Page 5 Loading... Tips: Click on articles from page |
What's new at IllinoisTimes Boozing and teetotalingOn a recent Monday, there is lament at the lack of Budweiser Select – just one bottle is left. The walls are mostly bare. Fireball, served in shot glasses, appears to be the liquor of choice, but most folks stick with beer. During a 90-minute stretch, three customers walk in. Page 3 - no comments - 369 views  Consider more inpatient mental health treatmentIn recent years, our alternatives for dealing with the dangerously mentally ill have diminished. According to an Ohio State University study, there were 400,000 patients in American mental hospitals in 1950, a time when the population of the United States was half what it is today. Page 3 - no comments - 286 views  Madigan values loyalty above all elseIn other words, Madigan was making it clear that loyalty goes well beyond merely showing up every day and working hard and meeting or exceeding goals. Loyalty, which is a trait prized most highly by Madigan, also means not doing anything that could get the boss into trouble or bring disrepute on the organization. Page 4 - no comments - 368 views  LETTERSBRINGING BACK MACARTHUR BOULEVARD This is my neighborhood where I’ve lived most of my life from birth to age 70. In a perfect world, this intersection would be a public gathering space, a square, surrounded by markets and other small businesses. Right now, it’s only a connected expanse of roads and asphalt parking lots. Page 5 - no comments - 300 views  A wonderful Wizard of OzIt started tentatively, with a few from the crowd echoing the Munchkins, “Follow the yellow brick road.” Later came a roar of “Lions, and tigers, and bears! Oh, my!” It wasn’t a standing ovation, but it was something more heartfelt and genuine, and a lovely moment in the theater. Page 6 - no comments - 555 views  Town and Country hits foreclosureAccording to foreclosure papers filed in Sangamon County Circuit Court, JP Morgan Chase Bank loaned $13.65 million to the owners in 2015. The bank since has assigned its interest to a trust, according to the lawsuit, and the owners haven’t made payments since January. Page 6 - no comments - 298 views  The art of the fairMention the Illinois State Fair, and things like corn dogs, lemon shakeups, the giant slide, concerts in the Grandstand, animal barns, dizzying rides and all types of food on a stick come to mind. But a professional art exhibition is also a stalwart of the Illinois State Fair. Page 7 - no comments - 352 views  Illinois State Fair-y tales“I theorize to Native Companion (who worked detasseling summer corn with me in high school) that the state fair’s animating thesis involves some kind of structured, decorated interval of communion with both neighbor and space – the sheer fact of the land is to be celebrated here, its yields ogled and its stock groomed and paraded,” Wallace writes. Page 8 - no comments - 305 views  Too much watermelon!“Nose-to-tail eating” is a philosophy of using every part of the animal in food preparation and letting nothing go to waste. In the restaurant kitchen where I’m employed, this philosophy is also applied to fruits and vegetables. Page 15 - no comments - 422 views  Heartfelt Banks a bit heavy-handedFalsely accused of rape, he was arrested and ultimately brought to trial as an adult. On faulty advice from his lawyer, he accepted a plea bargain that would result in his serving six years in jail, five years on probation and force him to register as a sex offender. Page 18 - no comments - 314 views  Fair time folksIt’s time for the Illinois State Fair, and that means it’s fairly crazy in Springfield for about 10 days. Page 19 - no comments - 260 views  MUSIC | The Country and the CityOperatic soprano Christine Brewer and banjo virtuoso Noam Pikelny will perform as part of Illinois Humanities’ “The Country and the City” series that brings together rural and urban Illinoisans around shared concerns. Page 24 - no comments - 309 views 
|