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News-Sentinel.com Your Town. Your Voice.
Opening Arguments

Pence plans

I'm not sure how much stock we should put in this speculation about Mike Pence's plans, since it is attributed only to "a source familiar with his deliberations," but it's not too early to start talking about which conservative candidate to put up against President Obama (and Pence clearly qualifies since, as the article notes, he is "a darling of the conservative movement").

A healthy revolt

Hey, a clash with the wellness fascists in which the plebes win:

Indiana University, the fourth-largest employer in the state, is backing off a key part of its new wellness program after a backlash from employees.

Posted in: Hoosier lore

Close call

The Superior Court Judge race in which incumbent Ken Scheibenberger is being challenged by Wendy Davis and Lewis Griffin was one of the toughest endorsement editorials I've had to deal with in several years. For one thing, it's not the usual political contest we're used to writing about, in which the candidates have specific positions on specific issues. For another, the candidates are restrained by the Indiana Supreme Court in how they can campaign, a handicap not faced by candidates in other types of races.

R.I.P., Walkman

They die so young these days:

First they take away my Zima, now this: Sony has pressed the eject button on the Walkman, discontinuing production of the AM/FM cassette player after 31 years.

It's bad enough that John Hughes is dead and “Goonies” alum Martha Plimpton is playing a grandmother on TV.

Big History

This seems a little ambitious:

There is, to borrow from the cliche, something to fascinate everyone in the new exhibit on the Indiana University campus, titled, "From the Big Bang to the World Wide Web: The Origins of Everything." About three years in the making, the display will be open to the public for the first time at 10 a.m. Saturday at the Mathers Museum of World Cultures, 416 N. Indiana Ave.

Posted in: History, Hoosier lore

Land o' Goshen!

There was an article in USA Today back in February noting that "destination branding" is back in vogue "as cities and states pursue image makeovers designed to help them stand out in the weak global economy." Somebody at the Goshen Chamber of Commerce seems to have read the piece or one like it and gone off the marketing deep end.

The party of hell, no

In a post last week, I said I would prefer gridlock over the "bipartisan approach" that "has led to the monstrosity we now have as the federal government." That moved regular commenter Doug to ask, "Voting third party then, are you?" I think the answer deserves a separate post instead of being just a reply in the comments thread.

Public health

City Council President Marty Bender, who will be at Tuesday's meeting following his release from the hospital, wants to pick and choose the effects of being a public official:

Bender, who was hospitalized in intensive care after becoming ill Oct. 13, said he returned home Wednesday. Although he's not sure what caused the illness, Bender said doctors believe it may have been a reaction to a flu shot.

Where's my share of that awful money?

Grrrr. When the stimulus package was being debated, Indiana's Richard Lugar displayed proper conservative outrage. He said it contained "massive spending for a wide variety of projects, some of which are completely unrelated to the immediate economic challenges before us" and that it would "make certain that our children will face hundreds of billions of dollars of additional debt," both of which are true But now that the package actually exists, he has a slightly different attitude:

Dream on

I don't think they mean the same thing by American Dream as I do:

Just one in every four voters in 10 battleground House districts says the American Dream is “still there for everyone,” while four in 10 say the dream exists “only for some people,” according to The Hill 2010 Midterm Election Poll.??

Si, se puede!

Holy cow, the Tea Party has even infiltrated Cuba!

Cuba unveiled on Friday a new tax code it said was friendlier for small business, signaling authorities are serious about building a larger private sector within the state-dominated economy.

Leaving me be

Elena gets her gun

Way to go, Antonin! Get her to liking the feel of a good shotgun going off, and she might be salvageable:

According to two witnesses, Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia took fellow Justice Elena Kagan out for a lesson in skeet shooting at his shooting club in Virginia last week.

[. . .]

Scalia was bending down in order to teach Kagan how to hold the shotgun, the witnesses say, and the pair were shooting skeet.

I left the biscuit in my other pants

Wuz his biscuit a burnin'? Well, he would have been the last to know:

Tune out

Not a great week for public broadcasting. First, Gwen Ifill of PBS joined the herd of "leftist dullards" who reflexively chided Sarah Palin for saying "party like it's 1773," when she obviously meant 1776, demonstrating it's more important to mock a rightwing exremist than to do a simple Google search on the date.

Baggage

The Indianapolis Star's Matt Tully thinks Dan Coats' stint as a lobbyist alone should be a disqualifier for his Senate bid:

Ba

Just in case we forgot that "fan" is short for fanatic:

A disgruntled Indianapolis Colts fan could be to blame for $2 million in damage to a Jacksonville, Fla., hotel that happened hours after the Colts lost there a few weeks ago.

 

Florida authorities said the San Marco Homewood Suites and Hilton Garden Inn were damaged when someone tampered with two water valves, unleashing thousands of gallons of water onto five floors on Oct. 4.

[. . .]

Posted in: Hoosier lore, Sports

All washed up

It's tough enough trying to figure out whether we're getting a bargain or getting screwed in the marketplace. Now, the Better Business Bureau warns that we should study carefully the claims of "green" companies who say they're helping the environment while making a profit from us:

A reason to drink at home

The public drunkenness arrest of the Colt's punter has generated enough publicity that people may be learning some things about public intoxication law they didn't know before:

It's not an uncommon scene for officers, but deciding who is simply intoxicated, and who presents a public problem can be tricky. 

Women's work

It has generally been assumed that, while women might give more often than men to charity, they give less. But a new study from Indiana University shows -- pretty conclusively -- that women give both more often and more money. And the reporting of the study goes to great head-scratching lengths to figure out why this might be so:

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