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         Indiana Disabled & Special Needs Schools:     more detail

41. Special Programs Bookmarks
Information Decision Support education.indiana.edu/cas edu National Fathers’ Networkfor special needs Kids www National Info Center for disabled Children www
http://www.angelfire.com/tx4/textesol2/Bookmarks/Special.html
SPECIAL PROGRAMS BOOKMARKS
Gifted Education

Migrant Education

Safe, Drug-Free Schools

Special Education

Gifted Education
www.cec.sped.org/ericec.htm
Gifted and Talented Resources www.eskimo.com/~user/kids.html
Gifted Children Monthly www.gifted-children.com/
National Association for Gifted Children www.nagc.org/spindex.html
NEAG Center for Gifted Education www.ucc.uconn.edu/~wwwgt Gifted and Talented (TAG) Resources www.eskimo.com/~user/kids.html Migrant Education www.ael.org/eric Database of Schools with Migrant Students www.migranted.org/ccdrep.htm ERIC Migrant Education www.ael.org/eric/migrant.htm Migrant Ed Directory www.ael.org/eric/mied.htm Office of Migrant Ed, USDOE www.ed.gov/offices/OESE/MEP Safe, Drug-Free Schools The ABC’s of Safe and Healthy Child Care www.cdc.gov/ncidod/hip/abc/abc.htm Comprehensive School Health Programs www.cdc.gov/nccdphp/dash/cshpdef.htm education.indiana.edu/cas/diads/diads.html Early Warning, Timely Response A Guide to Safe Schools www.ed.gov/offices/OSERS/OSEP/earlywrn.html Get It Straight! The Facts About Drugs www.usdoj.gov/dea/pubs/straight/cover.htm

42. SEN
Roney's presentation at the indiana Adult Education disabilities CILT Languagesand special Educational needs Futcher School for physically disabled boys and
http://www.tomwilson.com/david/case/SEN.html
Modern Foreign Languages and Special Educational Needs Home The World Wide Web contains plenty of information about modern foreign language learning and about special educational needs as separate issues. The implications of SEN for MFL attract relatively sparse attention, which is why the present website seeks to redress the deficit. Glossaries Teaching materials Provision and practice Professional development ... Sensory and physical difficulties Glossaries of inclusive education terms Top Teaching materials
  • Val Lawson has created a large-print French course, in collaboration with Modern Foreign Languages teachers at her mainstream secondary school. It was originally developed for a Year 7 teaching group including a pupil with Downs Syndrome and several others with specific learning difficulties. Read more about the course on her KS3 French and German Resources page and read a sample unit in Adobe Acrobat format on her Download area The Makaton Vocabulary Development Project has designed Resource Vocabulary signs and symbols for the early levels of a number of National Curriculum subjects, including modern foreign languages.

43. Vitae
for it's housing for the disabled program. date I have presented special needs DriverTeam Texas, Illinois, Wisconsin, Michigan, indiana, Pennsylvania, Kentucky
http://www.whitebuffalopress.com/vitae.htm
Curriculum Vitae
Dayton Ray Turner, Ed.D.
5306 King George Drive
San Antonio, TX 78229
210-614-1396 FAX
Education
Bachelor of Arts, University of Northern Colorado, Greeley, Colorado. Major: Secondary Special Education-Mental Retardation. May, 1966. Minor: Sociology. Master of Science, University of Illinois, Urbana, Illinois. Graduate Fellow of the United States Office of Education (USOE). Thesis topic:The Mentally Retarded Offender. October, 1970. Doctor of Education-Special Education Administration, University of Northern Colorado. Greeley, Colorado. Dissertation Topic: Guilford's Structure of Intellect and the Social Intelligence of Juvenile Delinquents. August, 1975. Postdoctoral Study. Educational Technology. University of Northern Colorado. Greeley, Colorado. Distance Learning for Special Populations. November, 1991.
National Honors
Recepient of the Sure-Lok National Special Needs Transportation Award, 2002.
Presented at the National Association for Pupil Transportation 2002 Conference, Greensboro, North Carolina. November 3, 2002.
Professional Affiliations
National Association for Pupil Transportation (NAPT).

44. FSSA - Services For Disabled Persons
any of the Vocational Rehabilitation offices in indiana. special Programs at BosmaRehabilitation Center skills to manage their health needs more independently
http://www.state.in.us/fssa/servicedisabl/blind/
var dir = location.href.substring(0,location.href.lastIndexOf('www.in.gov/')); var url = location.href.substring(dir.length,location.href.length+1); document.write("") People with Disabilities - Blind and Visually Impaired Services Bosma Rehabilitation Center Itinerant Rehabilitation Teaching Program Randolph-Sheppard Vending Program Blind Registry ... Sensory Aid Services Bosma Rehabilitation Center - "Successful Adjustment to Vision Impairment" The Charles E. Bosma Rehabilitation Center for the Blind and Visually Impaired offers training in independent living skills. The Center provides real life situations through which individuals can become skillful in caring for themselves, home-making activities, independent travel, and new methods of communication. Clients practice these skills under supervision by experienced instructors, several of whom are visually impaired. The Center also provides group discussion opportunities for people going through similar experiences to share their problems with adjustment to vision impairment. Individuals attend training sessions six hours a day, Monday through Friday. During the first four weeks of the program, the ability, interests, and needs of the individual are evaluated. The instructor and the individual jointly determine goals. An average training program lasts 12 weeks, but may very depending upon the needs and progress of each person. Acquiring independent living skills can give a person who is blind or visually impaired the confidence and ability to go through vocational rehabilitation and become employable.

45. Wrightslaw - The Special Ed Advocate Newsletter, March 1, 2000
columnists are COPAA members Pat Howey(indiana advocate) and hearing on behalf ofa disabled child. brightest advocates and attorneys for special needs children
http://www.wrightslaw.com/advoc/nwltr/2000/nl_00_0301.htm

Wrights law
The Special Ed Advocate Newsletter
March 1, 2000 Home Advocacy Libraries Newsletter Archives March 1 Home
Issue - 64
ISSN: 1538-3202 May 2-3 Springfield, MA
May 16-17 Jacksonville, FL

May 21 Roanoke, VA

Full Schedule
Subscribe Your Email:
Check Email for spelling
select a page . . . Home What's New Sitemap Press Topics **Advocacy** Articles FAQ's Tips Newsletters **Law** Articles Caselaw Pleadings Regs **Topics** Advocacy Assessments Autism ADD/ADHD Damages Discipline Discriminations Due Process Early Childhood Eligilibity FAPE High Stakes Tests IDEA IDEA 2002 IEPs LRE/Inclusion Learning Disab. Mediation No Child Left Confidentiality Private Schools Letter Writing Placement Safe Guards Related Services Retaliation School Personnel Transition **Pubs** Spec. Ed. Law FETA Newsletter Flyers **Services** Orders Our Seminars Consults Communities Headline News Updates **Resources** Free Pubs Free Newsletters Disability Groups State DOEs PTI Centers International State Yellow Pgs Best School Sites Asmnt Terms **Book Store** Best Of Disabilities Special Ed IEPs Legal Strategy Negotiate Parents Kids Updates **Other** Search Subscribe About Us Link to Us Home Wrightslaw Home What's New Sitemap Press ... Topics Advocacy Library Articles FAQ's Tips Newsletters Law Library Articles Caselaw Topics Advocacy Assessments ADD/ADHD Autism ... Privacy, Records

46. Related Websites
and volunteers work together to support children with special needs. A listing ofrespite service providers for indiana. League for the Blind disabled, Inc.
http://www.insource.org/links.htm
Return to IN*SOURCE Home Page
REACHING OUT: IN*SOURCE'S LINKS TO RELATED DISABILITY SITES
Revised November 25, 2002
LINKING HOOSIERS: Related Organizations in Indiana
Listed Alphabetically
Abilities Unlimited, Inc.
  • Abilities Unlimited, Inc. assists individuals with any physical, mental or emotional impairment in achieving maximum opportunity for participation in community and family life by providing direct services and collaborating with other community groups
Access Indiana Information Network (AIIN)
  • Access Indiana Information Network (AIIN) is an interactive information and communication system created to provide equal electronic access to information, regardless of geographic locations, for residents and business across Indiana.
American Council of the Blind of Indiana
  • The ABC of Indiana strives to improve the well-being of all blind and visually impaired people by: serving as a representative national organization of blind people; elevating the social, economic and cultural levels of blind people; improving educational and rehabilitation facilities and opportunities; cooperating with the public and private institutions and organizations concerned with blind services; encouraging and assisting all blind persons to develop their abilities and conducting a public education program to promote greater understanding of blindness and the capabilities of blind people.

47. Learning Disabilities OnLine: Finding Help - LD Schools
17195 East Cleveland Road, South Bend, indiana 46635; 574 software for the learningdisabled community successfully include children with special needs into the
http://www.ldonline.org/finding_help/ld_schools/
To find other help resources select a topic from the list and click GO Select a Topic US - National Organizations US - Federal Agencies US - State By State Resource Guides Canadian Resources Information By Phone International Links LD Schools On-line Resources Parent Advocacy
LD OnLine introduces the LD OnLine Yellow Pages ! This exciting new venture brings information about professionals who serve children and adults with learning disabilities and/or ADHD. If you are a professional interested in listing your services, sign-up online now! US Schools
Learning/Teaching Resources

Homeschooling

Summer Programs
...
Postsecondary Education
US Schools (Listed by States)
Please contact the schools for updated information.
A C D F ... W
A
Spring Ridge Academy (Arizona) Spring Valley, AZ : boarding school for girls with attention deficit disorder, learning disabilities, low self esteem or other challenges. 13690 South Burton Road, Spring Valley, AZ 86333 - (520) 632-4602

48. Children's Services - Books For Children Concerning Disabilities
Services Monroe County Public Library, indiana - (812) 349 of such challengeson the disabled person and Visiting a Class For Children With special needs.
http://www.monroe.lib.in.us/childrens/disabilitybib.html
Children's Services - Monroe County Public Library, Indiana - (812) 349-3100 Booklists Search Tools Web Sites Program Schedule
Books For Children Concerning Disabilities
Non-Fiction Blatchford, Claire H. Going With the Flow.
When Mark changes schools in mid-year, he is angry, lonely, and embarrassed by his deafness, but he soon begins to adjust. Dinn, Sheila. Hearts of Gold: A Celebration of Special Olympics and Its Heroes.
Covers the history of the Special Olympics, the various events in which mentally and physically handicapped athletes compete, and some of the people involved in this international competition. Haldane, Suzanne. Helping Hands: How Monkeys Assist People Who Are Disabled.
A photo-essay focusing on a teenager with quadriplegia and his capuchin monkey. Kent, Deborah. Extraordinary People With Disabilities.
Profiles seven dozen people throughout history with various physical or mental disabilities. Additional articles provide historical background on the disability rights movement. Krementz, Jill. How It Feels To Live With a Physical Disability.

49. Educational Psychology
visually disabled, learning disabled and developmentally based programs for childrenwith special needs. Hearing Sciences indiana University. Organizations
http://personal.nbnet.nb.ca/86mitch/irene/spec_ed.htm
Special Education (Educational Psychology)
    You are visitor N°. to visit., Welcome...
    Education
    Everyone knows someone or has a relative that has special needs. I devoted my life to helping these such people. I hope that these links and my personal thoughts will inspire you to feel helpful toward others.
    General Links

    Learning Disabilities

    Attention Deficit Disorder (ADD)

    Dyslexia
    ...
    Compagnies

    General Links
    • Behavior Page - resource for school personnel, parents, and other professionals concerning the full range of behavior problems and challenges displayed by children and youth in school.
    • Catalyst, The - quarterly newsletter concerning microcomputers and related technology for children and adults with any disability, focusing on special education and rehabilitation.
    • Federal Resource Center for Special Education - helps Regional Resource Centers improve programs, policies, and practices.
    • Gentle Teaching - non-aversive approach of teaching people with mental retardation with a focus on establishing safe and bonded interpersonal relations.
    • Inventory for Client and Agency Planning (ICAP) - assesses the type and amount of special assistance that people with disabilities may need.

50. [ICPAC] Early Childhood And Elementary Education
http//icpac.indiana.edu/education/educational_programs/23400 aide, bilingual/biculturalaide, disabled learner aide the needs of students with special needs.
http://icpac.indiana.edu/education/educational_programs/23400.xml.print
Early Childhood and Elementary Education
http://icpac.indiana.edu/education/educational_programs/23400.xml.print
Introduction
Early childhood and elementary education programs intend to prepare people to teach preschool or elementary classes. Early childhood education programs are designed to prepare people to teach students ranging in age from infancy to eight years. Elementary education programs intend to prepare people to teach students in kindergarten through eighth grade. Middle school education programs intend to prepare people to teach students in grades four through nine. Study in these programs includes preparation to teach several or all subjects. Early childhood and elementary education programs usually are four-year to five-year programs that end in bachelor's degrees, professional certificates, and, in some cases, master's degrees. They are found at colleges and universities. These education programs instruct students about teaching theories and methods, plus give them techniques to create, carry out, and evaluate classroom learning activities. Most states require teachers to be certified. For more information on certification, see the certification topic in the Elementary and Secondary Teachers occupation. One-year certificate and two-year associate degree programs in early childhood education are designed to prepare people to work with preschool children or as teacher aides in schools. Some two-year educational aide programs allow students to specialize in classroom aide, bilingual/bicultural aide, disabled learner aide, and vocational-technical education.

51. The Math Forum - Math Library - Disabled/Challenged
including Mathematics, Learning disabled, Hyperactive (Attention An indianabasednonprofit which, among correspondence program for special needs students in
http://mathforum.org/library/ed_topics/contexts_disabled/
Browse and Search the Library
Home
Math Ed Topics Teaching Issues/Strats Special Contexts : Disabled/Challenged

Library Home
Search Full Table of Contents Suggest a Link ... Library Help
Selected Sites (see also All Sites in this category
  • Adaptive Technology Resource Centre - University of Toronto
    more>>
  • EASI Street to Science, Engineering, and Math (SEM)
    Equal access to software and information: an NSF-sponsored project to collect and disseminate information on tools that make these fields more accessible to professionals with disabilities. Online workshops, Webcasts, links to programs for the visually impaired, those with learning disabilities, the hard-of-hearing, social barriers to SEM access, resources for tactile graphics/three-dimensional models, etc. more>>
  • Equal Access to Software and Information (EASI)
    An affiliate of the Association for the Advancement of Higher Education dedicated to disseminating up-to-date information about providing equal access to computing and information technology for persons with disabilities. E-mail Workshops, on-site seminars on Adaptive Computing, and assistance in making information technology accessible with the use of state-of-the-art adaptive computing technology are available for universities, colleges, schools, businesses, and non-profit organizations. more>>
  • ERIC Clearinghouse on Disabilities and Gifted Education (ERIC EC) - Council for Exceptional Children (CEC), U.S. Dept. of Education
  • 52. Computer Science Details
    to Exceptional Children (indiana University (indiana, USA)). Instruction for studentswith special needs (California State Mainstreaming disabled Students in
    http://www.ed-x.com/courselistings/educationdetails.asp?SubCatID=154

    53. Special Education -- Ball State University
    The Department of special Education has twelve full have had teaching experiencewith disabled children, and school teaching certification in indiana or other
    http://www.bsu.edu/web/admingen/acadepts/speced.html
    For campus information using Telecommunications Devices for the Deaf ( TDD Ball State University.
    Muncie, IN 47306.
    Equal Opportunity and Affirmative Action

    Department of
    Special Education [Academic Programs] [ H. S. Prep.] [Scholarships]
    [Special Opportunities]
    ... [Careers] Academic Programs Teacher Education Majors in Special Education, All-Grade.
    Several majors are available in special education: Mild Disabilities, 126 hours , leads to certification for teaching students with learning disabilities and mild mental handicaps. Severe Disabilities, 126 hours , leads to certification for teaching children and youth with moderate, severe, profound and/or multiple disabilities, and Autism. Emotionally Handicapped, 126 hours , leads to certification for teaching children and youth with emotional or behavioral problems. Special education courses in these majors help students understand disabilities and how they affect students and their families, schools, and society. Lecture classes are supplemented with observation and experience in public school classrooms or agency programs. Students learn to match instructional techniques to the needs of children and adults with disabilities and how to use diagnostic and remedial procedures. Graduates must demonstrate competencies in all facets of the individualized education programs required by federal and state law for individuals with disabilities, including assessing the functional educational level of the student, developing long-term goals and instructional objectives, determining the extent to which the individual can be included in a general education classroom, and ensuring compliance with the procedural due process rights of parents.

    54. Indiana Academy Of Fine Performing Arts
    and opportunities for lowincome, disabled or special if transportation does presenta special need and open to students in the indianapolis, indiana area and
    http://www.geocities.com/fine4arts/just4u.html
    Sign Guestbook View Guestbook We are an exempt 501(c)(3) educational organization serving low-income, disabled and special needs children and their families throughout the state of Indiana with excellent quality education in fine and performing arts. 
    MISSION:  To improve the quality of life in children through fine arts while providing racial harmony and to assist families to be self-sufficient in today's society through education, fine arts and the coordination of resources.
    VISION:  To focus and expose children to the fine arts in order to enhance multi-intelligence concepts.  To assist children to learn and understand what is socially acceptable while given the opportunity to use creative minds to their best ability.  To assist families to be self-sufficient in today's society through education.
    GOALS:  To identify and select principals that has demonstrated a potential for professional self-growth and to develop that potential through an intensive and exciting fine arts academic program.  To ensure school effectiveness by developing mentors of educators as well as higher level administra-tive staff for the continuous growth of the academy.
    To expand and enhance fine arts activity, experience, and opportunities for low-income, disabled or special needs children and their families.  To strengthen self-awareness and self-sufficiency in parents through education, communication and fine arts.  Finally, to ensure school effectiveness by educating community volunteers for the purpose of serving as mentors and fundraising activities.

    55. Dorene J. Philpot Attorney At Law -- Special Education -- Indianapolis Indiana
    and their parents all over the state of indiana. Failure to allow the special needschild to participate in to the same extent as his nondisabled peers when
    http://www.dphilpotlaw.com/html/special-ed.html

    Attorney Fees
    Basic Definitions Being An Advocate Case Law ... Other Resources Special Education Law Dorene Philpot is an Indianapolis attorney who represents children with special needs and their parents all over the state of Indiana.
    Often this means going to a due process hearing in order to force the schools to comply with the federal and state protections afforded children with special needs.
    Parents frequently do not know what their children's rights are in terms of the education and services offered by the schools, and they frequently feel intimidated by school staffs during case conference committee meetings and feel that they have little input into the child's Individualized Education Plan (IEP).
    These problems can have serious impact and their children's progress can be hampered by that lack of knowledge.
    "What we have is what you get" is NOT what the federal and state laws provide.
    The schools are required, by law, to devise an INDIVIDUALIZED education program for a child, based on that child's individual needs (not on the school's staffing or budget problems) that is reasonably calculated to confer MEANINGFUL educational benefit.

    56. Effective Responses, Safe & Responsive Schools Project, Indiana Education Policy
    and problematic youngsters, whether disabled or nondisabled. Referral to specialeducation may also provide some 9, 2000 http//www.indiana.edu/~safeschl
    http://www.indiana.edu/~safeschl/response.html
    Understanding School Violence Home Search Contact Us Schools that are safe and responsive have plans and procedures in place to deal with violent and disruptive behaviors that do occur. Over-reliance on suspension and expulsion is replaced by an extensive array of options that can be matched to the severity of the offense. In particular, well-prepared schools and districts have in place crisis intervention plans that detail the roles and procedures used to respond to crisis events. How can schools begin to develop an array of options as an alternative to suspension and expulsion? If we are to break the cycle of violence in American society, we must begin to look beyond a program of stiffer consequences to an array of effective responses geared toward the seriousness of the offense. A number of such alternative responses might be made available: In-school disciplinary alternatives : Saturday school or in-school suspension keep students in school while being disciplined. The effectiveness of in-school suspension seems to depend on its implementation; programs with a well-trained supervisor that require students to continue their academic assignments are more likely to be effective.

    57. Education Week - Registration - Access Restricted
    example, 12 states, including indiana, required all responding to concerns that specialeducation students accommodations for learningdisabled students that
    http://www.edweek.org/ew/ewstory.cfm?slug=38stakes.h19

    58. Sesame Workshop - The New Kid In Class
    at Maple Elementary School in Jeffersonville, indiana. in the same classrooms as disabledyoungsters may gratification in helping their specialneeds classmates
    http://www.sesameworkshop.org/parents/advice/article/0,4125,745,00.html
    document.write(getAdLink(468, 60, "/parents/advice/article.php?contentId=745/")); document.write(getAdLink(120, 60, "/parents/advice/article.php?contentId=745/")); Search
    document.write(getAdLink(120, 60, "/parents/advice/article.php?contentId=745/"));
    The New Kid in Class She's disabled. She may look and act different. How will her presence affect your child's education? Part Two of a Two-Part Series.
    by Dianne Hales
    Something major is happening in American education: Children with disabilities are no longer out of sight.
    Over the past five years increasing numbers of students with physical and emotional disabilities have been brought out of separate schools and special-education classes and into mainstream classrooms. The reason? New federal laws that have embraced the policy of inclusion.
    This controversial educational approach assumes that all children, regardless of physical, emotional, or academic ability, can and should learn together in the same classroom. Inclusionary schools assign students a grade based solely on their chronological age; any child who also requires the services of special-education teachers can then get most of those services in the classroom.
    The first part of this series, "A Place for Amber" looked at the effects of inclusion on children with disabilities, and found that many educators and parents give it high marks. But there is another side to the equation: inclusion's effect on children who are not disabled. In this second and concluding part of Moving Into the Mainstream, we look at what is known about students who share classrooms with youngsters with special needs.

    59. Daily Report Card News Service 2001: The NEGP Weekly For July 1
    RIVER PROJECT A NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC special (Goal 3 STATE POLICY NEWS *****1.) *** disabled STUDENTS MUST PASS indiana'S HIGH SCHOOL
    http://www.youth.net/drc/2001/0028.html
    The NEGP Weekly for July 13, 2001
    From: Annie Golden ( GOLDENA1@WESTAT.com
    Date: Thu Jul 12 2001 - 14:04:03 PDT http://www.in.gov/ai/gov/state/html . Click on Judicial Branch and then Indiana Court of Appeals. 2.) ******** OHIO REVAMPS STATE TESTS: ALIGNS WITH STANDARDS (Goal Three: Student Achievement and Citizenship) A new Ohio state law overhauls the state's proficiency tests by aligning them with academic standards (Rubin, EDUCATION DAILY, 6/15). The law also limits the tests' use in determining whether students will be promoted to the next grade or earn a high school diploma. The new law is based on recommendations developed by Governor Bob Taft's Commission for Student Success. Last year, the Commission reported that the Ohio tests were "rushed into place before the academic standards they were meant to measure had taken hold," reports the paper. For more information on the new law, visit http://www.state.oh.us/gov/releases

    60. NEGP Weekly - The NEGP Weekly For July 13, 2001
    1.) disabled STUDENTS MUST PASS indiana'S HIGH SCHOOL 5.) COMMUNITYBASED AID FORdisabled STUDENTS HELP RIVER PROJECT A NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC special (Goal 3
    http://commons.somewhere.com/reportcard/2001/The.NEGP.Weekly.for.July.html
    NEGP Weekly Most Recent Article: Mon, 7 Apr 2003 *****************THE NEGP WEEKLY***************** A weekly news update on America's Education Goals and school improvement efforts across America from the NATIONAL EDUCATION GOALS PANEL Friday - July 13, 2001 Vol. 2 No. 108 CONTENTS **STATE POLICY DISABLED STUDENTS: MUST PASS INDIANA'S HIGH SCHOOL EXAM (Goal 3) OHIO REVAMPS STATE TESTS: ALIGNS WITH STANDARDS (Goal 3) **COMMUNITY AND LOCAL NEWS COMMUNITY INTERVENTIONS: KEEPS KIDS IN SCHOOL (Goal 2) ASSIST: DELMAR, DELAWARE, PROGRAM HELPS SPECIAL NEEDS STUDENTS LEARN (Goal 3) **FEDERAL POLICY NEWS COMMUNITY-BASED AID FOR DISABLED STUDENTS: HELP FROM THE DoED (Goal 6) "No Such Thing as a Vacation from Reading": DoEd'S SUMMER READING PROGRAM (Goal 3) **RESEARCH AND EDUCATION PRACTICE IBM'S REINVENTING EDUCATION: GAINS REPORTED (Goals 3 and 4) THE RIVER PROJECT: A NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC SPECIAL (Goal 3) **FEATURE STORY WESTED: AIDING LOW-PERFORMING SCHOOLS (All Goals) STATE POLICY NEWS http://www.in.gov/ai/gov/state/html

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