgive Lincoln since he took the time to dedicate a bridge in Savah, Posey County, Indiana in 1844 when he was campaigning for Henry Clay (1777-1852); Clay lost. Maybe those early Hoosiers suspected Abraham Lincoln might someday start an income tax.

Well, income taxes and the Civil War aside, Abraham Lincoln still has much to teach us about humility, compromise, mercy, justice and just plain decency. And as for Peg’s birthday, I am going to celebrate it by thanking you Gentle Readers who have been kind enough to commiserate with her as she has often served as a foil in these articles over the many years!

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

Or “Like” us on Facebook at JPegRanchBooks&Knitting

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Euler Powers USI To 13-5 Win

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Euler Powers USI To 13-5 Win

HAPPENINGS AT THE VANDERBURGH COUNTY DEMOCRATIC PARTY

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Early voting begins Tuesday, April 9 at the Vanderburgh County Election Office and will continue until noon on Monday, May 6.

The Election Office is located at the Civic Center Complex, Room 216, 1 NW MLK Jr. Blvd. If you have questions call the Election Office at 812-435-5122.

BE A VOTER!

How to be an Early Voter
Free training session for Precinct team members who will be knocking on doors.
This training is for the new and veteran canvasser. We will cover the use of MiniVAN, review the best practices of canvassing and discuss reporting practices. ONLY ONE HOUR will be spent indoors. The second hour, groups of four will take a turf and practice talking to voters. Please wear comfortable shoes, bring your cell phone, and water. We will have paper forms available to accomodate anyone without a cell phone. You can download the free Mini-Van App before you arrive.
Mini-Van App for Android
Mini-Van App for iPhone
SIGN UP FOR TRAINING

This is a meet the candidate’s event AND a fundraiser for the Vanderburgh County Democratic Party to supply resources needed to build teams dedicated to electing Democrats in the 2019 municipal election.

The suggested donation is $15 a person ($10.00 for Precinct Committeepersons, Democrat Card Holders, and Young Democrats). Pizza and soft drinks will be served and you will have a chance to visit with our candidates, volunteers, and members.

Women’s Tennis Shuts Out McKendree, 4-0

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Women’s Tennis Shuts Out McKendree, 4-0

LEBANON, Ill. – USI Women’s Tennis defeated McKendree University on Friday, 4-0, snapping a nine-match losing streak and earning its first Great Lakes Valley Conference victory of the year.

The Screaming Eagles (4-12, 1-3 GLVC) were led by freshman Rachel Anderson (Racine, Wisconsin) as she teamed up with sophomore Lauryn Thompson (Evansville, Indiana) to seal the doubles point, then earned the first singles point for USI, defeating Alex Tinnin, 6-0, 6-1, in No. 4 Singles.

Freshman Kylie Skepnek (Algonquin, Illinois) took No. 5 Singles, 6-2, 6-0, to seal the match. Thompson was tied at 6-6 in the first set of No. 2 Singles when the match was called. The Eagles took one doubles and one singles match by default.

USI Women’s Tennis heads to the University of Missouri-St. Louis on Tuesday for a non-conference matchup. Competition begins at 1 p.m.