Scared Straight – ‘The Great Sesser Homecoming Ticket Heist’

(NOTE:  The Sesser Homecoming Rend Lake Days will kick off this week and of course as the ‘Carnies’ rolled into town Sunday night that brought back memories of “The Great Sesser Homecoming Ticket Heist.”  Here’s a column I wrote a few years back detailing my brief and ill-fated life of crime.  I hope you enjoy!)

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Certainly, there is a great history of the Sesser Homecoming Rend Lake Days that has continued for nearly 60 years in the small Franklin County community.  This offering – which I will refer to as “The Great Sesser Homecoming Ticket Heist” will not be found in that illustrious history.

muir mug ihsa Let me explain.

As a kid growing up in Sesser the annual homecoming, held annually in the third week of June, was always the highlight of the summer. My main goal through the months of April and May was to save as much money as I could mowing yards so I’d have a pocket full of cash when the James Jackson Shows and Rides rolled into town.

Actually, back then a ‘pocket full of cash’ might have amounted to $15 or $20 bucks but in those days it was a windfall. And knowing my enthusiasm my mom would always hand me three or four Eagle Stamp books a few days before the Homecoming – books that she now doubt had been saving for weeks. I would happily go redeem them – I think they were worth $1.50 apiece – and add the proceeds to my stash.

Also, every year when the ‘carnies’ rolled into town I would head to the Sesser City Park on my trusty bicycle where I was joined by an assortment of other knuckleheads. There, we would spend the entire day watching the workers assemble the assortment of rides while counting the minutes until the homecoming became alive with excitement.

One year, when I was 11 years old, we were at the park and we were all straddling our bicycles very near one of the small booths where ride tickets are sold. Noticing that no one was around one of my friends reached into the booth and grabbed an entire roll of carnival ride tickets. Looking back, there must have been 5,000 tickets on that roll.

As he headed out of the park with the stash shoved up under his shirt, for a reason to this day that I don’t understand, I tagged right along behind him. Much like the cowboys in the movies who rob a bank and then head to a safe house to divide the loot, we decided to ride our bikes to Sesser Lake, located a couple of miles southeast of town, to divvy up the cache of yellow ride tickets. To say that I had visions of endless Ferris wheel and tilt-a-whirl rides on my mind would have been an understatement. As a carnival junkie I had just hit the mother lode.

We realized quickly that we had far more tickets than we could use so we played like Robin Hood – steal from the rich and give to the poor — and began dispersing yellow ride tickets all over town. Soon the word spread in the kid community throughout Sesser and we had guys looking for us hoping to ‘score’ some of the hot (in more ways than one) tickets.

Everything was going along without a hitch until the day that the homecoming was scheduled to start. I headed to town that morning and was soon met by my accomplice who was frantic and talking a mile a minute. During times in the conversation when he was coherent he related that he overheard his parents talking about some ‘stolen ride tickets.’ He said the police had been notified and that the color of ride tickets had been changed to blue. According to his story, anybody with a yellow ticket would be arrested.

As I listened to him talk, and my 11-year-old mind surmised the situation, I realized that was my last day of freedom on earth. I was certain that I would be sent to prison and celled up with a guy with tattoos, body odor and no teeth. It goes without saying that his name would be Bubba. Life as I knew it and enjoyed it would be over.

Actually, the thought of being arrested, sent to prison and branded as a thief paled in comparison to what I knew would happen if my dad found out. The thought of the police and sharing a cell with Bubba was one thing, but the thought of Bill Muir planting a boot in the seat of my pants was something else. For those of you who consider that child abuse, my dad would quickly tell you it was the most successful way he found to deal with a heathen child.

After a few minutes of remorse followed quickly by panic we decided that we still had time to try and round up the stolen tickets. We must have ridden our bikes 50 miles that day trying to recover those blasted yellow tickets and were successful finding everybody but one person. Only minutes before the rides were scheduled to start we found out that the one person we were looking for was already at the homecoming, so we made a frantic run for the park. We found him happily standing in line at the Ferris wheel with a yellow ticket clinched in his hand. We managed to get to him before he got to the ticket-taker, and in the process spared ourselves a lengthy prison sentence.

I’ve attended the Sesser Homecoming virtually every year since that fateful summer in 1964, always enjoying one of those delicious barbeques and some roasted corn. While I have many wonderful memories from the Homecoming I still vividly recall that harrowing June day nearly 50 years ago when “The Great Sesser Homecoming Ticket Heist” scared me straight and quickly ended my life of crime.

 

Obituary -Noble F. Johnston – Whittington

WHITTINGTON – Noble F. Johnston, 87, passed away Thursday morning, June 6, 2013.

Mr. Johnston was born May 26, 1926, in Whittington, the son of John T. and Jennie (Brown) Johnston.

He married JoAnn (House) on Sept. 9, 1979, and she survives.

Mr. Johnston served in the National Guard and volunteered to serve in the U.S. Navy at age 17. He was discharged in May 1946.

He retired from Ford Motor Company after 32 years. He worked as a die setter, foreman, mechanic and crane operator. He was a member of First United Methodist Church in Sesser.

Mr. Johnston was a life member of Amvets. He was a member of Sesser-Goode Masonic Lodge 744 and Benton Masonic Lodge 64 and Shriners and Scottish Rite Bodies.

Mr. Johnston is survived by his wife, JoAnn Johnston; three daughters, Diann McCord of Wilmington, Renee Johnston-Casey of Ewing and Melissa Schleede and husband, Jim, of Merrillville, Ind.  Also surviving is six grandchildren; three great-grandchildren; two stepchildren, Cheryl Markus and husband, Raymond, of Ohio and Keith Pyle and wife, Patricia, of Crete; one sister, Jo Aleen Guess of Benton; and two brothers, Loyd Gale Johnston of Benton and Larry Johnston and wife, Sharon, of Crete; and several nieces and nephews.

Mr. Johnston was preceded in death by his parents, a son Rick and a brother, Olen Lee Johnston.

Funeral services will be Monday, June 10 at 10 a.m. in Morton and Johnston Funeral Home in Benton, with the Rev. Mark Minor and Rev. Julie Smith officiating. Burial will be in Shiloh Cemetery in Whittington. Visitation will be from 4 to 8 p.m. Sunday at the funeral home, with Masonic rites at 7 p.m.

Sesser pair arrested on burglary charges

Benton police arrested a Sesser couple, both wanted on outstanding warrants for burglary.  Taken into custody was Danielle M. Clark, 20, and Carl J. Hendrix, 22.  Clark and Hendrix were taken to the Franklin County Jail where they remain in custody.

 

Lee enters not guilty plea, jury trial set for September 10

By Jim Muir

Donald Lee, the 39-year-old Elkville man accused of murdering a 23-year-old Bonnie woman last month, entered a not guilty plea in Franklin County Circuit Court on Wednesday.

Brittany Andrews

Brittany Andrews

Lee is charged with two counts of first degree murder and one count of aggravated unlawful use of a weapon in the death of Brittany Andrews.

Lee is charged with shooting Andrews in the head on an East Main Street parking lot, adjacent to a bar where they had reportedly just left.

Lee entered a plea of not guilty after waiving his right to a preliminary hearing during a brief appearance before Judge Thomas Tedeschi.  A jury trial was set for Sept. 10 with a final pretrial conference slated for August 29.  Lee remains in custody in Franklin County Jail in lieu of $2 million bond.

 

 

Obituary – Yolanda Gunter – Sesser

Yolanda Gunter, 90, of Sesser, died Tuesday, June 4, 2013 at Heartland Regional Medical Center in Marion.

She was born February 17, 1923 in Coello, the daughter of Telamaco Carnebale and Fidelia (Androvandi) Carnebali.

She was married to Tom Gunter and he preceded her in death. She worked for 17 years at Butler’s Store in Sesser, IL.

She is also survived by a special friend and caregiver Jack Winemiller, of Sesser, IL and one brother Fred Carnebali, of Chicago. Also surviving is two cousins and their spouses, Rick and Brenda Androvandi, of Sesser, IL and Nick and Barbara Androvandi, of Sesser along with two nieces, Patricia Leoni, of Chicago, IL and Shirley Overturf, of Sesser, IL.

Yolanda was preceded in death by her husband and parents.

Funeral services will be held at 1 p.m. on Friday, June 7, 2013 at Brayfield-Gilbert Funeral Home in Sesser, IL with the Rev. Harl Ray Lewis officiating. Visitation will be from 11 a.m until the time of the funeral service at 1 p.m. Interment will be in Mulkeytown Cemetery in Mulkeytown, IL.

In lieu of flowers the family requests that donations can be made to the First Baptist Church in Sesser, IL

Brayfield-Gilbert Funeral Home in Sesser IL is in charge of the arrangements.

For more information go to www.gilbertfuneralhomes.com

Our Universities: A Fearful Future?

The forces that appear to threaten universities provide the perfect opportunity for institutions to be able to do their job in a changing social milieu.  What appears to contradict or undermine purpose is, in reality, a recovery of strength.
“Evil [a baseless challenge to what is right, my addition] has no substance of its own, but is only the defect, excess, perversion, or corruption of that which has substance.”
John Henry Cardinal Newman
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By Walter Wendler

Sometimes I’m an alarmist. I see changes in higher education that give me pause.

Walter Wendler mug 2Alarmingly, student preparedness compared to a few generations ago is slipping.  Students arrive on campus with low math, science and reading skills: a challenge perceived by many educators during most of the last half of the 20th century.  To be sure, public expectations have increased as more families see universities as a means to economic security, regardless of student aptitude or demonstrated ability.

Another alarm rings:  Students unsure of what to study but led to believe by pop culture, parents, and press that studying anything at a university has value. This was probably true 100 years ago when a smaller portion of the population attended college and there were fewer “junk” degree options.  It is increasingly less true and many more graduates in traditional disciplines from anthropology to zoology, studied without passion or purpose, yield low value educational experiences.

A third alarm resonates: Brick and mortar universities will become dinosaurs as they are replaced by online and Massively Open Online Courses ( MOOC’s), for cheapness, accessibility, opportunities for self-paced learning, and omnipresent availability in a virtual classroom at a virtual university.

The clanging fourth alarm:  A university should be a means of providing employment. This is not to demean the value of a job at graduation.  Effective education should create a desire for life-long learning in students because learning creates ability and ability creates employment opportunity.  Certificates don’t do that. Enlightened capability does and it is the pinnacle of education.
These four alarms should not lessen the value universities bring to individual and society, but make us examine how contemporary universities may best serve and support a free and forward-looking society.

Rather than decry the implications of poor preparation of students, universities must find ways to create an enriched learning environment that challenges students in response to changing attitudes, aptitudes and aspirations.

Well directed focus on career choice creates interest and motivation. How many times have we heard college graduates say, “The first two years of school were not much fun for me, but in the core of my career interests in the last two, my attention and performance increased.”  This is not mindless careerism, but interest driven achievement.

Online learning, when correctly exploited, creates the means for students to improve exposure and ability.
With this mindset, it is possible to confront the three alarms of preparation, focus, and access, through the fourth alarm: the muscle and liberation of the demonstrated love of learning.

Threats squarely addressed become energizing agents. Threat “has no substance of its own,” except what we give it.

Good universities function by focusing on the relationship between teacher and student, each committed to learning. No placebo works. These four alarms should create a faculty guided renaissance in how our universities serve students and society. Enlightened leadership and impassioned faculty seize imagined threats as empowering refreshments.

Guarantees of success for prepared students, assurances of lifetime employment, the replacement of the campus with internet addresses, and the myth that when the degree is complete so is learning are evaporating one by one.
Perspective, purpose and persistence fuel excellence.  Fear leads to turf protection, the antithesis of education.

Surface mine training classes begin June 17 at RLC

Staff Report

Anyone considering a career in mining can learn the ins and outs of working a surface mine with a three-day class offering from Rend Lake College beginning June 17.

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Surface-Only New Miner Training will be held Monday-Wednesday, June 17-19, at the Coal Mine Training Center at Rend Lake College in Ina. The class will meet from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. each day. The cost of the class is $100.

Students will learn the basics of working a strip mine or the surface of an underground mine. Topics range from ground control to walking on stockpiles.

Anyone interested may contact Jo Ann Dick at 618-437-5321, Ext. 5804, or at dickj@rlc.edu.

Obituary – James J. Mandrell – Sesser

SESSER – James J. Mandrell, 75, died Wednesday, May 29, 2013, at home.

James was born Dec. 24, 1937, to Millard and Dorothy (Connor) Mandrell.

He married Lida (Shaw) Mandrell on Dec. 24, 1955, in Sterling.  James was a steelworker.

He is survived by children, James Nelson Mandrell of Mount Vernon, Steven Lee Mandrell of North Carolina, Alma Louise Mandrell of West Frankfort and Angel Marie Todd of Sesser.  Also surviving are grandchildren, Alysha, Hunter, Zachary, Ryan, Jennifer and Stacey; several great-grandchildren; brothers, Homer Mandrell of Deer Grove and Bob Mandrell of Atlanta; and three sisters also survive.

He was preceded in death by his parents, one daughter, Jo Ellen and two brothers and two sisters.

Funeral services will be at 1 p.m. Monday, June 3, in Brayfield-Gilbert Funeral Home in Sesser, with Brother Bryant Harris officiating. Visitation will be from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Monday, June 3, at the funeral home.

In lieu of flowers, memorials may be made to the family.

Brayfield-Gilbert Funeral Home in Sesser is in charge of arrangements.

For more information, visit www.gilbertfuneralhomes.com.

Rutherford running for Illinois governor

The gubernatorial race in Illinois in 2014 is expected to be a crowded field, particularly on the Republican side.  On Sunday Republican State Treasurer Dan Rutherford threw his hat in the ring.  Here the link to the story in the Chicago Tribune.

rutherford

Benton police report busy weekend

Benton police blotter:

On May 30, 2013 Benton Police arrested Cheryl Strickler, age 43, of Benton for driving while license suspended.  Strickler was transported to the Franklin County Jail for further processing.

On May 31, 2013 Benton Police arrested Jonathan E. Goddard on an active Franklin County warrant for petition to revoke probation.  Goddard was transported to the Franklin County Jail for further processing.

On June 1, 2013 Benton Police were dispatched to the 1200 block of Espy Street in reference to criminal trespass to a residence.  Upon arrival and through investigation, police arrested John R. Jessie, age 56, of Benton for criminal trespass to a residence and battery.  Jessie was charged and transported to the Franklin County Jail for further processing.

On June 1, 2013 Benton Police were dispatched to the 1000 block of Hunters Circle in reference to criminal trespass.  Through investigation, police arrested Michael S. Ligon, age 39, of Benton for criminal trespass to real property.  Ligon was charged and transported to the Franklin County Jail for further processing.

On June 1, 2013 Benton Police arrested James E. Twombly, age 42, of Benton for endangering the life of a child.  Twombly was charged and transported to the Franklin County Jail for further processing.

On June 2, 2013 Benton Police arrested Crystal E. Summers, age 33, of Benton for domestic battery.  Summers was charged and transported to the Franklin County Jail for further processing.

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