Home Blog Page 6237

Newburgh Museum Is Having A Special Holiday Display

2

A late 19th-century family holiday is the focus of an exciting new exhibit at the Newburgh Museum beginning Saturday, November 22nd. The special holiday display, “I’ll Be Home For Christmas,” will feature the view of a couple as they await the train to journey home for the holidays. At home the parlor is complete with a six-foot feather tree and gifts ready to be opened. A large Dickens village will also be on display along with other Christmas collectibles.

The Newburgh Museum’s “Notable Women of Newburgh” display, featuring iconic weather reporter Marcia Yockey, also continues through December.

The museum is open on Wednesdays and Saturdays from 11:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. Beginning November 29th and continuing through December 28th the museum will have extended hours and be open until 4:00 p.m. on Saturdays, and also on Sundays from 1:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m. Private group tours are also available by appointment.

The Newburgh Museum cares for, showcases, and interprets authentic pieces of Newburgh history. It is conveniently located on the first floor of the Old Newburgh Presbyterian Church at the corner of State and Main Streets in downtown Newburgh.

Please visit www.NewburghMuseum.com or call (812) 853-5045 for more information.

Vanderburgh County Recent Booking Report

0

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 November 22, 2014

0

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

EPD Activity Report

UNANIMOUS FOR MURDER, A NOVEL

0

Gavel Gamut

By Jim Redwine

UNANIMOUS FOR MURDER, A NOVEL

CHAPTER ELEVEN

Sarah Jones had forgiven Henry for his weakness. When she thought about him the memories were mostly regrets, not anger. She remembered how as a twenty year old bride she had been impressed by the forty year old business man who was respected by the Posey County community and who, when he touched her, was gentle and unhurried. They had dreamed of children and success together, but when no children came, Henry gradually drew away. What Sarah never understood, because Henry was too embarrassed to discuss it, was that Henry’s retreat into work was not due to disappointment with Sarah, but himself.

Because Henry’s first love, whom he kept secret from Sarah, had a child by another man, Henry knew the problem lay with him. While their love for one another was sufficient compensation for Sarah, Henry’s inability to defeat his bitterness made the lonely Sarah vulnerable to young Daniel Harrison, Jr. by whom she had Hattie. Hattie’s birth lit the conflagration of murder and destruction sparked by Henry’s embarrassment and self-loathing.

Sarah knew Henry was not a cruel man. On his own he would have never murdered anyone, especially Daniel Harrison, Jr. Henry and Da, what everyone called Daniel, had formed a close bond when Da’s mother, Elizabeth Harrison, would bring Da with her when she cleaned the Jones’ home. Henry had enjoyed the light skinned youngster’s antics, and he had even started to teach him about Henry’s Pittsburgh Coal Company business. But when Henry’s white friends, William Combs and George Daniels, called Da Henry’s Colored apprentice, Henry’s insecurity sabotaged the opportunity for a vicarious relationship among Henry, Sarah and Da.

Henry may have been with Combs and Daniels when Daniel Harrison, Jr., was thrown into the firebox of that steam locomotive on October 10, 1878, but Sarah had never believed the man who was her first love was responsible. Henry’s suicide note and will recognizing his own sins and naming Hattie as an heir proved to Sarah that Henry was not evil, but weak. She found she still loved him for the early years and most of all for accepting Hattie as the child they had so desperately wanted together.

Hattie’s biological father, Daniel Harrison, Jr., may have been legally an African American, but Hattie looked white. She had brown hair, brown eyes and the powerful physique of her father, who was a descendant of the gigantic ancient Saos people from Chad in north central Africa.

By the time she reached puberty Hattie had grown into a tall mirror image of her beautiful mother. She also had read all of the avant-garde writings of one of Sarah’s heroines, the New Harmony, Indiana feminist, Frances (Mad Fanny) Wright, who believed that slavery, marriage and religion were equal partners in the subjugation of blacks and women.

Hattie studied Wright and learned from Sarah how the legal system in southwestern Indiana had allowed the murder of her father and the banishment of her and her mother. Sarah did not want Hattie to grow up as Sarah had, naïve and vulnerable. Sarah did not shelter Hattie from the facts of her history. But the history lessons did not shield Hattie from her life in segregated Tulsa. The locales changed but prejudices remained. It was these damaging prejudices that brought Hattie to her death in 1920 at age forty-three. The Tulsa race riots were to blame.

Hattie’s youth was filled with stories of what had occurred in Posey County, Indiana before her mother and her friends Ajax and Jane (Harrison) Crider had fled Indiana for the Oklahoma Indian Territory in the autumn of 1878. Hattie passed these bitter memories on to the younger Ajax Crider, Jr. who was raised with Hattie in Tulsa and the Colored community at Langston, Oklahoma.

When Hattie was killed by a white mob, the then thirty year old Ajax Crider, Jr. lost his surrogate older sister. His anger and hatred, along with Hattie’s stories of Posey County, were deeply ingrained in Ajax and in Hattie’s only child, Elizabeth, who was born when Hattie was barely into puberty.

Elizabeth was the product of a rape that occurred during a trip Hattie and Sarah took to the Osage Indian Nation. They had gone to visit Sarah’s friends with whom she had fled from Indiana, Jenny Bell, Emma Davis and Ed Hill. All Hattie could relate of the encounter was that the man was a large Indian who never uttered a word when he dragged her into the shadows as she was reading alone away from the house. He covered her head with a blanket to muffle her screams and left her badly beaten. Sarah cursed the rapist but loved the child whom she had Hattie name Elizabeth after Elizabeth Harrison. When Hattie was killed, Sarah raised Elizabeth with the help of Jane Crider. Elizabeth grew up with Ajax, Jr. to look after her and tell her of the tragedies that defined them.

“Voter ID laws reduce Indiana’s election turnout”

3
 

INDIANAPOLIS - The newspaper editorial below was recently published in the Terre Haute Tribune-Star. I wanted to make sure you had a chance to read it for yourself.

With the 2014 elections past and some folks looking over “what happened”, let’s keep our perspective: not dwell on what happened, but look to the future.

The following newspaper editorial talks about what we know to be fact and not “spin.”

The fact is that the Indiana State Legislature has made it so difficult to vote that many of the people I talk with just didn’t participate. Their fault, yes. But what about the responsibility of the Legislature to the American promise?

Why should an elderly woman who never missed an election have to resign to an absentee ballot because she can’t stand in line or walk the distance to the vote center from the drop off and doesn’t trust the travel boards offered her?

Why should a young person…having moved to Evansville within the last 30 days…have to forfeit his right to vote because he didn’t meet the deadline?

And what about the infamous photo ID? If the majority party feels it so important, then set up alternative sites at the churches for the photo shoot. Supporters of the new law have accepted the unrealistic and out-of-touch assumption that everyone has access to the BMV for their photo. Well, the lady living in the high-rise doesn’t and never will but she, like me and you who vote, has a right to participate.

Changes must be made. It is past time.


Editorial: “Voter ID laws reduce Indiana’s election turnout”

      A decade ago, Indiana legislators worked hard to address an imaginary voting problem.

It’s time they worked even harder to fix a real one.

The Hoosier state ranks at the bottom in citizen participation in elections.

This month, a mere 28 percent of the state’s voting-eligible population — a measure of people who could vote, regardless of their registration status — voted, according to early projections by the United States Election Project, based at the University of Florida. Those calculations put Indiana dead last in America in turnout.

The Indiana voting system deserves most of the blame. It is true that the pathetic turnout for the 2014 election can partly be attributed to the low-profile offices at stake. Once every 12 years, the ballot features no races for president, U.S. Senate or governor. That was the case on Nov. 4. But a smaller percentage of Hoosiers cast ballots election after election, compared to residents of other states, including 2008 when Indiana turnouts peaked.

Instead of being a calendar quirk, the small slice of participants this year illuminates a larger, systemic problem. Actually, it is a bundle of problems. The voter photo ID law lurks near the core of that bundle. Statehouse Republicans enacted the ID requirement in 2005. Their publicly stated reason was to prevent voter fraud. That sounds noble, but no such problem existed here or in any of the other states with Republican-led legislatures that caught onto the idea.

It was an ingenious tactic. Pretending to eradicate fraud, the ID laws in reality made it harder for two Democratic-leaning segments of the population, the poor and elderly, to vote. Voter ID laws, on average, decrease turnouts by 4 to 5 percentage points, according to Michael McDonald, the University of Florida political scientist overseeing the Elections Project.

Indiana also maintains a 1913-era registration deadline.

Voters must be registered a month before the election, well before most people pay attention to the campaigns. In light of 21st-century technology and the voter ID law itself, the 29-days-before deadline makes no sense. State officials point proudly to Indiana’s long early voting period, but it begins, coincidentally, 29 days before the election.

If other Midwestern states, including Iowa, Wisconsin and Minnesota, manage to register voters on Election Day in person, surely Indiana could register early voters on site.

There’s more. Indiana also clings to America’s earliest poll-closing time on Election Day at 6 p.m., barely an hour after most people wrap up their work day.

Unlike 33 other states, Indiana requires an excuse for people mailing in an absentee ballot. Its legislative districts are redrawn every 10 years by the political party in power so the borders isolate areas traditionally supporting the opposing party. Thus, races in all nine Indiana congressional districts this year were slam dunks for incumbents; and in the state legislative races, 69 of 125 seats up for grabs featured only one uncontested candidate.

The state has implemented some honorable gestures to boost voting, but those efforts will yield only negligible results until the most obvious barriers are removed.

Almost three-quarters of eligible adults had no hand in selecting their state and federal representatives on Nov. 4. That’s a genuine problem in need of substantive action.

Tribune-Star, Terre Haute

Catch the Latest Edition of “The Indiana State Police Road Show” 

0

Indiana – Catch the latest edition of the “Indiana State Police Road Show” radio program every Monday morning at your convenience.

This week’s show features Indiana State Police Sergeant Ernie Alder, retired Public Information Officer from the Connersville Post. Ernie is considered the “father” of the Indiana State Police Youth Services program. He discusses the Indiana State Police camps and how it all began in 1969.

Download the program from the Network Indiana public website at www.networkindiana.com. Look for the state police logo on the main page and follow the download instructions. The ISP Road Show can also be viewed via YouTube.

Go to https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCu5Bg1KjBd7H1GxgkuV3YJA or visit the Indiana State Police website athttp://www.in.gov/isp/ and click on the YouTube link. This 15 minute talk show concentrates on public safety and informational topics with state wide interest.

The radio program was titled “Signal-10” in the early sixties when it was first started by two troopers in northern Indiana. The name was later changed to the “Indiana State Police Road Show” and is the longest continuously aired state police public service program in Indiana.

Radio stations across Indiana and the nation are invited to download and air for FREE this public service program sponsored by the Indiana State Police Alliance and Cops for Kids, a subsidiary of the Indiana State Police Alliance.

Pre-K applications now available in Allen, Lake, Marion and Vanderburgh counties

0

By Lesley Weidenbener
TheStatehouseFile.com

INDIANAPOLIS – Families in four of the five counties that are part of a state pre-kindergarten pilot can now sign up to receive a grant for the program.

Children eligible for the first phase of the pilot will include 4-year-olds living in Allen, Lake, Marion or Vanderburgh counties who will start kindergarten in the fall of 2015. The counties will start with limited programs in January serving about 400 children.

Jackson County is also part of the pilot but the program there won’t be available until fall 2015. Eventually, the pilot program is expected to serve roughly 2,000 students in the five counties.

To qualify, a student’s family must have household income of no more than 127 percent of the federal poverty level. For a family of three, that’s no more than $25,133 per year.

The state’s Office of Early Education and Out-of-School Learning will take applications through Dec. 15. A few days later, the state will use a lottery process to determine grant recipients if there are more qualified applicants than slots. Families will be notified if a student receives a grant.

Parents of children who receive grants can choose from a list of eligible, enrolled On My Way Pre-K programs. Approved pre-K programs may be located in a public or private school, licensed child care center, licensed home or registered ministry as long as that program meets the quality requirements and is registered as an On My Way Pre-K Provider.

Families may choose from a program that is full-day or part-time, as well as from programs that end with the school year or continue through the summer. A list of approved pre-K providers will be made available in December and posted online. Families who need help finding an approved pre-K program can also call 800-299-1627 for assistance from an early learning referral specialist.

To apply in Allen County click here.

To apply in Lake County click here.

To apply in Marion County click here.

To apply in Vanderburgh County click here.

For instructions on how to complete the application click here.

State’s unemployment rate holds steady at 5.7 percent

0

By Hannah Troyer

TheStatehouseFile.com

INDIANAPOLIS – The state’s unemployment rate held steady at 5.7 percent for the month of October.

The private sector added 2,500 manufacturing jobs during the month – ranking Indiana third in the nation for manufacturing job growth.

Similarly, the transportation and utility trades added 3,300 jobs in October – placing the state 10th in the nation for that sector.

The professional and business services sector saw a decrease of 2,200 jobs for the month, while available construction jobs decreased by 900.

Indiana House Minority Leader Scott Pelath, D-Michigan City, said the state’s job growth isn’t necessarily benefiting the middle class.

“We may continue to keep our unemployment rate at 5.7 percent, and yes, our leaders may continue to roll out figure after figure from business types that tell us we have a wonderful business climate,” Pelath said. “But there are numbers out there that should give all of us continued call for concern.”

In his response to the unemployment numbers, Pelath cited the current State Policy Report – published by the Federal Funds Information for States

– which ranks Indiana dead last in personal income growth from spring 2013 to spring 2014.

Pelath argued that while the state may be gaining jobs, they don’t offer high enough wages.

“We continue to create jobs that don’t pay well, which tends to defeat the idea that we have a growing economy,” he said. “A rising economic tide that lifts only a few and submerges the rest isn’t something to be bragging about. It’s something to stop.”

Hannah Troyer is a reporter for TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.

Commentary: What’s wrong with a little work?

1

By Abdul Hakim-Shabazz

IndyPoltics.Org

When did “work” turn into a four-letter word?

Did I miss something? I thought working, so you could be independent and not have to rely on others, was a good thing; apparently not to critics of Gov. Mike pence and his administration’s move that able-bodied individuals actually work or look for work in order to get food stamps.

Abdul Hakim-Shabazz is an attorney and the editor and publisher of IndyPoltics.Org.

The big change taking effect this spring is pretty straight-forward. If you are an able-bodied

Commentary button in JPG - no shadowadult with no kids, you can only get food stamps for three months out of a three-year period, unless you’re working or in a job training program for at least 20 hours a week.

The federal government had waived work requirement for Indiana, but the state decided not to reapply. However, if the economy heads south, it can. It’s estimated this would impact about 65,000 of the 877,000 people on food stamps to the tune of about $102 million annually. Critics lament this change, saying we’re picking on the poor, and, because there’s no living wage, there’s no incentive for people to go to work. Here’s an incentive to work, survival. If you want to eat, you’ll work.

Work is also not just good for body, but it’s good for the soul. Remember your first paycheck and how you felt that it was money that you earned and the feeling of independence that came with it? I still have a photocopy of my first check from my first full-time broadcaster job.  It was only $600, but in 1994, it was pretty good money for a 20-something doing radio news in Bloomington, Illinois. And I can’t put a price on the pride that came with it.

And on top of that, if you don’t give people a reason to get off the dole, they never will. It’s the family member who stays on your couch and keeps telling you that eventually he will look for a job. If you don’t light a fire under his rear end, eventually he will take root. You know exactly what I’m talking about so don’t even look at me funny.

And by the way, this isn’t the first time the state has had to light the fire under folks. A couple years ago, the Department of Workforce Development changed the rules so that when you filed for unemployment you had to report to Work One center on a regular basis to prove you were looking for work. Guess what? A few thousand people dropped off the unemployment rolls. Imagine that. Even in the latest HIP 2.0 proposed expansion the state has incorporated a jobs element so individuals can become self-sufficient.

So requiring someone who is able-bodied to either get a job or let the state help them find one in order to get assistance is not a bad thing. And yes, we should look at removing some of those barriers that keep those who made mistakes decades ago from finding stable work. And we should continue bipartisan efforts to close the skills gap and enhance the Hoosier workforce so more people can get those jobs that require more than a high school diploma, but not a four-year degree. Workforce Development offers a ton of programs to help people not only find jobs, but develop the soft skills they need to have a proper resume and have a successful interview.

This takes some effort on the part of the participant but don’t tell me that it’s better for an able-bodied person to get government assistance rather than gainful employment. The last time I checked, welfare and food stamps were supposed to act as trampolines, not hammocks. Work is not a four-letter word, but “lazy” is.

Abdul is an attorney and the editor and publisher of IndyPoltics.Org. He is also a frequent contributor to numerous Indiana media outlets. He can be reached at abdul@indypolitics.org.

WPSR to Host Christmas Countdown

0

Frosty the Snowman, Jingle Bells, Silent Night… Everyone has their favorite Christmas songs and EVSC’s radio station, WPSR, is looking for yours!

WPSR (90.7 FM) is asking individuals to vote for their favorite Christmas songs out of a list of the 20 most popular songs. The station will air a countdown on Christmas Eve and Christmas Day with the top 10 vote getters. Voting takes place now through December 15.

The countdown is the idea of Central High School Senior James Powell who also is enrolled in the Southern Indiana Career and Technical Center’s broadcasting class. Powell created the countdown and will also host the show that will air on Christmas Eve and Christmas Day.

To vote, listeners can visit http://goo.gl/uRqEFI.