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USI presents A Conversation with Michael Eric Dyson October 26

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Michael Eric Dyson, a renowned scholar, ordained Baptist minister, and public intellectual, will present “It’s All in the Numbers: The 99 Percent Occupiers, the 47 Percent Victims, the 14 Percent Unemployed, the First Mormon Candidate, the 44th President and the 2012 Elections” at noon Friday, October 26, in Mitchell Auditorium, located in the Health Professions Center at the University of Southern Indiana.

The lecture is free and open to the public. Students and employees are encouraged to attend.

Dyson is the author of 16 books, including New York Times bestseller Mercy, Mercy Me: The Art, Loves and Demons of Marvin Gaye; Holler if You Hear Me; Is Bill Cosby Right?; and I May Not Get There With You: The True Martin Luther King Jr. He also is well known for his diversification of college curriculum, teaching courses on hip-hop music artists Shawn Corey “Jay-Z” Carter and Tupac Shakur. Dyson was named one of the 100 Most Influential Black Americans for 2012 by Ebony magazine.

A sociology professor at Georgetown University, Dyson’s innovative scholarship and cultural criticism focuses on race, religion, popular culture, and contemporary issues in the African American community. Prior to joining the faculty at Georgetown, Dyson was the Avalon Foundation professor of humanities in the Department of Religious Studies at the University of Pennsylvania. He has taught at DePaul University, Chicago Theological Seminary, University of North Carolina, and Columbia and Brown universities.

He is host of the radio-syndicated “The Michael Eric Dyson Show,” which addresses social, cultural, and political issues in a contemporary vein. He has made appearances on The Today Show, Nightline, O’Reilly Factor, The Tavis Smiley Show, Real Time with Bill Maher, Rap City, Def Poetry Jam and The Colbert Report, among others.

Dyson’s appearance at USI is sponsored by Academic Affairs and Student Affairs.

Source: USI.edu

National Symphony Orchestra Violinist Featured in UE Guest Recital

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Violinist Joel Fuller, a member of the Washington, D.C.-based National Symphony Orchestra, will perform a guest recital at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, October 24 in the University of Evansville’s Wheeler Concert Hall.

The concert is free and open to the public, and the program includes works by Debussy, Faure, Bach, and Ysaye. Pianist Jiyoung Oh will accompany Fuller.

Prior to joining the National Symphony Orchestra, Fuller served as the assistant principal second violin of the Kennedy Center Opera House Orchestra. He also spent three years as the assistant concertmaster of the Naples Philharmonic, enjoying many opportunities to solo with the orchestra there. As a chamber musician, Fuller was the first violinist of the University of Michigan Graduate String Quartet and founding member of the Sonare and Vanderbilt String Quartets. He is currently a member of the IBIS Chamber Music Society and Musica Aperta ensembles in Washington, D.C.

As a student, Fuller was awarded a three-year orchestral fellowship to attend the Aspen Music Festival in Aspen, Colorado. He was one of only two to receive the honor for the 2001 summer season. He received his Bachelor of Music from the University of Wisconsin and a Master of Music degree in violin performance and chamber music from the University of Michigan. Fuller has won numerous awards and competitions including the ASTA competition and both the University of Wisconsin Concerto Competition and the University of Michigan Concerto Competition. He is honored to play on the “ex Powell” Omobono Stradivari violin, generously loaned to him by the John C. Schroeder trust for musical excellence.

Pianist Jiyoung Oh is a member of the faculty at the Levine School of Music in Washington, D.C. Oh received her Doctorate in Musical Arts from Indiana University Jacobs School of Music as a Chancellor’s Fellow and her Master of Music degree at the Eastman School of Music. She has performed as a soloist and chamber musician in the U.S. and Canada, and participated in summer festivals including the Aspen School of Music and the International Holland Music Sessions in Bergen. This past year, she was an interim piano faculty member at James Madison University where she taught piano and doctoral piano seminars. Prior to that, she taught at Lewis and Clark College and Indiana University. She was also a former adjudicator at the Virginia Music Teacher’s Association State Competition. Oh is also a freelance pianist in the greater D.C. area.

Source: Evansville.edu

7th Annual A Night at the Museum Halloween Party

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Returning for its Seventh year, Angel Mounds annual Halloween party is night of fun for all ages! Due to popular demand, Angel Mounds is proud to offer the event for three separate nights, October 12, 13 and 19, 2012. Nights of spooky fun will feature games, activities, trick-or-treating through the haunted village, hayrides, and haunted trails. NEW this year: Curse of the Mummy Egyptian Tomb & the Haunted Mansion Maze! The party starts at 7:00 pm. Admission is $5.00.

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Water and Sewer Utility to Open Quotes for 41 Sewer Line

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The Water and Sewer Utility will open quotes to replace a sewer line along US 41, declared as an emergency by the Evansville Water & Sewer Utility Board. The quotes will be opened and read publicly on Tuesday, October 16th at 10:00 am in the Civic Center, Room 100.

Gallup Alters Poll Assumptions Under White House Pressure By: Jay Cost

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Since about the beginning of President Obama’s tenure, the Gallup poll has generally been one of the least positive polls for the Democratic party. This has prompted outrage and pressure from the left–even from presidential advisor David Axelrod.

Over the summer Mark Blumenthal of Huffington Post wrote a critique of Gallup’s daily presidential job approval poll. The point of which was that Gallup was over-sampling whites and thus understating President Obama’s position in the adult population. I responded by arguing that Blumenthal’s case was underdeveloped and less-than-met-the-eye, and that was basically where things stood.

Until, that is, this week. President Obama enjoyed a bounce in his Gallup job approval number after the Democratic National Convention, as was to be expected, but there was a twist: it did not disappear. And while Gallup on average had found Obama’s job approval around 47 percent with adults through most of 2012, for the last five weeks it has been regularly above 50 percent. Yesterday, it stood at 53 percent, a number we have not really seen since 2009.

Unusual. So, what’s going on? Alan Abramowitz of Huffington Post and The Democratic Strategist noticed that Gallup has increased its share of nonwhites from 27 percent the week of the convention to 32 percent last week, a nearly 20 percent boost. In other words, Gallup seemed to have tweaked its methodology with just weeks to go until Election Day to reflect the criticism that has come from the left.

And indeed, in a wonky and elliptical statement, Gallup chief Frank Newport essentially confirms the shift:

As we began this election tracking program on Oct.1, our methodologists also recommended modifying and updating several procedures. We increased the proportion of cell phones in our tracking to 50%, meaning that we now complete interviews with 50% cell phones and 50% landlines each night. This marks a shift from our Gallup Daily tracking, which has previously been 40% cell phones. This means that our weights to various phone targets in the sample can be smaller, given that the actual percentage of cell phones and cell-phone-only respondents in the sample is higher. We have instituted some slight changes in our weighting procedures, including a weight for the density of the population area in which the respondent lives. Although all Gallup surveys are weighted consistently to census targets on demographic parameters, we believe that these improvements provide a more consistent match with weight targets.

So, from the looks of it, the left got what it wanted: Gallup altered its methodology with a month to go until Election Day. And the result – at least on the job approval question – is a shift in Obama’s favor. Whether or not this has altered the Romney-Obama head-to-head numbers among likely and registered voters, I cannot say.

I also cannot speak to the merits of the change in methodology. Back in June, I thought there was less than met the eye to Blumenthal’s critiques of Gallup. And I thought Gallup thought the same thing. Maybe the polling outlet changed its mind. Maybe it had other reasons for making the change. Who knows? That stuff is all “black box,” proprietary methodology that is not open for public analysis.

What I can say is that it’s problematic to alter one’s methodological approach to polling elections just five weeks before the biggest election in a generation. In fact, I think this is a highly inopportune time to make such a change; do it in the summer of 2012 or the winter of 2013, but for goodness sake not the fall of 2012!

It is even more problematic to make the shift but not spell out in detail the political effect of it. One utility of the Gallup tracker was that it enabled comparisons across time. Those are now difficult to accomplish because we have to assume what effect these methodological shifts have had. My guess is that it has moved the needle toward Obama by maybe 3 points on job approval, but we cannot know for sure. We also have no idea the extent to which this changes the Romney-Obama head-to-head among registered or likely voters.

What Gallup should have done is similar to what the Bureau of Labor Statistics does when it adjusts the unemployment rate to account for new Census data: Give the number as it is now calculated and as it would have been calculated absent the change, so everybody can know exactly what effect the changes in assumptions have had. Newport fails even to acknowledge whether and how this methodological change helped one side over the other, let alone its extent.

Final point: We absolutely, positively must remember polling in 2012 is politicized as never before, and it is incumbent upon the consumers of political polls not to accept the data naïvely, but to perform due diligence to see what goes into the product.

Source: The Weekly Standard

Is IT True October 11, 2012

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The Mole #??

IS IT TRUE October 11, 2012
Is It True that John Hamilton has made a decision and informed the City Council that after the first of the year he is going to step down as the City Council attorney. He wants to give his family and his practice more attention. We wish him the best.

Volunteers Needed Saturday For Door To Door in Warrick County

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Volunteers Needed Saturday, October 13th for D2D Blitz

One of the most effective and least expensive campaign tactics is doorto-
door campaigning. As part of our GOTV (Get Out The Vote) effort,
we are planning a county-wide door-to-door blitz on Saturday, October
13th. Led by candidates and precinct committeemen, we hope to cover
most, if not all precincts in the county. By knocking on doors, talking
to voters and passing out literature about our candidates, we can help
ensure victory on November 6th. We can’t have too many volunteers
for this effort. The plan is to meet at GOP Headquarters at 9:00am on
Saturday, October 6th. From there we will hand out suggested scripts
with some brief suggestions for talking points with voters along with
assignments for various neighborhoods throughout the county. The
plan is to spend about three hours going D2D and wrap things up at
12:30. This is a great opportunity to get involved and help with our
push to victory. Please join us at Headquarters on Saturday morning.

Warrick County GOP Vote Rally

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Come out on Friday, October 12th to show
your support at the GOP Early Vote Rally
Join Congressman Larry Bucshon and other state and local candidates
for an Early Vote Rally. We will gather on the Old Courthouse Lawn at
10:00am in a show of support for our GOP candidates. At around
10:20am, we will walk across the street to the Election Office in the
Judicial Center to vote.
We encourage you to bring campaign signs and wear campaign tshirts.
However, you will not be allowed to take any campaign material
(including t-shirts) into the Election Office. Therefore, if you wear any
campaign t-shirts, please either remove them prior to voting, or cover
them up with a jacket or sweatshirt. Also, don’t forget to bring your
photo ID.

VANDERBURGH COUNTY FELONY CHARGES

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VANDERBURGH COUNTY FELONY CHARGES

This feature is sponsored by Chris Walsh For Vanderburgh County Clerk. Chris Walsh is a veteran county administrator that strongly supports our local law enforcement professionals . Chris Walsh is a candidate that possess a non-partisan attitude with a consumer friendly demeanor. Chris also stands against unification of city and county governments.
This ad paid for by the committiee to elect Walsh Clerk.

VANDERBURGH COUNTY FELONY CHARGES

Evansville, IN – Below is a list of felony cases that were filed by the Vanderburgh County Prosecutor’s Office on Wednesday, October 10, 2012.

Robert Brown Resisting Law Enforcement – Class D Felony
Criminal Recklessness – Class A Misdemeanor
Reckless Driving – Class B Misdemeanor

Casie Friend Theft – Class D Felony

Nicholas Miller Operating a Vehicle as an Habitual Traffic Violator – Class D Felony

Harry Powell Theft – Class D Felony

Donald Scott Criminal Confinement – Class D Felony
Conversion – Class A Misdemeanor
Interference with the Reporting of a Crime – Class A Misdemeanor
Resisting Law Enforcement – Class A Misdemeanor
Disorderly Conduct – Class B Misdemeanor

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

Under Indiana law, all criminal defendants are considered to be innocent until proven guilty by a court of law.
SENTENCE CHART

Class Range
Murder 45-65 Years
Class A Felony 20-50 Years
Class B Felony 6-20 Years
Class C Felony 2-8 Years
Class D Felony ½ – 3 Years
Class A Misdemeanor 0-1 Year
Class B Misdemeanor 0-180 Days
Class C Misdemeanor 0-60 Days

Keep Evansville Beautiful Announces A New Partnership

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Keep Evansville Beautiful Announces A New Partnership with the Indiana Department of Correction, The Indiana Department of Transportation and the Vanderburgh County Sheriff For Litter Abatement

Evansville, Indiana – Keep Evansville Beautiful thanks Commissioner Bruce Lemmon of the Indiana Department of Correction and his commitment to litter abatement in Vanderburgh County. The availability of offenders from the Branchville and Wabash Valley Facilities twice monthly will considerably improve the appearance of these state highways.

Keep Evansville Beautiful recognizes the continuing contribution of Vanderburgh County Sheriff Eric Williams through the dedication of offenders in the Community Corrections Program. The Community Corrections offenders will continue litter abatement along these and other state roads and will assist the new program by retrieving the bags of litter filled by the state offenders.

Keep Evansville Beautiful thanks the Indiana Department of Transportation for supplying the trash bags and the funding for refuse disposal.

“The spirit of cooperation demonstrated by these government agencies to remove litter from area roads is deeply appreciated by Keep Evansville Beautiful. We are delighted to learn that the aluminum and plastics will be separated and recycled by the state offenders” said Cheryl Musgrave.