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Hoosier lore

Bread- and circuses

As the recession deepens, Hoosiers can be grateful that there are so many venues for gambling, so that those down on their luck can turn their last few pennies into a fortune. Now, our down-and-outers might have yet another way to escape from poverty:

A bill currently being tossed around in the House could potentially clear the way for ultimate fighting events to be staged in Indiana.

Elkhart, where dreams go to die

I don't know whether this is more depressing because of what it says about retirement income or what it says about an important segment of the Indiana economy, but it IS depressing: "People over 55 today will spend their golden years in the equivalent of Elkhart, Indiana." That's froma piece from Gary North, who says people near retirement haven't quite yet grasped that their "golden years" aren't going to be quite what they imagined:

No time for small crime

Bloomington has established a Web site at which citizens can report "minor crimes," such as vandalsm, lost property or thefts under $750 for which there are no suspects. It is being touted as progress made possible by technology:

The goal of the new system is to save police and victims time. BPD Records Division Supervisor Joan Manning said she estimates the BPD makes about 250 to 300 reports for minor crimes every month.

Know when to fold 'em

Some people are upset with the White House for throwing its weight around and making the Indiana Live Casino in Shelbyville pull its ad campaign showing a look-alike of President Barack Obama stumping for "change you can believe in." (Just read some of the reader comments attached to the story.) But the president is just exercising the same "right of publicity" we all have, which is the right to control or prevent the commercial exploitation of our own images. So far, Posted in: Hoosier lore, The law and the jungle, Politics and other nightmares

Guns at work

Indiana Senate Bill 11 would prohibit most public and private employers from adopting or enforcing rules barring firearms from company property. The Journal Gazette is, naturally, appalled:

Advocates for gun rights argue that law-abiding citizens should be allowed to keep weapons locked in their cars, but they ignore the tragic examples of employees who have taken the lives of co-workers when overcome by rage.

Not banned in Delphi

The Delphi school board, based on a parental complaint and after months of debate and appeals, voted 5-1 to NOT remove three books from the 11th-grade advanced English curriculum because of sex and language and yada, yada. The vote came after a public hearing attended by about 150 people, during which 44 of them spoke either for or against the books. And here's the amazing part: Everybody had their say and listened respectfully to other people having their say. Nobody called anybody names.

Shoveling the dough

A dispatch from the shovel-ready front: On its list of possible projects for President Obama's stimulus bill, Gary (them again!) included plans for a 350-slip marina that would cost $19 million and result in the creation of 35 jobs. Some of the local money the project, which has been untapped for 16 years, is controlled by a group called the Lake Michigan Marina Development Commission, which the state stopped funding years ago. Opines the Gary Post-Tribune:

Another bailout

You know, sometimes you decide to help out a relative. But then things go bad, and you're stuck with the troublemaking freeloader forever:

An Indianapolis Capital Improvement Board official is urging the city to take over the cost of operating Conseco Fieldhouse, saying the Indiana Pacers can no longer afford it.

Posted in: Hoosier lore, Sports

In the gun cites

The U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear the case, so a lower court's dismissal of it stands, and New York City's attempt to hold gun manufacturers liable for gun violence is over, and that might have an affect on Gary's efforts to do the same:

Gall alert

Now go to the corner for your time out and don't move till we say so:

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