JACKSONVILLE, IL (07/03/2012)(readMedia)-- The following students of Illinois College have been recognized for their academic excellence on April 27 when liberal arts college held its annual Honors Day Celebration.

Hannah Oak a sophomore from Taylor Ridge was awarded the Edith Rammelkamp Elliott Memorial Award. This award is presented to selected students desiring to travel abroad. Oak is a graduate of Rockridge High School and the daughter of Kevin and Cynthia Oak of Taylor Ridge.

Dustin Secrist a junior from Hillsdale was awarded the John G. Anderson Award in Theatre. This award is presented to a student who demonstrates dedicated and consistent excellence in theatre productions. Secrist is a graduate of Riverdale High School and the son of Casey Secrist of Hillsdale.

Founded in 1829, Illinois College is a residential liberal arts college fostering academic excellence rooted in opportunities for experiential learning while preparing students for lifelong success.

CHICAGO - July 3, 2012. Governor Pat Quinn today acted on the following bills.

 

Bill No.: SB 174

An Act Concerning: Government

Requires the State Board of Health to deliver to the Governor for presentation to the General Assembly a State Health Improvement Plan on Jan. 1, 2016 and every five years thereafter (rather than on Jan. 1, 2013 and every four years thereafter).

Action: Signed

Effective Date: Jan. 1

 

Bill No.: SB 2820

An Act Concerning: Public Aid

Expands the purposes for which the Public Assistance Emergency Revolving Fund may be used.

Action: Signed

Effective Date: Immediately

 

Bill No.: SB 3324

An Act Concerning: Local Government

Provides that compensation of township officers shall be for time served, and no officer may receive compensation for any future or anticipated days of duty.

Action: Signed

Effective Date: Immediately

 

Bill No.: SB 3380

An Act Concerning: Safety

Increases the number of members on the Carnival-Amusement Safety Board from eight to nine, and modifies the composition of the Board.

Action: Signed

Effective Date: Immediately

 

###

Well-Meaning Parents Often Fail to Teach Vital Values, Author Says

Parents and educators are always trying to spark student participation whether it's in the classroom, in the local community, or throughout the world.

When middle-school students at Allison Academy in North Miami Beach were asked what they could do to improve their country, they focused on what they understood - bullying, violence and racism.

Those problems are all rooted in the same issues, says Rachel Albert, author of "Quest to Telos," (www.QuestToTelos.com), a young adult novel where fantasy meets reality and even world peace is possible.

"They stem from a lack of personal integrity and absence of social responsibility," she says.

"Children who choose to put those values into practice are actively working toward peace. But they can only put into practice what they've learned; instilling those values may seem simple, but many parents miss the mark and actually model the opposite."

Throwing money at social problems like racism or violence doesn't resolve them, Albert says. But children can.

"The energy from kids' excitement can make a real difference and we need their energy focused right here at home," says the mother of four. "They see problems; it's up to us to give them the tools to address them."

The following tips can help parents teach their children personal integrity and social responsibility, giving them the keys to world peace.

• Never lie in front of your kids. It may seem obvious, but many parents lie in front of their children or encourage them to lie; misstating a child's age to save money on movie tickets or allowing them to take credit for school projects completed by the parent.  These seemingly inconsequential lies suggest it's OK, even good, to distort the truth. This causes long-term damage a million times more costly than whatever was gained in the short term.

• Give your kids a reason why. Author Mark Twain once said that the two most important days of your life are the day you are born and the day you figure out why.  If you fail to tell your kids why we are here, you have missed the opportunity to
figure out what motivates them and gets them excited. This is the most important key to getting kids' cooperation and empowering them to help the world.

• Don't criticize your children. Criticism is toxic, so why do almost all parents criticize their kids?  When we focus on what they aren't, they believe they can't. This creates angry children who express their pain by bullying others.  It's better to tell them how you feel rather than what you think of them, e.g., "I feel frustrated that you didn't listen to me," or "Can you say that in a more loving way?"

• Don't speak badly about other people. This is probably one of the hardest things to do, considering we're a generation that pays for gossip.  Speaking badly about others teaches kids to look for what they view as the negative in others and take joy in sharing it.

• Model charity. Actions speak louder than any words. When you teach kindness to children, they tend to feel empathy and have more successful lives, a crucial step toward achieving world peace.

Once we tackle the issues plaguing America, then as a model nation, we will be ready to tackle world peace, Albert says. Kids are hungry to form an identity and make their mark on the world. It's easier to try to bring peace to another country, but that never works. We need to start at home.

About Rachel Albert

Rachel Albert is a certified court reporter and business owner. "Quest to Telos" is her debut novel; it's being used by a private school to develop an inspirational, critical-thinking curriculum for middle-school students ready by the summer. Albert is currently working on a sequel. She is a staunch advocate of boosting teen literacy while inspiring kids to make a difference starting with their own hearts.

(DES MOINES) - Gov. Terry Branstad today named Jason Carlstrom, of Spirit Lake, as chair of the Iowa Board of Parole, effective September 3.

Carlstrom, 41, replaces Doris Kelley, who will resume her responsibilities as vice chair of the board.

"Jason will be a great leader for this board, and brings with him an unmatched ability and experience," said Branstad. "I am excited to see the great work he will do on behalf of Iowans in his new role of service."

Carlstrom is currently the Dickinson County Attorney. Prior to this elected position, he served as an attorney in private practice, and was an adjunct professor at both Buena Vista University and Iowa Lakes Community College.

"I am excited to serve in this new position, as we look to find effective, efficient and streamlined operations," said Carlstrom. "This is an exciting time for the Iowa Parole Board, as Governor Branstad has made it a priority to improve its services."

Branstad thanked Doris Kelley for her work, and is pleased she will continue serving on the board in a leadership capacity.

"I want to thank Doris for her outstanding work during this transition period, and am excited to see her resume her responsibilities as vice chair," said Branstad. "Her time was extremely valuable for the board, as she led on a number of positive new initiatives."

"Jason Carlstrom is taking the reins at an important time for the Iowa Board of Parole, and I look forward to seeing the great work he'll accomplish," said Kelley. "I will work with him every day to ensure the needs of this board are met in order to effectively serve the people of Iowa."

Carlstrom will move to the Des Moines metro area, where he will reside full-time.

Iowa City, IA - Riverside Theatre in the Park is entering the final week of its 2012 summer season with 5 more performances of Shakespeare's As You Like It and The Merchant of Venice. The 17-performance summer season opened on June 15 and will close July 8.

 

As You Like It by William Shakespeare and directed by Theodore Swetz will be performed this Thursday, July 5 at 8 p.m., Friday, July 6 at 8 p.m. and Sunday, July 8 at 7 p.m. In one of Shakespeare's greatest comedies our heroine and hero flee an oppressive court for the beautiful and healing Forest of Arden.

The Merchant of Venice by William Shakespeare and directed by Kristin Horton will be performed tonight, Tuesday, July 3 at 7 p.m. and Saturday, July 7 at 8 p.m. One of Shakespeare's less frequently produced plays, The Merchant of Venice introduces characters rich in complexity, humor and, most of all, flaws.

Post-performance Talkbacks will be held after both performances of The Merchant of Venice.

Don't miss your last chance of the summer to escape with an evening of live theatre under the stars at Riverside Theatre in the Park!

Tickets, reviews, photos, videos and more information on the plays is available at www.riversidetheatre.org, or call the Riverside Theatre Box Office at 319-338-7672 to order tickets.

Performances take place outdoors at the Festival Stage in Iowa City's Lower City Park.

Tickets range from $17-$39. To purchase tickets, call the Riverside Theatre Box Office at 319-338-7672 or order online at www.riversidetheatre.org. Tickets can also be purchased at the Festival Stage Box Office starting 90 minutes before each performance.

 

###

 

Final Week Performance Calendar:

Tuesday, July 3 - The Merchant of Venice, 7 p.m.

Thursday, July 5 - As You Like It, 8 p.m.

Friday, July 6 - As You Like It, 8 p.m.

Saturday, July 7 - The Merchant of Venice, 8 p.m.

Sunday, July 8 - As You Like It, 7 p.m.
By: Michael Levin

I took my twin ten-year-old sons to a couple of Angels games this week, and I was shocked?shocked!?to discover just how little they knew about baseball.

I don't mean to criticize my sons.  They know an awful lot about things that I'll never know.  Juggling.  Magic. Origami. And technology, of course.

But the one thing I knew about when I was their age was baseball.  I grew up in New York in the 1960s, and I came of age with Gil Hodges' Mets teams of that era.  So a couple of trips to the ballpark with my sons this week?they each got their own game?brought me back to my own childhood and shed a light on just how different things are today from back then.

For one thing, when my dad took me to the ballpark, the men had the tattoos and the women had the earrings.

The fundamental difference between my childhood and my sons' is that there were far fewer entertainment options back in the sixties, and there were far fewer screens in each home.  You might have had one color TV and then an old black-and-white somewhere in the house.  No computer, no computer games, no consoles, no iPhones.  The Internet?  It was barely a gleam in the eye of Al Gore.  We had Yoo-Hoo, not YouTube.

With fewer options, baseball mattered more.  We kept score of the games, both at home and at the stadium, in scorecards or in scoring books.  I'd be hard-pressed to tell you exactly why we did so, but we did.  The first purchase upon arrival at the stadium was always a program for a quarter, and a golf pencil for 10 cents.  Learning the art of keeping a meticulous scorecard was a bonding experience between father and son.  It also was a cause for conversation with one's neighbors in the seats around you.  Was that double play 6-4-3 or 4-6-3?

Baseball's greatest positive is its devotion to nuance and detail, two items that have little meaning in the slam-bang Internet era.  The game?on any given night and over the course of a season?rewards patience and deep knowledge of traditions and rules.  The vicarious thrill of watching a rookie pitcher, newly elevated from Triple A, striking out the side.  Seeing a player come back after a devastating injury, or an undesired trade, or a bout with the bottle.  It's soap opera for men and boys.  But all that detail is lost if all that matters is the long ball that makes SportsCenter.

W. P. Kinsella, the author of Shoeless Joe, which became Field of Dreams, put it best.  The action in an average three-hour baseball game could be compressed into five minutes, Kinsella wrote in Field of Dreams.  The rest of the time is spent thinking about what might happen, what could happen, what should happen, what did happen, and what should have happened.  So I said to one son, as his game began, "I'd like to point out some things about what's going on.  Let me know when you want me to stop."

To which he responded, "You can stop right now."

And then there's the matter of when to leave.  Back in the day, it was a point of honor never to leave a game until the last out, no matter how one-sided the contest might have been.  This provoked ongoing family debates, because my father never wanted to stay until the end.  He wanted to leave in the eighth, to beat the traffic.  But my boys were more than content to pack it in after five innings.

It didn't bother me any.  Both of the games we attended, interleague affairs with the Giants, were incredibly slow-paced.  That's another change from the sixties?just how long it takes to play nine innings.  Pitchers seem to take forever to work now.  Players are taught to be patient at the plate, to work the count.  Just get up there and take your cuts, fellas.  I've got to get to work in the morning.  Leaving early, therefore, no longer indicates weak moral character.  It just means you've seen enough.

In the 1960s, kids my age were devoted to one team and knew not just the starting lineup of that team but the starting lineups of every team in both leagues.  And had the baseball cards to back it up.  Everybody knew how many games out, or in front, their team was.  My sons' generation, by and large, doesn't read the standings.

It's frustrating.  I want my sons to notice the pace of a home run trot and the pitcher busying himself with the webbing of his glove after someone's gone yard on him, instead of watching the fireworks display.  I want my sons to know when to hit and run, when to sacrifice, how to recognize a perfect bunt, and how to tell a wild pitch from a passed ball.  But this is lore that may never matter to them the way it did, and does, to me.

When I was in law school, I clerked for two law professors, and one of them, Marshall Shapo, a renowned torts professor, entered the office one day bearing an expression of rapture.  He and his adolescent son had enjoyed an entire conversation in the car consisting solely of names of old ballplayers.  Van Lingle Mungo.  Dazzy Vance.  Stan Musial.  Pee Wee Reese.  I always dreamt of having a similar shared moment with a son, but it would appear that that's not on the horizon.

I'm sure we'll find something else to connect over.  It doesn't look like it'll be Van Lingle Mungo anytime soon.  But before I go, does anybody know what the Red Sox did last night.

About: New York Times best -selling author Michael Levin runs BusinessGhost.com and blogs at http://deathofpublishing.blogspot.com. He has written with Baseball Hall of Famer Dave Winfield, football broadcasting legend Pat Summerall, FBI undercover agent Joaquin Garcia, and E-Myth creator Michael Gerber.  He has written for the New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, CBS News, the Boston Globe, the Los Angeles Times, and many other top outlets. You can 'like' him on Facebook here...www.facebook.com/BusinessGhost

Join the adventures as Fetch, a ten-foot-tall T-Rex takes center stage in Brucemore's Outdoor Children's Theatre: Tyrannosaurus Fetch, July 25 - 28 at 5:30 and 7:30 p.m. Expecting a toy from a mail order catalogue, ten-year-old Cal is overjoyed when a real life dinosaur is delivered to his doorstep. With help from the audience, will Cal and Fetch, his new dinosaur friend, be able to complete all of Cal's chores without getting into trouble? What will happen when Cal's parents discover Fetch is not a toy, but a real life dinosaur? Will Cal be allowed to keep Fetch?

Tyrannosaurus Fetch is an original play written and directed by Joe Link, Associate Drama Director at Cedar Rapids Jefferson High School. Link said, "The dinosaur is not only physically big, but it may actually be big enough to meet a child's imagination."

Link was also the creator of past Brucemore Outdoor Children's Theatre productions: The Incredible Adventures of Captain Spoon, The Forgetful Pirate (2007); The Princess Who Wouldn't Wear Pink (2009); Robin Hood: Wanted (2010); and Grimm Brothers Fairy Tale Repair Shoppe (2011).

Brucemore's natural amphitheater near the pond will set the stage for this interactive children's show. Gates open at 5:00 and 7:00 p.m. Children and their adult chaperones are encouraged to bring blankets and lawn chairs (no food or beverage please). On-site parking is available. Tickets are $5 for adults and $3 for children.  Tickets are nonrefundable and may be purchased the night of the performance.  Brucemore Outdoor Children's Theatre is sponsored by US Bank and media sponsored by ImOn Communications.

Experience Brucemore, an unparalleled blend of tradition and culture, located at 2160 Linden Drive SE, Cedar Rapids, Iowa. At the heart of the historic 26-acre estate stands a nineteenth-century mansion filled with the stories of three Cedar Rapids families.  Concerts, theater, programs, and tours enliven the site and celebrate the heritage of a community.  For more information, call (319) 362-7375 or visit www.brucemore.org.

###


With temperatures already predicted to top at 100 degrees, the Bix 7 race committee has cancelled the Iowa American Water Bix at 6 and the trials for the Quad City Bank & Trust Battle Up Brady scheduled for this Thursday, July 5th. Due to the cancellations last Thursday and this week, an extra week has been added to the schedule. There will be scheduled Bix at 6 practice runs and Battle Up Brady trials on July 12th and now July 19th beginning at 6 PM.

Approximately 60 Central Illinois Employers on Hand Looking for Talented, Qualified Job Candidates

PEORIA , IL (07/03/2012)(readMedia)-- Approximately 60 central Illinois employers will be on hand at the Peoria Civic Center, 201 S.W. Jefferson Ave., July 12 for an employment fair aimed at veterans and military service members looking for a job. The Illinois Employer Support of the Guard and Reserve Committee, in conjunction with Hero2Hired, Illinois Department of Employment Security, U.S. Chamber of Commerce/ Hiring Our Heroes, and other sponsors and organizations have combined their efforts to bring employers with open positions together with veterans, National Guard, Reserve and spouses in Peoria and surrounding areas.

"We are very happy to be able to work with organizations and programs like Hero2Hired, Hiring Our Heroes, and IDES to offer this unique and much-needed employment fair opportunity to our veterans and service members here in central Illinois," said Dr. Michael Ayers, Ph.D., State Committee Chair for Illinois ESGR. "We recognize that unemployment among this important segment of our population is a growing concern not just here in Illinois but across the country."

The free Peoria employment fair will be 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Veteran and military job seekers should go to the Hiring Our Heroes Web site at https://HOH.Greatjob.net by July 5 to sign up online. For more information or registration questions, contact Hiring Our Heroes at: hiringourheroes@uschamber.com.

"The unemployment rate among our veterans, Guardsmen and Reservists is a concern," said Lt. Col. Tim Franklin, Illinois ESGR Program Director. "According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the overall unemployment rate in 2011 for veterans who served on active duty in since September 2001 was 12.1 percent. For those who were current or past members of the Reserve or National Guard the rate was 9.1 percent. We have a responsibility help these men and women who raise their hand and volunteer to put on the uniform to do our nation's bidding here at home and around the world."

The Peoria employment fair offers veterans, Guard and Reserve members and their spouses an opportunity to connect with central Illinois Employers with positions available. In addition to employers, veteran service organizations and providers will be at the fair. Walk-in veterans and spouses can attend the day of the event with proper identification, but pre-registration is encouraged through Hiring Our Heroes.

As I'm sure you know by now, the U.S. Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of the Affordable Care Act.

It was an exciting day for people with cancer, and those who care about them, because the decision protects policies that ensure they can access quality, affordable health care.

In Iowa, thanks to the health care law, already:

  • More than 20,000 young people have gained coverage;
  • Nearly two million residents with private insurance no longer have to worry about lifetime limits on their health coverage;
  • 611,000 Iowans with private health insurance gained preventive service coverage with no cost-sharing.

And it just gets better in the years to come. By January 2014:

  • Nearly one million people may benefit from a health care exchange, which provides individuals and small businesses with affordable, quality health plans;
  • Insurance companies will no longer be able to discriminate against people who have been sick in the past, a benefit already extended to children.

One thing is for sure -- access to care saves lives. ACS research shows that people without health coverage are more likely than those with private insurance to be diagnosed with cancer at its more advanced stages and are less likely to survive the disease.  Now that the Supreme Court has ruled, it is time for all of our elected officials in Iowa to work together in a bipartisan effort to implement the health care law as strongly as possible for cancer patients, survivors and their families.

Pages