october 26
- Area Colleges: I.C., Knox football announce charity drive
- Prep Scoops: Volleyball milestones for Anderson, Donnan
- CS8 squads eye bigger prizes
- Jeff Parsons' corporate bankruptcy case appears to be winding down
- Problems with homeless prompt officials to renovate jail entrance
- NIU police share powers, duties of local force
- Collisions up last year in Sangamon County
- Replica wows funeral directors convention in Indiana
- Zoolie Ghoulie brings out children, costumes
- Vietnam veteran gets overdue homecoming
- Rauner right to demand reforms as part of budget deal
- Illinois can't afford more budget cuts to autism services
- Rauner must crack down on 'freebies'
- A play well worth seeing
- It's time for Peoria to give Friedan her due
- IHSA football playoff brackets released
- Charlie Parker's owner wins $25,000 breakfast recipe contest
- National news: 10 things to know for today
- Strong earthquake in Afghanistan shakes region
- Woman faces 2nd-degree murder charges in Oklahoma crash
- No DeKalb County money for football championships this year
- Chicago-area district OKs later start so students can sleep
- Lee County considering creating firearms ordinance
- Woman arrested with $320K in drugs at Chicago station
- Passenger numbers up 3.5 percent through September
- School bus involved in three-vehicle crash
- Illinois insurance prices up for some under health care law
- Q&A: Frank Mautino set to become third Illinois auditor general
- Illinois' casino towns plan budgets as gambling tax revenue withheld
- 'What a legacy'
- People in the News
- People in the News
- Funeral for former Springfield Mayor Ossie Langfelder
- Worker injured at Springfield Metro Sanitary District plant dies
- Future home of Monastery of Mary the Queen in Macoupin County
- Beardstown eyes 1A boys state soccer berth
- New Berlin woman, 89, dead in crash on Interstate 72 ramp
- Police chiefs: Universal background checks for gun purchases
- Krispy Kreme has plenty of company in Springfield
- Greenview volleyball player Heyen doesn't take life for granted