Limestone Community High School shatters Easterseals fundraising goal
BARTONVILLE, Ill. (WMBD) — The booming drums and the loud instruments rocked the gym and gave Limestone Community High School students a terrific pick-me-up.
But it wasn't to cheer on a sports team but rather to celebrate uniqueness.
Limestone raised about $90,000 last year for their annual Easterseals fundraiser. Given that, the seniors issued a challenge and a chance to earn gold — raise $100,000. Easterseals is a national nonprofit devoted to helping kids with developmental delays, disabilities, or other special needs.
Challenge accepted and shattered.
After not even a month, students raised a total of $125,490. The total wasn't known by the entire student body until it was revealed through numbers on posterboards during the mid-morning assembly.
Even a cleverly rehearsed 'accidental' re-arrangement of the numbers that made it appear to students like they missed their goal didn't shake the confidence.
'The seniors set a goal of $100,000,' said Tara Stout, the faculty advisor for the student council. 'And we're like, 'Okay, fine, as long as the message of Easterseals is what's coming through, that everybody is included and empowered to be able to do whatever they want with their goals. Okay, let's make it happen.''
'And they, of course, blew it out of the water,' she said.
Each year a theme is picked for the fundraiser, and this year's was 'The Greatest Showman' to celebrate uniqueness and being proud of who you are. Beaming with pride, Stout said the students' efforts showed the dedication of students as well as the community.
'It just goes to show our community we can do amazing things for other people and have that joy right along with the people that it benefits,' Stout said.
Senior Victoria Bartolo is the student body president. She said raising this type of money isn't a simple task.
'It is a labor of love and it does not come easy,' she said. 'But for things like this and the opening assembly and also seeing the difference that we make, it's all worth it.'
Several fundraisers including a male pageant called 'Rocket Man,' named after their school's team name, and other events like a golf outing were able to help students achieve the goal the seniors set out to reach.
Bartolo said the memories she and her peers have made over her last four years doing this charity won't be forgotten.
'If it's a funny story about one of the events like Rocket Man or just telling everyone that we broke the record, it means the world to me, and it's something that I'll carry with me for the rest of my life,' she said.
Limestone puts on 'the greatest show' as they prepare to help a local non-profit
Keith Brown, district superintendent, spoke during the assembly about how the effort put into the Easterseals fundraiser reflects on the community and heart of Limestone.
'We are a big proponent of inclusion in our classrooms and in our programs, and you see it every day. The rest of the outside world gets to see it during this month,' he said. 'We believe very, very strongly in inclusion and community.'
After the 'business part of the meeting,' students competed against the faculty in tug of war, a cheer routine was performed. Since girls lost in what Limestone dubbed the 'Battle of the Sexes' — a friendly contest to see who raised more money, boys or girls — some female students and faculty had pies thrown in their face by the gleeful boys.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Los Angeles Times
an hour ago
- Los Angeles Times
Hugh Jackman brings jokes, drama and John Denver to opening night at the Hollywood Bowl
Strumming a black acoustic guitar to match his black tuxedo pants and jacket, Hugh Jackman strolled onto the stage of the Hollywood Bowl and let the audience know precisely what it was in for. 'Little bit of Neil Diamond,' he said as the Hollywood Bowl Orchestra revved up the go-go self-improvement jive of 'Crunchy Granola Suite.' A dedicated student of showbiz history, the Australian singer and actor was starting his concert Saturday night just as Diamond did half a century ago at the Greek Theatre gig famously captured on his classic 'Hot August Night' LP. Yet Diamond was just one of the flamboyant showmen Jackman aspired to emulate as he headlined the opening night of the Bowl's 2025 season. Later in the concert, the 56-year-old sang a medley of tunes by Peter Allen, the Australian songwriter and Manhattan bon vivant whom Jackman portrayed on Broadway in 2003 in 'The Boy From Oz.' And then there was P.T. Barnum, whose career as a maker of spectacle inspired the 2017 blockbuster 'The Greatest Showman,' which starred Jackman as Barnum and spawned a surprise-hit soundtrack that went quadruple-platinum. 'There's 17,000 of you, and if any of you did not see 'The Greatest Showman,' you might be thinking right now: This guy is super-confident,' Jackman told the crowd, panting ever so slightly after he sang the movie's title song, which has more than 625 million streams on Spotify. The success of 'Showman' notwithstanding, Jackman's brand of stage-and-screen razzle-dazzle feels fairly rare in pop music these days among male performers. (The theater-kid moment that helped make 'Wicked' a phenomenon was almost exclusively engineered — and has almost exclusively benefited — women such as Ariana Grande, Cynthia Erivo, Chappell Roan and Laufey.) What makes Jackman's jazz-handing even more remarkable is that to many he's best known as the extravagantly mutton-chopped Wolverine character from the Marvel movies. Before Jackman's performance on Saturday, the Hollywood Bowl Orchestra, conducted by Thomas Wilkins, played a brief set of orchestral music that included selections from John Ottman's score for 'X2: X-Men United.' The ascent of Benson Boone, with his mustache and his backflips, suggests that Jackman may yet find inheritors to carry on the tradition he himself was bequeathed by Diamond and the rest. But of course that assumes that Jackman is looking to pass the baton, which was not at all the impression you got from his spirited and athletic 90-minute show at the Bowl. In addition to stuff from 'The Greatest Showman' and a swinging tribute to Frank Sinatra, he did a second Diamond tune — 'Sweet Caroline,' naturally, which he said figures into an upcoming movie in which he plays a Diamond impersonator — and a couple of Jean Valjean's numbers from 'Les Misérables,' which Jackman sang in the 2012 movie adaptation that earned him an Academy Award nomination for lead actor. (With an Emmy, a Grammy and two Tonys to his name, he's an Oscar win away from EGOT status.) For 'You Will Be Found,' from 'Dear Evan Hansen,' he sat down behind a grand piano and accompanied himself for a bit; for the motor-mouthed 'Ya Got Trouble,' from 'The Music Man' — the first show he ever did as a high school kid, he pointed out — he came out into the crowd, weaving among the Bowl's boxes and interacting with audience members as he sang. 'I just saw a lot of friends as I went through,' he said when he returned to the stage. 'Hello, Melissa Etheridge and Linda. Hello, Jess Platt. Hi, Steph, hi, David, hi, Sophia, hi, Orlando — so many friends. Very difficult to say hello to friends and still do that dialogue.' He was panting again, this time more showily. 'It's like 53 degrees and I'm sweating.' The show's comedic centerpiece was a version of John Denver's 'Thank God I'm a Country Boy' that Jackman remade to celebrate his roots as an 'Aussie boy.' There were good-natured jokes about shark attacks and koalas and Margot Robbie, as well as a few pointed political gibes, one about how 'our leaders aren't 100 years old' — 'I'm moving on from that joke fast,' he added — and another that rhymed 'Life down under is really quite fun' with 'I never have to worry: Does that guy have a gun?' The emotional centerpiece, meanwhile, was 'Showman's' 'A Million Dreams,' for which the Hollywood Bowl Orchestra was joined by 18 members of the Los Angeles Philharmonic's Youth Orchestra Los Angeles. The song itself is pretty cringe, with a lyric bogged down by cliches and a melody you've heard a zillion times before. But Jackman sold its corny idealism with a huckster's sincerity you couldn't help but buy.
Yahoo
4 hours ago
- Yahoo
Food and free music are set to fill the air at a Peoria park
PEORIA, Ill. (WMBD) — The Peoria Municipal Band and Mac Daddy Spuds are set to hit Glen Oak Park Sunday evening. The band will be at Glen Oak Park, located at 2218 North Prospect Road, for a free concert starting at 7 p.m. Sunday, June 8, said a post on the city of Peoria's Facebook page. 'Yeehaw it is the Wild West! Ed Hammond is our special guest emcee, and Jennifer Rosa is back to sing for you,' the band's website said. The website also says to 'come early' and get mac and cheese, barbecue or a sandwich from the Mac Daddy Spuds food truck. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


New York Post
8 hours ago
- New York Post
Ron Howard's daughter reveals shocking details about ‘messed up' childhood
Bryce Dallas Howard knows she didn't have a normal childhood. The 'Jurassic World' actress 44, recalled the unusual interests she had while growing up as filmmaker Ron Howard's daughter. 'I was such a messed up kid – I would walk around the Disney lot reading about euthanasia,' Bryce said in an interview with The Independent published Saturday. 8 Bryce Dallas Howard and Ron Howard at the 2020 Vanity Fair Oscar Party. WireImage 'But I also wasn't dark,' she added. 'There was just a sort of intensity to my feelings and the stories I was curious about.' Bryce also revealed that she 'had a lot of difficulties learning and communicating' as a kid. 8 Throwback picture of Ron Howard, Cheryl Howard and Bryce Dallas Howard. realronhoward/Instagram 8 Ron Howard and Bryce Dallas Howard in an Instagram photo. brycedhoward/Instagram 'I was always very happy and smiley, but not extremely verbal,' she explained. 'It was unclear what intelligence was there, and how much I was really processing.' Bryce shared that her dad Ron, 71, and mom Cheryl took her to a psychologist, who later told the couple about the meetings. 'Can we talk about the dead babies? Because Bryce talks a lot about dead babies,' Bryce recalled the therapist saying, before the star laughed. 8 Ron Howard and Cheryl Howard with daughter Bryce Dallas Howard at a wedding in 1982. Ron Galella Collection via Getty Images The 'Rocketman' actress also told the outlet that she grew up on her dad's film sets, but was always told to avoid the actors to not disturb them. So, she spent time with the camera department, the first assistant directors and the sound guys and learned about the movie-making process. Bryce said that it wasn't until her high school years that she entertained the idea of becoming an actor. 8 Bryce Dallas Howard, Ron Howard and Cheryl Howard at the DGA Honors Gala 2015. WireImage 8 Bryce Dallas Howard with her dad Ron Howard in 2014. Getty Images for Canon Despite her current fame, Bryce admitted that she 'hardly ever gets recognized to this day.' 'I live a totally normal life – partly because I'm a shut-in and don't leave the house that much, but I've also just been incredibly lucky,' the 'Mandalorian' director stated. 'I was never followed around by photographers.' In a separate interview with The Times UK, Bryce didn't push back on the nepo baby title. 8 Bryce Dallas Howard at the 'Deep Cover' premiere at SXSW London 2025. Alan Chapman/Dave Benett/WireImage 'I happen to be in a situation where there are multiple layers of privilege,' she told the outlet, noting that her dad is the son of Hollywood stars Rance Howard and Jean Speegle Howard. 'So I got to have access in a way that, even if you were born into it, most people wouldn't,' she noted. 8 Bryce Dallas Howard and Ron Howard at the BAFTA Awards in London in 2017. Getty Images Bryce continued, 'At the beginning of my career people would ask — and I was always so shocked by this — 'Do you feel it's been a disadvantage?' And I was like, 'Disadvantage?'' 'When you're an actor, you need to capture a casting director or director's attention,' she said, 'but when you're someone who's related to someone else, there's an inherent curiosity there.'