Former State Police Commander Laimutis (“Limey”) Nargelenas

Limey Nargelenas
Inspired by role models like his father, a pre-War Lithuanian Border Control Officer, Limey Nargelenas has pursued a life-long career in police work, rising to the rank of Superintendent (commander) of the Illinois State Police. Some in Springfield might also remember his years as Director of Police Security and Safety at LLCC. Limey also has served as Deputy Director and Manager of Governmental Relations and Training for the Illinois Association of Chiefs of Police.

Only a few years after the restoration of Lithuania’s independence in 1991, Limey had the privilege of traveling back to where his family story began to assist the fledgling independent police forces of Vilnius and Kaunas as a consultant and trainer for the Pointman Leadership Institute.

Limey’s father, Antanas Nargelenas, born in Ukmerge, Lithuania, was taken prisoner by the invading German army in 1941 in the line of duty securing Lithuania’s border. After the Russians invaded Lithuania for the second time in 1944, Antanas and his wife Jadvyga Snabelyte Nargelenas (born in Ruminskis, Lithuania), ended up in a displaced persons (DP) camp in Watenstedt, Germany, where Limey was born.

While refugees from the Nargelenas and Snabelys families were scattered across the world, Limey and his immediate family ended up in Georgetown, Ill., due to the kind sponsorship of the Gustaitas family. It was there that five-year-old Limey faced the prospect of learning English at St. Mary’s Grade School, after already having learned Lithuanian and German. Limey’s father, like so many other former professionals, had no choice but to become a factory worker (and build homes on the side) to support his growing family in the U.S.

However, local Lithuanian-American Illinois State Troopers became friends of the family and gave Limey’s father a continuing connection to police work. Limey still remembers looking up to local officers Walter Lumsargis, Leonard Balsis, Vernon Cook, and John Matulis. Their reputation for upholding the law in the face of small-town corruption made Limey aspire to be a state trooper when he grew up. “I will never forget the time, as a Boy Scout in Georgetown Troop 16, when I was given the opportunity to ride along with Trooper Walt Lumsargis, who later became Sheriff of Vermilion County. I got to be the acting Georgetown Police Chief that day.”

Limey also recalls with pride how his parents “faced the challenges of coming to America to start a new life, how quickly they learned to speak English, and how proud they were to earn their U.S. citizenship.” After both his parents passed away, Limey’s younger brother Paul, now a pilot for Delta airlines, lived with him for a time. (He has another brother, Romas, and two sisters.)

Limey says he’s been grateful for the opportunity to travel the world teaching classes or consulting for police departments in China, Mongolia, England, Korea, Japan, Canada, Mexico, Peru, Australia, Germany, and Lithuania. He has also served as adjunct faculty for UIS, the Northwestern University Traffic Institute, Southern Illinois University and the University of North Florida. Limey is a former president of the Illinois Campus Law Enforcement Administrators and the Illinois Retired State Police Officers Association.

A graduate of the FBI National Executive Institute, Limey earned his M.A. in legal studies and B.A. in social justice from UIS. (His life story also includes varsity football at U of I and restaurant ownership in Springfield.) Today, Limey coordinates the legislative agenda for the Illinois Association of Chiefs of Police as president of Capitol Consulting, Inc., and is completing a Ph.D. from SIU-Carbondale in vocational education.

Remembering Rich Shereikis

RichShereikis.brownjacket

Back in the 1970s and ’80s, many of us read movie reviews in the Illinois Times by Rich Shereikis. While others in Springfield knew him as their professor of English and a charter faculty member of Sangamon State University, I am sorry to say I only knew him from his IT byline.
So when Rich died recently at 76, IT ran a full-page article, which helped me get in touch with his daughter Rebecca, who grew up in Springfield. http://www.illinoistimes.com/Springfield/article-11238-the-right-combination-of-sensibilities.html

Rebecca holds a Ph.D. in African history from Northwestern University, my own alma mater, and works as an administrator for NU’s Program of African Studies. She sent me the obit below, written by her mother, Judith, which will appear in the May 9 issue of the Washington Island Observer:

Rich Shereikis grew up in the Marquette Park neighborhood of Chicago, the only child of Lithuanian immigrants. His father John had left his war-torn country at age 18 to find work in a South Side factory; his mother Thelma had moved to the big city from a small town in southern Illinois, where her father was a coal miner. Little could they have imagined that this boy who grew up in a home almost devoid of books would become an avid reader, a gifted writer, and eventually a professor of English literature.

John and Thelma with son Rich

John and Thelma with son Rich

Rich was not just a bookish boy. He excelled in basketball and baseball, and was a varsity athlete for Harper High in the tough Chicago Public League. He pursued this love of athletics throughout his life, coaching track as a young high school teacher, pitching 16-inch softball in the summers, running marathons (including the Boston), and organizing inventive home Olympics for his children John, Michael and Rebecca. And when two “fake hips,” as he dubbed them, curtailed these activities, he took up long-distance biking.

His love of reading led him to a degree in English at Northern Illinois U. and to his first teaching job in a high school in the south suburbs of Chicago, where he met his wife Judy. During the summers, while working construction jobs, he completed coursework for his M.A. in English at the U. of Chicago.

After earning his Ph.D. in English in 1965 at the University of Colorado at Boulder and teaching three years at University of Wisconsin, Whitewater, in 1971, Rich was enticed to Springfield to become a charter faculty member at Sangamon State, where he stayed for 25 years. He was a dedicated teacher, with equally high standards for his students. His courses ranged from 19th century English literature (his beloved Dickens and Hardy) and Midwestern literature, to the short story, and sports in the American Culture. He also mentored aspiring high school teachers.

For twenty years he was movie and book reviewer, columnist, feature writer, and entertainment editor for Illinois Times, as well as the books and humanities editor and writer for Illinois Issues. Meanwhile, he also published in scholarly journals and wrote essays and reviews for the Chicago Reader, Mother Jones, and the Columbia Journalism Review that were picked up by papers from Boston to Malibu.

After he retired as Professor Emeritus from the University of Illinois, Springfield, in 1995, Rich and Judy moved to Evanston. In 1996, they bought a summer home on Washington Island, where Rich spent the last (and particularly lovely) autumn of his life (2012) before being diagnosed with pancreatic cancer.

A dear friend aptly eulogized Rich as “a man with a fierce intolerance of injustice and pretense, a deep appreciation for immigrant cultures arising from his Lithuanian heritage, a lifelong devotion to sports, an omnivorous love of literature and film, and an intense commitment to his family. Those of us who cherished him as a social critic, and sometime curmudgeon delighted to see the tender and doting grandfather he became. We will miss not only his blunt honesty but his deep generosity and humor.”

Rich is survived by his wife and children, as well as grandchildren Nicholas, Rachel, and Anya, to whom we offer our fond memories and deep admiration for a full and passionate life so well-lived.

Director of Patient Relations Joan Naumovich

Joan Naumovich

Joan Naumovich

Third-generation Lithuanian-American Joan M. Naumovich is Patient Advocate/ Director of Patient Relations at St. John’s Hospital. She began her medical career in high school as a volunteer or “candy striper” before earning her R.N. and then serving many years as a bedside nurse, always at St. John’s.

Joan says she gets a lot of satisfaction from her “healthcare ministry” helping patients navigate an increasingly complex medical system, which often involves a daunting number of specialists and a dizzying array of high-tech tests and treatments.

The third of 10 children born to Leonard and Jean Naumovich, Joan says her grandmother Josephine Deresker Naumovich immigrated from Lithuania in the early 1900s. And, like so many of us, Joan faced surname mutilation by teachers all through school at St. Aloysius, Ursuline Academy, then St. Louis University, where she earned her B.S. in nursing. She laughs: “It is amazing how many ways there are to put the 9 letters in Naumovich together to create a variety of sounds.”

Joan’s two daughters, Katie and Missy Dodd, come from a double-Lithuanian background. Their paternal great-grandmother was Springfield-area Lithuanian Marcella Yuscius. Joan has a fond memory of Grandma Yuscius assessing Katie as an infant in diapers and pronouncing Lithuanian words that sounded like “subikis paklis,” which she translated into English as, “butt like a stove.”

Joan in Lithuanian dress

Did that make you laugh out loud, like it did me? Do any readers recognize that phrase—or can you correct it for us if it’s a bit off? (Sounds like a keeper for some of life’s special occasions.)

It seems only natural, after speaking of butts, to transition to the subject of Lithuanian food. Joan remembers going as a child with her dad to a local grocer to buy the ethnic cheese called suris, sometimes with seeds and sometimes without. She liked the creamy, rich texture and recalls her dad eating only that for his lunch, especially during Lent.

Do any of our readers remember—or eat suris? And, if you eat too much, will somebody mumble in Lithuanian that you have “a butt like cheese?” And, if they did, how would you know? (I must be channeling Joan’s humorist brother Dan here.)

An annual Christmas favorite for Joan’s daughter Missy to this day is kugelis, a grated potato-bacon-onion casserole topped with sour cream that grandmother Dodd makes. Both sides of Joan’s extended Lithuanian family love Kielbasa and serve it as a side dish every Easter, Thanksgiving and Christmas.

suris: Lithuanian curd cheese

suris: Lithuanian curd cheese

Our Lithuanian-American “Elvis”

Rick Dunham.portrait

Rick Dunham, proudly 1/4th Lithuanian on his mother’s side, is a long-time Lithuanian-American Club member who has entertained at Club functions and professional gigs like the Illinois State Fair for 28 years as his singing alter-ego, “Elvis Himselvis.” He has also competed in many professional Elvis tributes, like the annual Midwest Tribute to the King in Springfield.

In fact, Rick has performed professionally as Elvis in 33 states, Canada and Europe (including on Lithuanian television).

Rick and his "retinue" in a publicity shot

Rick and his “retinue” in a publicity shot

He has also acted in 77 productions over the past 33 years, locally at the Springfield Muni Opera, Springfield Theatre Center, and Theatre in the Park. For the past eight years, he has worked a job he loves as one of the cast of professional actors at the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Museum. His most recent role at the Museum was as Stephen Douglas in “The Heavens are Hung in Black.”

Rick is the great-grandson of Michael and Margaret (Liutkus) Banzin, who came to the U.S. in 1902 and 1907, respectively, and were married in Riverton, IL. He probably holds our local American-born record for lifetime visits back to Lithuania at eight trips, so far. And, he hopes that he and Lithuania have not seen the last of each other.

Rick grew up in rural Dawson, spending a lot of time with his Grandma Helen (Banzin) Gestautas, who spoke Lithuanian. Helen’s second husband, Lithuanian World War II DP (displaced person) Paul Gestautas, Rick’s step-grandfather, also was a major childhood influence who told countless stories of Lithuania and took Rick on his first trip there in 1978.

Rick’s mother, Mary Ann (Dodd) Dunham (now Homer), of Dawson, also is a long-time Club member. Since Rick says his father Donald Dunham of Buffalo “was singing before I was born,” it’s no surprise that Rick began singing at age 7, and his dad was his first accompanist. Brother Randy Dunham is also a musical theatre actor. Other siblings include: brother Rodney Dunham, half-brother Andrew Dunham and step-sister Shauna (Bryant) Moore. (Nieces Chloe and Darby will also be remembered by long-time Club members.)

After graduating from Tri-City High School, Rick attended Lincoln Land Community College and Millikin University in Decatur, where he earned a BFA Music-Theatre.

The following have been his favorite acting roles over the years (he likes comedy and musical comedy the best): Psedolus in “A Funny thing Happened on the Way to the Forum,” Nicely-nicely in “Guys & Dolls,” Charlie Baker in “The Foreigner,” Sam Byck in “Assassins,” Adam in “Seven Brides for Seven Brothers,” and when he was younger, Puck in “A Midsummer Night’s Dream,” W.A. Mozart in ‘Amadeus,” The Baker in “Into the Woods,” and Anthony in “Sweeney Todd.”

“I have always been a huge Stephen Sondheim fan,” Rick says.

Meet Newspaper Reporter Matt Buedel

Matt Buedel

Matt Buedel, who grew up in Springfield the son of Regina (Abramikas) Buedel and grandson of Lithuanian immigrants Walter and Stephanie Abramikas, is a police beat reporter for the Journal Star newspaper in Peoria, Ill. He has worked at the Journal-Star for 13 years. Lately, he observes, “I’ve ended up reporting almost as much about the local police as about criminals.” The rest of this blog profile is Matt, the professional (and professionally sardonic) writer, in his own words. Enjoy!

When he was 16, Matt’s parents slapped a license plate on his car that read “BUEDEL 4” so that other drivers in Springfield could notify them when he did something dumb. The strategy never worked, but the license plate stuck around for about 18 years.

Alas, Matt’s lovely wife, Clare, fearing for her husband’s safety after he authored some particularly pointed newspaper stories, recently convinced him to abandon his vanity plate. Hence, he will drive in relative anonymity to the annual meeting of the Peoria Chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union later this month, where he will receive an award for his police reporting.

License plate cajoling aside, Matt lives a life of domestic bliss. He and Clare are about to celebrate their first anniversary (a number skewed by years of procrastination in engagement). Clare was smart enough to escape journalism (unlike Matt, who holds a journalism degree from Bradley University) and return to school for another degree. She now works at a Peoria ad agency, where people have more fun.

Their daughter, Felicity, is 9 years old (and won her first argument with her father more than five years ago). Felicity claims she will never drive a car and will attend Bradley University, as much for family tradition as convenience: The campus is just down the street from their house in Peoria’s oldest neighborhood.

Besides marital bliss, Matt has two other luxuries in his life. He takes an unusual amount of solace in pointing cameras at things and pressing buttons. He once mistook this as a professional calling, but after a healthy dose of commercial work, decided not to send photography down the path his poetry once took: to a full-time job.

That he no longer writes for himself, however, is not a problem because of his second luxury, which can prove elusive depending on the day: Each morning, Matt leaves his house in search of the truth.

For the record, let me add that Matt attended St. Agnes Grade School and Sacred Heart Griffin High School. Also, after reading the above, Matt’s mom, Regina, notes that in addition to writing about the disappearance of a man with Alzheimer’s, Matt actually joined in the search and found the man’s body before search and rescue. The grateful family, about whom Matt had written so sensitively, mentioned Matt’s name in the victim’s obituary. And, both Matt and the victim’s son, Scott Garrett, subsequently became certified members of the Peoria County Search and Rescue Squad. Be sure to read all the comments at the end of the article at this link:
http://www.pjstar.com/news/x1134100794/Peoria-Co-man-found-dead-one-week-after-being-declared-missing

Here’s another recent story by Matt, coincidentally involving a Lithuanian woman:
http://www.pjstar.com/news/x1522333897/Another-woman-might-have-led-to-Valentines-Day-slaying

Meet Arts Editor & Writer Margaret Eby

Margaret and fellow staffer at the Decaturian newspaper

Margaret and fellow staffer at the Decaturian newspaper

Margaret Eby, a resident of Springfield, was recently named to the dean’s list as a senior English major at Millikin University in Decatur. She is the great-granddaughter of Lithuanian immigrant John Matekaitis. Her great-grandmother also was a Lithuanian immigrant who entered the U.S. through the port of Baltimore in the early years of the 20th Century.

Margaret’s parents are Susan and the Rev. Joseph Eby of Springfield. (Joe is the pastor at Chatham Presbyterian Church, and Susan is a member of the Greater Springfield Interfaith Association.)

I’ve never met Margaret, although I met Sue and Joe at the June 2012 picnic of the Lithuanian-American Club, as well as at a couple of Slow Food Springfield events.

Margaret appeared in a March column of the State Journal-Register. According to the SJ-R, she is co-founder, arts editor and writer for Re:Decatur, an online community newspaper for Macon County. Margaret is also arts editor and columnist for the Decaturian newspaper. You can read two of her recent columns here:

Seth Meyers makes us laugh, cry and pee our pants

Millikin catches glimpse of Appalachian and American history

Update: A graduate of Rochester High School, Margaret graduated from Millikin University in May 2013 and is now a junior account executive with DCC Marketing in Decatur.

Chernis Seeks to Redevelop Historic Tract

Joe and Joey Chernis, owners of Midwest Demolition of Springfield

Joe and Joey Chernis, owners of Midwest Demolition of Springfield

A few weeks ago I read of some interesting plans for the old icehouse at 9th and Edwards by Joseph J. Chernis and his son Joey. The grandson of an immigrant Lithuanian coal-miner who died at age 45 from black lung, Joseph (Joe) is a retired 35-year field service engineer for 3M Company. He is also a Vietnam vet and former Springfield Township Highway Commissioner (1997-2005).

In 2009, he formed Midwest Demolition with his then-27-year-old son Joey, who could operate a backhoe at age 9 and loves managing the company. In less than four years, Midwest has grown to a total of 10 employees, and has performed basically every kind of job requiring heavy equipment, including demolishing multi-story buildings, excavating ponds, pre-construction prep and trucking scrap. For example, Midwest is currently at work on the new Aldi site on Dirksen Parkway.

Other customers in Illinois and beyond have included Norfolk Southern Rail, Mervis Industries, and the City of Springfield. However, there’s something special about Midwest’s icehouse project. This time, it’s not just about demolition. And Joe Chernis, himself, owns the property: four buildings on 1.2 acres that he bought at bank auction in 2009 as the only bidder.

A March 12, 2013 State Journal-Register article described how Joe wants to redevelop the icehouse site, which is just east of the Lincoln Home area, in concert with the 10th St. rail transportation center to be developed nearby. One idea is for a historic Route 66 visitor center and museum. Springfield Convention & Visitors Bureau officials agree that it’s a very attractive and strategic location, once private or public funds become available.

Joe’s Lithuanian immigrant grandparents, Joseph and Josephine Chernis, came to Springfield in 1906.They had two children, Joseph, and Margaret. Joe Chernis is the son of Joseph, Jr., deceased. He has three siblings: Marilyn Jean, Cheryl Beth, and John Patrick, and he attended St. Aloysius Grade School and St. James Trade School. His son Joey attended Ursuline Academy and Lanphier High School, followed by a laborers’ training center. According to Joe, demolition is clearly in son Joey’s blood: “Even as a boy, he could tear up an anvil with a rubber mallet. And he has always been fascinated with heavy equipment.”

Remembering Irene and George Kudirka, M.D.

George.KudirkaIrene.Kudirka

Another long-time Springfield-area Lithuanian died recently: Irene Kudirka, 85.
Many of us remember Irene and her husband, George A. Kudirka, M.D., of Mason City, from Lithuanian-American Club dinner dances, picnics and Christmas parties in the 1990s and early 2000s. George passed away at age 88 back in October 2011. He was born in Alytus, Lithuania on April 29, 1923, graduated from “Ausros” High School for boys in Kaunas, and earned his M.D. at Tuebingen University in Tuebingen, Germany as a person displaced by World War II.
After emigrating to the United States, George completed his medical internship and residency as a family practitioner in New York City. He was a diplomate and fellow, in good standing, of the American College of Family Physicians for 50 years. He was board-certified and attended annual medical conferences with his wife Irene around the world. George was also a Korean War veteran, serving as a physician with the rank of captain.
Irene (Giedrys) Kudirka, who died last week (March 1, 2013) in California, was born in Kybartas, Lithuania on June 21, 1927. Together with her parents, Andreas and Berta, and older brother, Eugene, Irene moved to Kaunas, Lithuania as a child, where she attended school.
During the Second World War, her father was a prisoner of the occupying Soviets at the Kaunas 9th Fort Prison. After her father was released, the family fled to Germany and ended up living as refugees in the “Haunstetten” displaced persons camp in Augsburg. While still in Germany, Irene graduated from Saint Theresa’s Catholic Girls High School. She emigrated with her parents to Brooklyn, NY in 1949. In 1951, she married George while he was completing his residency, and the couple remained married for 60 years.
In 1951 they settled in Mason City, Illinois, where they resided for 50 years, raising a family of five children; sons George of Tuscaloosa, AL, Tom of Santa Monica, CA, Anthony of Milford, MI, John of Thousand Oaks, CA, and daughter Daina (Kudirka) Shuster of Arcadia, CA. All of George and Irene’s children are college graduates: three sons hold medical degrees; one son, masters degrees in public administration and international business; and daughter Daina, a BS in nursing.
The funeral service for Irene Kudirka in Mason City will be held at Hurley Funeral Home on Tuesday, March 26, 2013 at 2:00 p.m. Visitation will be one hour prior to the service beginning at 1:00 p.m. Graveside services will follow at the Mason City Cemetery, where George is also buried.
Both George and Irene were uprooted by war, had their educations and families disrupted, and were forced by circumstances to emigrate at least twice by the age of 25. They were remarkable people with remarkable stories that I hope I can someday post in further detail. For now, we offer our sympathy to George and Irene’s children and grandchildren.

Our Lithuanian-American U.S. Senator

Senator Richard J. Durbin

Senator Dick Durbin

Senator Richard J. Durbin isn’t just one of the most powerful—and down-to-earth–political leaders in the United States. He is our #1 claim to fame as Springfield Lithuanian-Americans, and one of Lithuania’s best friends in Washington.

As Assistant Majority Leader of the U.S. Senate, he is the second highest-ranking U.S. Senator and only the fifth Illinois Senator in history to serve as a Senate leader. In January, he was appointed Chairman of the Senate’s Appropriations Subcommittee on Defense.

Many are familiar with what Senator Durbin has accomplished on U.S. consumer issues like food safety and financial regulation. We in Springfield are grateful for his role in the creation of the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum.

Senator Durbin’s ethnic Lithuanian profile is less well-known outside of Central Illinois.

Dick Durbin is the son of Ona Kutkaite (Kutkin–possibly from Kutkis) Durbin, who was born in Jurbarkas, Lithuania in 1909. In 1911, his maternal grandmother and his mother (two years old at the time), aunt and uncle all immigrated to East St. Louis to join grandfather Kutkin.

Lithuanian-language Catholic prayer book

Lithuanian-language Catholic prayer book

One family artifact that Senator Durbin treasures is the small contraband Lithuanian-language Catholic prayer book printed in Vilnius in 1863, like the one pictured here, that his grandmother carried with her to America.  For more than 40 years, publishing, teaching and speaking in the Lithuanian language were banned by the Czarist Russian rulers of Lithuania.

Senator Durbin explained:  “My grandmother, as defiant as she was, had this prayer book and she wasn’t going to surrender it—and she brought it with her to this country. That said something about her, but it also said something about America that she knew when she came here, her right to practice her religion would always be protected.”

Senator Durbin’s parents Ona and William were railroad employees in East St. Louis.  After finishing grade school and high school there, Dick earned a B.S. from the School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University in Washington, D.C. in 1966 and a J.D. from Georgetown’s School of Law in 1969. While in D.C., he got his first taste of national politics interning in the office of Senator Paul Douglas (D-IL).

Dick moved to Springfield as a new lawyer with a young family in 1969 for his first job: legal counsel to Lieutenant Governor Paul Simon.  From 1972-1982, he was counsel to the Illinois State Senate Judiciary Committee.  He won his first election—to the U.S. House of Representatives–in 1982.  Though he commutes between Illinois and Washington, his primary residence has been in Springfield since 1969.

The young Durbin family’s rented house on S. State St. across from Southside Christian Church.

The young Durbin family’s rented house on S. State St. across from Southside Christian Church.

That means many here have crossed paths, over the years, with Dick and his wife Loretta and their three children:  Christine (deceased in 2008), Paul and Jennifer. In the late 1960s and early 1970s, my family lived one block south of the Durbins on S. State St. (in Blessed Sacrament Parish), and my older sister Terry, a teenager at the time, was called on to babysit the young Durbin children.

When visiting from out of town, I remember putting up yard signs for one of his House campaigns in 1984 or 1986.  Next came the “Singing Revolution,” when Dick was a great partner in the U.S. Congress for the many local Lithuanian-Americans lobbying for Lithuanian independence from the Soviet Union.

In the spring of 1990, after small and embattled Lithuania declared the re-establishment of its sovereignty, then-U.S. Rep. Durbin stood on the steps of the Cathedral with several hundred fellow Springfield Lithuanian-Americans to rally U.S. support.  I remember seeing a note from Dick to my family on embossed House stationery admiring “the fire in your father’s eyes” during the demonstration.  (Our 70-ish father was a World War II “displaced person” who had arrived from Lithuania in 1949.)

Rep. Durbin also was a founder and leader of the Congressional Baltic Caucus and wrote/sponsored several important resolutions in support of Lithuania before and after independence came in 1991. After he became a U.S. Senator in 1996, Dick was key to founding the Senate’s Baltic caucus and continued to assist Lithuania over the years, most significantly with its entry into NATO.

In 2012 he made a personal donation to the new “Lithuanians in Springfield” historical marker in Enos Park.

For more info about Senator Durbin’s life and times in Springfield: http://www.springfieldsown.com/features/cover-story/464/home-where-your-heart

See him holding up his grandmother’s prayer book during a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing: <a href=”http://durbin.senate.gov/public/index.cfm/photos?ID=25c04e26-c04b-498c-ae8b-32195b462255

Here he is visiting Lithuania in January 2011, commemorating the 20th anniversary of the Soviet massacre at the Vilnius TV tower:  http://www.illinoistimes.com/Springfield/article-8287-durbin-commemorates-bloody-sunday-in-lithuania.html

See this link for Senator Durbin’s brief political biography. http://durbin.senate.gov/public/index.cfm/about

A warm thank-you to the Senator’s D.C. aide Christina (Norkus) Mulka, a fellow Lithuanian-American, who assisted with this information.

Meet Writer Dan Naumovich

dan.naumovichMost of us probably know Dan Naumovich as a monthly humor columnist for the State Journal-Register who makes us laugh at everyday aspects of family life. As a writer myself, I can tell you it’s a gift to be able to make something like having the flu sound funny. (Here’s one of Dan’s most popular SJ-R columns: http://www.sj-r.com/features/x1806564873/Dan-Naumovich-Sorry-kids-youve-been-chopped )

Few of Dan’s readers probably know that he is a third-generation Springfield Lithuanian-American, the grandson of Lithuania-born Leonard and Josephine Naumovich. Dan is also one of 10 children of Leonard and Jean Naumovich, and, he says, “probably the only one not to win a Fr. Yunker (Lithuanian student) college scholarship.”

Dan’s day job for eight years has been marketing the services of Crawford, Murphy & Tilly consulting engineers of Springfield. He holds a bachelor’s degree in marketing from Quincy College, and also earned a master’s degree in communications. “When I started grad school,” Dan says, “my wife Tammy and I had one child. By the time I graduated, we had four: Maria (now 13), Tessie (11), Victor (11), and Mark (8). It was a busy time,” Dan says.

Dan grew up on the North End and went to St. Aloysius Grade School. He graduated from Griffin High School in 1984. He started writing for the SJ-R in 2005. “The editor had been reading my blog, which covered local issues, and contacted me about contributing to the newspaper on a freelance basis,” Dan says. “I tend to write about my children a lot, but now that they’re getting older, I have to be a 6-2009-1 (7)little more sensitive about it. Even though 99 percent of kids never read a newspaper, I don’t want any embarrassing stories making it back to the playground.”

Dan has a freelance writing service on the side, through which he writes for other publications, and also provides copy to businesses and organizations. His freelance web site is www.naumo.com.