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Banned live Nativity goes on with mannequins

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IL for www. theindianalawyer.com

Concord High School in northern Indiana used mannequins instead of student actors after a federal judge banned a live Nativity scene that has been performed for decades.

There was applause and cheering at Concord High School on Saturday when the curtain rose revealing a static Nativity scene during the show. The Freedom From Religion Foundation and the American Civil Liberties Union sued the district on behalf of a Concord High School student and his father, arguing that a Nativity scene conveyed an endorsement of religion.

U.S. District Judge Jon DeGuilio issued a preliminary injunction to stop this year’s live scene, ruling that “the living Nativity scene impermissibly conveys an endorsement of religion and thus runs afoul of the Establishment Clause.”

School officials say the injunction only applied to a live scene and that they complied with the judge’s order.

“The injunction is a preliminary ruling and applies only to this year’s Christmas Spectacular performance,” Concord Community Schools Superintendent John Trout said in a statement. “For 2015, the court ordered that the School not present a live Nativity scene. That is, live performers cannot perform the Nativity scene in this year’s Spectacular, and Concord Community Schools will comply with that order.”

The school district in Elkhart, about 15 miles east of South Bend, has about 5,300 students.

The ACLU and the foundation didn’t immediately respond to requests for comment sent Sunday morning.

This year’s show also included performances of songs like “White Christmas,” a Hanukkah song and a traditional African song for Kwanzaa.

The case is to go to court Jan. 7.

Aces to hold first-ever West Side Night

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For the first time, the University of Evansville will be holding a West Side Night with the Purple Aces at the men’s basketball game versus Indiana State on December 30.

 

Fans will be able to purchase vouchers for discounted tickets to UE’s Missouri Valley Conference opener at several locations on the west side of Evansville.  Normally $15, fans can purchase these seats for just $5.

 

Vouchers can be picked up at the following west side locations: Hilltop Inn, Azzip Pizza (west side location only), Gerst Haus, Smitty’s Italian Steakhouse, Sportsman’s Grille & Billiards, B&S Home Improvement, Banterra Bank, St. Phillips Inn, Fulton Tile and Stone, Marx BBQ & Catering and Donut Bank (210 N. St. Joseph Ave).  They will be available beginning on December 15 until the day of the game.

 

On game day, the first 1,000 fans will receive a free “West Side Night with the Aces” t-shirt at the Ford Center.  During the game, fans will be entertained by the band and cheerleaders from Mater Dei and Reitz High Schools.

 

The event will also raise awareness for Logan’s Promise.  Logan Brown was killed by a drunk driver earlier this year and Logan’s Promise raises awareness about the perils of drinking and driving.  Bandanas benefiting Logan’s Promise will be available at the lobby of the Ford Center on Dec. 30 for just $5.  A video about Logan’s Promise will be played at halftime.

 

Orange is the color representing Logan’s Promise and, in honor of that, head coach Marty Simmons will have the Purple Aces sporting the new orange NIKE jerseys in front of the home crowd for the first time.  Fans are also encouraged to wear orange to the game.

 

Governor Pence to Award Regional Cities Initiative Funds

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Governor Mike Pence will join the Indiana Economic Development Corporation (IEDC) to award funds to support regional development plans through the Indiana Regional Cities Initiative. Details below.

 

Tuesday, December 15:

 

2:45 p.m. EST – Governor Mike Pence to join IEDC to award funds to support regional development plans through the Indiana Regional Cities Initiative

*Media are welcome to attend.

Ivy Tech Corporate College and Culinary Center – 2820 North Meridian St., Indianapolis, IN, 2nd Floor Ballroom

 

OWENSBORO HEALTH AND ST. MARY’S HEALTH ANNOUNCE CLINICAL ALLIANCE

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Owensboro Health, based in Owensboro, Kentucky, and St. Mary’s Health, based in Evansville, Indiana, today announced an agreement to establish a clinical alliance. The alliance is focused on improving the health of the respective communities served by the organizations through collaboration on clinical best practices, operational efficiency and access to care.

“This alliance represents a tremendous opportunity for both organizations to further our missions and do so in a way that is cost-effective and advances clinical quality,” said Philip Patterson, FACHE, Owensboro Health’s President and Chief Executive Officer.

“We share similar cultures with core missions of providing high quality clinical care,” said Keith Jewell, President of St. Mary’s Health. “This affiliation will allow both organizations to collaborate and share best practices to enhance quality and access to care, operate more efficiently and achieve advances in medicine and the health of our communities.”  St. Mary’s, in connection with St. Vincent Health in Indianapolis, is a member of Ascension, the nation’s largest Catholic and non-profit health system.

The partnership opens a new and exciting chapter in which both organizations will work together to identify ways of enhancing their respective clinical services and explore opportunities for joint programs and initiatives.

 

Although affiliated, each health system will remain independent and continue to be responsible for its own assets, operations and liabilities. Neither party nor its Board of Directors will have any legal responsibility over the other. Each organization shall continue to be operated under the direction and control of its respective governing board. Funding and operational management for new programs and services developed under the alliance will be mutually determined and jointly agreed upon.

About Owensboro Health

Owensboro Health is a nonprofit health system with a mission to heal the sick and to improve the health of the communities it serves in Kentucky and Indiana. The system includes Owensboro Health Regional Hospital, nationally recognized for design, architecture and engineering and the only hospital in the world to be designated a Signature Sanctuary by Audubon International, Owensboro Health Muhlenberg Community Hospital, the One Health medical group comprising over 170 providers in 29 locations, a certified medical fitness facility, and the Mitchell Memorial Cancer Center. Owensboro Health has been recognized for outstanding care, safety and clinical excellence by The Joint Commission, Healthgrades, U.S. News & World Report and Becker’s Hospital Review. As the largest employer west of Louisville, Owensboro Health has 4,088 employees, and in FY 2015 saw 18,380 inpatient admissions and 823,072 outpatient encounters. A committed community partner, Owensboro Health provided grants of $702,924 in the last year to health, social service, education and arts agencies across the region. For more information, visit www.owensborohealth.org.

About St. Mary’s Health

St. Mary’s Health, in partnership with St. Vincent Health in Indianapolis, is a member of Ascension Health – the nation’s largest Catholic and non-profit health system. We are a faith-based health ministry serving communities in Indiana, Illinois, and Kentucky. With a medical staff of more than 750 physicians, St. Mary’s specializes in cardiac, surgical, orthopedic, rehabilitation, neurosciences, women’s, children’s, seniors, emergency, and trauma services. For more than 140 years, St. Mary’s has been guided by its mission of serving all persons, with special attention to those who are poor and vulnerable. For more information, please visit our website at www.stmarys.org

About Ascension

Ascension (www.ascension.org) is a faith-based healthcare organization dedicated to transformation through innovation across the continuum of care. As the largest non-profit health system in the U.S. and the world’s largest Catholic health system, Ascension is committed to delivering compassionate, personalized care to all persons with special attention to those who are struggling the most. In FY2015, Ascension provided $2 billion in care of persons living in poverty and other community benefit programs. More than 150,000 associates and 35,000 affiliated providers serve in 1,900 sites of care – including 131 hospitals and more than 30 senior care facilities – in 24 states and the District of Columbia. In addition to healthcare delivery, Ascension subsidiaries provide a variety of services and solutions including physician practice management, venture capital investing, treasury management, biomedical engineering, clinical care management, information services, risk management, and contracting through Ascension’s own group purchasing organization.

7th Circuit upholds Indiana’s cold beer law

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Marilyn Odendahl for www.theindianalawyer.com

Cold beer will continue to be sold only by licensed liquor stores in Indiana.

The 7th Circuit Court of Appeals has upheld state law that prohibits convenience stores, gas stations and other retailers from selling beer cold in Indiana. In a 13-page opinion written by Judge Diane Sykes, the court Monday found the Indiana Petroleum Marketers and Convenience Store Association failed to carry its burden in showing why the state’s cold-beer statute is unconstitutional.

“The Association’s policy arguments for allowing cold-beer sales by grocery and convenience stores are matters for the Indiana legislature, not the federal judiciary,” Sykes concluded in Indiana Petroleum Marketers and Convenience Store Association, et al. v. David Cook, in his official capacity as Chairman of the Indiana Alcohol and Tobacco Commission, 14-2559.

The convenience stores and gas stations filed a lawsuit in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Indiana in May 2013. The plaintiffs argued Indiana’s statutes regarding cold beer sales violated the Commerce Clause, the Equal Protection and Due Process clauses of the 14th Amendment, and parallel provisions in the Indiana Constitution.

However, the association failed to convince the district court and argued their case before the 7th Circuit in January.

EVSC Presents Details of New Elementary School to be Built;

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Parent Meeting Planned Wednesday Evening

A new elementary school that will be comprised of students living in a section of the current Scott and Oak Hill School districts, is planned to open in Fall 2018, it was announced during tonight’s School Board meeting.

Another elementary school is necessary because of the growth in current and projected families moving to the far northside of Vanderburgh County. Currently, Scott School has 920 students and Oak Hill has 842. Scott is averaging about 55 additional students per year; and Oak Hill is growing by about 20.  All of the North High School Attendance District schools became Kindergarten through Sixth grade in the 2010-11 school year – when the new high school and junior high school opened.  This new elementary school will be have students in grades Pre-Kindergarten through Sixth.

The new facility will be located on property the EVSC School Board purchased in 1995, just north of McCutchanville Park on Petersburg Road, between Eagle Crossing and Viehe Drive.

Ground is expected to be broken on the new school in late Fall 2016. When complete, the building will have a capacity of 1,000 students. The anticipated building cost is between $13.5 and $15 million and will be entirely paid for by funds saved from the EVSC’s Capital Projects Fund by the current School Board.

Students attending the new school will include those in grades K-6 in 2018 within the following boundaries:

  • North Border: Boonville New Harmony Road to Petersburg Road to Green River Road to Ruston Avenue.
  • East Border: Warrick County line
  • South Border: A line running parallel to Hillsdale Road to Highway 57
  • West Border:  Highway 41

The majority of teachers for the new facility are expected to come from the current staff at Oak Hill and Scott Schools.

Informational letters are being sent tonight to current Scott and Oak Hill families and a meeting for families is planned for Wednesday, Dec. 16, at 7:30 p.m. at North High School, Room C221.
Proposed Boundaries:

New Elementary School Final Presentation 12-14-15

OED Awards UE $90,000 Community Conservation Challenge Grant

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The University of Evansville has announced that the U.S. Department of Energy and the Indiana Office of Energy Development’s Community Conservation Challenge has awarded $90,580.37 to a collaboration between UE and Carver Community Organization. The award is for the Evolving Evansville Energy (eCubed) group, led by UE Assistant Professor of Physics Angela Reisetter in conjunction with students in UE’s Alternative Energy class. The eCubed group partners with the wider community on alternative energy-related projects. This specific project focuses on Carver, which is a social service not-for-profit in Evansville, Indiana, that provides community education, daycare, and senior service programs.

The grant will provide funding to install LED lighting throughout Carver’s Neighborhood Center and Senior Services Center, replacing over 1,600 older, less efficient fluorescent bulbs. The new light bulbs will save Carver at least 3,000 kWh of energy a month and reduce electric bills substantially.  In addition, 90 solar panels will be installed on the Neighborhood Center’s roof, reducing the energy use and cost even further. The project will save Carver Organization money over the next 30 years, allowing those resources be put toward funding more community programs and services. The solar panels will also be a public education tool in a prominent downtown location, visible evidence that solar power makes sense both environmentally and economically in Evansville.

“It’s exciting to be part of this collaboration between UE and Carver, using grant funds to make a difference in the community both through energy cost savings and through environmental benefits,” states Reisetter.  “We hope this will help to truly evolve Evansville’s energy supply and change how we see alternative energy.”

David Wagner, executive director of Carver, explains that the “investments of the Indiana Community Conservation Challenge program grant, University of Evansville students and faculty, and the natural and financial resources reclaimed by Carver Community Organization will have an immense long term impact on generations to come.”

“Carver will be able to redirect financial resources to elevate the quality of existing programs and develop programs to meet new community needs,” he adds. “We hope this will be an emulated model of environmental stewardship to propel a paradigm shift in Evansville and elsewhere.”

The Alternative Energy class is part of the GAP program at UE, an innovative, project-based class that bridges the gap between classroom learning and real-world problems. In October, the eCubed team placed second in UE’s annual Changemaker Challenge, a competition challenging students to find innovative solutions to strengthen Evansville. As part of that challenge, they organized an awareness campaign on the UE campus about energy efficiency and alternative energy. Both the GAP program and the Changemaker Challenge are programs of the Institute for Global Enterprise which is supported by a generous grant from Lilly Endowment Inc.

“Rick Stein on Basketball” radio show premieres Wednesday

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University of Southern Indiana Women’s Basketball Head Coach Rick Stein and USI Men’s Basketball play-by-play commentator Dan Egierski will debut a new radio show, “Rick Stein on Basketball”, Wednesday night, live from St. Phillips Inn, located off Upper Mount Vernon Road on Evansville’s Westside.

 

The “Rick Stein on Basketball” radio show will be aired from 7-8 p.m. on WEOA 98.5 FM and 1400 AM as well as online at www.weoa985fm.com. The show will feature live comments from Stein about the Screaming Eagles’ recent games and upcoming opponents; insight into the women’s basketball program and women’s college basketball; and live interviews with players from the team.

 

Dates for the shows are December 16, January 13, January 27, February 10, February 24, and a date in March that is to be determined.

 

“Rick Stein on Basketball” dates and times:

 

December 16: 7 p.m.

January 13: 7 p.m.

January 27: 7 p.m.

February 10: 7 p.m.

February 24: 7 p.m.

March: TBD

 

Governor Pence Appoints South Bend, Madison Executives to IEDC Board

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Governor Mike Pence today named Hoosier business leaders Dominic Grote and Mark Neal to the Indiana Economic Development Corporation (IEDC) Board of Directors.

 

“I am pleased to welcome Dominic and Mark to our team as we work to create more quality jobs for hardworking Hoosiers across the state,” said Governor Pence. “The state and the IEDC have worked tirelessly to create a top-ranked, business-friendly climate that supports continued growth and job creation while attracting new investment from around the globe. Their breadth of experience along with their commitment and service to the state of Indiana will be invaluable to our continued economic development efforts and to the Hoosiers we serve statewide.”

 

Dominic Grote, of Madison, serves as president and chief executive officer of Grote Industries, leading the company’s global operations since 2009. Grote joined the fourth-generation, family-owned business which manufactures and markets vehicle lighting and safety systems in 1993 and previously served as vice president of sales and marketing.

 

Grote is actively involved in industry associations, serving as past president and board member of the Transportation Safety Equipment Institute and former chairman of the associates for the Truck Trailer Manufacturers Association. He is a member of the Conexus Indiana Logistics Council and is active in Madison and Jefferson County economic and community development initiatives.

 

Grote is a graduate of Wharton’s advanced management program and earned an MBA from George Washington University. He holds a bachelor’s degree from Southern Methodist University and resides in Madison with his wife, Patti, and their five children.

 

Mark Neal, of South Bend, is the chief operating officer of Bradley Company, a commercial real estate solutions provider in Northern Indiana and Western Michigan. Prior to joining the company in January, Neal served as city controller for South Bend and as deputy mayor during Mayor Pete Buttigieg’s deployment to Afghanistan in 2014.

 

Prior to joining Mayor Buttigieg’s administration, Neal led his own executive and financial management consulting firm, KRS Financial, and previously served as vice president and chief financial officer for Press Ganey Associates in South Bend.

Neal graduated from the University of Notre Dame and earned an MBA from George Washington University. He serves on the board of directors of the YMCA of Michiana and is the incoming 2016 chief volunteer officer. He is also president of the Michiana chapter of Financial Executives International and serves on the board of directors of the South Bend Parks Department. Neal lives in South Bend with his wife, Kathleen, and their three children.

These appointments will be effective tomorrow, Dec. 15, following the Board’s vote on state matching funds for regional development plans through the Indiana Regional Cities Initiative. The appointment terms will expire in March 2017.

OAK RIDGE BOYS Christmas Night Out Tour

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Upcoming Events:
Dec. 16 – Blue Man Group

Dec. 21 -  Oak Ridge Boys

Jan. 17 – Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat

Jan. 21 – Centre’d On Kids “Charlotte’s Web”

Feb. 2 – Peppa Pig’s Big Splash

Feb. 19 – Stomp

Feb. 20 – Jeff Foxworthy & Larry The Cable Guy

Where else can you see the newest inductees to the Country Music Hall of Fame for only $42.50!
Oak Ridge Boys

The newest inductees into the Country Music Hall of Fame – the Oak Ridge Boys kick off this huge show with over 40 years of award winning music. The hits are endless, but they will be packed in! Including “Elvira” and “Bobbie Sue” along with your other favorites! Then, after a short intermission, the stage is transformed and it’s Christmas! The trees are decorated, the snow is falling and Santa is there too! The Oak Ridge Boys treat you to Christmas favorites as only they can. From rollicking Santa songs to heartfelt standards, this show is a family favorite!
The Oak Ridge Boys Hits PLUS Christmas Show…it’s two huge Oak Ridge Boys shows in one magical evening!

Monday, December 21

at 7:30pm

OAK RIDGE BOYS

Christmas Night Out Tour

Check out this great YouTube video of past Christmas shows:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lmGyOkVkQlk

Here is a list of awesome videos – including the Country Music Hall of Fame announcement!
http://www.oakridgeboys.com/videos

find tickets
more link
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