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  • 7
    Dec
    2011
    3:39pm, EST

    Blagojevich gets 14 years in prison despite plea for mercy

    M. Spencer Green / AP

    Former Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich leaves the federal building with his wife Patti, right, in Chicago, Wednesday, Dec. 7, 2011, after being sentenced for 14 years on 18 corruption counts, including trying to auction off President Barack Obama's old Senate seat.

    Frank Polich / Getty Images

    Patti Blagojevich, wife of former Illinois Governor Rod Blagojevich, sheds a tear as she listens to him address the media at the Dirksen Federal Building Dec. 7, 2011 in Chicago, Illinois.

    msnbc.com wire services report:

    CHICAGO -- Rod Blagojevich, the ousted Illinois governor whose three-year battle against criminal charges became a national spectacle, was sentenced to 14 years in prison Wednesday, one of the stiffest penalties imposed for corruption in a state with a history of crooked politics.

    Blagojevich's 18 convictions included allegations of trying to leverage his power to appoint someone to President Barack Obama's vacated Senate seat to raise campaign cash or land a high-paying job.

    Charles Rex Arbogast / AP

    Former Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich, left, departs his home with his wife Patti in Chicago on Dec. 7, for the second day of his sentencing hearing on 18 corruption counts, including trying to to auction off President Barack Obama's old Senate seat.

    Charles Rex Arbogast / AP

    Former Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich departs his home in Chicago, Wednesday, on Dec. 7, for the second day of his sentencing hearing on 18 corruption counts, including trying to to auction off President Barack Obama's old Senate seat.

    Former Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich left federal court a disgraced man, headed for 14 years in federal prison, convicted of 17 counts of bribery and attempted extortion. NBC's Ron Allen reports.

     

     

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  • 22
    Sep
    2011
    11:00pm, EDT

    Asian Carp tacos? Illinois launches anti-hunger program

    Nam Y. Huh / AP

    Chef Tim Creehan, right, and chef Philippe Parola prepare food at Christ the King Jesuit College Preparatory High School on Thursday, Sept. 22, 2011, in Chicago. Launch of a campaign by the Illinois Department of Natural Resources to try and change the fish's image and teach people how to cook the ultra-bony meat.

    Nam Y. Huh / AP

    Students line up for the taste of Asian carp at Christ the King Jesuit College Preparatory High School on Thursday, Sept. 22, 2011, in Chicago.

    AP reports:

    CHICAGO — Minced Asian carp tacos? How about spaghetti with carp sauce?

    Illinois officials hope serving the invasive species on a plate is the creative solution to two big problems: controlling the plankton-gobbling carp from entering the Great Lakes and record numbers of people facing hunger. Full story.

    1 comment

    great solution- hope it works

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  • 20
    Sep
    2011
    8:04pm, EDT

    David Proeber / AP

    Kimberly Smith, left, and Stephanie Reed, student nurses at Illinois State University's Mennonite College of Nursing in Normal, Ill., examine one of the school's new high-fidelity patient simulators in the nursing simulation laboratory. State and local officials dedicated the new $2.7 million laboratory with an open house Monday morning. ISU President Al Boman says the growing nursing school has 418 students and 48 full-time faculty members.

    Nursing students practice with high-fidelity patient simulators

    By Rich Shulman

    I get a chuckle out of efforts to make robots more lifelike. No doubt this high-tech nursing simulation laboratory is a step forward, but how do they practice their bedside manner?

    7 comments

    Think looks like "Fire Marshal Bill"

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    Explore related topics: health, illinois, normal, nursing-simulation-laboratory, mennonite-college-of-nursing
  • 21
    Aug
    2011
    11:16am, EDT

    The state fair: Through a plastic camera lens

    By Jonathan Woods, msnbc.com

    The smell of fried food is in the air, the big wheel on the midway is turning, Labor Day is approaching and kids are heading back to school as the state fair gets under way across America.

    Along with the families and friends setting out to enjoy the festivals are the photographers that document them. And after six years covering the Illinois State Fair, photographer Justin Fowler set out to capture the essence of the event differently than he's done before. This time, his editor at the State Journal-Register challenged him to shoot with a crummy plastic camera lens.

    Justin L. Fowler / The State Journal-Register

    "Everyone's A Winner" A fairgoer makes his way through the crowds along Central Avenue with his winnings from a midway game in Springfield at the 2011 Illinois State Fair.

    Fowler's thoughts about the fair brought me right back to my days as a young child climbing on farm equipment, walking through the dairy barn, and wolfing down foot-long hot dogs at a Guinness world-record pace. He said:

    Memories are fragments captured from our lives and then tucked away to reminisce upon in a rocking chair with generations to come. Never perfect nor complete, they represent a mere sliver of a bigger picture.

    Like our memories, these photographs capture just a snippet of information. But when combined with our own mental pictures of the 2011 Illinois State Fair, each serves as a reminder of the bits and pieces that make the fair special.

    That's the unique power of photography. It instantly can transport you back to a specific moment and recall each sensation: the smell of fried everything wafting through the air; the slight chill as you enter the dairy barn; the screams of excitement echoing around the midway.

    He shared a few pictures with us from his experience, and talked with me recently about the project.

    Jonathan Woods: What inspired you to take on this project in this way?

    Justin Fowler: "I've always been fascinated with different types of photography and loved playing with different films and ways to create images. I happened across a Holga lens adapted for the Canon 5D.

    Justin L. Fowler / The State Journal-Register

    "Double Ribbon" Jasmine Padilla, of Monmouth, Ill., poses for a photograph with her double ribbons for winning Landrance Grand Champion Sow and Landrance Reserve Grand Champion Sow.

    Jonathan Woods: Why choose the state fair?

    Justin Fowler: It's dangerous photographing events that happen year after year. I've photographed every angle, and the fair is pretty similar every year. As a photographer I can go out there and say, "I know an easy picture can be made here, and then I can get out of here and go home." When I sense that, I look at the situation I've seen six years in a row and push myself, find a challenge and try something new.

    Justin L. Fowler / The State Journal-Register

    "Caramel Apples" Baylee Smith, 13, of Springfield, Ill., and Maddie Gleeson, 13, Kelsey Builta, 13, Cressa Wagner, 13, all three of Rochester, Ill., take a break from the midway to enjoy caramel apples.

    Jonathan Woods: How did this project pan out?

    Justin Fowler: My editor, Rich Saal, is good about pushing me to find different ways to do things. He threw out the idea, five days later I was out shooting it. I went to the fair with only one lens and camera. I had to see the fair through this lens. That way you can't rely on the institutional knowledge that's gotten you that far. I enjoy that challenge, it's good for creative mojo.

    Justin L. Fowler / The State Journal-Register

    "A Work In Progress" Sculptor Sharon BuMann of Central Square, N.Y., examines her work as she sculpts the Illinois State Fair Butter Cow in its refrigerated display case in the Dairy Building.

    Jonathan Woods: What were some of the challenges?

    Justin Fowler: The biggest challenge was the lens. It's a pinhole -- at f11 (meaning the lens lets in very little light visible to the human eye). Using the camera's viewfinder you can't see anything but highlights (the brightest light) in the camera, so I had to shoot in really bright light. I would look at the highlights to judge composition. It makes you remember the old days -- where photographers had to throw the hood over their head and look through the viewfinder. 

    Justin L. Fowler / The State Journal-Register

    "Ear Plugs Required" A plume of smoke rises up over the Multi Purpose Arena as a tractor begins its run during the Illinois Tractor Pullers Association Truck and Tractor Pull.

    Jonathan Woods: How would you summarize the experience?

    Justin Fowler: It was a fun adventure all around. The images could always be better, but I want to explore the world with my camera, and sometimes that gets lost. It's easy as a staffer to get in a rut, but a project like this makes me fall in love with photography all over again, and I really appreciate when my boss gives me a chance to do that.

    Be sure to check out the full image gallery for an unobstructed view and over two dozen of Fowler's images. You can also see more of Fowler's work at the State Journal-Register or on his website.

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  • 15
    Jul
    2011
    1:01pm, EDT

    Lauren Wood / Journal Star via AP

    In this July 14 photo, a reflection of Becky Petrehen's hot air balloon, named "Peaceful World," flies over a small body of water in Chillicothe, Ill.

    Hot air balloon reflects over Illinois

    By John Makely, NBC News

    A peaceful scene, as long as you stay airborne.

    1 comment

    What a wonderful capture!!! Magnificent!

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  • 14
    Jun
    2011
    10:37am, EDT

    J.B. Forbes / St.Louis Post-Dispatch via AP

    In this photo taken June 12, Samuel McClain, 33, left, comforts his friend Ira Ward, 28, Sunday afternoon in front of the burned out home where Ward and other family members lived on 70th Street in East St. Louis, Ill. Ward's cousin, Darius Addison, 11, was killed in the fire. Ward, who lost two cousins in a fire about ten years ago, said he tried to save Addison but the flames drove him back.

    Mourning in East St. Louis after a boy dies in fire

    .

    1 comment

    This photo says so much. I feel extreme sadness for Mr. Ira Ward. May you have peace in your heart Mr. Ward.

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  • 27
    May
    2011
    12:45pm, EDT

    Seth Perlman / AP

    The flag covered casket of Artie Hodapp is carried by Korean War veterans at the St. Joseph's cemetery during funeral services in Freeport, Ill., Wednesday, May 25, 2011. More than half a century after he died in Korea, the bones of the young soldier, Artie Hodapp, are returned after being matched with relatives' DNA.

    60 year mystery resolved as a veteran of the Korean war is returned to his family

    By Phaedra Singelis, NBC News

    AP reports:

    FREEPORT, Ill. — For 60 years, Artie Hodapp's family agonized over a heart-rending mystery: Where had the young man, known for his rollicking sense of humor, come to rest after dying in the Korean War?

    They couldn't know that the answer was among 17 boxes of remains that the North Koreans turned over nearly two decades ago. Nor could they know that the DNA the Army collected from his surviving siblings several years ago would finally help solve the riddle.

    Hodapp's long journey home came to an end this week at a Catholic cemetery in northern Illinois, where he was buried with full military honors beneath a grave marker his sister bought despite not knowing where he was.

    "We waited all this while," said Frances Meyers, 88, remembering her parents and siblings who died without knowing Hodapp's fate. "The rest are all gone, but I've got to feel good about it for them too, the rest of the family. Everybody wanted him back but there was nothing we could do about it."

    Continue reading...

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  • 22
    Feb
    2011
    1:52pm, EST

    Paul Beaty / AP

    Chicago mayoral candidate Rahm Emanuel left, greets a passenger at the 69th St. C.T.A. train stop in Chicago on Tuesday, Feb. 22. The former White House chief of staff has been leading in polls and is hoping to get more than 50 percent of the votes cast Tuesday and to avoid an April runoff with the second-place vote-getter.

    Election Day: Chicago to vote for new mayor

    By Elena Grothe

    The AP reports:

    Chicago voters are braving icy weather to cast ballots in a mayoral election that will end the long reign of retiring Mayor Richard M. Daley and bring certain change to city politics.

    Former White House chief of staff Rahm Emanuel shook hands with commuters outside a South Side train stop Tuesday. He has been leading in polls and is hoping to get more than 50 percent of the votes cast Tuesday and to avoid an April runoff with the second-place vote-getter.

    Tuesday's election in Chicago could select the city's first Jewish mayor, or the first black female or Hispanic to hold that office.

    Emanuel's primary challengers are former Chicago public schools president Gery Chico, former U.S. Sen. Carol Moseley Braun and City Clerk Miguel del Valle.

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  • 3
    Dec
    2010
    6:13pm, EST

    John H. White / Chicago Sun-Times / AP

    Chicago firefighters battle an extra-alarm blaze on Chicago's North Side, Friday, Dec. 3, that engulfed three buildings. About 130 firefighters responded to the scene. Chicago Fire Department spokesman Richard Rosado said the fire began Friday morning in a vacant commercial building. No injuries were reported.

    Fire damages rug warehouse in Chicago's Lakeview neighborhood

    By Katie Cannon, Senior Multimedia Editor

    What I initially thought was snow in this picture is high-expansion foam used to extinguish fires. Read more about the blaze at the Peerless Rugs warehouse here.

    1 comment

    Ha Ha Ha. I thought that it was snow too, and was ready write a little tome of gratitude to the fire servants-they still deserve thanks-it's just that it's foam and not a freezing cold Chitown Blaze, what do I say, Thanks for the Foam? I guess it's funny that an editor and I both missed this. Geez …

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Rich Shulman

is a multimedia editor at msnbc.com. Before that, he was a picture editor at Corbis and the Director of Photography at the Everett, Wa. Herald.

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Jonathan Woods

Jonathan Woods worked for msnbc.com for three years, ending in 2012. For six years prior he worked as a photojournalist and multimedia producer for four newspapers across the U.S., including the Rocky Mountain News in Denver. Woods earned his B.A. in photojournalism from Western Kentucky University. He is now working for TIME Magazine, leading a team of picture editors online for TIME.com.

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John Makely

is a Senior Multimedia Producer for NBCNews.com in New York.

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Phaedra Singelis

is a Supervising Producer at NBC News.com Previously she worked as an editor at the New York Times and the Washington Post in addition to working as a photojournalist at numerous newspapers.

Elena Grothe

is a multimedia editor at msnbc.com

Katie Cannon

is a Senior Multimedia Editor and has worked at msnbc.com since 1996.

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