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IS THIS THE END OF TRUMP?

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IS THIS THE END OF TRUMP?

by Will Durst

Go ahead, exhale a deep sigh of relief because our long national nightmare could very well be over. Yes, dear friends, Donald Trump might have bitten off more than he can chew and we may be mere moments away from combing him out of our hair for good. Then throw away the comb.
And indeed, we’ve heard this refrain a couple of hundred times already, but finally the aerodynamically coiffed real estate developer may actually have gone too far, even for him. Which apparently is… light years far. A galaxy far far away far. Go to eternity and take a left, far.
Up to now, Trump has doubled down on his outrageous statements, no matter who he insulted: Mexicans, women, Congressional Medal of Honor winners, people who prefer vinegar- based coleslaw, and it always worked out. He even got in a fight with the Pope. This Pope; the good Pope. Not the former Nazi Pope.
In January, Trump even bragged he “could stand in the middle of 5th Avenue and shoot someone and I wouldn’t lose voters.” But the conceit of that remark involved the shooting of other people, and he’s since spent the time shooting himself. In the foot. And the mouth. With his small hands.
These missteps could be described as jumping the shark. Over-sprayed his tan. The follicle that broke the camel’s back. Forced to wear the wrong hat. Inadvertently fired his daughter. Whatever is a bad thing for him, he did it. Repeatedly.
In response to a Chris Mathews question about abortion at a Wisconsin Town Hall, Trump said that women who had the procedure should be punished. And immediately both the pro-choice and anti-choice movements landed on him faster than greased beach balls filled with sand slide down a ski jump. See, he does bring people together. He is a uniter, not a divider or a multiplier.
It is uncanny how consistently Trump manages to annoy women. Someone on his staff needs to remind him they can vote too now. And that person should probably be somebody other than campaign manager Corey Lewandowski.
Trump’s approval rating amongst America’s y-chromosome challenged citizenry is right below hot coals on your genitals and slightly above knitting needles in your ears. Suddenly, he reminds every woman in America of her first husband, who was biologically incapable of apologizing.
His competition for the GOP nomination also attacked his make-it-up as he goes along, public-policy theories, but they’re treading a fine line here, because Republicans have been responsible for consistently carving away the edges of women’s health care. And prosecution is a logical extension of their legislation creep. Until they reach their ultimate goal of a 9 month waiting period.
Wail all they want, Trump isn’t damaging the GOP as much as he’s lifting the rocks they’ve been hiding under. Everything he says is a megaphone version of the whisper they’ve spent decades perfecting. He’s taken the dog out of dog whistle.
The question is: will this major gaffe precipitate the meltdown we’ve all been waiting for, or is The Donald truly a political cockroach able to survive anything, including a nuclear war on women? It would certainly explain the hard protective shell on the top of his head masquerading as hair.
Very Kafkaesque.

 

COMMISSION CANDIDATE BRENDA BERGWITZ IS A REBEL WITH CAUSE

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Brenda Bergwitz A “Rebel With A Cause”

Brenda has the reputation of doing everything she can to save God and Country and the unborn.  Its not uncommon to see Brenda attending two or three protest rallies a week. She has a strong passion for saving the unborn, fighting “OBAMA CARE”, and voicing her opposition to bad public policy.

She strongly supports  the local Tea Party group agenda, and volunteers her time on projects of her Church and giving of her time in helping her fellow veterans at the local to the VA Clinic.

Brenda openly will tell you that she doesn’t have all the answers about how to run local government but she has the desire and the mindset to learn. If elected she pledges to be a watchdog to insure that our tax dollars are spent properly by using conservative values.

She feels that our government is too big and  has out-of-control spending. Political patronage is rampant in County government and she pledges to take on the good old boy net work head on.
She was married for 54 years before her husband passed away last year. She is retired US Marine.

When a local priest  introduces County Commission candidate Brenda Bergwitz he calls her a “Rebel With A Cause”.  She feel that our government is to big and  has out control spending.  Political patronage is rampant in County government and she pledge to take the “Good Ole Boy” network head on.

She was married for 54 years before her husband passed away last year.  She is a retired US Marine.  She had 6 brothers served in the Marines and 4 sons seven in the militarily, 2 in the Army and 2 in the Navy

Poet Kevin Coval to Visit North High School

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Poet Kevin Coval to Visit North High School
Wednesday, April 6
9:15 a.m. and again at 1:15 p.m.
North High School, 15331 Highway 41 N.
Renowned Poet Kevin Coval will be at North High School tomorrow to perform and lead workshops for freshmen and sophomore students at North. Coval, who the Boston Globe dubbed as Chicago’s “unofficial poet laureate,” has appeared on HBO’s Def Poetry TV series four times and has written several poetry collections, including Everyday People and Slingshots: A Hip Hop Poetica. He is founder of Chicago’s Louder than a Bomb youth poetry slam and the artistic director of Young Chicago Authors.
The visit also serves as the official kick off for a poetry competition for North’s sophomore class. 
 
The visit was made possible by a Classroom Enrichment Grant from the Rotary/PEF/Love Foundation.

Statement from Sen. Becker regarding HEA 1001 signing

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State Sen. Vaneta Becker (R-Evansville) made the following statement  after Gov. Mike Pence ceremonially signed into law a measure to fund Regional Cities initiatives in Evansville: 

“This session, the Indiana General Assembly passed a variety of bills to benefit Hoosiers, including one major piece of legislation funding a third Regional Cities grant.

“House Enrolled Act 1001 funds 19 projects in Southwest Indiana to improve livability and connectivity, attract talent and workforce into the area, and leverage the new IU School of Medicine facility in downtown Evansville.

“The Signature School in Evansville, where  bill signing took place, will receive $2.5 million from Regional Cities funding to support an expansion that will allow up to 90 new students to attend Indiana’s number-one ranked high school.

“Additionally, Warrick County will receive funding to build a conference center at Victoria National and complete the Warrick Wellness Trail. Also, Oakland City University in Gibson County will be able to build student housing in the downtown area, and the New Harmony Arts and Food Project will be able to complete initiatives in Posey County, which includes updates to the New Harmony Way bike and pedestrian bridge.

“Along with providing funds for the Regional Cities projects, HEA 1001 and Senate Enrolled Act 67 work together to provide $1 billion in new state and local road funding over the next two years with no state tax increases and no new state debt.

“Thanks to this Regional Cities grant, Hoosiers in Southwest Indiana have plenty to look forward to with these outstanding plans to improve the quality of life in Evansville and surrounding counties.”

UE softball set for home doubleheader against Austin Peay

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UE to play APSU at 3 p.m. DH on Wednesday 

In its final scheduled home non-conference game of the season, the University of Evansville softball team is set to play Austin Peay in a 3 p.m. doubleheader at Cooper Stadium.

UE is coming off of a weekend MVC series at Bradley where they picked up a win in the first game, taking down the Braves by a final of 11-2.  Morgan Florey struck out seven batters in the complete game effort as she also notched three hits.  Kristin Koepke hit the first home run of her career while Courtney Land, Michal Luckett and Hayli Scott each finished with three hits apiece.

For the second time this season, Florey was named the MVC Newcomer of the Week.  Florey recorded the first home run of her career in a win over UT Martin and also picked up the win as she pitched 3 2/3 innings.  In one of the best all-around performance you will ever see, Florey went 3-4 with 2 runs, 2 RBI and 2 doubles in the series opener at Bradley.  Rounding out that performance was her complete game performance as she gave up two runs in six innings while striking out seven.

Despite just six at-bats in the last four games, UE infielder Morgan Lambert took full advantage of every trip to the plate.  Lambert recorded hits in five of her six at-bats, finishing the week hitting .833.  She also drew a walk.  She knocked in three runs for the Aces, helping the squad to a 2-2 mark in its last four games.

Infielder Susan Norris hit .364 over the last week and had a stellar effort as UE played a conference series at Bradley.  Her bat came alive in the final two games of the weekend as she went 4-7 with seven RBI and three runs scored in the final two games at Bradley.  In the second game of Saturday’s doubleheader, she knocked in four runs in a 3-4 performance while hitting a home run.  She homered again on Sunday, going 1-3 with a game-tying home run that made it a 4-4 game in the 6th inning.

Austin Peay stands at 5-22 overall and are 1-9 in Ohio Valley Conference play.  Last time out, they fell to UT Martin by a 1-0 final in a defensive battle.  Danielle Liermann and Kacy Acree are the top hitters for the Governors.  Both stand with batting averages of .368.  Liermann is the leading source of power for APSU, leading the way with 22 RBI and three home runs.

 

VANDERBURGH COUNTY FELONY CHARGES

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Below is a list of the felony cases that will be filed by the Vanderburgh County Prosecutor’s Office today and Monday.

Alfred Lee Jones Intimidation, Level 6 felony

Theft, Class A misdemeanor

Resisting law enforcement, Class A misdemeanor

Disorderly conduct, Class B misdemeanor

Lloyd David Shell Operating a motor vehicle after forfeiture of license for life, Level 5 felony

Possession of methamphetamine, Level 6 felony

Possession of marijuana, Class B misdemeanor

Matthew Kamon Motz Auto theft, Level 6 felony

Unlawful possession of a syringe, Level 6 felony

Possession of a synthetic drug or synthetic drug look-alike substance, Class A misdemeanor

Possession of marijuana, Class B misdemeanor

Blake Allen Barnett Unlawful possession of a syringe, Level 6 felony

Possession of a narcotic drug, Level 6 felony

Kelvin Ray Rush Possession of a narcotic drug, Level 6 felony

Possession of a controlled substance, Class A misdemeanor

Operating a vehicle while intoxicated, Class C misdemeanor

James Oather Capps II Possession of a narcotic drug, Level 6 felony

Operating a vehicle while intoxicated, Class C misdemeanor

Governor Pence to Ceremonially Sign Regional Cities Initiative Funding, Child Abuse Registry Bills Tomorrow

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Governor Mike Pence will join regional leaders in North Central Indiana to ceremonially sign HEA 1001, allocating full state match funding at $42 million each for three Indiana regional development plans as part of the Indiana Regional Cities Initiative. Together, these plans in Northeast, North Central and Southwest Indiana outline 100 quality of place projects totaling more than $2 billion in combined public and private investment. More than half of these planned projects, including new riverfront developments, revitalized downtowns and expanded trail systems, are currently scheduled to be completed by the end of 2018. Tomorrow afternoon, the Governor will ceremonially sign SEA 357, known as “Kirk’s Law,” which requires the Division of Court Administration to create a registry of individuals convicted of a crime of child abuse. Details below. 

Wednesday, April 6:

1:30 p.m. EDT – Governor Pence to ceremonially sign HEA 1001

*Media are welcome to attend.

Goshen Theater, 216 S. Main Street, Goshen, IN

3:00 p.m. EDT – Governor Pence to ceremonially sign SEA 357, or “Kirk’s Law”

*Media are welcome to attend.

Middlebury Town Hall, 418 N. Main Street, Middlebury, IN

 

TAKING CARE OF BUSINESS TUESDAYS:

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a workshop & lecture series
for Arts Council members
 
Don’t miss the first lecture of our Taking Care of Business series. Tonight’s topic is on grant writing with speaker, Scott Wylie. We will meet at the Arts Council at 6 PM. See you there!
 
The TCB Tuesdays events will be held every first Tuesday of the month, providing lectures and networking opportunities for artists members.
2016 TCB TUESDAYS CALENDAR OF EVENTS:
  • April 5th, Grant Writing, with speaker Scott Wylie
  •  May 3rd, Art as a Small Business, with the ISBDC
  • June 7th, Social event
  •  July 5th, IAC grants and Regional Resources, with speaker Paige Sharp
  • Aug 2nd, Commissions and Proposals, with speaker Al Holen
  • Sept 6th, Social event
  •   Oct 4th, Gallery Work, with speaker Garry Holstein
  •  Nov 1st, Marketing Art Business, with the AD Club
  •  Dec 6th, Holiday Social event

MVC Women’s Swimming and Diving Scholar-Athlete Team announced

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Aces well-represented on the squad

 ST.LOUIS – Nine members of the University of Evansville women’s swimming and diving team were named to the Missouri Valley Conference Scholar-Athlete Team on Tuesday.

Representing the Purple Aces were: Abby Smith (3.95), Kasey Rein (3.93), Amy Smith (3.74). Mackenzie Harris (3.72), Jessica Hildebrand (3.68), Courtney Coverdale (3.63), Maja Magnusson (3.60), Michaela Kent (3.58) and Kristen Myers (3.24).

“It is an honor for these ladies to be named to the 2016 MVC Swimming and Diving Scholar-Athlete Team,” Purple Aces head coach Rickey Perkins said.  “They did an outstanding job of balancing their academics and athletics. I am very proud of each of them.”

Scholar-Athlete honors require athletes to have completed at least one year and maintain either a 3.2 grade-point average and obtain all-conference honors, achieve a 3.5 grade-point average and finish top-16 in an individual event at the conference championships, or maintain a 3.8 grade-point average and participate in the MVC championship.

The Missouri Valley Conference had an outstanding number of student-athletes on the scholar-athlete team this season for swimming and diving, topping out at 73. In the 2015-16 season, 32 of these scholar-athletes had an impressive GPA at or above a 3.8 and 8 of those had a 4.0 GPA.