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Change on glass collection, Mount Pulaski Spring Fling, hospice gifts, Lincoln Heritage Museum honored, electronics and glass recycling, Elkhart garage sales, Railsplitting Festival, Together for Lincoln, writing club, LCHS exhibit at Lincoln Art Institute, Hartem Alumni Banquet, Relay For Life luminaria, Route 66 weekend June 7-9, Atlanta Rt. 66 Cruise-In

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[May 10, 2013]  Glass recycling collection location change for this Saturday only

Due to the motorcycle races, the glass recycling collection scheduled for Saturday has been relocated to the basketball courts on the south end of the Logan County Fairgrounds Recyclers should use the Short 11th St entrance.

Collection times, 9 a.m. to noon, remain unchanged.

___

For more information, see the original announcement of the recycling collection:
Initial glass recycling


Mount Pulaski hosts Spring Fling with Washington Street merchants

MOUNT PULASKI -- Downtown merchants in Mount Pulaski are celebrating the arrival of spring with a Spring Fling shopping and visiting event on Friday and Saturday.

Businesses on Washington Street will all have open houses with door prizes, drawings and, of course, tasty refreshments. Salt Creek Attic will even offer a complimentary lunch.

Hours for the events are Friday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. and Saturday from 11 to 3.

Participating merchants are Saddie’s Secret Place, Salt Creek Attic, Vintage One, Studio off the Square, Johnson's True Value, the Furniture Doktor, Under Construction and Botanica Florists.


Donor gifts make hospice patient wishes come true, help families cope with grief

A check representing collective donor gifts of $8,332.21 from the Abraham Lincoln Healthcare Foundation's Dr. Wayne J. Schall Hospice Fund was recently presented to the Memorial Home Services nurses who work with Logan County patients and their families.

The Light Up A Life and memorial contributions from local donors will help promote a bereavement support group and support the final wishes of local hospice patients.

Memorial Home Services is a not-for-profit affiliate of Memorial Health System and serves 14 central Illinois counties. Shelley Gray, R.N., and Jessica Spiedel, R.N., (pictured above) commute daily from Girard and Chatham to work with Logan and Mason County patients of Memorial Home Services. The two nurses do so because they "love the families, pharmacies, physicians and hospital in the Lincoln community."

As part of their daily routine, Gray and Spiedel visit hospice patients in their homes to help make their final days as pain-free and rewarding as possible. They also partner with ALMH case managers and Dr. Mary Bretscher's chemotherapy clinic to ensure that the transition to hospice care is as smooth as possible.

Gray says that the gifts passed along from the Abraham Lincoln Healthcare Foundation will be used to support a new bereavement support group, which meets in the ALMH Steinfort Room the third Thursday of every month from 6 to 8 p.m.

Spiedel added that the gifts will also help them grant wishes for local patients as part of the Memorial Home Services Hospice Sharing Wishes Fund. Gray and Spiedel work with the Memorial Hospice team of social workers, chaplains and volunteers to get to know the patients and their desires, and then use the Sharing Wishes Fund to make those wishes a reality. Wishes granted to Logan County patients have included a ride in a hot-air balloon, a laptop needed to Skype with far-away family members, a hearing device, and a haircut and special dinner.

According Marty Ahrends, executive director of the Abraham Lincoln Healthcare Foundation, ALMH started its own hospice program in the late '80s and named it in memory of beloved physician Dr. Wayne J. Schall. Even though the Schall Hospice at ALMH merged with Visiting Nurses Association of Central Illinois in the mid-'90s, the community continued to support the Schall Hospice Fund. More than $522,000 from 6,047 donors has been donated to the fund since then.

In 2004 the local hospice advisory group recommended that Schall funds purchase low-air-loss mattresses and other items that hospice patients would use in their homes. Later they approved the renovation of a hospice respite care room at the former ALMH facility and voted to use funds for pain medications that keep local hospice patients comfortable during their final months.

Gifts for the Schall Hospice Fund can be sent to the Abraham Lincoln Healthcare Foundation, 200 Stahlhut Drive in Lincoln. For more information, contact Ahrends at 605-5006 or visit www.almh.org.


Lincoln Heritage Museum named among top 30 university museums

The Lincoln Heritage Museum at Lincoln College has been named as one of the 30 "most amazing university museums" in the world, according to Best Colleges Online.

Jennifer Carson, a representative of Best Colleges Online, noted in her announcement to the Lincoln Heritage Museum that, in preparing this recent list, the editors reviewed information on hundreds of museums around the world and selected the 30 they deemed most outstanding.

According to the Best Colleges Online website, the Lincoln Heritage Museum was included because of the strength of its collection and how it "preserves artifacts related to the life and presidency of Abraham Lincoln." The editors for the site identified the "objects from Lincoln's home, books and other personal possessions of Lincoln, and a one-of-a-kind handmade campaign banner" as some of the museum's most prominent attributes.

Ron Keller, director of the Lincoln Heritage Museum, commented that this recognition is significant.

"One must consider that according to Lynn Marsden-Atlass, secretary for the Association of Academic Museums and Galleries, there are in the United States alone an estimated 3,000 college and university museums. That number is surely tripled when accounting for museums outside our nation's borders. That makes the acknowledgment of our museum quite noteworthy," Keller said.

Anne Moseley, assistant director of the museum commented: "We are honored to be among the many museums that have made an impact on the students and visitors to our campus. We will continue this in the new museum as we educate individuals on the life, the legacy and the character of Abraham Lincoln. Our significance is recognized now. Once we are in the new museum this fall, our impact and recognition will be even greater."

The top 30 list includes American and international museums, including the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology; the Harvard Museum of Natural History; the U.S. Naval War College Museum; the Museum of Anthropology in British Columbia, Canada; the Macquarie University Museum in Sydney, Australia; the Beth Hatefutsoth Museum in Tel Aviv University, Israel; the Kyoto Museum for World Peace, in Kyoto, Japan; the Grassi Museum fur Musikinstrumente (Museum of Musical Instruments) at the University of Leipzig, Germany; the Natural History Museum of Denmark at University of Copenhagen, Denmark; and the Asia University Museum of Art in Taipei, China. The full ranking of the 30 most amazing university museums is available at www.bestcollegesonline.org.

Best Colleges Online is an organization that surveys the nation's top online schools and degree programs, and provides career how-to guides, information about the benefits and advantages of online degrees, and other information on universities around the world. The editors regularly provide "top 10" rankings on many elements of college offerings.

The Lincoln Heritage Museum is open 9 to 4 Monday through Friday, and from 1 to 4 p.m. on Saturdays. Admission is free.


Monthly electronics recycling

Habitat for Humanity of Logan County will have its monthly electronics recycling collection on Saturday from 9 a.m. to noon at the Habitat for Humanity warehouse, 915 Woodlawn Road. The collection is free of charge to the public.

The following items will be accepted:
  • Entertainment equipment, including TVs, radios, stereo and game systems, game controls, VCR and DVD players, and cameras.

  • Computer equipment, including laptop and desktop personal computers, hard drives, monitors, keyboards, printers, scanners, cords and cables, CD-ROM, DVD, Zip and tape drives.

  • Small business equipment, including phones, copiers, typewriters, fax machines and calculators.

Small household and countertop appliances will also be accepted, as well as aluminum, copper, brass and stainless steel items.

Electronics are not to be left at the site and are not collected outside of the hours of the collection.

Additional information on the electronics recycling is available through Habitat for Humanity of Logan County by contacting the office at 217-732-6412 or visiting www.habitatlogan.org.


Initial glass recycling

Logan County residents will again have the opportunity to recycle glass containers through the cooperative efforts of the Lincoln Woman's Club, the Logan County Joint Solid Waste Agency, Verallia Saint-Gobain Containers and the Logan County Fair Association. There will be a monthly collection the second Saturday of each month from May through October. Glass will be collected from 9 a.m. to noon this Saturday on the grounds of the Logan County Fair.

Change of location (posted May 10): Due to the motorcycle races, the glass recycling collection May 11 has been relocated to the basketball courts on the south end of the Logan County Fairgrounds. Recyclers should use the Short 11th St entrance.

Collections will be canceled in the event of inclement weather or excessive heat. The Logan County Joint Solid Waste Agency does not accept glass at any of its recycling collection sites.

Only container glass will be accepted for recycling, which means it originally held either a food or beverage product. Clear glass as well as amber, green and blue will be accepted. The glass recycling program will not accept light bulbs or fluorescent lights, window glass, mirrors, ceramics, chinaware or CorningWare items.

Residents are asked to thoroughly rinse all glass containers. Lids as well as metal or plastic rings around the neck area of the container should be removed. Paper labels can be left on the containers.

Individuals are asked to follow the guidelines outlined, as one ceramic piece, one light bulb, or a metal neck ring or lid can ruin an entire load of glass being processed for recycling. The recycling program reserves the right to reject any glass not meeting preparation guidelines.

While glass collection is offered on a limited basis, it does have a positive impact in removing yet another item from the waste stream. Glass is not biodegradable, meaning it will not decompose over time. Glass can be recycled repeatedly. The local glass recycling program has collected over 187 tons of glass since the program's inception in 2004.

Logan County residents expressed the desire to recycle glass, and the glass recycling program is the direct response of local government, area businesses and civic organizations to support local recycling efforts.

For more information on local recycling activities, call 732-9636 or visit www.co.logan.il.us and select "Joint Solid Waste Agency." For the most up-to-date information on the agency and collection schedules, "like" the Logan County Joint Solid Waste Agency on Facebook.


Elkhart townwide yard sales

ELKHART -- In an annual event, there will be garage sales townwide this weekend in the village of Elkhart. Hours are 2-7 p.m. Friday and 8 a.m.-2 p.m. Saturday. Many houses in the village will host sales, and most are multiple-family sales.

Items being sold include children's and adult clothes, toys, sports equipment, home décor, furniture, appliances, pull-behind trailer, and more.

Hudson's Talk of the Town restaurant will be open for lunch and dinner to accommodate shoppers.

Maps will be available at 330 Kennedy Road and at the Talk of the Town.

For more information, see https://www.facebook.com/
events/446885158732455/?fref=ts
.

 


This year's Railsplitting Festival canceled

The Abraham Lincoln National Railsplitting Festival will not be held this year. The Logan Railsplitting Association met Monday evening and voted to take a year off. The decision by the association not to have the festival this year was a difficult one. The group will, however, put the festival on again in September 2014. Watch for more information after the first of the year.

The Civil War Ball will go on this year, and the public is encouraged to attend on Sept. 20. The organizers plan to make some additions to the evening, and more information on the event will be coming soon. 

The Logan Railsplitting Association thanks everyone for their past support of the festival and looks forward to having the festival again in 2014.

"We just needed to take a year off to refocus," said Darlene Begolka, association president, in making the announcement.


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Together for Lincoln pork chop dinner

Together for Lincoln will have its annual butterfly pork chop dinner fundraiser on Thursday, May 16, from 4 to 7 p.m. in the IGA parking lot. In addition to a butterfly pork chop, the meal includes au gratin potatoes, green beans and a dinner roll.

Tickets are $8. Tickets may be purchased in advance at the Jefferson Street Christian Church office during regular office hours Mondays-Thursdays or on-site the day of the dinner.

All proceeds will go to support projects at the annual Together for Lincoln service project day on Sunday, Sept. 22.


Lincoln Writer's Club will meet May 14

Lincoln Writer's Club will meet Tuesday, May 14, at 6:30 p.m. in the Alumni Room of the student center at Lincoln College.

Suggested topics:

  • Write a poem on a page of newspaper. Incorporate what you see into your poem.

  • How could a coconut, a mask and a dictionary help you off a desert island?

  • More home remedies.

For more information, call 732-2723.

All are welcome.


Logan County Arts presents 'Functional and Fine Art: Lincoln Community High School Textiles, Woods, Metals and Fine Art'

An exhibit of works by Lincoln Community High School students in textiles, woods, metals and fine art will be on view at the Lincoln Art Institute in downtown Lincoln from May 9 through May 26. The show opens Thursday, May 9, at 5 p.m. and is free and open to the public.

This event will feature various works by current students attending Lincoln Community High School and includes works that are both functional and creative in a variety of media.

Refreshments will be served at the opening, in addition to a bake sale with the proceeds going to support Logan County Arts, which serves artists and the community throughout Logan County.

The Lincoln Art Institute hosts Logan County Arts with the goal of expanding awareness of arts with a focus on Logan County.

___

Lincoln Art Institute
Address: 112 S. McLean, Lincoln, IL 62656
Contact: Toby Prange, curator,
contact@logancountyarts.org
Phone: 217-651-8355
Website: www.logancountyarts.org
Hours: Saturdays 11 a.m.-1 p.m.
or by appointment


Hartsburg-Emden High School Alumni Banquet will be June 8

HARTSBURG-EMDEN -- The 86th annual Hartsburg-Emden High School Alumni Banquet will begin at 6:30 p.m. Saturday, June 8, at the Knights of Columbus Hall in Lincoln.

Invitations to the banquet will be sent out the first week of May. Anyone who did not receive an invitation but would like to attend the banquet may send a request via email to Ron Spencer at coach_spencer@hotmail.com, or you may reach him on his cellphone at 309-838-0360.

Anniversary classes being honored this year are 1933, 1938, 1943, 1948, 1953, 1958, 1963, 1968, 1973, 1978, 1983, 1988, 1993, 1998, 2003, 2008 and the senior Class of 2013.

The winner of the "Wall of Fame" award will be selected and announced at the banquet. This year's award will be represented in the category of "Athletics/Sports."

Please mail nomination letters to Ron Spencer, 8923 Blooming Grove Road, Bloomington, IL 61705.

Due to the rising costs of the banquet, the alumni association will accept donations to help out with the cost of the event and to continue funding the Alumni Scholarship. Donations are payable to the Hartem Alumni Association and may be sent to Greg Phillips, 208 Market St., Emden, IL 62635.

Officers of the alumni association for 2013 are Chris Boerma, president; Ron Spencer, vice president; Loretta Hellman, secretary; Greg Phillips, treasurer; and Kay Mullins and Verna Lessen, corresponding secretaries.


Logan County Relay to celebrate American Cancer Society's 100th year

The Logan County Relay For Life is joining all of America in celebrating 100 years of saving lives and creating more birthdays through the efforts and research of the American Cancer Society, begun in 1913. Formerly the word cancer was not spoken, so almost all patients with this dreadful disease were lost.

On Saturday, May 18, the Logan County Relay For Life teams will sell $10 luminaria bags at Lincoln IGA from 9 a.m. until 2 p.m. The luminaria will also be available at the annual Relay For Life Breakfast at Lincoln College on Sunday, May 19, from 11 a.m. until 1 p.m. On Wednesday, May 22, these luminaria will draw attention to the 100th anniversary, as all of those purchased will be placed on the front porch of each participating home and lit at sundown to show support in helping to stamp out this disease in this century.

The luminaria purchased for this celebration will not be relit at the Relay For Life event June 14-15 at Lincoln College.

For more information, contact Bill Post, 732-7564; Tonita Reifsteck, 855-1645; or Nicole Lee, 828-1100.


Route 66 will anchor weekend of activities in Logan County

Route 66 will be the centerpiece for a diverse series of activities taking place in Logan County on the weekend of June 7-9, Friday-Sunday.

Events will range from garage sales, auto racing and an electric car show to art exhibits and the Illinois Route 66 Hall of Fame Banquet.

Festivities will begin with the annual Route 66 Garage Sale, which will take place from 7 a.m. until dusk Friday, Saturday and Sunday in Lincoln.

This year, vendors can rent indoor or outdoor space at the VFW, 915 Fifth St., or flea market space at The Mill, 738 S. Washington St. For reservations at the VFW, or general information about the garage sales, call Andrea Dykman at 217-735-0294. The Logan County Tourism Bureau at 217-732-8687 is taking reservations for spaces at The Mill.

For the first time, Logan County Outreach, a community betterment organization, and Lincoln Printers will host the Route 66 Garage Sale.

Private garage sales will also take place throughout the community. Those planners are urged to use traditional news and social media outlets to advertise their sales.

On Friday night, race fans can watch the POWRi competition at Lincoln Speedway on the Logan County Fairgrounds. Gates open at 3 p.m., with hot laps at 6:30 p.m. and racing at 7 p.m.

The Mill 2nd Saturday Flea Market on June 8 is the premiere event for a series of flea markets there on the second Saturday of each month through October. The flea market will run from 10 a.m. until 5 p.m.

The Lincoln Art Institute gallery at 112 S. McLean St. in downtown Lincoln will be open on Saturday from 11 a.m. until 1 p.m.

Main Street Lincoln will sponsor a PLUS 5K run and health fair in downtown Lincoln on Saturday.

Also on Saturday, an Electric Vehicle Cruise-In will take place from 10 a.m. until 4 p.m. along the original Mother Road in historic downtown Atlanta. The free public cruise-in is sponsored by the Atlanta Betterment Fund.

After it was commissioned in 1926, Route 66 was responsible for a huge increase in automobile traffic that led to the need for businesses to serve the traveling public. Among these new businesses were service stations.

Now, Route 66 is poised to help create the next big transportation infrastructure -- charging stations for electric vehicles. Atlanta is interested in helping other Route 66 communities discover how to better serve the traveling public that will be searching for an electric plug-in instead of a gas pump.

The June 8 Electric Vehicle Cruise-in, Illinois' first, will display some cool EV cars and offer a chance to learn more about how the Mother Road is working to give birth to a new travel infrastructure.

All electric and hybrid cars are invited to participate in the cruise-in. The event will also feature vintage music, great food, a 50-50 drawing and hourly drawings.

Atlanta offers two Level 2 Eaton charging stations, available by advance reservation at no fee. There are also 16 Level 1 charging stations available at no cost on a first-come, first-served basis.

For more information about the cruise-in, or to make reservations to use the Level 2 charger, contact Bill Thomas of the Atlanta Betterment Fund at 217-648-5077 or wthomas@teleologic.net.

Atlanta will also exhibit the results of its first Rt. 66 Reinterpreted Art Project from May 1 through Aug. 13.

Modeled on Chicago's "Cows on Parade" exhibit, the Rt. 66 Reinterpreted Art Project presented artists the opportunity to create their own take on one of the 20th century's most iconic and recognizable symbols, the U.S. Route 66 highway shield.

Artists were provided a blank 2-by-2-foot wooden cutout of the Route 66 highway shield, painted white, which then became their personal canvas. Each shield was required to incorporate the text "U.S. 66," but otherwise the design was left to each artist's imagination.

The Atlanta Betterment Fund, sponsor of the project, selected 10 shields as finalists. Visitors can vote on their favorites, and those with the most votes will be named winners of the contest. At the conclusion of the project, the five winning shields, along with the names of the artists who created them, will be displayed on a permanent basis in the Atlanta Rt. 66 Park. For more information, contact Bill Thomas at the telephone number or email address above.

The annual Route 66 Association of Illinois Motor Tour will pass through Logan County on Saturday, June 8. Many of the participants will stay overnight Saturday before continuing the tour on Sunday.

The Route 66 Association Hall of Fame Banquet will take place Saturday evening at Lincoln College. Advance reservations are required for the banquet. For more information about either the banquet or the motor tour, visit the Route 66 Association of Illinois at il66assoc.org.


Atlanta Rt. 66 Cruise-In May 11

ATLANTA -- Mark your calendar now and plan to attend the Atlanta Rt. 66 Cruise-In on Saturday, May 11, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Enjoy classic cars, vintage music, great food, a 50-50 drawing, hourly drawings and more -- all along an original alignment of the Mother Road itself in downtown Atlanta.

All area car club members and anyone with a great old car they want to display are invited to attend. Stop by the registration table to be included in the hourly drawings. The first 50 registrants will receive a free Atlanta Rt. 66 Cruise-In dash plaque.

While in town, visitors can step into the Palms Grill Café for a piece of blue-ribbon homemade pie, tour the J.H. Hawes Grain Elevator Museum, get their pictures taken with the Bunyon Giant, pick up souvenirs at the Gunnar Mast Trading Post or handcrafted items at the Arch Street Artisans shop, have a cheeseburger at Chubby's, visit the Atlanta Museum, enjoy a cold one at Phanny's or the Korner, then stroll around and enjoy the assembled cruise-in cars.

The Atlanta Rt. 66 Cruise-In is sponsored by the Atlanta Betterment Fund.

For more information, phone 217-648-5077 or email wthomas@teleologic.net.

The next cruise-in will take place on Saturday, June 8, and will be Illinois' first Electric Vehicle Cruise-In. Visitors will definitely want to come to downtown Atlanta that day to see the variety of electric and electric hybrid cars that will be on hand.


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