Archives for 2013

Morthland loses 80-65 to Robert Morris

In just their first loss by more than one point, the Morthland Patriots fell in recent action to Robert Morris College 80-65 in Springfield, IL.  Trailing 44-22 at half time, the Patriots were unable to mount any type of attack to catch Robert Morris.
Morthland was led in scoring by Eldorado’s Will Carmickle with 22 points, followed closely by PG Yavario Smith’s 21.  The loss drops the Patriots to 4-3 on the season.
The Patriots next play on Thursday, December 5th in Paragould, Arkansas against fellow NCCAA rival Crowley’s Ridge.

Benton police arrest Galatia man on aggravated assault and other charges

Staff Report

A 23-year-old Galatia man is in Franklin County Jail and facing a variety of charges after an incident in the parking lot of a Benton fast food restaurant.

Sean K. Robinson was taken into custody by Benton police following a report of an aggravated assault at 637 West Main Street, in Benton.

Robinson was charged with unlawful use of a weapon, aggravated assault, DUI and illegal transportation of alcohol.

Robinson is expected to make his initial court appearance on Monday.

 

Pension ‘fix’ vote on horizon: Legislature to reconvene Tuesday

CHICAGO— For years, Illinois’ multibillion-dollar pension crisis has dragged down the state’s finances and jeopardized the retirement funds of hundreds of thousands of public employees. Yet lawmakers remained sharply divided on how to fix the problem.

Here’s a link to the story by the AP in the Southern Illinoisan.

Obituary – Jack Adams – Christopher

Jack Adams, 65, of Christopher, died Nov. 29, 2013 at Herrin Hospital.

Jack was born on October 14, 1948 in Buckner, the son of  Jack Adams and Margaret (Manzek) Adams.

He was retired from the city of Christopher Street Department.  He was an avid scale model train enthusiast.

Jack is survived by two sisters, Ruth and Tom Stephens, of Christopher and Jane Adams, also of Christopher.

Also surviving are nephews Scotty Adams, Eugene Price, Schuyler and Andi Stephens, Simon and Sarah Stephens, Sidney and Ashton Stephens and great nephews Kane Stephens and LoreLai Stephens.

He was preceded in death by his father.

A private family funeral service was held at Gilbert Funeral Home in Christopher on Saturday, Nov. 30, 2013, with the Rev. Richard Lance officiating.   Burial was in Masonic and IOOF Cemetery, in Benton, IL.

Memorials in memory of Jack can be made to Maxine Towers Binando Scholarship Fund for Nursing and Christopher High School and can be sent to the Gilbert Funeral Home, 209 N. Emma St. in Christopher, IL 62822.

For more information visit gilbertfuneralhomes.com

 

 

 

 

 

Obituary – Hazel Mae Shoemaker – formerly of Sesser

Hazel Mae Shoemaker, 92, passed away Wednesday, November 27, 2013 at Palos Community Hospital, in Palos Heights, Illinois.

Mrs. Shoemaker was born in Sesser, IL on June 2, 1921, the daughter of Gola and Zella (Roberts) Whitlow.  She married Vallie Shoemaker on February, 26, 1940 and he preceded her in death.

Hazel retired from Hotpoint Co. in Cicero, IL.  She was a Baptist.  Hazel loved being around family and friends and she will be truly missed by all.

Mrs. Shoemaker is survived by her daughter, Barbara Pigatto and husband Jack, of Lemont, IL.  She is also survived by seven grandchildren, 16 great-grandchildren and one sister, Ellie Sulcer, of Sandoval, IL.

Mrs. Shoemaker was also preceded in death by an infant daughter, a son, a daughter, two sisters and a brother.

Funeral services will be held at 1 p.m. on Sunday, Dec. 1 at Johnston Funeral Home in Ina, IL with Brother Dale Burzynski officiating.  Burial will be in Maple Hill Cemetery, in Sesser.  Visitation will be after 6 p.m. on Saturday, Nov. 30 at Johnston Funeral Home, in Ina.

Obituary – Cora B. Fisher – Benton

Cora B. Fisher, 96, of Benton, passed away at 6:10 p.m. on Tuesday, Nov. 26, 2013 at Stonebridge Senior Living Center, in Benton.

She was born in Makanda, IL on December 1, 1916, the daughter of Dorsey and Louie Braden.

Cora married Ben R. Fisher on July 16, 1930, and he preceded her in death on May 9, 1999.

She was a member of Immanuel Baptist Church in Benton.

She is survived by four children, Richard Fisher and wife Nellie of Sterling, IL, Roland Fisher, of Christopher, Phyllis Harris, of Pikeville, KY and Alice Shanks, of West City.

Also surviving is 18 grandchildren, 27 great-grandchildren and eight great-great grandchildren.

She was preceded in death by her parents, husband, one son, Curtis Fisher, and four brothers and one sister.

Funeral services will be held at 11 a.m. Saturday, Nov. 30 at the Morton & Johnston Funeral Home in Benton with the Rev. Ron Cremeens officiating.  Burial will be in the Brady Cemetery in Akin.  Visitation will be from 6 to 8 p.m. Friday, Nov. 29 at the Morton & Johnston Funeral Home, in Benton.

RLC, Jefferson County Health Dept. offering help to sign up for Affordable Care Act

MT. VERNON, Ill.– The Jefferson County Health Department is hosting a workshop at the Rend Lake College MarketPlace in Mt. Vernon aimed at enabling uninsured local residents to sign up for insurance as required by the Affordable Care Act (ACA).

rlc logoA representative of the JCHD will be on hand Thursday, Dec. 12, Room 338 of the RLC MarketPlace in Mt. Vernon to assist enrollees with clarification and questions. Times will run from 8:30 a.m.-noon and from 1-4:30 p.m. People will be able to use the computers provided in the room to enroll. Coverage begins in the Health Insurance Marketplace on Jan. 1, 2014.

Judy McLaughlin of the JCHD said to get coverage starting Jan. 1, 2014, individuals must enroll and pay the first month’s premium by Dec. 23. Those interested should bring their 2012 taxes, or a month’s worth of paystubs, when enrolling. Knowing the social security numbers for all individuals in a household will also be helpful in the enrollment process. A green card will be accepted in place of a social security number.

“Typically, it takes about one hour to get through the enrollment process, but some of that time involves creating an email account if they don’t already have one,” said McLaughlin. “Also, they have to create a user ID and password. If someone already has insurance, then they don’t need to apply; this is for those who are uninsured or do not have access to insurance through their employment.”

Individuals can continue to enroll in the Healthcare Marketplace until March 31, 2014; however, enrollment after Dec. 23 will delay coverage from starting until May 2014.

“If they do not enroll by that date (March 31, 2014), then they will have to wait until open enrollment again, which will be October 7 through December 15, 2014,” said McLaughlin. “Those eligible for Medicaid will be able to enroll throughout the year.”

To get ahead of the game, individuals can go online to www.getcoveredillinois.gov and start the process by creating an account. Get Covered Illinois is a health insurance push from Dec. 7 through Dec. 23 to get people enrolled through Medicaid or Marketplace for the ACA.

For more information, contact the Jefferson County Health Department at 618-244-7134.

St. Bonaventure has hot hand in 83-71 win over Southern Illinois

By Tom Weber
SIUSalukis.com

Final Stats |  Photo Gallery 

ESTERO, Fla. – St. Bonaventure made 10-of-21 shots from 3-point range to subdue Southern Illinois, 83-71, on Monday night in the opening round of the Gulf Coast Showcase tournament.

anthony beaneThe Bonnies (4-1) were expecting to see a zone defense tonight from their opponent and they were ready for it. Matthew Wright made 5-of-10 shots from outside the arc and scored 32 points, while Charlon Kloof was 3-of-5, and Andell Cumberbatch made 2-of-4 treys.

“We knew going into the game that Southern was small and was going to play 2-3 zone,” said St. Bonaventure head coach Mark Schmidt. “We worked on it and knew we’d have to make some shots. Everyone had played us man-to-man because we’re much more of an attacking team, but we had to shoot the ball tonight.”

The Salukis (1-4) started a lineup with just one player taller than 6-foot-5. With such a stark difference in size and length against an opponent that featured a 7-foot center in Youssou Ndoye, plus four other players 6-7 or taller, SIU head coach Barry Hinson had little flexibility in his game plan.

“We told (our players) over and over, we’re going to let them settle for the three,” Hinson said. “They shot 26 percent coming into the game. There had been so many comments publicly that they don’t do a very good job against the zone, obviously that was our game plan.”

The strategy paid off in some respects for SIU, which was able to utilize its quickness off the dribble on offense. Desmar Jackson continued his torrid play with a 25-point outing, going 11-for-11 from the free throw line. Undersized power forward Jalen Pendleton maneuvered his way to the basket for 13 points, and guard Anthony Beane also scored 13.

“Jackson’s one of the best guards we’ll face this year,” Schmidt said. “He’s smooth, he’s long, he gets to the foul line. He’s a really good offensive player and we had our hands full all night.”

The Salukis shot 71 percent from the field in the second half, but by putting the ball on the floor so much, they turned it over 18 times in the game and had only five assists. Starting point guard Marcus Fillyaw played just 16 minutes due to foul trouble.

Although SIU never led in the contest, it kept things interesting with an 8-0 run in the first half and a 9-0 run in the second. After Wright completed a four-point play to put SBU ahead, 63-47, the Salukis ran off nine unanswered points that featured a 3-pointer by Beane and a one-handed slam by Jackson. However, Kloof responded with a clutch 3-pointer to give the Bonnies a double-digit lead, 66-56, and they later led by as many as 19 points.

“We handled adversity,” Schmidt said. “When a team makes a run you want to answer it.”

Southern is without a Division I win after five games for the first time since turning Division I in 1968. SIU will play Stetson (0-6), which is also looking for its first DI win this season, Tuesday at 1:30 p.m. CT.

Our Universities: Creating a Powerful Corporate Culture

Sixth and final reflection on corporate culture…

Nurturing a strong organizational culture is the only job that matters. Without the power of a positive shared experience, selfishness and happenstance rule not vision or purpose.

“A company’s culture is often buried so deeply inside rituals, assumptions, attitudes, and values that it becomes transparent to an organization’s members only when, for some reason, it changes.”

— Rob Goffee —
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By Walter Wendler

Healthy organizations promote effectiveness through proactive leadership. Unhealthy organizations sap initiative and good intentions from all. The following six precepts have application in any setting where two or more people aspire to common goals.

Walter Wendler mug 2First, be willing and able to present your point of view to make the enterprise more successful in attaining its goals. Never compromise your perspective. Thoughtful and informed discussion, even disagreement, is not antagonistic but stokes the heart of an organization.  Krystal Barron in a May 23, 2013 post on The American Genius suggests five ways to argue fairly in the workplace.  These are nearly self evident. Focus on the positives, don’t take criticism personally, set up a framework for discussion, don’t be a gossip, and don’t participate in workplace gossip. The difference between a productive discussion and denigrating the culture of the workplace is a fine line that gets crossed, by design or default, daily.

Second, do everything you can to build confidence in organizational purpose by supporting forward-looking ideas. Purposeful confidence is not decoration but the integrated result of the work of many.  Consistent determination to improve creates confidence. Carmine Gallo, communications coach and author of “The Presentation Secrets of Steve Jobs: How to be Insanely Great In Front of Any Audience”, identifies key differences between confidence, and arrogance. Arrogant people have little regard for anyone or anything outside of self.  He suggests arrogant people are the last ones to “fess up” to their own mistakes.  Arrogance focuses inward on the individual while confidence focuses outward on the organization.

Third, contribute to the positive perspective in the workplace even when it’s difficult. It is easy to be a cheerleader when the team is winning. The real test of good citizenship is what happens when the culture is challenged by defeat, scarcity, misstep, poor leadership or occurrences caustic to a healthy culture. According to a 2010 post on the website Incentive, What Motivates, Michael Ryan says the value of uplifting people’s efforts, even when they are not successful, is irrefutable. I don’t believe Ryan is suggesting dispensing “faint praise” at the water-cooler, but sincere appreciation for hard work.

Fourth, encourage and support the people you work with. On any day all of us may be difficult to be with. Develop a perspective that allows you to look past individual frailty for everyone you work with: Encourage up, encourage out, and encourage down.  This may sound like Pollyanna to members of work organizations where there is incessant strife, favoritism, envy and other trappings of human nature. Larry Downes, CEO of New Jersey Resources, speaking to Harvard Business Publishing, said that leadership is alive, vibrant and personal and every member of an organization must be engaged as a leader. This implies that we are all edifying, encouraging and challenging each other forward.

Fifth, make yourself proud of the place you work. Some days that’s not easy.  That is why it’s called work.  International Business Times reported last week in a study conducted by People Management that claims two fifths of employees are not proud to work for the organization that signs their checks. That’s down from almost one half from last year.  It’s sad: Workplace pride is a self fulfilling prophecy.

Sixth, “boy-scout” the workplace. The Boy Scout rule, “Always leave the campground cleaner than you found it,” could be applied every day in every workplace. It’s a simple admonition that would go a long way to create positive corporate culture.  If leadership doesn’t give you a reason to do it, find it inside yourself as a personal mission. It will make you feel better about the place you work, and those you work with.
These simple observations will help make any workplace culture stronger and distribute leadership:  not by leading from behind, or leading from below or above, but by everyone leading from within.

State police announce special holiday operations

Staff Report

The Illinois State Police has announced it is gearing up for the holiday travel period beginning today and lasting through the New Year.

This year, a special enforcement memorial operation is being dedicated to fallen Trooper Kyle Deatherage, who was killed in the line of duty on Nov. 26, 2012, while conducting a traffic stop.

All ISP sworn personnel are committed to working Operation Kyle and will be aggressively patrolling Illinois roadways for

24 consecutive hours on Nov. 26 and 27 in remembrance of Deatherage.

Traditionally, the Thanksgiving holiday marks the beginning of the busy holiday driving period, and continues through the New Year. State police will implement periodic saturation patrols until the New Year to reduce what agency calls the “Fatal Four”: speeding, seat belts, DUI and distracted driving.

Benton, West Frankfort, Illinois News | Franklin County News