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Illinois ballads

Time for me to drive? About the only thing that our new state tourism song has going for it is that it was inspired by a band from Illinois. Otherwise, JB would have us eschew public transportation, pile into carbon-spewing cars and roam the Land of Lincoln in search of fun. I m not sure how much we paid, if anything, for rights to the REO Speedwagon song, but it is too much. Replacing the word fly with drive isn t fooling anyone who recalls the 1979 original that appeared on the landmark album You Can Tune A Piano But You Can t Tuna Fish:

Starved Rock State Park authorities discover proposal related litter

Starved Rock State Park authorities discover proposal related litter
walls102.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from walls102.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Lawyers for family of 3 men killed in explosion near Starved Rock say demolition was active in the area

Family of 3 men killed in Illinois explosion hires attorneys to investigate

CHICAGO — The family of two brothers and their nephew who died in an explosion along the Illinois River next to Starved Rock State Park last week that officials say happened when the three ignited black powder has hired a law firm to look into the deaths. The Illinois law firm Salvi, Schostok and Pritchard announced in a news release Wednesday that the firm was hired to investigate the explosion and represent the family. The statement identified the three men who died as brothers, Inmer Rivera Tejada, 39, and Rafael Rivera Tejada, 36, and their nephew Guillermo Rivera Tejada, 26, of the Little Village neighborhood in Chicago.

Demolition work near Starved Rock State Park may be connected to deaths of three men last week, family s lawyer says

Salvi, Schostok & Pritchard, P.C. A lawyer hired by the family of three men killed in an explosion near Starved Rock State Park raised questions Wednesday about their deaths, saying “there is no reason to believe” they were “knowingly using explosive devices.” Attorney Tara R. Devine raised the possibility that the deaths of brothers Inmer Rivera Tejada, 39, and Rafael Rivera Tejada, 36, and their nephew Guillermo Rivera Tejada, 26, were connected to nearby demolition work for a bridge project. The three men were found last Thursday about 100 yards west of the Route 178 bridge in Utica. “We will be hiring some of the best experts in the country to assist us in our investigation and hopefully bring peace of mind to Inmer, Rafael and Guillermo’s family,” Devine said in a statement.

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