“READERS FORUM” JUNE 10, 2018
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?
WHATS ON YOUR MIND TODAY?
Todays “Readers Poll†question is: Do you support the current State GOP political platform that states marriage is between one man and one woman?
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Indiana House Democrats Propose School Safety Study Commission
By Brynna Sentel
TheStatehouseFile.com
INDIANAPOLIS—Following the Noblesville West Middle School shooting in late May, Indiana legislators began questioning what they should be doing to keep schools safe.
Wednesday, Indiana House Minority Leader Terry Goodin, D-Austin, wrote a letter to Indiana House Speaker Brian Bosma asking to add a permanent school safety commission to the roster of Interim Study Committees that review and propose legislation.
House Minority Leader Terry Goodin, D-Austin. Photo by Quinn Fitzgerald, TheStatehouseFile.com
In the letter, Goodin recognized the work being done by Indiana Department of Education and the Secured School Safety Board to study the current state of school safety to make recommendations for improvements. But he said more people should work together and be involved.
Adam Baker, spokesperson for the Indiana Department of Education, said his team has not yet had a chance to review the letter. However, he said they are already making progress on improving school safety, which includes providing recommendations to Gov. Eric Holcomb and reviewing all district school safety plans.
“I hope it’s a collaboration as far as trying to come up with the best policies for school safety,†Goodin said in an interview, stressing that everyone  affected should be involved, including parents, students and educators.
Changes proposed will ultimately need to be considered by the Indiana General Assembly so lawmakers should be involved with the studies from the beginning, he said.
“I think the legislature should have a say and actually have some input on what some of the best policies are,†Goodin said.
Making sure the commission has people from different backgrounds on it will provide depth, he explained.
“The number one goal is to make schools safer and that should be on top of everybody’s priority list,†Goodin said, “I think we are just not doing enough.â€
Bosma, R-Indianapolis, did not have a chance to review Goodin’s proposal to provide a comment.
However, also on Wednesday, Bosma suggested lawmakers should review state statutes that require criminal defendants under age 13 be tried as juveniles. His comment followed the decision by Hamilton County prosecutors not to charge the Noblesville school shooter as an adult.
“In light of the Noblesville West Middle School incident and the recent charges brought against the shooter, we are reviewing current state law in regards to juveniles being charged as adults,†Bosma said in a written statement.
“Given the heinous acts that led to a teacher and student being seriously harmed, I think it’s important for us to take a thoughtful look at our criminal code and whether changes to the law are appropriate.â€
FOOTNOTE: Brynna Sentel is a reporter for TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.
FLYING AMERICAN AIRLINES BE PREPARED TO HOLD IT
Members of any airline frequent flyer club have seen the benefits of membership gradually erode under the relentless assault of airline bean-counters. The yearly mileage necessary to qualify for even the lowest membership level has increased dramatically over the years.
At the same time, the member’s accumulated miles have been devalued as the mileage cost of free tickets has been increased to a minimum of 25,000 miles. Other perks, like upgrades and airport lounge, passes, associated with climbing up the frequent flyer status ladder, have also been reduced or eliminated.
The only airline club where the benefits have remained largely intact is the Mile-High Club and now American Airlines has declared war on that collection of randy flyers.
On American’s new 737-MAX aircraft, one would have to be Tyrion Lannister, to have even the remotest hope of conducting an induction ceremony, and even then it would be very close. Passengers flying on the remodeled 737 would do well to gate-check their claustrophobia.
The new bathrooms on that aircraft are so small the user experience more closely resembles that of a human cannonball than it does of relieving oneself. At the circus, the human cannonball knows, given the dimensions of the gun tube, once inside he’s not going to have the luxury of repositioning himself.
The same is true for the cruelly-named 737-MAX.
The ‘MAX’ bathroom is 25 percent smaller than the telephone booths flyers have grown accustomed to using in the past. The new comfort coffins are so tight it is impossible to turn around once inside with the door closed. This presents no problem for women or men who want to keep their options open, but for the rest of us, we’re going to have to commit before we close the door.
Plus-sized passengers may require the assistance of Crisco or their fellow passengers to get in and get out.
And that’s not where the similarity to Ringling Brothers ends.
Just as the human cannonball is expelled by the expansion of hot gases trapped behind him in the tube, passengers following an exiting flyer too closely into the aircraft lavatory may find themselves wishing they could eject when encountering a large hot aroma trapped in a small confined space.
These indignities are only confined to healthy passengers. Nervous flyers or those with sensitive stomachs would do well to start practicing hurling while standing erect because it is impossible to bend over in those bathrooms. This will be no problem for drunks and three-year-olds, but for rest of us abandon all hope of privacy as you are forced to leave the door open to bend over and be sick.
I always assumed when it came to mobile evacuation nothing could top the combination of indignity and excitement one experienced using a bus bathroom while the vehicle was in motion. It would have made perfect sense for Greyhound to install timers in those ‘restrooms’ so passengers could try and remain seated as long as the average bull rider.
Yet even in the worst bus bathroom I never got the impression the company had it in for me. Not so with American Airlines. Only a corporation that’s part of a lock-step oligopoly could exhibit such utter contempt for the comfort and dignity of its customers. To say nothing of its own reputation.
Starbucks shut the entire company down to atone for its sin after offending two black guys that weren’t even customers. American Airlines insults its entire customer base while laughing all the way to the bank.
The indignity doesn’t stop after you’ve finished your business. The sink in this was coffin is so tiny passengers can only wash one hand at a time. It would have made more sense to dispense with the sink altogether in favor of waterless hand cleaner and devote the added room to the preservation of male kneecaps.
Flight attendants are on the passenger’s side in this dispute. The two shoebox bathrooms are located across from each other in the rear. Attendants have discovered that if doors open simultaneously, the two frequently snag, forming an impromptu wall that traps them in the galley.
Our loss in comfort and privacy is naturally American’s gain. Smaller bathrooms, thinner seats and less distance between seats allow more passengers. American has increased the load from 160 passengers to 172 with the letterbox-sized bathrooms.
Flyers like me who avoid American aren’t safe either. Airlines are in a figurative race to the bottom and I fear my United will soon adopt American’s malign one-holer design. The only bright spot I can see – and limited to longer flights – is the reduction in bathroom size might force American to institute a corresponding reduction is flight attendant size. In the interest of safety, of course.
Bush Sr. Reminisces About His College World Series Days
Bush Sr. Reminisces About His College World Series Days
written by Joe Guzzardi is a Society for American Baseball Research member
For the next three weeks, baseball fans will have a chance to see the game played the way it should be. The NCAA’s best college nines, well-schooled in fundamental baseball, will display their talent in Omaha at the annual College World Series.
Given the choice between watching the College or Major League World Series, I would unhesitantly pick a college. Even in the CWS’ opening rounds, the players demonstrate an ability to advance the runner, hit the cut-off man and lay down a bunt, skills that too often elude multimillion-dollar ML–players. If the college players donned major league uniforms, fans couldn’t tell the difference. Many of the college pitchers throw over 90 miles per hour and field their positions flawlessly.
The CWS has a rich tradition that dates back to 1947 when Kalamazoo, Michigan, hosted the event. Two players from that year final that pitted the California Golden Bears against the Yale Bulldogs went on to achieve outstanding success in their professional careers: Jackie Jensen, with the New York Yankees, Boston Red Sox and Washington Senators, and George Herbert Walker Bush, United States president.
Although Jensen pitched for the Golden Bears, by the time he was named the American League’s Most Valuable Player in 1958, he played outfield. Bush, nicknamed “Poppy,†was a slick-fielding, no-hit first baseman and a recently returned decorated World War II hero who earned the Distinguished Flying Cross, three Air Medals and a Presidential Unit Citation.
In the series opener, Jensen came through with a pinch-hit single to drive in Cal’s game-tying run. Red Mathews, Yale’s third baseman, recalled that Jensen was “… strong and fast and big. I was very impressed with him.†The game wasn’t close for long. The Golden Bears scored 11 runs in the top of the ninth to win easily; Cal 17, Yale 4.
Then as now, the series finally had a best two of three formats. In the next day’s deciding doubleheader, Jensen started the opener. The “Golden Boy,†as Jensen was known, gave up a run in the first inning but then held Yale in check until the bottom of the fourth. The Bulldogs made a fatal mistake when manager Ethan Allen ordered Cal’s number eight hitter walked to face Jensen. Years later, Bush recalled that: “He [Jensen] hit one that’s still rolling out there in Kalamazoo.â€
Eventually, Jensen tired and was lifted in the bottom of the fourth with the score tied, 4-4. In the end, the Bears prevailed 8-7. Bears’ relief pitcher Virgil Butler struck out Bush, 0 for 7 in the series, to end the game. As Butler later joked: “On the last pitch, I struck out George Bush on a curveball. I got my 15 minutes of glory!â€
In January 1960, after only 11 mostly outstanding years in professional baseball and his career declining because of his air travel anxiety, Jensen retired. While Jensen starred on the baseball diamond, his later life was plagued by personal and financial misfortune. He was married to and divorced from Zoe Ann Olson, an Olympic diving star. By 1974, however, Jensen returned to Berkeley to coach his beloved Golden Bears who he led to more than 100 wins. But in 1982, age 55, Jensen died from his second heart attack in two months.
Bush, on the other hand, turns 94 on June 12. His political resume includes two terms in the U.S. House of Representatives, stints as the U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations and Director of the Central Intelligence Agency, two terms as Vice President and one term as President.
As for his CWS memories, Bush disputes his teammates’ criticism that he couldn’t hit. According to Bush, he batted about .250. Bush added, “And I think if I were playing today in the bigs, I’d probably get about $8 million a year for that.â€
Many other CWS superstars followed Jensen’s ML–career path, and some reached the Cooperstown Hall of Fame. Among the most well-known are Dave Winfield, Barry Larkin, Mike Schmidt and Paul Molitor. But only “Poppy†reached the White House.
FOOTNOTE: Joe Guzzardi is a Society for American Baseball Research member.Â
This article was posted by the City-County Observer without opinion, bias or editing.
PUTRID PORRIDGE
PUTRID PORRIDGE
GAVEL GAMUTÂ By Jim Redwine
As this is a family newspaper I cannot recite the W.C. Fields (1880–1946) actual quotation about why he did not drink water. However, after spending two full days removing a winter’s worth of sludge from Peg’s above ground pool I side with W.C. My first clue as to the toxicity of the greenish, quivering mass clinging to the Walmart plastic liner was when my friend Paul Axton, who is a Department of Natural Resources officer, stopped by to retrieve the racoon trap he had loaned me. Paul smelled the acrid fumes rising from the pool and walked over to investigate.
“Jim have you notified the E.P.A. about this concoction? It may require Congressional oversight to remove this junk. If this gets into the wrong hands terrorists may be able to use it for untold mayhem.â€
“No, Paul, but Peg has already ordered me to get in that knee-deep filth and prepare the pool for swimming. According to Peg, as the man of JPeg Ranch, the gods have ordained it is my duty. Peg has already cleared the disposal with the Health Department and the Department of Defense. Thanks for your concern; would you like to join me?â€
“Gee, I would but I told my sister, Judy, I would help her with her racoon problem. But feel free to call me any other time.â€
In past years Peg has just bypassed my reluctant involvement in removing the winter’s accumulation of dead organisms, crop dust, and floating debris. However, Peg thoughtlessly fell off the ladder when she started to clean it last week and re-injured the knee she broke skiing 22 years ago. She claims it hurts and Dr. Matthew Lee took her side and ordered her on bed rest for two weeks. To make matters worse, Dr. Lee then sent her to an orthopedic surgeon who agreed.
I gently reminded her she had skied on down a huge mountain in Utah when she broke her leg and maybe she could just ignore the medical profession’s opinion and the pain. I cannot repeat her response due once again to that family newspaper thing.
Anyway, my weekend was filled with two days of shop vacs, mops, Clorox, white vinegar, long handled brooms and water hoses. It was so gay to watch globs of unidentified multi-colored crude having the consistency and smell of the contents of used diapers ooze off the plastic floor through the vacuum, into the bucket then hoisted over the pool wall into the yard. My guess is every varmint within miles will think a grand smorgasbord has been laid out for them. Of course, the grass immediately began to wither and turn yellow.
Well, Gentle Reader, I know Peg’s injury and its unfortunate consequences may concern you, but, do not worry, I’ll be alright.
For more Gavel Gamut articles go to www.jamesmredwine.com
Or “Like†us on Facebook at JPegRanchBooksandKnitting
IURC asks Hoosiers to submit comments
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Many Hoosiers need high-quality internet service for daily tasks like completing school work, operating a business, paying bills, making purchases and enjoying media services.
Making broadband networks more readily available to all Hoosiers, especially those in rural and high-cost areas, is becoming increasingly important. This summer, the Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission will study topics related to broadband deployment. The commission is seeking comments from the public and stakeholders regarding the broadband study through June 15. You can submit a comment by emailing urccomments@urc.in.gov. |
McKinney Endowment nears $20,000 mark
Marilyn Odendahl for www.theindianalawyer.com
Since the December 2017 creation of an endowment in honor of the late Larry McKinney, senior judge of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Indiana, the fund is getting close to reaching the $20,000 milestone.
The Honorable Larry J. McKinney Fund for Civic Education was started by the Indiana Bar Foundation to support civic educations programs like We the People and Indiana Mock Trial. McKinney, who died suddenly in September 2017, was a strong advocate for teaching students about the Constitution and democracy. He often attended We the People and mock trial competitions and even held a naturalization ceremony during the annual We the People state championship so the students could see immigrants become U.S. citizens.
Charles Dunlap, executive director of the bar foundation, said the endowment will ensure McKinney’s legacy continues.
To get the McKinney Endowment started, the bar foundation offered to match each donation dollar-for-dollar up to the first $10,000. The most recent tally shows $8,105 have been raised from 52 donors which, with the match, doubles that amount to $16,210.
Dunlap is confident the bar foundation’s remaining $1,895 for the match will be used. Recently, the push for contributions to the endowment has slowed because, he said, the foundation does not want to fatigue its donors by constantly asking for help
“We’ll get there,†he said. “It is just taking a little bit longer.â€
Dunlap is hoping to begin drawing money from the endowment next year and to grow the total amount beyond $20,000. Plans call for the fund to target the expenses that can prevent a school from participating in one of the civic education programs.
As examples, Dunlap said the endowment might be used to cover the cost of transporting the students to the civic education contests or to pay for a substitute instructor while the regular classroom teacher is accompanying the team to the championship.