Blue III will make his debut on Saturday, February 18th @ 2:00pm

Butler will debut its Next Live Bulldog Mascot at Men’s Basketball BracketBuster Feb. 18

Blue II, Butler University’s live mascot, is in the process of training a puppy protégé.  Blue III, or “Trip,” as he will be called is making his Butler debut Feb. 18 at the men’s basketball ESPN BracketBuster game against Indiana State University at 2 p.m. in Hinkle Fieldhouse.

Media covering the game can see “Trip” up close at 2:05 p.m. in Hinkle’s Media Room. Media are also invited to campus for additional photos and interview opportunities with Michael Kaltenmark ’02, Butler’s director of Web Marketing and Communication, and caretaker to Blue II and Trip, on Tuesday, Feb. 21 from 9:30-10:30 a.m. in the University’s Reilly Room.

Joining big brother Blue II at Hinkle to welcome Trip into the Butler family will be Butler’s original mascot, Butler Blue. Now, 11 years old, Blue is enjoying her retirement in Illinois with her owner Kelli Walker ’91, former Butler Assistant Director of Alumni and Parent Programs.

Trip was born on Dec. 23, 2011 and weighed 13.5 oz. He comes from Frank and Jeane King of Kong King Kennel, the same breeders that gave Butler, Blue II, almost eight years ago.

“Butler was not looking for its third mascot before Trip was born,” said Kaltenmark. Blue II is still in great health and has and will continue to be an active member of the Butler community. “Trip was essentially ‘a great opportunity’ for Butler. He was the only male in his litter and is a descendant of championship Bulldog, Ch. Cherokee Legend Rock.” Having Trip at Butler now means he will learn from the best (Blue II) and be fully prepared for the day when he officially takes the reins as the University’s “Top Dawg.”  Until then, Blue II will continue to tweet, eat and nap around campus as usual.

Like Blue II, Trip will receive the best in care and support from partners such as City Dogs Grocery, Don Hinds Ford, Good Dog Hotel & Spa, Holistic Select, Nike, Butler Bookstore, WellPet and Woodland Animal Hospital. He will join Blue II in the Kaltenmark household which includes Michael, his wife Tiffany, and their son Everett.

You can learn more about Blue III by visiting his website <http://www.butler.edu/blue3/>

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Investigative Reporter Jerry Mitchell to Lecture @ Butler University on March 6th @ 7:30pm

 Investigative Reporter Jerry Mitchell to Lecture at Butler University
        
INDIANAPOLIS – Investigative reporter and MacArthur Foundation “genius grant” recipient Jerry Mitchell will deliver the Butler University College of Communication’s annual Howard L. Schrott Lecture at 7:30 p.m. March 6 in the Eidson-Duckwall Recital Hall.

Admission is free and open to the public without tickets. For more information, call (317) 940-5974.
Mitchell is an investigative reporter with the Jackson, Miss., Clarion-Ledger whose courageous efforts have ensured that unpunished murders from the Civil Rights era are finally prosecuted.

In 1989, Mitchell began his immersion in decades-old stories of thwarted justice and undertook a meticulous review of the 1963 assassination of NAACP leader Medgar Evers. Ku Klux Klan member Byron de la Beckwith had been tried twice for this crime in 1964, and each trial ended in hung juries. By analyzing hundreds of documents and interviewing scores of witnesses, Mitchell laid the groundwork for a new trial. The case was reopened and culminated in the conviction and life sentence of Beckwith in 1994.

Mitchell has since uncovered largely unknown details about many other long-dormant murder cases. His reporting has played a key role in the convictions of Klan Imperial Wizard Sam Bowers for ordering the fatal firebombing of NAACP leader Vernon Dahmer in 1966, of Bobby Cherry for the 1963 bombing of a Birmingham church that killed four girls, and of Edgar Ray Killen for helping to orchestrate the 1964 deaths of three civil rights workers in Neshoba County, Miss.

His investment of time and painstakingly detailed research has also produced a broad range of reports on such subjects as racial reconciliation in the South and judicial bribes and chicanery in Mississippi, as well as a series on his own family’s battle against a rare genetic ailment. In an era when long-term investigative reporting is more the exception than the rule, Mitchell’s life and work serve as an example of how a journalist willing to take risks and unsettle waters can make a difference in the pursuit of justice.

Jerry Mitchell received a B.A. (1982) from Harding University and an M.A. (1997) from Ohio State University. He joined the Clarion-Ledger in 1986 as a bureau reporter before turning to investigative reporting in 1989.

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Army and University Band Concerts @ Clowes (Feb. 29-Mar.3)

Butler Hosts Army Field Band, Bands from Purdue, Indiana, Ball State, Michigan   
        
INDIANAPOLIS – Free concerts by the United States Army Field Band and bands from Butler, Purdue, Indiana, Ball State and Michigan State universities will be held in Clowes Memorial Hall Feb. 29 through March 3 when Butler University hosts the American Bandmasters Conference.

The schedule of concerts will be:

8 p.m. Feb. 29: The Purdue University Wind Ensemble and the Ball State University Wind Ensemble.
8 p.m. March 1: Indiana University Wind Ensemble and Michigan State University Wind Symphony.
8 p.m. March 2: The United States Army Field Band, Washington, D.C.
2 p.m. March 3: Butler University Wind Ensemble.

The concerts are free and open to the public, but tickets are required for the Army Field Band performance. The tickets are available at the Clowes Memorial Hall box office and through Ticketmaster (some fees apply). For more information, call (317) 940-6444.

The American Bandmasters Association, founded in 1929 with John Philip Sousa as honorary life president, is the most prestigious organization in the world for band directors. The current membership (invitational) comprises approximately 300 band conductors and composers in the United States and Canada, and 70 associate members (music businesses and corporations that provide significant services to bands and to the publication of band music). Its convention rotates locations throughout the United States. This is the first time it’s being held in Indianapolis since 1982.

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Indy Reads Book Drive — Butler Collection on 2/24

Help “Indy Reads Books” Stock the Shelves

Donations of used books and media for our new retail outlet will support Indy Reads adult literacy programs! Start boxing up your gently used books, DVDs, CDs, audiobooks and video games, and help others learn to read.
 
Indy Reads, central Indiana’s only accredited adult literacy organization, is preparing to open a community bookstore. The store, to be called Indy Reads Books, will be located in downtown Indianapolis along The Cultural Trail. It will be the only bookstore in downtown Indianapolis and is scheduled for completion later this spring. Indy Reads Books will sell donated used books with proceeds benefitting Indy Reads’ literacy tutoring programs.

All types of books and media items, except for textbooks and magazines, are welcome at this time. Some items may be sold through a third-party service prior to the store opening. Book and media collection boxes are located at the following locations.

  • Indy Reads Office – 2450 N. Meridian St. (12 to 5 p.m. weekdays)
  • WFYI – 1630 N. Meridian St. (9 a.m. to 5 p.m. weekdays)
  • The Best Chocolate in Town – 880 Mass. Ave. (11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday through Saturday)
  • Global Gifts – 446 Mass. Ave. (10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Saturday)
  • The Athenaeum – YMCA – 401 E. Michigan St. (5 a.m. to 9 p.m. weekdays, 11 a.m. to 5. p.m. weekends)- this box will be available by 2/7/12

Book-drives will also take place on the Butler Campus (Feb. 24) and IUPUI (March 1). The local organization Giving Sum will also be conducting book-drives. Contributions are tax-deductible as provided by state and federal law. Indy Reads can not give receipts for books donated through the collection boxes. If donors wish to claim a deduction they will need to keep a record of the number of books and type (hardcover or paperback) donated at this time. Receipts will be available at the store after it opens.

Indy Reads Books will further support the mission of Indy Reads by providing private space for tutors and students to meet, training opportunities, and more. Initial funding for Indy Reads Books has been secured through generous grants from Margot Lacy Eccles, the Efroymson Fund, the Glick Fund, and Giving Sum.

Additional collection locations will be announced soon. For more information, or to inquire about maintaining a collection box at a business or other organization, please contact Travis DiNicola, Executive Director of Indy Reads, at 317-275-4035 or .

Indy Reads is unwavering in our mission to improve the literacy skills of adults in central Indiana who read or write at or below the sixth grade level. Our goal is to make Indianapolis 100 percent literate. First established more than 30 years ago, Indy Reads is the only organization in Indianapolis, accredited by ProLiteracy Worldwide, which uses volunteers to provide free, basic literacy tutoring to illiterate and semi-literate adults. Indy Reads programming includes one-on-one tutoring, small group sessions, English as a Second Language instruction, and “Literacy Labs” at neighborhood centers. Learn more at www.IndyReads.org.

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Butler University to host FREE Medicare Part D Enrollment/Re-Enrollment Events

Butler University’s College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences (COPHS) will host two free Medicare Part D Enrollment/Re-enrollment events on the Butler campus, 4600 Sunset Ave., on the following days:

               Tuesday, Nov. 1
               Butler University
               College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences Building, 4th floor conference room (elevator available)
               10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
               By appointment only. Call (317) 940-9324 to make an appointment.
               
               Friday, Nov. 4
               Butler University
               Ford Salon
               Noon to 5 p.m.
               No appointment necessary
              

On Wednesday, Nov. 2 and Thursday, Nov. 3, Butler’s COPHS will partner with Community Family Medicine for a free Medicare Part D Enrollment/Re-enrollment event, held at Community Family Medicine, 10122 E. 10th St. Suite 100, Indianapolis, from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., each day. Attendees must make an appointment by calling (317) 355-5715 and selecting the scheduling/appointment option.
              

Attendees for all events should bring the following: Medicare card and Medicare Part D card (if you have one); list of all current medications and dosages; health insurance cards; and letter(s) from the Social Security Administration or Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.
              

For questions about any of the enrollment/re-enrollment events, call (317) 940-9324.

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Mayoral Candidate Debate is TONIGHT!!

Just a friendly reminder about tonight’s Mayoral Candidate Debate held at Clowes Hall on the Butler University campus. Doors will open at 6:30pm and the debate will begin promptly at 7:00pm.

We hope to see many Butler Tarkington residents in attendance!

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