• Floyd County
H1N1 clinic Sunday at 4-H
The Floyd County Health Department will host a third walk-in H1N1 Clinic, this time for children ages six months to 18 years, and including those with certain chronic medical conditions and weakened immune systems in that same age range, from 1 to 5 p.m. Sunday at the Floyd County 4-H Fairgrounds, Green Valley Road, New Albany.
There is no cost for the vaccine.
Call the Health Department at 812-948-4726 or visit floydcountyhealthdept-in.com for more information.
— Contributed
• Southern Indiana
LSI breakfast series host Lamb
The Leadership Southern Indiana Board of Directors announces the Nov. 11 Breakfast Series with speaker Bill Lamb, president and general manager for Independence Television Co., Inc. (WDRB/WMYO), followed by a free alumni skill building event, “Behavioral Interviewing,” beginning at 7:30 a.m. at Kye’s II, 500 Missouri Ave., Jeffersonville.
The Breakfast Series will again be sponsored by The Horseshoe Foundation of Floyd County and the Paul Ogle Foundation. Lamb is probably the best known face on local TV without being an anchor or reporter for a nightly news program. His commentaries on WDRB-41 have become a trademark of his approach to the business and his views on our region.
The free LSI Alumni Skill Building Workshop, “Behavioral Interviewing” will be from 9:15 to 10:15 a.m. Savvy employers are using “behavioral interviewing” to find and hire candidates who: Can do the job (skills); will do the job (motivation); will fit (culture). Currently only 30 percent of employers use behavioral interviewing, yet statistics say behavioral interviewing is 5 times more accurate than the traditional interview. Patricia A. Shepherd will provide a one-hour introduction to behavioral interviewing, including how to look for traits such as self management, initiative, accountability, creativity and interpersonal skills. The workshop will help participants learn how to formulate behavioral interview questions and practice using probes to follow-up on what candidates have said.
The event is open to all LSI alumni, local area students and the general public on a first-come, first-serve basis.
Cost to attend the event is $22 for LSI Alumni and area students for the breakfast and workshop; $25 for guests for the breakfast; students must bring photo ID.
Call 812-246-6574 or e-mailing your request to info@leadershipsi.org for reservations.
— Contributed
IUS Concert Band to perform concert
The Music Department at Indiana University Southeast will present the IUS Concert Band at 3 p.m. Nov. 8 in the Richard K. Stem Concert Hall on the IUS campus, 4201 Grant Line Road, New Albany.
Director Don McMahel leads the Commonwealth Brass Band. He and associate director, Nan Moore, with the 60-member ensemble will perform a diverse program of songs for concert band, including “And the Multitude with One Voice Spoke” by James L. Hosay; “Fantasy on ‘Madame Butterfly’” by Giacomo Puccini and arranged by Yo Goto; “L’Spirit Du Tour” by Randal Alan Bass; “The Boys of the old Brigade March” by W. Paris Chambers; “Monterosi” by Jacob de Haan; “Flying the Breeze” by Philip Sparke; “Arabesque” by Samuel R. Hazo; and “Ticonderoga March” by Leroy Anderson.
Free parking for the concert is available in the Dogwood Lot only.
Tickets are $8 for adults, $5 for students, seniors, IUS faculty and staff.
Call or visit the Ogle Center ticket office, Ticketmaster locations, or call 502-361-3100, or online at ticketmaster.com for tickets.
— Contributed
JA launches federal Initiative
The Kentucky Education and Workforce Development Cabinet, along with Wired65, a federal initiative focused on uniting the Kentucky/Indiana I-65 corridor economically, recently awarded Junior Achievement of Kentuckiana $86,900 for a project that offers new ways to develop, retain and recruit the next generation of talent.
Southern Indiana schools whose students will experience the locally developed Junior Achievement program, “JA Real Jobs, Real World,” in response to the region’s need, are: Austin, Corydon Central, Crawford, Eastern, Floyd Central, Henryville, Jeffersonville, New Albany, South Central and Southwestern.
“JA Real Jobs, Real World” informs students of career path opportunities, establishes links between students and post-secondary education institutions and stresses the importance of staying in school. Hands-on projects and videos featuring local businesses will engage the students in their personal career-planning process. Junior Achievement is making great strides in fulfilling the grant, according to JA President Debra Hoffer of New Albany, with 105 class requests and 59 volunteers ready to teach.
Wired65 was funded by a $5 million grant awarded by the U.S. Department of Labor WIRED program to the Central Kentucky region in 2007. WIRED is a federal effort focusing on Workforce Innovation in Regional Economic Development.
Contact the JA office at 502-561-5437 for more information or to apply as a volunteer to teach.
— Contributed
Floyd County
The Tribune News Briefs
- Floyd County
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New Albany City Council will be asked to clarify audit issue over sewer rates
Several members from the audience also questioned other financial matters of the city, and whether the council was aware that Gibson received health insurance as city attorney under England though it had been stated by the previous administration his contract did not include medical benefits.
- News and Tribune briefs for Feb. 10, 2012
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First Savings buys bank branches
The move will increase First Savings’ market share in Harrison County to about 31 percent and up the bank’s presence in Floyd County.
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Free falling: CCE demolishes former New Albany business at no charge
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Floyd judge named semifinalist for Indiana Supreme Court
Granger, 42, said she decided to apply after discussions with her family and close friends.
“I care enormously about my judicial service, and I want to expand my work statewide,” she said. -
Indiana granted No Child Left Behind waiver
As the deadline approaches, more schools are failing to meet requirements under the law, with nearly half not doing so last year, according to the Center on Education Policy.
- News and Tribune briefs for Feb. 9, 2012
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Neace Lukens acquires Jenkins Insurance of Sellersburg
Jenkins Insurance principal Mike Jenkins will join the Neace Lukens’ New Albany office, where he’ll focus on his current employee benefit clients and expanding service and product platforms for the company.
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Some lawmakers want you to cruise in for Sunday commerce
The current ban on motorcycle sales is a remnant of Indiana’s old “blue laws” that prohibited various activities on Sundays. The legislature has been slowly chipping away at them.
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Court of appeals hears Messer appeal
Counseled by attorney Bart Betteau, the basis of Messer’s appeal was that his words were constitutionally-protected free speech. But Special Judge Roger Duvall upheld the merit commission’s decision in 2011.
- More Floyd County Headlines
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New Albany City Council will be asked to clarify audit issue over sewer rates






