Thursday, October 22, 2015

Letter to state representatives regarding closure of the Illinois State Musuem

Email message(s) sent today to:

  • Robert Pritchard, 70th Dist. -- R-Sycamore
  • Carol Ammons, 103rd -- D-Champaign
  • Scott Drury, 58th -- D-Highwood
  • Norine Hammond, 93rd -- R-Macomb
  • Donald Moffitt, 74th -- R-Galesburg

Paragraph in brackets was sent only to Rep. Moffitt.

I am writing to urge your support of SB 317, which would mandate reopening the Illinois State Museum in Springfield and its satellite facilities in Lewistown, Rend Lake, Lockport and Chicago. My interest in the issue is personal, since on Sept. 22, 2010, I discussed my research on the topic "Vachel Lindsay, Edgar Lee Masters and the Roots of Oldtime Music" at an Illinois State Museum Brown Bag Lecture in the ISM’s Research and Collections Center in Springfield. The opportunity to present my findings to a group of my academic peers at the Museum was important to my personal and professional development; in fact it helped me clarify research questions that led me to develop a proposal for the Illinois Humanities Council’s Road Scholars Program in 2014. I am retired now from my position as an associate professor at Benedictine University-Springfield, but I believe it is of utmost importance that younger scholars in Illinois have the same opportunities that I did.

[I have also presented talks on musical history in Andover and Bishop Hill in your legislative district, so I speak from experience when I say the impact of closing the ISM goes beyond the communities where its facilities are located.]

My interest in reopening the ISM facilities goes beyond that, however. As you are no doubt aware, the Accreditation Commission of the American Alliance of Museums has voted to put Illinois’ state museum system on probation. According to Commission Chair Burt Logan, “The actions by the Illinois state government that forced the Illinois State Museum system to close to the public left us no choice but to place this museum on probation pending further information from the museum system. We have grave concerns about the impact of this closure on the long-term viability of the museum, including affecting its ability to retain a professional staff and operate at the highest professional level; impairing the museum’s ability to care for the 13.5 million specimens in its collection; impacting donor support; risking its role as a major educational resource in the state of Illinois; and harming its reputation as a premier international museum and research institution.”

Senior administrators and scientific researchers have already found employment elsewhere, and some of the damage done by closure already is irreparable. If AAM is forced to pull accreditation, it will be terribly difficult to get it back. For all of these reasons, and because of the adverse economic impact that closure is having in the affected communities – and among artists and craftspeople statewide – I urge a yes vote on SB 317.

-- Dr. Peter Ellertsen (Ph.D., English; M.A., history and journalism)

Saturday, October 17, 2015

One of my all-time favorite New Yorker covers

http://www.newyorker.com/culture/culture-desk/cover-story-2015-10-05

https://www.facebook.com/peter.ellertsen/posts/1626741690920204?pnref=story

“Cats and dogs are just like people—they have their own likes and dislikes,” the artist Peter de Sève says about this week’s cover, “Catnap.” “When I see dogs dragged out by their masters for a run, I wonder whether they may not rather be doing something else. As for cats, there’s never a question about what they want: a nap. We have both a cat and a dog, and in fact, both are on that cover. That’s our cat, Cleo (short for Cleopatra), and Henry, who has already been on a New Yorker cover. He’s blasé about the whole thing.”

Friday, October 16, 2015

Jeb Bush: Shakin' up Washington?

Olivia Nuzzi, who's been covering the presidential primary campaigns, had an article on the Daily Beast website yesterday headlined "Jeb Wants a Recession in D.C., Having Forgotten That Real People Live There."

Anything here sound familiar, Springfield?

Nuzzi reports:

In New Hampshire on Wednesday, speaking to Sean Hannity in front of two plastic pumpkins and a Jeb! 2016 placard, the former Florida governor was asked how he would make the argument to voters that the Democrats’ plans to expand the safety net would bankrupt the country.

“We have the benefit now of all of this philosophy of offering free things to people not working,” Bush said. “I think the better message is, let’s disrupt Washington. Let’s create a little bit of a recession in Washington, D.C., so that we can have economic prosperity outside of Washington.”

Bush added that as governor, “I got to do that," and it resulted in the Sunshine State leading the nation in job growth for the majority of his tenure.

Asked if Bush really meant that he would like to create a recession in Washington, D.C., the country’s fourth-largest metropolitan economy, his spokesman, Tim Miller, responded, “We should shrink D.C. so we can grow the economy of the rest of the country.”

But Bush said recession.

She adds:

Shrinking the size of the federal government is a vastly different endeavor than creating a recession in the city in which the federal government is based. Asked if Bush is aware of the definition of a recession, Miller said, “a period of temporary economic decline generally identified by a fall of GDP in two successive quarters.”

Asked why in the hell a candidate for president of the United States would wish such a thing on an American city, Miller didn’t respond—not even to suggest it was a joke.