United
Way announces golf outing
The
fourth annual golf outing for United Way of Logan County will be
Friday, June 2, at Lincoln Elk’s Country Club. Tee-off time for the
four-person best ball scramble is 12:30 p.m. Only soft spikes are
allowed. Fees are $75 per golfer, $300 per team and $50 to sponsor a
tee. The entry fee includes beverages, dinner and prizes. For an entry
form or further information, people can contact the United Way office
at 735-4499 or Ron Hall at 735-4072. The deadline to enter is May 31.
Diabetes
and congestive heart failure support groups offered
Anyone
interested in joining a diabetes or congestive heart failure support
group is invited to attend an organizational meeting for the two
groups on Monday, June 5, in Conference Room A at Abraham Lincoln
Memorial Hospital. Family members are encouraged to attend.
Both
support groups will establish regular meeting schedules during the
initial meeting. The support groups will discuss various topics
including medicine information, lifestyle changes and other topics
decided on by group members. For more information about either support
group, please call Abraham Lincoln Memorial Hospital at 217-732-2161,
extension 199.
Lincoln
Rotary Club honored for its community service
At its annual District
Conference in Champaign this past weekend, Rotary International gave
awards to area clubs. One of the winners was the Lincoln Rotary Club,
recognized for its service to the community.
As
one of its projects, the Lincoln club took a chartered bus-load of 20
economically disadvantaged District 27 students to a Cubs game in
Chicago. Local club member Gene Frioli was one of the adults who
accompanied the children on last summer’s bus trip. "For a lot
of these kids it was a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity," said
Frioli. "And what better way to spend a summer day than to watch
a ball game at historic Wrigley Field around some adults."
This
year’s Rotary bus trip is scheduled for Friday, July 21. The day’s
activities will also include a trip to Sears Tower.
A
second major project this year focuses on literacy and aims to help
kindergarteners and their families. The Lincoln Rotary Club will be
providing the book "Kindergarten Kids" to all incoming
kindergarten students in District 27, West Lincoln-Broadwell,
Chester-East Lincoln, Zion Lutheran and Carroll Catholic schools.
Youngsters and their parents can read the book together in the weeks
before school begins to better prepare the children for kindergarten
activities. A companion book, "When You Go to Kindergarten,"
will be provided for all the kindergarten teachers in the
participating schools.
Other
community service projects for the Lincoln Rotary Club include
cleaning up the stretch of Lincoln Parkway from Union to Fifth Street,
and providing several scholarships to students from the community.
Students
participate in Job Fair 2000
Graduating high school seniors and
other students participated in Job Fair 2000 at Lincoln College on May
23. The steering committee partnered with a variety of businesses,
agencies and institutions for the event, initiated through
Lincoln/Logan Promise. The program was "Marketable Skills Through
Effective Education."
The students attended
sessions on planning, applying for, getting and keeping jobs. The
sessions included job resources, application blank completion, resume
and cover letter writing, job acceptance, budgetary considerations and
interpersonal skills for staying on the job. A formal luncheon
featured appropriate etiquette for dining with an employer. During the
luncheon, a style show of appropriate attire for the interview and for
work included cost-effective wardrobes obtained at local businesses.
After a presentation on what to do and what not to do when being
interviewed, a variety of business people conducted mock interviews to
give students experience.
Forty individuals from
25 organizations participated in the event, and 20 students were
involved in the activities. The steering committee and a group of high
school students called S.O.A.R. (Setting Our Actions Responsibly)
initiated the event. The goal was a project that resulted from a
national organization, America’s Promise, the Alliance for Youth,
which incorporates students and the community in activities that
inspire success for students. Financial supporters included Health
Families Task Force, Heartland Education-to-Careers Regional
Partnership, Heartland Tech Prep and Lincoln Kiwanis.
Central
Illinois Bank opens Lincoln facility
Officials
for Central Illinois Bank announce the opening of their newest
facility located at 428 Keokuk, in Lincoln, Illinois.
Bank
staff includes Wally Reese, senior vice president business
development; Kay Bauer, retail banking officer; Cindy Anderson, teller
supervisor; and teller staff. Reese, well known in the Lincoln
community, was president of Magna Bank prior to joining Central
Illinois Bank.
The
new facility is open 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. in the lobby, and 8 a.m. to 5
p.m. in the drive-up lanes Monday through Friday. The phone number is
(217) 735-5494.
Central
Illinois Bank is a full service bank offering a wide array of
commercial and personal financial services. Julie Dreesen, president
of Central Illinois Bank, said the company views Lincoln as an
excellent market, one that fits well into Central Illinois Bank’s
business banking approach. “Our growth in Central Illinois is
largely attributed to our commitment to commercial business
development. We believe that with Wally Reese’s leadership and
quality staff, we can achieve the growth and success we have realized
in similar communities”.
Central
Illinois Bank has 18 locations throughout Central Illinois. The bank
reported assets of $769 million as of March 31. Central Illinois Bank
is a subsidiary of CIB Marine Bancshares, Inc. Total assets for the
corporation as of March 31 were $2 billion.
An
Open House Week is scheduled for May 22 – 26 during regular banking
hours. Stop in and meet the staff, register for door prizes and
refreshments.
For
more information, contact Julie Dreesen at (309) 699-3405 or Wanita
Thompson at (309) 862-0222.
A
helping hand at Crisis Pregnancy Center
In
a small office tucked inside the Arcade Building at 513 Pulaski St.,
frightened young women often find a shoulder to lean on and a helping
hand.
Providing
these women a place to turn to when faced with an unplanned pregnancy
is a group of local volunteers who give their time and emotional
support at the Crisis Pregnancy Center.
"There
is nothing like one-on-one contact and hugging somebody that's
terrified, calming them down and helping them out," said Jennifer
Boeke, who has been volunteering since January. Boeke said she
believes in the center because "I believe in the sanctity of life
and have had a lot of friends who have had abortions and I've seen the
damage it did to their lives."
This
center, one of the 11 offices under the network of the Ministry of
Living Alternatives, strives to help pregnant women understand and
work through alternatives, enabling them to make informed decisions
about pregnancy. The Rev.
Gregory A. Roe of the World Harvest Church in Springfield, directs the
non-profit corporation. He
states that it "provides education and information to the general
public about Christian alternatives to abortion."
Most
women who seek help at the center are single, around 20 years old and
from the lower-income bracket. But "we also occasionally see
married women with children, who can't afford another pregnancy,"
Boeke adds.
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Volunteer
Jennifer Boeke displays some of the many baby items donated by
local churches. |
The center, a confidential, free resource for women, relies on
volunteers, monetary contributions and donations to keep operating.
Women of all ages and backgrounds are provided with counseling
services, necessary supplies such as clothing, and medical referrals.
Volunteers also provide guidance to women who find out they aren't
pregnant.
"When
we do get a negative pregnancy test, it's an opportunity to talk to
the women. I like to direct them to their goals and how their choices
in life will affect their goals. Having sex without the balance of
marriage, you see more broken hearts. We always think of the damage of
AIDS and such, but there is also damage to women's minds and bodies.
The choices they make now will set what the rest of their life will
be," she said. Boeke explains to young women about the 21
different sexually transmitted diseases, which affect more women than
men. For example, although HIV, which causes AIDS, is often in the
news, another virus called HPV, which nobody knows about, is a major
cause of cervical cancer and is easily transmitted.
"You
want to say to them -- 'You're playing with fire, with your future,
with your heart and body. Empower yourself, don't just be reactionary.
Think of how you want your life to be,'" she said.
If
a client does find out she is pregnant, Boeke said she offers
information about the necessary things like insurance.
Most importantly she offers friendship to the young woman.
"One of the goals of the center is to help women. We evangelize
because we're a Christian organization.
If they're pregnant we try to help them find the means and give
them names of who to contact to help with prenatal care and other
costs," she said
Boeke,
just one of about 15 local volunteers, spends four hours a week at the
center. An average shift for volunteers is two or three hours. Duties
include not just providing educational information about pregnancy,
sexual health and alternatives to abortion, but volunteers are also
needed for tasks like answering phones. There are four trained
counselors available.
Linda
Nelson, executive director, said volunteers undergo training before
they can assist clients and must be a well-grounded, secure, friendly
and passionate person. Volunteers, who are preferably women, should
not be judgmental and should be Christians, she said.
Volunteers
are always needed. Since
many volunteers are students from Lincoln Christian College, volunteer
numbers often sharply decrease during the summer. Even though the
center tries to remain open from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through
Friday and 9 a.m. to noon on Saturdays, sometimes here are no
volunteers to man the office.
The
center relies on monetary contributions from churches and individuals.
They also provide
a clothing and furniture service to help pregnant women defray some of
the costs of maternity and baby clothes. Anyone can donate items and
cribs, and car seats are in great demand.
Betty
Isham, a volunteer since 1995, also donates about three to four hours
a week when possible to the center.
"I think it's really worthwhile. Sometimes listening is
all you have to do. It makes you feel good when you know you've saved
a life," she said.
Isham, who is also a counselor, said most of the girls she sees just
need someone to love and support them. "We try to reassure them
that the Lord loves them," she said.
Major
school events like dances and the prom create an increase in the
number of women seeking advice. "Especially if they're younger
women living at home, they are scared. Some will just be shaking
because their whole life is going to change if they are pregnant. Most
girls I talk to aren't in favor of abortion but are more scared of
adoption because they see it as going through the whole nine-month
process and then giving up the baby," Boeke said.
Boeke,
who with her husband runs a wholesale art business, has two adult
children of her own, but is happy to donate some of her time each week
to young women who need a friendly face and someone to talk to.
"We
just want to be there and let them know someone cares," she said.
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