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Changes DNR At The Indy Boat, Sport And Travel Show

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There has been a change to the schedule for the Boat, Sport and Travel show. The dates and times in Thursday’s MyDNR newsletter included incorrect information. Below is the correct info. Sorry for the confusion. Enjoy!

Live birds of prey program will be presented Feb. 17 and 25, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. A presentation of live snakes will be offered Feb. 18 and 24, from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. A presentation featuring DNR Law Enforcement K9s will be offered Feb. 24, from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. All times are subject to change.

Eagles surge past Saints for seventh straight win

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Four University of Southern Indiana Women’s Basketball players reached double figures in the scoring column as the No. 10/16 Screaming Eagles surged past visiting Maryville University for a 75-50 Great Lakes Valley Conference victory Thursday evening at the Physical Activities Center.

Dressed in pink four their annual Play4Kay game, the Eagles used a 14-0 first half run to take control of the contest; then went on a 29-8 second-half run to seal the victory.

Senior guard/forward Kaydie Grooms (Marshall, Illinois) had a game-high 20 points to pace the Eagles, who shot 54.1 percent (33-61) from the field and 64.3 percent (18-28) in the second half.

Grooms had nine points at the end of the first period and 15 at the half as the Eagles built a 34-23 halftime advantage.

Marryville (6-12, 3-9 GLVC) trimmed USI’s lead to six four minutes into the third period, but a quick 6-0 spurt that featured buckets by three different players put USI back in front by double digits (46-34) with four minutes to play in the third quarter.

USI (18-2, 10-1 GLVC) scored seven straight points at the end of the third quarter and beginning of the fourth to extend its lead to 55-38; then sandwiched a pair of 8-0 runs around a Maryville basket to build an insurmountable 71-42 lead.

Senior forward Morgan Dahlstrom (Grayslake, Indiana) added 16 points and a game-high 12 rebounds for the Eagles, who held the Saints to 28.3 percent (15-53) from the field and 21.1 percent (4-19) from three-point range.

Junior forward Kacy Eschweiler (St. Charles, Missouri) contributed 12 points and seven rebounds, while freshman guard Emma DeHart (Indianapolis, Indiana) chipped in 11 points thanks to a 3-of-4 effort from behind the arc.

The Eagles, who outscored the Saints 30-12 in the paint, got 25 points from its bench, including six from junior forward/center Mikayla Rowan (Brazil, Indiana). Rowan, who also had three points, scored all of her points in the 14-0 first-half run that broke an 11-11 tie.

USI returns to action Saturday at 1 p.m. when it hosts Quincy University for Homecoming at the PAC. The Hawks (7-14, 3-9 GLVC) suffered a 79-60 setback to Bellarmine University Thursday evening in Louisville, Kentucky, and have lost four of their last five games.

“READERS FORUM” FEBRUARY 2, 2018

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WHATS ON YOUR MIND TODAY?

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?”
Todays “Readers Poll” question is: Do you feel that America is headed in the right direction?
Please take time and read our articles entitled “STATEHOUSE Files, CHANNEL 44 NEWS, LAW ENFORCEMENT, READERS POLL, BIRTHDAYS, HOT JOBS” and “LOCAL SPORTS”.  You now are able to subscribe to get the CCO daily.
If you would like to advertise on the CCO please contact us City-County Observer@live.com.
EDITOR’S FOOTNOTE:  Any comments posted in this column do not represent the views or opinions of the City-County Observer or our advertisers.

Youth First Celebrates 20th Anniversary

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Youth First has been strengthening youth and families for 20 years, and has big plans to celebrate this milestone. The organization held a ribbon cutting at their headquarters today to kick off the festivities.
Youth First will host the Edward Jones Emerald Gala on April 21st at the Tropicana, which will include a formal dinner, dancing, and an anniversary edition of Youth First’s Passport to Adventure auction.
Carol Lynch, Youth First Board Member, said, “Lots of people dream, but not everybody’s dream becomes a reality, and his dream became a reality. This community, the businesses, the schools, many, many people came on board and said you know I think that’s a pretty neat dream and I want to be a part of it. So we’re celebrating that.”
There will also be an auction preview and awards reception on April 19th, where the winners of this year’s Don Mattingly Youth Award and the Carol Lynch Advocate of Youth First Award will be named.
For more information about the organization go to Youth First.

Britney Taylor

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Senators Support Parents’ Choice In Sex Education

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By Erica Irish
TheStatehouseFile.com

 INDIANAPOLIS—When it comes to educators, minors and taboo topics likes sex, Indiana’s senators erred on the side of parents Tuesday.

Lawmakers approved Senate Bill 65, authored by Sen. Dennis Kruse, R-Auburn, 37-12, to require schools to send out permission slips for any in-class discussion on three specific areas of human sexuality: sexual activity, sexual orientation and gender identity.

“I think this is a good thing to do, I think this is a moral thing to do, and I think it gives parents the rights they should have to decide what their kids are taught in school,” Kruse said in a closing statement.

As a father, Sen. Rodric Bray, R-Martinsville, prefers having an opportunity to start the conversation about sex with his children before a school takes charge.

“We’re all going to differ in the way we have that conversation with our children,” he said. “It is very personal to each of us, it is very personal to each family.”

However, there was adamant opposition from several chamber Democrats.

Sen. Mark Stoops, D-Bloomington, said Kruse’s bill has less to do with students learning about sex and more with restricting their worldviews.

“This is surely undemocratic. This is surely un-American, to require that we have a small minority that is imposing their narrow religious morality on the rest of us,” Stoops said.

Stoops also accused Senate Republicans of using their support of the bill to promote their own interests in re-election campaigns.

“I understand the position your caucus is in. The Republican primary has got to be like a Spanish Inquisition. You got to pass that religious test, or you’re going to get primaried,” Stoops said.

FOOTNOTE: Erica Irish is a reporter for TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.

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A BACKYARD IMMIGRATION LESSON

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By Susan Stamper Brown

The perky little chickadee with a black cap and deformed beak that I’d been trying to keep alive died a few days ago, the same day the 7.9 magnitude earthquake jolted me and fellow Alaskans out of bed.

I knew it was only a matter of time.

It mattered not that I’d been doing everything possible to accommodate the cute little guy’s needs by pulverizing nuts and seeds to make it easier for him to swoop up and swallow food with his crossed-sickle beak.

Even without deformities, it’s tough for these birds, indigenous to Alaska, to survive the long and cold winters with daylight in short supply and 18-hour nights. They must eat constantly during daylight hours to regain the 10 percent body weight they burn each night staying warm.

The poor little guy died as a result of chain migration when a couple of opportunistic migratory birds called redpolls visited our feeders and came back with their extended family. Hundreds of them.

Unlike chickadees, redpolls refuse to assimilate. Rather than sharing feeders by politely grabbing seeds and eating them elsewhere, redpolls swarm, attack and overtake feeders, gorging themselves until the food is gone. And the next day the cycle repeats itself.

It is impossible for them to coexist. The more feeding stations I set up, the more they gorge, taking from the birds that belong here and draining my birdseed budget.

These incorrigible birds have no interest in assimilating and contribute nothing to the rest. I have absolutely no control, though, because they have wings, and the skies they navigate, no borders.

This reminds me of the current debate happening over immigration. House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif) said in a statement she released January 26 that President Trump’s immigration reform framework is “cruel” and part of an “unmistakable campaign to make America white again.”

Besides being toxic and divisive, Pelosi’s statement is downright ignorant. While I personally disagree with Trump’s proposition to offer a pathway to citizenship for those here illegally, his proposal has nothing to do with skin color.

Discontinuing the ridiculous Visa Lottery Program which invites people from countries all over the world, including those with known terrorist problems, is a no-brainer. Likewise, building a border wall and ending the preposterous chain migration program is necessary for our country’s survival.

According to Conservative Review’s Daniel Horowitz, “Overall, 97 percent of the four million individuals on the visa waiting list are chain migrants whose sole claim to an immigrant visa is family ties.” He reports in December 2017 alone, a beneficiary of chain migration targeted Harrisburg, Pennsylvania police in a series of shootings. On the same day as that terrorist attack, another chain migration recipient was sentenced in a Harrisburg federal court for material support to ISIS while a female Pakistani here on an F43 visa was charged with laundering Bitcoin to raise money for ISIS.

Unless immigration is fixed it will only get worse. Case in point: Europe’s migration crisis, an ill-advised goodwill gesture that invited a sudden eruption of non-assimilating refugees that essentially upended the lives of citizens, drained resources and generally wreaked havoc on the local population.

Americans are generous, but like me, they have their limits. If Redpolls had the desire to get along with all the other birds, there’s little I would not sacrifice to accommodate them. Lord knows I’ve tried. Similarly, our country has always welcomed legal immigrants to share in our national wealth and opportunity. But, it requires a willingness on everyone’s part to live up to our nation’s motto, “E Pluribus Unum,” out of many, one.

Since spraying my yard with birdshot is not an option, I am signing off now to refill the bird feeders and to take a head count of my chickadees.

EVSC to Offer Summer Engineering Camp

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Current seventh and eighth graders in Evansville and the surrounding area who are interested in exploring engineering-related fields are invited to participate in the EVSC’s Southern Indiana Career and Technical Center’s iEngineering 2.0 Summer Experience camp. The two-week, half-day camp is scheduled for June 4 through June 15, 2018 and will focus on topics related to engineering, manufacturing and architecture.

In addition to a field trip to a local manufacturing company, students at the camp will learn about and experience:

  • Soldering
  • Basic electrical circuits
  • Robotics
  • 3D scanning and printing
  • CNC machining
  • Computer-Aided Design (CAD) Software
  • Career awareness in science, technology, engineering and math
  • Architectural fundamentals
  • Electro-magnetic motors
  • Introduction to engineering concepts

Cost for the summer camp is $40 per student. To register, visit www.evscschools.com/sictc and click on the iEngineering link on the top of the page under ‘Summer Experiences,’ or visit the SICTC Facebook page at iEngineering 2.0 Summer Experience.  Individuals interested in participating in the camp must register by April 9, 2018.

DCS Consultant: Twice As Many Hoosier Kids Out Of Home

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IL for www.theindianalawyer.com

A consultant hired by the state says Indiana has more than double the number of children in out-of-home care compared to the national average.

The consultant, Child Welfare Policy, and Practice Group, was hired by Gov. Eric Holcomb to review the Department of Child Services after the resignation of former agency head Mary Beth Bonaventura. In her resignation letter in December, she accused Holcomb’s administration of service cuts that “all but ensure children will die.”

The contract Holcomb’s office signed with Child Welfare Policy and Practice Group runs from Jan. 2-June 21, 2018. Cost of the work will be capped at $146,630.

In a six-page initial progress report, the consultant sketched its plan for reviewing DCS. The work will include interviewing stakeholders such as children and families, foster parents, judges, law enforcement and caseworkers; examining outcomes and internal management data to assess how children are being served; and reviewing policies and case files.

Also, the consultant will shadow family case managers and supervisors in Allen, Clark, Lake, Marion, and Vanderburgh counties.

The consultant has begun interviewing personnel at DCS, including the incoming director, Terry Stigdon. Thus far the consultant has little to report, although officials said Thursday they found the state needs a better system for tracking cases of child abuse and neglect.

The number of children placed in foster care because their drug-addict parents can’t care for them has surged across the country. But the problem is particularly acute in a handful of states including Indiana.