http://www.vanderburghsheriff.com/jail-recent-booking-records.aspx
“READERS FORUM” FEBRUARY 16, 2019
We hope that today’s “READERS FORUMâ€Â 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: Are you pleased that State Representative Ryan Hatfield (D-Evansville) legislation increases the penalties against people who commit crimes against animals?
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.
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FOOTNOTE:  Any comments posted in this column do not represent the views or opinions of the City-County Observer or our advertisers.
SOUTHWEST INDIANA CHAMBER PRESENTS THE ATHENA AWARD® LUNCHEON
THE CLASS OF 2019 ATHENAS ARE
- Gina Gibson – Executive Director at Evansville Christian Life Center
- Mary Kessler – Dean of Education and Health Sciences at University of Evansville
- Deena Laska Lewis – Founder and Choreographer at Children’s Center for Dance Education
- Millie Marshall – President of Toyota Motor Manufacturing Indiana
- Susan Parsons – CFO at Koch Enterprises
- Carrie Roelle – Partner at Kahn, Dees, Donovan & Kahn, LLP
The representative of the 2019 ATHENA Award® will be announced at the 28th annual ATHENA Award® Luncheon on Friday, Feb. 22, 2019, from 11:30 am – 1 pm at Old National Events Plaza in Downtown Evansville.
Past award recipients include Chris Ryan (2018, Jan Davies (2017), Sara Miller (2016), Parri Black (2015).
To view recipients prior to 2015, visit www.swinchamber.com/ATHENA.
About ATHENA International and the ATHENA Award® Program
Chicago-based ATHENA International is a nonprofit organization founded in 1982 by Martha Mertz. In addition to supporting, developing, and honoring women leaders, the organization seeks to create balance in leadership worldwide and inspire women to achieve their full potential. Since the program’s inception in 1982, nearly 6,000 leaders in more than 500 communities have received the ATHENA Award®.
For more information about the Athena Award Luncheon, to purchase seats, or to inquire about
sponsorship opportunities, email Karen Robinson, events manager, krobinson@swinchamber.com or call 812-425-8147.
About Southwest Indiana Chamber
Since 1915, the Southwest Indiana Chamber has been a trusted ally of the regional business community. Today we are one of the state’s largest, strongest, and most impactful nonprofit business organizations, representing a total membership of more than 1,400 businesses, organizations, and agencies. About one-third of members have invested in our organization for 10 or more years. While nearly all major employers in our region invest in the Southwest Indiana Chamber, 71% of our member businesses have 25 or fewer employees.
Learn more about the Chamber, our members, and the Southwest Indiana regional business community at www.swinchamber.com.
318 Main St., Suite 401, Evansville, IN 47708.
USI Issues Safety Alert Following Campus Sexual Assault
USI Issues Safety Alert Following Campus Sexual Assault
Security at the University of Southern Indiana issued a warning Friday after reports of sexual assault in USI housing.
According to school officials, one person has been identified as the alleged perpetrator and has been banned from campus.
The school is urging students and staff to be aware of their surroundings both on and off campus.
Anyone wanting to report an incident is told to call campus security at 812-492-7777. This is an ongoing investigation.
Comments
EPA Acting Administrator Wheeler Signs A National FFA Organization Deal To Enhance Environmental Education
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Acting Administrator Andrew Wheeler signed a first-time Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with the National FFA Organization to advance educational outreach for EPA’s ongoing environmental and public health initiatives.
“Today’s MOU will expand EPA’s environmental education programs to an important and diverse new audience: the National FFA Organization’s 670,000 student members,â€Â said EPA Acting Administrator Andrew Wheeler. “The MOU reflects the importance of agricultural practices in promoting environmental stewardship and builds on our recent collaborations with America’s farmers and ranchers.â€
“This agreement between FFA and EPA recognizes how FFA members are ready to be leaders in environmental fields,” said National FFA President Luke O’Leary. “Whether it’s studying pH levels in soil or running experiments to reduce water runoff, we’re active stewards in preserving and enhancing the resources needed to grow our food.”
EPA will continue to work with FFA to ensure environmental education is learned and practiced by all Americans to achieve EPA’s mission of protecting human health and the environment.
HOW THE WORLD ENDS By Jim Redwine
HOW THE WORLD ENDS
GAVEL GAMUTÂ By Jim Redwine
The first television I saw was displayed in the front window of an appliance store on Main Street in Pawhuska, Oklahoma in 1950. It had a real wood cabinet which swallowed the 9†screen. The picture was a blurry black and white that showed the same Indian Chief test pattern for hours. It just sat there as a continuously gasping crowd of gawkers oohed and aahed. I was unaware that I was in the presence of the beginning of the end of a meaningful conversation, the reading of books and independent judgment based on individual investigation and analysis.
These insights appeared to me after almost 70 years because Peg and I have spent the past two weeks without access to television. I mention this woman I found living with me because until a couple of weeks ago our conversations had for years, especially the last two years, consisted mainly of “What is a Kardashian and what is it that they are doing?†Or, “Can you believe what those bobbing heads, most of whom seem to be twenty years old and chosen for their hairstyles, just stated as fact?â€
With the T.V. out of the picture, Peg and I have made some startling discoveries. It turns out we both enjoy getting out of our matching recliners and going outside. There is a lot to do out there. And we discovered that rather than watching inane commentary from screaming news pundits we seem to have some common interests, three children and seven grandchildren for instance, who are themselves engaged in some fascinating endeavors. Well, at least when they are not glued to some T.V. program such as Duck Dynasty or The View or on a cell phone.
Another discovery I made about Peg is she knows quite a bit about non-television things. These past two weeks we have wondered together how long the ten-thousand-year Egyptian dynasty would have made it had Egyptian children been educated by re-runs of Howdy Doody instead of mentoring by Imhotep. By the way, according to Wikipedia, Imhotep means “The one who comes in peaceâ€, a pretty good mantra for civilizations wishing to build more than hamburger stands and hoping to last more than a few years.
Now, I know the smart people who read this column, and only smart people do, have picked up on a logical lacuna in my diatribe against television. How is reliance on the Internet any better? Well, it isn’t; it’s worse. In fact, what little bit of culture and a polite conversation was left after television became ubiquitous has now been obliterated by cell phones, Snap Chat, Twitter, etc., etc.
My only defense is, society started me on this downhill slide in 1950. In other words, if I had been like Alexander the Great and had Aristotle as my personal advisor, instead of television, I too could have been great.Â
Want to read other Gavel Gamut articles?
Go to www.jamesmredwine.com
Or “Like†us on Facebook at JPegRanchBooksandKnitting
BROADWAY SHOWS IN NASHVILLE AT ANDREW JACKSON HALL
BROADWAY SHOWS IN NASHVILLE
THE BOOK OF MORMON
Booking from March 12th
With NINE Tony Awards – including Best Musical – a Grammy Award for Best Musical Theater Album, and leading New York Times critic Ben Brantley himself calling it the “best new musical of the century”, this is one show you won’t want to miss… Read more Buy Tickets
ANASTASIA
Dates from March 19th
Take an incredible journey to the past as the critically acclaimed, Broadway production of Anastasia heads on tour for a strictly limited…Â Read more by Tickets
HELLO, DOLLY!
Booking from April 30th
The darling of Broadway has returned! After a successful revival on Broadway, this glorious new production of Hello, Dolly! is heading out…Â Read more by Tickets
MISS SAIGON
Booking from June 4th
Fresh from Broadway! Heartbreaking musical epic Miss Saigon begins its countrywide tour this fall in Rhode Island. A musical by Claude-Michel… Read more Buy Tickets
FIDDLER ON THE ROOF
Dates from June 25th
The jubilant classic set on the eve of the Russian Revolution heads out on tour after its hugely successful Broadway revival. Featuring the…Â Read more by Tickets
Gizmo
Gizmo
Feathers experience wear and tear and get replaced annually in a process called molting. Since feathers are critical for flight, thermoregulation, weather protection, and camouflage, birds usually don’t shed all of their feathers all at once. It can take several weeks to finish. You may see scraggly birds but hardly ever bare birds in the wild!  Old feathers fall out in a fairly predictable sequence and new ones start growing out. The new ones are encased in a thin sheath of keratin to protect the feather as it is growing. They sort of look like pins growing out of the skin and are called pin feathers. They are also called blood feathers because there is an active supply of blood to deliver nutrients to the growing feather. The blood supply is cut off when the feather is fully developed.
Gizmo tends to molt rather heavily for a couple of weeks but he is quite the handsome fellow when he’s done.