Organizations,
Events, Milestones,
Good
Neighbors, Fund-raisers,
A Day in the Life...,
Diaspora, Reunions,
Reminiscence
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August 2001
Aug.
10-19
WHO:
Public
WHAT:
Illinois State Fair
WHERE:
Illinois State Fairground, Springfield
Wednesday,
Aug. 15
SPONSOR:
NAPA Auto Parts
WHO: Public
WHAT:
American
Red Cross blood
drive
WHERE:
Lincoln Sports Complex
WHEN:
noon - 5 pm
Friday,
Aug. 17
SPONSOR:
Logan County Board
WHO: Public
WHAT:
FY 2002
budget review hearings
WHERE:
Logan County Courthouse, third-floor jury room
WHEN:
9 am - noon
Saturday,
Aug. 18
SPONSOR:
Friends of
Spickard
WHO: Public
WHAT:
Cosmic
bowl party. Tickets for this event can be purchased by calling
732-3556.
WHERE:
Logan
Lanes
WHEN:
6-8 pm
Sundays
in August
WHO:
Public
WHAT:
Free tours of J.
H. Hawes Grain Elevator Museum
WHERE:
Atlanta
WHEN:
1-3 pm
Wednesday,
Aug. 22
SPONSOR:
Logan County Board
WHO: Public
WHAT:
FY 2002
budget review hearings
WHERE:
Logan County Courthouse, third-floor jury room
WHEN:
8 am - noon
WHO: Public
WHAT:
American
Red Cross blood
drive
WHERE:
Mount Pulaski Christian Church
WHEN:
11 am - 5 pm
Thursday,
Aug. 23
SPONSOR:
Logan County Board
WHO: Public
WHAT:
FY 2002
budget review hearings
WHERE:
Logan County Courthouse, third-floor jury room
WHEN:
1-4 pm
Friday,
Aug. 24
SPONSOR:
Logan County Board
WHO: Public
WHAT:
FY 2002
budget review hearings
WHERE:
Logan County Courthouse, third-floor jury room
WHEN:
tentatively beginning at 8:30 am
Aug.
24-26
WHO: Public
WHAT:
Lincoln Art and Balloon Festival
WHERE:
Logan County Fairgrounds and downtown
[Also click here to
read a three-part LDN article on ballooning.]
Saturday,
Aug. 25
SPONSOR:
Lincoln Park District
WHO: Public
WHAT:
Sky's the Limit 5K run
WHERE:
Lincoln Park District
Saturday
and Sunday, Aug. 25 and 26
SPONSOR:
Lincoln Junior Woman's Club
WHO: Public
WHAT:
Art fair hospitality suite; food served
WHERE:
Lincoln Women's Building, 230 N. McLean (across from Latham Park)
WHEN:
9 am - 4 pm Saturday; 9 am - 3 pm Sunday
WHO: Public
WHAT:
1800s Craft Fair
WHERE:
Postville Courthouse State Historic Site
WHEN: 10 am - 4 pm
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SPECIAL EVENTS AND ANNOUNCEMENTS:
Volunteers
and riders needed for ‘Saddle Up!’
ABATE hosts Chiggerfest 6,
Evening gala at
Henson Robinson Zoo, Attention: Civil War dancers,
Fund-raisers
scheduled by deputy’s friends, Special call for blood
donors, Ed
Madigan exhibit featured at Lincoln College Museum
REGULAR POSTINGS FOR
ORGANIZATIONS: American
Red Cross, Girl Scouts,
Lincoln
Park District, Mount
Pulaski Courthouse, Oasis,
Postville
Courthouse
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SPECIAL
EVENTS AND ANNOUNCEMENTS
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Volunteers
and riders needed for ‘Saddle Up!’
Volunteers and riders are
needed for United Cerebral Palsy’s therapeutic horseback riding
program "Saddle Up!" for children with special needs. Held
at Cobblestone Farm in Springfield, this program will give medically
fragile kids the opportunity to grow and develop through fun therapy
with horses.
Saddle
Up allows volunteers a variety of positions from working with riders
and horses to administrative duties. No experience with horses is
necessary. Volunteers will be trained on all aspects of Saddle Up’s
activities and programs. Volunteers must be at least 14 years of age
or accompanied by a parent.
Saddle
Up benefits children with disabilities by strengthening muscles,
improving posture, coordination and joint mobility. Saddle Up also
allows children to develop self-esteem, build self-confidence and
improve their concentration and self-discipline.
The
six-week session begins Sept. 5. A second session will begin Oct.
17. Sessions are every Monday and Wednesday.
For
more information about Saddle Up or to volunteer, call UCP of Land
of Lincoln at (217) 525-6522.
ABATE
hosts Chiggerfest 6
Chiggerfest
6, an ABATE of Illinois East Central Region party, will be Sept. 7,
8 and 9 at Ray’s place in Funks Grove. Gates open at noon. No one
under 21 except ABATE Illinois members will be
admitted.
(Non-members can join at the gate.)
Live
music Friday and Saturday nights will feature the Robin Crowe band,
Exit, Easy Money and various other artists. There will be food and
assorted vendors, a poker run, bike show, and field events.
Primitive camping and limited camper spots are available.
The
hosts say, "No kids, no pets, no golf carts or ATVs (three- or
four-wheelers). Absolutely no one allowed without proper ID (if the
cops won’t accept it, then neither will we)."
The
event is hosted by Heart of Illinois ABATE and co-sponsored by Salt
Creek ABATE
Directions:
Take Interstate 55 south of Bloomington to the Shirley exit. Go
south on Old Route 66 about a mile. Watch for signs.
There
is an admission fee at the gate. For additional information or
advance tickets, contact your local East Central Region chapter; a
Heart of Illinois ABATE officer; or Debbie Carr, (217) 935-4253 or
(217) 972-6186.
Evening
gala at Henson Robinson Zoo
The
sixth annual Torchlight Gala & Auction at the Henson Robinson
Zoo will be from 6:30 to 10 p.m.
on Saturday, Aug. 25. The zoo is at
1100 East Lake Drive, Springfield.
The
auctioneer will be Darrel Adcock. The evening also offers silent
auction tables, dinner by Jimmy’s Sub Shop and music by the Jane
Hartman Trio, sponsored by Illinois National Bank.
The
event is sponsored by the Springfield Zoological Society.
Call
the zoo, (217) 753-6217, for more information and to reserve
tickets.
Attention:
Civil War dancers
Practices
and performance scheduled
Civil
War dancers are scheduled to give demonstrations at the Postville
Courthouse in Lincoln on Sunday, Aug. 26, from noon to 3 p.m. The
group will give educational lectures to go along with the dancing
and will teach others to dance as well.
A
practice session
will be at 7 p.m. on Thursday,
Aug. 23, in the back yard at 633 W. Elm St. in Mason City.
Please
call or e-mail Bonnie at (217) 482-5821 or bjknieriem@hotmail.com
if you will be able to participate in the demonstration. Keep
watching for further opportunities.
Special
call for blood donors
The
American Red Cross has increased blood collections each year for the
past four years, but the need for blood is outpacing the supply.
Year-to-date collections are 1.9 million units more than this time
last year. However, medical advancements such as liver transplants,
cardiac surgery and treatments for premature babies require more
donations every day. Thirty-eight percent of all blood products used
today are for people 65 and older. The blood supply is extremely
fragile, and the Red Cross will not diminish its efforts to
continually recruit new and repeat donors.
In
the past four years the Red Cross has collected nearly one-half of
the nation’s blood supply, providing more than 14 million blood
products to more then 3,000 hospitals nationwide.
To
give blood, you must be in general good health, be at least 17 years
old, and weigh at least 110 pounds. The Red Cross especially needs
type O donations, the universal blood type that can be safely
transfused to any patient during an emergency and is always the
highest in demand.
Click
here for information on local blood drives in August.
Ed
Madigan exhibit featured at Lincoln
College Museum
The
Lincoln College Museum is presenting a temporary exhibit called
"Edward R. Madigan: From the Halls of Lincoln College to the
Halls of the White House." The exhibit, which is currently on
display, pays honor to one of Lincoln College’s most successful
alumni, the late Edward Madigan.
Madigan
graduated from Lincoln College in 1955, entered the Illinois
Legislature in 1966, was elected to Congress in 1972, and was
appointed by President Bush in 1991 to be secretary of agriculture.
In 1974, the Lincoln College Alumni Association presented Madigan
with its award for Outstanding Achievement in the field of Public
Services. In 1975 he was awarded an Honorary Doctor of Humane
Letters degree by Lincoln College. He died in 1994.
Lincoln
College Museum curator Ron Keller says the display tells the story
of Madigan’s career in public service. "The display reflects
his experiences and service through many photographs, and letters
from every president from Carter to Clinton. There are also various
artifacts from his works in Congress and in the White House."
The exhibit will run through November of 2001. The public is invited
to stop by the Lincoln College Museum to view this exhibit and tour
the rest of the historic exhibits.
The
Lincoln College Museum is located in the McKinstry Library on the
campus of Lincoln College. Hours are 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through
Friday and 1 to 4 p.m. Saturday and Sunday.
[Evelyn and
Agriculture Secretary Ed Madigan at the White House with President
and Mrs. Bush in 1991.]
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REGULAR
POSTINGS FOR ORGANIZATIONS
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Red
Cross blood drives in August
NAPA
Auto Parts sponsors two blood drives in August at the Lincoln Sports
Complex. The first was Aug. 1. The second will be from noon until 5
p.m. on Aug. 15. Another blood drive will be at the Mount Pulaski Christian Church on Aug.
22. The hours will be from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.
During July,
the following people reached goals in their blood donations: Glenn McCrea and
Connie Haseley, seven gallons; Robert Pharis, six gallons; Shawn Bertolino, five
gallons; Phillip Richmond, two gallons; and Myrna A. Aper, one gallon.
Girl
Scouts announcements
Websites with lots of ideas that Girl Scout leaders, families
or kids can use:
makingfriends.com
crayola.com
elmers.com
See
the website for Girl Scouts, Land of Lincoln Council, at http://www.girlscoutsllc.org/.
You
can send questions and suggestions to the council by clicking here: gsllc@girlscoutsllc.org.
Also, see the
national Girl Scouts site at http://www.girlscouts.org/.
Lincoln
Park District notes
From Roy Logan,
program coordinator
5K run
On Saturday,
Aug. 25, Lincoln Park District will host the 13th annual 5K run in conjunction
with the Lincoln Art and Balloon Festival. Race time is 8 a.m. The run
begins and ends at the Park District at 1400 Primm Road. Dan Slack, a veteran
cross-country record-holder for LCHS, is our race coordinator. T-shirts are
given to all participants, and awards are given to the top three finishers in
each age category. Refreshments are provided. Registration forms are
available at both the Rec Center and the Lincoln Chamber office.
Classic
Chevys circle Mount Pulaski Courthouse
Over
200 classic Chevrolets and their proud owners filled the Mount Pulaski
square on Thursday, July 5. Almost 600 people toured the Mount Pulaski
Courthouse that day. Many went up to the historic
courtroom to see a
presentation by Don Russell.
The
Vintage Chevrolet Club of America had their national event that week in
Springfield. As part of the activities, the club members visited both
Lincoln’s New Salem and Mount Pulaski. Since there were so many cars,
they were divided into two groups: pre-World War II and post-World War II.
The cars were beautiful and the people friendly. Almost all states were
represented and there were visitors from five foreign countries.
R.
Schachtsiek, site manager at the courthouse, says: "My compliments to
Doug Johnson and his hard-working crew for all their effort that day. It
was a great day for Mount Pulaski and the courthouse. I also wish to thank
Jo Richner and Don Baker for helping at the courthouse that day."
Another
group, about 20 ladies, visited the courthouse on July 21. They plus all
the Chevy club members put July’s attendance at over 700 people.
Coming
up in September, during Mount Pulaski’s Fall Festival, there will be a
special display in the courthouse to honor the 50th anniversary of the
Korean War. Richard Teike has helped provide posters and other items used
in the display. On Saturday, Sept. 8, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. a re-enactor
will be present to explain the uniform, equipment and weapons used by
American forces in Korea. People are invited to stop in at the courthouse
to learn more about America's "Forgotten War."
In July
the following courthouse volunteers worked 125 hours: D. Aper, D. Baker,
M. Borgerson, K. Boyd, D. Brooker, J. Cavestani, A. Davis, M. Downing, H.
Fine, V. Harbarger, P. Hawk, M. Johnson, W. Kautz, J. Martin, J. Maske, J.
Richner, C. and L. Schahl, D. Smith, E. Stahl, T. and W. Stephens, and C.
Van Rheedan.
Oasis
update
The
Oasis, Logan County’s senior citizen center, at 501 Pulaski St. in
Lincoln, is open weekdays (except holidays) from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. The
center also is open on Friday and Sunday nights for table games. Dominic
Dalpoas is the executive director. Activities are open to all Logan
County senior citizens,
regardless of membership.
Americana
room
The
Oasis is starting a new project in order to honor armed forces men and
women. Please bring materials for display at the Oasis, such as pictures
(or copies), newspaper articles and other items in your collections.
Flea
market Aug. 25-26
There
are still a few spaces available for flea market vendors at the Lincoln
Art & Balloon Festival. Please call or come in to secure your space
for only a $40 nonrefundable registration fee.
Hearing
screening
This
once-a-month free service is available from 10 a.m. until noon on Sept. 5.
Please call the Oasis for an appointment .
Game
winners
Daytime
pinochle winners were Mable Hoagland for July 27 and Henry Warnisher for
July 31. At the bingo games sponsored by Maple Ridge, Mary Kay Shipp won
the drawing for lunch at First Wok. Friday night game winners were Grace
McCrea for pinochle; Louis Johnson, Henry Warnisher and Betty Burger for
5-in-1; and Harley Heath for pool.
Newsletter
Friends of the
Oasis members receive bimonthly newsletters by mail. For more information,
people can call the Oasis at 732-6132 or 732-5844.
Hot
weather slows visitation at Postville Courthouse
Temperatures
in the 90s with high humidity may have slowed visitation at Postville
Courthouse in July. Visitors may have thought the historic courthouse would
be hot and stuffy, which would be historically correct. However, the
courthouse has been cool and comfortable due to modem air conditioning.
"So
do not stay away because of the heat," says Richard Schachtsiek, site
manager. "If you have visitors, you can expect to bring them to tour
Postville Courthouse in cool comfort. Over 100 people enjoyed the cool
interior and learned about attorney Abraham Lincoln, Postville Courthouse
and the 8th Judicial Circuit last month."
August
will be much busier due to the Lincoln Art & Balloon Festival on Aug.
24-26. Postville Courthouse is actively involved in hosting two special
events during the festival. A Porsche-only charity car show will be on
Saturday, Aug. 25, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. About 20 Porsches will be on
display. At 3:15 Lincoln Mayor Beth Davis will choose her favorite cars and
present three award plaques. During the day there will also be a display of
scale-model production and racing Porsches inside Postville Courthouse.
The
1800s Craft Fair will be at Postville Courthouse on Sunday, Aug. 26. This
popular event, which draws over a thousand people, goes from 10 a.m. to 4
p.m. There will be many returning artisans and craftsmen demonstrating
period skills and crafts, such as blacksmithing, wood turning on the
"Great Wheel," bobbin lace making, basket making, traditional
music and much more. New this year will be Civil War-era dance
demonstrations from noon to 3 p.m. Area dancers will demonstrate dances
popular in the mid-1800s and ask spectators to join in. Another new activity
will be Lee Slider performing as "Phineas Fairhead, Practical
Phrenologist." If you do not know about phrenology, come by Postville
Courthouse and learn about it.
The
volunteers listed below braved traveling in the heat and humidity to work
110 hours in July:
S. Bartelmay, B. Behrends, D. Freeman, J. Handlin, S. Johnson, C. Kelley, C.
Klink, N. Kleinmann,
K. Leesman, L. Leonard, B. Marvel, R. Meyer, H.
Oltmanns, M. Ott, W. Post, D. Short, M. Smith,
L. Snyder, R. Sullivan, G.
Wibben.
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Milestones
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Fund-raisers
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Fund-raisers
scheduled by deputy’s friends
[AUG.
3, 2001] Benefits
to help Bob Spickard and his family pay off their legal expenses
will be on Aug. 11 and 18.
Friends
of Spickard, who is facing $17,000 in legal fees for his defense of
a criminal suit in which he was found not guilty, have formed a
committee to help the financially burdened deputy.
On
Aug. 11 at the Eagles Lodge here in Lincoln, a day of events will
help raise money to pay off the deputy’s legal bills. The
activities will include a bake sale and auction at 1 p.m. as well as
an evening dance at 7 with DJ Joe Hackett. Joe has one of
the largest libraries of music in the world, and he has an excellent
reputation for playing what the crowd
likes. Admission to the dance is $2.50 per person.
The
next weekend, on Aug. 18 from 6 to 8 p.m., there will be a
cosmic bowl party at Logan Lanes. Tickets priced at $10 per person
will have half of those proceeds going to the Spickard fund. Call
732-3556 for tickets for this event.
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Stuart
Wyneken turns out the lights after 30 years with LCT summer productions
[AUG.
9, 2001] When
Stuart Wyneken was a boy, his father, an administrative assistant for
Lincoln College, would allow Stuart to accompany him as he oversaw the
construction of a number of new campus buildings. P.B. Johnston and his
wife, friends of Stuart’s grandparents, had donated the funds for the
construction of one of those buildings, a new center for the performing
arts on the college’s campus. Little did Stuart know that the very site
of that new construction where he idled away his summer vacation in 1970
would be the place where he would spend his summers for the next 30 years.
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The
summer of 2001 marks not only the 30th anniversary of Lincoln Community
Theatre, but also the 30th consecutive year for Wyneken’s service as the
lighting designer and technician for LCT productions. Announcing his
retirement from both the LCT board and the LCT light booth at the end of
the summer, Wyneken looks forward to having future summers available for
family and other interests.
The
first 19 years with LCT, he was a bachelor and had to answer only to
himself. Things changed in 1989 with his marriage. For the next 11 years,
when June rolled around, Wyneken’s wife, Kim, would say, "See you
in August!"
Wyneken
had just graduated from high school when Lincoln Community Theatre was
formed. He had been the student lighting chairman at Lincoln Community
High School when a group of students were recruited to get involved with
the first LCT performance.
His
knowledge of lighting was self-taught, primarily from observing
upperclassmen operate an old resistance dimmer board for school
productions. The dimmers were operated using large wooden levers, and
Wyneken remembers when electricity would arc and spark when the levers
were pulled. It took three students to operate the board during a show,
and blown fuses would have to be changed "on the fly" while the
production continued.
The
"new" 16-dimmer light board available at the Johnston Center for
the Performing Arts was more sophisticated than that at the high school,
but in today’s view would be considered quite simple. In those earlier
years, Lincoln College’s technical director Mickey Benson would provide
training when newer equipment was added.
Serving
as lighting designer and technician can be a time-consuming and demanding
job. The preparation begins with reading the script to get a general idea
of the lighting requirements of a show. After meeting with the director
and set designer to discuss their views of lighting needs, the lighting
technician must attend early rehearsals to understand how the actors and
set pieces will be blocked on the stage.
A
light plot is then created, which serves as a blueprint of electric strips
that the lighting instruments will hang from. Different colored gels are
cut to fit each lighting device to help create different lighting effects.
Next,
whatever lighting system is currently hung in the theater must be entirely
stripped, and the newly designed lights must be rehung and plugged into
the appropriate circuits. All of this is accomplished by lowering light
bars or crawling across a catwalk hung from the ceiling of the theater.
After being circuited, the lighting instruments are plugged into the
dimmer board.
[to top of second column
in this article] |
About
eight years ago, Lincoln College purchased a new, computerized light
board, which allows the storage of up to 130 light cues. The original
board Wyneken used required every lighting effect to be done by hand
during each production for each scene. With the computerized system, the
settings for the desired effect can be predetermined and programmed into
the computer. The lighting technician then needs to merely push a button
for the complex lighting direction to be achieved.
The
job of lighting technician has traditionally also included any special
effects necessary for a production. Wyneken says, "Over the years, I
have been privileged to be allowed to use various special effects. The
1987 production of ‘The Wizard of Oz’ was probably the first of these.
For that show we constructed our own flash pots, used CO2 fire
extinguishers and various other ‘homemade’ items for the wizard. It
was also the first time the trap door to the lower level was used for
melting the witch." How appropriate that his current and final
production, "The Wiz," an updated version of that same play,
with its robotics lighting system, is probably the most technically
advanced show he has ever attempted.
Getting
to work in the Lincoln Theatre building in the 1980s was one of Wyneken’s
career highlights. "This is a marvelous old building and the epitome
of vaudevillian theater," he says. "Being able to use their fly
system and the footlights was indeed a real treat."
Though
he is leaving the LCT board, he is assuming new duties as a board member
of the newly formed Logan County Arts Council. One of his goals is to see
the complete restoration of the Lincoln Theater building in downtown
Lincoln to its original 1923 condition, with the exception of the
installation of modern lighting, sound and stage equipment. Talks are
already underway with the GKC Cinema Corporation in hopes of acquiring the
facility when their new complex is completed. This building, in turn, he
hopes will become a future home of Lincoln Community Theatre and other
area art organizations.
Though
Wyneken states that he certainly won’t miss the long hours at the
theater, climbing ladders and catwalks, and cantankerous directors, he
wouldn’t trade his years with Lincoln Community Theatre for a thing. He
says that he will miss the people he has met over the last 30 years, as
well as the luxury of watching a good production every night. With the
time to relax and enjoy summer activities without having to rush back for
a show, Wyneken states that he still "loves being able to create a
mood for a show." He adds, "I will miss what I know I can
do."
Lincoln
Community Theatre recognized Wyneken this week by awarding him a life
membership in the organization. LCT, too, will certainly miss what they
know he can do!
[Judy
Rader] |
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People
all across this country and, in fact, around the world, claim roots in
Logan County. They have very interesting stories to tell, and some of them
like to connect with those of us who stayed at home. Logan County Diaspora
publishes the stories of former Logan County residents. With their
permission, we also include their e-mail addresses so that old friends
might be reunited. If you wish to be part of the Logan County
Diaspora, e-mail ldneditor@lincolndailynews.com.
|
Diaspora
correspondents
Click
on names to see letters and stories.
v
Indicates LDN sponsors
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Reunions
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Ongoing
class reunion in cyberspace for 1960 graduates of LCHS
http://www.geocities.com/lincolnhigh1960/
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Reminiscence
|
-
"Lincoln
Lakes beach," by
Stan Stringer, posted July 10, 2001, in LDN
-
"Stan
Stringer tells story of
Mark Holland’s buzzing of Lincoln," posted
May 11, 2001
-
"Leigh
Henson, now a college teacher in Missouri, remembers Miss Jones,
Jefferson School principal," posted
March 29, 2001
-
"Foreign
Service officer
recalls
infamous Valentine's Day '79 in Tehran," by George McKinney,
posted Feb. 15, 2001
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