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Understanding Illinois: Don’t Count On More Gambling To Save Illinois

News Progress Posted on June 6, 2018 by webmasterJune 5, 2018

•June 6, 2018•

By Jim Nowlan
NP Guest Columnist

State governments are salivating now that the US Supreme Court has cleared the way for them to authorize sports gambling, a legal (Nevada only right now) and illegal industry that experts say dwarfs the lotteries and casinos in dollars wagered.

But don’t count on any future state tax revenues from sports betting to make a dent in our state’s huge budget deficit.

Illinois has seven forms of legal gambling, in order of tax revenue to the state: the lottery, video gambling, casinos, horse racing, bingo, pull-tab and jar games.

State revenue from gambling has jumped from $118 million in 1975, when the state-run lottery was created, to $1.3 billion ($567 million in inflation-adjusted dollars) this past year.

The $2.8 billion spent on Illinois lottery tickets this past year amounts to about $600 for each of our state’s five million households. Read More

Posted in Editorials

O’Hare Airport: For Many, The Place To Reunite With The Ones You Love Best

News Progress Posted on May 30, 2018 by webmasterMay 30, 2018

•May 30, 2018•

By Marni Pyke
Of the Daily Herald

It took just seven years for O’Hare International Airport to rise from an unassuming, former aircraft factory to the world’s busiest airport in 1962.

Since then, the Midwest aviation hub has witnessed history and sparked an economic boom in the region; but for many across Illinois, it’s the place to reunite with the ones you love best.

“Creating O’Hare was a marvelously foresighted decision by the city of Chicago,” aviation expert Joseph Schwieterman said.

Chicago leaders chose Orchard Field, where the Douglas Aircraft Co. was building fighter planes, as the site for a second airport to relieve busy Midway International Airport in 1945. Read More

Posted in Editorials

Letter to the Editor: Who’s trying to buy the election of Coles-Moultrie Electric Cooperative directors?

News Progress Posted on May 30, 2018 by webmasterMay 30, 2018

•May 30, 2018•

Letter to the editor,

What is going on with the upcoming Coles-Moultrie Electric Cooperative board of directors election?

I have been a cooperative member since the 1970s. I’m seeing more money spent on campaigning for three of the seven candidates in this election than all previous directors’ elections combined. Read More

Posted in Editorials

Understanding Illinois: Voter Dilemma Haunts Illinois Christian Conservatives

News Progress Posted on May 30, 2018 by webmasterMay 30, 2018

•May 30, 2018•

By Jim Nowlan
NP Guest Columnist

Christian conservative voters in Illinois must be haunted by their dilemma: Hold their noses and vote for incumbent governor Bruce Rauner in November, or stay at home and let even-more-distasteful (to them) challenger J. B. Pritzker win.

Based on an informal poll of my insider political friends, these Christian conservatives will not only have to vote for Rauner, but do so “enthusiastically,” that is, in big numbers, or his bid for re-election is almost assuredly doomed.

To review: A little known challenger to Rauner in the March GOP primary captured almost half (48.5 percent) of the vote in that race.

State Rep. Jeanne Ives (R-Wheaton) rallied Christian conservatives to her/their cause over Rauner’s signature on an abortion bill that provides taxpayer funding for abortion.

His signature came after publicly promising to them and even to the Catholic cardinal of Chicago that he would veto the bill. Read More

Posted in Editorials

World War II Caused Dramatic Changes To Illinois’ Way Of Life And Economy

News Progress Posted on May 23, 2018 by webmasterMay 23, 2018

•May 23, 2018•

By Andy Kravetz
Of the Journal Star

Washington, Illinois, resident Mary Kerr said the war caused everyone to sacrifice.

“When we went into Iraq in 2001, there was no difference in my life because we went to war. But then, everyone was affected; from Victory Gardens to rationing of items to the draft, everyone was in,” she said.

Mothers saved tin cans and foil. Life went on, she said, but it was different.

“We went on with the churches and the schools, but it wasn’t the same. The Boy Scouts went on but they had paper drives,” Kerr said. “Nothing was the same as it was before Dec. 7, 1941, Pearl Harbor.”

Thousands enlisted from Illinois Read More

Posted in Editorials

Understanding Illinois: What the Devil does Blockchain Technology have to do with Voting?

News Progress Posted on May 23, 2018 by webmasterMay 23, 2018

•May 23, 2018•

By Jim Nowlan
NP Guest Columnist

This column is more musing than analysis: We don’t know where we are going, and we are going there faster and faster.

That is, we need to focus more effort on understanding the consequences of the dizzying cavalcade of new technologies that are disrupting our lives. The following brought the topic to mind.

“What the devil is blockchain technology?” editor Jonathan Whitney thundered in a recent email. For 50 years, Jon has edited, published and taken out the trash at the Carroll County Review in Thomson, Illinois. A former president of the Illinois Press Association, Jon is the consummate community journalist.

Jon had just received a press release about a new state report on the topic of his question. It sounded to him like a cockamamie, probably taxpayer-costly boondoggle. Always eager to please a paying editor, I said I’d look into it.

Blockchain is a distributed ledger (think spreadsheet) technology that provides identical information to every block on a chain. Seemingly infinite computer power and storage make it possible. Read More

Posted in Editorials

Understanding Illinois: Who Ruined Illinois? Many Share Blame

News Progress Posted on May 16, 2018 by webmasterMay 16, 2018

•May 16, 2018•

By Jim Nowlan
NP Guest Columnist

Governing is a respected magazine that reports on state and local governments in the U.S. Reporter Daniel Vock recently posed this question in a lead article in the May edition: Who ruined Illinois?

Vock interviewed former Illinois Republican governor Jim Edgar (1991-98) at length, who said: “Illinois government did work (presumably when he was in office), but then we had bad luck with a couple of governors (presumably Rod Blagojevich and Pat Quinn, both Democrats).”

I have great respect for friend Jim Edgar, and I am not privy to the whole of his interview. Yet, I beg to differ with this suggestion that all blame be placed on the two more recent, admittedly failed governors he fingers.

I contend that many, maybe most, of us who participated in Illinois politics and government over the past half century share at least a sliver of the blame for our present parlous situation. Read More

Posted in Editorials

Walgreens, America’s Pharmacist, got its Start in Illinois

News Progress Posted on May 16, 2018 by webmasterMay 16, 2018

•May 16, 2018•

By Christopher Placek

A pharmacist at Walgreens for 37 years, Joel Karlinsky might often see people on their worst days, coming to him for antidotes to their health maladies.

But in providing a helping hand and friendly smile, Karlinsky formed a bond with his customers. One regular appreciated the service so much that he had an engraved Montblanc pen made for Karlinsky with the pharmacist’s name on it.

“I tried to go out of my way to be nice to them,” said Karlinsky, now retired, who for a time managed the pharmacy at a Walgreens near the company’s Deerfield headquarters. “Customer service goes a long way. Everybody fills the same prescriptions, but if you’re providing them with a friendly, knowledgeable individual, that gives them a level of service above and beyond.”

That pharmacist’s personalized touch mirrors the 117-year-old company’s origin story, when founder Charles R. Walgreen Sr. and colleague Arthur C. Thorsen personally greeted each customer who came to the door of their modest 20-by-50-foot pharmacy on Chicago’s South Side. Read More

Posted in Editorials

Reagan’s Illinois: A Place of Honor, Integrity, Kindness that Inspired a President

News Progress Posted on May 9, 2018 by webmasterMay 9, 2018

•May 9, 2018•

By Jim Dunn
Of Sauk Valley Media

On Feb. 6, 1984, President Ronald Reagan was riding high as he celebrated his 73rd birthday in Dixon, Illinois, the county seat of Lee County and the town where he lived as a youth for a dozen years starting in 1920.

More than half a century earlier, Reagan had ventured forth from his hometown to earn a bachelor’s degree at Eureka College, class of 1932 – not an easy feat during the Great Depression.

Then he became a radio sports announcer in Iowa, an actor in about 50 Hollywood movies, president of the Screen Actors Guild, a television personality, and spokesman for General Electric.

Turning to politics in the 1960s, he served as governor of California for two terms and, on his third try, was elected 40th president of the United States.

His hometown birthday bash in 1984 found Reagan – tall, handsome and known for his sense of humor – in good spirits as he addressed a crowd that packed Dixon High School’s Lancaster Gymnasium. Read More

Posted in Editorials

Understanding Illinois: John A. and Mary Logan Gave Us Memorial Day

News Progress Posted on May 9, 2018 by webmasterMay 9, 2018

•May 9, 2018•

By Jim Nowlan
NP Guest Columnist

We have the formidable Southern Illinois couple John A. and Mary Logan to thank for our national Memorial Day, a remembrance of those who died serving in our nation’s armed forces.

Born in 1826, “John A.” (there was another senior Union officer named John Logan) grew up in Murphysboro in deep southern Illinois. Born 12 years later, young Mary Cunningham moved with her family from Tennessee to nearby Marion, Illinois, after her father had freed his slaves.

After service in the Mexican-American War, John A. returned to Southern Illinois to begin a political career as a Stephen A. Douglas Democrat. He stepped from county clerk all the way up the ladder to the U.S. Senate and as a vice-presidential candidate.

In between elective offices, Logan became arguably the most effective “political general” of the Civil War. Often elected officials, political generals lacked military training, but were important to President Lincoln.

They were appointed for several reasons: There was a shortage of West Point-trained officers; they had shown natural leadership abilities, and because of the political influence they wielded in their home states. Read More

Posted in Editorials

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Dawkins NEHS submission wows 



News Progress


Mae Dawkins, a Sullivan High School senior and member of the National English Honor Society, was recently informed that she is a national winner of the NEHS Intellectual Freedom Challenge, a prestigious competition that encourages NEHS members to craft compelling arguments defending texts that have faced challenges and bans. Her essay scored among some of the best submissions in the nation by university professors. May was awarded a certificate and a $150 dollar prize.


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