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PEOPLE
Edited by Rodd Whelpley
Bishop takes the helm at state liquor commission
Mark Bishop is now the acting execu-tive director of the Illinois Liquor Control Commission. Bishop had been the chief financial and operations officer.

Bishop replaces Sam Panayotovich,a former state legislator and restaurateur, who was named executive director last year by Gov. George Ryan. Panayotovich resigned in August after reports that the liquor industry had donated money to a political action committee that he promoted. Liquor distributors, brewers and nightclubs had given money to the South Cook PAC for its annual golf outing, according to records filed at the State Board of Elections. Until this year, Panayotovich chaired the PAC's golf outing committee.

The PAC was formed in 1996 to support political candidates. But the bulk of the $99,000 raised went to expenses to run the golf event. Panayotovich also had been reimbursed by the PAC for $492 he charged for wine on a 1998 trip to California. State law forbids members of the commission from accepting gifts from the industry.

In his resignation, Panayotovich said that no decisions by the commission had been affected by his involvement with the PAC or other community organizations.

Panayotovich represented Chicago's Southeast Side in the Illinois House from 1983 to 1989. Originally a Democrat, he switched to the Republican Party for his last term. He ran Play It Again Sam's tavern in Springfield but sold his interest in the business when he was appointed deputy director of the liquor commission in 1993 by Gov.

Jim Edgar.
The commission oversees the alcohol industry in the state and has the authority to issue and suspend liquor licenses, inspect establishments that sell alcohol and hear appeals on suspensions.

SHIFTS AT THE TOP
Bolingbrook Mayor Roger Claar resigned from the Illinois State Toll Highway Authority board. Claar, who was appointed in 1991, stepped down after being questioned by the Chicago Sun-Times about the more than $100,000 in campaign donations he solicited from tollway vendors.

Two members of Lt. Gov. Corinne Wood's staff have taken private sector jobs. Tom Faulkner of Chatham resigned as Wood's deputy chief of staff to work for Fuse Advertising on a project that will promote a plan to expand the St. Louis airport. Pat Hogan, Wood's director of public affairs, has moved to a similar position with the Metropolitan Airports Commission in Minneapolis-St Paul. Lori Williams of Spaulding has been promoted to director of policy for Wood.

Jo Warfield has joined the Illinois Department of Public Aid as chief of the office of media relations. Joyce Jackson remains as chief of the office of communications. Warfield was director of the television office at the University of Illinois at Springfield. She is a veteran of state government. Before joining the university, she worked for several state agencies, including the departments of Children and Family Services and Human Services. The public aid agency, which has been in the news often over the past year because child support checks it administers have been late, also issued a one-year, $96,000 contract to Eric Robinson Communications to continue to develop a media program for the state's Kid Care program. That program provides insurance to children in low-income families. Robinson was press secretary to former Gov. Jim Edgar and Lt. Gov. Wood.

Peter Leonis of Springfield is the new director of state relations at the State Board of Education. Leonis started his career in 1989 as assistant legislative liaison for the Department of Rehabilitation Services. Most recently, he was top legislative liaison for the Illinois Department of Human Services.

Pat McGuckin is the new director of communications at the Illinois State Library. He will publicize the roles of local libraries. McGuckin spent 17 years on the Democratic staff of the state Senate. He also previously worked in radio at the Statehouse for what is now the Illinois News Network, and later for WJEQ-FM in Macomb. He received a master's degree in public affairs reporting at Sangamon State University (now the University of Illinois at Springfield).



Aiken is third chancellor to leave U of I since 1999
Michael Aiken, chancellor of the Urbana-Champaign campus of the University of Illinois, will leave his post next August. The university credits him with helping to raise more than $1 billion dollars since he was appointed chancellor in 1993.

His resignation means that each U of I campus will have replaced its chancellor since 1999. In that year, David Broski left the Chicago campus. Sylvia Manning was named chancellor there this summer (see Illinois Issues, July/August, page 36). Meanwhile, the Springfield campus is in the midst of its second search to replace outgoing Chancellor Naomi Lynn (see Illinois Issues, June, page 34). The administration has begun the process of a national search for Aiken's replacement.

www.uis.edu/~ilissues Illinois Issues October 2000 . 42


Black Civil War soldier earns Congressional Medal of Honor
Black Civil War soldier
Photograph courtesy of Illinois State University / The State Journal-Register
Thanks, in part, to the efforts of Illinois historians and legislators, Andrew Jackson Smith, an ex-slave, will receive the Congressional Medal of Honor 137 years after his Civil War heroics.

On November 30, 1863, at the battle of Honey Hill, South Carolina, Smith saved his regimental and the American flag from falling. On June 20 of this year, President Bill Clinton signed a bill granting Smith the medal, after his gallantry was brought to the president’s attention by Smith’s family and U.S. Sen Richard Durbin and U.S. Rep. Tom Ewing. In a ceremony slated for this fall, the White House will formally honor the soldier.

Before his military exploits, Smith was a slave in Kentucky. He escaped across the Cumberland River into the protection of the 41st Illinois Volunteers, becoming the servant of Major John Warner, whose family home was in Clinton. Smith distinguished himself at the Battle of Shiloh by supplying Warner with three horses, two of which were shot from under him. The third was a Confederate mount Smith caught in the midst of the fight. Shortly afterward, a minié ball struck Smith in the temple, but it did not go through his skull and was removed after the battle.

Smith returned with Warner to Clinton in November 1862, but left to join the 54th Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry when he learned President Abraham Lincoln would permit black troops to fight. Bumped to the 55th Infantry due to a large number of volunteers, Smith was officially placed in the color guard of Company B on May 16, 1863.

That year at Honey Hill, Smith’s sergeant was killed by an artillery shell. Smith’s grandson, Andrew Bowman, writes, “Andy caught the falling Color Sergeant Robert King with one hand and snatched the flag with the other.” By the battle’s close, and the Union’s defeat, Smith was carrying the federal and regimental flags.

Sen. Durbin and Rep. Ewing learned about Smith from Bowman and his aunt, Caruth Smith-Washington, Andrew Jackson Smith’s 92-year-old daughter.

After researching his grandfather’s exploits, Bowman contacted Sharon MacDonald of Illinois State University’s history department and Rob Beckman, one of her students, in 1997 to help gather legal proof and evidence supporting a Medal of Honor for Smith.

The scholars met at Bowman’s home in Indianapolis. “On the way home, Rob was looking through the papers Andrew had gathered,” MacDonald says, “and Rob said, ‘Everything’s here to get Smith the medal right now.’”

MacDonald then studied the 1916 and 1917 laws on granting the Medal of Honor and applied them to Smith’s actions at Honey Hill. “He met every requirement,” she says, “which rarely ever happens.”
Ryan Reeves



QUOTABLE
" Never has so much money done so little good for so many. "
Chicago Democratic State Rep. John Fritchey to the Chicago Tribune in response to that newspaper's report that Illinoisans who receive the pre-election property tax rebates agreed to by state politicians will have to turn around and pay income taxes on the windfall. Those rebate checks to individual property taxpayers will total anywhere from $25 to $300. But as a result, according to state Department of Revenue calculations published by the Tribune, an estimated $36 million of Illinois' share in the settlement with major tobacco companies now will have to be forked over to the federal government. Meanwhile, only $29 million was designated this fiscal year for anti-smoking programs.
Clements re-opens Statehouse bureau for Champaign paper
Kate Clements is the new Statehouse bureau chief for The News-Gazette of Champaign. A graduate of the Public Affairs Reporting program at the University of Illinois at Springfield, she covered local government and politics for the Elgin bureau of the Daily Herald, based in Arlington Heights. The last full-time reporter at the Capitol for The News-Gazette was Michael Hawthorne,who left in 1996.

State comptroller honors a predecessor with a fellowship program
A committee appointed by Comptroller Dan Hynes will begin reviewing applications this month for the newly established Roland W. Burris Fellowship Program.

Hynes created the program to offer governmental public service experience to college students and recent graduates and prepare them for careers in government. The fellowship is also a way to honor Roland Burris, a three-term comptroller and one-term attorney general who was the first black in Illinois history to be elected to statewide office.

Gail Lobin, communications director for the comptroller’s office, says the program is an effort to “foster a mentoring relationship between students and state government.” Lobin also says the number of positions offered could vary from two to four, depending on budget constraints. The positions can be in either Springfield or Chicago, depending on what experiences the fellows wish to gain. “We’re trying to be as flexible as we can,” she says.

The fellowship’s one requirement is that applicants either have a bachelor’s degree or be enrolled in a bachelor’s program. The committee, which includes Burris, will consider applications from candidates in all fields of study. The deadline for applications is October 15, and interviews will run through November 30.

42 . October 2000 Illinois Issues www.uis.edu/~ilissues


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