Gov. Ryan returns to Cuba
on humanitarian mission

Leads pharmaceutical firms for potential humanitarian medical trade

[JAN. 26, 2002]  HAVANA, Cuba — Gov. George Ryan arrived in Havana, Cuba, on Thursday to meet with Illinois pharmaceutical firms willing to sell medicines and medical supplies that are badly needed in the wake of last November’s hurricane.

"By reaching out to our neighbors, we are further extending a bridge of understanding and goodwill," said Gov. Ryan. "We’re exploring a market for Illinois businesses and farmers with a neighbor, just 90 miles from U.S. shores. The people of Illinois are ready, willing and able to provide help to the people of Cuba in their time of need."

The governor and Mrs. Ryan were greeted at the Havana airport by Cuban officials. Later, the governor and representatives from the Illinois businesses met with officials from the Cuban Ministries of Public Health and Foreign Affairs and MediCuba, the purchasing arm of the Ministry of Public Health.

"In the two years since I first brought a delegation of Illinois government and business leaders here, we have worked together to solve problems that face all of us and have established strong relationships that I know will endure for years to come. And just as we have made headway in the sale of food products to Cuba, now we must make the same headway in the humanitarian sale of other products," Gov. Ryan said.

The firms meeting with the governor and Cuban officials included Ferris Manufacturing, of Burr Ridge; Medline, Mundelein; DMS Pharmaceutical, Park Ridge; JLR International, Chicago; and 21st Century Healthcare, Woodridge.

The Illinois Trade Office contacted the state’s pharmaceutical firms last month, after the Cuban Interest Section in Washington asked for assistance. The request was in response to depleted medical supplies due to the devastating hurricane.

 

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While in Cuba, Gov. Ryan was to address the International Congress on Diagnostic Imaging on Friday at the invitation of Dr. Robert Brossard, chair of medical imaging at the Methodist Hospital of Chicago and a participant in the congress.

Also on Friday, the governor expected to tour the National Oncology and Radiology Institute and present donations from the Illinois companies to the Cuban people. Mrs. Ryan planned to present teddy bears to the children in the hospital wards. The donations include medical supplies sought after by the Cuban government such as blood pressure kits, surgical instruments, wound dressings, thermometers and stethoscopes.

Gov. Ryan and the Illinois business delegation traveled to Cuba under the humanitarian license of the New York-based organization "Americans for Humanitarian Trade with Cuba." The group is scheduled to return on Saturday, Jan. 26.

In December, Gov. Ryan joined agribusiness firm Archer Daniels Midland in sending the first grain shipment to Cuba since 1962. That shipment was also a response to Cuba’s needs after Hurricane Michelle.

In October of 1999, Gov. Ryan was the first U.S. governor to lead a humanitarian mission to Cuba in nearly 40 years. The trip was an effort to build a bridge of good will with the people of Cuba and to offer humanitarian aid and cultural exchanges.

Since 1962, the U.S. government has had an economic embargo against Cuba under the regime of Fidel Castro. The sale of American medicines to Cuba was always exempted. In 2000, President Clinton signed into law a congressional package that allowed for cash transactions for U.S. agricultural products.

[News release]


Today’s history

Compiled by Dave Francis

Saturday, Jan. 26

The 26th day of the year

Quotes

"They died hard, those savage men — like wounded wolves at bay. They were filthy, and they were lousy, and they stunk. And I loved them." — Douglas MacArthur

"You can fool some of the people some of the time and all of the people some of the time, but you can’t fool all of the people all of the time." — Abraham Lincoln

Birthdays

1715 — Claude Helvetius, Paris, France, philosopher

1786 — Benjamin Robert Haydon, Plymouth, painter ("Waiting for The Times")

1819 — Abner Doubleday, Union major general and inventor (baseball) [or June 26]

1880 — Douglas MacArthur, Little Rock, Ark., general (World War II)

1925 — Paul Newman, Cleve, racer, popcorn mogul, actor ("Hud," "Hombre," "The Hustler")

1933 — Angela Davis, black revolutionary

1935 — Bob Uecker, Milwaukee, Wis., catcher and actor ("Mr. Belvedere")

1961 — Wayne Gretzky, Brantford, Ontario, NHL great scorer

Events

1784 — Ben Franklin expresses unhappiness over eagle as America’s symbol

1795 — Johann Christoph Friedrich Bach, composer, dies at 62

1837 — Michigan admitted as 26th U.S. state

1838 — Tennessee becomes first state to prohibit alcohol

1862 — Lincoln issues General War Order 1, calling for a Union offensive; McClellan ignores order

1893 — Abner Doubleday, credited with inventing baseball, dies on 74th birthday

1913 — Jim Thorpe relinquishes his 1912 Olympic medals for being a professional.

1940 — Nazis forbid Polish Jews to travel on trains

1942 — First U.S. forces in Europe during World War II go ashore in Northern Ireland

1942 — Italian supreme command demands dismissal of German marshal Rommel

1945 — Soviet forces reach Auschwitz concentration camp

1954 — Ground breaking begins on Disneyland

1962 — Charles "Lucky" Luciano, New York City Mafia gangster, dies at 65

1973 — Edward G. Robinson [Goldenberg], actor ("Little Caesar"), dies at 79

1983 — Paul "Bear" Bryant, college football coach (Alabama), dies at 69

 

 

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Sunday, Jan. 27

The 27th day of the year

Quotes

"A politician will do anything to keep his job — even become a patriot." — William Randolph Hearst

"Abandon all hope, you who enter here!" — Dante Aligheri

Birthdays

1756 — Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Austria, musical prodigy and composer

1832 — Lewis Carroll [Charles Lutwidge Dodgson], author ("Alice in Wonderland")

1834 — Dmitri Mendeleev, chemist (invented periodic table of the elements)

1850 — Samuel Gompers, Dutch-American, first president of American Federation of Labor

1900 — Hyman G. Rickover, U.S. admiral (father of modern nuclear navy)

1901 — Art Rooney, NFL team owner (Pittsburgh Steelers)

1908 — William Randolph Hearst Jr., newspaper publisher (Hearst Publishing)

1948 — Mikhail Baryshnikov, Riga, Latvia, ballet dancer ("That’s Dancing")

Events

1302 — Dante becomes a Florentine political exile

1671 — Pirate Henry Morgen lands at Panama City

1710 — Czar Peter the Great sets first Russian state budget

1851 — John James Audubon, conservationist (Audubon Society), dies at 65

1901 — Giuseppe Verdi, Italian composer ("Rigoletto," "La Traviata," "Aida"), dies at 87

1918 — "Tarzan of the Apes," first Tarzan film, premieres at Broadway Theater

1924 — Lenin placed in mausoleum in Red Square

1926 — First public demonstration of television

1927 — Harlem Globetrotters play their first game

1944 — Leningrad liberated from Germany in 880 days with 600,000 killed

1967 — Virgil I. "Gus" Grissom, astronaut, dies at 40 in Apollo I fire

1969 — 14 spies hung in Baghdad

1969 — Nine Jews publicly executed in Damascus, Syria

1973 — UCLA’s basketball team wins 61st consecutive game (NCAA record)

1973 — United States and Vietnam sign cease-fire, ending longest U.S. war and military draft

1986 — L. Ron Hubbard, novelist and founder of Church of Scientology, dies at 74

1993 — Andre "the Giant" Roussimoff, WWF wrestler, dies of heart attack at 49


Afternoon assailant shocks Lincoln

[JAN. 25, 2002]  Lincoln City Police are investigating a midafternoon shooting. Roy Malone, 38, of 703 N. Madison was doing laundry at the rear of his residence when he heard a knock at his back door. Malone opened his door and a man described as a tall white male wearing a black winter coat with fur around the hood aimed a small caliber handgun at him. Malone attempted to flee back into the house and turned to avoid the shooting when the man shot him in the abdomen. The assailant then fled. Malone immediately called 911 from inside his house at 3:31 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 24.

Malone was taken to ALMH and transferred to Memorial in Springfield, where he is listed in good condition. Lincoln police provided an officer on guard to protect him.

Detective Michael Harberts is handling the investigation. Harberts had this to say this morning: "The investigation has revealed that we do not feel that there is a random shooter knocking on doors shooting people. We believe that the assailant knew the victim. We have no evidence that the victim knows the assailant. We have evidence that the assailant knew the victim."

In particular, Detective Harberts wishes to emphasize to the community, "The people in Lincoln should not be unduly alarmed that there is a mad shooter knocking on doors. That’s not happening!"

[Jan Youngquist]


Two local businesses
get bad report cards

Discipline measures enforced

[JAN. 25, 2002]  Two local restaurants will receive license suspensions from the Logan County Board of Health. Both suspensions are related to routine inspection evaluations performed by the Logan County Health Department. Neither is seen as an issue of immediate jeopardy to health. It is because they have failed to make corrections — in inspection jargon, "serious repeated violations" — that the suspensions have been called for.

Al’s Main Event and Daphne’s Family Restaurant were asked to write up their own plans of correction and submit them by the end of the day Thursday. The suspensions will begin with acceptance of those plans.

Health Department Administrator Lloyd Evans is quick to say, "We don’t want to cause damage to these businesses." Evans sees it as unfortunate that they did not make the needed corrections sooner. He said that if they had, the health board would not have to issue the suspensions.

 

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However, this action now requires that they each submit a plan of correction, and "once their plans are approved they will be ordered to close until they have successfully completed all of the items on their plan of correction, including the mandatory training/education." The training will need to be done during normal business hours. This will cause both businesses to be closed for some hours or days. How long will be determined after the plans of correction are received, approved and scheduled.

Evans says he hopes this will send a message to other businesses to work more seriously on correcting their marked violations in order that they might avoid further action.

[Jan Youngquist]


Today’s history

Compiled by Dave Francis

Friday, Jan. 25

The 25th day of the year

Quotes

"When you choose your friends, don’t be short-changed by choosing personality over character." — W. Somerset Maugham

Birthdays

1693 — Anna Ivanova Romanova, daughter of Ivan V and empress of Russia (1730-40)

1741 — Benedict Arnold, general and traitor (U.S. revolution)

1874 — [William] Somerset Maugham, Paris, novelist and poet ("Of Human Bondage")

1882 — Virginia [Adeline] Woolf, London, author ("Jacob’s Room," "To the Lighthouse")

1928 — Eduard Shevardnadze, Soviet Georgia, foreign minister of U.S.S.R. (1985-’91)

1933 — Corazon Aquino, president of Philippines (1986-’92)

1941 — Elzie "Buddy" Baker, race-car driver

1962 — Chris Chelios, Chicago, NHL defenseman (Chicago Blackhawks, Team USA)

Events

1327 — King Edward III accedes to British throne

1533 — England’s King Henry VIII marries Anne Boleyn

1721 — Czar Peter the Great ends Russian-orthodox patriarchy

1802 — Napoleon elected president of Italian (Cisalpine) Republic

1851 — Sojourner Truth addresses first Black Women’s Rights Convention

 

 

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1858 — Mendelssohn’s "Wedding March" first played, at wedding of Queen Victoria’s daughter Princess Victoria to crown prince of Prussia

1890 — Nellie Bly beats Phileas Fogg’s time around world by eight days (72 days)

1890 — United Mine Workers of America forms

1915 — Alexander Graham Bell in New York calls Thomas Watson in San Francisco

1918 — Russia declared a republic of Soviets

1947 — Al Capone, Chicago gangster, dies of syphilis at 48

1949 — First Israeli election; Ben-Gurion’s Mapai party wins

1951 — United Nations begins counteroffensive in Korea

1961 — First live, nationally televised presidential news conference (JFK)

1971 — Charles Manson and three women followers convicted of Tate-LaBianca murders

1971 — Military coup in Uganda under Gen. Idi Amin Dada

1981 — 52 Americans held hostage by Iran for 444 days arrived back in United States

1981 — Mao’s widow Jiang Qing sentenced to death

1990 — Ava Gardner, actress ("The Barefoot Contessa"), dies of pneumonia at 67

1991 — Brett Hull is third NHL’er to score 50 goals in fewer than 50 games (49)


Corn Belt Energy moves

[JAN. 24, 2002]  Corn Belt Energy is in its new facility, with unopened boxes in offices and cornfields to view all around. The headquarters operation of the cooperative, which provides electricity, propane and natural gas to members within an 18-county service territory, moved to the Downs Crossing subdivision in the village of Downs as of Jan. 21. This is the fourth move the cooperative has made in its 63-year history. 

The new 43,000-square-foot facility is located on approximately 12 acres at the intersection of Route 150 and Towanda Barnes Road. Approximately 65 employees staff the new headquarters building.

Corn Belt Energy Corporation agreed to sell its Morrissey Drive land and buildings in Bloomington to the Snyder Corporation for expansion of their Radisson Conference Center and Brickyard Apartments.

Phone and fax numbers and the mailing address remain the same.

Corn Belt Energy Corporation CEO Jeffrey D. Reeves said, "We are very excited to move into our new facility. This location will enable our crews to be more efficient and productive."'

Special opening ceremonies and events will be on April 6, when the cooperative has the 64th annual meeting of its membership.

Corn Belt’s history

On Sept. 12, 1938, the McLean County Farm Bureau board of directors approved a Rural Electrification Administration project to bring electricity to the farmers of the area. Following numerous meetings to formulate the cooperative structure, acquire right of way, hire staff and secure a $1,164,000 REA loan to build 1,146 miles of distribution line, employees of the new Corn Belt Electric Cooperative placed the first pole on April 10, 1939, and strung the first wire on May 4.

By August of that year, the first 100 miles of line were energized northwest of Kappa, and 200 farms were electrified in McLean and Woodford counties.

As the cooperative grew, it became a key part of the Bloomington business community. The office was first at 508 N. Main St., then shifted to the old Farm Bureau Building at 1019 W. Monroe. In 1943, the co-op offices moved to 315 E. Front St. The 100-foot-tall wooden pole used to support the radio antennae is present to this day.

 

 

 

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In 1954 Corn Belt Electric moved to 1502 Morrissey Drive, where office, administration and support facilities were located until the recent move. The building of the new facility was precipitated by the Radisson Hotel purchase of the Morrissey Drive property for expansion purposes. The new headquarters at Downs Crossing is approximately 5 miles southeast of Bloomington.

Since 1938, Corn Belt has grown to provide energy products to more than 26,000 members throughout 18 central Illinois counties, using nearly 5,000 miles of line and 87 employees.

A major event in the cooperative’s history occurred Jan. 1, 1999, when Corn Belt Electric Cooperative (serving 10 counties) merged with Illinois Valley Electric Cooperative of Princeton (serving eight counties). The merger created a new organization known as Corn Belt Energy Corporation

During its 63-year history, Corn Belt’s membership base has changed dramatically from primarily farmers to an ever-increasing number of urban, suburban and commercial accounts. The cooperative retains its rural farm heritage but serves many of the new residential subdivisions and commercial zones in Bloomington-Normal as well as in other communities.

Corn Belt Energy has been a member of the McLean County Chamber of Commerce for over 60 years and is also a member of the Association of Illinois Electric Cooperatives and the National Rural Electric Cooperative Association.

Corn Belt Energy has been a member of Touchstone Energy®, a national branding effort, since its inception in 1998. More than 600 of the nation’s 1,000 electric cooperatives belong to Touchstone Energy®.

The cooperative is governed by 15 directors who are residential members of Corn Belt Energy.

Dave Hawkinson, a former executive director of the Lincoln/Logan County Chamber of Commerce, is director of marketing and public affairs.

[Corn Belt Energy news release]


Today’s history

Compiled by Dave Francis

Thursday, Jan. 24

The 24th day of the year

Quotes

"Religion is the idol of the mob; it adores everything it does not understand." — Frederick the Great.

"I have nothing to offer but blood, toil, tears and sweat." — Winston Churchill

Birthdays

1712 — Frederick II, (the Great), king of Prussia (1740-86)

1732 — Pierre de Baumarchais, France, playwright ("The Barber of Seville")

1888 — Ernst Heinrich Heinkel, German inventor (first rocket-powered aircraft)

1891 — Max Ernst, German-French surrealist painter and sculptor

1891 — Walter Model, German field marshal

1915 — Ernest Borgnine, Hamden, Conn., actor ("Ice Station Zebra," "McHale’s Navy," "Marty")

1918 — Oral Roberts, televangelist; needs $8,000,000 (Oral Roberts College)

1941 — Neil Diamond, Brooklyn, N.Y., singer and actor ("The Jazz Singer")

1943 — Sharon Tate, Dallas, Texas, actress ("Valley of the Dolls")

1949 — John Belushi, Chicago, comedian and actor ("Saturday Night Live," "Blues Brothers")

1968 — Mary Lou Retton, Fairmont, W.Va., gymnast (Olympics; gold, two silver, two bronze in 1984)

 

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Events

?? — Caligula [G.C. Germanicus], Roman emperor (37-41), assassinated at 28

1076 — Synod of Worms: German King Henry IV fires Pope Gregory VII

1568 — In Netherlands, Duke of Alva declares William of Orange an outlaw

1679 — King Charles II disbands English Parliament

1722 — Czar Peter the Great begins civil system

1848 — James Marshall finds gold in Sutter’s Mill in Coloma, Calif.

1901 — First games played in baseball’s American League

1922 — Eskimo Pie patented by Christian K. Nelson of Iowa (not an Eskimo)

1924 — Russian city of St. Petersburg renamed Leningrad

1935 — First canned beer, "Krueger Cream Ale," is sold by Kruger Brewing Co.

1965 — Winston Churchill, prime minister of Britain (C) (1940-45, ’51-’55), dies at 90

1975 — Larry Fine, actor ("Three Stooges"), dies at 72

1988 — Charles Glenn King, biochemist (discovered vitamin C), dies at 91

1989 — Ted Bundy, serial killer of up to 100 women, executed in Florida at 42

1993 — Thurgood Marshall, first black Supreme Court justice (1967-91), dies at 84


Council continues financial support
for Main Street Lincoln

[JAN. 23, 2002]  With one no vote, the Lincoln City Council voted Tuesday to continue its financial support of $1,250 per month for Main Street Lincoln, even though the organization is currently without a director.

The only opposition came from Alderman Joe Stone, who said he believed the funds budgeted for Main Street were exclusively for administrative salaries. Wendy Bell, former director of Main Street Lincoln and its only employee, resigned as of Jan. 1 to take a position with the state of Illinois Main Street program.

Jan Schumacher, president of the organization’s board, came before the council last week to ask that it continue some financial help until the organization is able to hire another full-time director. She said the organization needs to hire a part-time office worker until a new director is in place and also still has rent and other expenses to pay. She also said Main Street hopes to have the new director sometime in March.

Schumacher was advised to bring a list of expenses to the council, and at Tuesday’s board meeting she distributed a document showing expenses of $65 a week for a clerical worker, $750 for newspaper advertisements for a new director, $250 monthly rent, and copying and postage expenses of $100 a month.

Alderman Steve Fuhrer spoke in favor of continuing the financial support. "I have a problem thinking of this as just an administrative salary for Wendy," he said. "I thought we were giving money to Main Street for the Main Street program. I think we need to keep helping them out. They’ve done a lot for this community."

Alderman Glenn Shelton also spoke up in support. "I don’t want to see $1,250 a month create a division between Main Street and the city. We’ve already budgeted the money. They have done a great job." The city has $15,000 in the budget this year for Main Street Lincoln, to be paid in monthly installments.

Alderman Michael Montcalm moved that the council make the $1,250 February payment and the vote was taken. Voting in favor were Montcalm, Shelton, David Armbrust, Fuhrer, Benny Huskins, Verl Prather and Bill Melton. Pat Madigan was absent, and George Mitchell was serving as mayor pro tem in Beth Davis’ absence.

Another motion, this one to buy a new squad car for the Police Department, also passed with one no vote. Police Chief Rich Montcalm asked last week that the council purchase a second new vehicle this year, to replace one that was totaled in an accident, even though there is not enough money budgeted for a new vehicle.

Cost of the new squad car will be about $23,000, and $7,000 of that will have to come from the appropriations item in the budget.

 

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Verl Prather, head of the police committee, moved to go ahead with the purchase, but Fuhrer objected.

"In the crunch we have this year, we should try to keep within the budget," he said. He suggested that the Police Department "count the car we already bought to replace the wrecked vehicle" as this year’s new squad car and save the $15,973 in the budget for next year’s new squad car.

Prather reminded him that at one time the Police Department replaced two cars per year, but in the past few years has replaced only one car because of a tighter budget.

"If we don’t replace them, we get shoddy vehicles," he said.

Fuhrer’s was the only no vote on this issue.

Still another single no vote came on adoption of a policy for drug and alcohol abuse testing for employees driving street department vehicles. The issue in dispute is a "zero tolerance" policy that calls for an employee to be fired if he or she tests positive for drug or alcohol abuse. Bill Melton, head of the street department, had lobbied for a less restrictive policy under which a first-time offender could keep the job by enrolling in a rehabilitation program.

Melton said he would vote yes because he knew the department was late in putting such a policy in place. Though Melton voted yes, Prather cast a no vote.

In other business, the council agreed to table a discussion of the city’s participation in the Route 66 Association’s activities on June 15 and 16 until Mayor Davis returns.

The council also agreed to sign a letter to be sent to Gov. George Ryan, asking that the governor consider helping the city fund its $10 million sewer plant upgrade with an Illinois FIRST grant. According to the letter, the cost of the upgrade will bring users a 49.3 percent increase, which will be put into place in two steps. The first increase went into effect Jan. 1 of this year, and the second will be put in place when the work on the plant is completed.

"This is a heavy burden on our citizens," the letter reads. It also noted that the city has "deep concern about the possible downsizing or closing of Lincoln Developmental Center," which is also a user of the sewage treatment plant.

[Joan Crabb]


Mayor Davis recovering well from surgery

[JAN. 23, 2002]  Lincoln Mayor Elizabeth Davis is recovering well from gall bladder surgery and is expected be home today, Jan. 23, according to Deputy City Clerk Melanie Riggs. The surgery was done at St. John’s Hospital in Springfield.

[Joan Crabb]


Today’s history

Compiled by Dave Francis

Wednesday, Jan. 23

The 23rd day of the year

Quotes

"There are two levers for moving men — interest and fear." — Napoleon Bonaparte

"Wars have never hurt anybody except the people who die." — Salvador Dali

Birthdays

1582 — John Barclay, Scottish satirist and Latin poet ("Argenis")

1730 — Joseph Hewes, U.S. merchant (Declaration of Independence signer)

1898 — Randolph Scott, actor ("The Last of the Mohicans," "Western Union")

1898 — Sergei Eisenstein, Russia, director ("Battleship Potemkin") [NS]

1914 — Napoleon L. Bonaparte, French pretender to the throne

1963 — Hakeem Olajuwon, NBA center (Houston Rockets)

Events

?? — Start of Islamic calendar

1556 — Most deadly earthquake kills 830,000 in Shensi Province, China

 

 

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1789 — Georgetown, first U.S. Catholic college, founded

1800 — Edward Rutledge, U.S. attorney (signed Declaration of Independence), dies at 50

1812 — 7.8 earthquake shakes New Madrid, Mo.

1813 — George Clymer, U.S. merchant (signed Declaration of Independence), dies at 73

1864 — Michele Puccini, composer, dies at 50

1962 — Bob Feller and Jackie Robinson elected to Baseball Hall of Fame

1962 — British spy Kim Philby defects to U.S.S.R.

1968 — Spy ship USS Pueblo and 83-man crew seized in Sea of Japan by North Korea

1973 — President Nixon announces an accord has been reached to end Vietnam War

1977 — Bernard "Toots" Shor, barkeeper, dies at 73

1989 — Salvador Dali, surrealist painter, dies in Spain at 84


Coming up to the times

New security machine at Logan County Courthouse

[JAN. 22, 2002]  A Lincoln visitor’s eyes widened as he recalled his weekend air travel experience. Flying from Louisiana to St. Louis he made a flight transfer at the George Bush Intercontinental Airport at Houston, Texas. He was glad that he was merely doing a transfer, as it allowed him and his companion travelers to bypass the newcomer check-in security system. The airline passengers just getting on their first flight had to pass through an impressive, highly intimidating, flashing blue light-emanating contraption. Whether in the bypass line or just checking in line, all travelers then faced the now common sight of Tommy gun-carrying National Guardsmen dressed in fatigues in the waiting terminal.

The whole sight was a little overwhelming to the traveler, but it is a new day in America. We must adopt new practices. We are now probably where we should have been years ago — more security conscious like most of the rest of the world.

Today, Logan County completed another phase of beefing up its security. An X-ray machine has been installed and is operational at the Logan County Courthouse. Sheriff Tony Soloman said the plans to get one of these began long before Sept. 11. He first got approval to order a machine through the county board and law enforcement committee. In June 2001 they sent out for bids on one. They were able to order one in October, but because there was such a rush on them at that time it was slow to become available. The company they ordered from is based in Chicago and serves mostly federal government; their orders came first.

The machine has been purchased at no expense to Logan County taxpayers. Years ago Judge Gerald Dehner saw the need to start a security system in the courthouse. A certain percentage of criminal fines are put aside in a security fund. The fund has bought the current metal detector and pays for security officer wages. Sheriff Soloman said he thought it was time for a metal detector, and when he checked it out the funds were sufficient. The machines themselves are made in New Jersey. The total cost is $14,600.

 

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All packages and purses will be run through the machine. This can be done quickly and most conveniently. One of the greatest benefits to this device is that it spares anyone any embarrassment of searching through personal items, and a sense of privacy is maintained.

The particular setup Sheriff Soloman has chosen is a mobile unit. It can be used elsewhere for any number of occasions. It is not too bulky to use in offices or schools. If we have visiting dignitaries, such as when the governor came to LDC, the machine can be set up on location. If a school gets a threat that a student is bringing something to school, it can be taken there. It can also be used at any other public assemblies anywhere else.

[Jan Youngquist]


Entrepreneurs and small businesses are invited to conference, awards banquet

[JAN. 22, 2002]  SPRINGFIELD — Gov. George Ryan has invited representatives of Illinois small businesses and entrepreneurs to attend the governor’s 2002 Small Business Conference and Awards Banquet, scheduled for Feb. 5-6 at the Crowne Plaza Hotel in Springfield.

"Small businesses are the foundation of the Illinois economy," Gov. Ryan said. "Our state’s more than 625,000 small businesses provide jobs for more than 2.5 million Illinois workers. As a former small-business owner, I understand the challenges these business people face every day. This conference is designed to provide opportunities and information to help them meet those challenges."

Pam McDonough, director of the Department of Commerce and Community Affairs, said the 2002 conference supports small-business growth and entrepreneurship in Illinois through information, resources and training targeted specifically toward small businesses. Featured topics include: "eBusiness Strategies," "Accessing Business Financing for Business Expansion and Start-Up," "Tips on Thriving in Today’s Economy," "Low Cost Marketing Strategies" and "Small Business Security."

The conference also will feature a resource area including exhibits from a number of state agencies and associations. Exhibitors’ representatives will be available throughout the conference to discuss the services they offer to small-business owners and entrepreneurs in Illinois.

 

 

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"A strong Illinois small-business community means jobs for Illinois workers and a more diversified Illinois economy," McDonough said. "This conference combines practical training with networking opportunities that can help our small businesses and entrepreneurs achieve success."

Highlighting the conference will be the awards banquet on Feb. 5, celebrating the success of Illinois small businesses and entrepreneurs. Awards to be presented include the Small Business Person of the Year, Small Business Women’s Advocate of the Year, Small Business Minority Advocate, Entrepreneur Success Award, and Young Entrepreneur Award.

The fee to attend the conference is $50 per person, which includes the banquet and awards program. To register, download the registration form by clicking here. Registration forms may also be requested by calling (217) 698-7066 [TTY (800) 524-5856] or DCCA’s Small Business Office at (217) 524-5856 [TTY (217) 785-6055]. Completed registrations may be faxed to (217) 793-0041 if accompanied by a credit card number, or may be mailed with a check or money order made payable to Governor’s 2002 Small Business Conference to: Governor’s 2002 Small Business Conference, 1224 Centre West, Suite 200B, Springfield, IL 62704.

[News release]


Today’s history

Compiled by Dave Francis

Tuesday, Jan. 22

The 22nd day of the year

Quotes

"No pleasure is comparable to the standing upon the vantage-ground of truth." — Francis Bacon

"I once told Nixon that the Presidency is like being a jackass caught in a hail storm. You’ve got to just stand there and take it." — Lyndon B. Johnson

Birthdays

1440 — Ivan III, the Great, Russian czar (1462-1505)

1561 — Francis Bacon, England, statesman and essayist ("Novum Organum")

1788 — Lord [George Gordon Noel] Byron, England, romantic poet (Don Juan)

1800 — Nat Turner, slave that revolted

1937 — Joseph Wambaugh, East Pittsburgh, Pa., police writer ("The Onion Field")

Events

1528 — England and France declare war on Emperor Charles V

1552 — Edward Seymour, Duke of Somerset, beheaded for treason

 

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1905 — Bloody Sunday: Russian demonstrators fired on by tsarist troops

1939 — Uranium atom first split, Columbia University

1944 — During World War II, Allied forces begin landing at Anzio, Italy

1946 — U.S. president sets up CIA, Central Intelligence Agency

1951 — Fidel Castro ejected from a Winter League game after beaning batter

1969 — Judy Garland, singer and actress ("The Wizard of Oz"), dies at 48 of an overdose

1973 — George Foreman TKOs Joe Frazier in two for heavyweight boxing title

1973 — Roe vs. Wade: U.S. Supreme Court legalizes some abortions

1973 — Lyndon B. Johnson, president (1963-69), dies at his Texas ranch at 64

1980 — Dissidents Andrei Sacharov and Jelena Bonner banished to Gorki

1995 — Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy, mother of President John F. Kennedy, dies at 104


Today’s history

Compiled by Dave Francis

Monday, Jan. 21

The 21st day of the year

Quotes

"It is true that liberty is precious — so precious that it must be rationed." — I. Lenin

"Myths which are believed in tend to become true." — George Orwell

Birthdays

1824 — Thomas Jonathan "Stonewall" Jackson, lieutenant general, 2nd Corps (ANV, Confederacy)

1855 — John M. Browning, United States, weapons manufacturer

1905 — Christian Dior, Normandy, France, fashion designer

1924 — Telly Savalas, Garden City, N.J., actor ("Kojak")

1933 — William Wrigley III, chewing gum mogul (Wrigleys)

1939 — Wolfman Jack [Bob Smith], Brooklyn, N.Y., DJ ("Midnight Special")

1940 — Jack Nicklaus, Columbus, Ohio, golfer (Player of Year 1967, ’72, ’73, ’75, ’76)

1941 — Placido Domingo, Madrid, Spain, opera tenor (Pinkerton in "Mme. Butterfly")

 

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Events

1189 — Philip II, Henry II and Richard Lionhearted initiate third Crusade

1604 — Tsar Ivan IV defeats False Dmitri, who claims to be the true tsar

1789 — First American novel, W.H. Brown’s "Power of Sympathy," is published

1813 — Pineapple introduced to Hawaii (or 01-111)

1903 — "Wizard of Oz," premieres in New York City

1903 — Harry Houdini escapes police station Halvemaansteeg in Amsterdam

1924 — Vladimir Ilyich Ulyanov Lenin, Russian leader, dies of a stroke at 53

1950 — New York jury finds former State Department official Alger Hiss guilty of perjury

1950 — George Orwell, author ("Animal Farm," "1984"), dies in London at 46

1959 — Cecil B[lount] de Mille, producer ("The Ten Commandments"), dies at 77

1991 — Howard "Red" Grange, football’s galloping ghost, dies at 87

1997 — Colonel Tom Parker, manager (Elvis Presley), dies at 87

 


Military addresses sought

It is a year like no other. Since Sept. 11 we are a changed nation. Individually, our daily sensitivity toward whom and what we have in our lives has been heightened. We are more conscious and appreciative, first about those we love and see everyday. Next, we have a newfound appreciation for those who risk their lives every day as rescue workers and protectors of life and property in our communities. We also now think more about our military men and women who are committed to serve and protect our country. Many are away engaged in battle, some are in waiting to go, all are ready to lay their lives on the line in defense of our freedom.

Lincoln Daily News is seeking the names and addresses, including e-mail addresses, of friends and relatives who are serving in the armed forces. They need not be from here in Logan County. If you know someone serving, please send the information to ldneditor@lincolndailynews.com. A complete list will be made available and kept updated through the site so we might all hold them in our thoughts, prayers and well wishes.

[Click here for names available now.]

Name of person in military:

Branch of service:

Current location of service:

Postal address:

E-mail address:

Relationship to LDN reader sending information (optional):

[LDN]


Are we prepared for terrorism
in Logan County?

It’s on the radio, TV, in all the media. You hear it in the office, on the street and maybe at home — threats of terrorism. America is on high alert. Here in central Illinois, away from any supposed practical target areas, perhaps we feel a little less threatened, but we are still concerned. So how concerned should we be, and how prepared are we for the types of situations that could occur?

Whether the threat is domestic or foreign, violent, biological or chemical, our public health and rescue agencies have been preparing to respond to the situations. Lincoln Daily News has been at meetings where all the agencies gather together as the Logan County Emergency Planning Committee to strategize for just such a time. Our reports have not even provided every detail that every agency has reported; i.e., a number of representatives from differing agencies such as the health and fire departments, CILCO and ESDA went to a bioterrorism and hazmat (hazardous materials) seminar this past August.

Here are some of the articles that LDN has posted pre- and post-Tuesday, Sept. 11. Hopefully you will see in them that WE ARE WELL PREPARED. At least as much as any area can be. Every agency has been planning, training, submitting for grants to buy equipment long before Sept. 11. We can be thankful for all of the dedicated, insightful leaders we have in this community.

 

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America strikes back

As promised, the United States led an attack on Afghanistan. The attack began Sunday, Oct. 7. American and British military forces made 30 hits on air defenses, military airfields and terrorist training camps, destroying aircraft and radar systems. The strike was made targeting only terrorists.

More than 40 countries in Africa, Asia, Europe and the Middle East have pledged their cooperation and support the U.S. initiative.

Online news links

Other countries

Afghanistan

http://www.afghandaily.com/ 

http://www.myafghan.com/  

http://www.afghan-web.com/aop/ 

China

http://english.peopledaily.com.cn/

http://www1.chinadaily.com.cn/

Germany

http://www.faz.com/

India

http://www.dailypioneer.com/ 

http://www.hindustantimes.com/ 

http://www.timesofindia.com/ 

Israel

http://www.jpost.com/ 

http://www.haaretzdaily.com/ 

England

http://www.thetimes.co.uk/ 

http://www.guardian.co.uk/ 

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/

http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/

Pakistan

http://www.dawn.com/

http://frontierpost.com.pk/ 

Russia

http://english.pravda.ru/

http://www.sptimesrussia.com/ 

Saudi Arabia

http://www.arabnews.com/ 

 

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United States

Illinois

http://www.suntimes.com/index/ 

http://www.chicagotribune.com/ 

http://www.pantagraph.com/ 

http://www.qconline.com/ 

http://www.pjstar.com/

http://www.sj-r.com/ 

http://www.herald-review.com/

http://www.southernillinoisan.com/ 

New York

http://www.nypost.com/

http://www.nytimes.com/

Stars and Stripes
(serving the U.S. military community)

http://www.estripes.com/ 

Washington, D.C.

http://www.whitehouse.gov/

http://www.washingtonpost.com/

http://www.washtimes.com/

 

More newspaper links

http://www.thepaperboy.com/ 


Announcements

Voter registration for disabled

March 19 general primary election notice to the elderly and people with disabilities

[JAN. 15, 2002]  Citizens who are not registered to vote and cannot leave their home, hospital, nursing home or other institution because of a permanent physical disability can arrange for voter registration by contacting a deputy registrar or the county clerk’s office.

Voter registration will close on Feb. 19 for the March 19 general primary election.

If you are physically able, you may register to vote by going to the county clerk’s office, Room 20 in the Logan County Courthouse, 601 Broadway in Lincoln. Hours are 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. You will need to show two forms of identification, one with your current address on it.

For people with physical disabilities and the elderly, election judges will be available at the polling place on election day to assist voters when a friend or relative is unable to help. Handicapped-voter booths will be available for your convenience. Physically impaired or elderly persons may be eligible to vote absentee. Please contact the Logan County clerk’s office for information.

For any information concerning voter registration or voting for the elderly or disabled, please call the Logan County clerk’s office at (217) 732-4148.

[Sally J. Litterly, Logan County clerk]


Time to register to vote

[JAN. 3, 2002]  Are you registered to vote?

The March 19 primary is rapidly approaching. The close of registration is Feb. 19. If you have moved, or if you have married and changed your name, it is necessary that you change your voter registration with our office in order to cast your vote in the election.

If you have questions about your voting eligibility, please contact our office at (217) 732-4148.

[Sally J. Litterly, Logan County clerk]


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