Display: News - Images - Sections
What’s new at IllinoisTimes
Page 2
Page 3
A nose grows in Springfield
Burglars hit a North End gun store on Oct. 9 with what sounded like remarkable ease, kicking in a door and making off with more than 50 firearms from a dealer who did business from a home that looked like any other house in the quiet residential neighborhood on East Enos Avenue, not far from Dirksen Parkway.

Looking backward
Next summer, if things go well, I will become an historian, to the extent that the published author of a book-length history of mid-Illinois can be called an historian. In truth, I am untrained in the arts of the rigors of scholarship and don’t write history so much as I write about history.

Page 4
The ethical rot of Wells Fargo
It’s one thing for these giants of finance to cook the books or defraud investors, but top executives of Wells Fargo have been profiteering for years by literally forcing their employees to rob the bank’s customers.


Page 5
LETTERS
Stein is on the ballot in 45 states; Johnson in all 50. Both have a mathematical chance to win. I would suggest that instead of holding your nose and voting for the lesser of two evils, do your homework instead. Both have websites that clearly state their positions and views on the issues.

Page 6
Page 7
Some Dems have a Trump problem
Some organizations can fiddle around with the margins here and there and get some voters out who might not have bothered voting, but down-ballot candidates mainly have to find a way to win with the hand they are dealt by the top of the ticket. So, if one presidential candidate crashes and burns, that’s almost always the ballgame.


Page 8
Trading places
McGraw, who lives in Homer Glen, Illinois, owns Revolution Cannabis, a medical cannabis cultivation company near Peoria, and he has been watching with anticipation as marijuana and opioids seemingly switch places.

DRUG DISPOSAL
them up this Saturday and taking them to a proper disposal site to help celebrate National Prescription Drug Take Back Day, sponsored by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration.

Page 9
Madigan sticks to the facts, but lacks some context
Before the film’s release, it was somewhat tainted by allegations that some people were “duped” into doing interviews.

Page 10
Beating the rap
After deliberating a little more than three hours, the Springfield jury rejected murder charges and instead found Brown guilty of involuntary manslaughter, which typically carries a sentence of between two and five years.

Page 11
Judge calls case “a mess”
“I don’t know what’s true or not true here, but I look at this and I think this is just fundamental mistake after mistake,” U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Mary Gorman said during a Tuesday hearing on a case involving David Reid, who is running against Sangamon County Circuit Court Judge April Troemper.

Page 12
Top Ten Censored Stories 2016
As with the Watergate story, these aren’t censored in the overt heavy-handed manner of an authoritarian dictatorship, but in the often more effective manner reflecting our society – an oligarchy with highly centralized economic power pretending to be a “free marketplace of ideas.

Page 13
Page 14
More of Page 14 »Page 15
Page 16
Page 17
More of Page 17 »Page 18
Pumpkin fever hits hard
America has been a bit obsessed with all things pumpkin since Starbucks debuted their Pumpkin Spice latte in 2003. Since then pumpkin spice flavor has found its way into everything from beer to Cheerios to flavored oatmeal. I too find myself getting swept up in the moment.

Page 19
More of Page 19 »Page 20
Ouija II proves fun, frightening
I remember my grandmother had an Ouija board and it was something we kids pulled out at every family and holiday gathering, handling the tattered brown cardboard box with a sense of awe and respect that it ultimately didn’t deserve.

Page 21
October surprises
Last week I mentioned the flourishing of downtown open mics, and Doug Mayol, owner-operator of The Cardologist, informed me of another one happening at his store over the lunch hour every Wednesday starting at noon. Recently the card, novelty and otherwise shop moved from its longtime location across from Maldaner’s next door to Recycled Records.

Page 22
BAND SPOTLIGHT
This St. Louis-based contemporary duo started out as a musical vehicle for songwriters Doug Byrkit (guitar, vocals) and Brian Zielie (drums) to express songs that had no outlet in their other music endeavors.

Page 23
Page 24
More of Page 24 »Page 25
THE CALENDAR
Oct 22-23, 10am-5pm Sat, 12-5pm Sun. Wagon rides, face painting, barnyard games and animals, corn box and barrel tractor rides, fall treats, more. No admission fee; small charge for certain activities. indianknollpumpkins.com. Indian Knoll Farm and Pumpkin Patch, 2850 N.

Page 26
Page 27
Page 28
HISTORY | Stories of elections past
On Saturday, bring your political memorabilia to the Old State Capitol for a History Harvest hosted by the University of Illinois-Springfield’s Department of History.

Page 29
More of Page 29 »Page 30
THEATER | See the “Long Island Medium”
Although Teresa Caputo reports that she has been seeing spirits since she was four years old, it wasn’t until she was well into her 20s that she began to understand her role as a medium and learned to utilize her talents to communicate with souls in heaven by tuning into what is called “spirit energy.
