|   
        
          |  Still Waters, 
            the
            em space,  Where They Stand, 
            By
            the Numbers,
              How We Stack Up, 
            What's
            Up With That?
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          | Police
            protect us.Why don’t we protect them?
 Another state law that doesn’t make
            any sense By
            Mike Fak [JULY
            16, 2001]  The
            LDN recently ran an excellent article by Lynn Spellman regarding the
            financial plight of Sheriff’s Deputy Bob Spickard. Spickard,
            charged with battery and official misconduct while on duty, was
            exonerated of the charges by a jury of his peers in less than an
            hour. The costs Deputy Spickard faces defending himself are the kind
            of expense that for all working stiffs might take years to repay.
            That is flat-out wrong.
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          | There
          is the possibility Deputy Spickard didn’t do this whole affair the
          right way. Perhaps if he had gone to the County Board and asked for
          representation or simply asked the judge to appoint a public defender
          to represent him, Spickard would not be facing the monstrous attorney
          fees he now is faced with. That, of course, is easy for you or me to
          say. We were not facing the loss of not only a job but a career. We
          were not facing the possibility of being sent to jail to be among the
          very individuals we have spent our adulthood placing in incarceration. Can you
          really fault the deputy for erring on the side of caution? I can’t.
          I know you can’t either. The
          point that really frustrates me about this whole affair is that a
          county officer, while performing his duties, was charged with criminal
          malfeasance by an individual and has to personally foot the bill to
          prove he acted according to the law. Regardless of the fact that state
          law says this is correct, I beg to differ.    
 Officers,
          whether city, county or state, should not have to pay their own court
          costs and attorney fees to defend themselves while performing their
          duty. Especially after they have been found not guilty. It
          has been brought to light that city and county officers have the
          option of purchasing insurance to protect themselves from such
          financial duress, but is that the way it should really be? Are we not
          asking these people to protect us, place their lives on the line if
          need be for lousy pay, and then by Illinois law have the nerve to tell
          them: "By the way, if someone brings charges against you that a
          jury states are false, you are on your own financially." This is
          flat-out wrong.   [to top of second
          column in this commentary] |  
 Now
          I want it clear that I am not blaming the County Board for not making
          this coverage automatic. I am not blaming the sheriff either for not
          making insurance protection a requirement. Who I am blaming is the
          Illinois legislature that doesn’t see that officers of the law need
          basic, required protection from the expenses brought on by lawsuits,
          especially those that are adjudged inappropriate. I am blaming a union
          that doesn’t think from Day One that insurance protection in a day
          and age of frivolous lawsuit after frivolous lawsuit should be a part
          of every negotiating session. I am blaming an Illinois governor who
          just made a big deal out of awarding medals to many brave Illinois
          police officers but also doesn’t think they deserve to have
          mandatory insurance protection to prevent what just happened to
          patrolman Spickard. I have to ask those award-winning officers how
          long an attorney will represent them if the only collateral they have
          is one of those medals. Deputy
          Robert Spickard performed his duties on July 29, 1999, as his training
          dictated. He was charged with criminal battery and official misconduct
          but was found not guilty in the time it takes to eat a sandwich. For
          his life to be under financial duress because of this just isn’t
          right. It just isn’t. Tuesday
          night the County Board will vote on whether to assist the deputy and
          his family with the expenses he incurred due to this lawsuit. It may
          not be required by law for them to do anything in this matter.
          Regardless of this fact, I hope the board offers at least some
          financial assistance. It’s the right thing to do. [Mike Fak] Reply to
          Fak
          (not for publication): mikefak@msn.com Response
          to Fak's commentary: ldneditor@lincolndailynews.com 
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          | Promote
            the real Route 66 By
            Mike Fak [JULY
            12, 2001]  I
            really liked the question. A viewer on the show wanted to talk about
            Route 66. The gentleman asked why Route 66 isn’t the real Route 66
            anymore. Not being a native, I was unaware that the real route
            actually went through the heart of Lincoln and not around the
            beltline as the signs now direct.
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          | The
          question was simple. In the event we are trying to promote tourism,
          why don’t we want the nostalgia buffs associated with journeys along
          the historic road to go right through town? Secondary thoughts such
          as, "Wouldn’t this cause travelers to use our gas stations,
          restaurants and other businesses?" immediately came into the
          conversation. The caller has a good question. Why don’t we promote
          the old Route 66? The
          history of the famous road is not as easy to determine as one would
          think. More than 7,000 websites are directed to an inquirer about the
          old highway. Many of them are in foreign languages, including Thai,
          showing an investigator there is a world interest in this concrete
          slab of Americana. A great many of the sites, unfortunately, are
          commercial. "Buy this souvenir or that trinket" fills the
          Web. Maps on the highway — to be kind, in my words — are poor at
          best. Descriptions of the highway’s incredible number of nuances as
          it snaked its way across the country are lacking in sufficient detail.
          It has been a chore to find what I have, but allow me to share my
          initial research with you. The
          original road was 2,448 miles and stretched from downtown Chicago to
          Santa Monica, Calif. Crossing eight states and three time zones, this
          early 20th century roadway wasn’t completely paved until
          1937. Commissioned as a highway in 1926, the route used as many
          existing portions of road as possible to link Illinois with
          California. It is this meld of old and new that has given Route 66 its
          legend. With twists and turns that make no sense except to a 1920s
          federal road commissioner, the highway wriggles its way westward like
          a drunken sailor. It
          is this nuance that gives the route its charm and attracts the lasting
          fondness of nostalgia buffs. Unlike the highways of today, which speed
          through or around the cities in this country, Route 66 caused
          motorists to actually visit the towns on the way to Santa Monica.    
             [to top of second
          column in this commentary] | 
           It
          seems that in the 1950s, as America began its courtship with haste and
          as Eisenhower’s national highway program went into full gear, routes
          such as I-55, I-40, I-15 and I-10 were melded into the old route. This
          left parts of the original highway, as well as the towns it dissected,
          out of the nation’s travel itinerary. In
          fact, one of the route’s primary websites admits that there are
          still stretches of the original Route 66 waiting to be discovered. Talking
          to Lincoln residents, I find that it seems we are still aware in this
          area of the original road. Coming into town on the north end, by
          Kickapoo Street, the road jaunted west on Keokuk until heading
          southwest by following Fifth Street until it reached Washington
          Street. A left turn snaked the road through the cemeteries and back
          out to the service road headed to Broadwell. This
          makes it obvious to an observer like myself that a great deal of our
          community and its businesses could become part of the itinerary of
          travelers looking to relive a part of America’s traveling habits.
          The fact that the original road went past Postville Courthouse as well
          as the soon-to-be-refurbished historic well across the street begs us
          to ask why Lincoln can’t get at least our part of the historic road
          on the maps of perhaps millions of nostalgia buffs. It
          wouldn’t take a lot of time or money. Just a few interested citizens
          and a set of road signs are all that is needed. I will be happy to
          tell the world on the Web that Lincoln has the original road available
          for their travels through our area. In an electronic moment, 7,000
          websites and millions of history buffs will know about us. Isn’t
          technology amazing? Perhaps that’s why things such as an old,
          meandering, time-consuming highway are becoming lost. Things are
          getting easier and quicker, including car travel. I’m not convinced
          that they are getting better. [Mike Fak] Reply to
          Fak
          (not for publication): mikefak@msn.com Response
          to Fak's commentary: ldneditor@lincolndailynews.com 
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          | The em
      space is a staff writer's commentary section with observations about life experiences in Logan County and
      beyond.
        —
      Mary Krallmann 
         
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          | Watch for houses going by Houses
      usually stay put. We live in a mobile society, but unlike tent dwellers
      who lived on the plains before our time, we think of most structures in
      relatively permanent terms.  So I kept
      watching when I saw signs that a move was ahead for a local house. The
      first clue I really noticed was that the back porch had been detached. I
      also saw a newly dug basement a few blocks away. Then one Friday night a
      small bulldozer was unloaded at the house. I got more excited at noon a
      few days later when the machine scooped out bushes in front. I thought the
      house might be gone by the time I came by again, but it had just moved up
      and over. The building wasn’t exactly beside itself, but beside where it
      used to be.
 For about a
      week the house stood there higher than before but with curtains at the
      windows as usual. I especially liked to notice the outside water faucet
      with no connection to the ground. For a while a newly delivered telephone
      book in its yellow sack leaned against the front door, several feet above
      the ground. I imagined that when the house arrived at its new place,
      someone would want to call — by cell phone, I suppose — and say they
      made it all right. I began to
      wonder about arranging for such a move. I figured it wouldn’t be that
      much different from getting an insurance quote or making an appointment
      for repair work, but since I’ve never owned a lot or a house, the
      subject seemed about as likely as calling a travel agent for a ticket to
      the space station. Someone could use the idea for a comedy routine. 
        
          Hello.
          Do you move houses? OK,
          good. Here’s a situation. It’s getting too crowded where I live,
          but I’m tired of packing and unpacking, and I still like the house
          itself. I was wondering if someone could pick up the whole thing and
          put it somewhere else. I have no idea how much it weighs. I could give
          you the measurements if that would help. I did find a place with a
          better view, and it’s not too far away. So what do you need to know
          to give me an estimate? I discovered
      there actually are places on the Internet where people can exchange
      information like that.  Moving
      structures is nothing new, though. There’s a record of such a move in
      England about 400 years ago. Moving houses on the prairie was not
      uncommon. As Chicago grew, wooden buildings in the city were moved to
      outlying areas. Memoirs
      of Gustaf Unonius provide details.
 A recent
      book called "Silent Observer" includes a child’s view of a
      house move about 100 years ago in Nova Scotia. A woman who had been an
      illustrator used watercolors and words to convey her memories of waking up
      one morning with the house swaying as horses pulled it, while men placed
      logs for rollers underneath. Today there
      are hydraulically controlled dollies and unified jacking systems. In
      coastal areas, some houses are transported on barges. Churches,
      railroad stations, theaters, an airline terminal, apartments and
      restaurants have been moved. Preserving historic structures is one
      motivation, but newer buildings are relocated too. In order to make room
      for a mall, a ticket building for Opryland tourists was moved only four
      years after it was built. Hundreds of
      houses had to be relocated before construction of the Kennedy Space
      Center. Houses have also been moved to make way for new roads. Sometimes
      people can get a bargain house if they arrange to move it, and some firms
      that move houses also sell them. Structural
      moving is said to be the oldest and largest recycling business. A slogan
      on equipment for the recent local move said, "Save a Tree ... Move a
      House!"  Accounts of
      building moves include the report that a glass greenhouse was relocated
      and "not a pane was broken." One homeowner commented that the
      dog’s water bowl didn’t even spill during a move. Then there was the
      time a house took a "side trip into the ditch." Damage was
      "minimal": four cracked floor joists.
 Unusual
      things happening to structures around us draw our attention. There’s
      curiosity even in cases of damage from fire, wind or floodwater, but with
      a carefully planned event such as a building move, it’s a more positive
      situation. For most of us, it’s not an
      everyday sight when a building goes on to new digs. I wasn’t around when
      the actual move happened here recently, but the house isn’t there anymore, so I know
      it went by. [Mary
            Krallmann] 
       If you
      follow some links, you can find a variety of stories and pictures of house
      moves. http://www.iasm.org/ Website of
      the International Association of Structural Movers http://buildingmovers.com/ Website for the building moving
      industry
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          | Where
            They Stand
           |  
          | Where
            They Stand is a commentary section that poses a question about a
            specific issue in the community. Informed individuals present their
            position with facts, opinions or insights on the issue. The
            following commentaries have been printed, unedited, in their
            entirety, as they were received. If you have further comment on the
            issue, please send an e-mail message, complete with your name,
            address and telephone number to ldneditor@lincolndailynews.com. 
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          | By
            the Numbers
           |  
            | Population
              estimates in Logan County |  
            | 30,798 | Total population,
              1990 |  
            | 15,380 | Rural population -
              49.9%, 1990 |  
            | 15,418 | Urban population -
              50.1%, 1990 |  
            | 2,875 | Projected births,
              1990-1998 |  
            | 2,736 | Projected deaths,
              1990-1998 |  
            | 3,143 | Persons below poverty
              level - 11.8 % |  
            | 258 | Average marriages per
              year |  
            | 135 | Average deaths per
              year |  
            |  | Alexis Asher
             |  
            | 
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            | Logan
              County high schools: 1960-2000 |  
            | 1962 | Middletown
              High School consolidated with New Holland |  
            | 1972 | Atlanta
              High School became part of Olympia School District |  
            | 1975 | Elkhart
              High School consolidated with Mount Pulaski |  
            | 1979 | Latham
              High School became Warrensburg-Latham |  
            | 1988 | New Holland-Middletown
              High School consolidated with Lincoln Community High School |  
        
          | 1989 | San
            Jose High School consolidated with Illini Central (Mason City) |  |