You’d think a reporter would remember the night he covered a City Council meeting that lasted so long he left in the middle of it to file his story, waited until the newspaper rolled off the presses, then returned to the council chambers to deliver the next day’s news to the aldermen, whose meeting still […]
News
The highway side
ONE Shelly Michalowski’s eyes were a shimmering, contact-lens blue. Her hair was bleach blond, and she could flip it with near perfect control, wink, go from a smile to a leer–and never once stop talking. She was a five-foot-two-inch perpetual-motion machine, and every bit of it was fake. I wasn’t sure whether she knew this, […]
It cant happen here
The smell of fresh-baked cinnamon rolls wafts enticingly inside Dagwood’s Deli. Leaning against the restaurant’s counter, owner Tim Spengler smiles and says, “Just by standing here I can tell you who smokes and who doesn’t when they walk through that door.” Outside that door is where all the cigarettes are left. Spengler won’t allow customers […]
Smoking should be made very inconvenient
His name was Johnny. He had dark auburn hair and was good-looking in a rugged way. A former military man, Johnny was 42 and married. He had two sons, ages 10 and 12. In 1968, one week after Dr. Glennon Paul arrived at the VA hospital in Seattle, Johnny died of lung cancer. Paul was […]
The Soul of wit
What are numbers, anyway? John Knoepfle, one of Illinois’ most esteemed poets, has a big birthday coming up Tuesday. Not that big. His age is still well inside the two-digit range. But it is the kind of birthday that sounds a bit better on a bottle of scotch than on a writer of poetry. The […]
Easy credit, hard times
A dozen people showed up for a three-hour class on money management last Saturday at the 11th Street office of the Springfield Housing Authority. Leading the class was Tami Rechner, whose goal is to get these people out of debt. She told the class about one client who was 13 months behind on her $200 […]
Little isnt always small
No, the Little Theatre on the Square isn’t little. In fact, it’s quite big, and in its heyday it had quite a few big names in show biz performing there. That includes both Broadway and Hollywood stars: Eve Arden, Alan Alda, Leonard Nimoy, Dennis Weaver, Betty Grable, Kitty Carlisle, and Mickey Rooney all worked the […]
Worlds away
If you don’t happen to be one of those lucky long-term employees with enough vacation time stacked up to leave for a month, don’t worry–you can drive 100 miles southwest and find yourself a world away. Down Interstate 55 and west on State Highway 140 lies the tiny village of Elsah, nicknamed “the town that […]
Two wheels good
In Springfield:Lost Bridge Trail begins at the Illinois Department of Transportation, at Ash and Dirksen Parkway, and wends for five miles on a shady, tree-lined asphalt path to Rochester. At the end of the Lost Bridge Trail is a mile-and-a-half loop that goes into Rochester Park. The Wabash Trail begins at Park and North, and […]
Hot fun in the summer time
Things can get steamy in the summer around here–it helps the corn grow–so chill out with some cool live music. You’ll hear it from the rooftops to the Grandstand, in the streets and the parks, and in all your favorite nightclubs. Hardee’s Jam Fest kicks off the scene. The second annual benefit for Friends of […]
Fairs not bad
Will anyone notice that $700,000 less is being spent on this year’s Illinois State Fair? Most likely the answer will be “yes.” Parking will be a buck more expensive (rising to $7), and some of the free concerts may no longer be free. But officials say any comparison to last year’s fair isn’t, well, fair. […]
