Missing Person
The Peoria Police Department is actively searching for Terri A Anderson, may also use last name of Wilson. She is a White female, blonde hair and blue eyes, is 5’3 115#. Female was last seen May 18, 2014 between the hours of 9:00-9:30 pm. If you have seen Ms Anderson, please contact the Peoria Police Department at 673-4521.
2nd Annual 5K Duck Dash & Waddle for the Center for Prevention of Abuse will be on August 9th
Associated Bank proudly presents The 2nd annual 5K Duck Dash and Waddle benefiting the CENTER for PREVENTION of ABUSE. The Dash takes place on August 9th. You can register online at centerforpreventionofabuse.org or call 309-691-0551 for registration information.
Here is the link:
http://www.centerforpreventionofabuse.org/download/DuckDashBrochure2014.pdf
After the Duck Dash and before the annual Duck Race fundraiser in August, we will be having a special event. The Center for Prevention of Abuse is getting a 65 foot 1100 pound duck that will be floating in the Peoria River to celebrate the upcoming events. I’m sure it will be the talk of the town!
More than 5,000 Central Illinois School Children will Visit Peoria Riverfront Museum this May
Yellow buses surround the building. The sounds of laughter and delight overflow the exhibit halls, planetarium and giant screen theater. These days, the Peoria Riverfront Museum plays host to anywhere from 50 to well over 100 Central Illinois students, teachers and parents. It’s field trip season.
“It takes months of work to prepare school visits,” says Crystal Radovanovic, Museum teacher. “But just seeing the wide-eyed expression and hearing the response from the children when we conduct science experiments and show them around exhibits makes every minute worth it.”
School group coordinator, Lottie Philips, says it takes the entire Museum staff to pull off field trip season – with all that needs to be scheduled, coordinated and set up for teaching. “We work hard to ensure that each group receives the best educational experience possible,” she says. “Each student is important.”
The school groups come in from Peoria and 15 counties including, Bureau, Fulton, Hancock, Knox, LaSalle, Marshall, Mason, McDonough, Morgan, McLean, Putnam, Sangamon, Stark, Tazewell and Woodford.
This month, alone, more than 5,000 children will enjoy a hands-on learning experience in one or more of the Museum’s educational program. By the end of May (approximately):
• 3,000+ students will have studied the stars in the Dome Planetarium
• 3,000 students will have watched an educational film in the Giant Screen Theater
• 3,000+ students will have perused the Museum’s galleries
• 1,500 students will have participated in educational workshops
Although it may look chaotic to visitors, the process is well coordinated. Students stream in from buses in neat lines. Teachers and staff haul in lunch boxes and bags that are placed on service carts and whisked down into Lakeview Room cafeteria. Students put coats and backpacks into rolling duffels assigned to each group. Finally the students – led by a Museum staff member – head in respective lines toward the planetarium, theater, exhibits or one of several classrooms upstairs and down.
The excitement is palpable – among students and teachers. Many have never been to the Museum. Many would not be able to come, were it not for the Museum’s field trip program that’s funded by memberships, donations, grants and underwriting.
“Sponsorship helps to make school visits possible,” says Ann Schmitt, Museum programs VP. “Underwriting for exhibits allows us to create our educational programs and bring kids to the Museum.”
The Museum programs staff universally agrees that the joy of teaching and watching the children learn is what makes the season so satisfying – if hectic.
“I love leading and teaching our littlest visitors – their enthusiasm is genuine and they’re not afraid to ask questions about what they see,” says museum teacher Taylor Stef. She admits that the schedule can be exhausting, but says “I’m excited to do it again next year – with new programs and offerings.”
Schmitt agrees and points out the students aren’t the only learners. “Every time we create a new program, activity or experiment, we learn something new, too,” she says. “For all of us it’s like going back to college – that lifelong learning part, it’s the one of best parts.”
The Peoria Riverfront Museum is the collaborative effort of eight organizations, with nearly 500 years of combined experience educating, entertaining, and supporting our diverse Peoria-area culture. Our mission is to inspire lifelong learning for all – connecting art, history, science, and achievement through collections, exhibitions, and programs.
For further information about the Museum also visit peoriariverfrontmuseum.org.
Look. It’s My Book to Sell Items at Moss Avenue Sale!
Look. It’s My Book! will sell items at the Moss Avenue Sale at 1610 W. Moss Ave. June 7, 2014 6:00a.m. -4:00 p.m..
Judge Richard and Joyce Eagleton have generously offered their home for the day.
Please donate your saleable items. We are non-profit and will give you a tax deductable receipt.
You may drop off items at my house 310 E. High Point Lane Peoria, IL 61614 phone 453-3554 or Marg Semmes 10214 N. Forrest, Peoria, IL 61615. Marg has agreed to chair the sale. Also let me know if you are interested in helping with the sale.
The City Begins the Street Asset Inventory Project
Starting the week of May 19, Peoria Public Works Department data collection will begin for the City’s Street Asset Inventory Project. The data will be used to assess the condition of the streets and alleys providing information for prioritizing maintenance projects and budgeting. The location and condition of the street signs and street lights will also be collected. This data will be used to create a sign and light inventory.
Residents may see a white van driving throughout the city streets recording data from the cameras and lasers mounted on the vehicle. One camera records the conditions of the street, while the another photographs the street signs and lights. LiDAR, a laser-based system that very accurately measures point distances to objects, will also be used. The alleys will be evaluated with a regular vehicle and walking surveys.
This project is targeted for completion by early Fall of 2014. For more information, contact City Engineer Scott Reeise at (309)494-8800.
OSF SAINT FRANCIS & CHILDREN’S HOSPITAL HOSPITAL WEEK AND NURSING EXCELLENCE WINNERS ANNOUNCED
(Peoria, IL / May 16, 2014) – National Hospital Week, the nation’s largest health care event, was first observed in 1921. The theme for 2014 is Compassion, Innovation, Dedication: The Commitment Continues. OSF Saint Francis Medical Center and Children’s Hospital of Illinois, in recognition of National Hospital Week, are pleased to announce the following award winners (with hometowns):
Heart of Saint Francis Award: Honors non-nursing employees who demonstrate excellence and exhibit pride in their work and job responsibilities, making a difference in the lives of patients, patient’s families, and co-workers.
Rick Comeens – Materials Management (Creve Coeur)
Deanna Zercher – Professional Development (Mackinaw)
Leader of the Year Award: Recognizes directors, managers, or supervisors who demonstrate excellence in leadership, foster teamwork, volunteering within the Medical Center and/or community, leading by example, and successfully implementing initiatives promoting employee satisfaction and development.
Dr. Mary Schultz – Resident Education (Groveland)
Sister Aeterna O.S.F., Mission Integration Award: Recognizes OSF Saint Francis employees who encourage and inspire by drawing from their own spirituality to support others. The award honors Sister Aeterna who, as a Sister Nurse and leader, cared for over 82,000 babies and their families with great skill and profound love.
Amy Larson, Medical Information Services (Knoxville)
Deacon Bill Sloman, Chaplaincy Services (East Peoria)
Brenda Waremburg, Volunteer Services (Tremont)
Charlene Hoskins, Dietary (Peoria)
Sister Jacqueline Schroeder, Palliative Care
Nancy Spooner, Volunteer Services – (Peoria)
Dr. Paulette Archer, College of Nursing (Peoria)
Dr. Richard Frederick, Emergency Medicine (Pekin)
Coinciding with Hospital Week was National Nurses Week. The 2014 Nursing Excellence recipients are:
Transformational: Direct: Kim Campbell – Medical Information Services (Farmington)
Leadership: Indirect: Layne Steffen – 6 Sigma (Washington)
Nurse Leader: Abby Lotz – Medical Int./Neuro-Surgical Intermediate (Metamora)
Empowerment: Direct: Kami Henriques – PACU (Peoria)
Innovator in Nursing: Direct: Freedom Andal – Adult Cardiac ICU (Pekin)
Indirect: Jenni Cuthbert – Learning Academy (Edwards)
Exemplary Professional Direct: Amy Vandel – Labor and Delivery (East Peoria)
Practice: Indirect: Heidi Florey – Surgery – Neurology (Bartonville)
APN: Laura Youngman – Wound Healing and Hyperbaric Center (Chillicothe)
BETTER BREATHERS CLUB TO MEET
Please make note of May meeting location
(Peoria, IL / May 16, 2014) – The monthly meeting of the Better Breathers Club will be held Wednesday, May 28, 2014 from 2-3:30 PM in the Children’s Hospital of Illinois building at OSF Saint Francis Medical Center, 5th Floor – Room 59208. Parking is available in the North Parking Deck, accessed off Berkeley Ave. with easy access into the hospital.
The program is Gift of Hope – How can you make a difference? It will feature Carrie Stephen, a double lung recipient, and Michelle Reef, Hospital Donation Coordinator, Gift of Hope Organ and Tissue Donor Network.
Anyone dealing with lung or breathing problems is welcome to attend. It is requested that those attending not wear perfume or cologne to meetings as it may bother other participants with breathing difficulties.
For more information about the Better Breathers Club contact Sara Fiddes, RRT with OSF Outpatient Pulmonary Rebab at 309.282.1646, or Revina McWhirter, Member Coordinator at 309.635.5442.
Summer Reading Sign Up is Open at Peoria Public Library
Paws to Read Summer Reading officially opened sign up on May 1 at every Peoria Public Library location and on the Bookmobile! All ages are invited to participate in this fun program that will get everyone reading this summer.
This year all you have to do is come into the branch where you signed up and sign your contract saying you read library materials for three hours each week. Read to yourself, read to someone else or read to your pet! The program starts June 9 and ends July 26. Those who read five weeks earn a voucher for a ticket to a Chief’s game on either August 4 or 18. By reading six of seven weeks participants earn a ticket to the best party of the summer, the fabulous Summer Reading Party at Peoria Riverfront Museum on Tuesday, July 29 from 6:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. The doors will be flung wide to every activity – theater and planetarium included – just for Summer Readers! Parking will be free, and Peoria Public Library will add some “paws-a-tive” fun to this family-friendly party.
Summer Reading has been a time-honored tradition for more than 60 years in Peoria. The summer fun that used to be just for kids whose parents wanted them to keep reading skills sharp. Now it is for all ages and not only does it keep new reader’s skills sharp, it gives everyone a chance to relax and read what they want to read while earning great incentives. Families or groups are encouraged to sign up together and take the challenge to be a Summer Reader.
Sign up now and be a Summer Reader!
Music in the McKenzie presents Small Potatoes Sunday, May 18 at Peoria Public Library North Branch
Peoria Public Library North Branch presents Music in the McKenzie: Small Potatoes at North Branch Sunday, May 18 at 2:00 p.m. for a repertoire of music described as “Celtic to Cowboy.”
Small Potatoes, a Chicago based folk duo of Jacquie Manning and Rich Prezioso, has been touring together since 1993. In that time they’ve become sought-after regulars at many clubs and coffeehouses across the U.S.
They say it has taken “years of careful indecision” to come up with a mix of music that ranges from country, blues, and swing to Irish, with songwriting that touches on all of those styles and more. Superb musicianship and showmanship, award-winning songwriting, and a strong sense of tradition has made them, as Dirty Linen Magazine once said, “one of the most polished, inventive, and entertaining shows on the circuit.” For more on the history of Small Potatoes visit their website at smallpotatoesmusic.com.
Proceeds from CD sales will benefit Friends of the Peoria Public Library. The show is free and open to all ages.