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.

More details released in fatal Franklin County crash

Staff Report

The Franklin County Sheriff’s Department released more information this morning regarding a fatal crash Wednesday night that took place on Route 14 east of Benton.

According to the report Lavern F. Johnson, 50, of McLeansboro, was killed at 9:15 p.m. when he struck a tractor pulling a bean drill and traveling west on Route 14 a short distance from North Thompsonville Road.  The tractor was being operated by Steven S. Browning, 47, of Benton and according to the police report was taking up all the westbound lane and protruding into the eastbound lane.  Johnson, who was traveling eastbound, was driving a 1998 Mercury Sable and died on impact, according to Franklin County Coroner Marty Leffler.

At 9:26 p.m. a second vehicle being driven by Mary Stich, 71, of Dahlgren, Illinois, struck the implement.  Stich received major injuries and had to be extricated from the vehicle by the Ewing-Northern Fire Department.  Stich was airlifted from the scene by Air-Evac and taken to Deaconess Hospital in Evansville with major injuries.  She is listed in critical condition.

A third person was also injured in the crash according to authorities.  Kurtis T. Hunter, 49, of Johnston City, had stopped after the first crash and was out of his vehicle calling 911 when he was struck by the vehicle driven by Stich after she hit the implement.  Hunter received injuries to his legs and was transported to Franklin Hospital by Abbott’s EMS.  He was treated and released.

Franklin County Sheriff Don Jones said a reconstruction team is working on putting details of the crash together.  He also said that citations are pending.  State police also assisted with the accident which closed Route 14 for approximately four hours.

 

Saluki Basketball and Football Notebook

By Tom Weber
Saluki Media Services

With Saluki fans hungry for any kind of tidbits about next year’s men’s basketball team, here’s a quick scouting report on the nine newcomers, based on observations from 90 minutes of practice time during the past week.

siu bball logo

Mike Balogun: Good 3-point stroke, athletic, competitive

Marcus Fillyaw: Sees the court well, good passer, doesn’t look to score

Hunter Gibson: Solid build, spot-up shooter, hairline makes him look older than 22

KC Goodwin: Quickest player on the team, rail-thin, unorthodox jumper

Sean O’Brien: Inside and outside threat, good feel for the game, potential All-Freshman team

Bola Olaniyan: Raw but powerful, not a leaper, good long-term potential

Tyler Smithpeters: Great feel for the game, 3-point shooter, skinny

Bronson Verhines: Does a little bit of everything well, limited by his lack of size and strength

Dawson Verhines: More muscular than his brother, competitive, knows the game

It’s much too early to draw conclusions, but fun to speculate. O’Brien looks like the cream of the crop among the new players and could be a candidate for the All-Freshman team. He already demonstrates the best post-up moves on the team, and at 6-foot-6 and 195 pounds, is technically a guard. Balogun is the most athletic of the newcomers. Given time and continued development, there’s a chance freshmen Olaniyan, Smithpeters and Goodwin could become solid MVC players during the course of their careers.

*******************************

Questions abound with this team. Who will take over at point guard? How will the team offset its lack of size? How much improvement will young veterans like Anthony Beane and Jalen Pendleton make? Can injury-prone Davante Drinkard and Josh Swan stay healthy? Desmar Jackson is one of the most gifted players in the MVC, but will that translate into an All-Conference-type season?

*******************************

My first impression at practice was that this is not an “airport” team. Of course, Southern has never been an airport team that flaunts its 7-footers. The tallest starter in the past 12 years was 6-foot-9 Brad Korn. The Salukis have made up for it in the past with muscular, athletic kids, though this year’s team has only two players who weigh more than 200 pounds (Drinkard and Olaniyan).

*******************************

The non-conference schedule is almost complete. A few dates are still tentative, but the home schedule will feature Saint Louis, Western Kentucky, Ball State and SIUE. The road slate includes Missouri, Austin Peay, Chicago State, Murray State and Miami University. The Salukis will play in an eight-team tournament at a neutral site in Florida right before Thanksgiving. The entire field will consist of mid-majors.

*******************************

Some football roster notes…kicker Jackson MacLachlan, cornerback Tay Griffin and fullback PJ Ellis will not return for the 2013 season. MacLachlan kicked in three games last year before losing his starting job to Austin Johnson. He will be best remembered for kicking the game-winning field goal in a 20-18 win over Missouri State in 2011.

The start of training camp is just 25 days away. The Salukis will lace ‘em up for the first practice on Sunday, Aug. 4.

*******************************

With Saluki Athletics celebrating 100 Years of Saluki Football and Basketball, an exciting opportunity for you to participate will begin in about two weeks, as fans will get to vote on the All-Century team. The Football team will consist of 50 players with fans voting on-line at SIUSalukis.com.

Fowler-Bonan Foundation ‘Clothes for Kids’ set for July 18-19

HARRISBURG, IL.  The Fowler-Bonan Foundation’s ninth annual “Clothes for Kids” Junior Golf Day is all set for Thursday / Friday, July 18/19 at Shawnee Hills Country Club in Harrisburg.
fb foundation
The event is open to all boys and girls in southern Illinois.  Kids age 4 – 11 will play July 18 while those 12-18 will compete on July 19.
Entry fee is only $20 and all participants will receive a t-shirt, lunch and an award.  The event is open to kids of all skill levels, keeping score is not required, and beginning players are welcome.
“It’s a fun-filled day for the children, and an even greater day for the kids we serve,” said co-founder Dale Fowler.  Our junior golf event sponsors help us raise significant dollars for our foundation, and we welcome everyone’s support of our mission to clothe underprivileged children.”
Four/five year-olds (as of June 1) will play 4 holes, six/seven year-olds play 5 holes, eight/nine year-olds play 7 holes, ten/eleven and twelve/thirteen year-olds play 9 holes, and fourteen/fifteen and sixteen/eighteen year-olds will play 18 holes.   There will also be 9-hole novice divisions in the 14/15 and 16-18 groups.  Eighteen year-olds must not have entered college, and age divisions are based on participant’s age as of June 1.
In addition, for players’ ages 10-18 who wish to compete for trophies, the Southern Illinois Golf Association (S.I.G.A.) sanctions the junior event.
To register, call the Foundation at 618-231-3904 as soon as possible.
Sponsorships levels range from hole sponsor ($100) to championship sponsor ($1,000).  Fowler said that for every one hundred dollars received,  another underprivileged child can have new clothes and shoes to wear to school.
Participants also learn what it’s like to help  those less fortunate.
“We tell each and every one of the kids “thank you”, and let them know that because of them we are able to help other children”, Fowler added.
The Fowler-Bonan Foundation provides new clothing and shoes, at no cost, for underprivileged children based on a referral system from area schools. They assist hundreds of area children annually in eleven southern Illinois counties, according to the foundation co-founder Dale Fowler.  The Foundation is a 501 (c) (3) non-profit organization.
Fowler said their programs are made possible only due to the support of businesses, community groups and individuals throughout the area.

McLeansboro man killed, two others injured in three-vehicle crash

By Jim Muir

A McLeansboro man was killed and two other people were injured in a multi-vehicle accident Wednesday night in rural Franklin County.

Fatally injured in the accident was 50-year-old Laverne F. Johnston, Jr., who died on impact according to Franklin County Coroner Marty Leffler.

Leffler said Johnson’s vehicle was traveling east on Route 14, one-fourth mile east of North Thompsonville Road when he collided with a tractor pulling a bean drill.  The tractor was westbound on Route 14, according to authorities.  Franklin County Sheriff Department received the call reporting the accident and then a short time later received a second call that another vehicle had struck the tractor and also a pedestrian who had stopped to try and help direct traffic around the crash site.

The names of the driver of the tractor, the second vehicle and the pedestrian are being withheld at this time, Leffler said.  The driver of the second vehicle was airlifted from the scene and the pedestrian was transported by Abbott Ambulance Service to Franklin Hospital.  The driver of the tractor was not injured, Leffler said.

The accident is under investigation by the Franklin County Sheriff’s Department.  An autopsy will be performed on Johnson today.

This is the fourth fatality involving some type of vehicle accident in Franklin County since June 25th.

Illinois lawmakers override Quinn, enact concealed carry law

Illinois lawmakers overrode Gov. Pat Quinn’s veto of concealed carry legislation on Tuesday, but it will likely be 2014 before any firearm owners are permitted to pack handguns in public.

Here’s the link to the story at the Chicago Tribune.

Other stories on concealed carry from around the state.

A story from the Chicago Sun Times.

Another story from the Quincy Journal.

Attorney General Lisa Madigan: Appealing federal court’s concealed carry ruling now moot after override effort.

Interesting headline: Despite Chicago bloodshed Illinois passes concealed carry law.

Our Universities: A Cacophony of Concerns

Increasing college costs and decreasing employment opportunity have produced an avalanche of studies regarding the value of college degrees.  Sometimes more information is not better. A “back to basics” understanding would be valuable to all.

“Nowadays people know the price of everything and the value of nothing.”
Oscar Wilde
_____________________________________

By Walter V. Wendler

Legitimate concerns about ever-increasing costs of college and a seemingly ever-decreasing availability of good paying jobs for the holders of degrees have generated studies that make a student’s and parent’s head spin.

Walter Wendler mug 2Recently, EducationSector, a think-tank that ponders education policy, published an investigation by Andrew Gillen, “In Debt and in the Dark: It’s Time for Better Information on Student Loan Defaults.” The findings were reported in USA Today under the headline, “College Default Rates Higher Than Graduation Rates.”

The claim in the Gillen study, reiterated by USA Today, asserts that more students are defaulting on education loans than graduating.  No secret to those who work with learners daily. The strongest students finish their degrees more closely to the traditional four-year benchmark, typically work diligently in part-time jobs, double-time in the summer, to avoid borrowing too much money.  They enter the workforce or graduate school closer to flush and ready to move forward.

When tagging someone “a good student” this, in part, is what is meant.

Gillen includes public two-year institutions along with national research universities. I am not convinced that these institutional types were accounted for fully. For example if a two-year institution has a 6% graduation rate it’s possible that 80% of the students who enroll never intend to complete a degree program, but take job-related courses to increase skills, or square dancing, both valuable pursuits, neither reflective of the failure of post-secondary educational institutions.

Don’t get me wrong…I tell students and families every chance I get, “Don’t borrow…find lower cost alternatives.”
However, not all students are good students and statistics, bantered between one pundit and another, make little distinction between students regarding motivation, interest and determination.

Another freshly minted study by PayScale.com analyzed 1,511 schools to assess return on investment (ROI) for a college education against the predicted 30 year earning capacity for graduates in an effort to rate “value.”  Financial aid was factored in. Looking through the list and trying to understand the self-reported data is mind-boggling.  Unfortunately, the effort produces little more than fear, trepidation and misinformation about value.

The usual “good universities” occupy the top spots: generally selective/expensive schools that lead to good jobs for competitive, well-prepared, motivated students.  Prestige is earned, never given…to paraphrase a potent line from the U.S. Marines.  The basement of the list includes for-profit, public and private institutions that accept any student with resources.  Nothing else seems to matter and the potential for prestige is mindlessly squandered.

A scant two dozen of the 1,511 schools are shown to have a negative ROI.  However, that does not make the rest a guaranteed good investment.  Shockingly, the difference between the best ROI and no ROI at all is less than 15%.  Dedicated teachers and motivated students bedevil measurement and exist in some measure in any institution.

Noise and disarray are the results of many studies of the purported value of higher education.

Honest, forthright, university leadership must present clear information to students. Spinning and public relations are, respectively, political and retail machinations. Universities are neither.

Resisting unrealistic hope regarding the benefits of any degree requires stainless steel backbone in leaders, not acquiescence. Remember, earned, never given. Motivated students and faculty reduce the debt burden and increase effectiveness and opportunity.

Nothing else.

This is not elitism as is too frequently claimed, but legitimate, sensible realism that calibrates attitude, backbone and capability, the ABCs of educational success.

In the next decade of the 21st century our best universities and community colleges will be heralded for honesty, eclipsing the touchstones of access and excellence.  University leadership must step up and transparently lay out the odds, tell ‘em the truth, as candidate Truman did in Harrisburg, Illinois in 1948.

The cat is out of the bag and the cacophony may be the overture of a symphony memorializing snake oil and lost trust.

Showdown in Springfield on concealed carry

Lawmakers return to Springfield on Tuesday, poised to override Gov. Pat Quinn’s rewrite of a proposed law allowing concealed carry of firearms, but his actions and those of his potential rivals have created a conundrum for many Downstate Democrats in the early stages of the 2014 race for governor.

Here’s the link to the story in the Chicago Tribune.

Rend Lake Fishing Report

 

SPECIES RATING BAIT OF CHOICE SUGGESTED LOCATIONS REGULATIONS
LARGEMOUTH BASS Good Worms, black and blue jigs, minnows. Fish in shallow bays near brush cover and bushes. Fish around bridges and along the rocks. Reports of fish being caught around Jackie Branch and Sandusky cove. 14” minimum length limit, 6 daily creel limit. 1 fish daily creel limit in PONDS 14” minimum length.
CRAPPIE

 

Good Jigs are working well. Quarter-Ounce pink and white tub jigs. Small & Medium Minnows. Meal worms. Fish are in flooded brushy areas (set bait 2’ deep). Reports of fish being caught shallow in buck brush in any cove and also deep water (8’-17’) around brush piles. Try the Gun Creek Area. From shore fish near structures, hot spots are Jackie Branch, Sandusky, and Marcum Coves, and North Marcum Boat Ramp. 25 fish daily creel limit with no more than 10 fish 10 inches or longer
BLUEGILL

 

Excellent Crickets, worms, wax worms, meal worms. Fish in the back of necks in shallow water or along rocks. Hot spot off the rocks under the sailboat harbor bridge in 1-4 ft of water. 10 fish daily creel limit in PONDS.
CHANNEL

CATFISH

 

Excellent Sonny’s stink bait, Hoss’s Hawg Bait, leeches, night crawlers, and large minnows. Creeks running into the lake are hot spots. Also try the Waltonville Dam, Turnip Patch, Jackie Branch, and North Sandusky Day Use Area. Set line 3-4’ from the shore over rocks. Try leeches in moving water. 6 fish daily creel limit in PONDS.

Jugs must be attended at all times while fishing.

WHITE BASS Good Worms, black and blue jigs, minnows. Fish in shallow bays near brush cover and bushes. Fish around bridges and along the rocks. Reports of fish being caught around Jackie Branch and Sandusky cove. 20 fish creel limit.

No more than 3 fish 17” or longer daily

 

Information as of: 07/08/2013

LAKE LEVEL: 410.33 AVERAGE POOL FOR THIS DATE: 406.73 WATER TEMP: 77°F

Use of a minnow seine, cast net, or shad scoop for bait collecting within 1000 yards downstream of the Rend Lake dam and spillway is prohibited.

Maps of the Fish Attractor tree locations along with GPS readings are available at the Rend Lake Corps of Engineers Project Office. Contact Molly Rawlinson for more information at (618)724-2493. In order to maintain a cleaner recreation area, anglers and bow fishermen fishing below the dam are asked to return dead rough fish to the water.

SIU’s Black Out Cancer game scheduled for Sept. 28

CARBONDALE, Ill. – Saluki Athletics and Southern Illinois Healthcare announced today that the 2013 Black Out Cancer game is scheduled for Saturday, Sept. 28 when the SIU football team hosts Youngstown State at 6 p.m.

blackout_logo_1

The third annual Black Out Cancer event will again feature a jersey auction. Fans can bid to place their name or the name of a loved one affected by cancer on the back of one of the 80 special black jerseys the Salukis will wear during the game. The game-worn jerseys will be given to successful bidders following the game.

All funds raised from the auction will go toward SIH’s plans to build a new cancer treatment center in southern Illinois, the SIH Cancer Center. Presently, cancer patients who live in the region are often required to travel long distances for treatment. A new, centralized treatment center would bring more quality care to the area.

“This community, through Saluki Way, made a significant investment in Saluki Athletics,” Director of Athletics Mario Moccia said. “This is one more way that we can repay that investment that the community made.”

Saluki Athletics and SIH are entering the second year of a three-year agreement to sponsor an annual Black Out Cancer game. The partnership with SIH also includes the Saluki Volleyball team’s Dig for the Cure, women’s basketball’s Pink Out game and softball’s Strikeout Cancer game.

To bid on a jersey, go to salukisblackoutcancer.com. Bidding will end at 8 p.m. on Sept. 16.

Benton, West Frankfort, Illinois News | Franklin County News