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DUKES THROWN OFF THEIR GAME BASEBALL, B1
CRUZ CALLS IT QUITS
ELECTION, A12
TELEGRAPH Wednesday, May 4, 2016
SERVING DIXON AND THE SURROUNDING AREA SINCE 1851
MAYOR LI ARELLANO JR. | 1 YEAR IN OFFICE
Looking back, and ahead A year into office, Dixon’s mayor reflects on city’s success stories, and he looks forward to the next chapter
BY RACHEL RODGERS rrodgers@saukvalley.com 815-625-3600, ext. 5529 @rj_rodgers
DIXON – Starting his term with a brand-new council and form of government, Mayor Li Arellano Jr. aims to keep the past year’s momentum churning. Sworn into office a year ago today,
Arellano and the council had to operate on a learning curve, sussing out the balance of power and responsibilities in the newly established managerial form of government. Although the transition was challenging at times, it allowed them to be at the forefront of a new start for the city, he said. ARELLANO CONTINUED ON A11
RIGHT: Dixon Mayor Li Arellano Jr. listens to speakers during a Latino voting program April 26 in Sterling. Today marks his first anniversary in office, and Arellano recently reflected on the accomplishments, and goals, of the new administration. Alex T. Paschal/apaschal@saukvalley.com
WHERE ARE THEY NOW?
EDUCATION
christopher HEIMERMAN Heimerman is the Enterprise and Projects Editor at SVM. He can be reached at cheimerman@saukvalley.com or 815-625-3600, ext. 5523.
Getting a higher education SHS grad honed her leadership skills in the Rocky Mountains
Alex T. Paschal/apaschal@saukvalley.com
Dixon High School senior Jazzarae Glown, 17, of Dixon, sells coffee drinks Tuesday afternoon in a mini trade show, part of the CEO program. The Whiteside Area Career Center class teaches teens how to make and market their products. Jazzarae calls her business Jazz & Joe. The sale continues today at Northland Mall in Sterling.
A
A profit margin of success Business was good – really good – at CEO show BY CHRISTOPHER HEIMERMAN cheimerman@saukvalley.com 815-625-3600, ext. 5523 @CHeimerman_SVM
STERLING – It was a bad night to be a gourmet grilled cheese sandwich or a turtle at Northland Mall on Tuesday evening. Now, if you were the CEO of a business selling them? “This has been insane,” Dixon High
School senior Clara Thorpe said just after 5:30 p.m. at the annual Creating Entrepreneurial Opportunities Trade Show. “I did not expect this much business.” She prepped enough ingredients for about 200 of her artisan-yet-nostalgic sammies. “I’m getting a little worried,” the CEO of C’s Cheese said. SUCCESS CONTINUED ON A5
Online extra Click on this story at saukvalley.com to check out sights and sounds from the CEO Trade Show at Northland Mall. The event will continue from 4 to 8 p.m. today at the mall.
ROCK FALLS
City going around roadblocks Council moves ahead with bonding process for riverfront redevelopment BY PAM EGGEMEIER peggemeier@saukvalley.com 815-625-3600, ext. 5570 @pam_eggemeier
ROCK FALLS – Plans to redevelop the riverfront area in the RB&W District have
$1.00
TODAY’S EDITION: 24 PAGES 2 SECTIONS VOL. 166 ISSUE 3
encountered some huge roadblocks, but the city is ready to move ahead. The riverfront centerpiece was secured in May 2014, when the city announced a development deal was secured to build a Holiday Inn Express & Suites at 301 E. Second St. Several issues delayed construction, but the hotel is set to open its doors to patrons Thursday. To build on the riverfront momentum, plans were made for an estimated $4.2 million green space project near
INDEX
ABBY ................... A8 BUSINESS ......... A12 COMICS ...............B6
the hotel. The plans included an amphitheater, ornate retaining walls, a splash pad or some other type of water feature, a skate park, scenic overlook piers, a bike and walk path, and restrooms. On Jan. 3, 2015, the city learned it would receive a $400,000 grant from the Open Space Lands Acquisition and Development grant program, which is funded by the state real estate transfer tax.
CROSSWORD....B12 LIFESTYLE ........... A8 LOTTERY ............. A2
n instructor was using a frying pan to protect himself from golf-ball-sized hail. It was about 2,000 feet to the top of the drainage in the Dark Canyon Wilderness in southeastern Utah, while flash floods enveloped the base. Wearing 60-pound packs, Kinzie Vogel and her 11 fellow students simply were trying not to slip, or freeze, or ... well, we’ll just leave it there. Pretty wild to think that it went from sunny and mild to 3 feet of snow during the National Outdoor Leadership School students’ hike to get to their rations. Wilder yet? Vogel, a 20-year-old member of Sterling High School’s Class of 2013, made the decision to undertake the 89-day fall semester course the day before her crew would set forth in Wyoming. It was sunny that fateful August morning, and she had just enough time to get her transcripts from Sauk Valley Community College, sneak in a physical at the CGH Medical Center Ready Care clinic, and head west. “I won ‘most likely to be late’ in high school,” she said. “I’ve made a lot of last-second decisions, but most of them have worked out well.” As Mother Nature threw everything she had at the students and their instructors during that ascent, she wondered whether her latest kneejerk decision would spell her demise. “If there was any moment when I thought I might not make it, that was one of the only ones,” Kinzie said.
ROADBLOCKS CONTINUED ON A5
OBITUARIES ........ A4 OPINION .............. A6 POLICE ................ A2
EDUCATION CONTINUED ON A4
Today’s weather High 57. Low 37. More on A3.
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