Page 1 Loading... Tips: Click on articles from page |
What's new at IllinoisTimesWe need something better than blue binsIt is up to humans to design systems that make sense. Perhaps the best time to design this was yesterday, but as with many problems we are coming to grips with now, the next best time is today. Let’s start where we are. And for me, that means observing and asking questions. Page 3 - no comments - 185 views  Trains, planes and busesWe were supposed to be zipping along at 110 mph by now. We’re not. Thanks to delays in installing safety gear aimed at keeping trains from hitting things and each other, speeds still top out at 79 mph, same as before the feds poured money into the rail corridor that runs through Springfield in the name of stimulating the economy and saving the earth. Page 3 - no comments - 120 views  Tax cuts for the massesOne of the early responses from opponents was to attempt to scare people into believing rich people will pack up and leave, even though one of our biggest exit problems is the tens of thousands of kids who leave for out-ofstate colleges every year and never come back. Page 4 - no comments - 197 views  LETTERSIndeed, the Chinese have decided to no longer accept American recycling. But it is not as Mr. Rushton claims, that they consider it trash. It’s that, rightly so, they decided that Americans made these recyclables, and Americans should be responsible for dealing with them. Page 5 - no comments - 199 views  Three experienced candidates compete in Ward 5Sam Cahnman, an attorney in private practice who previously served two terms as alderman for Ward 5, is hoping to regain the office from current alderman Andrew Proctor, who was a political newcomer before successfully challenging Cahnman for his seat in 2015. Page 6 - no comments - 196 views  Ward 7 warsAld. Joe McMenamin has drawn the ire of fellow aldermen whom he has excoriated for accepting campaign contributions from labor unions and entities that do business with the city. Page 7 - no comments - 175 views  BROKEN HOMESLekiesha Hightower left Chicago for Springfield more than five years ago, hoping for a better life for herself and her child. Until this past May, she lived with a family friend in her new hometown, but last spring she moved into a place of her own, in the Poplar Place subdivision on Springfield’s east side. Page 8 - no comments - 184 views  Poplar Place may get an overhaulThe poster child for east side decay is, arguably, Poplar Place, a housing development created in the 1940s. As years have passed, the development that includes more than 200 units, primarily duplexes, has fallen apart, with trash piling up and streets going unfixed. Page 10 - no comments - 157 views  Winter farmers marketShop local this St. Patrick's Day weekend! A variety of locally raised products will be available for purchase at the Winter Farmers Market this Saturday, March 16, 9 a.m.-1 p.m. at the State House Inn. Page 12 - no comments - 228 views  Grim Greta a deliciously dark comic thrillerChloe Grace Moretz is along for the ride as Frances, a vulnerable college student who's still coming to terms with the death of her mother a year prior. While riding the subway one day, she spies a designer handbag someone's left behind. Page 14 - no comments - 190 views  Irish, Flash, ColourWe must -- or so we should -- so we shall, start off with our annual review of Irish/Celtic music around town for the big St. Patrick’s Day weekend. Our first act of the celebration is McKinney, Hennessy & O’Hare this Thursday (tonight, for our intrepid readers) at the Hoogland Center for the Arts in the Club Room. Page 17 - no comments - 216 views  FESTIVALS | Share the Irish SpiritSpringfield’s St. Patrick’s Day Parade has been an annual event since 1985. That year the grand marshal was William “Pinky” McHenry who was instrumental in the revitalization of St. John’s Breadline and Friends of Brother James Court. This year the honor goes to Share the Spirit Foundation. Page 22 - no comments - 220 views 
|