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How We Stack UpWhat’s Up With That?


The laws of nature…
overruled

MY LIFE AS A BIRD

by

ColinBird

[OCT. 25, 2001]  It’s getting cold again in Logan County. And not because it’s fall and the air is expected to begin turning brisk and chilly this time of year, but rather, I’d like to point out, because Mother Nature hates me.

For years I have been an avid runner. My favorite part of the day is early dawn, when I wake up smelling the crisp morning air, stretching out my tired body and then promptly going back to sleep for another four and a half hours, laughing at anyone dumb enough to

actually sacrifice sleep for exercise. So I’m a night runner. Or at least I was, up until the hour of Nature’s evil turn. You see, the annual Harvest of Talents is coming up on Saturday, Oct. 27.

…For those of you readers who don’t know, this is a local festive event where many talented people gather together to talk about how talented they are. Plus there is Pie. Which is more than enough reason for me to attend. Well, that, and the 5K run.

So I’ve been in serious training mode for all of two days now (minus the one day I missed due to a severe cramp infection from the previous day’s training), in hopes of finishing the race before either the 30-minute mark or before the paramedics begin resuscitating me. Although training is not an easy process because, as any serious athlete will tell you, there is an absolute ton of movement involved. Something I successfully avoided until the third grade, when my parents began recognizing my astute laziness abilities and stopped bringing food to me, thus causing me to walk to the fridge on my own. We’ve been best friends ever since, the refrigerator and I. But now it’s time to stay focused. Not just on food and all the glorious bliss it provides, but on getting ready to run. And trying to overcome the wrath of Mother Nature, her ruthless self, in the process. Let me explain…

 

As I said earlier, Mother Nature hates me. And as part of her abhorrence toward me, she has decided that I shall (1) Never Obtain Peak Physical Performance; (2) Never Obtain Average Physical Performance; (3) Never, Under No Circumstance Whatsoever, Survive The Harvest Of Talents, Annual 5K Run. She is seeing to this by not allowing me the opportunity to properly prepare. So far during my long, two-day training regime, I have already been the target of many vicious and pointed attacks.

First off, I began running the other day when it started to hail. Mere coincidence, you say? Well, that’s what I thought, until the hail cloud began following me. It was like one of those little cartoon clouds, chasing me down while I cried, fleeing it, similar to the way a stray cat meandering down a random Lincoln sidewalk might flee a charging bear. Only with more screaming.

 

[to top of second column in this commentary]

Before that I was nearly tackled by a large crow. Running out on Airport Road, just off Route 10, I saw it creeping toward me from the corner of my eye. Actually, before I saw it, I heard it laughing. That’s when I turned just in time to dodge the psychotic bird, who, I believe, was packing.

Aside from the attacks, it’s just getting downright cold at night. Except on nights when I’m too busy to run. In which case, the weather stays in or around the mid- to low 90s. Often even in December. And when I am able to hit the streets after dark, I’m forced to dress like a hypothermic Eskimo, wearing 14 layers of clothing, which is almost thick enough to protect me from the killer birds and death-crazed hail clouds.

So I’ve seen no choice but to hire myself a stunt double. The process is simple: He runs out a few feet in front of me, and after he goes down, I take off sprinting home. But even at top speeds (and using a special tactic I learned in a dream once where I was being chased by a Giant Maniac Smurf — which is flailing my arms around my head frantically) when I’m out in the middle of town, in the wide open, it’s then that I’m most vulnerable to these forces which have chosen to stop me.

So I contacted the proprietor of Kickapoo Creek Park, Scott Walker, a good friend of mine, and asked if I might perhaps use the park’s facilities to practice running after they close down at night. Scott, who is an active member in his church and an integrity-filled family man who recently returned from a trip in which he went to help out local missionaries, told me that if I wanted to run there after closing time, that he — and this is a direct quote, I swear — "Might not shoot me."

So now that I know my friends have been hired out by Mother Nature and that all other odds seemed to be stacked against me, I might just rethink entering this race. But then I’m reminded of all my hard work thus far and my two days’ worth of dedication. And I’m reminded of all that pie they’ll have there available for purchase, and that’s when I ask myself, "Why am I so worried?" The race begins at 8 a.m. I won’t even be up until noon.

[Colin Bird]


A place that most of us wish didn’t exist

LDC, an integral part of this community, an integral part of our humanity

By Mike Fak

[OCT. 24, 2001]  I wrote the following paragraph as part of an article I submitted to the Lincoln Courier in the summer of 1999. The paragraph was the lead to a story I wrote in support of LDC and its employees after a sad and disparaging report had come out regarding the death of one of the residents at the Lincoln Developmental Center.

The buildings are huddled together, like a sprawling college campus on the end of town. We drive by them almost every day, but we don’t see them. We don’t see them because they are part of a place that most of us wish didn’t exist. We ignore them or choose not to ponder what they represent because the reality of what they are and who lives and works in those buildings is more truth than most of us can live with.

Two years later, nothing about LDC or the people who work there causes me to change a single word in that paragraph.

LDC is under a great deal of fire these days. It is under fire for many reasons that actually have nothing to do with the 700 employees who walk the halls of the institution.

 

LDC has been told that it has failed to correct administrative problems in a timely fashion. The state, or no one else for that matter, asks why a woman from the Department of Corrections was moved into the chief position of administration at a home for mentally handicapped individuals. She has been replaced, but no one has asked why this administrator was actually promoted to another office after having failed to handle the stated problems at LDC.

By the way, the employees at the center knew she couldn’t do the job and voted "no confidence" in her administration. But that wouldn’t be of any significance, would it.

We have heard that LDC is under scrutiny for not having enough staff to handle the patient load at the center, but no one has asked the state why their continued cutbacks in funding, which caused this understaffing, was not remedied in a timely fashion.

We hear press conferences by John Eckert, head of the Consortium of Illinois Disability Advocates, saying that the center should be closed down. No one asks the man if his consortium, which has a goal of shutting down developmental institutions in Illinois, has a truly objective view of the situation. No one has asked the man if he has ever visited LDC and seen for himself the claims he makes in front of a microphone. I can find no one who has ever seen him at the center.

Eckert has stated that the issue has nothing to do with jobs. An easy statement for someone to make who earns a living disparaging LDC and all the other developmental centers like it. I have to ask Mr. Eckert if, in the event he got his wish and all of Illinois no longer had these facilities, would he then be out of a job. Or would he perhaps find some other cause to ensure that he continues to earn a paycheck.

 

[to top of second column in this commentary]

Mr. Eckert claims that his organization represents the patients of LDC, but he has interviewed only those who agree with his position. He has nothing to say or do with the parents group, which Tuesday had their own press conference supporting the center and its employees.

Eckert, of course, has his own agenda that he claims is for the benefit of all the tenants of the center, but his actions and statements prove otherwise. His organization is intent on closing state care facilities, and with LDC on the ropes, he and his coalition are circling over the beleaguered center like verbal vultures waiting for the kill.

The coalition states jobs are not the issue, but jobs in any community always are an issue to be considered in an equation.

The employees of LDC have not discovered the great "cash cow." Working at that center is not some type of "died and gone to heaven" employment. These employees are making a living doing something that we and Mr. Eckert cannot do. That job is helping the mentally impaired have an existence in this world. The idea that all of them can have a coexistence with us is absurd. In the event Mr. Eckert walks away from a press conference long enough to visit LDC, he will find that a great many of the residents can never become our next-door neighbors. Many of these blessed souls need care 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

 

We could close LDC. All we need is for Mr. Eckert to pledge to bring these individuals into his home and neighborhood and to ensure, like the LDC employees do, that they are taken care of.

I find it disheartening that groups that profess their advocacy for disabled Americans have ulterior motives. No one should have to live in a home for developmentally disabled people. But the reality is, that is where some of us belong. We need to care for these individuals. We need to support the employees. Most of all we need to look in an honest and compassionate way at what God has dealt this world.

The Lincoln Developmental Center is an integral part of this community. More importantly, it is an integral part of our humanity. I don’t need to hold a press conference to explain that.

[Mike Fak]

Reply to Fak (not for publication):

mikefak@msn.com

Response to Fak’s commentary:

ldneditor@lincolndailynews.com 


Proud to be an American…
or at least a ‘Lincolnian’

By Gina Sennett

[OCT. 6, 2001]  Central Illinois continues to amaze me. Ever since Sept. 11, I have seen nothing but giving hearts and unselfish attitudes in the people around me. This Sunday, I had the opportunity to witness not only the giving of time and money to families in New York, but the humble attitude of Lincolnites in giving to their neighbors.

As was reported, this past Sunday was the Lincoln auction for the Red Cross Disaster Relief fund. Dozens of people showed up, not only to give their money but to give their time and efforts. Tirelessly, these volunteers gave as much as two weeks of their time to the nationwide cause to help victims of the terrorist attacks in New York, Washington, and Pennsylvania. This, however, was not what touched me that day.

Early in the auction, I had the opportunity to speak with Philip Carver, one of the volunteers, who pointed me in the direction of what he thought (and I agreed with him on this) was the highlight of the auction. It was a framed poster of a print by Allan Albaitis entitled "Return to Glory."

 

The painting is of a burning building and firemen lifting a ladder to an upper window. Streaming from the window is a billow of smoke and fire that blends into an American flag where it touches the top of the ladder. Against the building is what at first glance appears to be the shadow of the firemen. Upon closer examination, however, it is actually a photo of the Marines lifting the American flag on Iwo Jima.

The picture’s beauty and simplicity amazed me. This was not the photo we are all so familiar with of the firemen raising the flagpole in front of the remains of the World Trade Center. It was just a picture of men doing what was needed to save lives.

What was most awe-inspiring was that this print was not made in response to the "Attack on America" or the subsequent "acts of heroism." The copyright date on the poster was 1997. Albaitis, himself a veteran Las Vegas firefighter, looked at firefighters and realized — long before America did — that they are modern-day heroes.

Of his piece, he writes, "As are all of my firefighter pieces, ‘Return to Glory’ is meant to convey the emotional intensity and unswerving dedication of the men and women with whom I have been blessed to work." More on Albaitis’ work can be found on his website, http://www.fireart.com.

 

[to top of second column in this commentary]

But my story is not over. I said that this would be about the giving spirit of Lincolnites. And that it is. You see, this poster was purchased and donated by one of our own firefighters on behalf of the Lincoln Fire Department.

When, at last, it was put up on the auction block, the bidding was furious. Two people wanted that poster. I don’t know why the man who did not buy it wanted it. I don’t know if he had a deeper purpose or just wanted it for his home. But William Dahman was the man who would not give up. He bought the poster for $100.

When I spoke with him afterward, he said that he was not alone. He said he knew of many people, mainly firefighters, who were going to pitch in to buy this poster, including Dr. Robert and Linda Shaffer. Dahman said that he and many others had helped move the donations into the gym on Saturday, had seen the poster, and knew exactly where it belonged. At Old Joe’s.

 

Old Joe’s is a bar on Sangamon owned by retired firefighter and chief Joe Poppish. According to Dahman, many of the local firefighters like to go there to relax. "Old Joe’s has been there for 50 years," he said, "and it’ll be there for 50 more. And that picture will hang there."

Now I have only lived in Lincoln a few months, but it really makes me proud to know that there are people in this town not only thinking of those far away in this time of need, but thinking of each other. The men of the Lincoln and Logan County fire departments know that heroes are not only found in times of crisis and cities of international stature, but they are found here — in the cornfields of Illinois — every day.

[Gina Sennett]

 

 


Shifting paradigms

Airlines, flags, prayer and the law

By Mike Fak

[OCT. 5, 2001]  I have been watching all the events that have entailed since the World Trade Center fell before our eyes and have noticed several strange and, in many cases, troubling issues coming before our eyes and ears.

I will tell you what stories have concerned me, and please let me know if you agree or have found other issues that you find out of place in the times we live in.

The airline industry will receive $5 billion in free federal funds plus an additional $10 billion in low-cost federal loan guarantees. I find no fault with helping an industry crippled by the events of Sept. 11, but question why the CEOs of these airlines continue to receive $4 million to $12 million a year in salary. In an industry that has laid off 130,000 employees, would not a significant pay cut by these executives have been appropriate? Could anyone say that cutting their pay from $12 million to $6 million would cause one of these executives to have to go on food stamps. All the Fed has stipulated in giving the billions is that CEOs of airlines don’t give themselves a raise for two years. Is that some type of hardship to an agency that has lobbied against the type of security actions that may have prevented their planes from becoming human bombs?

Six years ago, a national aeronautic safety committee headed by Vice President Al Gore had on the table requirements that all luggage be X-rayed, curbside check-in be stopped, and no baggage should be placed on a plane unless that person also is on the same plane. A dozen other security measures to ensure passenger safety in the air were recommended by the committee. The airline industry lobbied against these recommendations, stating they would cause hardships and delays in their flights. Gore made sure that all the recommendations were never approved. Two days after the recommendations were thrown in the wastebasket, $600,000 in airline industry political contributions made their way to the Democratic Party to re-elect the president. Doesn’t all of this sound wrong?

 

 

[to top of second column in this commentary]

 

CNN, that bastion of truth in the news, has directed all their anchors to not use the word "terrorists" in their description of the terrorists (I will use the word) or their activities, because these sick people have not been found guilty in a court of law. Are they serious? Do they expect me to ever watch their programs again?

Why is it that 80 percent of American flags are made in China? In a country that continues to export our jobs to other parts of the world to save a corporate buck, can we not have just one thing so simple and inexpensive as an American flag made in America? Maybe not. Our special forces, the Black Berets, have been getting their berets from China because they are 50 cents cheaper than a U.S. version would be. I personally have been forced on many occasions to buy items not made in this country. But I will promise you that my flags will always have a U.S.A. label on them, or I won’t have one at all.

Lastly, why is it that in the last three weeks in a country that sings "God Bless America," and pledges one nation under God at every event imaginable, in a nation that has a national day of prayer, a state day of prayer and city mayors throughout the land declaring a community gathering for prayer, that we still tell our children it is illegal to pray together in school. How does this concept make any sense?

Yes, after Sept. 11 we all are a little different than we were the day before. I’m a little sadder. A little more disheartened. And, it seems, a great deal more confused than ever.

[Mike Fak]

Reply to Fak (not for publication):

mikefak@msn.com

Response to Fak’s commentary:

ldneditor@lincolndailynews.com 


This is the em space, a staff writer’s section with observations about life experiences in Logan County and elsewhere. Enjoy your visit.

— Mary Krallmann


Gifts without wrappings

In spite of the closed curtains, in spite of the Saturday on the calendar, sunshine filled the bedroom more than at any other time. It was a little later than I usually wake up on a weekday but a little earlier than I get up on most days off. With no need for speaking ability, the sun seemed to say, "Wake up! Get up! And don’t try that trick of burrowing under the covers. I’ll still find you!"

I was awake, I was found, and I didn’t even want to hide. It promised to be one of the last bright, warm days before the clocks change. No one could wrap it up in a package and put a ribbon around it, but the day was a special gift nonetheless.

One use for such a day was to try out other gifts. For example, there was the new broom a recent houseguest bought for me. She had noticed that the bristles of the one standing in a kitchen corner were worn away almost to the level of the stitches that held the broom together. No wonder it was hard to use. When we went shopping, I picked out a replacement. We added it to the cart and then had to experiment with more convenient ways to position the long-handled object.

Since it was lightweight and angled for corners and under cabinets, the new broom turned out to be ideal for brushing away pine needles and spider webs that cling to exterior siding. A little external sweeping of the house felt like a good excuse for being outside on a beautiful fall morning.

During the shopping expedition for the broom, we had also found a windproof umbrella to replace one that hadn’t fared so well against the wind the year before. With recent downpours, protection from rain was a high priority. It wasn’t that I lacked umbrellas, but most were large instead of compact. For the sunny spell, the new model settled into a bottom drawer where the wrapping paper is stored. We never bothered to wrap the gift itself.

When a clerk checked the price of the umbrella — apparently the last of its kind — I also asked about a pin to replace one that had fallen out of a watchband. She took care of the need at no charge, supplying another gift without wrappings.

Later, when I cleaned with a vacuum instead of the broom, the missing pin showed up next to a wall, giving me a spare in case of another loss.

Other solutions around the house had developed almost as easily. When the words disappeared from television broadcasts at the beginning of the week, I pushed buttons and jiggled connections without success. My guest made a call the next day to find out if the problem was widespread. Since it wasn’t, we tried again in the evening, methodically checking the most likely sources of trouble. After that, everything worked fine. Even the picture looked clearer. The same plan apparently restored a balky computer screen, though we couldn’t say for sure which connection had been loose in either case. Repairs without cost are a significant gift.

When a serviceman came to replace a bathroom part, my guest remembered that I’d also mentioned a slow leak in the sink. She reported it, and when I came home, everything was fixed. The right words at the right time were another gift.

When we went out to eat, there was a complete array of gifts without wrappings, as my guest treated us to a selection of foods neither of us had prepared.

Of course, the companionship of the visit was a fundamental gift underlying all the others.

By the time the giver went home again, I was more aware of gifts all around every day.

Like tantalizing selections in a mass of colorful packages, each tree and each bush have become seasonal gifts. Wrapped in every imaginable variation of yellow and orange, of red, green and brown, the bounty is almost too much to receive all at once. The natural packaging is a gift in itself, and the gift needs no unwrapping.

[Mary Krallmann]

 

Where They Stand

Where They Stand is a commentary section that poses a question about a specific issue in the community. Informed individuals present their position with facts, opinions or insights on the issue. The following commentaries have been printed, unedited, in their entirety, as they were received. If you have further comment on the issue, please send an e-mail message, complete with your name, address and telephone number to ldneditor@lincolndailynews.com.


 

By the Numbers

Population estimates in Logan County
30,798 Total population, 1990
15,380 Rural population - 49.9%, 1990
15,418 Urban population - 50.1%, 1990
2,875 Projected births, 1990-1998
2,736 Projected deaths, 1990-1998
3,143 Persons below poverty level - 11.8 %
258 Average marriages per year
135 Average deaths per year

Alexis Asher


Logan County high schools: 1960-2000
1962 Middletown High School consolidated with New Holland
1972 Atlanta High School became part of Olympia School District
1975 Elkhart High School consolidated with Mount Pulaski
1979 Latham High School became Warrensburg-Latham
1988 New Holland-Middletown High School consolidated with Lincoln Community High School
1989 San Jose High School consolidated with Illini Central (Mason City)

Alexis Asher


Lincoln High School history

1859

Lincoln School District

5

School buildings in 1859

1

"Grammar school" in 1859

1

High school teacher, Mr. January, in 1859

1870-71

Central School opened

1898

High school building started

1900

High school dedicated, Jan. 5

$20,000

Cost of new high school

1920

Election authorized community high school District #404

1958

Dedication of new Lincoln Community High School, 1000 Primm Road, in auditorium, on Nov. 9

Alexis Asher


How We Stack Up


This feature of the Lincoln Daily News compares Lincoln and Logan County to similar cities and counties on a variety of issues in a succinct manner, using charts and graphs for illustration.

Racial makeup of selected Illinois counties

 



What’s Up With That?

 

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