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Governor, First Lady to Attend Annual Indiana Leadership Prayer Breakfast Tomorrow

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Governor to Sign “Right to Try” Bill

 

Indianapolis – Tomorrow, Governor Mike Pence and First Lady Karen Pence will attend the annual Indiana Leadership Prayer Breakfast, where the Governor will offer remarks. Later, Governor Pence will sign HEA 1065, or the “Right to Try” bill, which will allow terminally ill patients to receive experimental or nonconventional medical treatment if he or she meets certain requirements. Details below.

 

Tuesday, March 24:

 

7:15 a.m. EDT – Governor, First Lady to attend annual Indiana Leadership Prayer Breakfast; Governor to offer remarks

*Media are welcome to attend.

Indiana Roof Ballroom, 140 W. Washington Street, Indianapolis

 

12:00 p.m. EDT – Governor Pence to sign HEA 1065, or the “Right to Try” bill

*Media are welcome to attend.

Statehouse, Room 206, 200 W. Washington Street, Indianapolis

 

Governor Pence Statement Regarding Passage of SB 101, Religious Freedom

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Indianapolis – Governor Mike Pence issued the following statement after SB 101, religious freedom, passed the Indiana House 63 to 31 today.

 

“The legislation, SB 101, is about respecting and reassuring Hoosiers that their religious freedoms are intact.  I strongly support the legislation and applaud the members of the General Assembly for their work on this important issue.  I look forward to signing the bill when it reaches my desk.”

COMMON CORE TESTS ARE FAILURES

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By Jason Stanford

A 6th grader in East Texas recently challenged state lawmakers to do what she and every other public-school kid have to do during testing season: “Sit in a room for up to four hours, without talking, writing, drawing, reading, or using your cell phone.” Because millions of children are taking Common Core standardized tests this time of year, I did her one better. I took a 4th-grade English Language Arts practice test. The good news is I passed.

The bad news is that the test is basically worthless, highlighting the folly of using standardized tests to measure a child’s ability to read and write. And to the Texas 6th grader’s point, in no way whatsoever was I able to quietly sit still for that long. Of course, it didn’t take me four hours to complete the sample test. I don’t want to brag, but I’m very advanced for a 4th grader.

I took a sample test from the Smarter Balanced Assessment Consortium, one of two groups doing the Common Core testing. Twenty-one states belong to the SBAC, mostly on the west coast, the Black Hills, New England, and some of the Great Lakes area. Other states, such as Alabama, Alaska, Kansas, Pennsylvania, and Utah, have voted to pull out of SBAC mostly because their legislatures have political differences with President Obama, and not for any pedagogical reasons.

Common Core—originally a state-driven guideline to make sure Americans got a good education—isn’t a bad idea. Unfortunately, trying to measure the growth of a child’s mind with a standardized test just corrupts the whole process. To get students ready to take an English Language Arts test, they don’t do what you and I would recognize as reading and writing. An education that prepares a kid to take a standardized test is a perversion of the idea of education.

Completely absent from the sample test on English Language Arts was any literature, AKA the art of the English language. A nine-year-old in the English-speaking world is heir to a cultural fortune, including “James and the Giant Peach” by Roald Dahl, C.S. Lewis’ “The Chronicles of Narnia,” and “Charlotte’s Web” by E.B. White, among many others. Sadly, this canon is not aimed at our children.

Instead, a prepubescent test-taker will have to read antiseptic “selections.” In one passage that recalled Native American folk tales but was not described as such (depriving the student of any cultural appreciation of literature), a coyote dresses up like a bear to steal honey. It was so boring I had to make blinders of my hands to force myself to focus on the text.

Then there were the questions, some of which seemed confusing for a 9-year-old and some that puzzled a middle-aged columnist. One question asked which sentence out of a paragraph “best supports the inference that Coyote uses his imagination.” A kid could get tripped up on the word “inference,” and it was irrelevant to the concept being tested. Asking what “best shows Coyote uses his imagination” would have worked better.

Then there were the questions that made me want to strangle the committee that wrote this test. None of the possible answers for what “best describes the lesson Coyote learned” had anything to do with the real meaning of the parable, and a student is asked to decide whether a particular metaphor about a “tree’s belly” is humorous, playful, or surprising, even though humor is often playful and surprising. Maybe I shouldn’t be surprised that people who write standardized tests do not fundamentally understand humor.

The writing portion of the test was ludicrous. Students were given a business card-shaped rectangle in which to record their analysis. You could replace this entire test with a book report and come out ahead. Actually, you could probably buy every child in America first editions and come out ahead. The price tag on SBAC tests in California alone is $1 billion.

We’re so focused on measuring children that we’ve stopped developing them. These tests don’t measure what we want our children to learn and are a waste of money. That Texas 6th grader has a point. I can’t sit quietly. This test is failing our children.

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© Copyright 2015 Jason Stanford, distributed exclusively by Cagle Cartoons newspaper syndicate.

“Classic” Ann Landers

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Dear Ann Landers: I never have cheated on my wife and am absolutely certain that I never will. We have been married for five wonderful years, and our marriage is rock solid. Here’s the problem: About a year ago, during a moment of passion, I happened to call out the name of my wife’s best friend, “Annabelle.” You can imagine my wife’s reaction.
Annabelle is single, in her early 20s and good-looking, and she has a terrific figure. She moved out of town three years ago. I made it clear to my wife that nothing ever went on between Annabelle and me and that calling her name was just part of a harmless fantasy. I tried to explain that fantasies are normal and I have no intention of acting them out. My wife accepted this explanation, and things seemed to be going well. Now comes the hard part.
Annabelle visits us once a year and stays for a week. Her visit is coming up soon, and my wife has started to turn very cold. In fact, she’s downright hostile. I know she is afraid I will be attracted to Annabelle and feels threatened. What can I do to reassure her and get things back on track? — Faithful in Denver
Dear Denver: Because you have had sexual fantasies about Annabelle, your wife has some justification for feeling a bit threatened. Start immediately to line up some attractive men for Annabelle to go out with when she is visiting you. Make sure you are never alone with your guest, and most importantly, concentrate on finding a substitute fantasy woman. (Any star of stage or screen will do.) And be especially affectionate to your wife in Annabelle’s presence. She will appreciate it.
Dear Ann Landers: I have been going with a man for three years. “Jerome” has a 5-year-old daughter, and I don’t know how much longer I can tolerate that child. She tells her father where to sit, where to stand, when to go out and what to eat. She walks around his apartment and insists on holding his hand, no matter what he’s doing. She even goes to the bathroom with him. (He says she cries if he locks her out.) If she awakens in the middle of the night, he allows her to sleep with him.
Jerome is divorced, and his daughter spends two nights a week at his place. I realize she misses her father, but this seems to me a very unhealthy attachment. When she is with him, she won’t play with her toys or watch TV. She only wants to sit on his lap. This child has so many hang-ups it saddens me. Jerome says I am jealous of her, but I don’t believe this is true. What do you say, Ann? — Ready To Give Up in Richmond, Va.
Dear Richmond: Dump Jerome, unless you are willing to play second fiddle to that pathetic spoiled brat for the rest of your life. Unfortunately, her brattiness is not her fault. Her father (probably guilty about the divorce) has catered to the child to the extent that he is totally under her thumb. Adios, Jerome, and the sooner the better.
Forget to save some of your favorite Ann Landers columns? “Nuggets and Doozies” is the answer. Send a self-addressed, long, business-sized envelope and a check or money order for $5.25 (this includes postage and handling) to: Creators Syndicate, 737 3rd Street, Hermosa Beach, CA 90254. To find out more about Ann Landers and read her past columns, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.
ANN LANDERS (R)
COPYRIGHT 2014 CREATORS.COM

ST. MARY’S CELEBRATES SAFE KIDS DAY

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St. Mary’s Hospital for Women & Children and the Safe Kids Vanderburgh/Warrick County coalition is hosting Safe Kids Day. The event is free and open to the public on Wednesday April 8, from 4:00 p.m. -7:00 p.m. in front of the Hospital for Women and Children.

Safe Kids Day is a day to celebrate kids, prevent injuries and save lives. Most preventable injuries – things like car crashes, drownings, fires and falls – are the leading cause of death to kids in the United States. Around the world a million children die each year from preventable injuries.

Families are encouraged to attend the event.  We will have car seat checks, interactive games, bike safety videos, helmet safety information, Spot the Tot vehicle awareness, and water safety education. There will also be a fire truck onsite for the kids to see.

During the car seat checks, parents will learn about proper installation and use, as well as ensure their child is in the proper restraint for their size and weight. Children who use the car seat must be present.

Appointments are always available by calling the car seat hotline at 812-485-6777.

IS IT TRUE MARCH 24, 2015

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IS IT TRUE that last Wednesday (March 19, 2015) members from one of the most highly respected organization in this entire region reapproached Evansville Police Chief Billy Bolin about supporting the Narcan Rescue Kit program in order to assist in community policing efforts? …11 select members of the CONGREGATIONS ACTING FOR JUSTICE AND EMPOWERMENT met with Chief Bolin to present him with research that would show the need for a Narcan Rescue Kit to be placed in every squad car in Evansville?

IS IT TRUE this meeting only lasted less 7 minutes? …Chief Bolin refused to discuss Narcan Rescue Kit with the members of CAJE? …when pressed he said “We are done here” and told his receptionist to show them out (the back door) of his office? … he also told the members of CAJE that he that he has no intention of using Narcan Recuse Kit in his Department? …its also important to point out that Warrick and Vanderburgh Sheriff Departments use these kits?

IS IT TRUE the Narcan Rescue Kits can be “sprayed” into the nose of an overdosing user of opiate drugs (like OxyContin, Vicodin, or heroin) and keep them breathing and alive? …each year, overdose deaths from heroin and prescription drugs like OxyContin outnumber fatalities from murder, hepatitis or AIDS? … public health workers and private citizens in many states now have a weapon to combat opiate drug overdoses – a rescue kit that can save a life – for less than $50? …the rescue kit contains a prepackaged dose of an antidote drug called Narcan (the brand name for naloxone)? …when administered as a nasal spray within minutes of an overdose, Narcan can restore breathing (the cause of death in a drug overdose is usually loss of respiratory function)?

IS IT TRUE we are surprised by Chief Bolin’s insulting members of CAJE in the way he did …we are disappointed that he has forgotten he is hired help and the taxpayers are his bosses?  …we predict Mr. Bolin actions has cost the Mayor votes in this upcoming election?

IS IT TRUE we urge the Mayor to pull rank on Chief Bolin and sit down with members of CAJE and have a rational and calm discussion concerning this possible life saving project?

IS IT TRUE the CITY COUNTY OBSERVER would like to thank members of CAJE for doing great things for this community and the people who live here?

 We thank you for your support and look forward to bringing you the news in a way that not only brings you into the discussion but makes you feel compelled to participate.  The CCO is alive and well and remains your community watchdog?

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.

http://www.vanderburghsheriff.com/recent-booking-records.aspx

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.

EPD Activity Report

Reversal: Ex-AM General exec must go to court for compensation

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Dace Stafford for www.theindianalawyer.com

The ex-president, CEO and chairman of South Bend Humvee maker AM General will have to go to court to seek cash compensation that the company instead paid in the form of a promissory note, the Indiana Court of Appeals ruled Friday.

James A. Armour retired three years ago, and his employment agreement included a provision that part of his compensation was long-term incentive payments in an amount redacted by the trial court. The promissory note given to Armour in December 2012 said the note was due and payable in December 2015.

After AM General sued seeking a declaratory judgment that the note didn’t breach its obligations to Armour under the contract, Armour prevailed on a counter-claim and won summary judgment in St. Joseph Superior Court.

The Court of Appeals reversed, though, and Judge Melissa May wrote for the majority joined by Judge Ezra Friedlander that summary judgment was improper. They said an affidavit from an AM General human resources officer saying the contract didn’t address how the long-term incentive payments were to be made created a “genuine issue of material fact, including whether the promissory note tendered to Mr. Armour met the criteria for when an assignable promissory note is the equivalent of cash.”

Chief Judge Nancy Vaidik dissented and would have affirmed summary judgment in favor of Armour, writing that the affidavit didn’t create an issue of material fact. “This is because ‘payment’ has a specific meaning, and AM General’s Note to Armour does not qualify as a ‘payment.’”

The case is AM General, LLC v. James A. Armour, 71A03-1402-PL-58.

Free Change of Life Seminars offered at SWIRCA

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SWIRCA & More is excited to announce a new program we will be offering this spring called Boomer Bootcamp. Successfully plan for your retirement with this free unbiased seminar. Sessions are held Wednesday nights in April at SWIRCA & More. Topics include legal queries, health insurance, financial planning and end of life planning.

Attendance is free but spots are limited. Sign up for one or all sessions. Register today to ensure your place by calling SWIRCA & More at 812-464-7800.