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

Quaking

By God, I love science:

CHICAGO - Can cleavage cause an earthquake? Women all over the country are testing the theory.

It all started with a blog post from Purdue University senior, Jennifer McCreight. She was upset over comments a senior Iranian cleric made about women who wear revealing clothing and behave promiscuously.

[. . .]

Born to be . . . safe?

Guess this will be a setback for the crusade for a motorcycle helmet law:

Motorcycle traffic fatalities in Indiana declined more than 14 percentage points last year, reflecting a nationwide trend, according to a new study.

ahorse

As a Monday morning brightener, we have a new record holder. This is Enistein, who weighed just 6 pounds when he was born Friday in Barnstead, New Hampshire. He's small even for the minature breed he is. Apparently, the Guniness Book of Records lists the smallest newborn horse as weighing 9 pounds.

Posted in: Current Affairs

Unfit to serve

Sylvia Smith had an interesting column in Sunday's JG about how many kids are unfit for military service, and I found myself agreeing with much of it.

Vet care

As a veteran nearing the age when getting medical care will likely be a regular activity, I'm very interested in the back and forth between 3rd District congressional candidates Bob Thomas and Mark Souder over VA hospitals. As Thomas tells it, Souder didn't care all that much about the local hospital until a veterans' group put pressure on him. The way Souder sees it, Thomas wants to close all the hospitals and callously put veterans in a "Medicaid-like system."

Doo process

Noble County police were trying to serve Thomas Hovis Jr. with an arrest warrant on drug charges. As they arrived at the house he was staying at, Hovis ran to a nearby outbuilding. They surrounded the building, ordered him out and then fired tear gas, which apparently did not persuade him to leave. And then:

  When officers entered the building, they found Hovis standing up to his neck in a manure pit under the floor. After officers removed Hovis from the pit, he reportedly began fighting with officers, and was Tased, police said.

All in the family

In this day and age, when anybody can be with anybody else without fear of embarrassment or recrimination, it's odd to see a story about two people who kept their marriage secret for five years. But that's what Mishawaka Schools Superintendent R. Steven Mills and Joann Shaw, the district's director of literacy programs, did, and for the most old-fashioned of reasons, that people should not supervise people they are married to and people in supervisory positions know this very well.

Healthy prisoners

A letter to the editor from a Jeffersonville woman takes on Indiana's attorney general over health care:

As a citizen of the United States and resident of Indiana, I am surprised that the Attorney General of the State of Indiana, Greg Zoeller, would even entertain filing a lawsuit. His reasoning is based on the constitutionally of health care reform.

Short of the top

Indiana Superintendent of Public Instruction Tony Bennett and the leadership of the Indiana State Teachers Association are making Washington Democrats and Republicans look like dope-smoking old hippies singing kumbaya around the campfire:

Indiana will bow out of the federal Race to the Top competition after a highly public feud between public schools chief Tony Bennett and the state's teachers' unions.

[. . .]

Read his lips

They're trying to sneak up on it, aren't they?

President Barack Obama suggested Wednesday that a new value-added tax on Americans is still on the table, seeming to show more openness to the idea than his aides have expressed in recent days.

Let's talk dirty

OK, now this is funny:

Veteran Rep. Babette Josephs (D., Phila.) last Thursday accused her primary opponent, Gregg Kravitz, of pretending to be bisexual in order to pander to lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender voters, a powerful bloc in the district.

Copers and whiners

In a severe economic downturn, everybody has to make sacrifices. But not everybody deals with it equally. There's the civil, gracious way:

John Dickerson, executive director of Arc of Indiana, says the recent announcement of nearly $90 million in state funding cuts to services for people with developmental disabilities is a call to action. The cuts can spur much-needed change in the delivery and oversight of those services.

The three-

To address Indiana's "undereducation" problem (just 16.5 percent of adults between 25 and 64 have a bachelor's degree), Gov. Mitch Daniels has asked more of the state's colleges and universities to offer three-year degree programs (only Ball State and Manchester now do):

Nic work if you can

In case you've been losing sleep wondering about this, Ben & Jerry's "flavor gurus" come up with a list of more than 100 concepts for new flavors every year.:

Obama's choice

Today's doubletalk award:

President Obama said today he doesn't have a "litmus test" for the next Supreme Court nominee, but he supports abortion rights and his choice must "take into account individual rights, and that includes women's rights."

I believe Obama doesn't have a litmus test on abortion rights about as much as I believe the county commissioners weren't aiming at abortion with their registration-of-outside-doctors proposal.

The original snarks

Those of us in the blogosphere sometimes take a perverse pride in our snarky put-downs. But we can't compare with writers slamming other writers. There is, for example, William Faulkner on Mark Twain:

A hack writer who would not have been considered fourth rate in Europe, who tricked out a few of the old proven sure fire literary skeletons with sufficient local color to intrigue the superficial and the lazy.

Posted in: Books

A common problem

Tomorrow is the 40th anniversary of Earth Day, a good time for a reminder that a respect for private property, not massive government intervention, is the best prescription for a healthy environment:

The Stevens legacy

There they go again:

Would you let the government take your car and give it to someone else? How about your computer, television set, house, or business? What if the government said you would be paid  yet you had no choice?

Spit-take

Gerald Foday, executive director of the Metropolitan Human Relations Commission, has announced a settlement of the investigation into Ricker Oil Co.'s unfortunate "No Burmese people allowed" sign at a southside laundry:

We like our rules, by golly!

God, they never stop. Not only do they keep ratcheting up the control . . .

Posted in: Uncategorized
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