Friday, January 29, 2010
Political social media increasing
Institute of Government and Public Affairs senior fellow Michael Cheney, a communications professor at the University of Illinois at Springfield, found that while participation in social media is going up, some candidates have no presence whatsoever.
The study was featured in a January 28, 2010, broadcast/article by the Illinois Radio Network.
Download a PDF of the article:
20100129-IRN-Political-Social-Media-Increasing.pdf
Is taking a jab at House Speaker politically risky?
Kent Redfield, a former political science professor at the University of Illinois at Springfield, said Democrats who seriously oppose House Speaker Michael Madigan won't get far.
"For those who think they are going to be independent, criticizing the Speaker, voting against the Speaker, that would be disastrous for the representative and bad for the district," Redfield explained. "Madigan has a long memory and keeps score when members cross him. It can be isolating and ineffective if you go directly against him."
Redfield's comments were featured in a January 29, 2010, article in the Chicago Daily Herald.
Download a PDF of the article:
20100129-CDH-Is-taking-a-jab-at-House-Speaker2.pdf
UIS consultants recommend consolidation of 3 districts
“What you have now is the information to make that decision,” said professor William H. Phillips, who lead the study. “But we think this would be the greatest opportunity to educate your students.”
The UIS consultants were featured in a January 29, 2010, article in the Galesburg Register-Mail.
Download a PDF of the article:
20100129-GRM-Consultants-recommend-consolidation.pdf
Thursday, January 28, 2010
Local couple donates Lincoln artifact to UIS
Rick and Dona McGraw acquired a bronze cast of Abraham Lincoln's face when they bought the McDonald's restaurant in downtown Springfield. It's one of only 15 in the world and was taken just two months before the president's assassination.
"We are fast becoming one of the countries best public liberal arts universities," said UIS Chancellor Richard Ringeisen.
The story was featured in a WICS-TV 20 report on January, 28, 2010.
Watch the report online:
http://www.wics.com/newsroom/top_stories/videos/wics_vid_1421.shtml
Race for lieutenant gov takes wacky, pricey turn
"It's a very unusual situation," said Kent Redfield, a political science professor at the University of Illinois-Springfield, who confirmed the race is the most expensive in the office's history. "If we hadn't had the impeachment [of Rod Blagojevich], it would be a lower profile sort of thing."
Redfield's comments were featured in a January 28, 2010, article in the Chicago Sun-Times.
Download a PDF of the article:
20100128-SunTimes-Race-for-lieutenant-gov.pdf
UIS' Sims getting better by the minutes
The 6-foot-6 reserve forward has made the most of his minutes during the past few men’s basketball games after a so-so December.
Sims has been a regular contributor off a bench that’s averaging 31 points per game. He is tied with teammate Ryan Thornton for fourth on the team in scoring at 8.6 points per game, and he’s third in rebounding with 4.3 per game.
“He’s getting more playing time and scoring the basketball for us,” UIS coach Kevin Gamble said.
Sims was featured in a January 28, 2010, article in the State Journal-Register.
Download a PDF of the article:
20100128-SJR-UIS-Sims-getting-better.pdf
Wednesday, January 27, 2010
McGraw family donates Lincoln mask to UIS
A bronze cast of Abraham Lincoln — one of 15 taken from an early plaster casting of sculptor Clark Mills’ 1865 life mask of Lincoln — will have a new home among University of Illinois Springfield students.
The Rick and Dona McGraw family, owners of the local McDonald’s franchise, has donated the bronze to UIS, where it will be displayed in the information commons area adjacent to the lobby of Brookens Library.
The news was reported in a January 27, 2010, article in the State Journal-Register.
Download a PDF of the article:
20100127-SJR-lincolnmask.pdf
Jeans Day program is bad publicity for Brown
According to Kent Redfield, professor emeritus of political science at UIS, “People are highlighting (the program) because it fits into what appears to be a larger pattern of soliciting donations from employees. There’s been a long tradition of elected officials essentially shaking down their employees for campaign contributions.”
Redfield's comments were featured in a January 27, 2010, article in the Medill Reports.
Download a PDF of the article:
20100126-MedillReport-JeansDay.pdf
Primary fight taking over Illinois Democratic Party
Now, instead of entrenched incumbents in the state's two top offices, the Illinois Democratic Party goes into the campaign season with an unelected governor and an open Senate seat. The situation has spawned the rare spectacle of a sprawling primary fight within the ruling party.
"Rod Blagojevich isn't all of it by any stretch, but he's certainly some of it," Chris Mooney, professor of political science at UIS, said of the Democrats' lost cohesion.
Mooney's comments were featured in a January 27, 2010, article in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
Download a PDF of the article:
20100127-STLPostDispatch-Democrats.pdf
Tuesday, January 26, 2010
Republicans are hungry for success in Illinois
Observers say Republicans are hungry for success in Illinois, and the party is getting better at
maneuvering its candidates through difficult primaries.
“This time around, in general, the Republicans are being more pragmatic than usual,” said Kent
Redfield, professor emeritus of political science at UIS. “There certainly is still a big split among Republicans in terms of moderate and very conservative. But I think there’s a greater chance of papering it over this time.”
Redfield's observations were featured in a January 25, 2010, edition of The Hill.
Download a PDF of the article:
20100125-TheHill-election.pdf
Monday, January 25, 2010
Congressional candidates not required to live in district
Under U.S. law, congressional candidates do not need to live within the district they wish to serve.
The Founding Fathers probably didn't make residency a Constitutional requirement for federal office because mobility was limited in the 18th century, said Kent Redfield, a political science professor emeritus at UIS, and district residency may have been taken for granted.
Redfield's comments were featured in the January 25, 2010, Daily Herald.
Download a PDF of the article:
20100125-DailyHerald-carpetbagging.pdf
Hynes winning money race over Quinn
Quinn, the former lieutenant governor who has held the top spot less than a year, showed an incumbent’s fundraising power, collecting $3.1 million during the period to Dan Hynes’ $2.3 million, but Quinn started the six-month stretch with just $702,000 on hand.
“Quinn historically has been someone who has had a lot of trouble raising money and not a big interest in raising money,” UIS political science professor Kent Redfield said. “The difference is largely the head start that Hynes had.”
Redfield's comments were featured in a January 22, 2010, article in the State Journal-Register.
Download a PDF of the article:
20100122-SJR-Hynesmoney.pdf
Illinois politicians cashing big checks
After a year in which Illinois politicians passed landmark laws to rein in moneyed interests, candidates for governor are having no qualms about cashing big checks while they still can to keep their campaigns running.
Until 2012 limits are enforced, Illinois remains one of the few states where donors can give as much as they want to any candidate, as long as it is periodically disclosed.
"It is very difficult in a completely unregulated system to say unilaterally, 'I'm not going to raise money,'" says Kent Redfield, professor emeritus of political science at UIS.
And despite the economic recession that has sent unemployment to double digit levels, Redfield said there will always be a pile of cash for politicians.
Redfield's comments were featured in a January 24, 2010, article in the Daily Herald.Download a PDF of the article:
20100124-DailyHerald-bigchecks.pdf
Diversity Coalition reconvenes
“There was something different about last year, where people acted out acts of hatred quantitatively in a different way than had been occurring for quite a while within the city,” said Larry Golden, an emeritus professor at the University of Illinois Springfield, who is a member of the coalition.
The news was featured in a January 22, 2010, article in the State Journal-Register.
Download a PDF of the article:
20100123-SJR-diversitycoalition.pdf
Friday, January 22, 2010
Supreme Court rules against limits on corporate political spending
Illinois reform advocates say the ruling probably couldn't be used to challenge the new limits on state-level campaign donations that take effect next year because those limits apply only to donations of cash and services, not independent expenditures made on behalf of candidates.
But Kent Redfield, professor emeritus of political science at UIS and one of the proponents pushing the state to implement more limits, said the ruling could stymie future attempts by reformers to impose stronger restrictions in other areas.
Redfield's comments were featured in the January 22, 2010, St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
Download a PDF of the article:
20100122-STLPostDispatch-Cash.pdf
Stroger puts away $500,000
Cook County Board President Todd Stroger squirreled away $500,000 in two certificates of deposit at the Amalgamated Bank in Chicago last August, even as his opponents were gearing up to spend hundreds of thousands on TV ads and other campaign expenditures.
"It certainly looks like he is more interested in putting money away in the bank than running for office," said Kent Redfield, political science professor emeritus at UIS.
Redfield's comments were featured in the January 2, 2010, Daily Herald.
Download a PDF of the article: 20100121-DailyHerald-Stroger.pdf
Money will give Senate candidates an advantage
Already a hotly-contested race, the campaign for President Barack Obama’s former U.S. Senate seat is expected to get uglier and more expensive following today’s Supreme Court ruling that corporations and unions can spend as much as they want to sway voters.
“Big money is going to interject itself into federal elections,” and people with money always have an advantage, according to Kent Redfield, a political science professor at UIS.
Redfield's comments were featured in a January 22, 2010, article in the Chicago Tribune.
Download a PDF of the article:
20100122-ChiTrib-SupremeCt.pdf
Emiquon to host public lecture on mallards
A public lecture titled “Monitoring Mallard Movements in the Illinois River Valley and Beyond” will be hosted at the UIS Alfred O. and Barbara Cordwell Therkildsen Field Station at Emiquon on Tuesday, January 26 at 6:30.
The presenters of the lecture will be Danielle DeVito and Curt Kleist, waterfowl research technicians with the Illinois Natural History Survey, Forbes Biological Station in Havana.
The information about the lecture was published in the January 22, 2010, Galesburg Register-Mail.
Download a PDF of the article:
20100122-GalesburgRM-Mallards.pdf
Thursday, January 21, 2010
UIS furlough days affect students
Some faculty will be taking all four days on the same dates to raise awareness about the impact of the state budget on higher education, while other staff and faculty will try to minimize the affect of furloughs on students.
Additionally, on Wednesday, faculty and academic professionals were given the option of taking a temporary pay cut equivalent to what the university would save by them taking a furlough day, so that they have the option to continue working instead of taking time off.
Details about the furlough days and the state's debt to UIS were discussed in a January 21, 2010, article in the State Journal-Register.
Download a PDF of the article:
20100120-SJR-furloughdays.pdf
Ill. Democrats might worry after Mass. Republican win
Chris Mooney, professor of political science at UIS, said Illinois Democrats in general might have to worry about the image of partywide complacency and sense of entitlement that has hurt the party in Massachusetts.
Mooney's comments were featured in a January 21, 2010, article in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
Download a PDF of the article:
20100121-STLPostDispatch-elections.pdf
UIS hosts alumni exhibition in VAG
The exhibition was featured in the January 21, 2010, State Journal-Register.
Download a PDF of the article:
20100121-SJR-alumniexhibition.pdf
Wednesday, January 20, 2010
UIS is not one of GLVC schools to add football
The Great Lakes Valley Conference is expanding its sports program by adding football with the inaugural season slated for 2012.
The University of Illinois Springfield Prairie Stars, who are new to the GLVC and NCAA Division II, will not be among the league’s football-playing schools, however. UIS is “absolutely not” starting a football program, according to athletic director Rodger Jehlicka.
The story was published in the January 20, 2010, State Journal-Register.
Download a PDF of the article: 20100120-SJR-football.pdf
Illinois primary just around the corner
Illinois voters are less than two weeks away from a high-stakes election that will determine which candidates continue their quest for governor, U.S. Senate and a handful of other offices in the state.
However, many people don't realize an election is just around the corner or they've likely had very little time to learn about the candidates.
Kent Redfield, a professsor emeritus of political science at UIS, said voters tend not to focus much on political campaigns during the holiday season, which makes it hard for candidates to get their messages heard.
Redfield's comments were featured in a January 19, 2010, article in the St. Louis Beacon.
Download a PDF of the article: 20100119-STLBeacon-Primary.pdf
Tuesday, January 19, 2010
Obama magic fading in Chicago
President Barack Obama's political magic is now giving way to sobering realities of time, distance and enormously elevated responsibilities a year after he took office, even in his hometown of Chicago.
"At the very least, it will become part of the keepsake box of the city, like having Oprah in town or being home to the 1893 World's Fair," said Chris Mooney, a political scientist at the University of Illinois' Springfield campus. "Every big city needs to be noticed now and then. Even if you're already the prom queen, it's nice to be complimented."
Mooney's comments were featured in a January 18, 2010, article in the Chicago Tribune.
Download a PDF of the article: 20100118-ChiTrib-ObamaChicago.pdf
UIS Diversity Center director is keynote speaker for MLK celebration
The march and celebration was the feature of a January 18, 2010, article on Rome Newswire.com.
Download a PDF of the article:
20100118-RomeNewsWire-MLKDay.pdf
UIS community joins in MLK celebration downtown
The Ministerial Alliance of Springfield’s annual Martin Luther King Jr. observance service, held at Union Baptist Church, became the destination for the University of Illinois Springfield’s march in honor of King this year.
The march began at Second Street and Capitol Avenue, where UIS' Voices in Praise Choir performed in front of a statue of Martin Luther King Jr. before about 40 people walked toward Union Baptist Church, where the annual service was held.
The march and UIS' involvement in the celebration was featured in a January 19, 2010, article in the State Journal-Register.
Download a PDF of the article: 20100118-SJR-MLKmarch.pdf
Thursday, January 14, 2010
Martin Luther King Jr. march, service planned
Clarice Ford, director of the Diversity Center at the University of Illinois Springfield, will be the keynote speaker Sunday for the annual Martin Luther King Jr. Commemorative March and Memorial Service.
The march will begin at 3 p.m. at Freedom Corner, the statue of Martin Luther King Jr. at Second Street and Capitol Avenue. The UIS Student Gospel Choir will sing at the statue and lead the singing as marchers proceed to Union Baptist Church, 1405 E. Monroe St., where the service will be held. The march is expected to last about 20 minutes.
The story was featured in a January 14, 2010, article in the State Journal-Register.
Download a PDF of the article:
2010014-SJR-MLK-march.pdf
Parents made sure UIS' Thornton got his shots
For the University of Illinois Springfield Prairie Stars sharpshooter, there was more to it than simply recording words on paper.
“My dad got me a goal book when I was in grade school,” he said. “He said maybe get 2,500 shots up each day. I’d look at 2,500 shots and say I could do more, so I might get 3,000 or 3,200 shots up. In the summer I’d set a goal for myself that I want to have a basketball in my hand every day.”
Thornton's story was featured in a January, 14, 2010, article in the State Journal-Register.
Download a PDF of the article:
20100114-SJR-Parents-made-sure-UIS%27-Thornton.pdf
Wednesday, January 13, 2010
UIS alumnus debuts novel
University of Illinois Springfield alumnus Laura Bynum's debut novel, “Veracity” (Pocket Books), was released last week. She returns to her Springfield hometown at 7 p.m. Wednesday for a book-signing at Barnes & Noble Booksellers, 3111 S. Veterans Parkway.
Just a few years ago, Bynum was doing the “safe” thing — working in the corporate world, raising her daughters with second husband Eric, and ignoring the lifelong yet risky urge to write.
“I was really in a quandary,” she said. “I made decent money as a corporate department builder. I knew I could make money for my family. As an artist, it’s a crapshoot.”
Bynum's story was featured in a January 10, 2010, article in the State Journal-Register.
Download a PDF of the article:
20100110-SJR-The-story-of-her-life.pdf
Monday, January 11, 2010
Primary election favors incumbents
Redfield's comments were featured in an article about the fast-approaching primary election in a January 8, 2010, article in the Kankakee Daily Journal.
Download a PDF of the article:
20100108-KankakeeJournal-primary%20election.pdf
UIS part of ILEAD U
The institute was the feature of a January 10, 2010, article in the State Journal-Register.
Download a PDF of the article:
20100110-SJR-libraryinstitute.pdf
Friday, January 8, 2010
Schillerstrom likely needs longer than one term to fix Ill. state government
But with Illinois is facing a $13 billion budget deficit, it will likely take longer than one term to fix the state's problems, according to Kent Redfield, professor emeritus of political science at UIS.
Redfield's comments were featured in a January 7, 2010, article in the Illinois Statehouse News.
Download a PDF of the article:
20100107-ILStatehouseNews-Schillerstrom.pdf
Increased voter registration doesn't necessarily mean big turnout
Michaelson's comments were featured in a January 7, 2010, article published by the Illinois Statehouse News.
Download a PDF of the article:
20100107-ILStatehouseNews-voters.pdf
UIS uses Google Wave for education
Download a PDF of the article:
20100108-LaCrosseTrib-Googlewave.pdf
Thursday, January 7, 2010
Revealing the explosive heart of Eta Carinae
Using adaptive optics to remove atmospheric blurring, Gemini Observatory released an image showing previously hidden forensic secrets at the ballistic core of the Homunculus Nebula, part of the explosive Eta Carinae star system.
The new Gemini image was presented by John Martin of the University of Illinois Springfield who, along with an international team of researchers, obtained their data using the Near-Infrared Coronagraphic Imager (NICI) at the Gemini South telescope in Chile.
Martin's comments were feature in a January 6, 2010, U.S. News and World Report article.
Download a PDF of the article:
20100106-USNews-Revealing-the-Explosive-Heart.pdf
Stars align for UIS big man Miranda
The University of Illinois Springfield senior has experienced college life as a student athlete and just a student. After playing college basketball for three seasons, he spent the 2008-09 school year as a regular old full-time student and watching UIS Prairie Stars men’s basketball home games from the stands.
Sitting out for a year taught him a lesson.
“It kind of made me more humble since I had to be a regular student,” Miranda said.
Miranda was featured in a January 7, 2010, State Journal-Register report.
Download a PDF of the article:
20100107-SJR-Stars-align-for-UIS.pdf
Wednesday, January 6, 2010
U of I to enforce furlough days and hiring freeze
The cost-cutting measures, including furloughs and a hiring freeze, are designed to trim $82 million from the U of I’s operating budget and ease a $436 million backlog of unpaid state appropriations to the university.
The news was featured in a January 6, 2010, article in the State Journal-Register.
Download a PDF of the article:
20100106-SJR-furloughdays.pdf
The topic was also covered by other news outlets.
Download a PDF of an article from the Chicago Tribune: 20100106-ChiTrib-furloughdays.pdf
Download a PDF of an article from the Chicago Sun-Times: 20100106-ChiSunTimes-furloughdays.pdf
Tuesday, January 5, 2010
Professor's work highlighted at national astronomy meeting
His work was reported in the January 4, 2010, Science News.
Download the article about Martin and his research:
20100104-ScienceNews-Martin.pdf
Monday, January 4, 2010
Political candidates use social media during campaigns
A year after Obama's historic election during which he utilized social media to build his support, candidates across the country - and throughout the Chicago suburbs - are following suit. Candidates running for federal, state and even county offices are campaigning via Facebook, YouTube, Twitter and e-mail.
If you don't have a Web site, people assume you aren't credible, according to Kent Redfield, political science professor emeritus at UIS.
Redfield's comments were featured in a January 2, 2010, article in the Chicago Daily Herald.
Download a PDF of the article: 20100102-DailyHerald-socialmedia.pdf