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Gavel Gamut

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By Jim Redwine

BLISS

Hurricane Sandy knocked out twenty-five percent of the cell phone coverage in New York City. Land lines were immediately elevated from anachronisms to necessities. People who had never used a pay phone were converted from techies to dummies.
The national media reported numerous instances of people standing non-plussed in front of artifacts reminiscent of Easter Island. As one twenty-four year old man continued to pour quarters into a slot and berate the telephone for not responding, he failed to lift the receiver, other people encouraged him to push buttons and try different passwords.
My initial reaction to those reactions was to wonder how anyone could be so obtuse. Then I recalled a shower I attempted to take at a retrofitted motel in Reno, Nevada. After about fifteen minutes of standing in a tub type shower with hot water splashing only on my toes, I stepped out and called the front desk. The night clerk politely, but with barely hidden disdain, instructed me to pull down on the nozzle of the faucet.
That experience was not as humbling as the first time I made the acquaintance of a Turkish latrine in Volgograd, Russia. If you have had the pleasure of straddling an open pit without ready access to Charmin, you may be able to relate to my situation.
While bodily functions are involved in many of these out of touch dilemmas, we live in a modern world where numerous new devices have removed us from the ability to use older, albeit perhaps more reliable ones. I remember unlocking my 1956 Mercury with a key. Now my car locks are electronic and integrated with an alarm system. Ergo, about once a week I press the wrong button and a shrill alarm will awaken the area within a mile of where I am parked. So far, I have managed to shut off the alarm before I get arrested for stealing my own car.
These instances and a host of others have led me to wonder if instead of wasting our time and money on such conundrums as peace in the Middle East we should develop a federal agency whose charter is to catalogue all the arcane items that once were state of the art and have an 800 number, with a back up system, so we can access it in emergencies. You know, an emergency such as running out of gasoline in a storm and being unable to operate an electric gas pump. Some federal bureaucrat could explain to us how to put gas in a plastic boot then pour it out into our cars.
Such things as record players, televisions without remotes, mimeograph machines, recorders with plastic belts and tools without power cords may soon be as enigmatic as pay phones to modern society. Instead of studying the ancient pyramids for clues to past cultures, anthropologists need only go to the trash bins outside the Apple stores for clues to our ancient past of ten years ago.

Indiana Property Tax Dealine Approaching‏

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EVANSVILLE (Nov. 12, 2012) – Vanderburgh County Treasurer Rick Davis reminds taxpayers that the Civic Center is open on Monday, Nov. 12, and property tax payments can be made at the Treasurer’s Office until 4:30 p.m. today and Tuesday. The property tax deadline for the Fall Installment of taxes is Tuesday, Nov. 13. In addition to going to the Civic Center today, taxpayers may still make payments using the county’s web site, pay by phone, or use the drop box in front of the Civic Center in order to avoid enhanced Civic Center security.

On Tuesday, the final day of property tax payment, taxpayers may use any one of 18 local Old National Bank branches. To pay at Old National Bank, you must have the bill that was mailed to your home in the spring. If you do not have your bill, you cannot pay at the bank.

The traditional property tax deadline, Nov. 10, fell on a Saturday this year. Due to the fact local banks observe Veterans Day today, Indiana property owners were given an additional 3 days to make their fall payment. That means the Indiana property tax deadline is Tuesday, Nov. 13 this year.

The Treasurer’s Office will open at 8 a.m. on Tuesday and will accept payments until 4:30 p.m. To avoid potential long lines, parking issues, and enhanced Civic Center security, Davis strongly recommended that property owners make their payments at any Old National Bank branch in the Tri-State Area on Tuesday.

Davis also suggested using the convenient drop box in front of the Civic Center or by mailing checks, made payable to the Vanderburgh County Treasurer, at PO Box 77, Evansville, IN 47701-0077. So long as your envelope is postmarked on or before Nov. 13, your payment will be considered on time, said Davis.

Davis reminded last-minute taxpayers that the drop box will be open until midnight on Tuesday, Nov. 13. Missing the Nov. 13 deadline will add a 5% penalty to your amount owed if you have no previous delinquencies. That amount increases to 10% after 30 days. If you miss the Nov. 13 deadline and already have a delinquency that penalty is an automatic 10% fee.

Payments can also be made online at www.vanderburghtreasurer.org with a major credit card for a 2.6% convenience fee or by using the office’s E-Check feature for a flat $1.95 fee. Payments are also accepted over the phone by calling 1-800-2PAYTAX (use the following “jurisdiction code” – 2405) with a major credit card and by paying a 2.6% fee. Visa Debit users are able to pay a flat $3.95 fee. Davis noted that the Vanderburgh County Commissioners recently signed a new contract with the county’s credit card provider that reduced credit card fees from 2.75% to 2.6% and reduced the E-check fee from $3 to $1.95. The new rates took effect on Nov. 1, just in time for the fall payment period rush.

If you cannot find your bill, visit the Treasurer’s Office web site and look up your information online. You can mail your check in with the correct payment amount so long as you put your parcel ID number in the memo section. You may also contact the Treasurer’s Office at 435-5248 for any questions concerning your property tax payment.

Below are the Old National banking centers accepting the Vanderburgh County Property Taxes on Tuesday, Nov. 13, with lobby hours from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.

1. Evansville Main
2. Evansville North Side
3. Washington & Kentucky
4. West Side
5. 41 North
6. Hebron
7. University Square
8. North Brook
9. Darmstadt
10. Red Bank
11. Burkhardt Rd
12. Lakeside Commons
13. Bell Oaks
14. Boonville
15. Princeton
16. Mt Vernon, IN
17. Henderson, Ky., Main
18. Henderson, Ky., North

Local Emergency Management Agency Officials to Aid in Hurricane Relief Efforts

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Sherman Greer, Director of the Evansville- Vanderburgh County Emergency Management Agency along with John Pease, a volunteer in Logistics Support for the local EMA will travel to New York to aid in Hurricane Sandy relief efforts today.

Greer and Pease will join 5 other trained professionals from District Ten of the Indiana Department of Homeland Security in Indianapolis at 6 pm today and deploy to New York for a 14 day mission in and around the Long island area. They will be joined by Tonda Dixon, EMA Director in Pike County, Stephanie McKinney, EMA Administrative Assistant in Gibson County, Al Perdue, EMA Director in Spencer County, Dallas Scott, EMA Director in Warrick County, and Kent Winkler, Assistant Fire Chief in Princeton Fire Territory.

District Ten is made up of 12 counties: Crawford, Daviess, Dubois, Gibson, Knox, Martin, Pike, Perry, Posey, Spencer, Vanderburgh and Warrick. District Response Task Force Ten Incident Management Team personnel are being activated along with District Response Task Force One from northwestern Indiana which includes Lake County and the State Incident Management Assistance Team to join Incident Management Teams which provide command and control functions.

NIMS (National Incident Command Systems) is a FEMA (Federal Emergency Management Agency) certified emergency management system used across the U.S. to coordinate preparedness, incident management, and response among public and private sectors. By using this system trained people can plan, prepare, prevent, mitigate, respond and recover from incidents of any size, cause, location, or complexity, to reduce loss of life and property and harm to our environment. NIMS enables trained government, not–for–profit, and private sector responders from across the country to work side by side during any incident in a predictable and coordinated manner, because the terminology, structure, process and procedure is standardized.

Hurricane Sandy made landfall October 29, 2012. Government, not for profit, and private sector employees and volunteers in the impacted communities made sure their families were safe and immediately opened Incident Command Centers. It was clear this incident was too massive to be handled locally and responders and outside resources were needed. Persons from nearby areas not impacted by the storm were mobilized. Now, 12 days after landfall, resources from further west are deploying to aid in response and recovery. Like any workplace, staff changes are necessary at the end of operational periods. To preserve staff health and well-being, breaks, sleep, food, and time away are vital. The seven people from southwestern Indiana will join people from other Districts across the country to provide the needed trained backup.

UE Named One of the Nation’s Top Study Abroad Programs

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The nation’s leading voice on educational and cultural exchange has again named the University of Evansville among America’s top study abroad programs.

Today, the Institute of International Education released its annual Open Doors report, which ranks the top study abroad programs in the nation. This year, UE moved up one spot on the list, ranking 12th for study abroad participation among master’s degree-granting institutions. For 2010-11, the academic year covered by this year’s report, 50.7 percent of UE students studied abroad.

“The opportunity to study abroad is one of the hallmarks of the University of Evansville experience, so we’re very excited to earn national recognition for our study abroad participation,” said Earl Kirk, UE director of study abroad. “The life-transforming educational experiences our students gain from studying abroad – at our British campus, Harlaxton College, or anywhere else in the world – give them a cultural awareness that is vital for success in today’s global marketplace.”

The University of Evansville proudly welcomes international students from around the world and encourages students to pursue cultural and academic experiences abroad. This semester, 217 international students from 46 countries are enrolled at UE. During the 2012-13 academic year, 285 UE students are expected to study abroad in approximately 20 countries.

The release of the Open Doors report falls this year on the first day of International Education Week, a joint initiative of the United States Departments of State and Education that promotes the benefits of international education and cultural exchange. For its sixth annual observance of International Education Week, the University of Evansville will hold a series of events, including a keynote speaker and the International Bazaar. A full schedule is available on the IEW website.

To view the complete Open Doors report, please visit the Institute of International Education’s website.

Source: Evansville.edu

VOICE session at USI on Wednesday

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USI
The City of Evansville will hold a VOICE visioning session from 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. Wednesday, November 14, in Carter Hall in the University Center.

VOICE is Evansville’s community-wide, citizen-driven vision process that allows community members to share their ideas, hopes, and visions for Evansville’s preferred future.

Through sessions facilitated by Leadership Evansville, VOICE aims to bring together diverse members of the community to discuss their dreams for Evansville in an open forum. The facilitation is led in such a way that respectful conversations will occur, all voices will be heard, and opinions will be documented, ensuring that the entire community has the opportunity to take part in creating a desired future.

“This is really about building trust amongst the members of our community and learning that if we all join together and have civil dialogue about our future desires and current issues, we can create a strong society that will thrive and grow,” said Mayor Lloyd Winnecke. “Through this effort, I am confident that Evansville will become a place where people from all over will want to live, work and play.”

Multiple VOICE sessions have been held throughout the year to obtain feedback from people of all ages, ethnic and religious backgrounds, and neighborhoods.

The VOICE Process:

• Leadership Evansville will facilitate discussion sessions at easy-to-access public locations, such as Evansville Public Library System branches and Evansville Vanderburgh School Corporation schools. The sessions will be advertised in neighborhood newsletters, the newspaper, television, radio and Internet.

• Comments from each session will be available to the participants and the public. A summary and detailed notes will be posted on the VOICE website within one week of the session.

• Once all comments are collected, additional community sessions will occur to verify that the information collected truly represents participants’ opinions.

• Then, common themes and ideas will be grouped by topic area to serve guidance for those organizations, businesses, universities, individuals and government bodies with interest in that topic to move forward with further research and planning toward a common goal.

“I firmly believe that communities with a shared vision, and appropriate processes to capture, record, and inspire action around common goals can achieve healthier, more vibrant futures,” said Lynn Miller-Pease, executive director of Leadership Evansville . “The approach we are taking with VOICE is allowing citizens to actively create and participate in envisioning their own their own future so they can dream big and be part of making it happen.”

For more information, contact Leadership Evansville at 812/589-3682.

Former Tavern to be Demolished for Community Improvement Project

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(EVANSVILLE, IN) – It was a saloon before Prohibition, and then it was converted into a restaurant. Over the years it alternated between serving food and liquor, eventually becoming a pet grooming business and most recently an eyesore.

On Tuesday, Mayor Winnecke will use a sledgehammer to take the first swing at the old Paddock Tavern, as demolition crews begin to raze the dilapidated structure at 1510 N. First Ave.

The building was recently purchased by Bootz Manufacturing, which opened a distribution center at 1600 N. First Ave. in 2010. Bootz President and CEO Pete DeSocio said the company completed extensive landscaping around the distribution center and was recognized with the 2011 Community Improvement of the Year Award by Keep Evansville Beautiful.

DeSocio said the company views purchasing and tearing down the old tavern as a community improvement project and a way to enhance safety. He said the building blocks the line-of-sight for truck drivers making deliveries to the distribution center off First Avenue, causing drivers to miss the entrance and have to turn around.

Floyd Staub, Inc., has been contracted to raze the structure. The work is set to begin tomorrow, Nov. 13, at 8 a.m. Staub will be closing the inside southbound lane of First Avenue for one hour. According to Historic Preservation Officer Dennis Au, the structure was built sometime between 1905 and 1910. Before Prohibition, it was Emerson B. Baldsdon’s Saloon. During Prohibition it was converted into a restaurant. One of the eateries was owned by Abraham Schick in 1929.
After Prohibition, in 1939, William Kirsch ran a tavern at the location.

Au said during World War II, George Kirsch (1942) and Nellie Piper (1944) operated restaurants in the building. In 1983, it was listed as Art’s Post and Paddock Tavern. After that, the building was vacant for almost a decade. In 1997, Country Charm Pet Grooming opened at the location. The building was purchased by Bootz Manufacturing in 2012.

IS IT TRUE November 12, 2012 Part Two (City Council Tonight)

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Evansville Controller Russ Lloyd Jr. CPA

IS IT TRUE November 12, 2012 Part Two (City Council Tonight)

IS IT TRUE that the City of Evansville Controller, Russ Lloyd, Jr. is bringing another accounting mistake to the attention of city council tomorrow evening? …that City Controller Lloyd is asking council to make an adjustment of exactly $1.38 to the Recovery Act Justice Federal grant fund?…also true that Controller Lloyd, Jr. will be ask by members of city council the status of the $1 million accounting program that has failed to provide him and taxpayers with the real and accurate information concerning how much we have in all financial accounts that allow us to fund the total operations of Evansville?

IS IT TRUE that City Controller Russ Lloyd, Jr. shall present another request to city council tomorrow evening? …he shall request that additional funding be approved to cover salaries and expenses for EVCBA to manage Robert’s Stadium through December or until demolition begins?… he shall claim that when the 2012 budget was prepared it was not known the exact numbers of months expenses would be necessary?…that the Mayor’s “financial hatchet man” Russ Lloyd, Jr. should be prepare to field several pointed and direct questions by city council members concerning this request for this budget adjustment? …we can expect the Mayor’s (“political spin doctor”) Chief of Staff shall be ready to defend Russ Lloyd, Jr. interesting budget adjustment request?

IS IT TRUE we wonder if the City of Evansville’s one million dollar accounting program is finally working properly?…we also wonder why a meeting of the Evansville City Council was scheduled on Veteran’s Day that is a holiday at many municipalities across this country and a worthy day to show honor to American’s who served their country in the military?

A Pragmatic Canadian’s View of the Presidential Election

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Excerpts:

“Barack Obama’s victory this week was hoped for, and celebrated, in Canada as a triumph of Canadian-style Americanism.”

“This was an historic election, but not in ways that Americans or the Canadian left will celebrate. Mitt Romney was never a strong candidate, and any serious incumbent would have sent him to the proverbial dust-bin of history”

“A shocking $3-billion was spent to keep a failed administration and mediocre congressional leaders (House Speaker John Boehner and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid) in place, operating a system that is very corrupt and is almost completely dysfunctional. Almost nothing worthwhile was said during the campaign about anything substantial. There is nothing in any of it to celebrate. An incumbent president was re-elected to a second term with fewer electoral votes than he had the first time — the first time this has happened.”

“The administration couldn’t run on its record, and so resorted to a smear campaign against Romney with a fear-mongering leitmotif about “reproductive rights.” None of the leading figures seemed able, right down to the nauseating treacle on election night, to stop the clap-trap about “the greatest power in human history’s greatest days are ahead of it” long enough to notice what a basket case America has become.”

“Public health and education standards have collapsed (though not those in the private sector); the whole country is being terrorized by a fascistic prosecution service; and the number of food-stamp recipients and the number of people with criminal records are coursing neck and neck toward 50 million apiece, a shocking figure in each case. The wealthiest country in history is bankrupt, with 50 million citizens in poverty and the entire middle class on an economic knife-edge.”

“Historically, when America has needed leadership, its greatest leaders have come forward. Not this year.”

“Lest any reader fear otherwise, I am not partisan, nor, overall, to the right of Obama. But I support a more consistent definition of American security interests than has been shown by his feckless attitude toward almost everything — including Iran’s Green Revolution and nuclear program, the failed “reset” with Russia; Libya and Syria. But at least he has avoided the open-ended adventurism of his predecessor.”

“I favour low income taxes and less regulation than the administration. But, as I wrote here on Wednesday and especially after spending three years in American prisons, I am a strong leftist on protection of human rights and liberties, restraint of rabid prosecutors and a radical effort to address poverty. Yet Obama’s “sharing the wealth” approach won’t accomplish anything.”

“This president has converted the $10-trillion of national debt accumulated in 232 years of American history (from 1776 to 2008) into $16-trillion now, and has financed most of it by selling bonds to the Treasury’s 100% subsidiary, the Federal Reserve, in exchange for bogus cyber-notes. This violates George Washington’s injunction to defend an indissoluble Union militarily and with a strong currency.”

“It isn’t debt at all; it is just a money supply increase of incendiary inflationary consequences, with a delay-fuse provided by the proportions of the economic slow-down the official extravagance has failed to alleviate, in which the 25% annual gasoline price increase and double-digit food and milk price increases are disguised by collapsed housing prices and minimal interest rates, and the recessionary pricing of manufacturers. It is a giant shell game, but there is nothing under any of the shells.”

“this President has added $17,000 of new debt for every man, woman and child in the country, and given no hint of how he proposes to prevent the U.S. currency from becoming toilet paper. And there are five million fewer Americans working than four years ago. The greatest and wealthiest nation in history is sliding into a more profound bankruptcy than any serious country has had since Weimar Germany, and almost the whole country seems to be in a delusional fantasyland.”

“Nothing short of higher taxes on discretionary transactions to shrink the deficit, lower income taxes to promote growth and recovery, a serious spending review including entitlement reform, a bi-partisan assault on medical costs (more than twice what they are in other advanced countries such as Canada, while providing inferior care for a third of Americans, a state of affairs that will not be much altered by Obamacare); and a radical reconstruction of the education and justice systems, will restart the long-inexorable rise of America. There is no sign of any of this being considered or that it is even politically possible.”

“For the first time, a combination of non-white minorities and whites who are invested personally, either emotionally or more often for tangible reasons, in the redistributive side of the political civil war between advocates of growth and of direct transfers of resources from those who have earned them (or inherited from those who did) to those who haven’t (regardless of mitigating circumstances), has eked out a clear victory. If American politics continues along these lines, the social strains, piled onto the funeral pyre of the national accounts, will put the fate of what has long been the world’s greatest nation in acute doubt.”

“the geopolitical vacuum incarnated by Barack Obama, Mitt Romney and the Republicans who sat the race out, will create a powerful and dangerous vortex. These will be perilous times.”

http://fullcomment.nationalpost.com/2012/11/10/conrad-black-the-obama-disaster-part-ii/

Reid to present illustrated lecture on ’37 flood at USI

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Dr. Robert L. Reid, USI provost emeritus and professor emeritus of history, will present a free, illustrated lecture on “The Great Flood of 1937” at 2 p.m. Tuesday, November 13, in Kleymeyer Hall in the lower level of the Liberal Arts Center at USI.

Reid’s January lecture on the same topic attracted a standing-room only crowd to the Evansville Museum of Arts, History, and Science. The lecture has since been updated with new video footage and photos.

Reid has published several books on local and North American history. He holds a bachelor’s degree from St. Olaf College in Northfield, Minnesota, and master’s and doctoral degrees from Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois.

The program is for USI Retirees, but the public is welcome to attend.

Source: USI.edu