| 
            There is a winter storm watch late 
            Wednesday night and Thursday for Lincoln and Logan County. The 
            winter storm watch also covers Cass, Champaign, Christian, Clark, 
            Clay, Coles, Crawford, Cumberland, DeWitt, Douglas, Edgar, 
            Effingham, Fulton, Jasper, Knox, Lawrence, Macon, Marshall, Mason, 
            McLean, Menard, Morgan, Moultrie, Peoria, Piatt, Richland, Sangamon, 
            Schuyler, Scott, Shelby, Stark, Tazewell, Vermilion and Woodford 
            counties, including the cities of Beardstown, Bloomington, Canton, 
            Champaign, Charleston, Clinton, Danville, Decatur, Effingham, 
            Eureka, Flora, Galesburg, Havana, Jacksonville, Lacon, 
            Lawrenceville, Lewistown, Marshall, Mason City, Mattoon, Monticello, 
            Newton, Olney, Paris, Pekin, Peoria, Rantoul, Robinson, Rushville, 
            Shelbyville, Springfield, Sullivan, Taylorville, Toledo, Tuscola, 
            Virginia and Winchester.    
            [to top of second column in
this article] | 
 
            A significant winter storm will move 
            out of the southern Plains late Wednesday night into Thursday and 
            produce a band of snow, sleet and freezing rain over parts of 
            central Illinois. Most of the precipitation should hold off until 
            late Wednesday night, with the threat for any heavy accumulations of 
            snow or ice during the day Thursday.  A winter 
            storm watch is issued when severe winter weather is possible but not 
            imminent. At the time there is a potential for significant snow and 
            ice accumulations. Future driving and walking conditions may become 
            hazardous, so it is important to monitor the latest forecasts. [Weather 
            alert issued 4 p.m. Tuesday] | 
        
            | Hopefully Liz 
            Skelton's determination will influence you. The Lincoln native is a 
            classic example of the famous saying, "What the mind of man can 
            perceive, he can achieve." October 2002 The voice on the other end of the phone 
            is chipper, sweet and thoughtful. When asked if she might be able to 
            take time from her busy college schedule for an interview, she 
            doesn't hesitate to say yes, she can do that. Six days later the 
            21-year-old Eureka College coed sits on her bed like a normal 
            college student telling her story. Despite all outward appearances 
            Skelton is not your typical college student. 
             [Photos by Jan Youngquist]
 [Liz Skelton in her dorm room]
 When it first began  How many 5-year-olds 
            do you know who say what they are going to do as an adult and are 
            still committed to doing that thing as they enter young adulthood? 
            Unless they grew up in a family of strong vocational tradition like 
            farming or doctoring, it is not the typical outcome. Liz Skelton was 
            only 5 when she announced before her entire family, including her 
            grandparents, that she was going to be a teacher.  The first setback However, not long 
            after first grade began she was identified as EMH, educably mentally 
            handicapped. Testing revealed that she read backward and she was 
            weak in mathematics.  She entered the 
            School District 27 specialized program that offered an 
            individualized plan that would help her through grade and junior 
            high school. During those years she kept up with her class. Skelton praises all 
            her teachers from grade and junior high schools. She was in 
            Washington Monroe for first grade. She recalls Mrs. (Jan) Davis from 
            Adams for second and third grades. "Loved her, she's an awesome 
            person," Skelton said. And at Central she had Mrs. (Charlise) 
            Leesman for fourth through sixth grades. The teachers collaborated 
            on her progression. Skelton credits 
            another teacher who stood out with the inspiration she carries 
            today. At Lincoln Junior High she met Mrs. (Melinda) Mayfield. "She 
            brightens up a room when she walks in. Radiance comes from her," 
            Skelton says, "Mrs. Mayfield told me to go for what I wanted. I have 
            always remembered that." Mayfield responded, 
            "You don't know the little things that you do that can influence 
            another person's life. It's neat but scary."    
      
       Liz stood out in her 
            memory as well. "She was a fun student to have, an encouragement to 
            me and her peers," Mayfield said. "One day she came to school with 
            an outfit like mine and said, ‘Mrs. Mayfield, like my outfit?' and 
            we laughed." Mayfield continued, 
            "She is the type of person that if you said she couldn't do it, 
            she'd prove you wrong." It fit a poster Mayfield remembers having up 
            on the wall.  Your 
            I will  is 
            more important  than 
            your IQ "Liz appears 
            vulnerable, gullible and easygoing. You might think you could pull 
            something over on her. But there is a lot of depth there," she said. Mayfield says that 
            when she looks at a special education student, she looks at what 
            they are good at. "If I'm not good at mathematics, why would I go 
            into math? To some degree we all have disabilities," she says.  She cited as an 
            example, "I know a man who is head of a corporation who cannot read. 
            He knows how to put people in his life to deal with it. We just have 
            to learn to get around our disabilities."   
       Her foundational strength Skelton says of 
            herself, "I do what I can set my mind to. I have my father's will, 
            which is, ‘Go for it. Don't give up on it, whatever that is.'"  She said that one 
            summer when her father was putting up a dog pen. He was having a lot 
            of trouble with it. He wanted to give up. But he didn't.  She and her father 
            talked about her determination and using the dog pen experience as 
            an example. She remembers telling him, "I learned from the best." Little did she know 
            then how important her tenacity to see a thing through would be in 
            her future.  High school  It was a downfall 
            from her goals when Skelton reached high school. She was set up with 
            an individualized education plan, an IEPA, her freshman year in high 
            school that did not fit her intentions. The LCHS special education 
            coordinator, Mr. Ross, placed her in life skills courses rather than 
            college prep classes. He made the recommendations based on her 
            testing, academic history and what he thought best for her. She took 
            classes such as food and nutrition and child development rather than 
            economics.  Skelton said that 
            during a first-semester meeting with her and her mom, Ross told them 
            that said she wouldn't get through high school. Her mother let him 
            know that her daughter had been planning to go to college since the 
            age of 5. While Skelton 
            graduated with her high school class, she didn't go on to college 
            the very next fall. She missed the college registration date by a 
            few days and took the semester off.  Life blows When Skelton's mother 
            was diagnosed with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease she was 
            given six months to live. Skelton was so devastated she stopped 
            going to church. It's now been 3½ years, her mother is still alive, 
            and Skelton just went back to church.   
        
         
            [to top of second column in
this article] | 
            
       She sadly remembers 
            the day late in fall following her graduation. She was with her 
            brother at a madrigal dinner practice. She strongly sensed it as the 
            ambulance and rescue vehicles went flying by, sirens screaming. They 
            were going for her father. He had had an epileptic seizure while 
            driving. Her grandmother was a passenger in the truck. Both were 
            gone forever that day.  Moving on to the big test The next January 
            Skelton began the ultimate test of her dream. With a 13 on her ACT 
            exam she entered Lincoln College as a full-time student. She was 
            earnestly striving to get on track again.  The LC tutors 
            assisted her just as teachers had in the grade and junior high 
            schools. Of Mr. Bob Turley, mathematics teacher and tutor, Skelton 
            says, "[He was] God-sent." She gives high praises to Mr. (Lyle) Read 
            and Mrs. (Marjorie) Hamilton and Mrs. (Jean) Hall. Of the latter she 
            says, "I really miss her when I go to write papers."  Hamilton said that 
            Skelton was a delight to work with. "Elizabeth impressed me with her 
            optimism. She's such a happy person. She loved school and worked 
            hard," she said. She even began helping another student in the 
            tutoring center who needed help. Hamilton said, "Her 
            personality is so well suited to working with children." She will 
            make a great teacher.     
       More than academics While at Lincoln 
            College Skelton worked on the student senate-sponsored winter 
            semiformal. She was an active member of the LC Choir under Bill 
            Buffington and took voice lessons with Linda Buffington.  The choir had fall, 
            winter and spring performances that required lots of practice and 
            memorization. Mr. Buffington said she was a delightful, diligent and 
            congenial worker. Mrs. Buffington 
            commented that, unlike her other students, Skelton had had very 
            little training when she came in. But she improved dramatically. 
            While she "started with three strikes against her," Buffington says, 
            "any university or college would be glad to get her now."  She was easy to work 
            with and eager to please, Buffington said. "I could have her do 
            something, she'd try it, find it worked and stuck to it," she said. 
            She was first to memorize the new songs each semester. "If praised 
            she tried all the harder."  "She showed 
            stick-to-it courage even though she was so scared she was moved to 
            tears," Buffington said. It was during one such performance that the 
            fullness of her talent came to light. During a solo of the piece 
            "Think of Me," the instrumental tape cut out. Liz went on "and 
            finished perfectly on pitch." Buffington said. "She won a 
            respect from other music students." Buffington said 
            Skelton was a lovable and delightful student. She'd say to me, "Oh, 
            Miss B, thank you for believing in me." Mr. and Mrs. Miley 
            both had Skelton in art classes. Karen Miley said she remembers 
            Skelton as a hard worker who put in a lot of time, stuck with it and 
            produced a lot of paintings. It was in her 3-D acrylic class that 
            Skelton created the impressionist piece with ladder-back chairs 
            surrounded by flowers.    
             [Skelton's beautiful painting hangs in her room.]
 If you lay the 
            painting down the chairs actually appear to stand out from the 
            canvas. In the spring of 2002 
            Skelton graduated from Lincoln College with her first college 
            degree. Skelton's college life at Lincoln was rich and full of 
            accomplishments.  Continuing her quest Skelton chose Eureka 
            College to continue her schooling as an education major. Life at 
            Eureka is no less filled with activities. She has continued with her 
            music and is busy with CAB, the campus activities board. She's also 
            taking yearbook pictures, has pledged a singing fraternity and 
            studies are going well. She loves going 
            weekly to Davenport Grade School to do clinical teaching with first 
            graders. She works with them on their reading and writing. Working by a plan Skelton plans to get 
            her bachelor of science degree and then go to work. She plans to go 
            on to ISU to do master's work, and then she intends to get her 
            teaching certificate in special education.   
             Work is not all there is in life While at Lincoln 
            College Skelton met her fiancé, Eric Alfredson. He was also in 
            special ed, "so we connect on certain levels that others wouldn't," 
            she says. "He's a nice guy and a true gentleman. I love him to 
            death." Alfredson is a 
            business administration major at Jacksonville College. The couple 
            intends to wait until they have both finished school and have been 
            working a year before marrying. They are planning to wed on June 6, 
            2006. Her message to others concerning 
            education "If in special 
            education or not, keep going; it is very beneficial. Don't just drop 
            out and say ‘I'm done.' That's how I got to where I am. I never gave 
            up on going to college." While Skelton has not 
            yet met her goal of becoming a teacher, she has already done much 
            more than some others have said she would do. She is a model for 
            what vision and persistence can do.  How focused are you 
            on your dreams? So focused that if the musical accompaniment cuts 
            off you will still carry on and finish on perfect pitch? That's what 
            it takes. Happy New Year! [Jan
Youngquist] | 
        
            | 
            [Click here for January and February news]
            March Battle over LDC closing continues In mid-March, AFSCME 
            officials charged that the death of three medically fragile LDC 
            residents may have been caused by the Department of Human Services 
            moving them from the cottage that had been their home. Coty Cottage 
            had been set up for the care of the physically fragile, but patients 
            there were moved to another cottage that lacked appropriate 
            facilities, an AFSCME spokesman said. The moves were part of the 
            downsizing of LDC ordered by Gov. Ryan. State officials later denied 
            that the transfer of residents had anything to do with the three 
            deaths. At the end of the 
            month, Associate Circuit Judge Donald Behle ruled that the state 
            could not move any more residents from LDC without a permit from the 
            Illinois Health Facilities Planning Board. The ruling came as the 
            result of a lawsuit filed by parents of an LDC resident, state Sen. 
            Larry Bomke, AFSCME Council 31 and Don Todd, president of AFSCME 
            Local 425. Later in March state 
            Reps. Bill Mitchell, R-Forsythe, and Jonathan Wright, R-Hartsburg, 
            filed an amendment that would keep Lincoln Developmental Center 
            operating with 240 residents and 480 employees. "It will be an 
            uphill fight. I don't want to lead you on, but it's the right thing 
            to do and it's the fair thing to do," Mitchell said. The proposed 
            amendment would increase the funding proposed for LDC in the 2003 
            fiscal year from $11,028,400 to $27,816,000. Gov. George Ryan, 
            citing abuse and neglect at the 125-year-old facility, in February 
            of this year ordered LDC downsized from a high of nearly 400 
            residents to 100, and from a high of about 700 employees to 210.   
             City faces budget crunch The city of Lincoln's 
            finance chairman, Steve Fuhrer, told the council that the city must 
            cut almost $1 million from next year's budget to make expenditures 
            balance its estimated revenues. In March the city was also asked to 
            come up with $1.1 million as its share of the $3.5 million cost of a 
            proposed industrial and commercial park on 63.5 acres north of the 
            city near the I-55 interchange. The city's share would go to run a 
            sewer line out to the property and for other sewer improvements, 
            according to Mark Smith, economic development director. Smith said 
            prospects who are looking for manufacturing and distribution sites 
            do not want to locate on the west side, where utilities are more 
            easily available, because of incompatible land use. He said that 
            because there are homes, churches and retail establishments on the 
            west side, prospects who want to build these facilities are 
            concerned about objections from neighbors.  Early in March, a 
            privately operated company, the Alan G. Ryle Company of Champaign, 
            asked the city of Lincoln to grant it a zoning change to allow a 
            Community Integrated Living Arrangement home in an R-1 neighborhood. 
            The company announced plans to build homes for 64 of the residents 
            that Gov. Ryan proposed to move out of the Lincoln Developmental 
            Center by the end of June. The city does not allow group homes areas 
            zoned R-1, but the attorney for the company said the city's 
            ordinance is illegal and violates the federal Fair Housing Act as 
            well as the Americans with Disabilities Act. At a later meeting, 
            however, city attorney Bill Bates said that whether the city's 
            housing ordinance was illegal was still in question.  Primary brings high voter turnout Interest was high for 
            the March 19 primary, bringing a high voter turnout of 40.24 
            percent. Of those, 83 percent took Republican ballots and 17 percent 
            took Democratic ballots. Republicans Sally Litterly and Mary E. 
            Bruns were unopposed in their races for county clerk and recorder 
            and for county treasurer. Steven G. Nichols won the nomination for 
            sheriff over three other Republican candidates, Robert J. Brandt, 
            James J. Pinney and Henry Bartmann. Nichols will face Democrat 
            Anthony "Tony" Soloman in November. Jean R. Anderson defeated Robert 
            P. Turk as Republican candidate for regional superintendent of 
            schools for Logan, Mason and Menard counties. For the first time in 
            many years, voters chose members of the Logan County Board from 
            districts rather than at large. In District 1, Republicans Lloyd 
            Hellman and Charles E. Ruben were unopposed. In District 2, 
            Republicans Robert D. Farmer and Richard E. "Dick" Logan defeated 
            incumbent Roger W. Bock and Scott E. Doerr. In District 3, 
            Republicans Gloria Luster and John L. Stewart defeated Tom Cash. 
            They will face Democrat Harold G. Dingman in November. In District 
            4, Republicans David R. Hepler and Terry "TW" Werth defeated Julia 
            Pegram Gerardot and Stephan A. Mesner. In District 5, incumbent Dale 
            A. Voyles and newcomer Patrick O'Neill defeated incumbents Clifford 
            "Sonny" Sullivan and Jim Griffin. In District 6, Republicans Paul 
            Gleason and William (Mitch) Brown defeated Veronica Board Hasprey. In state races, 
            Republican senatorial candidate Jim Durkin defeated John Cox and 
            James D. Oberweis and will face incumbent Democrat Richard J. Durbin 
            in the fall. Gubernatorial candidate Jim Ryan defeated Republican 
            challengers Corinne Wood and Patrick J. O'Malley. Democrat Rod R. 
            Blagojevich defeated Paul. G. Vallas and Roland W. Burris. In the 
            race for lieutenant governor, Republican Carl Hawkinson defeated 
            Jack J. McInerney, Charles G. Owens and William A. O'Connor. 
            Democrat Pat Quinn defeated F. Michael Kelleher and Joyce W. 
            Washington. In the race for 
            attorney general, Republican Joe Birkett defeated Bob Coleman, and 
            Democrat Lisa Madigan defeated John Schmidt. Secretary of state 
            candidates Kris O'Rourke Cohn, Republican, and incumbent Jesse 
            White, Democrat, were unopposed, as were comptroller candidates 
            Thomas J. Ramsdell, Republican, and Daniel W. Hynes, Democrat, and 
            treasurer candidates Judy Baar Topinka, Republican, and Thomas J. 
            Dart, Democrat. This year poll 
            watchers who congregated at the courthouse watched the returns on a 
            computer monitor instead of the traditional blackboard   
             County revenues down Logan County revenues 
            from sales and income taxes for the first three months of the fiscal 
            year are down, and expenses exceed income by 2.79 percent. Finance 
            committee spokesman Roger Bock said revenues from the income tax and 
            from 1 percent and 0.25 percent sales taxes are $65,000 below where 
            they ought to be at the end of the first quarter. Not all revenue 
            sources are down, and interest income is holding steady. However, he 
            said, sales tax is a better indicator of overall trends than other 
            revenue sources like inheritance tax because it is less susceptible 
            to fluctuation. If the present trend continues, Bock projected a 
            year-end revenue deficit in the neighborhood of $250,000.  New rules and 
            regulations for Logan County Airport were discussed by the county 
            board and will be reviewed by State's Attorney Tim Huyett. Existing 
            regulations were passed in 1985, 1980 or even earlier and do not 
            address many current needs, according to airport and farm committee 
            chair Roger Bock, who researched the changes. Dale Voyles, chair of 
            the insurance and legislative committee, said it seems prudent to 
            renew the county's health insurance coverage with Health Alliance of 
            Champaign despite a 23 percent increase in premium. He said the main 
            reason for the increase is that claims have exceeded the premium by 
            more than $200,000 during the seven months the policy has been in 
            effect. Three significant claims have produced this shortfall.  Other March news The Logan County Arts 
            Association board, with Marshall Jacobs as board president, adopted 
            a membership schedule ranging from $30 for individuals to $350 for 
            corporate sponsorships. The association plans to have its first 
            official membership drive during October 2002. The basic membership 
            level costs $30 for an individual or $50 for a couple and includes a 
            membership newsletter or mailings. A house fire claimed 
            the life of a Mount Pulaski resident in the early morning of 
            Thursday, March 7. Brad S. Follis, 29, of 504 1842nd Ave., Mount 
            Pulaski, was pronounced dead at 1:17 a.m. by Logan County Coroner 
            Chuck Fricke. Follis' mother, Nancy Monroe, awoke to the fire in the 
            house and tried to put it out. She was taken to Memorial Medical 
            Center in Springfield, where she was treated and released. Clinton Lake was 
            reopened after being closed to the public. Exelon owns the lake and 
            the adjacent nuclear power plant and closed the lake in September, 
            citing safety and security concerns following the Sept. 11 terrorist 
            attacks. Daniel J. Logan, 16, 
            of Lincoln was pronounced dead at 9:44 p.m. Saturday, March 30, 
            after the car he was driving failed to negotiate a curve on Route 
            121-Limit Street. The car was traveling southbound when it moved 
            into the northbound lane and off the road into a ditch. The car 
            overturned and the driver was thrown from the vehicle. He was 
            pronounced dead at the scene. There were no other passengers in the 
            car. The accident occurred just south of Keokuk Street at 8:56 p.m. 
            Daniel Logan is the son of the local county board chairman, Dick 
            Logan. Sports  Lincoln's Stephanie Reichle led the Lady Redbirds to a 70-67 victory over the visiting 
            Indiana State Sycamores, tallying nine points and leading the team 
            in rebounds with six. She also had three assists and three steals 
            while foul trouble limited her to 27 minutes of action. She recently 
            had knee surgery but said she is now 100 percent and has all her old 
            hustle back. On March 3, another 
            Lincolnite, Brian Cook, along with Frank Williams, led the Fighting 
            Illini to a last-minute win over Minnesota. The Illini were down by 
            nine points with just over three minutes to play. Then Frank 
            Williams stripped the ball away and Cory Bradford drilled one of his 
            five 3-pointers. Illinois was down by only one with 6.9 seconds to 
            play when Williams sent off a high-arching banker that floated 
            softly through the twine. His shot launched a wild celebration 
            throughout the state. Cook did all he could to set up the 
            celebration by registering a double-double, tallying 22 points, 11 
            rebounds and four blocked shots. Indiana's Jared 
            Jeffries was chosen as the Big Ten Player of the Year in voting by 
            both the coaches and media. University of Illinois junior Frank 
            Williams was honored as Big Ten Player of the Year for 2001 and 
            received first-team honors this year. Lincoln's Brian Cook, also a 
            junior at Illinois, was one of five players named to the second 
            team. The Lincoln Railers 
            were defeated by Springfield Lanphier in IHSA sectionals at the 
            Prairie Capital Convention Center in Springfield. However, two 
            Railers, Brock Werner and Cliff Carnahan, advanced in the IHSA 
            3-point shootout in Springfield and now move on to the state 
            tournament in Peoria.    
            [to top of second column 
            in this article]
             | 
      
       April LDC story 
            continues 
            Eighteen Illinois legislators, most of 
            whom were members of the committee that heard testimony about 
            closing or downsizing Lincoln Developmental Center, have sent a 
            letter to Gov. George Ryan asking him not to downsize the 
            institution until the "unanswered questions" about the moves have 
            been resolved. The letter noted that family members of residents 
            remain supportive of LDC and wish their loved ones to stay there. 
            As part of a series of staff cutbacks 
            aimed at downsizing the facility, 19 Lincoln Developmental Center 
            employees left as of Tuesday, April 16, to take positions in other 
            state-operated centers for the developmentally disabled. These were 
            the first of 60 employees who chose to accept transfers to other 
            locations rather than be laid off by the Department of Human 
            Services, according to Dan Senters, spokesman for the American 
            Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, the union that 
            represents most LDC staff members. The employees went to the Fox 
            Developmental Center in Dwight, the Shapiro Developmental Center in 
            Kankakee and the Jacksonville facility. 
            Although the injunction by Logan County 
            Circuit Judge Donald Behle has put a hold on moving out residents, 
            AFSCME members are concerned that the state will continue staff 
            layoffs and residents will not be properly cared for. Sen. Larry 
            Bomke, R-Springfield, an LDC supporter, said it would be 
            "devastating" to lay off the 128 employees scheduled to leave on 
            April 30. A spokesman for the DHS said employees who are needed will 
            not be laid off. Senters said later in the month that only 35 of the 
            128 scheduled to leave would be laid off, but he also said the state 
            is laying off people who are needed, and many of the current 
            employees have been mandated to work double shifts almost daily. 
            An amendment filed in the House to 
            provide funding to keep LDC at 240 residents failed to get out of 
            the rules committee. The bill was sponsored by state Reps. Bill 
            Mitchell, R-Forsythe, and Jonathan Wright, R-Hartsburg. City 
            continues with budget cutting 
            In an effort to cut about $1 million 
            from next year's budget, the Lincoln City Council decided it must 
            pass the fire hydrant service fees back to water company customers. 
            The move will save the city about $212,000 yearly and will add about 
            $5 to city residents' bimonthly water bills. 
            To keep the budget deficit down, the 
            budget committee will move money out of set-aside funds for the 
            west-side fire station, the fund that pays death benefits for city 
            fire or police employees, and the working cash fund. The committee 
            has already imposed a wage freeze for all department heads and a 
            hiring freeze for all departments. According to finance chairman 
            Steve Fuhrer, the city has already spent $285,000 more than it is 
            bringing in this year. He said he hoped the city could avoid layoffs 
            of employees to keep the budget in balance. The city will still have 
            a deficit of about $270,000, he said. 
            Lincoln received a Tree City USA award 
            from the National Arbor Day Association and the Illinois Department 
            of Natural Resources. The city supplied trees to be planted at six 
            local elementary schools in celebration of Arbor Day this year.
             
            In April the Lincoln Police Department 
            opened its first substation, at an office in Centennial Courts. 
            Officer Tim Butterfield is in charge of the new facility, which will 
            be staffed part time.  
              
            
       Logan 
            County Board sees shortfall 
            The Logan County Board learned that its 
            general fund decreased by $239,103 during 2001 because of overly 
            optimistic income projections. In the first third of 2002 revenue is 
            also below budget. Andy Lascody of Sikisch Gardner & Co. presented 
            tentative results of his audit of county books for fiscal year 2001, 
            ending Nov. 30. The report shows that revenues from fines, personal 
            property replacement tax, 1 percent sales tax, state income tax and 
            interest income were all low, totaling $328,327 short of budget 
            expectations. Lascody attributed some of the shortfall to the 
            weakened national economy, resulting in lower sales tax income and 
            interest rates. The shortfall was apparently not caused by 
            out-of-line expenditures. "All departments stayed pretty well within 
            what they were allotted," said finance chair Rod White. 
            The board voted to "renew by 
            continuance" the county health insurance policy with Health Alliance 
            of Champaign for one year. It also voted to establish immediately a 
            committee composed of township, city and county officials to discuss 
            the north-side commerce park proposal, with the possibility of 
            including other development options as well. Those options include 
            broadening the north-side industrial park package to improve Fifth 
            Street Road to aid development on the west side. The committee will 
            see if there is any feasible way to combine the Fifth Street Road 
            and north-side industrial park projects. One reason the broader 
            package is appealing is that funds for Fifth Street Road improvement 
            are already in the works. Widening Fifth Street Road would enhance 
            existing property, including the already developed Lincoln 
            Industrial Park on Fifth Street Road and the Burwell property on 
            Route 10. Central 
            School construction over budget 
            Construction work on Lincoln Elementary 
            School District 27's new Central School will resume on April 29, 
            after a series of changes to bring costs into line. On that date 
            work will begin on piping and electrical work, Bill Ahal of the S.M. 
            Wilson firm, construction manager for the building project, told the 
            school board. Work on the Seventh Street site stopped on April 3 
            while the board, architect Dave Leonatti and the Wilson firm looked 
            for alternative systems that would bring the costs down. The halt in 
            construction was necessary because in February, when bids were 
            opened, the board found costs were almost $800,000 beyond the 
            approximately $6 million budgeted to build the 47,000-square-foot 
            elementary school.  Other 
            April news 
            On April 16 the Lincoln Police 
            Department spent five hours negotiating with a 20-year-old man 
            threatening to commit suicide before using less than lethal force to 
            subdue him. The man would not allow police into the residence in the 
            400 block of South Kickapoo. He had filled the house with natural 
            gas and was threatening to blow himself up. The emergency response 
            team was called out and the street was blocked off during the 
            incident. 
            State Rep. Jonathan Wright, 
            R-Hartsburg, has introduced a bill in the state legislature that any 
            infant born alive, including those surviving an attempted abortion, 
            would be assured proper medical care to protect and preserve their 
            lives. 
            Looking for Lincoln officers announced 
            at the group's April 17 meeting that the grant to fund the Abraham 
            Lincoln video has been delayed but not canceled, so shooting must be 
            postponed from early June to late summer or early fall. Paul Beaver, 
            Logan County chair of Looking for Lincoln, said Illinois Sen. Bob 
            Madigan and Rep. John Turner assured him in the fall of 2001 that 
            $20,000 in state funds had been earmarked for the video project. He 
            said the money would come from a Member Initiative Grant. 
             An1860s-style 
            baseball game, a video of events from 1953 and national-grade 
            entertainment -- all these are planned for the party the city of 
            Lincoln will throw to celebrate its 150th birthday. Meeting on April 
            17, the sesquicentennial planning committee voted to urge the 
            Lincoln City Council to accept the polling place building at Adams 
            and Fifth streets for use at Postville Park for historical purposes, 
            including the sesquicentennial. 
            Lincoln Community High School recently 
            awarded diplomas to four former students, men who left school before 
            they graduated. Today's young people might think of these four men 
            as dropouts, but in their day they were heroes. All of them left 
            school to enlist in the armed forces at a time when America was 
            engaged in conflict that threatened its very existence. Two of 
            Sunday's graduates, Robert Ball and Edgar Logan, enlisted to serve 
            in the U.S. Navy in World War II. The other two, Richard Montcalm 
            and Jim Pinney, signed up to serve during the Korean War a few years 
            later. 
            The Relay for Life held April 19-20 
            raised $60,510 for the American Cancer Society. The people circling 
            the oval track at the Recreation Center were survivors of cancer -- 
            men and women, old and young. 
            Glenn Brunk Stationers of Springfield 
            announced plans to open a store at 511 Broadway about June 1. The 
            company, run by the Stanfield family who bought it from the 
            founder's widow in 1997, specializes in personal service to the 
            point of delivering a single item. Lately Lincoln has been without 
            an office supply store for the first time in 60 years. Staples and 
            BAT (formerly Lincoln Office Supply) had both closed. 
            The Senior Citizens of Logan County 
            hosted an open house at The Oasis from 4 to 6 p.m. Thursday, May 9, 
            to celebrate 17 years of service. The public was invited to visit 
            the senior center at 501 Pulaski in Lincoln. 
              
      
       Sports 
            news 
            According to the ISU football office, 
            Lincoln's Andy King has signed a free-agent contract with the St. 
            Louis Rams. This news makes King potentially the second player from 
            Lincoln to play in the NFL in the last decade, joining offensive 
            lineman Tony Semple of the Detroit Lions. According to an ISU 
            source, the New York Giants and the Chicago Bears had both shown 
            considerable interest in acquiring King's services, so it was pretty 
            surprising to see him end up with the Rams. 
            The Railer baseball club seems to be 
            turning things around of late. Although their record is not what 
            they'd like it to be, they're showing signs of life. Andy Knopp and 
            Derek Schrader have been hitting some bombs, and Lincoln's pitching 
            seems to be coming along just a bit. While a brutal early schedule 
            might not have aided the Railers to a quick start, it may have 
            toughened their resolve and made them a better team in the long run. The Lady 
            Railers also are not sporting the kind of overall record that sends 
            shivers down their opponents' spines, but they were 2-2 in the 
            conference the last time we got a report. The loss of JoBeth 
            Borowiak could've been killer. Instead, the girls have marched on. 
            It will be interesting to see how both of these teams fare in the 
            weeks ahead. (To be 
            continued) 
            [Joan Crabb] |