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PAST ISSUES
June 2006
Fallout: States face a fraying lifeline
May 2006
Higher and higher:
With no respite in sight from rising fuel prices, policy makers face increasing pressure to find solutions
April 2006
Whose rights?
No matter how the U.S. Supreme Court reacts to Roe, other jurisdictions have reframed the abortion debate to focus on the status of the fetus.
March 2006
Over the top: Illinoisans head the national debate over money and politics
February 2006
Rating game: You got trouble with a capital T and that rhymes with V for video toys
January 2006
Beginnings: Another political season is on the horizon
December 2005
Out there:
What's in store for public art?
November
2005
Uncle Sam's pocket: Where there's federal cash the states choose to follow
October
2005
Coming or going? Comfortable and reliable passenger trains used to run in Illinois, and they might again if Congress quits arguing about Amtrak and starts talking about trains.
September
2005
Pipe dream? States try to snuff out meth on their own
July/August
2005
Like five wise old sisters, the inland seas have stories to tell and lessons to teach
More past
issues

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July/August 2006 CURRENT ISSUE • SUBSCRIBE TO ILLINOIS ISSUES
FEATURES
Ground to gumbo by James Krohe Jr.
The difference between feeding and polluting a body of water is the same as the difference between feeding and polluting a human body.
Aisle of opportunity by Bethany Carson
Consumers will gain options as superstores enter the organic food market. But Illinois farmers have been slow to cash in.
Body of knowledge by Jasmine Washington
Citizens could find out what contaminants they have been exposed to. But states face challenges in connecting environmental hazards to public health.
PHOTO ESSAY
Renewal .pdf file
Disturbed land can return to its natural state and we can learn a lot from the transformation.
BOOKS
Big Earth, Big History by Robert Kuhn McGregor
Many refuse to entertain the idea that the Earth has some influence on our past and our future.
GUEST ESSAY
Act local by Donald J. Wuebbles and Kevin Knobloch
Our future is in our hands.
EDITOR'S NOTEBOOK by Peggy Boyer Long
It's dinner time. Do you know where your food came from?
STATE OF THE STATE by Bethany Carson
What goes around comes around so our daily habits drive the state's economy
BRIEFLY
OUTDOOR SPORTS
Gun enthusiasts can show off skills at a new venue
Lawmakers form new Environmental Caucus
GEOLOGY
Scientists to drill in Antarctic for signs of global warming
Protecting open space strikes a chord with lawmakers from all areas
NATIONAL PARKS
Numbers indicate people may prefer home entertainment
At the river's edge
UPDATES
BIRDSONG
It's not just for humans anymore: Birds can learn to use grammar
Radon not on the radar
PEOPLE
OBITS
Katherine Dunham, George Dunne
Race for Tenhouse seat
History on the Hill
U.S. House Speaker J. Dennis Hastert
ENDS AND MEANS by Charles N. Wheeler III
Illinois politicians weigh benefits of unloading the lottery and the tollway
ILLINOIS ISSUES 30TH ANNIVERSARY
Retrospectives
Three decades of public affairs journalism
PART 1: Welfare reform, Tax caps, and Capital punishment
PART 2: Patronage rulings, Cutback Amendment, Judicial subdistricts
PART 3: Energy resources, Water commerce, Economic subsidies
PART 4: Editorial cartoons, Public art, Political fiction, Classic architecture, Web literature
Illinois Issues is published by Center Publications
Center for State Policy and Leadership
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