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4A
THE CHRONICLE ■ JULY 2008 TheChronicleOnline.net
TOPNATIONALNEWS
Illinois man changes his name to
'In God We Trust'
By Michael Ireland
ASSIST News Service
ZION, ILLINOIS (ANS)
-- A school bus driver and amateur
artist from the Chicago
suburb of Zion has legally
changed his name to "In God
We Trust."
The Zion artist people used
to know as Steve Kreuscher is
now legally In God We Trust.
According to the Associated
Press (AP), a Lake County
circuit court judge approved
Steve Kreuscher's (CROY'shirz)
name change petition on
Friday.
The 57-year-old's first
name was changed to "In
God," while his last name was
changed to "We Trust." He
says the new name symbolizes
the help God gave him during
tough times and that he can't
wait to begin signing his artwork
with the new moniker.
The 57-year-old artist and
bus driver was ecstatic about
the name change as he exited
court Friday.
"I feel great. It's just like,
yes!" We Trust said, according
to Nicholas P. Alajakis, writing
in the Lake County News-Sun.
That newspaper said the
entire process before Judge
David Hall took less than two
minutes, but We Trust said he
was quite nervous.
"I have been praying for this.
I didn't want anything to mess
this up," he said.
We Trust said the new name
more closely represents his
devotion to God than "Steve
Kreuscher" did.
The process to change
his name took roughly three
months, the newspaper said.
Throughout the course of his
name change We Trust said he
was looking for a sign from
God that would let him know
it was a good idea. He got it
one day while adding up the
expenses for the name change,
which came out to roughly
$600.
"I didn't want to use my
own money because things are
tight," said the father of four.
"Three weeks later, I got my
(tax) rebate check for $600."
Changing his name to something
so out of the ordinary
is bound to get mixed reactions
from people, especially
because of the religious overtones,
he said.
"I'm not out to offend anybody.
People can call me
something different," We Trust
said.
The newspaper reported that
We Trust must now go about
changing his name on all legal
documents. Early next week,
he'll visit the Social Security
office in Waukegan and then
the Secretary of State's office
and his bank.
He's already begun signing
his artwork with his new moniker,
a move that he believes
may add value to his work.
"There are billions of artists
out there. If you don't do
something to stand out in the
crowd the world won't recognize
you," We Trust said.
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Formerly known as Steve Kruescher, In God We Trust says he feels
fantastic after a Lake County judge granted his request for the
name change. (Photo: Vincent Perri, Daily Herald).
Daily Herald suburban
Chicago newspaper Photo
Editor Vincent Perri writes that
the amateur artist says his new
name fully expresses who he is
as a person.
"God has brought me
through some very hard
times," he said. "I feel this is a
way to honor God and immortalize
that phrase."
We Trust is most excited to
sign his artwork with the new
moniker. He said it will make
his colored pencil drawings
stand out in a unique way.
Efforts by atheists to remove
any reference to God from
U.S. currency also has him
worried. He said the words are
an "endangered species."
But now he feels he's saved
the phrase forever. "You can
take it off the money, but you
can't take away my name," he
has said previously.
The Herald writer also tells
how We Trust will have to
change his driver's license,
bank account and Social
Security card to reflect his new
name. And how that's going to
cost him some money.
That writer says We Trust
has already had to pay $246
for the legal petition, and about
$150 for legal notices in the
newspaper. We Trust figures
the total cost will be about
$600 and recounts how he
just received his government
stimulus check in the amount
of $600 to cover the costs
involved.
"It didn't surprise me," We
Trust told the newspaper. "God
is with me, "he said.
Secret Bilderberg agenda to
microchip Americans leaked
Elitists want to microchip Americans
in name of fighting terrorism
2008 Bilderberg meeting
have leaked the details of
what elitists were discussing
in Chantilly Virginia in June
and the talking points were
ominous - a plan to microchip
Americans under the pretext
of fighting terrorist groups
which will be identified as
blonde haired, blue eyed westerners.
Veteran Bilderberg
sleuth Jim Tucker relies on
Massachusetts High
School faces
pregnancy boom
Chronicle Staff Report
In a bizarre incident at the
Gloucester High School in
Gloucester, Mass. some 17 girls
are pregnant in what observers
call a pregnancy pact.
Reports indicate that last fall
a group of girls began appearing
at the school clinic and asked
for pregnancy tests. "Some girls
seemed more upset when they
weren't pregnant than when they
were," Principal Joseph Sullivan
told Time Magazine.
The report added that men in
their 20s were suspected to fathering
most children. Dr. Brian Orr,
the medical director at the clinic
said he started to lobby for birth
control even without parental consent
after seeing the high rate of
pregnancy tests in the clinic.
"It is very clear that the board
[at Northeast Health System of
Beverly, which manages the clinic]
is not in favor and will not support
Carolyn Kirk, mayor
of Gloucester, Mass.,
right, speaks to members
of the media following
a meeting with
city leaders to discuss
issues surrounding
a report relating to
a pregnancy pact,
Monday, June 23,
2008 at city hall in
Gloucester, Mass.
contraception in the school," Orr told the Boston Globe.
"There is an epidemic of teen pregnancy at the school."
Town officials in Gloucester, however, are questioning
reports that a group of young girls made a pact to get
pregnant this past school year. As many as 18 high school
students are pregnant: that's four times the usual teen pregnancy
rate.
Time Magazine says it is standing by its story. But
Superintendent Christopher Farmer says from what he's
gathered, the so-called pact may have been nothing more
than a post-pregnancy agreement by the girls to stick
together and help each other raise their babies.
School officials say they are calling in expert advisers
and will decide by fall whether to start offering birth control
through the high school health center. It's a controversial
proposition in this heavily Catholic community. And,
many residents are quick to point out birth control would
not stop young girls who are trying to get pregnant.
sources who regularly attend
Bilderberg as aides and
assistants but who are not
Bilderberg members themselves.
The information they
provided is consistent for
those who have tracked the
development of the plan to
make the general public consider
implanted microchips as
a convenience as routine as
credit cards.
"Under the heading of
resisting terrorism there were
points made about how the
terrorist organizations are
recruiting people who do not
look like terrorists - blonde,
blue eyed boys - they're
searching hard for those
types to become the new mad
bombers," said Tucker.
The blue eyed blonde haired
Al-Qaeda line is a familiar
talking point that has been
pushed on Fox News and
within other Neo-Con circles
in an attempt to turn the antiterror
apparatus around to
target dissidents, protesters
and the American people in
general.
Ominously, Tucker's source
also reported that Bilderberg
were discussing the microchipping
of humans on a
mass scale, which would be
introduced under the pretext
of fighting terrorism whereby
the "good guys" would be
allowed to travel freely from
airports so long as their microchip
could be scanned and
the information stored in a
database.
Tucker said the idea was
also sold on the basis that it
would help hospital staff treat
a patient in an emergency situation
because a scan of the
chip would provide instantaneous
access to health details.
Such a bizarre concept may
seem unbelievable to some,
but over the past ten years
dozens of examples of people
accepting implanted chips for
a variety of different reasons
have been reported.
In 2004, Mexico's attorney
general and 160 of his office
staff were implanted with
tracker chips to control access
to secure areas of their headquarters.
The Baja Beach Club in
Barcelona and other nightclubs
around the world are
already offering implantable
chips to customers who want
to pay for drinks with the
wave of a hand and also get
access to VIP areas of the club
lounge.
Paul Joseph Watson writes
for prisonplanet.com.