High-Ropes
Challenge Course—a Peak Experience
[MARCH
8, 2000] The
Lincoln Area YMCA’s Gateway program is a very
“uplifting” experience for youth ages 12 to 15. In
fact, some lucky youngsters will be lifted nearly 30 feet
in the air at the Y’s high-ropes challenge course
located behind the Y office at 319 West Kickapoo.
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Cliffs
’n Cables, a Chicago-based company that specializes in
outdoor adventure courses, finished constructing Lincoln’s
ropes course in February. The YMCA’s new structure
includes a high-ropes course (suspended between trees and
poles 30 feet in the air), a low-ropes course (just a few
feet off the ground), and a team rescue course (you would
have to see it).
The
Y’s ropes courses are constructed of wood, cables and
rope. The high-ropes course includes a cargo net, Burma
bridge, bottomless Burma bridge, balance beam, vine walk
and a zip line. Sounds like the perfect adventure for any
rambunctious early adolescent.
What
is the purpose of the YMCA’s challenge courses?
According to Angie Peters, executive director of the
Lincoln Area YMCA, challenge courses "teach teamwork
and enhance a young person’s self-confidence." As
would be expected in any YMCA program, participants are
carefully trained and supervised. "The challenge
courses are very exciting, but also very safe,"
explains Peters. The equipment is tested and certified
before we use it. The staff is thoroughly trained. The
kids are always connected to safety lines. At all times,
the participants are part of carefully designed
instructional activities that teach important lessons.
This isn’t just a recreational experience."
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The
first group of Gateway youngsters to ascend the trees will
be eighth graders from Lincoln Junior High School. These
students are completing the Prudential Youth Leadership
Institute training, which they received from YMCA staff
members, Ron Sillings and Sarah Farris. The nationally
validated program teaches communication, leadership, and
community service. A reward for completion of the program
(including a successful community service project) will be
an invitation to participate in the challenge courses
training.
"Kids
in Lincoln are getting the advantage of training that
corporations spend a lot of money on to provide their
executives," says Sillings. "I’m talking about
both the Prudential Youth Leadership Institute and the
challenge courses. The Prudential program is based on a
corporate training model, with an added community service
dimension. Ropes courses are very common training
experiences for executives."
In
the months to come, the Lincoln Area YMCA will open its
challenge course training to church, corporate, school,
club and family groups. The Gateway project will expand to
serve other groups of 12 to 15 year olds. Gateway has been
generously supported by two local and anonymous
contributors.
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Zion
Lutheran School Celebrates National Lutheran School Week
[MARCH
7, 2000]
Zion
Lutheran School, located at 1600 Woodlawn Road, is
celebrating National Lutheran School Week. This year’s
theme is, "Shine Like Living Stars." Students of
all ages began the event-filled week with yesterday’s
Hobbies and Careers Day. The PTO organized a day’s worth
of activities to expose the students to nearly 50
different professions.
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Field
trips to visit businesses on site included: Logan Lanes,
Kroger, Wendy’s, Elder Custom Cycle, The Courier,
Lincoln Animal Clinic, Christian Village, Cracker Barrrel,
Graue Chevrolet, Archery and Hunting Club, and Photography
with Debbie Skelton.
Other
area business persons brought their craft to Zion.
Activities and presenters were: Mapmaking with Kim Larson,
Candy Making with Cindy Ayars, Swing Dance with Audra
Turley, Wire Beads with Laura Davidson, Rope Making with
Edgar and Analina Coers, Truck Driving with Dennis Rekart,
Cake Decorating with Roberta Rademaker, Counted Cross
Stitch with Pam Conrady, Woodworking with Peggy Meyer,
Amazing Science with Mr. Boyd, Farm and Home Safety with
Betsy Pech, Rubber Stamping with Judy Awe, First Aid with
Marsha Dowling, Theater Workshop with Vicki Brinton, Eye
Care with Dr. Nobbe, Farming with Jim Drew, Finger Weaving
with Fay Boerma, Hair Care with Paula Landess, Air Brush
Painting with Tom Alberts, Creative Memories Scrapbooking
with Carol Runyon, Tae Bo with Carla Bender, and Magicians
with Chris Sprinkle. Baby-Sitting, Antiques Show, Bass
Fishing Skills, Civil War Costumes, Paper Quilting, Race
Car Engines and Skin Care were also showcased.
[Students and teachers watch as an Illinois Air
National Guard helicopter lands
on school grounds earlier this morning]
[Rope Making with Mr. and Mrs. Coers]
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At
10 this morning an Illinois Air National Guard helicopter
landed in front of the school. Later today students will
present a talent show. The schedule for the remainder of
the week is as follows:
[A perfect landing]
Day |
Special
Activities |
Ash
Wednesday |
Chapel
families |
Thursday |
Community
and world service projects
History
and art fair will be open to the public in the
evening
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Friday |
Lutheran
Schools Pep Rally featuring the school’s band |
Sunday |
Students
will participate in worship at the 8 and 10:30
a.m. services at Zion Lutheran Church
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Other
activities scheduled for this week include Blue and Gold
Day, Walking Art Day (students will wear T-shirts they
have made), and Shorts in March Day.
[LDN]
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Police
Ask Citizens’ Help to Combat Meth Labs
[MARCH
7, 2000]
The
methamphetamine labs that are a growing problem in Central
Illinois pose many different hazards, according to Master
Sergeant Bruce Liebe of the Illinois State Police.
Ingredients used to make the drug can maim or even kill.
The labs are a fire hazard, and the toxic waste they
produce is destructive to the environment and costly to
clean up.
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In
addition, the drug is so addictive that it completely
dominates the lives of users. "Their whole lives
revolve around the drug," Liebe said at a seminar
held yesterday at the Lincoln Park District. "Their
children don’t matter, their relationships don’t
matter, their work doesn’t matter. All that matters is
meth."
To
fight this problem, law enforcement agencies in Illinois
are asking for help from people in the community. Because
the drug can be made entirely from legal substances that
are easy to get, police would like farmers, merchants and
ordinary citizens to report thefts or large purchases of
substances meth "cooks" need.
There
is more than one recipe for the drug, Liebe said, but all
of them start with common over-the-counter cold and asthma
medications containing ephedrine or pseudo-ephedrine.
Piles of empty bubble-packs that once held these pills
could be one sign that a meth lab is in the neighborhood.
Although
one person can legally buy only two packets of these pills
at a time, a meth manufacturer can visit more than one
store, until he or she has accumulated the thousand pills
used to make an average batch of the drug. Merchants who
notice large and frequent purchases of these products
should inform the local police department and if possible
give a physical description of the purchasers.
The
most popular meth recipe in Central Illinois uses
anhydrous ammonia, a liquid fertilizer. Right now there
are many tanks of anhydrous sitting in farmyards and
fields ready for spring use. Farmers who think the tanks
may have been tampered with should notify authorities, and
if they see a suspicious car in the vicinity should make a
note of the license number.
Lithium
batteries are another staple, along with a solvent such as
ether, starter fluid, fuel for a camp stove or a similar
substance. Another ingredient is hydrogen chloride gas
made from sulfuric acid. Some recipes also use red
phosphorous and iodine crystals, muratic acid, freon,
acetone, hydriotic acid and denatured alcohol. Any
merchant who sees an increase in sales of products
containing these chemicals should also inform the local
police department.
The
contents of garbage cans sometimes provide clues to the
presence of a meth lab, Liebe explained. Empty containers
of starter fluid, ether cans with holes punched in them,
products such as Heet, drain cleaner cans, salt containers
and stripped-out lithium batteries indicate meth is being
produced nearby. Other clues are coffee filters and used
glass containers containing white residue (sometimes pink
if that was the color of the pills the cook started with).
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A
pervasive odor of ether or a strong smell of ammonia can
also indicate a meth lab in the area, he said.
Every
pound of meth produces five or six pounds of very toxic
residue, Liebe said, and meth users are not careful how
they dispose of it. Toxic waste has been dumped in farm
waterways and fields where it kills fish, animals, and all
vegetation. Often it is put in dumpsters or even city
sewers. The cost to clean up the average meth lab, which
must be done by a hazardous waste contractor, is from
$5,000 to $10,000.
Manufacturing
meth is a dangerous occupation. "Most anhydrous
thieves have some type of injury," Liebe explained.
The volatile liquid can cause burns on the hands and face
and, if accidentally splashed in the eyes, blindness. He
noted that if a quart of the ether used in the meth
manufacturing process is ignited, "It could blow up a
small house." The hydrogen chloride gas is also very
deadly. "A little can put you down and a little more
can kill you, and those makeshift labs usually aren’t
properly ventilated."
The
meth labs don’t look like a science setup with
sophisticated equipment, he pointed out. Blenders, hot
plates, plastic bottles, glass jars, duct tape and plastic
tubing like that used in an aquarium are common utensils.
Most of the equipment needed to make meth can be stored in
a small space, such as a chest cooler.
In
Illinois the first users were adults in their 30s and 40s,
according to Lincoln police, but the recent raid on a meth
lab in the San Jose area turned up users of high school
age as well. "There is more and more use in this age
group," Liebe said. Sometimes it’s like raiding a
school bus."
"We
are so concerned about this that we’ve dedicated an
officer from our police force to work on the drug
problem," said Lincoln Police Chief Richard Ludolph.
"He works in the District 9 area of Central Illinois
with state Drug Enforcement Administration."
Ludolph
said that Illinois legislators have toughened the laws and
the prosecutors are now able to get stiffer penalties for
drug manufacturers. "Overall we are fortunate we live
in Logan County when it comes to drug sentencing," he
said. "Our legal system here has always aggressively
prosecuted drug dealers, much more aggressively than in
some other counties in Central Illinois. We have sent some
to prison for 10 to 15 years."
The
informational seminar was sponsored by the Alcohol,
Tobacco and Drug Task Force of the Healthy Communities
Partnership. A second seminar is scheduled for Monday,
March 13, at 6:30 p.m. at Lincoln Junior High School, 208
Broadway.
[Joan
Crabb]
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Part 1 of 3
Lincoln's
Helping Hands Reach All the Way to Africa
Barbara
O’Donohue on the way to Kenya
[MARCH
6, 2000]
What
is on your agenda for this week? If you could sneak a peek
at one Lincoln woman’s daily planner, it might look like
this: This week’s agenda: Go to a small, remote village
in Africa. Stay in "mud huts, graciously shared by
the most wonderful people you could meet."
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Owner
and president of a Lincoln-based business, General
Consulting Services, Barbara O’Donohue left the States
March 5th for a return trip to Kenya. She will
be working as a volunteer for the Children of Pokot
Educational Fund (COPE), an organization she helped found.
The Pokot village she will be visiting is located in the
country of Kenya, in the Kacheliba District. This will be
one of Ms. O’Donohue’s shorter trips, taking four
weeks instead of the usual five or six. She will be
working with tribal leaders, women, educators and other
villagers.
[Barbara O'Donohue and Sam Poghisio]
How
did Ms. O’Donohue, a Lincoln businesswoman, first
connect with a village in Africa? The story begins with
Sam Poghisio, a Kenyan who attended Lincoln Christian
Seminary.
Poghisio
was an exile from Kenya when he arrived in Lincoln in the
early '90s. He came on a scholarship to Lincoln Christian
Seminary. Back in Kenya Poghisio had been a member of
Parliament. He was expelled from the Parliament during a
difficult political time. Poghisio’s strong stances had
provoked those in power, and his safety was endangered.
Shortly after Poghisio came to Lincoln, his wife, Pauline,
joined him. Mrs. Poghisio was about to give birth to the
couple’s first child and had been unable to attain a
visa. After the birth of their daughter, Chelimo, Mrs.
Poghisio was granted a visa and came to join her husband.
Poghisio
earned his master of divinity degree in 1993, and the
family returned to Kenya the following year. He took a
professorship at Africa’s largest Christian university,
Nairobi’s Daystar University. He resumed his works for
his people and was elected back into the Parliament of
Kenya in 1998.
Paul
and Mary Boatman of Lincoln were traveling with Poghisio
in 1995. During that visit in a remote village of the
Pokot province, the Boatmans learned of the needs of Pokot.
They observed children milling around, children who should
have been in school. There are no schools readily
accessible in the remote area around Pokot. Poghisio
explained to the Boatmans that the children of this
village grew up without education. The boys became tribal
warriors, and the girls married the boys.
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Poghisio
dreamed of educating the children of Pokot, and asked his
well-educated sister if she would go there to teach. She
agreed. Poghisio’s sister opened school under a tree.
After
seeing the children and meeting the villagers during her
visit to the village, O’Donohue caught the vision. She
came home inspired by the wonderful people. With the
support of the Boatmans and other Lincolnites, she took on
the leadership to establish COPE, which has helped the
school to grow.
Later,
the class moved to a shelter, a grass hut where the
children sat on dirt floors. Since then, a new building
has been constructed, and the school children will soon
move into it. The little schoolhouse has a concrete floor,
tin roof and no desks. It is divided into five rooms.
Poghisio smiles and says proudly, "The children will
no longer have to sit in the dust."
[Poghisio poses with artifacts of his native
country]
Four
teachers and 150 children are looking forward to moving
into the new school. They now claim one of the highest
enrollments in the district, and the school is one of the
few offering a Bible-based education. Lincoln people have
joined the Boatmans and Ms. O’Donohue in supporting the
schoolhouse in Pokot.
Sam
Poghisio recently returned to Kenya after a brief visit to
the States. He was here with many other world leaders on
an invitation to the National Prayer Breakfast in
Washington, D.C. The members of the U.S. Congress hosted
the breakfast, with the President and Mrs. Clinton also in
attendance. Poghisio swung though Lincoln to see some of
his friends here and to express his great appreciation for
the people who support COPE.
[Jan
Youngquist]
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