September 15, 2012
Brian A. Howey / Special to IBJWith every public survey since the May primary repeatedly showing Republican U.S. Senate nominee Richard Mourdock in a dead
heat with Democrat Joe Donnelly, the Indiana treasurer has taken on a remake of his battered image.
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September 15, 2012
Angel RiveraI find it awkwardly self-serving when a candidate for public office tells me the next election—when he or she is on
the ballot—is the most important election of my lifetime. This happens at least once every election cycle.
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September 15, 2012
Kay Fleming / Special to IBJThe piece of legislation I believe is most critical is a comprehensive revision of Indiana’s criminal code. The last
comprehensive revision of the code occurred in 1977. Although there have been some legislative changes since then, our criminal
code is terribly outdated.
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September 15, 2012
As attorney general, and in my prior position as chief deputy in this office, I understand and appreciate the relationship
between the Office of the Attorney General and the General Assembly. Indiana is one of only six states where the office is
created by the Legislature and not by the state constitution.
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September 15, 2012
Anthony L. Fargo / Special to IBJThe Indiana Coalition for Open Government was putting together such a list for the gubernatorial candidates as I wrote this
column. While I played a small role in that effort, I would also like to ask a few questions of Mike Pence and John Gregg
that are not on the list:
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September 15, 2012
Sue Swayze / Special to IBJWar on women? The only one I see is the plight of the single mother suffering from broken commitments, her own poor choices,
and an overwhelmed system poorly designed to serve her and her children.
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September 15, 2012
When women vote, women win. That’s the mantra the 51% Club has adopted in an effort to encourage women to vote this
election cycle. An organic, grass-roots movement of Democratic women throughout Indiana, the 51% Club has repeatedly shared
some startling statistics.
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September 15, 2012
John Krull / Special to IBJNow that the national political conventions have come and gone and the presidential campaign season is about to reach top
gear, at least two Hoosiers have to be watching with mixed emotions.
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September 15, 2012
Woodrow Myers / Special to IBJFor an actor, actress or movie buff, it is the Academy Awards. For a basketball player and fan, it is March Madness or the
NBA Finals. For the swimmer, gymnast, or distance runner and those of us who admire their talents, it is the Olympics.
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September 15, 2012
Bill Taft / Special to IBJI admit it. Even though I was a political science minor in college, I did not watch one minute of the Republican or Democratic
national conventions. But I am not alone. In some very informal polling, I have learned that lots of engaged local leaders
also skipped these television events.
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September 15, 2012
Robert Vane / Special to IBJGoing to a convention really is a “bucket list” item for those of us who find politics so compelling. I can only
imagine what the conventions were like a hundred years ago—much less scripted and scrutinized I’m sure—but
there was such tremendous optimism and energy in Tampa last month.
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September 15, 2012
Louis Mahern / Special to IBJEarlier this year, U.S. student loan debt achieved a milestone. It surpassed outstanding credit card debt. According to the
Federal Reserve Bank of New York, student debt is rising when other debt is flat or even falling. Fifteen percent of all Americans
with a credit score are carrying student debt.
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September 15, 2012
John Mutz / Special to IBJOnce upon a time, three daily newspapers operated in Indianapolis. The Indianapolis Times, a Scripps-Howard paper,
was first to stop its presses, in 1965, a victim of competition and the advent of aggressive electronic news sources.
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September 15, 2012
Jake Bonifield / Special to IBJFootball season is here, bringing with it swelled TV audiences, increased tax revenue for Indianapolis, filled seats in Lucas
Oil Stadium, and frustrated fans across the state. For many, their frustration will likely catch them by surprise and have
nothing to do with Andrew Luck’s accuracy or holes in the Indianapolis Colts defense.
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September 1, 2012
David Harris / Special to IBJGov. Daniels will have a momentous opportunity to make Purdue’s College of Education a national model for teacher preparation.
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September 1, 2012
Samuel L. Odle / Special to IBJThe announcement of a potential Super Bowl bid for 2018 is creating a buzz, reminding us that Indianapolis and central Indiana
are now on the national, even international, stage in many ways.
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September 1, 2012
Joe Donnelly / Special to IBJWhen my kids were growing up, I coached their baseball and basketball teams. Like all coaches, I preached teamwork as one
of the key fundamentals that would make us successful.
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September 1, 2012
Julia Vaughn / Special to IBJWhen the U.S. Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of the vast majority of the Affordable Care Act, it threw a curveball
to politicians like Gov. Daniels and Mike Pence, who were counting on the court killing the implementation of national health
reform.
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September 1, 2012
Rex Early / Special to IBJIt’s nine weeks until the election, and Richard Mourdock from southern Indiana and Joe Donnelly from northwest Indiana
are in a barn-burner race for the Senate seat. I am going to vote for Mourdock because I like his “tell it like it is”
style, much like my all-time best Indiana senator, William Ezra Jenner.
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September 1, 2012
Mark Souder / Special to IBJAmong news people in Indiana there is an excited buzz: Mourdock may be in trouble in his Senate race against Donnelly. Indiana
Democrats were swamped in the 2010 elections.
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September 1, 2012
Kathy Davis / Special to IBJIt’s getting close to election time. I find many voters are feeling a depressed malaise. When we feel that way, it’s
hard to imagine regaining the energetic confidence we could have, and that we need to succeed.
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September 1, 2012
John Ketzenberger / Special to IBJMr. Chapman lived across the street from my elementary school, in a ramshackle house behind the candy store. I’d seen
him around, but never met him until I started to deliver the Auburn Evening Star along 15th Street.
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September 1, 2012
Jim Shella / Special to IBJMitch Daniels is leaving office because of a term limit. As he departs at the end of his second four-year hitch, a recent
independent poll placed the Daniels approval rating at 66 percent, showing a large majority of voters still approve of the
job he’s doing.
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September 1, 2012
Ted Boehm / Special to IBJPardon me for reminiscing on this 25th anniversary of the 1987 Pan American Games. Others have told how the Indianapolis “sports
strategy” helped regenerate downtown, grow IUPUI, and establish Indianapolis as a major league city and a convention
destination.
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September 1, 2012
Teresa Meredith / Special to IBJInitially, I think Gov. Daniels should find a way to celebrate the great projects happening in teacher education.
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Three Magi
Cats out of the bag. The object of the game is to get acquired. That means the company has no idea how to grow beyond a certain point. Email is a 1990s technology. I have laughed at this company since day one. Such a small bit player. If it was anywhere but here, it wouldn't be newsworthy.
Esther, Indy has passed Chicago in the local government corruption arena. Don't downgrade us. We're No. 1 in the Midwest.
Does the buyer get to keep the recent Accu-Chek J.D. Power award? Be careful, those Swiss cannot be trusted. Last June they pimped Mayor Ballard and former Governor Daniels at a media op, announcing plans to invest "$300 million at its Indianapolis headquarters, creating up to 100 new jobs by 2017," only to turn around and close the Roche Nutley, NJ facility and eliminate 1000 jobs there later the same week. It seems that healthcare can be innovated only as long as money is to be made. Right now Roche seems to have big eyes for China: there are many Chinese in China and potential billions in Swiss francs! Since Roche is having difficulty with US insurance companies swallowing the bill for overpriced cancer drugs (with debatable efficacy) why not sell insurance to the Chinese and market the drugs to them there? There is a name for these sort of business practices however proper decorum precludes it use in this forum.
Same kind of Luddites who oppose I-69. Guessing their 501(c)(4) application probably sailed right through the IRS.