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Hoosier lore

What home rule?

Gov. Mitch Daniels sat down with WANE-TV last month and said it should be up to the people of Fort Wayne whether to pursue expanded gambling here. Then he was asked if he would sign off on a referendum for such gambling if it came to his desk during a legislative session, and he said:

Dopes

Good old Hoosier family values:

Here's a tip for would-be marijuana cultivators.

Don't display your plants in the open windows of houses visible from heavily traveled streets.

Winchester residents Glenn E. Younker, 51, and his son, Jeremiah J. Younker, 26, were arrested Saturday after city police saw marijuana plants, some of them as high as five feet tall, "in plain view" through a second-story window of their apartment in the 500 block of North Main Street.

Second-chance time?

Tony Dungy is a trusting soul:

It might be time to give fallen NFL star Michael Vick a second chance, says Tony Dungy, former coach of the Indianapolis Colts. Dungy has been giving Vick advice about his future since he paid a visit to the former quarterback in prison.

[. . .]

Posted in: Hoosier lore, Sports

Feeling the heat

I don't know whether we should be hopeful or worried that, according to The New York Times, Indiana's two senators are "considered fence sitters" on major climate change legislation moving through Congress. The analysis even goes so far as to say that their votes "could be the deciding factors, and obtaining those votes will be challenging."

A big, fast mess

My brother the software designer was the first one to tell me this truism from the programming world: If you computerize a mess, all you get is a faster mess. That sounds like what happened with Indiana's attempt to outsource its FSSA claims, as described in this spanking of the state in The Wall Street Journal:

Just call me a terrorist

Rep. Baron Hill is another Indiana Democrat who is ducking town hall meetings because of all those mean, nasty constiuents who really want to turn them into, you know, town hall meetings in which there is a boisterous exchange of opinion. Instead, he is having "unannounced meetings," and he is getting some grief for his explanation:

Check

American chess thugs, who are having one of their gang meetings in Indianapolis, are apparently mad at each other. Four of the six-member governing board are trying to kick out the other two -- married couple Susan Polgar and Paul Truong -- and there are suits and counter-suits, and the whole thing is one big sordid, wonderful mess. This is apparently a mess years in the making:

Posted in: Hoosier lore, Sports

Home alone

Not in the running for Mother of the Year:

A Vincennes mother is facing charges for allegedly leaving her 2-year-old daughter alone at home early Sunday morning.

[. . .]

Authorities reportedly went to the tavern and paged Winters, at which time she ran out the back door. Police say she never returned home but was located later that morning in the 600 block of south 13th Street.

Miles run

They seem to have either their music or their history or both mixed up in Lafayette. A bunch of latter-day pseudo-freaks had a music festival:

LAFAYETTE, Ind. (WLFI) - Downtown Lafayette was overtaken by hundreds of people in tie-dye and bellbottoms, all celebrating a special Mosey Down Main Street.

[. . .]

I'm in office now, so shut up

An Indiana congressman who should decide whether he really wants to stay in the kitchen:

EVANSVILLE, Ind. - Indiana Congressman Brad Ellsworth has dropped plans for public meetings in the coming weeks as rowdy health care protests over have disrupted sessions across the country.

Ellsworth says he decided to instead hold small private meetings with constituents to allow people to give him their opinions without being interrupted.

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