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Schedule of Meetings for Board of Park Commissioners 2017

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The Board of Park Commissioners will conduct Monthly meetings in Kevin Winternheimer Chambers, Room 301, Civic Center Complex, 100 NW Martin Luther King, Jr. Blvd, Evansville, IN 47708, on the first and third Wednesdays of each month at 12:00 noon, unless otherwise notified.  A table listing the dates for each Board Meeting is furnished below:

January 4, 2017 January 18, 2017 February 1, 2017

February 15, 2017 March 1, 2017 March 15, 2017

April 5, 2017 April 19, 2017 May 3, 2017

May 17, 2017 June 7, 2017 June 21, 2017

July 5, 2017 July 19, 2017 August 2, 2017

August 16, 2017 September 6, 2017 September 20, 2017

October 4, 2017 October 18, 2017 November 1, 2017

November 15, 2017 December 6, 2017 December 13, 2017

 

The public is welcome to attend all Board Meetings.  If any group or individual wishes to address the Board on a special issue, please contact me or send a letter and I will schedule you for a future meeting.

If you have any questions, please call 812-435-6141.

*Changed to conduct year-end business.

Adopt A Pet

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Marbles is an 8-month-old female tortoiseshell kitten! She’s waited on a home for several months, which is unusual for such a young cat. Hopefully the VHS “Black Friday special” will help her get adopted! Her fee is reduced to $25 on Friday & Saturday, 11/25-11/26 and includes her spay, microchip, vaccines, and more. Contact VHS at (812) 426-2563 or at adoptions@vhslifesaver.org for details!

 

Adopt A Pet

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Lucy is a 2-year-old female brown tabby cat! She gets along just fine with other cats, and has waited on a home for several months. Her adoption fee is $30 and includes her spay, microchip, vaccines, and more. Contact VHS at (812) 426-2563 or at adoptions@vhslifesaver.org for details!

Catch the Latest Edition of “The Indiana State Police Road Show”

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Indiana - Catch the latest edition of the “Indiana State Police Road Show” radio program every Monday morning at your convenience.

This week’s show features Master Trooper Patrick Etter. Trooper Etter discusses the Trooper Bartram Memorial Foundation and the upcoming Christmas for Kids shopping event. The event will take place at Wal-Mart in Camby, located at 8191 Upland Way, Camby IN 46113 (SR 67 @ Heartland Crossing) on Saturday December 3rd.  For more information visit the Trooper Bartram Memorial website at www.bartrammemorial.com.

Download the program from the Network Indiana public websites at www.networkindiana.com.  Look for the state police logo on the main page and follow the download instructions. The ISP Road Show can also be viewed via YouTube.

Go to https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCu5Bg1KjBd7H1GxgkuV3YJA or visit the Indiana State Police website at http://www.in.gov/isp/   and click on the YouTube link. This 15 minute talk show concentrates on public safety and informational topics with state wide interest.

The radio program was titled “Signal-10” in the early sixties when it was first started by two troopers in northern Indiana. The name was later changed to the “Indiana State Police Road Show” and is the longest continuously aired state police public service program in Indiana.

Radio stations across Indiana and the nation are invited to download and air for FREE this public service program sponsored by the Indiana State Police Alliance and Cops for Kids, a subsidiary of the Indiana State Police Alliance.

VANDERBURGH COUNTY FELONY CHARGES

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 Below are the felony cases to be filed by the Vanderburgh County Prosecutor’s Office today.

Charles Ernest Echols Theft, Level 6 felony

Criminal trespass, Class A misdemeanor

David Alan Flaherty Resisting law enforcement, Level 6 felony

Driving while suspended, Class A misdemeanor

Possession of paraphernalia, Class C misdemeanor

Ryan Eric Winebrenner Carrying a handgun without a license, Level 5 felony

Criminal recklessness, Level 6 felony

Matthew Robert Bailey Operating a vehicle as a habitual traffic violator, Level 6 felony

False informing, Class B misdemeanor

Jason Aarone Banks Burglary, Level 5 felony

Theft, Level 6 felony

Keith Alan Steele Domestic battery, Level 6 felony

Christopher Alan Hill Domestic battery, Level 5 felony

IS IT TRUE NOVEMBER 28, 2016

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IS IT TRUE we are expecting the Judge to rule today on the merits of the law suit filed against the City by the FOP and EFD concerning their Employees Health Care benefits?  …we are told the ruling of the FOP and EFD employee injunction for a stay could go either way? …if  the injunction is granted by the Judge the City employee Heath Care insurance  costs will remain the same as agreed on in the 2016 employee contract?  …if this happens the City of Evansville shall face a major financial crisis beyond belief?

IS IT TRUE a quiet search for a replacement of the current Chairman of the Vanderburgh County Democratic Party is presently being conducted?  …we are hearing that the current party Chairman is beginning to appoint precinct leaders that will choose the new party Chairman?  …isn’t this called “stacking the deck”?  …we hear that Mathew Newell is considering running for this position?  …  Attorney Scott Danks is being encouraged by many of the party movers and shakers to run for this position?  … Mr. Danks has outstanding organizational and fund raising skills that could quickly turn things around for the local Democratic?  … we hear if Mr. Danks want to be the next Chairman of the Vanderburgh Democratic party it’s his for the asking?

IS IT TRUE  the next Vanderburgh Democratic Party Chairman will immediately be challenged to raise around $40,000 plus for past unpaid bills?  …this figure doesn’t include money needed to hire new staff and pay for future operational costs?

IS IT TRUE the once proud and powerful Vanderburgh Democratic Party demise started when Mayor Jonathan Winezapfel cut a backroom political deal to defeat Mayoral candidate Rick Davis? …a couple of the same individuals involved in the Rick Davis for Mayor situation also cut another backroom political deal to insure that Mayor Winnecke would win re-election over Gail Riecken? … when Mayor Weinzapfel left office he took with him a political war chest of $750,000 and landed a high paying job as Chancellor of Ivy Tech-Evansville?  …you now have the answer why many supporters of Rick Davis and Gail Riecken shall never support or trust anyone in involved in the demised of their candidates?  …this is why the new party Chairmen must not be someone who was involved in working against Rick Davis and Gail Riecken Mayoral campaigns?

IS IT TRUE City Officials are planning to established a “Special Tax District” for Downtown?  …this project is being touted as way to generate money to create new capital for Downtown Evansville without using public money? …when Government create a new source of revenue for future capital projects this is called a “TAX”? ….we are told that the “Special Tax District” money collected for Downtown capital projects will be managed by a Board of Directors?  …we wonder who will be appointed as the Director of this “Special Tax District” for Downtown?  …will it be Downtown Alliance Director Josh Armstrong (a Chamber of Commence employee) that will oversee the establishment of the “Special Tax District for Downtown”?  …if he’s selected Director of this project who will be paying his salary (Chamber of Commence or the City)?

IS IT TRUE wasn’t Mr Armstrong the person that the City of Evansville hired to run a contest to select a restaurant owner to start an upscale restaurant in the vacant Rogers Jewelry building on Main Street without assuming any startup costs? …the winner of this free turnkey restaurant turned the offer down because it turned out that this project was not free at all?  …it was reported that Mr. Armstrong was paid around $30,000 of our hard earned tax money to head up this failed project?

IS IT TRUE we wonder why the City of Evansville continues to pour millions of dollars into the Downtown and the Haynies Corner Art District areas and avoid doing similar for the West Franklin Street, Lincoln Avenue (Center City) and South Green River Road areas?

FOOTNOTE:  Todays “READERS POLL” question is “Do you feel that the City of Evansville should continue to pour millions of our tax dollars into the Downtown and Haynies Corner area”?

CHANNEL 44 TV NEWS: Locals Mourn the Loss of Evansville Native Ron Glass

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Locals Mourn the Loss of Evansville Native Ron Glass

 Friends of Evansville native and well known actor Ron Glass are remembering him the day after his death.

Glass was best known to many for his roll as detective Ron Harris in the sitcom “Barney Miller.”

Many in the African American community look back fondly the time he spent with them, and that’s why staff at Evansville’s African American Museum are arranging a scholarship in his honor.

USI Engineering And Physics Team To Put Spacecraft Into Orbit

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NASA expected to launch CubeSat unit in 2018

Engineering and physics students at the University of Southern Indiana have embarked on a mission-of-a-lifetime project designing the University’s first spacecraft to be placed into orbit by NASA sometime in 2018. The unit is a CubeSat, a miniaturized satellite known as a U-class spacecraft.

The USI student-led project to design, build and then operate the CubeSat in orbit is funded by NASA’s (National Aeronautics and Space Administration’s) Undergraduate Student Instrument Project (USIP). USI’s project was one of 47 national projects competitively selected and funded by NASA to give undergraduate students a hands-on experience developing and flying research or technology experiments relevant to NASA missions. Twenty three of the 47 projects involve CubeSats.

“How often do you get to send something into space?” said Wyatt Helms, an engineering sophomore from Alfordsville, Indiana. “When I graduated high school, I wanted to go to school for aerospace engineering, but didn’t get the scholarships I was able to get here at USI. Now, it turns out I’m doing the same things I wanted to be doing.”

The USI CubeSat is known as the Undergraduate Nano Ionospheric Temperature Explorer (UNITE), and will target the least explored layer of the atmosphere, the lower ionosphere. While traveling through the ionosphere the UNITE CubeSat will probe plasma density, determine drag characteristics of the vehicle, and measure temperature on the skin and in the interior of the spacecraft. The satellite measures 10 cm x 10 cm x 30 cm and has a mass of just 4 kilograms.

To be able to work on a project of this magnitude at the undergraduate level is something the entire team is excited about. “I’m working on the command and data handling, one of the subsystems we’re going to provide,” said Colin Runnion, an engineering junior from Evansville. “I get to be part of a team that will basically design the command and data handling systems from the ground up. It will be one of the more critical parts, and one of the parts most likely to fail. It’s a lot of stress, since I haven’t designed something this complicated, but I’m really looking forward to that. Hopefully, if all goes well, someday, I’ll find myself working at a job at NASA.”

“We’re approaching this project with both exhilaration and trepidation,” said Dr. Glen Kissel, associate professor of engineering and project faculty mentor. “Exhilaration, because our students have been given this exciting opportunity to place the University’s first spacecraft into orbit, but also trepidation, knowing there are potential setbacks every step of the way.”

NASA requires that the USI team deliver a flight-ready CubeSat by early March 2018, with a launch expected sometime later that year. Launch services will be provided by NASA at no charge to the team. CubeSats are generally ejected from a rocket as a secondary payload, once the orbit has been achieved for the much larger primary payload. Alternatively, CubeSats can be sent to the International Space Station and loaded by astronauts into a deployer for ejection into orbit.

Jose Fregozo, an engineering and physics major from Evansville, is charged with monitoring the drag analysis and other key functions of the craft. Taking theory and putting it into practice is something he’s particularly excited about. “It combines both of my majors. I’m looking at things from a physics perspective, understanding the fundamental theories and getting to apply those things using my engineering know how.”

The USI team is still evaluating what orbits would be acceptable for its mission, in preparation for making a formal request to NASA later in the year for a rocket ride into space. Depending on the orbit NASA places the CubeSat in, the UNITE mission could be as short as 40 days, or as long as 400 days, before it burns up in the atmosphere.

The team first met this semester to begin the design and to plan the remaining phases to complete the unit, then integrate, test and operate the CubeSat using NASA Systems Engineering principles. Because the project is a multi-year endeavor, the team will fluctuate as students graduate. Adam Will, an engineering junior from Evansville, will take over as team leader in spring 2017. “Being a longtime admirer of NASA and private space companies like SpaceX, it’s exciting to be working on a satellite that’s going into space here at USI at an undergraduate level,” he said.

USI’s UNITE CubeSat team includes:

  • Jose Fregozo, Engineering and Physics Senior, Evansville, IN
  • Wyatt Helms, Engineering Sophomore, Alfordsville, IN
  • Ryan Loehrlein, Engineering and Business Finance Sophomore, Evansville, IN
  • Haley McConnell, Biophysics and Math Senior, Evansville, IN
  • Kegan Miller, Engineering Senior, Frankfort, IN
  • Bryan Mitchell, Engineering Junior, Evansville, IN
  • Jonah Quirk, Physics Junior, Evansville, IN
  • Colin Runnion, Engineering Junior, Evansville, IN
  • John Siepierski, Outgoing Team Leader, Engineering Senior, Bradford, PA
  • Adam Will, Incoming Team Leader, Engineering Junior, Evansville, IN
  • Eric McCord, graduated from USI with a BS in Engineering in spring 2016 (He did preliminary design testing in spring 2016 in support of the CubeSat project.)

Dr. Eric Greenwood, assistant professor of physics, and Dr. Art Chlebowski, assistant professor of engineering, also will assist the UNITE CubeSat team.

USI’s UNITE CubeSat project is funded through NASA’s Undergraduate Student Instrument Project with administrative assistance from the Indiana Space Grant Consortium at Purdue University. Near Space Launch Inc. of Upland, Indiana, will be the primary vendor for the UNITE project components.

A Republican Ban on Internet Gambling Would Repeat a Costly Democratic Mistake

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A Republican Ban on Internet Gambling Would Repeat a Costly Democratic Mistake
Veronique de Rugy Veronique de Rugy for TOWNHALL

Many on the left have taken Donald Trump’s surprise victory poorly, responding with considerable hand-wringing and emotional outbursts. Instead of simply focusing on the many evils that they anticipate will take place under President Trump, they would do well to look in the mirror and recognize that there would be far less cause for concern had they not spent the past eight years cheering on the expansion of executive power under President Barack Obama.

Republicans, soon to control all elected branches for the first time in a decade, ignore this lesson at their peril.
A group of congressional Republicans has been trying to undo the Department of Justice’s acknowledgment in 2011 that the Wire Act — passed before the internet existed — never should have been interpreted to prevent all forms of online gambling (such as poker and lotteries), as opposed to the “bets or wagers on any sporting event or contest” that the statute explicitly addresses.
They’re worked up about it because billionaire casino owner Sheldon Adelson is a GOP megadonor and some states have begun authorizing online gambling within their borders. Adelson hates online gambling, as it competes with his bricks-and-mortar Las Vegas casinos for customers.

More than five years ago, on what has become known to the poker world as Black Friday, the federal government unleashed a legal jihad against online poker companies and their top executives. Online poker is not itself illegal — a fact clarified by the DOJ’s reinterpretation of the Wire Act — but the 2006 Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act made it illegal for payment processors to transfer funds to and from gambling sites.

 

CARTOONS | HENRY PAYNE
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The problem for Adelson and his allies is that the UIGEA and other federal statutes apply only when state borders are crossed. The 10th Amendment and the principles of federalism mean that federal lawmakers should have no say regarding activities that take place entirely within one state’s borders. So if state governments wish to authorize online gambling for their citizens, they are and should remain free to do so.
Adelson’s gang has been trying for some time to pass the Restoration of America’s Wire Act to stop states from setting their own gaming rules. Despite its misleading name, RAWA would go even further than the original and erroneous interpretation of the Wire Act, as even that dealt only with interstate activity.
RAWA has failed to muster enough support to move forward thus far, but another bill, SB 3376, was recently introduced by Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., with very similar language, suggesting there may be an attempt to sneak it through during the lame-duck session. Trump’s campaign received significant support from Adelson, so Republicans might also try to take it up in the new Congress.
Doing so would mean ditching their oft-claimed support for the 10th Amendment and state sovereignty. It would also set a precedent for Democrats, who will eventually hold power again, to similarly prohibit the forms of online commerce they find distasteful, such as gun and ammunition sales.
Republicans should learn from today’s dismayed Democrats and resist the temptation — while in power — to operate beyond constitutional limits so that such limits might still be around to keep the other side in check once control of the federal government inevitably changes hands again.
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