For unto us a child is born….

 

I am going to share a series of columns based on the verse Isaiah 9:6 during the holiday season.  The first six words of this verse exactly is the true meaning of this season.

I am 46 years old and I still watch A Charlie Brown Christmas.  I actually used to have an authentic Charlie Brown Christmas Tree as a decoration.  The cartoon is in its 51st year.  It was about on the cutting floor of CBS, and came close to never airing.  Network

Peanuts character and theologian Linus VanPelt

Peanuts character and theologian Linus VanPelt

executives said it was too religious.

Charlie Brown was asking the true meaning of Christmas.  Linus VanPelt, the theologian of the comic, recited this verse:

And the angel said unto them, Fear not: for, behold, I bring you good tidings of great joy, which shall be to all people. For unto you is born this day in the city of David a Saviour, which is Christ the Lord.  And this shall be a sign unto you; Ye shall find the babe wrapped in swaddling clothes, lying in a manger.  (Luke 2:10-12 KJV)

Linus followed up with “That is the true meaning of Christmas, Charlie Brown.”

This is a side note.  Anything I write of this nature, I will use the King James Version.  Use a version of God’s word that is easy for you to understand.  I use is for personal preference.  I just like the thunder of it.

I am going to share my opinion on a couple of things.  First Santa Claus is not the real meaning of Christmas, but I feel there is absolutely nothing wrong with telling your children about him.  Some of the greatest joys in my life was spent in a Santa suit.  I am going to share some of those before.

I feel there is nothing wrong with having a Christmas tree in your house.  The reason we use evergreens is to symbolize eternal life through Christ.  It is nothing to worship, but it is a decoration that is worth explaining the true meaning of others.

This time of year gets very busy.  There are parties, gatherings, in the heart of basketball season, and stress in trying to find the right present for someone. For others, it is a time of loneliness and sadness.  Whatever you lot is in life, keep in mind what the true meaning of Christmas is.  Jesus was born to die on the cross so that I and you could have eternal life.

At your holiday gatherings, make it a tradition to open the Bible and share the Christmas story with your friends and family before opening presents.  It will put everyone in the right mindset, and will make opening presents a lot more special.

 

This piece was written by Steve Dunford, a guest columnist of FranklinCounty-news.com.  He spent 20 years pastoring five small Southern Baptist Churches in Franklin and Jefferson counties.  He currently is a member of the Calvary Baptist Church in West Frankfort

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Faking the news

Mainstream media are suddenly concerned about “fake news.” It used to be that phony stories were easy to spot. They usually

In this Oct. 18, 2011, file photo, traffic passes the New York Times building, in New York. The New York Times pushed back against President-elect Donald Trump, saying Thursday, Nov. 17, 2016, that its paid subscriptions have jumped since the election, despite what Trump has said on Twitter. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan, File)

In this Oct. 18, 2011, file photo, traffic passes the New York Times building, in New York. The New York Times pushed back against President-elect Donald Trump, saying Thursday, Nov. 17, 2016, that its paid subscriptions have jumped since the election, despite what Trump has said on Twitter. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan, File)

focused on space aliens or mysterious creatures found wandering deep in the woods. My personal favorite in this genre was a 1992 “story” in the supermarket tabloid Weekly World News that claimed the bones of Adam and Eve had been discovered in Colorado. A “leading archaeologist” was quoted, presumably to add credence to the fake story. In the internet age, things once thought incredible have taken on credibility. From spam email that claims someone in Nigeria wants to send you money, if you send them some first, to politicians engaging in behavior that only sounds true if you happen to hate the politician and believe he (or she) is capable of anything. It has become a lot easier to fool some of the people all of the time. A recent fake news story claimed Hillary Clinton was involved in a child sex ring run out of a Washington, D.C., pizza restaurant. It prompted a deranged man with a gun to fire shots inside the place in hopes of liberating the “enslaved” children.  Please click to read the editorial by syndicated columist Cal Thomas.

Gap widens between rich and poor, Harvard expert says

It’s even harder for poor children to succeed than it was 50 years ago because the gap has widened between haves and have-nots, a Harvard University professor told Quad-City-area civic leaders on Wednesday. Robert D. Putnam, author of “Our Kids: The

Harvard Professor Robert Puntnam (Photo Provided to the Quad City Times)

Harvard Professor Robert Puntnam (Photo Provided to the Quad City Times)

American Dream in Crisis,” brought five years of research, plenty of anecdotes and statistics to bolster his theory to an event hosted by United Way of the Quad-Cities Area at the iWireless Center, Moline….For instance, 74 percent of rich children who excel in school will complete a four-year college degree versus 30 percent of poor, successful students. Rich children who are awful in school are still 10 times more likely to complete a college degree than their poorer counterparts. There have always been rich and poor people, he said. The middle class, he said, has evaporated as more and more are becoming poor. Please click to read the entire story by Brian Wellner of the Quad City Times

Inventor of Dairy Queen’s ‘Blizzard’ machine dies in Bettendorf IA

Ronald Medd was an entrepreneur and a person who worked very hard with his family to improve the Bettendorf community,

The Medd Family (Quad City Times file photo.)

The Medd Family (Quad City Times file photo.)

according to the Rev. Richard Pokora of Redeemer Lutheran Church, Bettendorf. Medd, 85, died Monday at his Bettendorf home, surrounded by his family. His many accomplishments included helping to invent the “Blizzard” machine for Dairy Queen franchises all over the country. The frosty treat is so popular in some quarters that it even has a fan club. To this day, Pokora enjoys stopping by the Bettendorf Dairy Queen on 18th Street, where he thinks about Medd. A machine in that location commemorates the invention. Please click on this link to read the entire story from Deirdre Cox Baker of the Quad City Times

Highlights of the Rend Lake College Board of Trustees Meeting on December 13, 2016

Business AAS degree returns, two new certificates receive approval
The board approved the reactivation of the Associate in Applied Science Degree in Business and authorized its submission to the Illinois Community College Board for action. The updated curriculum rlc-old-school-logowill allow students to graduate in as little as two years and to specialize in accounting and finance or management and human resources. The curriculum is designed to provide students with a general background in all areas of business and to prepare them for careers in the fields of banking, accounting, management or marketing at the mid-management level in a variety of businesses and industries.
In addition to reactivation of the AAS degree, the board also approved two Business Management occupational certificates, one of 16 credit hours and the other of 31 credit hours. These are designed to be stackable credentials toward the AAS degree.
In a related matter, a new course, Introduction to Economics, was approved and authorized for submission to ICCB. This three-credit-hour class includes an introduction to national income theories, price theories and behavior of the firm under varying economic conditions, among other content.
In other curriculum-related actions, changes to the Tutor Training and Independent Study courses were approved, the board learned of sequence changes to the existing Microsoft User Certificate curriculum, and 35 courses in varying subjects were withdrawn.
Walker receives appointment as Nursing Instructor
The board appointed David John Walker as Nursing Instructor effective Jan. 5, 2017. He holds a Master of Science Degree in Nursing from Western Governors University, a Master of Arts Degree in Human Resource Development from Webster University, a Bachelor of Science Degree in Nursing from Old Dominion University and an Associate in Science Degree from Rend Lake College. He spent 20 years in the U.S. Navy, and most recently was facilities director for Crossroads Community Hospital.
DeForest joins full-time ranks
The board appointed Emily DeForest as Business Office Specialist effective Jan. 3.  She currently works part-time in the Business Office as a communications specialist. In her new position, she will continue those duties and will assist with additional Business Office functions in light of the recent resignation of the previous Business Office Specialist. DeForest holds a Bachelor of Fine Arts Degree from Southern Illinois University and an Associate in Arts Degree from Rend Lake College.
Education veteran Mongtomery to retire
After more than 20 years as Director of Alternative Education, Walt Mongtomery will retire effective Dec. 31, 2016, a retirement resignation accepted with regret Tuesday evening. “Rend Lake College has been a great place to work,” Montgomery wrote in his retirement letter. “I have made many friends while working here and have found all fellow employees to be cooperative and dedicated to the students. It has been very rewarding to see many students receive their high school diploma by completing classes in the Alternative Education program and continuing their education in various programs here at Rend Lake College.”
Three resignations accepted …
The board accepted with regret three resignations Tuesday.
·Jacquelyn Anselment, Quality Specialist / Provider Recruitment Specialist for Project CHILD, effective Nov. 25, 2016. She had been with Project CHILD full-time since September 2014. “I am so thankful for all of the opportunities that Rend Lake College and Project CHILD have provided to me over the past two years,” Anselment wrote in her resignation letter.
·Mollie Bremer, Title III Health Studies Support Coordinator, effective Jan. 6, 2017. She has been with RLC full-time since March 2012. “I sincerely appreciate the professional guidance and support I received while working at Rend Lake College. I consider it a privilege to have been part, and worked alongside, such a great team,” Bremer wrote in her resignation letter.
·Tony Etnier, Academic Advisor and Head Baseball Coach, effective Jan. 5, 2017. He has been with RLC full-time since July 2006, including time spent as Director of The Hitting Zone on campus prior to transferring to academic advisement. In his letter of resignation, Etnier described his time at RLC as “101/2 of the best years of my life.”  He said his initial employment with the RLC was his first “real job” after graduating from college, and “it developed into a career, and eventually the college became like a family to me. I cannot say enough positive things about my experiences here with the students, athletes, faculty and staff. Go Warriors!”
In other business, the board approved the 2017 schedule of meetings for the RLC Board of Trustees. The schedule will be available on the Board of Trustees page of the college website at www.rlc.edu.
·Approved the 2017-2018 Rend Lake College Catalog.
·Approved revisions to the college organizational chart.
·Approved revisions to board policy and procedure concerning the Board of Trustees Code of Ethics (first reading); identification and disposal of obsolete equipment, materials and supplies (first reading); and inventory records for capital assets (first reading).
·Approved board policy and procedure concerning the Employee Code of Ethics (first reading), sexual offender / sexual predator registration for employment applicants and employees (first reading), and sexual offender / sexual predator registration for students (first reading).
·Approved revisions to board procedure concerning stipends.
·Granted permission to advertise for a college controller, to replace the retiring Wendy Smith.
·Granted an unpaid leave of absence for the Testing and Placement Specialist.
·Approved the current faculty salary schedule as negotiated and accepted within the faculty union agreement for the RLC Federation of Teachers Local No. 3708.
·Ratified payment of college expenses, including travel reimbursements, as presented.
Mark your calendars …
·Thespian Comedy Improv, 7 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 26, RLC Theatre.
·WYSE Competition, Wednesday, Feb. 8, Waugh Gymnasium.
·Visiting Artist Series: Mixed Media by Najjar Abdul-Musawwir, Jan. 27-April 21, RLC Theatre Lobby.
·Spoken Word Open Mic, 6:30 p.m. Monday, Jan. 30, King City Books, Mt. Vernon.
·SIU Student Filmmakers, noon Wednesday, March 22, RLC Theatre.
·Spring Musical: The Wizard of Oz, 7 p.m. April 6-8, 2 p.m. April 9, RLC Theatre.
· Job Search Party, 3-6 p.m. Thursday, April 13, Holiday Inn / Doubletree Inn, Mt. Vernon.

SIU defeats SLU at the Arena 70-55 last night

CARBONDALE, Ill. — Leading by four points with four minutes to go, Southern Illinois finished the game on a 14-3 run to put away a pesky Saint Louis team, 70-55, on Wednesday night at SIU Arena.

The Salukis (6-5) were led by Armon Fletcher, who had a career-

Saluki forward Sean O' Brien drives around Billiken defender Jalon Johnson

Saluki forward Sean O’ Brien drives around Billiken defender Jalon Johnson (SIU Media Services photo.)

high 21 points, while Sean O’Brien pitched in a double-double with 13 points and 13 rebounds. Thik Bol added 14 points. 

The key shot of the night, though, came from guard Sean Lloyd, who made his first-career start for SIU. With his team clinging to a 58-54 lead, Lloyd drained a 3-pointer from the right wing with four minutes to go that gave his club some breathing room. 

“He comes down the floor and I yell at my staff that Sean’s scared to death — and that’s paraphrased,” Hinson said. “When he caught the ball, he shoots a three and he sticks it, and he looks right at me. I guess that’s how you gotta coach guys from Philly.”

The final eight possessions for Saint Louis included four missed shots and three turnovers, and SIU sealed the win with six free throws by Mike Rodriguez, plus layups by O’Brien and Bol.

The Billikens (3-7) played without leading scorer and starting point guard Jermaine Bishop, but they had no trouble knocking down shots in the first half, converting 7-of-12 from 3-point range. Their largest lead was eight points, 25-17, on a 3-pointer by Aaron Hines, a former walk-on, who started in place of Bishop.

SLU entered the game ranked No. 328 in 3-point shooting percentage (28 percent), but Southern checked in with a 3-point shooting defense that also ranked No. 328. The Billikens won that battle, as five-different players connected from downtown.

“I wondered how we’d play, because we’ve been so short-handed in practice, and without our point guard, and we’re pretty short-handed to begin with anyway,” said first-year Saint Louis head coach Travis Ford. “So we had some fight early. I was proud of how we executed early.”

Southern struggled at times against SLU’s zone defense. The team’s only consistent threat from outside the arc this season has been Fletcher, and he delivered a 4-for-7 night from downtown. His teammates were 1-for-7.

“We don’t have a lot of confidence,” Hinson acknowledged. “The greatest defense to play against a team with no confidence is a zone, because it makes you stagnant. We got stagnant offensively, we got stagnant defensively, and we were lulled to sleep.”

Trailing by two at halftime, the Salukis woke up in the second half, surging to a lead, 40-38, on a trey by Fletcher. Defensively, they held their opponent to 36 percent in the second half. Saint Louis stayed within one or two possessions until late in the game, but 21 turnovers were their undoing, including an inordinate amount of traveling violations. 

“We were our own worst enemy a lot of the time,” Ford said. “When you’re shooting 60 percent in the half and have 11 turnovers, we thought we should have had a bigger lead at halftime and taken advantage of us actually running offense and making a few shots.” 

Saint Louis is in full rebuilding mode under Ford. The Billikens have three transfers sitting out, and on top of that, starting guards Mike Crawford and Davell Roby didn’t practice the last two days with injuries, Ford said, though they ended up playing in the game.

“I was proud of our team being able to keep it all together after the couple days have been pretty rough on our basketball team,” he said.

Southern snapped a two-game losing streak, and after he questioned the team’s effort in Saturday’s loss to Sam Houston State, Hinson became emotional during his postgame remarks to the media tonight.

“You gotta have guys that want to fight,” he said, raising his voice. “You gotta have guys that want to compete. We didn’t do that in the last two games. That was our whole message tonight — when you get out on that wood floor, why don’t you compete! Why don’t you fight a little bit!”

Long-Shot Bid to Block Trump Arrives at Electoral College Monday

The Electoral College’s 538 members gather Monday at 50 state capitols to cast the ballots that matter the most when it comes to electing a U.S. president. Normally sedate affairs that pass with little

Trump at a victory rally after the election. (Washington Times photo)

Trump at a victory rally after the election. (Washington Times photo)

notice, this year’s proceedings have been injected with a bit of drama and a dash of uncertainty with an unprecedented campaign by a small group of electors to overturn the results of Election Day. Behind the drive is a group calling itself Hamilton Electors, led by two Democratic electors from western states. The name is a nod to Alexander Hamilton and his explanation of the need for the Electoral College, an entity the first U.S. Treasury secretary said existed to make sure that “the office of the president will never fall to the lot of any man who is not in an eminent degree endowed with the requisite qualifications.”

IHSA estabishes pitch counts for HS baseball

 

The Illinois High School Association (IHSA) Board of Directors met at its regularly scheduled meeting at the IHSA office in Bloomington ihsaon Monday, December 12, 2016, where the Board voted to implement a pitching regulation Policy in the sport of baseball. The pitch limitations are effective immediately and will be used by IHSA member schools during the 2017 baseball season this spring.
The limitations approved by the Board closely mirror the pitching limitations jointly developed by the IHSA’s Baseball Advisory Committee and Sports Medicine Advisory Committee. The most significant change from the original recommendation is dropping the maximum number of pitches in a game from 115 pitches to 105 pitches.

Click here to see the Pitch Count Guidelines Policy.

“This was a collaborative effort that goes a long way toward making high school baseball in Illinois safer,” said IHSA Sports Medicine Advisory Committee member Dr. Preston Wolin. “I want to thank the IHSA Board, the Sports Medicine Advisory Committee, the Baseball Advisory Committee, and all the people who were indispensable in this process for their efforts.”

Dr. Wolin was a guest of the Baseball Advisory Committee at their August meeting, where he presented the recommendations of the Sports Medicine Advisory to the group.

The Board of Directors reviewed the pitching limitation recommendation in the fall and chose to present it to the IHSA membership for feedback during the Association’s annual Town Hall Meetings in November.

“Kudos to the Baseball Advisory and Sports Medicine Advisory committees for working together on behalf of student safety,” said IHSA Executive Director Craig Anderson. “We believe that the NFHS and its state association membership have been leaders in this area in all sports, but ultimately, the high school season encompasses a short window. We hope that youth and travel baseball organizations will follow our lead to help protect these pitchers and their arms.”

The IHSA is developing a process for schools to submit their game-by-game pitching counts via the IHSA website, which will be presented to coaches and school personnel prior to the season. The Board confirmed that a violation of the Policy could result in forfeiture and that all violations of the Policy will be reviewed by the Executive Director on a case-by-case basis.

Courtesy of a press release from the Illinois High School Association.

Men’s Basketball Gets Back On Track With Win Against Simmons

West Frankfort, Ill. – A talented Simmons College team came into town and found themselves outmatched agains the Patriots clutch offense. Morthland sent the Falcons home to a final score of 95-75.
Aaron Rushing opened up the scoring for the boys with a quick two pointer just 10 seconds after the tip to give the Patriots the lead.

A quick response from Simmons’ Jalen Baker put the Falcons up by one with his shot from behind the arc.

Ashton Worgu at the free throw line in the 95-75 win against Simmons last night.

Ashton Worgu at the free throw line in the 95-75 win against Simmons last night.

Cody Schultz said he could do it better and answered with a trey of his own to bring the patriots back up by two. From there, Morthland kept the lead the rest of the night.

A couple of back-and-forth possessions found the Patriots up 15-12 when they sparked a 12-0 run to put themselves up 27-12 with 9:18 left in the half.

That run staked Morthland’s momentum for the evening, and the boys never lead by less than double digits for the rest of the night.

With their offense never slowing down, the Patriots led by 28 at the most when they found themselves up 85-57 after a Rushing basket in the paint.

Morthland’s big man ended the night with 19 points (9-for-13) and six rebounds.

Tyler Burmester had the lone double-double with his 24 points and 11 rebounds. He also tacked on five assists to his name.

Schultz and Dylan Burmester registered double-digit points as well with 20 and 16. Dylan Burmester was just one rebound shy of a double-double.

Ben McFarland came off the bench for the Patriots and made some noise with two tremendous blocks to swing momentum even farther in Morthland’s favor.

As a team, the boys shot 54.5 percent from the floor and 46.4 percent from deep. The Patriots out rebounded Simmons 45 to 33.

With the win, Morthland moves to 6-4 on the season. They take the court again in two days as they host the Ron Herrin Memorial Shootout.

Games are scheduled for 6:00 and 8:00 on Friday evening. Then 12:00 and 2:00 on Saturday afternoon. Alongside Morthland, the tournament will play host to Robert Morris University – Peoria, Robert Morris University – Springfield and College of Faith.

For stats go to the following link:  http://www.morthlandpatriots.com/stats/2016-17/box_9.html

Energy Dept. rebuffs Trump’s request for list of climate-change workers

In another sign that the transition isn’t proceeding as smoothly as President Obama professes, the Energy Department refused Tuesday to provide President-elect Donald Trump’s team with a list

resident Barack Obama and President-elect Donald Trump shake hands following their meeting in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, Thursday, Nov. 10, 2016. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

President Barack Obama and President-elect Donald Trump shake hands following their meeting in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, Thursday, Nov. 10, 2016. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

of federal employees who have worked on climate-change programs. White House press secretary Josh Earnest expressed concern that the move by Mr. Trump “could have been an attempt to target civil servants, career federal government employees.” “If we had to replace the entire Department of Energy every time a new president was elected, that is certainly going to undermine the ability of those at the most senior levels to implement a coherent and effective energy policy,” he said. The president-elect’s transition officials have not explained the inquiry and did not respond to a request for comment Tuesday. Please click to read the entire story by Dave Boyer and Ben Wolfgang of the Washington Times.

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