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Love in the Cheap Seats

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LOVE IN THE CHEAP SEATS!candyLITTLE BIG TOWN
PAIN KILLER TOUR
find tickets
Buy two tickets for Little Big Town and pay the price of one!This offer is available now through March 11 and only online with Ticketmaster.This deal is for the last 4 rows in the balcony only so limited number of seats are available for this deal.

 

 

 

 

NBC’s Ridiculous Williams Suspension

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Brian Williams’ six-month suspension has fallen flat. His critics aren’t mollified. His supporters are clearly dispirited. Everyone knows this one is not over — though his tenure at NBC may very well be done.

The suspension isn’t going to work for the same reason his apology went nowhere. It resolves nothing.

Hubris. So many celebrities — be they politicians, journalists, artists — refuse to accept that the cover-up and obfuscation is always worse than the crime. Time and again, when honesty and humility beckon, they are nowhere to be found.

So it was with Richard Nixon. Had he accepted personal responsibility, immediately, and then taken the steps, immediately, to investigate and resolve the matter, there would have been no Watergate scandal marring his legacy.

Ronald Reagan did address Iran-Contra immediately, personally taking responsibility and firing staff responsible. But the body language of his administration and supporters (we were in that number) was different: The Contra cause was noble (and it was), therefore the funding was, well, clever. Except it was illegal.

Bill Clinton both lied (“Ah did nah have sexual relations with that woman”) and obfuscated (“it depends upon what the meaning of the word ‘is’ is”) and deserved his impeachment, removal from the bar and should have been removed from office for perjury.

The Williams explanation in his “apology” was a farce. He “misremembered” being hit by an RPG. For the love of God. This might be true if he had subsequently undergone a frontal lobotomy, otherwise it was not just untrue, it was impudent. Let them eat cake. He then added a new falsehood, suggesting the RPG had hit the helicopter in front of him when no such thing took place. And no small arms fire. And not injuries to his pilot. And …

Hillary Clinton is no different. She has yet to answer for Benghazi, hoping her media allies will help in the cover-up (which they’ve done diligently thus far). If forced to testify, she feigns anger, then tearful sorrow, all for the cameras and the evening news.

She still has to answer for the lies she told about Bosnia.

More important, she needs to come clean about the insulting explanation she provided.

In a speech at George Washington University on March 17, 2008 she recounted the story about her harrowing experience at the airport in Tuzla during the Bosnian war. “I remember landing under sniper fire. There was supposed to be some kind of a greeting ceremony at the airport, but instead we just ran with our heads down to get into the vehicles to get to our base.”

It was beyond dramatic. It was pure drama. As Media Research Center sleuth Rich Noyes discovered looking at news footage of that trip, nothing of the sort had occurred. There she was, smiling, standing in front of schoolchildren lined up on the tarmac. Accepting their flowers.

How to explain this dishonesty? Why, with another dishonesty, and even that only when growing public outrage threatened to derail her candidacy. She told a friendly audience, smiling, laughing, that by golly that was a whopper, wasn’t it? Yuk-yuk. She was tired. It was all because of “sleep deprivation.” Yuk-yuk. 

That was as dishonest as the original statement. Sleep deprivation can cause you to forget you were in Cairo when you stated you were in Cannes. Or that you met with Queen Sophia when it was Queen Elizabeth. But sleepiness does not cause a person to make up entire stories about ducking enemy sniper fire any more than misrememberance explains tall tales about RPG attacks.

Brian Williams lied. The honorable thing was to apologize, honestly and completely, and resign. His career would have been resurrected immediately. If he refused to, the honorable decision from Comcast/NBC was termination and a corporate apology (which they owed anyway). Neither happened. Instead it was a bizarre long-term suspension, and another self-inflicted wound, and more bleeding as the Peacock Network’s credibility disintegrates.

L. Brent Bozell III is the president of the Media Research Center. Tim Graham is director of media analysis at the Media Research Center and executive editor of the blog NewsBusters.org. To find out more about Brent Bozell III and Tim Graham, and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2015 CREATORS.COM

Indiana students to get free FAFSA filing help at College Goal Sunday

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Financial aid professionals will be volunteering at Ivy Tech Community College in Evansville, and 35 other sites in Indiana to help college-bound students and their families open the door to financial aid during College Goal Sunday. The event is set for 2 p.m. (CST), February 22, 2015, at Ivy Tech’s main campus in Evansville, located at 3501 N First Avenue.

 

The free program assists Indiana students in filing the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA). The FAFSA form is required for students to be considered for federal and state grants, scholarships and student loans at most colleges, universities and vocational/technical schools nationwide. The FAFSA MUST be filed by March 10 to be eligible for Indiana financial aid. College Goal Sunday is so important since completing this required form correctly and by the deadline is sometimes perceived to be complicated and time consuming. In less than one afternoon at a College Goal Sunday event, students and their families can get free help and file the form online.

 

Now in its 26th year, College Goal Sunday has helped more than 90,000 Indiana students and families complete the FAFSA properly and on time. College Goal Sunday is a charitable program of the Indiana Student Financial Aid Association (ISFAA).

 

Program assists students

“Nearly half of Indiana’s college students qualify for financial aid from the State of Indiana,” said Christina Lucas, co-chair of College Goal Sunday. “This event helps families across the state file the FAFSA, and brings students one step closer to fulfilling their educational goals.”

 

According to the Indiana Commission for Higher Education’s Division of Student Financial Aid (SFA), programs like College Goal Sunday are reaching first-generation college students. In recent years, according to SFA statistics, more single-parent Hoosier families have filed for financial aid, indicating programs like College Goal Sunday are reaching high-risk students and their families.

 

“Financial aid professionals have seen firsthand the disappointment of students who don’t complete their financial aid paperwork properly,” said Lucas. “That’s why the Indiana Student Financial Aid Association continues to provide College Goal Sunday. If our assistance gives students a better chance at higher education, we’re fulfilling our mission.”

 

 

What students should bring

Students should attend College Goal Sunday with their parent(s) or guardian(s), and parents’ should bring completed 2014 IRS 1040 tax returns, W-2 Forms and other 2014 income and benefits information. Students who worked last year should bring their income information as well. Students 24 years of age or older may attend alone and bring their own completed 2014 IRS 1040 tax return, W-2 Form or other 2014 income and benefits information. Students and parents are encouraged to apply for their U.S. Department of Education Personal Identification Numbers (PINs) at www.pin.ed.gov before coming to the event.

 

Volunteers will walk through the online form line-by-line and answer families’ individual questions as needed. All sites offer FAFSA online capabilities and many have Spanish interpreters. A complete list of sites is available at www.CollegeGoalSunday.org. 

 

Attendees may win educational prizes

Students may also win one of 16 $1000 scholarships. Students who attend any of the College Goal Sunday sites and submit a completed evaluation form will automatically be entered in a drawing for a $1000 scholarship. The winners will be notified in March, and prizes will be sent directly to the higher education institution selected by the winning students.

 

21st Century Scholars benefit 

21st Century Scholars are income-eligible students who sign a contract in the seventh or eighth grade promising they will graduate from high school, meet grade point requirements, fulfill a pledge of good citizenship, and apply for college financial aid. Upon high school graduation, Scholars who have fulfilled the commitment receive state funds to help cover their college tuition and fees for eight semesters at eligible Indiana colleges. To fulfill their pledge, scholars must submit a completed FAFSA form on time. College Goal Sunday can help.

 

Program is a national model

College Goal Sunday originated right here in Indiana, and is now a national model. Following Indiana’s example, College Goal Sunday events organized by more than 35 states have opened doors to higher education for tens of thousands of students all over the country. Visit www.CollegeGoalSundayUSA.org to learn more.

 

 

For more information about College Goal Sunday visit www.CollegeGoalSunday.org. 

Sleaze in a $5,000 Suit

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When he was secretary of state, Henry Kissinger was often — and deliberately — seen in the company of attractive actresses, including Jill St. John and Candice Bergen. Kissinger, whom nobody ever accused of being a matinee idol physically, offered this explanation for his seeming appeal to beautiful women: “Power is the ultimate aphrodisiac.”

Repeatedly we have been told that power corrupts. Thank goodness that is an overstatement. Power does not necessarily corrupt. But power does almost always reveal character — or its absence — in the individual who wields it. This month, in a courtroom in Lille, a city in northern France, where Dominique Strauss-Kahn, the former head of the International Monetary Fund, is charged with “aggravated pimping,” which carries punishment of up to 10 years in prison and $1.7 million in fines, the testimony, especially the defendant’s, provides a most unpretty picture of the arrogance of power and the power of arrogance.

First, to be clear about French law, sex with prostitutes is not illegal, but the soliciting or procuring of prostitutes is a crime. Strauss-Kahn, a self-acknowledged master of the universe, openly admitted his active participation in group sex parties organized in his honor: “I had a very hectic life, with just a few outlets for recreation, and these sessions were just that.” But “there were only 12 parties in total — that is, four per year over three years” — when he was working tirelessly, as he reminded the court, “saving the world” after the global financial crisis.

The case hangs in large part on whether the former IMF chief knew that the women at these group sex parties were being paid to be there.

Sounding more than a little like the “shocked” piano player in a house of ill repute, Strauss-Kahn insisted, “I am horrified at the practice of using prostitutes.” How did he explain how all these women were willing to have sex with him? “What can I say? It’s nothing to be proud of, but there have been 10 times that I’ve found myself in a situation where a woman threw herself at me.”

This dumpy 65-year-old man, the living personification of sleaze in a $5,000 suit, turns out to be a babe magnet? He wants us to believe he sees himself as some sort of French-speaking George Clooney. Sorry, but even male conceit and self-delusion do have their limits. It wasn’t your charm or your after-shave, Dominique, that led to your orchestrated extramarital relations.

Let’s be clear. The women were there, as they stated in court, not as volunteers and not because the guest of honor was an irresistible hunk but because they were paid cash money to be there. The sex parties were organized because the IMF big cheese who craved them had the power to bestow political favors. As businessman David Roquet, who helped put together those special occasions, testified, he did so for solely “professional” reasons.

This is not a Gallic version of the Salem witch trials. But it does show the inner ugliness of this once-powerful individual, who believed he was entitled to use and abuse fellow human beings in the service of his vanity and dark obsessions. He will not be missed.

To find out more about Mark Shields and read his past columns, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2015 MARK SHIELDS

DISTRIBUTED BY CREATORS.COM

Author/illustrator Hillenbrand special guest at Young Authors Event

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Celebrated children’s book author/illustrator Will Hillenbrand will be the featured guest at the Evansville Vanderburgh Public Library’s annual Young Authors Event on Saturday, February 28. The event will take place at Central Library beginning with Hillenbrand’s presentation at 10:00 am.

Hillenbrand has illustrated more than fifty books and won numerous awards for his work. At the event he will discuss his work and demonstrate his process of creating picture books, followed by a book signing. Books will be available for purchase.

Following Hillenbrand’s talk, local schools will display the work of their young authors in the lobby until 1:00 pm. The EVPL will also showcase projects created by students at Library programs. Event goers will enjoy hands-on activities provided by the EVPL and cMoe until 2:00 pm, and Mesker Park Zoo & Botanic Garden will present an interactive story with zoo animals and biofacts at noon.

For more information about the event, call (812) 428-8225 or visit evpl.org.

The Young Authors Event is made possible by the Evansville Vanderburgh Public Library Foundation.

Jackson Kelly Lawyers Named To 2015 List Of Indiana Super Lawyers

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Four attorneys from Jackson Kelly’s Evansville, Indiana office have been named to the 2015 list of Indiana Super Lawyers and Rising Stars. James D. Johnson  and Timothy A. Klingler have been chosen for the 2015 list of Indiana Super Lawyers. Joseph H. Langerak and Kyle R. Rudolph have been selected for inclusion in the 2015 Rising Stars list.Joe Langerak

Super Lawyers, a Thomson Reuters business, is a rating service of outstanding lawyers from more than 70 practice areas who have attained a high degree of peer recognition and professional achievement. The annual selections are made using a patented multiphase process that includes a statewide survey of lawyers, an independent research evaluation of candidates and peer reviews by practice area. No more than 2.5 percent of attorneys in the state are named to the Rising Stars list each year. Rising Star nominees must be either 40 years old or younger, or in practice for ten years or less.

Johnson, a Member of the Commercial Law Practice Group, has been named to the Indiana Super Lawyers list for the second consecutive year. He focuses his practice on complex commercial and civil litigation and appellate law and also represents clients in matters of insurance law and products liability.

Klingler is Of Counsel and practices in the Administrative Practice Group. He focuses his practice in the areas of workers’ compensation defense and mediation. He also serves as Chairman for medical malpractice panels in the state of Indiana.Johnson J

Langerak, Counsel in the Firm’s Commercial Law Practice Group, has been selected to the Indiana Rising Stars list for the sixth consecutive year. He concentrates his practice in the areas of business and commercial litigation with emphasis on business and commercial transactions, real estate, banking and finance and bankruptcy and creditor rights. Langerak also advises clients in matters of construction law.

Rudolph is an associate in the Commercial Law Practice Group and has been named to the Indiana Rising Stars list for the second consecutive year.  He concentrates his practice in the areas of commercial and business litigation and insurance defense litigation. Rudolph also serves as a resource for matters concerning internet law.

The Super Lawyers lists are published nationwide in Super Lawyers Magazines and in leading city and regional magazines and newspapers across the country. Super Lawyers Magazines also feature editorial profiles of attorneys who embody excellence in the practice of law. For more information about Super Lawyers, visit www.superlawyers.com.RudolphK - c

Jackson Kelly PLLC recently merged with Rudolph, Fine, Porter & Johnson, LLP in response to the continued growth of the region and its local businesses. Rudolph, Fine, Porter & Johnson, LLP was founded in Evansville in 1987 and built from the ground up to become a recognized leader in its marketplace serving clients in the Indiana-Kentucky-Illinois region and beyond in the areas of litigation, mediation, estate planning and administration, corporate, health care, banking, employment and real estate law.

Jackson Kelly, which was founded in 1822, opened its eleventh office in Evansville with three attorneys in 2011 to serve its growing practice and continues to support the manufacturing industries in the area. The Firm’s Evansville office moved to Rudolph, Fine, Porter & Johnson’s office in downtown Evansville, at 221 NW Fifth Street, Evansville, Indiana 47706-1507.

 

Client Focus, Industry Insight, National Reputation. Jackson Kelly PLLC is a national law firm with more than 200 attorneys located in twelve offices throughout Pennsylvania, Ohio, West Virginia, Kentucky, Indiana, Colorado and the District of Columbia. With a focus on companies working in and around the energy industry, the Firm works with its clients to help resolve their operating challenges by teaming to develop and implement strategies that minimize risks, quickly and effectively. Focusing on clients’ industry-specific needs, the Firm serves a wide variety of corporate and public clients and enjoys a national reputation in business, labor and employment, litigation, government contracts, tax, safety and health, permitting, natural resource and environmental law. The Firm’s clients and peers recognize its commitment to providing superior client service as Jackson Kelly has repeatedly been selected as a Go-To Law Firm for the Top 500 Companies in the U.S. and is regularly named to BTI’s Client Service A-Team.

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 Thursday, February 12, 2015

Keith Davis         Carrying a Handgun without  a License-Level 5 Felony

Robert Obrien           Intimidation-Level 6 Felony

Battery Resulting in Bodily Injury-Class A Misdemeanor

Sir Nelson                  Domestic Battery-Level 6 Felony

Valerie Nelson            Domestic Battery-Level 6 Felony

Eric Small                 Operating a Motor Vehicle after Forfeiture of License for Life-Level 5 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

RECYCLE DAY

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2/14/2015 8:00 AM – 12:00 PM
4-H Center
201 E Boonville-New Harmony Rd
Evansville, Indiana
Add to my Calendar
ITEMS TO BRING: Please be sure items are clean and sorted.

Aluminum cans
Metal food cans
Cardboard
Catalogs/magazines
Newspaper
Junk Mail
Glass containers
#1 thru #7 plastic containers – no Styrofoam or plastic bags

Vanderburgh County Residents Only

*weather permitting*

Dates & Locations subject to change.

O.A.R. coming to Ford Center April 17

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O.A.R.

FRIDAY, APRIL 17, 2015 AT 7:00PM

TICKETS ON SALE MONDAY, FEBRUARY 16 AT 10AM

 O.A.R is coming to the Ford Center in Evansville on Friday, April 17 at 7:00pm. Tickets go on sale Monday, February 16 at 10am and can be purchased at the Ford Center Ticket Office, online at Ticketmaster.com, all Ticketmaster outlets, or by phone at 800-745-3000.

Renowned for its intense, vibrant live show — including selling out Madison Square Garden twice —and the communal feeling it shares with its fans, O.A.R found that visiting their Maryland hometown gave them a sense of peace. “This isn’t about us going back to our musical roots per se,” says lead singer Marc Roberge, who founded O.A.R. in 1996 with his Rockville, Md. high school classmates, drummer Chris Culos, guitarist Richard On, and bassist Benj Gershman (saxophonist Jerry DePizzo joined while the group was at Ohio State University). “It’s about us getting inspired by the place we came from. We’d drive the same roads, visit the old haunts, spend time with our people. Rockville was the catalyst then, and it’s the catalyst now.”

For years, they had been pushing themselves to reach new levels of success, searching for their place in the world. Plus, turbulent times within their personal lives had led them to a slightly disconnected state. “I went home to Maryland

many times while making this album and based these songs on all the familiar feelings that Rockville gave me,” Roberge says. “I tried to focus in on the simple things that always made this band so creative and driven. For everyone in the band, this was a restart. We’ve been hanging out, enjoying life, letting things go…The whole album is about a reboot.”

That sense of renewal is evident on the first single, the deep, yearning “Peace.” “As we were writing it, I felt the weight of three years lift off my shoulders,” Roberge says. “We wrote it about getting back to that even playing field after you go through turbulent times. It’s about what I see people going through all around me, everyone deserves second, third, fourth chances.”

Roberge wrote “Peace” with Blair Daly and Nashville-based producer Nathan Chapman, best known for his work with Taylor Swift, after Roberge introduced himself to Chapman at an event in Los Angeles. The two got along so well that, in addition to “Peace,” their writing sessions yielded three other songs: “Favorite Song,” “Two Hands Up” and “We’ll Pick Up Where We Left Off.” Chapman produced “Favorite Song” and “Two Hands Up,” while Gregg Wattenberg, who co-wrote O.A.R.’s No. 1 smash, “Shattered (Turn the Car Around),” produced “Peace.” Chapman and Wattenberg shared production duties on “We’ll Pick Up Where We Left Off.” With those four tracks serving as the foundation for the album and as a boost to the band’s confidence, Roberge produced the rest of the tracks on THE ROCKVILLE LP including a co-production with Jerry DePizzo on “The Element.” “We felt like we were on to something with an overwhelming freedom to chase down some more songs,” Roberge says.

THE ROCKVILLE LP, which was recorded in Nashville, Bethesda, Md., and Brooklyn, N.Y., features some of O.A.R.’s most diverse, intricate songs to date. Bold horn arrangements weave in and out of several of the tunes, including “Irish Rose” sequel and DePizzo showcase, the jangly, story song, “Caroline the Wrecking Ball,” as well as the ambitious “The Architect,” a song adored by longtime fans, but one O.A.R. had never committed to an album before.

Pure joy and light-heartedness infuse album opener, the spiky infectious anthem, “Two Hands Up,” and the irrepressible reggae-tinged “Favorite Song” in which Roberge cheerfully references dozens of song titles. “We were driving down roads in Nashville and Maryland feeling nostalgic harkening back to the days of endlessly flipping through the radio dial singing loudly to your favorite songs. This song is an ode to the hit, to recognize the pure joy you can get from a song and some rolled down windows.”

With each studio album, the band has endeavored to achieve that sense of immediacy. On THE ROCKVILLE LP, “it comes the closest,” Roberge says. “Every live band I know will always want nothing more than to carry their live performance onto the album. It’s an elusive thing to capture, so I’ll never say we nailed it,” Roberge says. “But I can guarantee we put that same live show energy and passion into each minute of THE ROCKVILLE LP and we can only hope the audience feels that.”