Benton police make arrests

Benton police blotter:

On July 19, 2013 Benton Police arrested Earl Glisson, age 54, of Benton for driving while license revoked.  Glisson was charged and transported to the Franklin County Jail for further processing.

On July 21, 2013 Benton Police were dispatched to the 700 block of East Ruth St in reference to a domestic disturbance.  Through investigation, police arrested William Frohock, age 30, of Benton for battery, domestic battery, and criminal damage to state supported property.  Frohock was charged and transported to the Franklin County Jail for further processing.

On July 21, 2013 Benton Police arrested Michael Edwards, age 22, of Benton on an active Franklin County warrant for failure to appear.  Edwards was charged and transported to the Franklin County Jail for further processing.

Our Universities: Borders of the Mind

The beauty of American higher education is the coupling of thought and action:  Thinking people putting ideas to work make a university strong.  It’s the foundation of a free society to boot. But is it a disappearing reality?
“You see, idealism detached from action is just a dream. But idealism allied with pragmatism, with rolling up your sleeves and making the world bend a bit, is very exciting. It’s very real. It’s very strong.”

Bono
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By Walter V. Wendler

Hank Williams twanged Clarence Williams’ (no kin) ballad “My Bucket’s got A Hole in It” in 1949.   We have two holes in our higher education bucket in 2013 and they need plugging.

Walter Wendler mug 2Brain drain, not a flush but a slow leak, of students into Canada to places like McGill University in Montréal is gaining momentum. Speculation on causes of the migration proliferates. Six percent of the McGill’s students are U.S. citizens, and the number is growing. In an April 24th NBC report, Rehema Ellis and Jeff Black argue the primary reason for students departing the U.S. for Canada is cost.

McGill University is an excellent institution.  Comparison with U.S. institutions is difficult. This much is clear: costs are 25 cents on the dollar. The decisions are value judgments: Is a domestic degree worth four times what you would pay for its Canadian counterpart?  It’s a family decision.

The growing number of students in default on college loans, north of 15%, increasingly pinpoints cost as the central variable in the education equation.   The days of the idea that, “No matter what it costs it’s worth it.” are numbered.  Or evaporated, like a few of the 5,439 cubic miles of water in the Great Lakes, currently at their lowest level since 1918, according to a National Geographic study.
I know it’s a trickle, a few vapors.  And nobody sees it happen. But it does.

The number of students studying at Canadian institutions has increased by 50% over the last decade. The deep discounts compared to competitors south of the 49th parallel are magnetic:  Tens of thousands of dollars per year is real money to real people.
Our universities are built on the Western European model, reinvented and I believe perfected, 150 years ago, ignited by U.S. ingenuity driven by pragmatism at the pinnacle of the Industrial Revolution.

Our northern neighbors use a similar model.  Merit-based admission, test scores, class rank, grades, good faculty and facilities as well as reasonable approaches to “other-than-academic” amenities are the benchmarks.

Thoughtful American students are being siphoned off.

The open intellectual market should be the stone on which U.S. institutions whet their edge to meet the demands and needs of students, culture, and country, by helping people generate razor sharp insight and exceptional intellectual capability.
A second leaking of intellect is reported in a July 16, New York Times column. Richard Perez-Pena reveals the increasingly common occurrence of cyber attacks at U.S. universities. With greater frequency, intellectual property departs our borders over the Internet via stolen patents.  Citizens of nations less concerned about the value of intellectual property — knowledge and insight expressed in action — than we have historically been in America wantonly steal what’s not theirs.

This electronic larceny is directed towards the backbone of our republic — ideas — the cold steel of opportunity fired by opportunity.
These two leaks, one over the lakes, the other over the network, yield a costly impact on American economic vitality.
The trickle is starting.  A torrent may follow.

American pride’s seed is the “idea.”  We develop the patents for the VCR or the microwave and, if Japan, Taiwan, Korea, or Vietnam can produce the device at a lower cost, the U.S. still benefits… as long as our nation values the intellect and the property produced by it.  When we allow either to leave, we lose.

Our universities face significant challenges. We better get smart about controlling costs and quality. Likewise, the intellectual kettles in the kitchens of our nation should be carefully tended. The leaking bucket undermines American contributions to the democracy of ideas.

The nurture and protection of our insight and wisdom in every manifestation create a stronger nation and a better world.

Former Buckner cop William McKinney makes first court appearance

William P. McKinney, the former Buckner police officer who is facing charges in the death of a 62-year-old Buckner resident, made his first appearance in Franklin County Circuit Court on Monday.

mckinney mugMcKinney is charged with involuntary manslaughter, aggravated battery of a senior citizen and official misconduct in the death of Roy D. Barnhart who died July 7, five days after McKinney arrested him.

McKinney was advised of his rights and an arraignment hearing was set for August 14 at 1:30 p.m.

McKinney was fired by Buckner officials shortly after the altercation that took place on July 2.  Police were called to quell a disturbance and Barnhart and McKinney, who was one of the responding officers, had a heated verbal exchange.  Barnhart was tasered by one of the other officers and then McKinney allegedly hit and kicked Barnhart after he was on the ground and handcuffed, according to witnesses.  At least one report by witnesses indicate that McKinney had to be physically pulled off of Barnhart, who died July 7 at St. Louis University Hospital.

McKinney is being represented by Franklin County Public Defender Eric Dirnbeck.

 

Fracking conference to be held at Rend Lake College on July 30

INA, Ill. – A limited number of seats remain for a conference on the practice of hydraulic fracturing, or “fracking,” organized by several agencies and held Tuesday, July 30, at Rend Lake College in Ina.

The event is being organized by the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity (DCEO) in partnership with Southeastern Illinois College (SIC), Illinois Eastern Community Colleges (IECC) and Rend Lake College. It will feature a variety of speakers, from State Representative John Bradley to local government officials and business people.

Attendance is limited to 300 people, and those interested in attending the conference should RSVP no later than Monday, July 22. Open spaces will be given on a first-come, first-serve basis. Though the conference is geared toward local elected officials and economic developers, public attendance is welcome as long as registration is completed.

The conference is scheduled to begin at 8 a.m. in the RLC Theater in Ina, with a lunch provided by RLC and break-out sessions held in the afternoon.

The following is the tentative schedule of events for the conference:

8 a.m.              Registration

8:30 a.m.         Welcome by RLC President Terry Wilkerson and DCEO Director Adam Pollett

8:45 a.m.         Illinois State Representative John Bradley

9 a.m.              Mary Morissey-Kochanny, Office of the Attorney General

9 a.m.              Mitchell Cohen, Illinois Department of Natural Resources

9:30 a.m.         Robert Bauer, U.S. Geological Survey

10 a.m.            Break

10:15 a.m.       Industry Perspectives by Brad Richards, Illinois Oil & Gas Association and Tom Stewart, Ohio Oil & Gas Association

11 a.m.            Economic Development Impacts by Mary Ellen Bechtel, Jefferson County Development Corp

11:30 a.m.       Impacts to Local Governments & Communities: Roads, Infrastructure, Housing, Education by Adam Feig, U of I Extension; Brian Ray, White County Engineer; Grayville Mayor Joe Bisch; Dan Sulsberger, Flora Economic Development; Brad Miller, Hamilton County Board; and Bob Oglesby, Saline County Board.

12:45 p.m.       Break-out sessions and lunch. Break-out sessions include: Municipal, County and Economic Development

2:15 p.m.         Wrap-up by David Yepsen, Paul Simon Public Policy Institute

2:45 p.m.         Adjourn

For more information about the Fracking Conference, contact Kim Watson at 618-993-7630. To register, contact Deb Wilcut at Debbie.wilcut@illinois.gov or at 618-993-7230.

Goebel at 100!

Goebel Patton, a true Southern Illinois living legend, is approaching his 100th birthday and friends and family paused on Sunday to offer well-deserved congratulations.

Here’s the link to the story at the Southern Illinoisan.

Charges filed in fatal accident

Traffic charges have been filed against a Franklin County farmer following a fatal accident last week that claimed the life of a McLeansboro man.

Steven S. Browning, of Benton, was operating a tractor shortly after 9 p.m. on July 10 that was pulling a bean drill on Route 14 east of Benton when he was struck by an oncoming vehicle being driven by Lavern J. Johnson, 50, of McLeansboro. Browning has been charged with operating an over-width vehicle and improper lane usage.

According to the police report Browning was driving the tractor west on Route 14 and the farm machinery took up the entire westbound lane and protruded into the eastbound lane also. Johnson was traveling eastbound and struck the tractor, authorities said.

Johnson was killed on impact from head and chest injuries according to Franklin County Coroner Marty Leffler.

A few minutes after the initial crash a second vehicle, driven by 71-year-old Mary Stich, of Dahlgren, also struck the tractor. Stich had to be extricated from her vehicle by first responders from Ewing-Northern Fire Protection District. Stich was airlifted from the scene to Deaconess Hospital in Evansville with critical injuries.

Also injured in the accident was Kurtis T. Hunter, of Johnston City, who had stopped and was outside his vehicle calling 911 when he was struck by the vehicle being driven by Stich, after she collided with the tractor. Hunter was taken to Franklin Hospital with injuries to his legs and was treated and released.

Benton man arrested on sexual assault and child porn charges

A 68-year-old Franklin County man has been charged with sexual assault and child pornography.

vaughn2Thomas L. Vaughn, of Benton, is charged with predatory criminal sexual assault of a child, child pornography, and grooming.

Information was filed Monday in Franklin County Circuit Court alleging that Vaughn used Facebook to lure a girl under the age of 13 and then he assaulted her. Authorities also reported they discovered child pornography on Vaughn’s computer.

Vaughn was taken to the Franklin County Jail and is being held in lieu of $500,000 bond.  Vaughn is scheduled to appear for a preliminary hearing on July 24.

Our Universities: All That Glitters Is Not Gold

Students and families should understand what is desired from an education.  Socially or politically prescribed solutions for personal aspirations don’t work.
“Truth, like gold, is to be obtained not by its growth, but by washing away from it all that is not gold.

— Leo Nikolaevich Tolstoy —
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Oregon is breaking the funding mold for higher education. House Bill 3472 passed overwhelmingly and awaits the governor’s signature.   With no initial student investment, the plan proposes a maximum guaranteed loan payback of 3% of a borrower’s annual income for 24 years.  An uncollateralized no down payment loan with eventual payback fixed to earning capacity.

Walter Wendler mug 2The plan has been dubbed “Pay it Forward, Pay it Back.” It has a nice ring to it.

The impetus: Soaring costs and a 100% jump of interest rates from 3.4% to 6.8% on federally backed Stafford loans. It’s not surprising that students enrolled at Portland State University in a class entitled “Student Debt: Economics, Policy and Advocacy” helped give the legislative effort legs.

However, it should produce trepidation that will compound like interest on a loan shark’s balloon note.

Some aspects of HB 3472 are unclear. What is crystal clear:  The $24,616 in debt carried by the average student graduating from a university in Oregon grieves elected officials. I can promise you it grieves students and their families. I talk to them every day. It grieves leaders who ignore the devastating combination of increasing costs, diminished expectations and falling value of college degrees.  Intelligent action is required…grief fixes nothing.

Increasing costs are marked by runaway tuition and fees. Diminished expectations are evidenced in grade inflation, admission granted to unprepared students, and a proliferation of degrees with neither workforce benefit nor preparation for graduate school. On some days it seems the enterprise is falling apart, and proposals like HB 3472 are seductive in the educational leadership vacuum that chokes change by doggedly holding on to the campus status quo: more students, more money.

Universities offer an ever growing number of junk degrees. Tuition dollars are wrung out of students for study of little intrinsic or extrinsic value. With little emotional investment and no financial obligation, student commitment to study is too frequently in the tank.

Institutional and elected leadership pander for support fueled by a twisted view that success in life is tied to a college degree; the Oregon legislation does nothing to retool the calculus of higher education.

I don’t believe every degree must produce an immediate job. Every degree should provide opportunities for continued intellectual and economic growth to its holder. Intellectual and economic growth is determined on a one-at-a-time basis by a student. State run equations don’t work.   This commoditization of a university education equates an education to a cell phone, iPod, or food: it’s misguided and undermines the purpose of a university, community college, and trade school, all.

HB 3472 as championed by the 7000 member Oregon Working Families Party is riddled with potholes.
First, the road is indeed paved with good intentions. Of course, nearly $25,000 in debt for a degree with low value of any kind is wrong and impossible to defend before thoughtful families. Making more of these kinds of degrees available to more people on more borrowed money is even more egregious, no matter the payback plan.

Second, a degree guarantees little. Students and families need to be honestly apprised of the power of a specific degree, at a specific time. Performance is neither granted nor guaranteed by a degree. Value is not produced by the state, but by capable individuals. House Bill 3472 reinforces the idea that the degree is a trinket.

Third, it worked in Australia.  Really?  The jury is still out down under.   Indeed debt is lower, but has the value of the degree increased?  Is the human condition or economy better or stronger?  These are pivotal unanswered questions.

Fourth, value in anything earned decreases when attainment is guaranteed or easy.  A university education is a private betterment.  Public benefit comes when the knowledge and insight gained are levied by an individual.

Unwary prospectors looking for real gold are confused by Pyrite.  Students and families are similarly fooled by specious claims at what lies at the end of the rainbow, and too often it’s not a pot o’ gold, but a bag o’ debt, regardless of how it is paid off.

Illinois bass fishing tournament promises $400,000 to winner

LAKE OF EGYPT — One of the largest bass fishing tournaments in the nation is coming to Southern Illinois. The winner earns $400,000 in cash.

bass

The Lake of Egypt, located in southeastern Williamson County, will be the site for the “Big Kahuna World Championship Bass Fishing Tournament” as part of the Bass Widows Fishing Series.

In all, $1.3 million in prize money will be awarded throughout eight weekly qualifying tournaments leading up to the championship round where even second place pays an astounding $200,000.

“This will be one of the largest prize money tournament series in America,” said Jody Perrotto, one of the event’s organizers and owner of the Johnny Bass Fishing Campus and Event Center at the Egyptian Hills Resort where tournament activities will be centered.

 “This is an incredible event to be held in Southern Illinois, and an incredible amount of money to be won. If you can set the hook, you could be the big Kahuna and take home the $400,000 prize,” Perrotto said.

The tournament starts October 2. Registration for the tournament begins July 15.

To qualify for the championship tournament, fishermen must place in one of the top 15 positions during any one of the eight qualifying tournaments; qualifying tournaments are held each week leading up to the championship.

First place in the qualifying tournaments pays $20,000. Each of the 8 qualifying tournaments are a major bass fishing tournament in their own right.

“There will be a total of 120 entries competing for the championship,” Perrotto said. “Cash prizes will be awarded to the top 15 finishers.” ($400,000, first-place; $200,000, second-place; $100,000, third-place; $50,000, fourth-place; $30,000, fifth-place; $20,000, sixth-place; $17,000, seventh-place; $12,000, eighth-place; $10,000, ninth-place; $7,000, 10th-place; $5,000, 11th-place; $3,000, 12th-place; $2,000, 13th-place; $2,000, 14th-place; $2,000, 15th-place.)

“This is the best pot odds in fishing,” Perrotto said. “Plus you are fishing one of the most beautiful lakes in the nation rated as one of the top three bass fishing lakes in the state.”

The Lake of Egypt is a 2,300-acre reservoir located about seven miles south of Marion just off Interstate 57. It has 93 miles of shoreline. The lake’s average depth is 19 feet with a maximum depth of 52 feet.

There is a $2,000 entry fee for the qualifying tournaments. Each qualifying tournament will be limited to 125 two-angler boats.” Anglers wanting to participate are included on a first come basis and “should enter early as we are receiving inquiries from all over the country.” Perrotto said.

For more information, go to www.basswidowsfishing.com or contact the Fishermen’s Information Line at 618-995-2151 or 708-669-4988.

Gun issue inspires talk of downstate Dem challenge to Gov. Ryan

SPRINGFIELD, Ill. — When Gov. Pat Quinn tried to impose his last-minute restrictions on Illinois’ new concealed-carry gun law, he spent days rallying support in Chicago neighborhoods with stops at a West Side church, a community center and even historic Wrigley Field.

Here’s the link to the story in the Belleville News-Democrat.
Benton, West Frankfort, Illinois News | Franklin County News