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Commentary: Make Lawmakers Wear Their Labels

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Commentary: Make Lawmakers Wear Their Labels

By John Krull
TheStatehouseFile.com 

INDIANAPOLIS – Long ago, the late Indianapolis News political pundit Ed Ziegner used to roast legislators at the end of each session of the Indiana General Assembly.

One year, he absolutely scorched the lawmakers.

John Krull, publisher, TheStatehouseFile.com

He said that they should list their sponsors or the special interests who claimed their true allegiance on their shirts, like Little League baseball teams. But a shirt wouldn’t be enough for every legislator, Ziegner said.

Some had sold themselves so often that they’d need capes to list every group that had bought them or otherwise owned them.

I thought of Ziegner’s jibe the other day when I attended a press conference at the Statehouse. Rep. Carey Hamilton, D-Indianapolis, Marion County Prosecutor Terry Curry and two parents whose lives and children had been touched by gun violence wanted to retrieve two common-sense firearm-safety bills from the legislative scrap heap.

They said, over and over again, they just wanted a chance to make their case. They wanted a hearing and a vote, they said and would accept the outcome, win or lose.

Rep. Jim Lucas, R-Seymour, trolled at the edge of the press conference. Lucas loves to identify himself as the chief cheerleader and camp follower for the National Rifle Association. Until he developed a recent infatuation with medical marijuana laws, almost every bill Lucas introduced involved loosening Indiana’s already lax gun laws.

He, of course, is supposed to represent the interests of his community.

But, judging by Lucas’s priorities, the biggest problems the good people of Seymour’s face are that they can’t get enough guns or pot.

Lucas waited for a nanosecond at most after the press conference’s conclusion to find a TV camera into which he could bloviate his strange interpretation of the Second Amendment. In his version of that amendment, the 13 words of the militia purpose clause – the part that allows for reasonable regulation of guns – do not exist.

He neatly overlooked the fact that the parents at the press conference also were exercising a constitutional right – the First Amendment one guaranteeing that they can petition the government for redress of grievances.

Someday, Lucas will have to read the other 7,577 words in the Constitution – or at least get someone to read them to him.

Not that it would matter much. Because Lucas is so wedded to his special-interest love, he doesn’t much care about the feelings – much less the constitutional rights – of people who don’t agree with him.

That’s why he takes pride in bullying citizens who come to testify in favor of sensible gun laws. It’s also why he likes to boast there is no gun-control law – no matter how sensible – that he and his fellow gun-lobby compliant legislators ever will consider.

That’s also why, no matter how many Hoosiers die in gun-related violence, legislative session after legislative session will come and go without our lawmakers doing anything about the problem.

Nor are guns the only example.

For years, public health advocates have recommended an increase in the cigarette tax. A hike of $2 would produce $360 million in annual revenue for the state until it started to do its real work. That real work involves discouraging Hoosiers from smoking.

This would reduce health-care costs dramatically.

This should be a no-brainer – a plan that brings money in on the front end saves it on the back end and make people healthier in between.

But this bill, too, languishes, waiting for a hearing that won’t come.

The same goes for proposals regarding hate-crimes legislation, redistricting reform and any number of other basic and often popular measures.

The common denominator is they die without getting a committee hearing or vote. A committee chairperson or other powerful legislator – one generally from a gerrymandered district – bottles up the bill and avoids the inconvenience of having legislators vote on a measure people favor but an entrenched special interest doesn’t.

Confusing, isn’t it?

Ziegner’s suggestion offered in jest, though, would clear up a lot of that confusion.

If we made legislators who carry water for the gun lobby wear NRA shirts around the Statehouse or the lawmakers who want to make it easy for cigarette manufacturers to market smokes to kids sport Big Tobacco jerseys, we could eliminate a lot of the mystery.

It would make the action easier to follow.

FOOTNOTE: John Krull is director of Franklin College’s Pulliam School of Journalism, host of “No Limits” WFYI 90.1 Indianapolis and publisher of TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.

 

LETTER TO EDITOR: MAYOR WINNECKE LACK OF OPPOSITION

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LETTER TO EDITOR: MAYOR WINNECKE LACK OF OPPOSITION
by BiILL HAZELIP
Vanderburgh County
Why do we have a Mayor with no political opposition?  The answer is simple, “we have no media voice or newspaper to voice any opposition!”  First of all, I am a Republican and I think the present Mayor has done an average job.  Would I vote for him?  Well, it depends on who is running in opposition!
I think a Mayor of a struggling City needs to be more than just be a ribbon cutter!  Anyone can cut a ribbon on Green River Road for another “Jiffy Burger.”  But hamburger shops will not save Evansville’s financial and labor problems.  We will face a growing problem as the old monies disappear. The new money’s value will be a struggle, just to survive.
Back in the 70’s I wrote an article titled “I can see Evansville’s future”, back then,  I traveled the East Coast,  I seen our future in Wilmington, DE, Newark, NJ, and many more Eastern cities that had lost their Manufacturing plants and their ability to recover.  Ability to recover is an important part of our survival!  We have lost enough manufacturing, technical, and skillful workers in the last 60 years to support a city of a half million population. Many of the downtown buildings are empty.
Today, we don’t even have a newspaper printed in Evansville, there is no vital information good or bad, about what is going on in this city, our Weather Station was relocated to Paducah, Kentucky, and we even came close to losing the Airport.  But, no one seems to care; today’s newspaper carries one article about a person opening up brewhouse.  How sad, the loss of the local paper!  And we wonder,  why no one is running for Mayor!
What a wonderful time to be Mayor, no opposition or newspaper to report on one’s performance.

USI Baseball Team Begins The 2019 Campaign In Midwest Region Title Defense

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This Week At USI

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Monday, February 11 – Saturday, February 16

USI Homecoming 2019

The University of Southern Indiana will hold Homecoming activities throughout the week of Monday, February 11 through the women’s and men’s basketball home games on Saturday, February 16. A full schedule of homecoming events, the homecoming court and other activities can be found at USI.edu/homecoming.

Thursday, February 14 – Sunday, February 17

USI Theatre Continues Season with Pygmalion

University of Southern Indiana Theatre will continue its 2018-2019 season with the classic play Pygmalion, written by Bernard Shaw and directed by Elliot Wasserman, professor of theatre. The production runs from Thursday, February 14 through Sunday, February 17 in the USI Performance Center located in University Center East on USI’s campus. Read More

10 a.m. – 2 p.m. Friday, February 15

USI’s annual International Food Expo returns Friday, February 15

The International Club at the University of Southern Indiana will host the annual International Food Expo from 10:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. Friday, February 15 in Carter Hall, located in University Center West. Tickets can be purchased in advance for $10 from the Center for International Programs in University Center East, Room 1235, or at the door on the day of the Expo for $15. USI students are able to purchase tickets from the Eagle Access Office with their USI ID using Munch Money. A portion of the proceeds will be donated to a local charity. Read More

Exhibit open through Saturday, February 16

New Harmony Gallery to host work of New Harmony Clay Project artists

The New Harmony Gallery of Contemporary Art is hosting a ceramics exhibition, showcasing artists in residence at the New Harmony Clay Project, through Saturday, February 16. The exhibition is free and open to the public. The exhibition will feature a diverse set of styles and techniques in both functional and sculptural ceramics from six resident artists who participated in the project in 2018. Read More

STUDENT EVENTS

A collection of events on campus and in the community sponsored by USI student organizations can be found on the USI events calendar by clicking here.

SAVE THE DATE

7 p.m. Wednesday, February 20 and 6:30 p.m. Friday, February 22

USI to celebrate 21st anniversary of The Vagina Monologues and founding of V-Day

The University of Southern Indiana will present a two-night-only benefit reading of Eve Ensler’s award-winning play The Vagina Monologues at 7:30 p.m. on Wednesday, February 20, and 7 p.m. on Friday, February 22 in Forum III of the Wright Administration Building on the USI campus. Doors will open at 7 p.m. on Wednesday, February 20, and at 6:30 p.m. on Friday, February 22. The event costs $8 at the door. Ninety percent of proceeds go to Willow Tree of Posey County, working to help women and girls coping with sexual assault and domestic violence. Ten percent of proceeds go to the V-Day Action Fund for women who have been incarcerated. Read More

9 a.m. Friday, February 22

USI Center for Interdisciplinary Studies, College of Liberal Arts present 12th Interdisciplinary Colloquium

The University of Southern Indiana College of Liberal Arts and its Center for Interdisciplinary Studies will host the 12th Interdisciplinary Colloquium, titled “Movement(s).” The day-long, multi-session event will take place from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Friday, February 22 in Carter Hall in University Center West. This event is free and open to the public. The College of Liberal Arts’ annual Interdisciplinary Colloquium showcases USI faculty research across a wide range of academic disciplines centered on a single topic. Faculty presenters represent a variety of USI programs and departments including Art, Biology, Criminal Justice, Economics, English, Gender Studies, German, Health Services, History, Music, Sociology, and Theatre Arts. Read More

Tuesday, February 26

Author, scholar, activist Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor to keynote 2019 Mandela Day

Dr. Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor, author and assistant professor of African American Studies at Princeton University, will present the keynote address for the 2019 University of Southern Indiana Nelson Mandela Social Justice Day at 6 p.m. Tuesday, February 26 in the USI Performance Center. The presentation will be free and open to the public. The keynote address is the culmination of a full day of activities meant to raise dialogue at USI around current issues of human and civil rights, public service, and activism. Read More

Wednesday, March 21

Annual Shaw Biology Lecture to feature director of National Center for Science Education

Ann Reid, director at the National Center for Science Education in Oakland, California, will present the University of Southern Indiana’s eighth annual Marlene V. Shaw Biology Lecture at 7 p.m. Wednesday, March 21, in Mitchell Auditorium, located in the lower level of the Health Professions Center on USI’s campus. The presentation, titled “The Enduring Power of Evidence,” will be free and open to the public. Read More

Thursday, April 4

General Colin Powell to speak on leadership at USI in April

The University of Southern Indiana will present “Leadership: Taking Charge,” a moderated discussion with General Colin L. Powell, USA (Ret.) at 6 p.m. Thursday, April 4, 2019, at the new USI Arena. The discussion will be free and open to the public. General Powell will be the fourth speaker in the University’s Romain College of Business Innovative Speaker Series. 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. Read More

 

 

University Of Evansville CiSM Project Receives $1 Million Grant for Scholarships from the NSF S-STEM Program

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University Of Evansville CISM Project Receives $1 Million Grant for Scholarships from the NSF S-STEM Program

The University of Evansville’s Computers in Science and Math (CISM) project has been awarded a grant totaling $999,934 to fund scholarships for academically talented students with financial need majoring in biochemistry, biology, chemistry, environmental science, mathematics, physics, or statistics and data science.

The project, funded by the National Science Foundation’s (NSF) Scholarships in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (S-STEM) program, is led by UE faculty members Joyce Stamm, professor of biology; Angela Reisetter, associate professor of physics; Adam Salminen, associate professor of mathematics; and Sarah Wilson, assistant professor of chemistry.

The CISM scholarships will be available beginning in the fall 2020 semester and will provide up to $10,000 per year for four years to two cohorts of seven or eight students. These students will be part of an interdisciplinary learning community established through an all-expenses-paid bridge course during the summer before the freshman year and maintained as the students live together in UE’s honors residence hall and enroll together in computational problem-solving courses. CISM students will also receive summer research and conference attendance funds, and CISM-specific academic advising, career preparation, and mentoring.

“This interdisciplinary cohort approach will prepare our students for a real work setting, where biologists and mathematicians may work alongside chemists and physicists toward a common goal,” said Stamm. “The interpersonal skills developed from living and working together are just as, if not more, important than the technical skills gained through coursework. It allows them to learn to speak the same language.”

Reisetter added, “Computational problem-solving skills are not currently emphasized in UE’s math and science curriculum, so we’re particularly excited to develop additional talents in our students, which will translate into broader career opportunities and workplace success upon graduation.”

To develop these skills, the project will introduce a scaffolded curriculum with four interdisciplinary computational problem-solving courses. The first three courses will focus on the power of computational and data visualization skills in the sciences, and introduce students to interesting data-centric scientific projects. The fourth course will be part of the UE ChangeLab program and will pair student and faculty teams with a local business or nonprofit clients. Students will work with the clients to solve a problem involving experimental design, data collection, and/or data analysis. Because these courses will be open to all math and science majors at UE, the CISM project will have an impact beyond the scholarship recipients

“The digital revolution has allowed scientists and businesses to collect vast quantities of data,” said Salminen. “Marketing firms, educators, and sports teams have gleaned knowledge and insights from this data for application to business techniques for many years. Of particular importance here is the growing need of these skills in the sciences.”

Data scientists and statisticians work to develop new statistical approaches and develop new software and techniques of analysis. However, a scientist in other areas such as genomics, particle physics, and neuroscience need to use these techniques to unravel the massive amounts of data that they collect. Moving forward, scientists will need to have a better understanding of working with large data, and statisticians and mathematicians, with proper training and interest, can help tackle difficult problems throughout the sciences.

In line with the NSF’s mission to improve STEM undergraduate education, another important goal of the project is to determine the impacts of the learning community on CISM scholars.

“We will assess each of the project’s activities using a mixed-methods approach, to examine how involvement in the CISM community affects students’ science and mathematics self-efficacy, sense of community, retention, success, and progression to STEM careers,” said Wilson. “We hope that the CISM project will serve as a model for interdisciplinary STEM education at institutions similar to UE.”

KOMEN EVANSVILLE TRI-STATE 3nd ANNUAL BIGWIGS CHAMPAIGN AND BIGWIGS KICK-OFF EVENT WITH THE DIAMOND GALLERIA!

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Susan G. Komen Evansville Tri-State Affiliate in conjunction with The Diamond Galleria will host a public kick-off reception to meet and greet the 2019 Komen Evansville Tri-State BigWigs! The reception will be held on Thursday, February 21 5:30 to 7:30 pm at The Diamond Galleria at 6245 Vogel Road in Evansville who is the Host Sponsor for this event.

“Komen BigWig (noun): a very important person on a mission to end breast cancer forever by raising awareness and funds in their community; willing to have fun while wearing a ridiculous pinkwig.”

Come meet all ten of our BigWigs, find out why they are fundraising, how much they have committed to raising, and how this fundraising campaign will make a difference in our tri-state community.

Our 2019 BigWigs are:

  • ï‚·  Veronica Dekett – 44 News WEVV
  • ï‚·  Liberty DeWig – My105.3
  • ï‚·  Karen Krauskopf – Ellis Park
  • ï‚·  Heidi Lance – Vanderburgh Medical Alliance
  • ï‚·  Darin Lander – Old National Bank
  • ï‚·  Brandon McClish – Purple Aces Sports Properties
  • ï‚·  Bethany Miller – 14 News WFIE
  • ï‚·  Ronnie Paulson – Schmitt Refrigeration, Air Conditioning and Heating
  • ï‚·  Ron Rhodes – WEHT
  • ï‚·  Travis Sams – 99.5 WKDQ

CLIMATE ROULETTE

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EVSC’s MPA Students Travel to St. Vincent for Hands-on Learning

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EVSC’s MPA Students Travel to St. Vincent for Hands-on Learning
February 12 and 23
11:30 a.m. – 12:30 p.m.
St. Vincent Evansville, 3700 Washington Ave. 
During the next two weeks, sophomores enrolled in the EVSC’s Medical Professions Academy will get a first-hand look at the medical field through hands-on activities, tours and skills practice at St. Vincent Evansville.

Lt. Governor Crouch: Public schedule for Feb. 12

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Below is Lt. Governor Suzanne Crouch’s public schedule for Feb. 12, 2019.

Tuesday, Feb. 12
What: Crouch speaks at Agribusiness Council of Indiana
Host: Agribusiness Council of Indiana
When: 11:00 a.m. – 11:30 a.m., with Crouch remarks at 11:05 a.m., ET
Where: Indiana Statehouse, Supreme Court conference room, 200 W. Washington St., Indianapolis, IN 46204

Tuesday, Feb. 12
What: Crouch speaks at 2019 Grant County State Legislative dinner
Host:
Marion-Grant County Chamber of Commerce
When:
5:30 p.m. – 7:00 p.m., ET, with Crouch remarks at 6:10 p.m., ET
Where:
Columbia Club, 121 Monument Circle, Indianapolis, IN 46204

VCHD CLOSED 2-18-19

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