Abandoned Pools Humanistic

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Karriem Drewery

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Aug 4, 2024, 8:13:46 PM8/4/24
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SusanS. Suter returned to Illinois government on October 1 as Gov. James R. Thompson's choice as director of the state's Department of Public Aid. She left her post as director of the Illinois Department of Rehabilitation Services (DORS) last March after President Reagan nominated her to serve as a commissioner with the federal Rehabilitation Services Administration. Before her departure for Washington, D.C., Suter had served as DORS director since September 1984. Prior to that she was the agency's assistant director for two and a half years. In 1987, Suter was the recipient of a National Governors' Association Distinguished Service Award and was also named one of 10 outstanding career women by Glamour magazine. Suter's annual salary is $71,321.

Suter replaced Edward T. Duffy who resigned August 8 after serving in the Thompson administration since 1982. Duffy, who now works for Arlington Park Ltd., operates four off-track betting parlors in Illinois.


Appointed by Thompson in late August to take over as DORS director was Phil Bradley. He had been serving as acting director since Suter's federal appointment. Prior to that he had been a deputy director since 1983, most recently heading the Bureau of Disability Determination Services. Before joining DORS Bradley was associate director of the Illinois Community College Trustees Association from 1977-83. Bradley's annual salary is $65,835.


A new advisory council created to assist IIlinois veterans met for the first time in late August. The Atomic Radiation and Dioxin Poisoning Victims Advisory Council is to help Illinois vets from the 1940s and 1950s who are victims of atomic radiation and those from the Vietnam War who were exposed to Agent Orange.


The council will have 10 members, eight of whom have already been appointed by Gov. Thompson. Members include Larry Besson of Stonington, an electrician with Caterpillar Company; Dr. Frank Chamberlin of Quincy, medical director of the Illinois Veterans Home; Willie G. Collins of Kankakee; George Edwards of Sterling, first vice commander of the Disabled American Veterans; Benjamin Ferlage of Mount Vernon, an animal health technician with the U.S. Department of Agriculture; Bill Gomora of Lockport, a safety inspector with Unocal Oil Company; James A. Lahr of Lincoln; and Dr. Peter Orris of Chicago, a physician with Cook County Hospital. Besson and Edwards are serving as cochairmen of the council.


Campbell's problems began in November 1987 when he was charged by the Judicial Inquiry Board with improperly firing his legal secretary and with impaneling a jury in a criminal case with neither the defendant nor either counsel present. He also refused to answer any of the board's questions about the firing of his secretary.


The courts commission found that Campbell fired his secretary in retaliation for her desire to end their long-term romantic relationship. This and his refusal to answer questions regarding that job action violated Supreme Court Rules 61 and 62(A). Campbell's failure to allow counsel to challenge selection of jurors violated Supreme Court Rules 62(A), 63(A)(1) and 63(A)(4).


Forty years ago the casual observer along the Ohio River could see more than water rolling by. Dead animals, abandoned vehicles and sewage nearly choked this major east-west waterway. In 1948 the states that lie in the river's drainage basin banded together to form the Ohio River Valley Water Sanitation Commission. Today, in an era of declining water quality and increasingly short-range government planning, the commission is a contradiction: It has successfully coordinated the efforts of eight states over 40 years and cleaned up the Ohio River.


The 27-member commission is comprised of three representatives from each state participating in the compact plus three from the federal government. Of the members from Illinois, two are named by the governor, with the consent of the Senate. Recently reappointed to the commision was Richard S. Engelbrecht of Urbana, a professor of environmental engineering at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. His new term expires January 3, 1994. He has been a commissioner since 1976. The other governor-appointed spot was occupied until recently by Cordell McGoy of Cairo, a Vienna Correctional Center officer. McGoy, who was elected to the Cairo City Council last April, is not seeking a second term on the commission. Serving as ex officio member is the director of the state's Environmental Protection Agency, currently Bernard Killian. Members receive expenses only.


Joining the 62-member Board of Governors were former four-term U.S. Congressman Tom Corcoran (R-14), currently an executive with Wallace Associates Corporation, a Chicago-and Washington, D.C.-based consulting/financial services firm; Peter Gallanis, a Rudnick & Wolfe partner, who is active in both the American and Chicago bar associations and in the Midwest Immigrants' Rights Center; Dietrich M. Gross, president of Mercury Stainless Corporation, who is heavily involved in charitable, cultural and political affairs in Chicago; Olympic Federal Savings and Loan chairman John J. Lanigan Jr., a member of the State Board of Elections and former Commissioner of Savings and Loan under former Gov. Richard B. Ogilvie; Robert R. Mazer, president of Mazer Chemicals, member of the regional American/Israeli Public Action Committee and a board member of the National Jewish Coalition; and Janet Malone Morrow, past executive director of TRUST (now the Chicago Council on Urban Affairs), an initial member of Mayor Harold Washington's board of ethics and a member of several boards including the Chicago Ethics Project and the Chicago Foundation for Women. Board members serve three-year terms.


on August 1, As DASA's chief auditor, he is responsible for the audit process and for recommending necessary changes. Kantanka came to DASA from the Department of Children and Family Services where he had been the agency's business administrator since 1985. He previously held positions as fiscal manager at Chicago Rehab Network, a not-for-profit organization, and as an auditor for the city of Chicago's housing department.


Dennis Lawler of Springfield was named deputy division manager for the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency's (IEPA) air pollution control division in September. Lawler, who has been with the IEPA since 1975, managed the agency's air quality planning section before the appointment and will continue to do so until this position is filled. A member of the National Air Pollution Control Association, Lawler is also certified by the American Meteorological Society as a consulting meteorologist. The certification follows completion of a six-year testing process.


John Peoples Jr. was appointed deputy director of the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory at Batavia, effective September 1. Peoples has been with Fermilab since 1973. He was instrumental in the construction of Fermilab's fixed target experimental areas and, in 1981, led the design, construction and commissioning of the Fermilab Antiproton Source, the second such facility to be built worldwide. Peoples had been on leave from Fermilab since October 1987, serving as head of the magnet division for the proposed superconducting super collider being developed by a central design group at California's Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory. He succeeds Philip Livdahl, who was deputy director from 1984 until his retirement in 1987. Livdahl is now project manager for the development of a medical accelerator for the Loma Linda Medical Center in California.


Mayor David McDowell of Murphysboro was elected president of the Southern Illinois Mayors Association at the spring general membership meeting in Murphysboro. McDowell, SIMA's fourteenth president, was its vice president last year and secretary-treasurer in 1986-87. Other newly elected officers include Pinckneyville Mayor Joe Holder, vice president, and Woodlawn Mayor Earl Spohr, secretary-treasurer. Mayors Neil Dillard of Carbondale and Ned Mitchell of Sesser are new SIM A board members.


The 18-member Illinois Soybean Operating Board, which allocates soybean checkoff contributions, elected officers during its August board meeting in Bloomington. Philip Bradshaw of Griggsville, was reelected chairman. Also reelected were Kevin Miller of Teutopolis as treasurer and Richard Borgsmiller of Murphysboro as secretary. Elected to the office of assistant secretary-treasurer was Bob Johnson of Waterman. Officers serve one-year terms.


State Department of Revenue director Roger D. Sweet was appointed to the board of directors of the Federation of Tax Administrators in August. He was also named vice president of the regional organization, the Midwestern States Association of Tax Administrators. The Washington, D.C.-based federation, which includes representatives from revenue agencies in all 50 states, the District of Columbia, city of New York and the province of Ontario, serves as a clearinghouse of information for revenue agencies, conducts research and provides training to improve tax administration.


Joseph A. Morris became general counsel and chief executive officer of the Mid-America Legal Foundation on September 16. Morris previously served with the U.S. Department of Justice. In August he was awarded the department's highest honor, the Edmund J. Randolph Award. He was a practicing Chicago attorney before he joined the federal government in 1981. The Mid-America Legal Foundation, based in Chicago, was established in 1975 as a public interest law firm and legal studies center dedicated to the advancement of individual liberty, free enterprise and the rule of law.


The Illinois Humanities Council will honor individual, corporate and educational efforts to support the humanities when members gather for the council's annual dinner November 11 at Chicago's South Shore Cultural Center.

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