Sorry, but if you’re a Christian, you need to go to church. Regularly

LEXINGTON, KY (Paul Prather Lexington Herald) Please Click to read the entire column. Here is an Exceprt. Lately, I’ve read a couple of insightful articles that address a recurring spiritual question: If you consider yourself a Christian, must you go to church? I’ve expressed my thoughts before about this issue. My answer, unfortunately, tends to make people mad. My answer is, yes, you have to go to church. That is, if you want to progress in your faith — if you hope to become a mature, actualized, fully functioning Christian.

The Franklin County Rangers

by Steve Dunford – franklincounty.news-com.

Tuesday night, I made my first trip to Rich Herrin gym this season. The renovations look great.  Thank you to the “Governors” grandparents, Rick and Debbie Webster, for hauling my lard butt to the game Tuesday.  I will be writing a feature story on Jonathan Kinsman soon.

My top row view of Rich Herrin gym Tuesday night.

My top row view of Rich Herrin gym Tuesday night.

I was sitting in the rafters on the top row.  It was probably the first time I sat in a chair seat in Rich Herrin gym.  They are awesome seats with a lot of leg room.  I have watched hundreds of games over the years in that gym.  I think it was the first time I ever sat in a chair seat.

Even though the first time I watched them live, I have watched the Rangers on streaming video multiple times this year.  Listening to Jim Muir (and no I am not sucking up to my boss) and Tom Wheeler over the years is as good as being there.

I am going to call the crowd 3,500 Tuesday night.  It was pushing the McLeansboro crowd in the BIT in 1984.  With the 1A and 2A Super Sectional going on last night as well,

I didn’t run into anyone from Z-R , but I saw people who had maroon on last night from each of the other teams in the county. There were some Redbirds in maroon even.

I ran into Austin Glodich Wednesday morning at Caseys.  The first question he asked was, “Did you go to Benton last night?”  I am going to miss watching him play.

"Sideline Sev" in his Ranger gear Tuesday night"

“Sideline Sev” in his Ranger gear Tuesday night”

It was the first time I had the “privilege” of witnessing Travis Severin in his Halloween costume Tuesday.  A lot of the awesome Ranger student section was dressed to go trick or treating too.   One thing that I have witnessed in general around Southern Illinois, students are starting to turn out again at High School games again.  It warms this old geezers heart.

I am going down memory lane for a second.  From an early age, Ron Head and Bobby Blondi brought Ranger basketball to me on WQRX. I especially loved listening to games from the Centralia Holiday Tournament and the BIT.  I would go around the house pulling up my socks and stomping the floor like Rich Herrin.  It is a privilege to cover Morthland College games and be able to sit behind the bench in an intimate setting.

I played hooky from school to watch a Bruce Baker team take on Marty Simmons and Doug Novseck for Ron Felling and Lawrenceville in the in the State Tournament in 1982.

My heart was broke watching a 1984 team that was the smallest AA team in the state, lose an overtime thriller to Evanston in the Elite Eight.  There were several division one players on that team.  A lot of them played for Rich Herrin at SIU.

Somewhere in this time frame around 1982-84, I wanted a maroon Jacket with Benton Rangers stitched on the back.  They were coming from a new business on the square.  Their phone number was 435-555-55-5.

I mentioned to my mom and dad I wanted one for Christmas.  This resulted in a fist fight with my brother in our garage, saying I was showing disrespect for T’ville.  I don’t know if the jacket came from All Stars-n-Stitches, but for Christmas I received a blue and gold Thompsonville Tigers jacket in the same format.

I was able to watch Jo Jo Johnson and the 1992 team in B section, center court, at the Assembly Hall.  It was great to see the Rangers take home some hardware.

Every time I went into a restaurant, I would run into a lot of people from Franklin County.  I arrived in Champaign two hours before the quarterfinal game.  There was so many Franklin County people in there,  John and Mary Moreland should have received a cut of the sales.

I have enjoyed taking basketball with Kenny Irvin over the years.  I pull up in the parking lot in my Buick Regal I drove at the time, and I noticed him with Jo Jo Liquid Papered all over his recently shaved head.  I do not know this for sure, but rumors said he had a tough time removing.  It was good to see him last night and crossing paths with him several times during the season.

Lets get into the present day.  I jotted down some notes but only used them as talking points discussing the game.  One was slowing the game down in the second half.  Ron Winemiller and Wade Thomas let their McLeansboro roots show.  The Rangers patient offense was effective outscoring Cahokia 13-6 in the third quarter to turn a four point half-time deficit into a three point lead.

The Rangers weathered the storm missing eight free throws in the fourth quarter Tuesday night, and a few unforced turnovers in the first half.  They weathered the storm being behind by double digits in the first quarter to Carbondale.

Leaving Tuesday night, I just had a gut feeling you will see this team play in Peoria.  The reason why, they seem to find a way to win.  My mind is going all the way back to December, when they squeaked out a win down at Herrin.

I have a lot of ties to this Ranger team.  I am going to share some with you.

I am distantly related to coach Ron Winemiller.  I posted this on Facebook after the regional championship win with Carbondale on Friday night.

Most of you know that Benton coach Ron Winemiller is a distant cousin of mine. My great aunt is Coach Winemiller’s great grandma. We spent a lot of time in the backyard at my maternal grandparents house talking basketball. She would go down the list of the Corn’s which was her grandkids. First the UAB blazers, then the Pinckneyville Panthers, the McLeansboro Foxes, and finally the Benton Rangers. I believe when the bible says the windows of heaven are open, you are allowed to see happy times on this earth. I think my aunt Doris was smiling from heaven last night, seeing her great grandson, who is a second generation coach, guiding the Rangers to a victory last Friday night.

The first is Timmy Henson.  I guess you call his mom Penny my first girlfriend. (Don’t be jealous Mike)  We would hold hands on the playground in first grade. Our families were friends.  It is a friendship that still lasts today.

Something else about Timmy is he slid on the same uniform up to his freshman year that I slid on, a Thompsonville Tiger jersey.  In the three years that he has been a Ranger, there are several from T’ville that has followed his playing career.  It has been special watching him play all four years in high school.

I became friends with Derek Oxford’s uncle, Terry Drone, when I went to school at Rend Lake.  We don’t cross paths a lot, but when we see each other we have a long conversation, mainly about High School Basketball.

Even though he was a few years younger than me, Benton football coach Bob Pankey lived a block and a half from me, until his family moved between Whittington and Ewing when he was in grade school.  I always liked talking to that red headed kid back then.  There is my tie to Blaine Pankey.

Hamilton Page’s mom Cindy, was always around my cousins house in Akin alot.  She was not as much, but you can throw Gehrig Wynn’s mom Trudee in there.  I would cross paths with Matt a lot when I was a student at  SIU.

The little I have been around this team, they play the game right. They are good kids off the court.  The grade school age kids in Benton idolize this team.  They set an example for them to look up to.

Knowing that several of the Ranger players went to the “Governor’s” seventh birthday party was awesome.  There were always little hands that were stuck out wanting five during the game at both of the end zones of Rich Herrin gym.  The Ranger players did at every opportunity.

Tickets for tonight’s game sold out quickly yesterday.  I am going to be watching tonight from my recliner from the YouTube stream.

Enjoy the run.  I have a feeeling the journey is far from over.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Severe weather needs to be taken seriously part one

Steve Dunford –  franklincounty-news.com

Six days ago we had a long track tornado that started in Perryville MO, where the track ended on the west side of Franklin County. Intense rotation persisted all the way across the county until another tornado touch down in White County around the Crossville area and proceeded across the Wabash to and dissipated  south of Oakland City, IN.

Dash cam still photo of the Tornado that struck near Mulkeytown, retrieved from Franklin County EMA Director Ryan Buckingham's on board vehicle camera system. Observing severe weather at night can be particularly difficult and dangerous due to low visibility and other environmental factors. (FCEMA photo)

Dash cam still photo of the tornado that struck near Mulkeytown, retrieved from Franklin County EMA Director Ryan Buckingham’s on board vehicle camera system. Observing severe weather at night can be particularly difficult and dangerous due to low visibility and other environmental factors. (FCEMA photo)

The Perryville to Mulkeytown tornado had a 50.5 mile track.  Since the National Weather Service office in Paducah was founded in 1984, it was the longest track tornado according to NWS meteorologist Robin Smith.

I had a half hour long conversation with Smith on Friday.  I asked him a question about Tuesday night’s tornado.  I told him that I have been a weather geek since I could barely talk.  I said that storms seem to do weird things when the cross the Mississippi into Southern Illinois.

Here in Franklin County we are very fortunate of this but when the tornado was getting within a few miles of Rend Lake. it dissipated. The violent F-4 twister was approaching several population centers in the county, especially the city of Benton.  I am not trivializing the ones that suffered loss around the Route 184/Yellowbanks area of the county, but the loss would have been beyond catastrophic if a large populated area was hit.

I asked Smith about bodies of water having effects on storms.  I was caught up in the  of the conversation to get a direct quote, but he said they do strange things.  He mentioned that most of the time this particular tornado was on the ground in Southeast Missouri, there were multiple vorticies.  After crossing the river into Southern Illinois, the storm became a single vortex.

Smith said if last Tuesday night’s storm would have stayed on the ground continuously through the rest of Franklin, Hamilton and White Counties it would have been about the same length of the Tri-State Tornado in 1925.  The one that ended here in Franklin County ran a parallel track about 10 miles to the northwest of the Tri-State one.

The one that touched down around Crossville and went into Southern Indiana, was an identical track to the Tri-State tornado. In fact, one of the homes that was destroyed around Crossville, there was a home that was on the same property that was destroyed in 1925.

Tonight, we have a risk of severe weather in the overnight hours. The NWS and local media sources did an outstanding job relaying information to the public during this last event.

Since technology is in place to detect rotation, there are more Tornado Warnings issued.  A lot of times when one it sighted on the ground it is too late.  Rotation or funnel clouds should be taken as serious as a touchdown.  If you are one who gets aggravated for break ins of your favorite program, just think if the tornado mentioned above was bearing down on you with no warning at all.  I hope last Tuesday night was a wake up call if you feel that way.

The Paudcah Weather service office did a phenomenal job with the warning lead times.   During the event we were under two PDS (Particularly Dangerous Situation) Tornado Watches and two PDS tornado warnings.

The Storm Prediction Center only gives three percent of tornado watches the PDS label.  The Tornado warnings that are given that label are by the local weather service office.  The last time there were warnings around here with that strong of language was the early morning of the Harrisburg tornado.

Tonight, we have a risk of severe weather in the overnight hours. The NWS and local media sources did an outstanding job relaying information to the public during this last event.

This event will be during the overnight hours.  Just make sure you have a way to receive warnings and prepare in case there is an outage in your sleep.

I will post the second part of this in a couple of days.  I am just going to share some observations that I see that will help you prepare for the next event.

It is Severe Weather Preparedness week here in Illinois.  I will be sharing things from Franklin County Emergency Management Agency in regards to this.

One footnote I would like to share about last Tuesday night. Superintendent Richard Towers and the staff of Christopher Unit District #99 made a very good call having the players, cheerleaders and fans ride the storm out at Hamilton County High School after the sectional boys basketball game at Norris City.  Thank you to the Hamco administration for opening their doors up.

I kept typing out warnings for this sites Facebook page and sending texts to my son that played on the Christopher basketball team.   One of the greatest texts I ever received in my life was “Dad I am OK, I am in McLeansboro at the High School.  We are staying here until the storm passes.  Again, thank you all for your foresight that evening.

 

 

Big government sneakily gets bigger

WASHINGTON, DC- (Please click to read George Will’s weekly column from the Washington Post. Here is an Excerpt) In 1960, when John Kennedy was elected president, America’s population was 180 million and it had approximately 1.8 million federal bureaucrats (not counting uniformed military personnel and postal workers). Fifty-seven years later, with seven new Cabinet agencies, and myriad new sub-Cabinet agencies (e.g., the Environmental Protection Agency), and a slew of matters on the federal policy agenda that were virtually absent in 1960 (health insurance, primary and secondary school quality, crime, drug abuse, campaign finance, gun control, occupational safety, etc.), and with a population of 324 million, there are only about 2 million federal bureaucrats. So, since 1960, federal spending, adjusted for inflation, has quintupled and federal undertakings have multiplied like dandelions, but the federal civilian workforce has expanded only negligibly, to approximately what it was when Dwight Eisenhower was elected in 1952. Does this mean that “big government” is not really big?

Trump is a Lot Like LBJ Who Liberals Still Idolize

AUSTIN, TX (John Fund, National Review Magazine. Click to read the whole story, here is an excerpt) Johnson was reckless, grandiose, and intimidating, but he got things done, with the help of the

History Channel Photo

History Channel Photo

GOP. As president, he cut a grandiose figure. He was a braggart and a frequent liar. He was suspicious of other countries, frequently saying, “Foreigners are not like the folks I am used to.” He had a reckless disregard for limits. He belittled and browbeat others to intimidate them and give him what he wanted. Historian Robert Dallek said that he “viewed criticism of his policies as personal attacks” and opponents of his policies “as disloyal to him and the country.” He would bully and insult reporters, saying of one that he “always knew when he was around, because he could smell him.” He told whoppers about voter fraud in his elections. But he did get things done, dominating the political scene for good and for ill.

When God is in the Classroom

educationNOTE; This has been circulating around Facebook today. It is from a teacher’s blog named Mrs. Ackley. Here is an exerpt. Click to read the full article. -sd I’ve heard it said in various ways, “They have taken God out of the classroom.” I’ve even been asked, “How can you work in a public school when you can’t share your faith with the kids?” I’ve watched teachers walk away from public education with great frustration because of politics, evaluation systems, state standards, pay, and lack of support. If I am being honest, there are days in which I ask, “Why am I still here?” Yet, every time I ask myself that question, I hear a soft whisper in my soul… “Because I am here.” God is in your classroom.

Major media remain in denial

Image from Kassander.com

Image from Kasserver.com

By Cal Thomas Tribune Content Agency (Click on the link to read the full story.-Here is an excerpt) Since Donald Trump’s election, the major media have been trying to figure out what they did wrong, given their fawning coverage of Hillary Clinton and their anti-Donald Trump stories. Didn’t they help twice elect Barack Obama? Why didn’t the formula work this time? Mostly the media blame voters, talk radio and Fox News, never themselves. One might say they are in denial, a condition that has a medical definition. The psychologywikia.com defines it: “Denial is a defense mechanism postulated by Sigmund Freud, in which a person is faced with a fact that is too uncomfortable to accept and rejects it instead, insisting that it is not true despite what may be overwhelming evidence.” While the major media seek to apply that definition to President Trump — Scott Pelley opened a recent broadcast of the “CBS Evening News” claiming that the president’s statement Monday about unreported terrorist attacks were part of a growing list of comments that prove he is “divorced from reality” — they ought to spend some time looking in the mirror.

It’s Not What You Say; It’s How You Say It

Mona CharenPlease click on this link to read Mona Charen’s weekly coulmn. Here is an excerpt…. On Feb. 9, 1950, at a speech before the Ohio County Women’s Republican Club in Wheeling, West Virginia, Sen. Joe McCarthy brandished a piece of paper. “I have here in my hand a list of 205 … known to the secretary of state as being members of the Communist Party and who nevertheless are still working and shaping the policy of the State Department.” But McCarthy never released the names he supposedly had, and changed his story in the days and weeks that followed about exactly how many known communists there were in the State Department. McCarthy’s irresponsible grandstanding eventually got him censured by the Senate and contributed tremendously to discrediting the whole cause of anti-communism.

Franklin Graham’s Interview with the Huffington Post

Franklin Graham, head of international relief organization Samaritan's Purse, visits one of the organization's cholera treatment centers in the Cite Soleil neighborhood of Port-au-Prince, January 8, 2011. REUTERS/Allison Shelley (HAITI - Tags: SOCIETY HEALTH)

Franklin Graham, head of international relief organization Samaritan’s Purse, visits one of the organization’s cholera treatment centers in the Cite Soleil neighborhood of Port-au-Prince, January 8, 2011. REUTERS/Allison Shelley (HAITI – Tags: SOCIETY HEALTH)

NOTE – This interview has been talked about on social media as well has been a topic on debate shows over the last few days. Please click to read the entire interview for yourself from the Huffington Post. Here is an excerpt- “It’s not a biblical command for the country to let everyone in who wants to come, that’s not a Bible issue,” Graham told HuffPost. “We want to love people, we want to be kind to people, we want to be considerate, but we have a country and a country should have order and there are laws that relate to immigration and I think we should follow those laws. Because of the dangers we see today in this world, we need to be very careful.” …

Trump’s foreign policy revolution -Charles Krauthammer

charles krauthammerHere is an excerpt from Charles Krauthammer’s weekly Editorial in the Washington Post. Please click to read the entire column.  The flurry of bold executive orders and of highly provocative Cabinet nominations (such as a secretary of education who actually believes in school choice) has been encouraging to conservative skeptics of Donald Trump. But it shouldn’t erase the troubling memory of one major element of Trump’s inaugural address. The foreign policy section has received far less attention than so revolutionary a declaration deserved. It radically redefined the American national interest as understood since World War II. Trump outlined a world in which foreign relations are collapsed into a zero-sum game. They gain, we lose. As in: “For many decades, we’ve enriched foreign industry at the expense of American industry; subsidized the armies of other countries” while depleting our own.

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