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ST. MARY’S, UNIVERSITY OF EVANSVILLE TO OFFER FINANCIAL PREPAREDNESS CLASS FOR NEW AND EXPECTANT PARENTS

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st. marys logo Welcoming a new baby brings a lot of joy to families – but it can also bring many questions about finances. Preparing for the expenses of the first few months of life, costs for daycare, saving for college, and the overall costs of raising a child can leave parents feeling stressed.

That’s why St. Mary’s Hospital for Women & Children and the University of Evansville are teaming up to offer a financial preparedness class for new and expectant parents – whether they are having their first child or welcoming another baby to the family. The class is set for Wednesday, April 1st  from 6:30 – 8:30 PM in the St. Mary’s Gift Conference Room, located just off the lobby of the Hospital for Women and Children.

Dr. Yasser Alhenawi, Assistant Professor of Finance at the University of Evansville, will address topics including:

  • Household financial planning
  • Taxes and insurance
  • Resources available for those needing assistance

The class is free, but registration is required. To reserve a spot, go to stmarys.org and click the “Class or Event” tab, or call Terry Cooper, Perso

Governor Pence to Chair Board Meeting, Visit Wayne County School Tomorrow

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Indianapolis – Governor Mike Pence will Chair the Indiana Economic Development Corporation Board of Directors meeting tomorrow in Richmond. Later in the afternoon, he will visit fourth graders at Fairview Elementary School. Details below.

 

Thursday, March 12:

 

11:00 a.m. EDT – Governor Pence to Chair the Indiana Economic Development Corporation Board of Directors meeting

*Media are welcome to attend.

Osborn, 2350 Salisbury Road, Richmond

 

1:30 p.m. EDT – Governor Pence to visit fourth graders at Fairview Elementary School

*Media are welcome to attend and are asked to check in at the front desk.

Fairview Elementary School, 60 Northwest L Street, Richmond

FOOD INTERVENTION, GOVERNMENT STYLE

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Eric Allie / Cagle Cartoons

“All right, tubby, if you aren’t going to stop sitting in front of the TV, eating fatty and sugary treats, maybe the government should force you to change your ways.”

“Force me to change my ways? But I know what foods do and don’t make me tubby. I choose to live this way.”

“Yeah, and that’s why the federal committee responsible for nutrition guidelines, the Dietary Guidelines Advisory Committee (DGAC), says it needs to step in.”

“What do you mean, ‘step in’?”

“DGAC just released a far-reaching 571-page report that gives proposed recommendations to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and the U.S. Department of Agriculture that explain how to ‘transform the food system’ and, hopefully, make Americans less fat!”

“What kind of proposed recommendations?”

“Well, according to The Associated Press, they are calling for interventions by trained weight-management interventionists in health-care settings, community locations and worksites.”

“Interventions?”

“Sure, DGAC also called for interventions into public policy that would limit access to high-calorie grub in government-owned buildings, limit the ability of fatty-foods companies to advertise their goods, and tax salty and fatty treats.”

“They want to tax my junk food?”

“Sure. They are thinking they can use tax revenues, based on foods that aren’t so good for us, to fund healthy-eating education and obesity-prevention programs.”

“Who doesn’t know that cakes and sweets and other delicious treats are high in calories or that vegetables are good for us? We choose one over the other aware of the consequences.”

“But you’re not getting with the program, are you? DGAC is not just coming after your treats, either. They’re coming after you and the way you behave.”

“It’s none of the government’s business how I behave!”

“But that’s not what the government thinks. You would admit that you spend way too much time sitting in front of the tube. That is bad for your health. And, when you consider how much health care is costing the government these days, your behavior is now the government’s concern.”

“So what does DGAC want to do to prevent sedentary behavior?”

“It recommends coaching and counseling sessions and peer-based support programs. It also likes the idea of using electronic monitoring devices to limit screen time. According to AP, that idea ‘came from The Community Guide, a group affiliated with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which reviewed studies that used an electronic monitoring device to limit screen time of teenagers.’”

“They want to use high-tech surveillance to stop tubby American people from watching television?”

“You have to admit, you are doing a poor job on your own. Their intentions are good. They want you to stop eating so much meat, too, in favor of plant-based foods, as it is good for you and the environment!”

“What the heck does the environment have to do with my dinner choices?”

“Well, DGAC says it is also concerned about the effects of your diet on climate change. It recommends a Mediterranean-style diet with lots of vegetables, since that produces fewer greenhouse gas emissions than the beef-loving American diet.”

“If God didn’t want us to eat beef, why did he make it taste so good?”

“Look, DGAC’s conclusion is that personal health must become a human right. If you aren’t on board, you still have a chance to provide public comment before final dietary guidelines are released later this year.”

“But doesn’t every human already have the right to eat healthy? Nobody is forcing potato chips down our throats. I just get awfully uneasy when the government uses good intentions to force specific behaviors on citizens. What are they going to forbid next, coffee?”

“DGAC says it’s OK to drink three to five cups of coffee a day — but not more.”

“Why not?”

“I think it’s because more coffee makes people crabby and more likely to vote for Republicans.”

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©2015 Tom Purcell. Tom Purcell, author of “Misadventures of a 1970’s Childhood” and “Comical Sense: A Lone Humorist Takes on a World Gone Nutty!” is a Pittsburgh Tribune-Review humor columnist and is nationally syndicated exclusively by Cagle Cartoons Inc. For info on using this column in your publication or website, contact Sales@cagle.com or call (805) 969-2829. Send comments to Tom at Purcell@caglecartoons.com.

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.

Indiana State Bar Association to honor former Chief Justice Randall T. Shepard

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Indiana State Bar Association (ISBA)

Reception to honor former Chief Justice Randall T. Shepardimage001

Thursday, March 12, 2015 | 6 p.m. (CDT)

Old Courthouse

201 N.W. 4th Street
Evansville, IN 47708

The ISBA Leadership Development Academy (LDA) inaugural class will honor former Chief

 Justice Randall T. Shepard and his longtime service to the community by presenting him with a plaque to hang outside the “Randall T. Shepard Courtroom” in the Old Courthouse. The plaque will provide biographical information and context for the courtroom dedication, which occurred n 2011. Additionally, the LDA inaugural class will provide an endowment to the Evansville Bar Foundation for the creation of a Shepard Lecture Series, which will bring influential speakers to Evansville to present on topics such as the rule of law, professionalism and leadership.

The Academy is a statewide leadership program established to empower and develop lawyers to be informed, committed and involved so that they may fill significant leadership roles in local and state bar associations, local communities and organizations and to serve as role models in matters of ethics and professionalism. The 25 members participate in five sessions featuring professional facilitators and prominent speakers from various disciplines to inform participants about leadership principles and techniques, the importance of effective leaders in organizations to maximize efficiency and effectiveness, and the challenges and rewards of leadership in action.

Dr. Bucshon Announces 2015 Congressional Art Competition

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Winner to receive a free trip to Washington, DC and have his or her artwork displayed in the U.S. Capitol for one year

Today, Representative Larry Bucshon, M.D. (IN-08) announced his 2015 8th District Congressional Art Competition open to all students currently enrolled in a high school located in the 8th District.

 

Bucshon holds the 8th District Congressional Art Competition every year, in concert with Representatives nation-wide, to recognize and encourage the artistic talent of high school students.

 

Participants must submit two-dimensional artwork up to 28 inches by 28 inches by 4 inches (including the frame) that weighs no more than 15 pounds.

 

All submissions must be delivered to one of Bucshon’s district offices by Friday, April 25th.  Following the submission deadline, all submitted artwork will be displayed for public viewing during a Gallery Show at the Arts Council of Southwestern Indiana where an expert panel will select a winner.

 

The winner will be announced by Bucshon and the expert panel on May 4, 2015. His or her artwork will be displayed for one year in the U.S. Capitol alongside artwork from other contest winners nation-wide.

 

The winner will also receive two free roundtrip airline tickets to Washington, D.C., a gift card for a hotel, a tour of the U.S. Capitol, and an invitation to the Congressional awards ceremony.  At the end of the year, the winning artwork will be returned to the student.

 

Competition information, rules, checklist, and release form are available at http://bucshon.house.gov/serving-you/art-competition.  In addition, art teachers at the 8th District high schools have been sent packets of information to help students along the process.

Students may also contact Samantha in Bucshon’s Evansville District Office at 812-465-6484 for more information.

 

WHAT IF THE SEAL WHO SHOT BIN LADEN HAD BEEN A WOMAN?

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Adam Zyglis / Buffalo News

By Jason Stanford

If I told you Warren Buffett had a stock tip, you’d listen, right? Would you see a movie if Meryl Streep recommended it? Of course you would. You look like a smart fella. It just stands to reason. Some expertise is unimpeachable.

So if the member of SEAL Team Six who shot Osama bin Laden had an opinion on whether women could meet the grueling demands places on Navy SEALs, you’d better sit up and listen.

“Absolutely,” former Chief Petty Officer Robert O’Neill recently said.

The Armed Services are taking the rest of the year to evaluate which jobs in the military should be opened to women, and then Defense Secretary Ashton Carter will make the final determination. In his confirmation hearings, he said he was “certainly committed to gender neutral standards” and “strongly incline[d] towards opening [military positions] all to women.” Some of the more than 200,000 military jobs now closed to women will likely be opened.

We’ve been at war for so long now that letting women serve openly in combat occupies two different worlds. It sounds both like a radical strike against tradition and something I thought we had done a long time ago. A 2013 Pew Research Center poll found that two-thirds of Americans support the change. This is a change whose time has come, and in some ways—280,000 female troops have served in Afghanistan and Iraq—it has already come and gone.

We’ve got a long way to go before our military can take the best man for the job even if it’s a woman—hey guys, it happens—but some males-only bastions are opening up. Last month, the Army opened 4,100 special operations positions to women, and six female soldiers completed the Ranger Training Assessment Course. Next month, they’re headed to Ranger School while 80 more female soldiers are coming up behind them.

But even if some of them make it all the way through Ranger School and earn their Ranger Tab, they still won’t be able to serve in the 75th Ranger Regiment. For now, that’s boys only. You want to tell a woman with a Ranger Tab she’s not good enough for the Rangers because she doesn’t have boy parts? Good luck, fellas.

As messed up as that is, the Army Rangers and even the Marines are at least experimenting with letting women prove they have what it takes. The SEALs aren’t even letting women go through the training. To O’Neill, SEAL training should weed out the weak, not the women.

“It is the toughest in the world,” O’Neill said. “It’s tough physically. But it comes to a mental spot where you need to talk yourself into doing more. And you can convince your body through your mind to do anything and I think a lot of women are mentally tougher than men. Like I said, if they don’t lower the standards. If they can do the amount of pull ups, do the slide for life, get over the cargo net, and carry the log then, yeah.”

I looked up the “slide for life.” It’s about a thousand times harder than my morning workout, and I’m being kind.

To be sure, letting women compete for any job they qualify for in the military could make some men uncomfortable. But they said the same thing about letting people of color to serve equally and allowing gays and lesbians to serve openly. And for that matter, there’s a reason we don’t call them “firemen” or “policemen” anymore. If you have a problem with that, in a couple years you might be able to take it up with a female Commander-in-Chief.

Or you could ask O’Neill what he would have thought if a woman was in SEAL Team Six when they got bin Laden. There’s some controversy of whether he really did shoot bin Laden, but ask yourself: Does it matter if it was O’Neill? What about if a black SEAL shot him? Would it matter if a gay SEAL had put a bullet in bin Laden’s head? What if it had been a woman?

I don’t know. I’m no expert.

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

ST. MARY’S HEALTH RESCHEDULES HIP 2.0 APPLICATION ASSISTANCE EVENT

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St. Mary’s Health is offering an application assistance event for insurance through the Healthy Indiana Plan (HIP 2.0). This is a reschedule from a snowed out February 17th event.

Applications for HIP 2.0 are being accepted now. St. Mary’s Health Access Advocates will be available to assist the uninsured. They will offer help navigating the application process. Low-income, non-disabled adults ages 19 to 64 with incomes of up to $16,297 annually or $33,307 for a family of four are generally eligible to participate in the Healthy Indiana Plan. Those interested are encouraged to schedule an appointment by calling 812.485.5864. Walk-ins are welcome.

VANDERBURGH COUNTY FELONY CHARGES

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

 Below is a list of felony cases that were filed by the Vanderburgh County Prosecutor’s Office on Monday, March 09, 2015

Isaac D. Burney                    Child Molesting-Level 3 Felony

Child Molesting-Level 4 Felony

Myceisha Hunter                      Battery on Person Less Than 14 Years Old-Level 6 Felony

Neglect of a Dependent-Level 6 Felony

Operating a Vehicle as an Habitual Traffic Violator-Level 6 Felony

Resisting Law Enforcement-Class A Misdemeanor

Michael Vincent Murr  Operating a Motor Vehicle After Forfeiture of License For Life-Level 5 Felony

Kenneth Colbert, Jr.               Dealing in Methamphetamine-Level 4 Felony

Dealing in Cocaine-Level 4 Felony

For further information on the cases listed above, or any pending case, please contact Kyle Phernetton at 812.435.5688 or via e-mail at kphernetton@vanderburghgov.org

Under Indiana law, all criminal defendants are presumed to be innocent until proven guilty by a court of law