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Where: Metamora (Franklin County)
When: May 28-30
Highlights: Chain Saw Artists are invited to come to Metamora and carve wood masterpieces for the weekend. From carved bears to eagles and more, pieces are sold at auction on Sunday afternoon to determine the winning carver. Proceeds benefit the town of Metamora.
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At $3,000, Is This Damaged 2002 Subaru WRX A Damn-Good Deal? Today’s Nice Price or No Dice Subaru has a salvage title and a nose that looks like it lost a bout to Mike Tyson. Neither of those issues should be insurmountable for a savvy buyer. We’ll have to decide if its price might just be. Advertisement If your favorite president is Abraham Lincoln and your favorite song is Hot Rod Lincoln, then you might just be a prime candidate for yesterday’s 2001 Lincoln LS V6. With its five-speed stick, that car represented the rarest of the rare from Ford’s upper-crust brand. With a mere $2,500 asking price, it was affordable, even for us poors. A cracked K-frame was the only monkey in the wrench, but even that couldn’t dim the enthusiasm shown in the votes as the car took home a solid 76 percent Nice Price win.
Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan (R) this week signed legislation repealing the state’s Civil War-era song that referred to President Lincoln as "tyrant" and a "despot.” Hogan on Tuesday signed the measure, calling it a “relic of the Confederacy, which is clearly outdated and out of touch.” “Maryland, My Maryland” was written by a Confederate sympathizer, James Ryder Randall, in 1861 and was set to the tune of “O Tannenbaum.” ADVERTISEMENT It was inspired by a poem written following the Pratt Street Riot, where Southern sympathizers attacked the 6th Massachusetts Infantry as they marched through Baltimore on their way to Washington, D.C. NPR noted that the violence occurred just days before the opening shots of the Civil War were fired at Fort Sumter.
This Week In Illinois History: The Sucker State (May 17, 1955) This 1884 map depicting state nicknames was created by H. W. Hill & Co. of Decatur, Illinois, manufacturer of Hill’s Hog Ringers. Credit Library of Congress (LC-DIG-pga-03942) On May 17, 1955, the Illinois General Assembly approved the official state slogan: Land of Lincoln. Before that, Illinois was known as the Prairie State. But Illinois had an older, unofficial slogan that dates back to the state’s earliest days: the Sucker State. During the 1800s, Illinoisans were known far and wide as “suckers.” But this term predates the derogatory usage of “sucker” as someone who is easily deceived.
Destination Indiana: Indiana Peony Festival greensburgdailynews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from greensburgdailynews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
WILTON, Conn. – An autograph album from 1862 containing the signature of Abraham Lincoln and 226 members of his administration and Congress, a manuscript penned by Sir Isaac Newton ...
If it weren't for Sangamon River, it's unlikely the Decatur we know today would exist. The region's earliest industries were tied to it. Lincoln's earliest Illinois days were spent on
Sangamon River winds through area's history, future herald-review.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from herald-review.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter. (He has also directed several installments in Russia’s most successful live-action film franchise, a series of holiday-themed comedies unreleased in the U.S.) As a producer, though, Bekmambetov is more innovative. He’s a low-key pioneer, running thriller plots on a new operating system with his so-called “Screenlife” movies. These projects, like and Searching, tell their stories entirely through computer screens, an extension of the first-person effect seen in found-footage horror. Watching a missing-persons case or a vengeful ghost story unfold through streaming video, chat boxes, and search results isn’t necessarily a more “realistic” window into genre filmmaking; like found footage, it requires different forms of contrivance in pursuit of a particular effect. But the surprisingly successful technique has a way of teasing out subtleties of behavior not available to traditional narrative, and immersing audiences in familiar online habits, on a much larger screen, before jolting them into unease.
Norman Lloyd, Actor in 'St. Elsewhere' and Hitchcock's 'Saboteur,' Dies at 106 Laura Haefner, provided by FacebookTwitterEmail Actor, producer and director Norman Lloyd, best known for his title role in Hitchcock’s “Saboteur” and as Dr. Daniel Auschlander on NBC’s “St. Elsewhere” and famously associated with Orson Welles’ Mercury Theater, died Tuesday at his home in Los Angeles. He was 106. His friend, producer Dean Hargrove, confirmed his death and said “His third act was really the best time of his life,” referring to the many historical Hollywood retrospectives and events Lloyd had participated in over the past few decades. Lloyd often said his secret to his long and mostly illness-free life was “avoiding disagreeable people,” Hargrove recounted.