All content on this website, including dictionary, thesaurus, literature, geography, and other reference data is for informational purposes only. Caterpillar Electronic Technician Serial Numbers. Convert Caterpillar Electronic Technician trail version to full software. Apr 13, 2017 Caterpillar Electronic Technician (CAT ET) is diagnostic software required to communicate, diagnose and service electronically controlled Caterpillar engines and machines. When connected to an Electronic Control Module (ECM), a technician has the ability to diagnose existing and potential problems, configure the product, and obtain data for. Ephemeral films are non-fiction films usually made for educational, industrial, or promotional purposes. Film shows U.S. Navy electronic technician training.
Free activation just for active members! Caterpillar Electronic Technician (CAT ET) 2015A Multilanguage Win | 309 MB Caterpillar Electronic Technician (CAT ET) is diagnostic software required to communicate, diagnose and service electronically controlled Caterpillar engines and machines. When connected to an Electronic Control Module (ECM), a technician has the ability to diagnose existing and potential problems, configure the product, and obtain data for analysis. Requirements: - O.S.: Windows XP; Windows Vista; Windows 7; Windows 8 - CPU: Pentium/Athlon Dual Core or higher - RAM: 1 GB of system memory - Hard Drive: 1 GB of available space - CD-ROM
Contri – Henderson/CIB
Contri/clatfelter
Contri/polistina
Polistina/carpenter/SPD MCU
CIB/HENDERSON - CONTRI/CLATFELTER/IBT 916
from 'henderson' and see 'clatfelter' site - contri - (contri sells cobblestone)
contri impacts – clatfelter – ibt – sherman – Peoria JC65 – gauwitz - cat
FOR THE RECORD
State Journal-Register, The (Springfield, IL) - Thursday, March 15, 2007
PERSONAL Births Molly N. and Chad A. Ishmael, Sherman, a son, William Davison Ishmael, Friday, Feb. 9, 2007. Grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Henderson
of Sherman and Mr. and Mrs. Sam Ishmael of Athens.
Great-grandparents are MaryContri of Sherman,
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Henderson of Springfield,
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Davison of Greenview and Mr. and Mrs. Cloyd Ishmael of Chandlerville.
CONTRI – polistina – (sherrock/polistina)
TITLE: WEDDINGS
State Journal-Register, The (Springfield, IL) - Sunday, October 5, 1986
Vignali- ContriLynn Marie Contri and Damon Anthony Vignali, both of Sherman, exchanged wedding vows at 4 p.m. Sept. 13. Performing the ceremony was the Rev. John Corredato at St. John Vianney Church in Sherman.
Parents of the bride are Val and Mary Contri of Sherman. The bridegroom is the son of Richard and Cathy Vignali of Sherman. Serving as maid of honor was Toni Camille, with Cindy Naumovich, Colleen Langer, Valerie Henderson and Leanne Contri serving as bridesmaids. Flower girl was Molly Henderson. Best man was Terry Polistina. Serving as groomsmen were Ted Contri , Steve Hall, John Geyston and Mark Polistina. Ushers were Mark and Kevin Johnson, and Bob Whalen. Hunter Whalen was ringbearer. A reception was held at the St. John Vianney Activity Center immediately after the ceremony. The bride, a graduate of Williamsville High School, is employed by Horace Mann Insurance Co. The bridegroom, a graduate of Williamsville High School, is employed by the state Department of Insurance. They will live in Springfield.
Contri– clatfelter
And note tony zander – social network – and see OTB gambling zander
TITLE: OBITUARIES
State Journal-Register, The (Springfield, IL) - Monday, April 11, 1994
Vincent Picchi Vincent 'Jimmy' Picchi, 77, of Springfield, formerly of Langleyville, died at 4:35 a.m. Sunday at Memorial Medical Center.
He was born Oct. 26, 1916, in Gualdo Tadino, Italy, the son of Nazzareno and Cerbina Balerina Picchi. He married Patricia Gard Godbey in 1981. Preceding him in death were his first wife, Bonnie Kibele Picchi, in 1974; and a sister, Rose Picchi. Mr. Picchi was a Springfield resident for 50 years. He had been employed by Sangamo Electric and the State of Illinois. He was a member of K of C Marion Council 3914 of Riverton, Greenview United Church and VFW Post 755. He was a U.S. Army veteran of World War II. Surviving are his wife, Patricia;
daughter, Mrs. Tom (Linda) Clatfelter of Sherman;
four stepdaughters, Sally Godbey, Mrs. Sam (Amy) Zanders, Mrs.
David (Julie) James and Mrs. Clay (Janie) Bahlow, all of Springfield; five grandchildren; three sisters, Mrs. Clara Morris of Springfield, Mrs. Mary Touhy of Chicago and Mrs. Louise Decknadel of Minnesota; two brothers,
Dan Contri of Springfield and
Val Contri of Sherman;
and several nieces, nephews and cousins.
Sherrock - polistina explains –
mcu – carpenter & graham
and see polistina in ftl
paul carpenter is married to linda polistina
James Polistina (capitol group= IBT)
SHERMAN - James Polistina , 73, of Sherman died Thursday, May 16, 2002, at Memorial Medical Center.
He was born Sept. 23, 1928, in Sherman, the son of Carmen and Lena M. Gazza Polistina .
Mr. Polistina worked for Capitol Group and retired from the
Sangamon County Highway Department in 1990.
He was a member of St. John Vianney Church, Sherman Athletic Club and the Sherman VFW.
Survivors: three daughters, Lisa (husband, Mark) Pell of Bullard, Texas,
Laura (husband, Paul) Carpenter of Chatham
and Linda Polistina of Sherman;
a son, Michael Polistina of Sherman;
eight grandchildren; a sister, Rose (husband, Harold) Bryant of Frenchburg, Ky.;
three brothers, Amato (wife, Doris), Robert and Ross Polistina , all of Sherman; and
several aunts, uncles, nieces, nephews and cousins.
dateMon, Aug 4, 2008 at 4:21 PM
subjectMCU - SPD - caldwell - rouse - dodson - disbanded - cover-up - isp report whitewash - caldwell - dhs - charlie pennell
mailed-bygmail.com
hide details 8/4/08
The investigation
State Journal-Register, The (Springfield, IL) - October 18, 2006
Section: LOCAL
Page: 4
Background on the Illinois State Police investigation of the Springfield Police Department:
* What did it say? A summary of the investigation concluded that detectives Jim Graham and Paul Carpenter violated department policies along with five of their supervisors: deputy chief Bill Rouse , Lt. Greg Williamson, Lt. Rickey Davis, Lt. Dave Dodson and Sgt. Tim Young.
* Who are those people? Graham and Carpenter worked in the investigations division. Rouse is the deputy chief of investigations, while Young, Williamson, Davis and Dodson are former supervisors in the division. Young is retired; Davis is on paid leave.
* What policies did they allegedly violate? There are too many allegations to list here, but among them: Carpenter and Graham used and paid confidential sources without preparing the required paperwork, and their supervisors failed to ensure the paperwork was filed. Graham and Carpenter conducted police work outside of Springfield. Graham did not take appropriate action when he allegedly saw Carpenter receive a gun from a known felon and when he saw cocaine at an informant's home. Carpenter allegedly forged a time card for community-service hours a confidential source was to complete at St. John's Breadline.
* What do Graham and Carpenter say? Among other things, they told investigators they believed many of their actions were OK'd by supervisors and that other allegations were untrue or exaggerated.
* Why was there an investigation? Former Springfield narcotics unit Sgt. Ron Vose complained to Police Chief Don Kliment and Mayor Tim Davlin about the conduct of officers in the department's former major case unit.
* Why did the investigation occur? Kliment asked the state police to look into Vose's charges. The investigation lasted from June 2, 2005, until June 28, 2006. The report addresses each allegation Vose outlined in his memo.
* What did the investigation produce? A 30-page summary, which is posted on The State Journal-Register's Web site, www.sj-r.com, and a 2,300-page report, which has not been made public.
Rouse retires without fanfare / Embattled leader of criminal investigations steps down
State Journal-Register, The (Springfield, IL) - July 29, 2007
Author/Byline: JAYETTE BOLINSKI STAFF WRITER
Section: CITY/STATE
Page: 11
To casual observers of the Springfield Police Department, Bill Rouse wasn't the obvious choice to head the troubled criminal investigations division four years ago.
Rouse had been a city police officer since 1982, had supervised
patrol officers and traffic cops and worked in internal affairs briefly. But he had no experience as a detective.
That didn't matter, said retired police chief Don Kliment, who worked under Rouse at one time and appointed him to head the
investigations division in 2003.
'I was aware of the fact he could run a division,' Kliment said. 'I wanted a fresh start in there. I didn't need detectives to run the division. I needed a supervisor and a manager.'
Rouse, 54, quietly retired a week ago, after completing his 25th year with the department. He said he began planning his retirement two or three years ago, so his leaving the department was not the 'shakeup' some have claimed it was.
'I've got my 25 years in. That was my goal,' he said.
When Rouse cleaned out his office, he took with him several cardboard boxes filled with legal paperwork - the result of four ongoing federal lawsuits that name him as a defendant.
The first, filed in 2004 by former Springfield police Lt. Rickey Davis, claims Davis was better qualified than Rouse to head the investigations division.
In 2006, former Springfield
police Sgt. Ron Vose sued Rouse and Kliment, claiming they retaliated against him when he blew the whistle on misconduct by detectives in the now-disbanded Major Case Unit.
In March, Springfield resident Larry Washington sued Rouse and five other officers, alleging they conspired to violate his rights and conducted an unlawful search and false arrest for cocaine possession. The charges against Washington were dismissed.
In April, Davis named Rouse, along with Kliment and Mayor Tim Davlin, as a defendant in another lawsuit that claims Davis was retaliated against because of his previous accusations of racial discrimination within the department.
And then there's 'the report' - an as-yet-unreleased 2,300-page epic compiled by Illinois State Police investigators who were tapped to document shortcomings in the Springfield Police Department's investigations division. A 30-page summary of the report concludes that five supervisors, including Rouse, failed to properly oversee two detectives who were accused of misconduct and have since been fired.
Despite the criticism, Rouse said he enjoyed the investigations assignment. The fondest part of his career, though, remains being a patrol officer and street sergeant.
'I ran across and met a lot of different people, some of them good and some of them bad. But overall it was a fun, enjoyable time - and a lot less stress,' he said. 'And I was not sued once as a patrol officer or a sergeant.'
Rouse is proud of several things he achieved while head of investigations.
For one, he changed the detective-selection process. Previously, officers would apply for the job, read some books suggested by the department and then go through an interview. Rouse implemented a four-point process - a fairer process, he said - that includes a written test, investigation scenarios, report writing and an interview.
About 10 detectives have been through the new process and have given it high marks, Rouse said.
Badly needed technology upgrades also were a priority. He and his staff were able to find money to buy about $100,000 in digital and electronic equipment to aid in solving crimes. Among the additions are a system for recording interrogations, for enhancing digital surveillance video, for taking measurements at crime and crash scenes and for putting together composite drawings of suspects.
He also ushered in routine compliance checks of parolees, sex offenders and juvenile probationers. And he helped get off the ground 'Project Safety,' an effort to reduce gun violence.
Rouse, who will become a security officer at a local bank, said he also intends to take some time off and complete some projects around his house near Athens. He lives with his wife, Pam, and his stepdaughter, Desiree.
His advice for young officers or those considering going into police work is to treat people the way the officers would want to be treated.
'Probably 95 percent of the officers do the best they can, and they deserve all the credit,' he said. 'They're dedicated to their job and the people they serve, and to receive some unwarranted criticism is, I think, unfair because it's a very tough job.'
Caption: '.. It was a fun, enjoyable time - and a lot less stress. And I was not sued once as a patrol officer or sergeant.' - Bill Rouse , recalling the fondest part of his career
Plaintiff's attorneys to see ISP report
State Journal-Register, The (Springfield, IL) - January 22, 2008
Author/Byline: SARAH ANTONACCI STAFF WRITER [email protected]
Section: CITY/STATE
Page: 15
A federal judge ruled last week that attorneys for a man suing the city of Springfield over an alleged illegal search of his house in March 2005 will have access to a much-sought Illinois State Police report.
U.S. Magistrate Judge Byron Cudmore read the 2,300-page report himself before deciding whether the lawyers for Larry Washington would have access to its contents documenting the findings of a state police investigation into alleged misconduct within the Springfield Police Department.
Former police chief Don Kliment asked for the investigation, a summary of which was leaked to the media in the fall of 2006. The report has never been made public, though The State Journal-Register and other media outlets, city aldermen and other groups have sought access.
City officials and the union representing Springfield police officers have objected to release of the report. They say, among other things, that releasing the information could identify confidential sources, damage investigations and reveal investigative techniques.
Cudmore is giving Washington's attorneys an edited version of the report. Identities of confidential sources, Crime Stoppers informants and some other information will not be included. The report also is subject to a protective order, meaning the lawyers cannot disclose information from it.
Washington and Jennifer Jenkins are suing the city, along with former police detectives Paul Carpenter and Jim Graham, former Lt. Rickey Davis, former deputy chief Bill Rouse , and current officers Steve Welsh and J.T. Wooldridge.
Washington and Jenkins accuse the officers of a conspiracy by the defendants to violate the couple's civil rights, unlawful search and false arrest.
In raiding Washington's house on Guemes Court, police allegedly found cocaine in a graham cracker box.
Graham and Carpenter sought the search warrant on grounds that they had found cocaine residue inside plastic bags in Washington's garbage. However, state police crime lab testing turned up no such residue, and the charges were dropped.
Caption: Larry Washington and Jennifer Jenkins are suing the city and several former and current police personnel for conspiracy to violate the couple's civil rights, unlawful search and false arrest. (Pictured: Larry Washington)
Theilen: Caldwell pages 'bland' / Two other aldermen agree it will have little impact on chief nomination decision
State Journal-Register, The (Springfield, IL) - June 22, 2007
Author/Byline: CHRIS WETTERICH STAFF WRITER
Section: CITY/STATE
Page: 9
Three aldermen who have read the three pages pertaining to Springfield police chief nominee Ralph Caldwell that are in a lengthy Illinois State Police report said Thursday there's little in them that would affect their decision whether to confirm him.
'It's nothing I had not already found out on my own,' Ward 8 Ald. Kris Theilen said. 'There's no smoking gun. It's really pretty bland.'
But Ward 9 Ald. Steve Dove questioned whether the administration of Mayor Tim Davlin had given aldermen access to everything in the 2,300-page report concerning Caldwell. What's in a 30-page summary that was made public last year may actually be more useful, he said.
'There are issues in the 30-page report that aren't in these three pages,' Dove said, adding that aldermen have a right to see the entire report.
The administration acknowledged Wednesday that the three pages - summarizing investigators' interview of Caldwell - do not include every instance where he is mentioned.
Because the police officers' union has threatened to sue if the entire report is released, aldermen had to come to city hall to see the three pages. They were not allowed to take notes, and a city employee was in the room as they read, Ward 5 Ald. Sam Cahnman said.
He, too, said the report had 'nothing really new' in it but that it did give him some ideas as to what questions he would ask Caldwell, either at a one-on-one meeting or at a scheduled public hearing on his appointment Tuesday.
Theilen declined to discuss the contents of the three pages, and Cahnman said he could not remember many of the details, although he said they described an interview investigators did with Caldwell regarding complaints by former police Sgt. Ron Vose.
A memo Vose wrote to the Springfield Police Department's top brass alleging misconduct and rules violations sparked the state police investigation in early 2006. Vose resigned and is suing just-retired police chief Don Kliment and deputy chief Bill Rouse in federal court for retaliation. Caldwell took over as acting chief on Thursday.
'It related to what Caldwell had to say about this,' Cahnman said of the pages aldermen can review. 'It's difficult to follow because there were so many redactions.'
The 30-page summary briefly discusses Caldwell's 2002-03 tenure as deputy chief for the investigations division, which included the now-disbanded major-case unit. Caldwell never before had served in the investigations division.
'Due to his lack of experience, Caldwell asserted he was circumvented by the lieutenants and sergeants of investigations, but he stated he was fine with letting them run their units,' one passage in the summary says.
Cahnman said the newly examined pages say the same thing - 'he didn't have the experience, and he was letting the division run itself. It was the same kind of explanation that we'd heard before. It's something I want to talk to Caldwell about.'
The leadership skills of Caldwell, a 27-year veteran of the local force, are foremost on the mind of Ward 2 Ald. Gail Simpson, who had not yet read the three pages Thursday. While she concedes Caldwell is a nice man, she was less than enthralled after their meeting.
'It's not so much his role in the report. For me, it's the fact that there are serious problems in the police department as evidenced by that report. I need to know what he's going to do about them,' Simpson said, adding that she, too, still wants to see the entire report.
The mayor's office has said Caldwell has not had access to the report, either, so he can't comment on it. Simpson wonders how that can be when he was assistant chief the last four years.
'I don't get a sense he's a strong manager,' Simpson said.
'If everybody likes you, you're probably not doing a real good job,' she added. 'If you're the supervisor, you don't let your staff circumvent you. You don't say, 'I don't know what you do, just do it.' That abdicates authority.'
As a part of his decision-making process, Theilen said he's exploring what constraints Caldwell may have been under as deputy chief for investigations. He noted that during Caldwell's tenure with the investigations division, the police chief was John Harris, someone brought in from outside the department who was highly unpopular with many rank-and-file officers and their supervisors.
'Both supporters and detractors of Ralph are telling me that under former Chief Harris, you couldn't make decisions,' Theilen said. 'It was his way or the highway. Anybody who wanted to stay employed did it John Harris' way.'
Dove said rank-and-file officers' opinions carry a lot of weight when it comes to his confirmation vote and that the 'general consensus is that .. Caldwell is a good guy, nice guy, easy to work with in terms of his overall personality.'
Clean up police problems now
State Journal-Register, The (Springfield, IL) - October 18, 2006
Section: EDITORIAL
Page: 6
REVELATIONS from the Illinois State Police investigation of alleged wrongdoing in the Springfield Police Department raise two major and troubling questions:
1. What in the world does it take to be fired from the Springfield Police Department?
2. Why does Mayor Tim Davlin's administration insist on shrouding the public's business in secrecy - in this case even refusing to share important information with the members of the Springfield City Council?
THE STATE POLICE, at the behest of Springfield Police Chief Don Kliment, began an investigation of police detectives Jim Graham and Paul Carpenter. The investigation was instigated by a detailed memo from former Sgt. Ron Vose, who complained of misconduct by Graham and Carpenter.
Vose, a 27-year member of the force, felt so mistreated for bringing the alleged misdeeds to light that he quit the force. He also filed a federal lawsuit against Kliment and Deputy Chief Bill Rouse, alleging they retaliated against him for exposing Graham and Carpenter.
The state police developed a 2,300-page report addressing each of Vose's complaints. The 30-page summary of the report (available at www.sj-r.com) paints a frightening picture of Carpenter and Graham breaking rules - and possibly some laws - with abandon. The report also details that five supervisors did a pretty pathetic job of supervising the rogue detectives.
SOME OF THE allegations are embarrassing; some are quite serious. The detectives' failure to follow the rule of law has already had implications in the judicial system. Among the most serious allegations was the falsification of information for a search warrant and cutting corners in other areas in order to get the bad guys at any cost.
The problem with that approach is that a good defense attorney then has reason to actually get the bad guy off. The other problem is that the good guys are supposed to act like good guys and follow the law. Disregard for the law led to charges being dropped in one drug case and the release of a man from prison. Imagine how many other defense attorneys are wondering whether their clients' cases should be reviewed if Carpenter and Graham were involved in the investigations.
These guys have been on paid leave for many months. It's an insult to the taxpayers for this situation to continue. Again, we ask, what does it take to fire a cop in Springfield?
One would think the mayor might take the lead in demanding some action on bringing the Graham and Carpenter situation to a conclusion. But it appears Davlin's concern now is with who 'leaked' the state police summary. The mayor has ordered the city police to investigate who provided copies of the summary to the aldermen.
WARD 3 ALD. Frank Kunz called the investigation sad. 'I don't agree with the bureaucracy that everything needs to be secret. The taxpayers paid the bill. The taxpayers should know what's going on,' said Kunz.
Bravo. We're with Kunz on this one. In fact, it seems absurd to us that the aldermen were not immediately provided with the state police report, especially since it includes information concerning Lt. Rickey Davis. Mayor Davlin has asked the city council to approve a financial settlement with Davis to settle a racial discrimination lawsuit. Some of the aldermen understandably refused to vote for the measure without seeing the report.
The Davlin administration has been consistent in wanting to do business in secret. We usually admire consistency, but not in this case. The state police report demonstrated some serious problems exist in the city police department. We need to clean up the mess, not cover it up.
City police rapped / Officers, bosses found to have broken rules
State Journal-Register, The (Springfield, IL) - October 17, 2006
Author/Byline: JAYETTE BOLINSKI STAFF WRITER
Edition: M2
Section: NEWS
Page: 1
An Illinois State Police investigation of allegations of improper conduct by two Springfield police detectives concludes that not only did Jim Graham and Paul Carpenter violate a variety of departmental rules, so did five of their supervisors.
The five - Deputy Chief Bill Rouse , who oversees the criminal investigations division, Lt. Dave Dodson, Lt. Rickey Davis, Lt. Doug Williamson and now-retired Sgt. Tim Young, all former supervisors in the division - failed to properly oversee the detectives, the report concludes.
The full text of the report's investigative summary can be found on The State Journal-Register's Web site, www.sj-r.com.
The 30-page document includes a docket of department rules allegedly violated by the two detectives and five supervisors. It does not indicate that any of the seven engaged in criminal wrongdoing.
The summary posted on the newspaper's Web site has been redacted to protect identities of confidential informants and others who became ensnared in the investigation through various relationships.
Springfield Police Chief Don Kliment last year asked the state police to conduct an investigation after receiving a memo from former Sgt. Ron Vose alleging misconduct by Graham and Carpenter. The investigation went from June 2, 2005, until June 28, 2006, and the report addresses each allegation Vose outlined in his memo. The newspaper does not have a copy of the whole report.
However, the summary outlines a variety of founded and unfounded accusations, finger-pointing and conflicting statements not only by Springfield police officers but by others in law enforcement as well.
Carpenter, a 13-year veteran, has been on paid administrative leave since last October, and Graham, who has been on the force for nearly 15 years, has been on paid leave since January, pending the outcome of the inquiry. Kliment reportedly has been making his way through the 2,300-page report, but when he may make disciplinary decisions is not known.
Carpenter and Graham have declined to comment publicly about the probe, but the summary shows they defended themselves to investigators. Among other things, they said many of their actions were approved by supervisors and that other allegations were untrue or exaggerated.
Vose, a 27-year department veteran who supervised the drug unit, quit the force in January, and in February filed a federal lawsuit against Kliment and Rouse, saying they retaliated against him after he brought the allegations to their attention.
Among allegations outlined in the summary:
* Carpenter and Graham conducted investigations involving drug activity without forwarding the information to the commanding officer of the investigations division.
* Carpenter and Graham utilized and paid confidential sources without preparing the required paperwork.
* Carpenter and Graham engaged in police work outside the department's jurisdiction when they conducted 'trash pulls' - searches of residential garbage in attempts to obtain evidence to justify search warrants - and when they obtained an arrest warrant against an attempted murder suspect for burglarizing a Rochester church.
* Graham did not take appropriate action when he allegedly saw Carpenter receive a gun from a known felon and when he he saw cocaine at an informant's home.
Carpenter also is accused of receiving the gun, of reporting a fictitious address as the location where he had gotten it and of not taking action when he saw the crack cocaine.
* Carpenter allegedly forged a time card for community service hours a confidential source was to complete at St. John's Breadline. Carpenter later argued with a Sangamon County probation supervisor regarding the falsified time sheet, according to allegations in the summary.
* Graham testified at a murder trial that he had not completed a report of an interview with a witness, then revealed he had found a report of the interview in his personal folder.
* Graham, while attempting to locate two homicide suspects in Mississippi, was seen by another detective in bed with a female informant in Graham's hotel room, the summary says. Graham, who said the incident was innocent, allegedly did not complete any reports regarding his investigation in Mississippi.
* Graham on two occasions drove his squad car to crime scenes after having consumed alcohol, according to allegations in the summary. At one scene, he reportedly was ordered by a supervisor to return to the police department to work on affidavits. At the other, he was accused of being drunk and walking through a homicide victim's blood. Graham denied to investigators that he had been intoxicated at crime scenes. He also told state police that he had 'stepped on a little corner of blood' at a murder scene but did not track it throughout the house.
* Rouse, Dodson, Davis, Williamson and Young allegedly failed as supervisors in a variety of ways, including failing to ensure that major case detectives documented their payments to confidential sources, that major case detectives notified the drug unit when they turned up drug information and that the detectives discontinued 'trash pulls' when ordered to do so.
Caption: 1. Carpenter / 2. Graham
Sherrock – polistina –
poe – Sherman – burge – fs – ifb
- nudo/shg – oratech – APL/dvm – Heidi
britt/sherrock – Sherman board – krista sherrock –
clatfelter - mumaw
June 22, 2009
May God bless you and your family in this time of sorrow.
~
Robert @ Ross Polistina,
Sherman, Illinois
June 22, 2009
Ronny and Bobby--Our thoughts and prayers are with you.
~
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Kirby and Family,
Springfield, Illinois
fromDennis Delaney <[email protected]>
dateSat, Jan 31, 2009 at 5:05 PM
subjectPOLISTINA - POE - $ - CAPITOL GROUP/IBT - COUNTY HIGHWAY DEPT -
mailed-bygmail.com
hide details Jan 31 Reply
Polistina
Poe -- 50th Mr. and Mrs. Donald L. Poe of R.R. 5 will celebrate their 50th wedding anniversary with an open house from 2 to 4:30 p.m. Dec. 7 at Sherman United Methodist Church in Sherman.
Poe and the former Sarah A. Grass were united in marriage Dec. 9, 1936, at Williamsville Christian Church parsonage. Mr. Poe is a retired farmer. Mrs. Poe is a homemaker. They are the parents of four children,
1. Mrs. Marie Patterson of Cantrall,
2. Joyce Polistina of Williamsville,
3. Raymond Poe and [ILREP and farm bureau, cogfa, wife at ioicc, etc.]
4. Mrs. Kay Sapp, both of Springfield. [leonard sapp – fam]
They have 12 grandchildren and one great-grandchild
SPRINGFIELD - Anthony Joseph 'Tony' Yuskavich, 86, of Springfield died Thursday, Jan. 29, 2009, at St. John's Hospital. Tony was born on March 20, 1922, in Springfield, the son of John and Stella Kuizen Yuskavich. He married Helen Follis on Sept. 7, 1946, in Springfield; she preceded him in death in 1973. He married Mary Polistina on July 2, 1974, in Las Vegas; she preceded him in death in 1993.
Tony graduated from Lanphier High School. He proudly served his country in the United States Army. He was employed by Fiatallis and, in his free time, enjoyed going to the racetrack.He was also preceded in death by his parents and two brothers, George and John.
He is survived by a stepson, Ron (wife, Anna) Polistina of Farmersville; his special nieces, Kathy (husband, John) Plough, Pat Towner, Barb Devine and Mary Ann (husband, Kerry) Wycoff; in addition to several other nieces and nephews; several great-nieces and -nephews; and several great-great-nieces and -nephews.
Graveside ceremonies will be held at 10 a.m. Monday, Feb. 2, 2009, at Camp Butler National Cemetery, with military honors provided by the United States Department of Defense and the Interveterans Burial Detail of Sangamon County.
Memorial contributions may be made to the American Cancer Society, 687 E. Linton Ave., Springfield, IL 62703.
Investing for Illinois / Treasurer's office feeling the pressure
State Journal-Register, The (Springfield, IL) - Wednesday, January 23, 2008
The uncertainty in world markets has created a ripple effect that reached early Tuesday into a third-floor room in a state government office building on Jefferson Street.
That's where a handful of state Treasurer Alexi Giannoulias' employees trade and invest billions of dollars on behalf of local governments and the state's general fund portfolio.
In that room, the busiest part of every weekday happens during the first 20 or 30 minutes, starting promptly at 7 a.m.
By 7:30 a.m. Tuesday, for instance, the employees had invested $6.6 billion by trading U.S. Treasury repurchase agreements and U.S. government agency repurchase agreements.
'We just spent more money than most people will in their entire lives,' said Mark Polistina , portfolio manager for the treasurer's office. 'I shouldn't say 'spent.' We invested it.'
He, Sue Roth and Garry Dierkes shared the duties of making a flurry of phone calls, tapping on computer keyboards and saying such things as: 'Ninety-five. You're on the board.'
'I don't expect today to be a very fun day,' Polistina said just before 7 a.m.
Later, he explained that he meant he didn't think rates for U.S. Treasury securities would be very good Tuesday. And they weren't.
His prediction was based in part on the knowledge that foreign equity markets, especially in Asia, had dropped between 5 percent and 8 percent overnight.
'When people perceive issues in the economy .. people flock to U.S. Treasuries,' he said. 'They buy quality. The highest-quality security you can own is a U.S. Treasury.'
As demand increases for U.S. Treasury securities, their yield decreases, Polistina said.
Yield on a two-year Treasury note, for instance, dropped 25 basis points from Friday's close to Tuesday morning, when it was 2.10 percent. A year ago, yield on a two-year Treasury note was 4.91 percent.
Such declining numbers translate into lower earnings on investments for local governments, which pool their money into short-term investments called The Illinois Funds, and for the state's general fund portfolio.
Governments use their investment earnings for a variety of purposes, such as improving schools and transportation.
'There are going to be drops in the rates that we're able to get from the marketplace, and we want to make sure we're doing everything we can,' Giannoulias said in an interview later Tuesday.
'It's tough for us to control the market. But we're going to keep on being safe, liquid and as aggressive as possible,' he said, adding that the three priorities are in that order, with 'safe' topping the list.
Shortly after Tuesday's early-morning trading session ended, Polistina read - on a big-screen TV tuned to the CNBC channel and on a computer - that the Federal Reserve had cut a key interest rate by 0.75 percent.
'What we saw today was the biggest cut since 1984,' Giannoulias said later. 'That's going to have a significant impact on our investments and our revenue going forward, so it is a concern.'
Area stocks - Stock 52-week high Tuesday close ;Ameren Corp. $55.00 $45.78 Archer Daniels Midland 47.33 40.19 Deere & Co. 94.77 83.15 Caterpillar 87.00 63.82 Horace Mann 23.23 17.09
Caption: Mark Polistina , portfolio manager for the Illinois treasurer's office, pauses during early trading Tuesday. By 7:30 a.m., he and his fellow employees had invested $6.6 billion in state and local government money.
James Polistina (capitol group= IBT)
SHERMAN - James Polistina , 73, of Sherman died Thursday, May 16, 2002, at Memorial Medical Center.
He was born Sept. 23, 1928, in Sherman, the son of Carmen and Lena M. Gazza Polistina .
Mr. Polistina worked for Capitol Group and retired from the
Sangamon County Highway Department in 1990.
He was a member of St. John Vianney Church, Sherman Athletic Club and the Sherman VFW.
Survivors: three daughters, Lisa (husband, Mark) Pell of Bullard, Texas,
Laura (husband, Paul) Carpenter of Chatham
and Linda Polistina of Sherman;
a son, Michael Polistina of Sherman;
eight grandchildren; a sister, Rose (husband, Harold) Bryant of Frenchburg, Ky.;
three brothers, Amato (wife, Doris), Robert and Ross Polistina , all of Sherman; and several aunts, uncles, nieces, nephews and cousins.
OBITUARIES - State Journal-Register, The (Springfield, IL) - Sunday, December 23, 2001
Nina P. Stender - SPRINGFIELD - Nina P. Stender, 61, of Springfield died Wednesday, Dec. 19, 2001, at her home.
She was born April 9, 1940, in Springfield, the daughter of John and Laura McCormick Gust. She married Jack Stender in 1967 in Springfield; he preceded her in death in 1997.
Mrs. Stender was a data input operator for the state of Illinois and also had worked several years at the Georgian Restaurant, the Bar-B-Que Drive Inn and St. John's Hospital in housekeeping. She was a member of St. Cabrini Catholic Church and the Ladies Auxiliary VFW Post 10302 Northenders.
Survivors: a son, Jack W. 'Jay' Stender II (wife, Linda Polistina ) of Springfield; a daughter, Barbara Stender (husband, Lester Prier) of Springfield and Mount Pulaski; five grandchildren; two brothers, John T. (wife, Sue) Gust of Springfield and William J. (wife, Karen) Gust of Missouri; five sisters, Margaret M. Gust of Florida, and Mary Jane Shimkus, Ruth E. (husband, Ted) Quintard, Lois M. Gust and Kathryn E. (husband, Grant) Adams, all of Springfield; and several nieces and nephews.
State Journal-Register, The (Springfield, IL) - Thursday, November 9, 2000
Rocco Polistina - SHERMAN - Rocco Polistina , 67, of Suddith, Ky., formerly of Sherman, died Thursday, Nov. 7, 2000, at Veteran's Hospital in St. Louis. He was born Dec. 4, 1932, in Sherman, the son of Carmine 'Chick' and Lena Polistina .
Mr. Polistina retired from Fiatallis after 30 years of service. He was a U.S. Army veteran of the Korean War and a member of St. Julia Catholic Church in Owingsville, Ky.
Survivors: four brothers, Amato 'Mott' (wife, Doris), Jimmy (wife, Shirley), Robert and Ross Polistina , all of Sherman; a sister, Rose (husband, Harold) Bryant of Suddith; and several nieces and nephews.
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Reply |Dennis Delaney
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show details Feb 3 Reply
problems w/ capitol group trucks when parked at pool center and movie theater, see paper notes from recordings. note; ibt, see others in neighborhood, moughan et al.
fromDennis Delaney <[email protected]>
dateThu, Jan 25, 2007 at 3:43 PM
subjectpotential defendants - shg football - ken leonard coach
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2006 Varsity Football Roster
1Stephen Hott 57Dillon Thomas
2Rob Mosher 58Jacob Wilmot
4Thomas Kennedy 60Kevin Dallavis
5Gary Wilson 61Casey Daley
6David Kavish 63Sean Johnson
7Bobby Brenneisen 64Nick Theole
8Dominic Walton 65Derek French
9Mike Stieren 66Dan Schafer
10Kevin Klemm67Jeremy Bertoni
11Shaughn Reid 68Nick Varney
13John Lantz70Matt Mast
15Alex Kararo 72Shawn Young
16Joe Marrin 73Tim Stevens
17Tim Dondanville74Jeremy Adams
18Grant Anderson 75Matt Israel
21Brian Rimini 77Chad Rushing
24Chris Peterson 79Zach Higdon
25Josh Gossard80Victor Kimberlin
27Adrian Cave 81Ryan Hillsted
28Scott Kren 82Brian Fitzgerald
33Mike Edwards 83Adam Nudo
37Keenan Gilpin 84Brandon Dixon
38Joe Geiger 85Donovan Kavish
39Jack Duncan 88Tim Fitzgerald
40Mitch Murphy 90Tanner Sommer
43Leonard Hubbard 95Matt Magowan
44Andrew Collings 99Jared Dodd
48Tommy Jennings 9Tim Capestrain
50Aaron Peterman 25Ryan Butler
51Matt Selvaggio 37Steve Begando
52Kelby Jasmon 52Mitch Luster
53Blake Pranger60John Felchner
54Zack Moore 61Mike Loscher
55Matt Sartore63Zach Boente
56Jason Moore 75Jon O'Daniel
2006 Freshman Football Roster
2Eric Williamson 60Brian Johnson
5Tyrone Lee 61Ryan Crabtree
6David Miller 63Christian Jordan
8Nick Guzzardo 66Casey Bova
13Brian Haley 67Tony Capellin
16Cody Needham 70Dominic Antonacci
15Zach Rockford 71Nate Jennings
17Mason Alford 73Jordan Leaf
18Alex Hamlin 72Brandon Freitag
24Steven Cummins 74Evan Kararo
27Tyler Casson 77Marlandez Harris
38Tommy Gullo 78Jacob Hupp
39Clay Sherrock 81Jake Ward
43Jeff Bartel 82Joey Redpath
48Nick Lanzotti 83Sam Shearer
44Matt Franklin84Eddie Hubbard
50Jarred Adams 85Max Sherman
52John Root 88Jake Smith
55Griffin Davis 99Sean Richie
58Matt Anderson 95Sam Reents
fromDennis Delaney <[email protected]>
dateThu, Mar 26, 2009 at 4:25 PM
subjectCatherine Sue Kalb - obit - ORATECH - APL - sherman - sherrock - sherman city council - dvm waggin tails - see other dvm - minder et al - see also chips - saviano
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Kalb, Catherine S.
SPRINGFIELD - Catherine Sue Kalb, 54, of Springfield died peacefully with her family by her side at 8:13 a.m. Tuesday, March 24, 2009, at St. John's Hospice.
She was born Sept. 16, 1954, in Centralia, the daughter of Bob and Carol Smith Sherrock.
She was preceded in death by her mother.
She was a resident of Springfield for most of her life. She was a dental technician for 25 years with Oratech Laboratories.
She was a member of Animal Protective League and loved animals.
Surviving are a son, Charles (Heather) Kalb of Springfield; father,
Bob Sherrockof Williamsville;
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two grandchildren, Hunter and Karle Kalb; brothers, Michael (Christine) Sherrock of Springfield and Ronald (Heidi) Sherrock of Williamsville; an aunt, Marilyn Oehmke; and two nephews, Clay and Kenyon Sherrock.
A memorial gathering will be held from 1-4 p.m. Saturday, March 28, 2009, at Staab Funeral Home.
Memorials may be made to a charity of donor's choice.
Sherman considering options for new park
State Journal-Register, The (Springfield, IL) - Friday, March 6, 2009
Author/Byline: AMANDA REAVY, THE STATE JOURNAL-REGISTER
Section: homepage
SHERMAN - The Sherman Parks and Recreation Advisory Committee is asking residents what facilities and features they want included in a potential new 40-acre community park.
The seven-member committee has set up a Facebook group that residents can join to submit their ideas. It also put together a form for the public to rank the top five amenities they'd like to see in a park in the village of about 3,700.
The committee will in turn compile a feasibility study for the new park, said village board member Jeff Mitchell, the committee's chair.
The feasibility study will include design options, layout and cost estimates, he said.
Mitchell and Village President Trevor Clatfelter emphasized that the village board has made no commitment or decision to build a new park, and that the committee was assembled to develop a plan for a possible facility.
Any decision on a park and its funding would be brought before the community for consideration and approval, Clatfelter said.
The committee also is collecting ideas for a new veterans memorial and gateway park that's being developed on Sherman's north side.
Mitchell noted that the desire for more parks ranked high on a village-wide survey distributed in late 2007 to update Sherman's comprehensive plan. The survey results showed nearly 43 percent of residents said they were willing to pay for more parks.
Parks and recreation opportunities also were identified as issues needing improvement during Sherman's participation in sessions for a Western Illinois University program called MAPPING (Management and Planning Program Involving Non-metropolitan Groups) the Future of Your Community, he said.
'Sherman's growing pretty rapidly, and we're at a point where our park system right now isn't sufficient to support the population and the amount of young families that we have,' Clatfelter said.
He said one potential park site is a 40-acre tract in the area of the Old Tipton Estates subdivision by the village water tower that would be available for sale if funding becomes available.
For now, he said the village wants to hear residents' 'wish lists' for such a park.
To collect ideas, Clatfelter appointed six community members - John Bryant, Brad Davis, Steve Mumaw, Krista Sherrock , Dan Underwood and Brad Welker - as well as Mitchell, who is a landscape architect, to the parks and advisory committee.
Clatfelter said he asked the committee to come up with park features, such as baseball and softball diamonds that can be used as tournament sites, that can draw people into the village and spur economic development.
'We kind of want to work backwards off of the premise of, 'You figure out how many baseball diamonds are needed to host one of these good-sized tournaments and all the other amenities in there as well,' he said.
Clatfelter and Mitchell also noted that public input boosts a community's chances of receiving park grants from the Illinois Department of Natural Resources and other agencies.
The committee meets the first Monday of every month at 7 p.m. at the Sherman Village Hall, and the public is invited to attend. For those unable to, Mumaw has set up a Facebook group that people can join and submit their ideas.
Sherrock said suggestions the committee has received so far include baseball diamonds, soccer fields, bocce ball courts, a community center and a waking path.
The committee will consider these ideas, examine the costs and logistics involved and create a plan for the park.
'We're looking for a date somewhere around early summer to come back with a first draft plan on the park,' Mitchell said.
Once the plan is complete, it will go to the village board's public buildings, grounds, parks and recreation committee and then on to the full board.
Amanda Reavy can be reached at 788-1525.
How to contribute
Those who want to submit the top five amenities they'd like to see in a Sherman park can pick up a form at the Sherman Village Hall, 401 St. John Drive. Residents also can join the Sherman Parks and Recreation Advisory Committee's group on Facebook to share their ideas. To do this, Facebook users must log in and type 'Residents for Sherman Parks' in the search line. Once at the page, users may join the group and write their ideas in the comments section.
Many local school board, village seats up for election
State Journal-Register, The (Springfield, IL) - Thursday, January 29, 2009
Sherman: Three seats are open on the village board. Incumbents Ron Hickman, Kevin Schultz and Nancy Zibutis are running, along with challengers Tony Horner
and Krista Sherrock
APL OFFERS STRAY-CAT NEUTERING SERVICES
State Journal-Register, The (Springfield, IL) - Tuesday, May 2, 2000
Section: LOCAL
Page: 28
The Animal Protective League of Springfield and Sangamon County will observe 'Be Kind to Animals Week,' Sunday through May 13 by offering an opportunity for limited-income area residents to obtain stray-cat neutering procedures for only $10.
At the same time, APL also will offer a rabies inoculation for $5.
An unspayed cat, her mate and all of their offspring, producing two litters per year, with 2.8 surviving kittens per litter, can total 11,801 in just five years.
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Five local veterinarians, including the Waggin' Tails vet, Heidi Britt- Sherrock , are volunteering to neuter the cats brought to Waggin' Tails during 'Be Kind to Animals Week.'
Appointments must be made for the neuterings. Those interested in taking advantage of this effort should call 753-2141 today through Saturday from noon to 4 p.m.
Other veterinarians taking part in the effort are Richard Speck of Parkway Veterinary Clinic, Thomas Powell of Animal Medical Clinic, Rina Ward of Brewer Animal Hospital and William Wright of Capitol Illini Veterinary.
Because of the additional work involved on the part of Waggin' Tails staff members, the shelter will not be open to the public during the week of May 8-12.
Normal Saturday hours, 1 to 5 p.m., will resume May 13.
The Animal Protective League of Springfield and Sangamon County and its no-kill Waggin' Tails Shelter is an organization dedicated to caring for sick, stray and/or abused animals.
TITLE: PEOPLE IN THE NEWS
State Journal-Register, The (Springfield, IL) - Sunday, June 18, 1995
HEIDI BRITT- SHERROCK , daughter of Mrs. Wanda Britt of Williamsville, has graduated from the University of Illinois College of Veterinary Medicine with a doctor of veterinary medicine degree.
TITLE: ANNIVERSARIES
State Journal-Register, The (Springfield, IL) - Tuesday, December 3, 1996
Sherrock -40th Mr. and Mrs. Eugene J. Sherrock Sr. of Williamsville celebrated their 40th wedding anniversary with a family dinner.
Sherrock and the former Barbara Jane Schmidt were married Nov. 23, 1956.
Mr. Sherrock is retired from Carolina Freight Co.
Mrs. Sherrock is retired from the insurance business.
They are parents of three children, Joe and John Sherrock of Williamsville and Mike Sherrock of Las Vegas, Nev. There are six grandchildren.
TITLE: WEDDINGS
State Journal-Register, The (Springfield, IL) - Sunday, October 6, 1996
Sherrock -Furlong Krista Gae Furlong of Sherman and John Carroll Sherrock of Williamsville were married at 4 p.m. Sept. 7 at First United Methodist Church by the Rev.
Jerry E. Furlong.
The bride is the daughter of Jerry and Sharon Furlong of Sherman.
The groom is the son of Eugene Sr. and Barb Sherrock of Williamsville.
Serving as maid of honor was Kristine Callas. Jennifer Rauch, Judy Anderson, Ginger Payne, Sara Crowe, Michal Backes and Sabina Backes were bridesmaids. Flower girl was Jordan Kellerstrass. Ringbearer was Jesse Brenden Backes.
Kyle Johnson served as best man. Mike Harris, Joe Sherrock ,
Bill Dowis,
Bill Howard, Mike Sherrock and Joseph Sherrock were groomsmen. Josh and Jacob Sherrock were ushers.
A reception was held at the American Center.
The bride is a graduate of Williamsville High School and Millikin University. She is employed by the Department of Human Rights.
The groom is a graduate of Williamsville High School and Lincoln Land Community College. He is employed by ALL TRI R Inc.
Black-Dees Tracey Kay Dees and Harvey Richard Black, both of Williamsville, were united in marriage at 4:30 p.m. May 10. The Revs. Dan and Gay Crede officiated the ceremony at United Methodist Church in Williamsville.
The bride is the daughter of Wesley and Beverly Dees of Sherman. The bridegroom is the son of Harvey R. and Shirley Black of Williamsville.
Serving as matron of honor was Gina Peters, with Dawn Thompson, Sheila Rock, Cindy Jacques and Mary Rock serving as bridesmaids. Flower girl was Veronica Camille.
Best man was Stanley Kitchens. Groomsmen were Ron Camille, Mike Sherrock , Terry Casson and John Black. Mike and Pat Dees served as ushers, with Joey Sanzenbacher serving as ringbearer.
A reception was held at the Sherman Athletic Club.
Both are graduates of Williamsville High School. The bride is employed by Franklin Life Insurance Co.
The bridegroom is employed by Perry Braughton Trucking Co.
The couple will reside in Williamsville.
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