Archives for 2013

BMS ‘Road Warriors’ pick up overtime win at Carterville

By Jim Muir

Perhaps its time the Benton Middle School Junior Rangers became known as the Benton Road Warriors.

For the 11th time this season the BMS 8th grade team picked up a tough road win, this time a thrilling 45-42 overtime victory over Carterville on Thursday night.

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BMS coach John Cook said traveling to Carterville “was exactly what we expected it to be.”

“It is never easy to come out with a win at Carterville,” said Cook. “It was a tough road environment and I’m very proud of our guys for keeping their focus and making big plays down the stretch.”

The victory improves Benton to 16-4 overall.

Derek Oxford led the Rangers with 24 points and six rebounds – his eighth game in a row with a 20-plus point performance – and was followed by Tyson Houghland who turned in a solid game with 12 points and eight rebounds.

“Tyson (Houghland) had a huge game for us as did Blane Pankey, with some key rebounds and free throws in the overtime,” said Cook. “And Derek (Oxford) just kept attacking the basket and he hit some big, big shots for us when we needed them the most.”

BMS jumped out to a 16-10 first quarter lead but Carterville roared back outscoring the Junior Rangers 11-4 in the second quarter to take a 21-20 halftime lead. Both teams continued to battle in the second half with Benton pulling ahead 29-28 after three quarters. Carterville outscored Benton 12-11 in the fourth forcing a 40-40 tie in regulation.

Cook said he feels his team’s second half defense was the key to the hard-fought victory.

“Our defense in the second half was the difference in the game,” said Cook. “We were able to hold their two leading scorers to just six combined points. It was a team win, it took all our guys to accomplish that.”

Another key stat in the game, Cook said, was Benton’s free throw shooting late when the Junior Rangers hit 6-of-8 free throws in the fourth quarter and overtime period.

Along with Oxford’s 24 and Houghland’s 12 points Blane Pankey added four points and five rebounds, and Austin Wills scored three points. Also contributing to the win was Oliver Davis, Gehrig Wynn, Jordan Richey and Hamilton Page.

In the 7th grade contest BMS pulled out an exciting 21-20 victory behind eight points from leading scorer Gehrig Wynn.

Brett Bonenberger had a big game for BMS with the winning basket in the final seconds to secure the win. Bonenberger finished with six points, eight rebounds and a pair of steals.

The 7th grade team, coached by Andy Davis, trailed 7-2 at the end of the first quarter but outscored Carterville in the second frame 11-4 to take a 13-11 halftime lead.. Carterville outscored Benton 6-4 in the third quarter to force a 17-17 deadlock heading into the final frame.

Also scoring for Benton was Blane Pankey with three points and Hamilton Page with two points. Other players who contributed to the win are Parker Williams, Drew Owens, Eldon Owens and Mason Wills.

Benton’s 7th grade team is in action at Harrisburg in the Big 7 Conference Tournament on Saturday. Both BMS teams will be at home on Monday, January 28 for the final regular season game. It is also “8th Grade Night” where players and cheerleaders will be recognized.

Post season play for the BMS 8th grade team will begin Thursday, January 31 at the Hamilton County Regional.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

County Board approves changes to regional education office

By BRUCE A. FASOL

The Franklin-Williamson Regional Office of Education may be getting a name change.

The Franklin County Board agreed Tuesday to a joint resolution sought by the Franklin-Williamson Regional Office of Education to incorporate Johnson County into its office. Johnson County’s Board had already passed the joint resolution last week, and Williamson County Board members voted in favor of it on Thursday morning.

The office expansion stems from a request by Franklin-Williamson Regional Superintendent Matt Donkin, and is prompted by state efforts to reduce the number of regional offices statewide. A state law passed last spring requires that the number of regional offices of education be reduced from 44 to 35 by July 1, 2015, the date the next term of office for the state’s elected regional superintendents begins.

Offices that serve populations of less than 61,000 people have until June 30 to consolidate with larger offices. The Franklin-Williamson office serves a larger population and does not have to consolidate. But Johnson County, which is part of ROE 2, a 5-county office that also serves Alexander, Massac, Pope and Union counties, is affected. If the offices do not consolidate by June 30, the state board of education will step in and mandate the new districts.

Regional offices of education serve as liaisons between the Illinois Board of Education and local school districts. They oversee programs including teacher certification, GED testing, bus driver training and truancy prevention.

Obituary – John Keith “Skip” Miller – Formerly of Valier

John Keith “Skip” Miller, 69, died January 22, 2013 at Rapid City Regional Hospital, in Rapid City, South Dakota.  Mr. Miller is a former resident of Valier, IL.

Skip was married to Vicki (Winchester) Miller.

He was was born July 2, 1943 in West Frankfort, IL to John L. and Mae (Cavinder) Miller.  John was given the nickname of “Skipper” by his paternal grandmother and was known to family and friends as Skip.

Skip was the loving husband of Vicki (Winchester) Miler, father of Drake, Clay and Brandi, brother of JoAnne Girten, grandson of John and Mary Lena Miller and Edgar and Carrie Cavinder.

Skip spent most of his early years in Valier, IL graduating from Valier High School in 1961. Skip attended Ranken Technical College in St. Louis, MO before returning home to Valier to join his father in the Electrical business. Skip’s electrical career spanned 44 years and he was a proud member of the

IBEW Local 702 in West Frankfort, IL.
Since the 1990’s Skip honed his skills as a master knife maker and was known for his detailed, quality knives. He was a member of the Professional

Knifemakers Association and won national awards for his craft. In 2006, Skip moved to South Dakota.
Retirement allowed Skip to build and enjoy his retirement home, work on his knife making, spend time with friends and neighbors and to be a grandfather. Skip received the diagnosis of Mesothelioma April 1, 2011. He accepted the diagnosis with courage and grace and always appreciated the care he received throughout his illness.

Surviving him are his wife Vicki, mother Mae Miller, sister JoAnn Girten, sons and family and daughter and son-in-law Brandi and Dan Tackett and grandson Nash.

Funeral services will be held on Sunday, January 27, 2013 at 1 p.m. at Gilbert Funeral Home in Christopher with the Rev. Julie Smith officiating. Visitation will be after  6 p.m. on Saturday, January 26, 2013 at Gilbert Funeral Home.  Burial will be at Grange Hall Cemetery in Marion.
Memorials in memory of Skip Miller should be made to the Mesothelioma Applied Research Foundation,1317 King St. Alexandria VA 22314 and will be accepted at the funeral home

Gilbert Funeral Home in Christopher is in charge of arrangements.
For more information visit our web site at gilbertfuneralhomes.com.

OBITUARY – JOHN KEITH “SKIP” MILLER – FORMERLY OF VALIER

John Keith “Skip” Miller, 69, died January 22, 2013 at Rapid City Regional Hospital, in Rapid City, South Dakota. Mr. Miller is a former resident of Valier, IL.

Mr. Miller was married to Vicki (Winchester) Miller.

Funeral services will be held on Sunday, January 27, 2013 at 1 p.m. at Gilbert Funeral Home in Christopher with the Rev. Julie Smith officiating. Visitation will be after 6 p.m. on Saturday, January 26, 2013 at Gilbert Funeral Home. Burial will be at Grange Hall Cemetery in Marion.

Gilbert Funeral Home in Christopher is in charge of arrangements.

For more information visit our web site at gilbertfuneralhomes.com.

 

SIJHSAA Basketball Tips off another championship series at Rend Lake College

 

INA, Ill. (Jan. 18, 2013) – A tradition of southern Illinois junior high championship basketball tipped off Friday, Jan. 18, with the Southern Illinois Junior High School Athletic Association’s 2012 Class S, M and L Girls State Basketball Tournament at Rend Lake College. The SIJHSAA Class S, M and L Boys State Basketball Tournament will follow on Feb. 1 – 14.

Okawville Junior High fans cheer on their Lady Rockets in the school's win over Christopher Elementary, Friday night, in the opening round of the 2013 Southern Illinois Junior High School Athletic Association championship basketball tournaments.

Okawville Junior High fans cheer on their Lady Rockets in the school’s win over Christopher Elementary, Friday night, in the opening round of the 2013 Southern Illinois Junior High School Athletic Association championship basketball tournaments.

Held on the floor of James “Hummer” Waugh Gymnasium at RLC for more than 30 years now, the girls and boys state basketball championships will showcase 56 local teams, all vying for a spot among the SIJHSAA’s 92-year history of the best junior high basketball teams in the region.
The tournament dates back to 1928 when it was played as sub-states at various locations in southern Illinois, particularly high schools. The tournament came to RLC when a significant snow storm hit the region in 1978, causing officials to scratch game after game in regional tournaments throughout the area. RLC provided a central site and the event has stayed there ever since. Moreover, it continues to grow larger each year, with more teams competing for the championship in classes S, M and L.

Greg Hale of Pinckneyville took over as SIJHSAA Executive Director last June, replacing 15-year head Jim Burnes. Hale talked about some goals he had for his role with the association. They included an improved website with sponsorship opportunities. He checked that off the list last year. The site at www.sijhsaa.com is completely revamped with better functionality, a slick look and feel, and corporate sponsors – including Baden which is providing all the balls for SIJHSAA tournaments. Results from the upcoming rounds at RLC can be found on this site, along with a wealth of information about SIJHSAA sports and opportunities for users to interact, predict tournament winners and post questions in forums.

The Girls Class M tournament at Rend Lake started things off Friday, Jan. 18, with Meridian and Aviston (3:30 p.m.), Christopher and Okawville (4:45 p.m.), Goreville and Pinckneyville Jr. High (6 p.m.), and Fairfield and Gallatin County (7:15 p.m.). The Class M final four is at 6 p.m. and 7:15 p.m., Jan. 22. A consolation game is set for 6 p.m., Jan. 25, immediately followed by the Class M championship at 7:30 p.m.

The Girls Class L tournament will start Saturday, Jan. 19, with Carterville going up against Centralia (9:30 a.m.), West Frankfort taking on Highland (10:45 a.m.), Massac County facing off against Collinsville (noon), and Carmi taking on Trico (1:15 p.m.). The Class L final four is scheduled for 6 and 7:15 p.m., Jan. 23, and the consolation final will be at 9:30 a.m., Jan. 26, immediately followed by the Class L championship game at 11 a.m.
The Girls Class S tournament also gets underway Saturday, Jan. 19, with Lick Creek and Summersville (2:30 p.m.), St. John Catholic (Red Bud) and Bartelso (3:45 p.m.), DeSoto and Germantown (5 p.m.), and St. Joe (Olney) taking on Hoyleton-Grand Prairie (6:15 p.m.). Final four matchups will be played at 6 and 7:15 p.m., Jan. 24, with a consolation final at 12:30 p.m., Jan. 26, followed by the Class S championship game at 2 p.m. The Class S finals will conclude the 2013 girls state tournament.

The Boys Class M tournament regional winners will start things off Friday, Feb. 1, with Region 3 versus Region 2 (3:30 p.m.), Region 6 versus Region 1 (4:45), Region 8 versus Region 4 (6:00), and Region 5 versus Region 7 (7:15). The final four is at 6 p.m., and 7:15 p.m., Feb. 5. A consolation game is set for 6 p.m., Feb. 8, immediately followed by the Class M championship at 7:30 p.m.

The Boys Class S tournament gets underway Saturday, Feb. 2, with Region 3 versus Region 13 (9:30 a.m.), Region 15 versus Region 12 (10:45), Region 4 versus Region 1 (Noon), Region 2 versus Region 16 (1:15), Region 9 versus Region 5 (2:30), Region 11 versus Region 6 (3:45), Region 7 versus Region 8 (5:00), and Region 14 versus Region 10 (6:15). Quarterfinals are at 3:30, 4:45, 6:00 and 7:15 on Feb. 4. Final four matchups will be played at 6 and 7:15 p.m., Feb. 7, with a consolation final at 2:30 p.m., Feb. 9, followed by the championship game at 4 p.m.

The Class L tournament will run Feb. 9 through Valentine’s Day on Feb. 14. The Feb. 9 lineup will feature Region 2 versus Region 3 (9:30 a.m.), Region 6 versus Region 1 (10:45 a.m.), Region 8 versus Region 4 (noon) and Region 5 versus Region 7 (1:15 p.m.). The tournament will continue with the final four at 6 and 7:15 p.m., Feb. 12. A consolation game will be played at 6 p.m.., Feb. 14, followed by the Class L championship at 7:30 p.m.
Scores and results from the series of SIJHSAA tournaments at RLC can be found on-line daily at www.sijhsaa.com or by following Rend Lake College at www.twitter.com. For all things athletic at The Lake, visit RLC online at www.rlc.edu/warriors.

Legal Seminar Series Offered at RLC

Employment and labor laws, estate planning, business ownership and legal issues in medical practice are just some of the topics on tap for the Legal Seminar Series, starting next week at the Rend Lake College MarketPlace in Mt. Vernon.

rlc logoThis five-session Legal Seminar series will be led by attorneys from Sandberg, Phoenix and von Gontard and is being offered courtesy of Rend Lake College. The registration fee for these classes is $10 per session or participants can register for all five sessions for $40. Each session meets from 9 a.m. to noon in Room 354 at the RLC MarketPlace.

Monday, Jan. 28 – “Business Entities 101” is a program designed for small business owners and entrepreneurs who are considering starting, expanding, or transitioning out of a business.

Thursday, Feb. 21 – “Principles of Commercial and Real Estate Lending” is a program designed to highlight “red flag” issues in commercial and real estate lending. Instructors will cover 100 topics to help lenders identify red flags when doing transactions.

Thursday, March 21 – “Legal Issues for the Medical Practice” is a program designed for physicians in private practice and managers of those practices.

Friday, April 26 – “Estate Planning – Business Succession” is a program designed for people who want to create, change, or update an estate plan or business succession plan. Instructors will cover the titling of assets to complete an estate plan, including beneficiary designations.

Thursday, May 16 – “Updates in Employment and Labor Laws” is a program designed to bring the small business owner and human resource professional up to date on current issues in employment and labor laws.
For more information or to register, contact Rend Lake College’s Center for Community and Corporate Education at 618-437-5321, Ext. 1267 / 1714, toll-free at 800-369-5321, Ext. 1267 / 1714 or e-mail to CommCorpEd@rlc.edu.

Franklin County Farm Bureau News

By J. Larry Miller

Heavy rains across southern Illinois this weekend may have resolved the low water levels on the Mississippi River. The National Weather Service said that by Thursday the water level of the Mississippi River at St Louis will be up nearly 2 feet from last Wednesday, bringing it to the highest level in almost a month. At Thebes, the water level has jumped almost 9 feet since last week. This does not mean that the long affects of the drought are over but I have noticed that Rend Lake water level is up and there is a lot of mud around my cattle feeding bunks.

Larry Miller

USDA’s Farm Service Agency (FSA) reminds producers that the American Taxpayer Relief Act of 2012 extended the authorization of the Food, Conservation, and Energy Act of 2008 (the 2008 Farm Bill) for many Commodity Credit Corporation (CCC) commodity, disaster, and conservation programs through 2013. FSA administers these programs. This affects every farmer in Franklin County so use these cold days to get your farms enrolled.

The effects of this summers’ drought continues to cause problems for farmers. Several farmers are waiting to receive their crop insurance checks after going through audits because claims were so high. These audits require a review of the past 3 years’ production records to confirm actual production history. As they wait, cash flow can be a problem as the large number of claims makes a heavy load for crop claims adjusters. Kansas State University crop insurance expert Art Barnaby says 2012 drought claims aren’t breaking the bank. Looking at loss ratios, and with IL and IN claims still being filed, Barnaby says, “What is also clear is the 2012 crop insurance losses are going to much lower than the original estimates. The (USDA) underwriting loss may even be less than $3 billion.” Total claims (from USDA and company funds) paid as of January 14 were $11.581 billion.

Dale Durcholz will be making a market update presentation here at Farm Bureau on Tuesday January 29th. Please call for reservations for breakfast at 435-3616.

House Republicans appear confident they have the votes to pass a short-term debt ceiling increase as they attempt to dispatch with this fiscal battle to focus on bigger ones ahead. The legislation would suspend the $16.4 trillion debt limit to allow the nation to continue to borrow money to pay its bills for another three months and then increase the legal limit to that new debt level. I thought they saved us from the financial cliff but it looks as if were are in a free fall!

Remember we are farmers working together. If we can help let us know.

Our Universities: Demographic Shift

The changing nature of students, their interests and abilities, requires that our universities change too.  While they do, we must remember the attributes of learning and insight, and the abilities and skills that make the university valuable to all change little, it all. Universities help create cause in students, not effect.
An explanation of cause is not a justification by reason.
C. S. Lewis
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The January 2013 report from the Western Interstate Commission on Higher Education, “Knocking At the Door: A Projection of High School Graduates,” contains clarifying revelations. The number of blacks and whites finishing high school will decrease in the near future as the number of Asian Americans/Pacific Islander and Latino graduates will increase. Like a tsunami.

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Additionally, over the next few years there will be a reduction in the total number of high school graduates produced until the numbers stabilize at around 3.3 million nationally according to Ronald Roche of Diverse Issues in Higher Education in the January 17, 2013 edition.
Some states are particularly challenged.  In Wisconsin two-year enrollments are down. University leaders and state policymakers suggest these realities are due to a 6.3% decline in Wisconsin high school graduates projected from the year 2010 to 2015, according to a story in the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel last October.
The diminishing number of students available to attend universities and the nature of their backgrounds, expectations, and aspirations exacerbate a continuing decrease in university budgets through lower tuition revenue. Cost increases for everything from faculty to football push the prospects of college out of the reach for new and different cadres of students.
Universities have two options.  Bend or break.
Bob Lay, Dean for Enrollment Management at Boston College, suggested that with this shift in demographics produces a larger number of students from less affluent families where college study has not been the norm.  These recent high school graduates participate with less family experience, understanding and support.  Yet, increasing expectations and believed benefits of the university experience abound creating unrealistic expectations for student and institution alike.
Universities will stand and deliver; or lie down and die.
Dean Lay also suggested that “The notion that we are merely gatekeepers for our institutions has thankfully faded in the minds of current leaders in higher education.” His optimism is admirable, but many institutions continue to move too slowly towards a revitalized approach to university life in response to a markedly different group of students.
False hope in the power of distance learning and online instruction to provide a high-quality university experience shifting from classroom to digital experience will fall short. It is effect not cause. The new demographic, like the old demographic, wants contact with interested professionals who take tutelage seriously.
Most freshman classes at state universities are now more representative of the population they serve than at any time in history. This is great news. However the graduating classes revert back to the same old look, with the shifted demographic holding the bag, but not graduating. Hopes die: debt thrives.  Access is encouraged and rewarded with cheap loans, but success is locked up in after-school detention.
It is better not to accept a student unprepared and live in the deceit that they will complete a worthwhile program than to take in a person with the lowest likelihood of graduation.  William Powers, president at the University of Texas suggested many of the students are fully capable, but have not been challenged, nurtured, or tutored in a way that allows them to be successful.  He packages the problem crisply, “Often, they may have gone to a high school where they didn’t have a calculus class or advanced placement classes. The challenges are also financial and what I call cultural. They might be away from home, and they don’t have parents and aunts and uncles who have already been here.”
The times are tough for many universities…but will get tougher yet. Little relief is in sight for universities unwilling to simultaneously hold onto the traditional values of the university experience, enlightened teaching and engaged faculty and staff, while also looking at alternative methods to reduce the total costs and increase the effectiveness of the university experience.
Requiring all students to participate in some form of either low- or no-cost distance education, encouraging students to begin at a community college and reducing costs and scouring out ineffectiveness are all valuable considerations, but none a panacea in isolation.
These actions and others help to address the dramatic demographic shift and the escalation of the expectations that comes with it. At our universities academic leadership that understands cause is required.

OBITUARY – MARGARET ELIZABETH MALLORY – FORMERLY OF SESSER

 

 Mrs. Margaret Elizabeth Mallory, age 92, passed away Sunday, January 20, 2013. Margaret was born in Laketon Township, MI on August 21, 1920 to George T. and Helen (O’Neil) Slankard.
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Her family later relocated to Sesser, IL where she graduated from Goode-Barren Township High School. She then attended and graduated from Southern Illinois University with a major in Education and Sociology. On June 28, 1943, she married Ralph Mallory who preceded her in death in 2001. Margaret started a long and respected career as an elementary teacher in the Sesser Public Schools in 1939. Following a move to Michigan in 1949, she taught in the Ravenna, Mouth and Whitehall Public Schools. Her most often taught and preferred grade to teach was Kindergarten. She was instrumental in the development of many language arts programs as this was her specialty.
Most of her career she taught only half days in the morning and then would work in her husband’s insurance office as his life-long partner. She retired in 1982. Although a long time member of the Sesser United Methodist Church, she also was involved in the Whitehall Congregational Church for many years. Her civic interests included a local chapter of the American Association of University Women, Eastern Star and Whitehall Unity Club.
She is survived by her children, Marsha (John) Mahan of Plainwell, MI, and Tom (Chris) Mallory of Whitehall; grandchildren, Bryan (Jill) Mahan, Karen (Chad) Earle, Kristen (Nate) Deridder, Meghan (Andy) Fleckenstein-Vogel; she was also the proudest great grandmother of Kyle, Julia, Collin, Alexandria, Mary Adeline and Cecilia; brother, George O. (Mary) Slankard of Sesser IL.
SERVICE
Funeral services will be Saturday, January 26, 2013, at 1:30 PM and visitation beginning at noon at Sesser United Methodist Church in Sesser IL. Interment at Maple Hill Cemetery,Sesser IL with the Rev. Jack Wolf and the Rev. Julie Smith officiating. Local arrangement are be handled by the Brayfield-Gilbert Funeral Home Sesser Il.
Visitation will also be held Thursday from 2-4 & 6-8 p.m. at Clock Funeral Home – Muskegon, MI. Memorials may be made to the Margaret S. & Marcia H. Mallory Memorial Scholarship Fund, 541 E Slocum, Whitehall MI 49461. Please visit www.clockfuneralhome.com

Rend Lake College wrestlers went 2-1 at the Lincoln Duals

LINCOLN, Ill. (Jan. 22, 2013) – Rend Lake College wrestlers went 2-1 at the Lincoln Duals this past weekend at Lincoln College. Rend Lake defeated Muskegon Community College 23-19 and Olivet 27-15, and lost to host Lincoln College 31-14.

Rend Lake College sophomore wrestler Eric Tozzi (Ramseur, N.C.) went undefeated at the Lincoln Duals where the Warriors finished 2-1 as a team.

Rend Lake College sophomore wrestler Eric Tozzi (Ramseur, N.C.) went undefeated at the Lincoln Duals where the Warriors finished 2-1 as a team.

Against Olivet: RLC’s Gabriel Bartok (Carbondale) won by forfeit at 133 pounds; Eric Tozzi (Ramseur, N.C.) won by major decision over Olivet’s Matt Darling 11-2 at 141 pounds; Skyler Procasky (Belleville) won by technical fall over Olivet’s Bryce Baase 16-0 at 149 pounds; Justin Cash (Franklin, Tenn.) won by decision over Olivet’s Daniel Fleet 8-4 at 157; Olivet’s Rocky Cantu won by decision over Juan Stimpson (Asheboro, N.C.) 2-1 at 165; RLC’s Anthony Jehn (Beech Grove, Ind.) won by decision over Nicholas Affricano 5-3 at 174; Nicholas Allen won by injury default over RLC’s Austin Warren (Newburgh, Ind.) at 184; Olivet’s Thomas Hall won by forfeit at 197; and Coltyn Pease (Pittsfield) won by injury default over Olivet’s Dustin Gajowiak at heavyweight.
Against Lincoln: LC’s Ignace Hakizimana won by forfeit at 125; Alex Jones won by decision over Bartok 8-5; Tozzi won by forfeit; LC’s Takil Agnew won by decision over Procasky 10-3; Cash won by technical fall over Luke Dunn 25-10; Darnell Thomas won by decision over Stimpson 10-7; Alex Young won by major decision over Jehn 17-5; Warren won by decision over Kyle Harris 6-2; LC’s West Cathcart won by forfeit; and Dequence Goodman won by pin over Pease at 3:25.

Against Muskegon: Tyler Gibson (MCC) won by forfeit; Bartok won by decision over Andrew Nold 4-3; Tozzi won by technical fall over Michael Lackney 15-0; Procasky won by decision over Chase Singleton 6-3; Cash won by pin over Brandon Smith at 2:34; Stimpson won by decision over Dillon Francisco 5-3; Justin Johnson won by major decision over Jehn 13-4; Zachary Johnston won by decision over Warren 7-6; Thomas Bolday (MCC) won by forfeit; and Pease won by decision over Jeffrey Tautolo 3-2.
Next up for the Warriors is the Greyhound Open Tournament, Feb. 2, in Indianapolis, Ind. For all things athletic at The Lake, visit RLC online at www.rlc.edu/warriors.

Benton, West Frankfort, Illinois News | Franklin County News