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Governor sets special election The primary election for U.S. Rep. Mel Reynolds' seat will be held November 28, with the general election to be held two weeks later on December 12. The field of candidates vying for the 2nd District seat is filling up. Senate Minority Leader Emil Jones Jr. joined General Assembly colleagues Sen. Alice Palmer and Rep. Monique Davis. Jesse Jackson Jr., son of the two-time presidential candidate, also announced his intention to seek the Democratic Party's nomination in the primary election. Manny Hoffman, Cook County Republican Party chairman, is considering a run in the predominantly Democratic district. Reynolds, a two-term congressman from Dolton, resigned following his conviction in August for sexual misconduct. New senator for 58th District Sen. Ralph Dunn, Republican from DuQuoin, resigned his Illinois Senate seat effective the end of September. Dunn made his announcement at a fund-raiser in late August. Dave Luechtenfeld, a high school coach in Washington County, was named his successor. Homewood mayor appointed to fill vacant House seat
Best unkept secret Lt. Gov. Bob Kustra made it official. He announced in September he would run for the Republican nomination for the U.S. Senate seat being vacated by retiring Sen. Paul Simon. He joins Rep. Richard Durbin and former state Treasurer Pat Quinn, both Democrats, as the announced candidates. On the same day, U.S. Sen. Alan Dixon announced he would not run and would support Durbin. Kustra is backed by Gov. Edgar and has endorsements from the majority of GOP leaders. The primary election is March 19. Five lawmakers targeted in ghost payrolling scandal Five Illinois lawmakers, all from the Chicago area, are under investigation for ghost payrolling — the practice of paying individuals for doing little or no work — at the Cook County Sheriff's office, according to reports by The Associated Press and the Chicago Sun-Times. Employment and district office records have been requested from Sen. William Mahar, a Republican from Orland Park; Sen. Margaret Smith, Sen. Bruce Parley, Rep. Miguel Santiago, all Democrats from Chicago; and former Rep. Sam Panayotovich, a longtime Chicago Democrat turned Republican. 40/October 1995/Illinois Issues Trial date set for House member, former tollway chief The date has been set for December 19 in the trial of Rep. Joseph Kotlarz, a Democrat from Chicago, and Robert Hickman, former head of the Illinois Toll Highway Authority and longtime friend of Gov. Edgar, for conspiracy, theft and misconduct in a land deal along I-88. Optometry school really is poorer now The private Chicago optometry college that has received more than $1 million in state grants will not get the $300,000 allocated this year. Gov. Edgar stopped the grant, saying it is inconsistent with spending cuts in such services for the poor. Former governor named to special panel Former Gov. James R. Thompson was named to a special three-person panel that will monitor operations of the Hotel Employees and Restaurant Employees International Union. The union is under investigation for alleged ties to organized crime. Judicial appointment Judge Timothy C. Evans, a former Chicago alderman and mayoral candidate, was appointed presiding judge of the domestic relations division of the Cook County Circuit Court. He replaces Judge Benjamin S. Mackoff, who resigned to enter private practice. Obituaries •Former Chief Justice Thomas J. Moran died of cancer September 14 in Lake Forest. He was elected to the Illinois Supreme Court in 1976 and served as chief justice from 1988 through 1990. He resigned from the court in December 1992, while in his second 10-year term. •David Dodds Henry, the former president of the University of Illinois, died at age 89 in Naples, Fla. He guided the university through the turbulent campus anti-war demonstrations during the 1960s. Also during that time he established the university's Chicago Circle campus, now known as the University of Illinois at Chicago. Henry was president from 1955 to 1971. Beverley Scobell
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