Hey parents … your kid sucks

This comes from a blog, ‘Baseball Perspectives’ written by Colin Young, a former professional baseball player.  I think it’s an interesting read.  Please feel free to share your opinion.

Here’s the link.

baseball little leauger

Wheels’ World: ‘Nice job, Caldwell’

Cindy Caldwell became a member of the Fast Pitch Hall of Fame in Decatur recently.  At church Sunday this accomplishment was brought to the congregation’s attention. Typical, Cindy spoke up saying, “not me, our team the West Frankfort Cardinals of whom I was a member was put in the Hall of Fame.”

Caldwell 1

Cindy Caldwell, right, with former Christopher coach Tom Wheeler.

To me, Caldwell is my ex short-stop at Christopher Community High School, one of the best I ever had, and she was also my first Black Diamond All Conference player. To students at Rend Lake College, she is Ms. Caldwell, associate professor in mathematics.

Going to the garage I came up with this info on Caldwell’s background. After graduating from Christopher she became a “Wren” at RLC (that’s what the women teams were called while the men’s teams were Warriors). For the Wrens she did it all, playing volleyball, basketball and softball. From the “small world department” her volleyball and softball coach was John M Kretz who played short stop on the Zeigler Raiders fast pitch team while Caldwell’s High School coach (me) played second base on the same team. Cindy was elected Most Valuable Player by her teammates that year.

At RLC her coach in basketball was Carol Whipple, assisted by Lila Waugh where she had CCHS classmate Christy Cook as a teammate. As a freshman in softball Cindy was All Conference at short-stop along with Wrens first baseman Kelly Stewart (Benton) in the Southern Illinois College Conference.

Playing short stop for Coach Tim Broy with the WF Cardinals was a great experience for the now math teacher as she was surrounded by the best fast pitch players in the south including ex- Bearcat Sue Ramsey. Winning state with this team was “one of my biggest thrills,” she said.

A very typical game for Cindy was hitting a grand slam and triple while going 4-for-5 against a good team from McLeansboro. Checking some clippings I noticed it was not unusual for the infield to turn double plays, Caldwell to second baseman Ramona Weiser (who’s Dad Raymond also helped coach) to first basemen Lisa Bernhardt.

When I first watched Cindy play I was sure of one thing, she will do what it takes to win, and she was and is such a great competitor. All the time I coached her I never called her Cindy, it was always “Caldwell.”

So let me finish by saying, ‘Nice job, Caldwell!’

Caldwill 2

Another bomb threat at Zeigler-Royalton High School, second in five days

By Jim Muir

For the second time in five days Zeigler-Royalton High School has been evacuated because of a bomb threat.

Franklin County Sheriff Don Jones confirmed Wednesday afternoon that a bomb threat was called in to the school shortly after 1 p.m.

Because the school is not within the city limits of Zeigler the sheriff’s department handles all emergency calls.  Jones said no other details were immediately available but said deputies were on the scene.

Hazardous Device Technicians from the Illinois Secretary of State Police prepare to enter Zeigler-Royalton High School during a bomb threat on Wednesday, May 1, 2013. (Christopher Kays / For Franklin County News)

Hazardous Device Technicians from the Illinois Secretary of State Police prepare to enter Zeigler-Royalton High School during a bomb threat on Wednesday, May 1, 2013. (Christopher Kays / For Franklin County News)

Darrell B. Dalton, 17, of Royalton and Zachary T. Barnett, 17, of Christopher were arrested April 26 and are accused of calling a bomb threat into the Z-R High School at approximately 8:20 a.m.  School personnel, deputies and a K-9 unit from the Illinois Secretary of State Police searched the school for the explosive device.  The student body was relocated to a position of safety by school personnel.  No explosive device was located.

Dalton and Barnett are both sophomore students at the school and both were charged with felony disorderly conduct, conveying a bomb threat to a school.  Both remain in custody.

This story will be updated later this afternoon.

Franklin County Farm Bureau News

 By J. Larry Miller

The warmer temperatures on Tuesday and Wednesday were certainly welcome and I was beginning to lose my confidence in Al Gore and global warming. There is still some concern as cooler temperatures are forecast this weekend. Corn that was planted almost 2 weeks ago has sprouted and is possibly going to make it.

Larry Miller, executive director Franklin County Farm Bureau

Larry Miller, executive director Franklin County Farm Bureau

April is the cruelest month,” the poet T.S. Eliott wrote in 1922, and it’s a judgment many nervous Illinois farmers might share in 2013.

The five-year average for corn planting is 40 percent. This year, with rain-saturated fields and cool soils, just 1 percent of the corn is in the ground, according to the weekly Illinois Weather and Crops report from the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
As of April 24, the month already had been the fourth-wettest in Illinois history, according to Jim Angel, state climatologist with the Illinois State Water Survey. The state average rain was 6.58 inches and within striking distance of the record 7.40 in April 2011, Angel said. April’s average is 3.77.

Farmers are not looking forward to the forecast for the rest of this week with lost of rain possible. Looks like it will be at least next week before much else can be done in the fields. But as a farmer there are always many things that need attention around the farm so inside work will get caught up during this time.

The 2nd Annual Franklin County Farm Bureau Antique Tractor Drive Josh Odom Memorial will be held on May 11th in conjunction with the Rend Lake Water Festival. The Young Leaders have been working diligently in getting local implement dealers to come and set up equipment on the parking lot across from McDonald’s in West City at the Rend Lake Plaza.

The tractor drive will begin with registration at 10:00 a.m. and leave Rend Lake Plaza at 10:30 to drive around the lake and enjoy the day. Right now the weather says we will have a high of 79 degrees which will be perfect weather for the event.

We still have plenty of room for entries for the antique tractors to participate – with a $10 entry fee that will get you a t-shirt and a fish dinner this is quite reasonable. The television show “Small Town, Big Deal” will be here filming for this event so Franklin County will be on national television and get some major recognition for all that we do. Let’s get as many tractors to participate as possible for a good showing.

For more information call the Franklin County Farm Bureau at (618) 435-3616 to reserve your space today.

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

Benton Runnin’ Rangers track team holding annual pork chop sandwich fundraiser

 The Benton Runnin’ Rangers track team is selling tickets this week for its annual pork chop sandwich fundraiser. You can get a pork chop sandwich, chips, and a drink for $5.00. Orders can be picked up between 11:00 am – 1:30 pm on Saturday, May 4th, at the Capitol Building Pavilion on the Benton Public Square.  All proceeds will go to the Benton track program.

State employee union sets new vote on contract agreement

Staff Report

Caregivers for the disabled, child protection workers and prison employees are just some of the nearly 40,000 frontline employees of Illinois state government who will vote again on whether to go forward with a new union contract with the Quinn Administration.

The state employees’ union, AFSCME Council 31, announced today that a new vote is required since the first tally was based on the administration’s commitment to drop its appeal of a court decision. In that case, the judge ruled that the state is obligated to honor the prior union contract and owes employees back wages withheld since July 2011.

Governor Quinn has asked that the appeal be dropped, but the authority rests with Attorney General Lisa Madigan, who has refused to do so.

“Tens of thousands of state employees have been denied their rightful wages for nearly two years,” AFSCME Council 31 executive director Henry Bayer said. “The court has ruled, correctly, that the state must honor the prior union contract, and that employees are owed their back pay. We think the appeal should be dropped and the matter put to rest. Since the earlier vote was based on assurances that the appeal would be withdrawn, union members have a right to re-vote now.”

The union and the Quinn Administration are urging lawmakers to approve an appropriation to pay the back wages. Passage of that measure would make the court case moot.

Benton woman arrested for retail theft

A 19-year-old Benton woman was arrested by Benton police for retail theft on Tuesday.

Samantha R. Wheatley was arrested at Fred’s Department Store, located at 215 Bailey Lane, according to the police report.  Police were called to the store and after an investigation Wheatley was arrested and charged with retail theft.  She was charged and taken to Franklin County Jail for processing.

 

Madigan rolls out pension proposal, unions say it will be overturned in court

 

As we roll into May House Speaker Michael Madigan has rolled out a plan to fix the ailing Illinois’ underfunded budget, a plan that is getting mixed reviews at best.  Here is the story from the Chicago Tribune.

Our Universities: Hire Power

Courage is essential when hiring.  Self-confidence is required to say, “We need people who are more knowledgeable than we are.”  Impossible for a narcissist or a self-absorbed leader… and hiring in any other way dooms any organization to failure.
“Never hire someone who knows less than you do about what he’s hired to do.”
Malcolm Forbes, Former Publisher of Forbes
_________________________________________________

By Walter Wender

It’s natural and healthy for any family unit to desire a better life for their progeny, so too it’s healthy for an enterprise to desire the next generation to eclipse the present — a positive side of human nature.

Walter Wendler mug 2Progress is achieved by nurturing existing people, retaining the most productive, and hiring newcomers who add value.   New recruits, with new ideas, are often an affront to the existing “state of affairs” — a negative side of human nature. This perspective is troubling when held by any member of a group, but debilitating when core leadership holds it.

David Walgner, President of Psychological Services Incorporated says hiring has a significant impact on the effectiveness of an organization: Common sense?  The consequences of weak hires:  low morale, decreased productivity, higher training costs are all easy to spot.  A compromised culture is the ultimate price. Walner’s findings are from the hotel industry but their intuitive resilience implies wide applicability.

Career Builder’s Kristen Wishon claims that 4 of 10 hires are ineffective and cost $25,000 apiece:  Twenty five percent are believed to cost over $50,000 each. Her litany of reasons mirrors Walner’s. It is difficult to “shake off” a bad hire, nearly impossible in the public sector. Good hiring at any level of the organizational chart is powerful — poor hiring disastrous — especially at the apex.
Here are five thoughts for higher power hiring.

First, never hire a person who lacks simple, your-mother-told-you-so, integrity.  People of integrity are revealed by their own history.  Integrity doesn’t mean blind loyalty, or thick-skulled agreement with every corporate edict.  Integrity liberates wholeness and completeness in personal thought and deed and it is revealed in action. Integrity missing?  Leave the person on the curb… he or she will contribute to organizational ruination… from plumbers to presidents.

Second, Steve Jobs declares in Steve Jobs, “You need to have a collaborative hiring process.”   The process of sharing hiring insights and ideas with a wide variety of people within the organization is a form of shared governance. And it’s fundamental. If you hire an accountant, technicians, executives, and clerical staff should weigh in too, not just other accountants. Well-hired people understand what’s important, and spot it in others. It is a common cultural process that makes a strong culture stronger.

Third, if the leader is the smartest person in the room, the organization will fail…it is only a matter of time.  Lee Iacocca, former chief of Chrysler, echoed Malcolm Forbes’ advice, and added a twist:”I hire people brighter than me [here comes the caveat] and then I get out of their way.”

Fourth, people who value the organization’s mission are to be coveted. Vision is critical and needs to be clearly expressed to attract motivated people. Lawrence Bossidy, former Chief Operating Office of GE said it this way, “I am convinced that nothing we do is more important than hiring and developing people. At the end of the day you bet on people, not on strategies.”
Fifth, Henry David Thoreau warned in Life Without Principle, “Do not hire a man (or woman) who does your work for money, but him (or her) who does it for the love of it.” This is difficult to assess but absolutely essential. Hire people whose work is a ministration, not administration, self-service, or self-aggrandizement.

Our universities, and all successful enterprises from churches to seats of commerce, hospitals to manufacturers, should hire with power.  The future of any enterprise depends on every hire, at every level, from the executive suite to the machine shop.

Wheel’s World: The Real Fab Five

By Tom Wheeler

Rich Herrin took the 85-86 SIU basketball program when it was at an all-time low. The year before Coach Allen Van Winkle had five starters back while Herrin started his era with only FOUR letterman back: Doug Novsek, Steve Middleton, Dan Weiss and Brian Welch. These four played .o8 percent of SIU’s game minutes and contributed 108 of 2,044 points (.05 percent) in the 84-85 season. Somehow Rich’s first team won 8 games (4-12 in the conference) including a big win at St. Louis University. Remember also, this team was put on probation by the Missouri Valley and was not allowed to play in the post-season tournament.

5 SIU COACHES

Coach Herrin has always said that this team laid the groundwork for the Saluki’s later success. Checking closer I found that that is not the only groundwork that five of these players laid.

Let me explain about five of these special players!

Thad Matta is now head coach at Ohio State University. He is one of only two coaches who have posted 20 wins in their first 13 years. He has won five Big Ten titles, was runner –up in the NCAA tournament in 2007 and made the final four again in 2012. The Hoopston-East Lynn High School star played at SIU and Butler where he also coached. He moved on to Xavier before Ohio State and has a great resume of his assistants moving up the coach’s ladder, Illinois Coach John Groce being an example.

Steve Middleton is in his fifth year as an associate head coach at Oklahoma State. The Brooklyn New York native ended up in Carbondale and after a great career at  SIU he  became a very prosperous coach at St. Mary’s High School in Paducah, Kentucky where he was 81-35  his last four years. Ex-University of Kentucky standout Travis Ford was so impressed with Coach Middleton that he convinced him to enter the college scene. Middleton has become one of the top recruiters in the nation and he has joined Coach Ford at Eastern Kentucky, then Massachusetts University and now at Oklahoma State.

Doug Novsek came to SIU from the famed Ron Felling Lawrenceville High School period. He was runner-up for the prestigious Illinois’ Mr. Basketball award after leading the Indians to an undefeated record which included an Illinois State Championship. Doug was the basketball captain his last two years at SIU before entering the college coaching ranks. He has been an assistant for five years at Southwest Texas, three years at Illinois State, four years at the University of Nebraska and is in his seventh year as the associate head coach at the University of Nevada.

Randy House was a four year starter at SIU where he scored over 1,000 points and he has taken these “Rambo” type qualities he learned under Coach Herrin at Benton High School and then at SIU to become a top Junior College coach at Rend Lake College. Last season Coach House got his Warriors to the National tournament for the first time in the school’s history and topped that journey this year by winning the NJCAA D-II Tournament in Danville.  Their 87-69 Championship win over Morraine Valley of Chicago was a fitting way to prove to fans they were truly the number one team at Danville. More impressive during their 30-3 season record is the fact they won the GRAC Conference being the “only” school in the conference that was not a Division I school.

Wayne Harre was a Nashville high School All –State player who first played at Kaskaskia College in Centralia (where he was later inducted into the schools Hall of Fame) before moving to SIU to be a Saluki. Wayne returned home to coach the boys JV team before he decided to become the Nashville girls’ coach. In 13 years at the helm of the Lady Hornets his team has won 362 games while losing only 64. His worse season in these 13 years was in 07-08 when he “only” won 22 games and lost 8 (that was his worst). His team’s success at the IHSA state tournament includes finishing fourth twice, finishing third twice and this year they were the IHSA Class 2A state champs finishing 33-2.

SIU Salukis – 1985-86

Benton, West Frankfort, Illinois News | Franklin County News