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APPOINTMENTS
The University of Illinois Board of Trustees appointed David Broski chancellor at the Chicago campus. He had served as interim chancellor after James Stukel was named president of the U of I system. Northeastern Illinois University's Board of Trustees voted to extend President Salme H. Steinberg's contract through August 1999. Mitsubishi tapped former U.S. Labor Secretary Lynn Martin to investigate charges of sexual harassment at the company's assembly plant in Normal. The former Illinois congresswoman also will suggest ways to improve the treatment of women at the plant.
HONORS
Illinois congressman will chair GOP platform committee
U.S. Rep. Henry Hyde, chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, will chair the platform committee at the Republican National Convention in San Diego in August. Activists on both sides of the abortion issue are keeping a close watch on the move. Some believe the appointment signals an effort to negotiate changes in the party's anti-abortion plank. The plank, calling for a constitutional amendment prohibiting abortion, has been part of the GOP platform since 1980. It has sparked controversy at past conventions. Hyde is a staunch opponent of abortion, but some observers believe the Wood Dale Republican could affect a compromise. Bob Dole, the likely presidential nominee, has hedged on the platform's abortion language.
Putting a '30' on a career — and an era
40 ¦ June 1996 Illinois Issues
Civic Federation president resigns
William Hudnut, president of the Civic Federation of Chicago, will leave the organization in July to be a senior fellow at the Urban Land Institute in Washington, D.C. In 1994, Hudnut joined the Civic Federation, a watchdog group that monitors taxes and spending in local government agencies. Before that he served for 16 years as the mayor of Indianapolis, where he led an economic development strategy that built the Hoosier Dome and lured the Colts football team, hosted the Pan American games and convinced United Airlines to build a $1 billion maintenance facility. Hudnut will apply his experience to land-use planning.
First lady visits central Illinois
Democrats nail down convention delegation
Heiple plea bargains, pays fine
Transit chief resigns
Panel named to study restrictions on teen drivers
Mike Chamness, director of the department of driver services for the secretary of state, will chair the group. The members include: State Sens. John J. Cullerton, Democrat of Chicago, and Beverly J. Fawell, Republican of Glen Ellyn, and state Reps. Carole Pankau, Republican of Roselle, and Douglas P. Scott, Democrat of Rockford; Terry Gainer, director, Illinois State Police; Frank Gruber, Illinois High School and College Drivers Education Association; Patrick Kelley, Sangamon County state's attorney; Jonathan Lehrer, AAA-Chicago Motor Club/Editors for Traffic Safety; Theresa McGreary-Hill, National Association of Independent Insurers; Don McNamara, National Highway Traffic Safety Administration; Kevin Martin, Illinois Insurance Information Service; Judge Anthony S. Montelione, presiding judge, 5th Municipal District, Circuit Court of Cook County; Larry Wort, bureau chief, Illinois Department of Transportation. Representatives to be named from the Illinois Association of Chiefs of Police, the Illinois Sheriffs' Association and the State Bar Association will join the group along with the high school student winner of the AAA-Chicago Motor Club essay contest. Illinois Issues June 1996 ¦ 41
SIU president hires investigator, probes release of names
The AP used the university's records to show how lawmakers had given tuition waivers to their families and friends, and to students who lived outside their legislative districts. The information was supplied under the Freedom of Information Act. The students names were blacked out, but some were still legible. The legislative scholarship program was launched in 1905. Under the program, lawmakers can award up to two four-year scholarships each year, one to the University of Illinois and one to any other state university Since the 1970s, officials at state universities have maintained that legislative scholarship winners are protected under the federal privacy laws. However, late in the spring session, lawmakers approved legislation requiring recipients to waive their rights to keep their names secret. Edgar is expected to sign it. Earlier this year, The Champaign-Urbana News-Gazette asked several universities for the information in a Freedom of Information request. The newspaper reported one in every five scholarships that legislators awarded between 1989 and 1995 at Western Illinois and Eastern Illinois universities went either to the relatives of political supporters or to students who lived outside the lawmakers' districts. AP's report mirrored those findings. Sanders apologized to the SIU students. He says the investigation is aimed at determining whether negligence was behind the release of the names. Hess served as U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Illinois and for the Southern District of Illinois.
County assessor to head state Democratic effort for fall general election
Other members of the panel are Margaret Houlihan, who is representing U.S. Senate candidate Richard J. Durbin; Emil Jones Jr., state Senate minority leader; Gary J. LaPaille, state Democratic chairman; and Michael J. Madigan, state House minority leader.
Audit faults math and science foundation
Director Stephanie Pace Marshall repaid $3,665 last fall after auditors reported the Fund for Advancement of Education is prohibited from participating in political activities. Marshall made the contributions over a four-year period by buying luncheon and registration tickets.
ICC chairman sparks political furor
Obituaries Joseph E. Gardner, a commissioner on the Metropolitan Water Reclamation District, died May 16. Gardner, who ran for mayor of Chicago in 1995, was a community and political activist. James T. Hickey, the former curator of the state's Abraham Lincoln collection, died May 13. He worked at the Illinois State Historical Library for 25 years before retiring. John Thomas Elmer, a former Chicago Tribune reporter who served as the paper's bureau chief in Springfield, died on April 28. 42 ¦ June 199 6 Illinois Issues |
Sam S. Manivong, Illinois Periodicals Online Coordinator |