Archive for the ‘illinois news’ Category

I want to know what is going on in cairo news?

Saturday, March 27th, 2010

looking for Cairo illinois
News

Nothing in particular. Same old stuff that goes on any news channel.

Student teaching in Northern Illinois: what are the best schools?

Thursday, March 25th, 2010

I will be student teaching at the end of my undergrad in a few years and I would love to know from former student teachers and current illinois teachers what some of the best high schools in the North/Northwest Suburbs of Chicago are, not just from what you’ve read in US News and World Report, but from personal experiences and from word of mouth–especially if you student-taught there! Any other advice or tips about student teaching and how to survive it and prepare for it are also appreciated!

I haven’t taught in Illinois, but I have taught for many years with the ESL program and with a Community College. I did find some sites below on schools in the Chicago area which might assist you in your decision. My advice, if you are serious about teaching, consider teaching at a Community College. There is a world of difference from K-12.

BABY JAY ILLINOIS NEWS COVERAGE

Tuesday, March 23rd, 2010

BABY JAY illinois SCHOOL TOUR. RECEIVED MEDIA COVERAGE FOR HIS POSITIVE HIP-HOP/RAP MOVEMENT.

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Should all of Illinois pay for Chicago mass transit?

Tuesday, March 23rd, 2010

On the news channel from Chicago they are expressing that Chicagoans and the people that run the city are really mad at the governor.
They think he is doing the wrong thing by not passing a bill to have that whole state of illinois pay taxes to help the mass transit in the city.
Do the people of Chicago know that there are many other people in the state that do not go to Chicago and use the mass transit.
They do not want to pay taxes for something they are not using.
Why don’t Chicago just get that message and increase the fares for people who use it? Then they can pay their own bills and do their own upkeep of the sysyem.
The other people in the state of Illinois are sick and tired of paying for Chicago to get everything they want.

yes. if all illinois donot want to pay for chicago why dont they throw chicago put of illinois? i think all world should pay or chicago, as well as all chicago pay for the world. we should have a world government.

What is the difference between holding suspected terrorist detainees at Gitmo or in Illinois?

Sunday, March 21st, 2010

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20091215/ap_on_go_pr_wh/us_detainee_prison

Why will Obama get credit for closing Gitmo while still holding suspects and how is it safer to have them in illinois?

The difference is they will have access to visitors, phone calls, and lawyers who will try and get their cases dismissed! It endangers our security, notice it was Illinois who got the contract!! The feds will purchase the prison from them!! Follow the money!
May God Bless you and Merry Christmas!

This was in the news a couple weeks ago in illinois: scholarships were taken away? many of them? Details?

Friday, March 19th, 2010

Please site.

It had to do with the state budget. 2M in scholarships were slashed from the budget. Gov. Quinn put them back in, though.

Is it strange that Illinois Gov. Blagojevich was trying to help people the day before his allegation?

Wednesday, March 17th, 2010

I thought it was kind of strange that illinois Gov. Blagojevich had allegations brought up against him the day after trying to help some laid off workers gain some relief funding from a bank.
Im not supporting the Gov. I just thought it was wierd that the day before people found out about his scandal, he was in the news for trying to fight the system. Does anybody else see the irony?

Rod Blagojevich never helps anyone. He simply gives aid or support to whomever or whatever he feels will end up benefiting him the most. He wasn’t trying to do anything for those workers except use them in an attempt to gain support for himself.

Elmhurst and Addison Illinois Flood Out – Chicago News Ch. 2

Tuesday, March 16th, 2010

This is news from Channel 2 in Chicago from 1987 when the towns of Elmhurst and Addison flooded out.

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How many of Obama’s advisers and other appointees are from Illinois?

Monday, March 15th, 2010

Given the recent events surrounding political corruption, how many people that Obama has appointed or surrounded himself with are from illinois?

How many are possibly invovled or been named in the recent event. Two have been mentioned in the news.

Does anyone else know?

This presidential group is the most corrupt in all of history starting with Obama and then the biggest laugh having Barney Franks questioning Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and calling them the only reason for the economic downfall! Everyday there is something new they could not write this stuff if they tried Bush will look like a sweet thing by the time this corrupt group has finished with the U.S.

There was an article on yahoo news 7-27-07 am. that was about a coal mine in Illinois where an ancient found?

Saturday, March 13th, 2010

Did anyone see the article about an ancient fossilised forest found in an illinois coal mine on 7-27-07 on yahoo? I can’t seem to find it again. Thanks

from GeoTimes.com:

Largest fossilized forest found in mine
July 2007

Deep within a maze of coal mines nestled along the eastern edge of Illinois, an ancient swamp forest lies perfectly still. Preserved at its time of death by a catastrophic flood 307 million years ago, the fossilized vegetation is a snapshot of a long-extinct woodland ecosystem.

The fossilized Pennsylvanian-age forest is preserved at the contact between a layer of shale and the Herrin coal bed below. Miners digging in the tunnels saw huge trunks dangling from the roof where researchers later found fossilized ground plants and even a few shellfish.

The 1,000-hectare (2,470-acre) spread may be the most expansive ancient woodland known to have been preserved in an instant of geologic time, the researchers wrote in the May 2007 Geology. “Flood, bang, bury” is how lead author Bill DiMichele of the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History describes the forest’s final days. The site is so well-preserved that fossilized leaves were still on their branches. “And we’ve found another within the Illinois Basin that’s even larger,” DiMichele says.

The type of sediments and how they were buried gave clues that the mire forest was entombed by a flood. Because the layers of coal and overlying shale are clearly defined and the remains are so perfectly preserved, the researchers say the forest could have been submerged within two months. Given the tectonic nature of the region during the Pennsylvanian epoch, the flood could have been triggered by earthquakes along a nearby fault, say DiMichele and his collaborators. They suggest that this flooding was similar to the one that submerged the lowland Missouri forest and formed Reelfoot Lake during the magnitude-8 New Madrid earthquakes in the early 19th century.

The findings are providing new context and perspective on Pennsylvanian-age vegetation, DiMichele says. The lack of plant species recovered from many other ancient swamp sites has been assumed to be due to limited sample size or lack of preservation. The new find revealed nearly 30 plant species, and because this fossilized forest is so vast and so exceedingly well-preserved at “time-zero,” the researchers suggest that limited diversity may have been the natural characteristic of some ancient ecosystems.

The researchers also discovered trunks of tree species that scientists had previously known mainly from seeds and leaves. “It is amazing,” DiMichele says. “There were tree trunks everywhere, and what tipped us off [to the value of the site] was there were trunks from tree ferns that we don’t always see — that’s extremely unusual — and trunks from seed ferns, also an uncommon thing to find.”

The study has implications even in modern times. By gaining a clearer picture of what ancient mires looked like, researchers can better understand how swamps around the world can change in real time as global temperatures increase. “We’re looking at whether systems really behave like models,” DiMichele says. “Modern ecology doesn’t really have the time reach, but these studies give that extra perspective.”