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THE BIBLE AND IMMIGRATION

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THE BIBLE AND IMMIGRATION

By Susan Stamper Brown

People are tempted to blur moral lines when it comes to feel-good things like immigration. Last year, President Obama wanted us to support his views so desperately he pulled the Christianity card out of his back pocket, attempting to tie a moral equivalent to his immigration policies and the Mary and Joseph story. Obama’s version included a made-up scripture: “The good book says don’t throw stones in glass houses” and a couple other choice misquotes.

It would be swell to allow every Tom, Dick or Harry into the U.S., or any Mohamud, Osman, and Abil — in the case of the recent brutal murder of a Portland, Maine man named Freddy Akoa, who was allegedly beaten to death by three Muslim immigrants. While the Portland police did not divulge a motive, as of this writing, the Portland Press Herald reports a bloodstained Bible was found next to the victims’ head.
Meanwhile in other news, in mid-August an Uzbek refugee was convicted of three terrorism-related charges in Idaho for supporting a terrorist organization and gathering explosives to carry out an attack in the U.S. from his Boise apartment. In May, television station WUSA-9 reported a West African refugee was sentenced to ten years in prison for attempted rape of a woman — just nine days after his feet touched American soil.
Currently, President Obama’s nonsensical United Nations Refugee Resettlement Program grants permanent legal residency to almost 70,000 immigrants each year. You’d think after injecting Christianity into the immigration issue Obama’s program would grant refuge to persecuted minorities running for their lives, like the 27 Chaldean Christians who’ve been locked up in an ICE detention center in California for six months now. But, oh no.

The administration seems a wee bit biased these days. WND.com reports at least 90 percent of immigrant refuges thus far are Muslim. Muslims from jihad nations. With no vetting. Expecting a positive outcome from dropping massive amounts of mostly Muslim, non-English speaking, non-vetted refugees into any town the administration pleases is a fool’s errand at best and a national security threat of epic proportion.
President Obama’s ignoring his biggest priority – protecting us. Before you go all “Jesus-y” on me to shame me for my views, I wonder how many of you lock your doors at night to protect your family from intruders and look through the peephole before you open the door. It’s no different. The Bible says the “strangers and aliens” we are to care for should be legal, obeying the laws of the land. And they should graciously assimilate into the communities which welcome them.

We’ve had almost 50 cases where Muslim immigrants exited the U.S. to join terrorist groups like ISIS in Syria and al-Shabab in Somalia. Back in February, an FBI counter-terrorism top official, Michael Steinback, testified before a House Homeland Security committee admitting the U.S. is unable to vet Syrian refugees for terrorism connections.

The Obama administration approved 5,000 to 8,000 more Syrian refugees to immigrate here in 2016 despite the fact that back in June, Norwegian officials discovered several of the refuges seeking asylum in Norway under the same UN program were linked to terrorist groups. Fact is, ISIS promised to smuggle fighters into Europe and elsewhere disguised as refugees. During that Homeland Security hearing, Steinback said he’s “concerned” that bringing Syrian refugees poses a clear and present danger to Americans admitting, “We don’t have it under control.”

So what might Jesus do, you ask? I don’t know. I can tell you what I’d do. I’d probably kick around a few tables for twisting scriptures out of context and maybe call a few government officials “vipers” for betraying their oath to protect Americans. Or maybe I’d offer a trade like President Obama did for Bowe Bergdahl. Five anti-American progressives for one vetted immigrant.  Or, maybe I’d vote for Donald Trump… if he’d prove he’s a conservative.  But that might be a stretch.

Susan Stamper Brown Susan’s is a recovering political pundit from Alaska, who does her best to make sense of current day events using her faith. Her columns are syndicated by CagleCartoons.com.

DAVIESS COMMUNITY HOSPITAL MEDICAL CLINIC ADDS NEPHROLOGY SERVICES

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Beginning this month, Daviess Community Hospital’s Medical Clinic will offer Nephrology services provided by physicians with St. Mary’s Medical Group. The move is a result of the recent partnership between Daviess Community Hospital and St. Mary’s Health, which was announced last month.

Vijay Bhasin, MD, with St. Mary’s Medical Group Nephrology, will provide services for patients with kidney-related health issues. Bhasin will be available at the Medical Clinic twice monthly. He will see patients on the second Thursday of the month from 10 a.m. EST to 3 p.m. EST and on the third Friday of the month from 1 – 4 p.m. EST.

Bhasin earned board certification from the American Board of Internal Medicine. He received his medical degree from the Gov. Medical College Punjabi University in Punjab, India. He completed his residency at St. Luke’s Hospital in Bethlehem, PA, and a fellowship at the University of Vermont in Burlington, VT.

“We are excited to bring these services to the Daviess County community and its surrounding area. They will enhance our patients’ access to healthcare services in several key areas – making it easier and more convenient for them to get the care they need, when they need it” said David Bixler, CEO of Daviess Community Hospital.

Patent hub playing matchmaker for inventors, pro bono attorneys

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Marilyn Odendahl for www.theindianalawyer.com

In its overhaul of the U.S. patent system, the America Invents Act has been criticized for favoring large corporations over garage inventors, workshop innovators and small entrepreneurs.

Individuals who develop what could be the next great thing are at a disadvantage under the AIA’s first-to-file rule. Now, instead of being protected by the first-to-invent standard, which awarded the patent to the inventor regardless of when the application was submitted, independent innovators must race to the patent office or they could lose the rights to their idea.

The biggest obstacle to filing a patent application is the cost. It is a complicated, time-consuming and expensive process that usually requires the assistance of an attorney and can run into the thousands of dollars.

Under a mandate from Congress to help independent inventors, the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office started opening patent hubs around the country. Most recently, the federal agency tapped the Center for Intellectual Property Research at Indiana University Maurer School of Law to be the hub serving Indiana.

Essentially, the patent hub is a matchmaking service, said Norman Hedges, director of the Intellectual Property Law Clinic at IU Maurer. Inventors looking for help filing a patent application and IP lawyers searching for volunteer opportunities will be matched together to potentially begin a client-attorney relationship.

The hub, dubbed Patent Connect for Hoosiers, was unveiled Sept. 1 as part of IU Maurer’s Launch IP event at Eli Lilly and Co. headquarters in Indianapolis. IU Maurer’s IP faculty was joined by Christal Sheppard, director of the USPTO Midwest Satellite Office, and IP attorneys.

Both the law school’s IP clinic and the hub were lauded as meeting a need among small-business owners and helping Indiana’s economy grow.

“What you’re doing here is really (providing) the missing link that we’ve not been able to figure out statewide,” said keynote speaker Lt. Gov. Sue Ellspermann. “Putting those legal services (to work getting) trademarks, patents and helping in that commercialization of products is so important.”

Clinical attraction

The IP clinic first attracted the patent office to IU Maurer.

Traditionally, law school clinics provide hands-on experience for students in areas like family law, criminal justice and immigration. Intellectual property is not typically a clinical focus, but Mark Janis, director of the IU Maurer Center for Intellectual Property Research, argued that any nationally distinguished IP program should have a clinic.

Janis and former interim dean Hannah Buxbaum crafted a plan to start the clinic on a limited scale with funding from the law school and the IU Office of the Vice Provost for Research.

With the addition of Hedges, who developed the clinic to mimic a law firm, second- and third-year students help clients with their patent applications. The students get real-life experience with the patent process along with being mentored and having the chance to learn from their mistakes before they enter private practice.

“It’s absolutely giving them practical experience,” said Jessica Van Dalen, adjunct professor at the clinic. “A lot of the things they struggle with are things I struggled with either as a summer associate or as a first-year associate.”

Clients of the clinic have included individual inventors and small startup companies as well as referrals from the Crane Division of the Naval Surface Warfare Center in southern Indiana and the Indiana Small Business Development Center. It has also connected with students and faculty who are creating new products at the Purdue Foundry.

In January 2014, the clinic became part of the USPTO’s Law School Clinic Certification Pilot Program. It was certified in both patents and trademarks, one of only 18 law schools to gain a dual designation. The clinic must comply with the rigorous standards imposed by the pilot program, but a bonus is that the students are eligible to receive a temporary registration number to practice before the patent office.

Partnering with the USPTO on the patent hub was a natural extension of the clinic relationship. The hub operation integrated well with the clinic work and made IU Maurer one of only a handful of law schools running both an IP clinic and a patent hub.

IU Maurer Dean Austen Parrish said having both means two things for the Bloomington law school. They provide IP students with an experiential training, and they support the innovation economy in the state.

Although Indiana is not often lumped in with Silicon Valley or the North Carolina Research Triangle, Parrish said the innovation community here is doing great things. All that activity is creating a high demand for services offered by the clinic and the patent hub.

“I think legal services for entrepreneurs is something startups desperately need,” Parrish said. “There’s a massive demand for it. (The clinic and the hub are) going to have trouble, I think, making sure they can handle the workload.”

Connecting at the hub

The clinic and the hub are a one-stop shop for entrepreneurs in Indiana who need patent representation, Janis said. Some clients will be directed to the clinic, and others will be matched with attorneys offering their services pro bono through the hub.

IU Maurer has created a website, www.patentconnect.org, which will serve as the intake center for inventors needing help and attorneys wanting to volunteer their services. The hub will screen the inventors, allowing only those who qualify economically and have viable products into the network.

Once the website identifies a potential match, the attorney can either accept or decline. If the match is accepted, the hub steps out of the process and leaves the attorney and client to form a direct business relationship.

Van Dalen, who is also an IU Maurer 2010 graduate, accepted a pro bono client through Patent Connect for Hoosiers. An associate at Faegre Baker Daniels, Van Dalen often works with corporate entities, but the volunteer opportunity came with a higher level of excitement.

“Everyone is excited about their inventions, but for big corporations it can be a little more routine,” she explained. “I think there are times when some of that enthusiasm is sort of lost in the shuffle a little bit. … There is definitely a level of enthusiasm that single inventors have that I think can be lost on the bigger clients at times.”

Van Dalen’s client saw a need for storage containers that could be used around a house or for outside activities like picnics. Initially starting a business focusing on these containers, the client had enlisted a law firm. But recognizing the cost going forward, the inventor sought help from the patent hub.

Van Dalen and her colleagues at FaegreBD have filed an application for the client and have plans to continue representation through the entire process.

“It’s very exciting to see how enthusiastic they are not only about their invention, but also about the thought of their business going forward and how they maybe will make a difference in a community,” she said. “It’s so rewarding.”•

Indiana State Auditor Suzanne Crouch Selected CCO “Outstanding Community Service Award Winner”

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The City-County Observer is excited to announce State Auditor Suzanne Crouch as our next “Outstanding Community Services Award” (“MOLE AWARD”) winners for 2015. This years awards luncheon is held at Tropicana-Evansville Walnut rooms A and B. The registration begin at 11:30 am, the event officially starts at 12 noon on October 26, 2015. Reservations for this event may be obtain by calling Mollie Drake Schreiber at 812-760-4233 or e-email her at mdarke07@yahoo.com. Deadline for registration is October 15, 2014. Last years event was a sellout.

THIS YEARS OUTSTANDING COMMUNITY SERVICES (MOLE AWARD) WINNER is popular Indiana State Auditor Suzanne Crouch from Vanderburgh County.

Appointed as Indiana’s 56th State Auditor in January of 2014 and elected to that position in November 2014, Suzanne Crouch serves as the Chief Financial Officer for the State of Indiana. Auditor Crouch is a committed fiscal conservative who keeps taxpayers first, recognizing that each tax dollar is closely linked to the hard working Hoosier who earned it.

Before becoming Auditor, Crouch served as the State Representative for House District 78 which encompasses parts of Vanderburgh and Warrick Counties. She was elected to the seat in 2005, and served as the Vice Chairman of the Ways and Means Committee and on the Public Health Committee. While in the House, Crouch had several legislative accomplishments. She received the 2012 Public Policy Award from the Arc of Indiana for her work with people with disabilities and was named Legislator of the Year in 2011 by the Indiana Association of Rehabilitation Facilities.

Prior to serving in the House of Representatives, Crouch spent eight years as Auditor of Vanderburgh County. During that time, her office received its first clean bill of health in decades from the State Board of Accounts. Crouch then went on to serve as a Vanderburgh County Commissioner until joining the House. She presided as president of that body during her third year in office.

Auditor Crouch graduated from Mater Dei High School in Evansville. She then went on to receive her Bachelor’s Degree from Purdue University, majoring in Political Science. She has been married to her husband, Larry Downs, for 37 years and they have one grown daughter, Courtney.

Please take time and vote in today’s “Readers Poll”. Don’t miss reading today’s Feature articles because they are always an interesting read. Please scroll at the bottom of our paper so you can enjoy our creative political cartoons. Copyright 2015 City County Observer. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without our permission.

Children’s Center for Dance Education Hosts Open Auditions for The Children’s Nutcracker

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  Dance nonprofit, Children’s Center for Dance Education will host free open auditions for the 2015 touring ballet of The Children’s Nutcracker. Auditions will be this weekend, Saturday, September 12th from 10:30am to 3:00pm at the studio, located at 5900 Vogel Rd. Ste. A, Evansville, IN 47715. There is absolutely no cost to audition for a role. Auditions are broken up by age and skill level (see below).

Time: Age: Skill:
12:30-1:00pm 4&5 Beginners
1:00-1:30pm 6,7,&8 Beginners
1:30-2:15pm 8,9,&10 Intermediate
2:15-3:00pm 10+ Advanced

 

The newly selected 2015-2016 Touring Company will have their auditions from 10:30am-12:00pm. To see the list of Company and Pre-Company Dancers, visit childdance.org.

Questions about auditions or registering for dance classes may be directed to the studio by calling (812) 421-8600 or emailing adm.cc4de@gmail.com.

Police Attempt to Identify Suspects

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SPONSORED BY DEFENSE ATTORNEY IVAN ARNAEZ. 
DON’T GO TO COURT ALONE. CALL IVAN ARNAEZ @ 812-424-6671.

The below images are of subjects who are suspected of committing multiple thefts from night deposit boxes from local apartment communities during the last few weeks. The suspects are using a “fishing” device on a string to steal items from the night deposit boxes.

If anyone has knowledge about these crimes or the individuals’ identities, please call the Evansville Police Department at 436-7959, Crime Free Multi-housing Unit at 435-6116 or the WeTip line at 1-800-78-CRIME.

Note: Some of the images were taken with IR cameras and the tints and colors in the images will not be correct.

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Vanderburgh County Recent Booking Records

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SPONSORED BY DEFENSE ATTORNEY IVAN ARNAEZ. 
DON’T GO TO COURT ALONE. CALL IVAN ARNAEZ @ 812-424-6671.

EPD Activity Report

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SPONSORED BY DEFENSE ATTORNEY IVAN ARNAEZ. 
DON’T GO TO COURT ALONE. CALL IVAN ARNAEZ @ 812-424-6671.

Dr. Bryant Burkett, has joined Evansville Main Street Family Dental

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BRYANT P. BURKETT, DDS, JOINS 

EVANSVILLE MAIN STREET FAMILY DENTAL 

 Bryant P. Burkett, DDS, recently joined Patrick A. Tromley, DDS, at Evansville Main Street Family Dental.

Dr. Burkett is a recent graduate of Indiana University School of Dentistry, where he earned his Doctor of Dental Surgery degree. He received a Bachelor of Science degree in General Health Sciences from Purdue University.

At Evansville Main Street Family Dental, Dr. Burkett will offer a full range of dental services including: preventive and restorative dentistry, crown and bridge, prosthodontics, endodontics, extractions and pediatric dentistry.

Dr. Burkett is a member of the American Dental Association and the Indiana Dental Association. In his free time he enjoys golfing, running, biking and gardening.

Located at 431 Main Street in Evansville, Ind., Evansville Main Street Family Dental was established in 1992. Evansville Main Street Family Dental provides high quality dentistry and patient education. Appointments can be made by calling 812.423.3426.