|   
        
          | Organizations, 
            Events,  Milestones,
             Good
            Neighbors, Fund-raisers, 
            A Day in the Life...,
             Diaspora,  Reunions, 
            Reminiscence
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          |  
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          | July-August 2001
             
 Tuesday,
            July 31SPONSOR:
            Abraham Lincoln
            Memorial Hospital
 WHO: Public
 WHAT:
            Free blood
            pressure screenings
 WHERE:
            ALMH, first floor waiting area
 WHEN:
            9 am - noon
 Tuesday,
            July 31, through Sunday, Aug. 5WHO: Public
 WHAT:
            
            Logan County Fair
 WHERE:
            Logan County Fairgrounds
 Wednesday,
            Aug. 1SPONSOR:
            NAPA Auto Parts
 WHO: Public
 WHAT:
            American
            Red Cross blood
            drive
 WHERE:
            Lincoln Sports Complex
 WHEN:
            noon - 5 pm
 SPONSOR:
            Postville CourthouseWHO:  Volunteers
 WHAT:
            Informational
            meeting
 WHERE:
            Postville
            Courthouse, 914 Fifth St.
 WHEN:
            7 pm
 Sundays
            in July and AugustWHO:
            Public
 WHAT:
            Free tours of J.
            H. Hawes Grain Elevator Museum
 WHERE:
            Atlanta
 WHEN:
            1-3 pm
 Aug.
            10-19WHO:
            Public
 WHAT:
            
            Illinois State Fair
 WHERE:
            Illinois State Fairground, Springfield
 Wednesday,
            Aug. 15SPONSOR:
            NAPA Auto Parts
 WHO: Public
 WHAT:
            American
            Red Cross blood
            drive
 WHERE:
            Lincoln Sports Complex
 WHEN:
            noon - 5 pm
 Friday,
            Aug. 17SPONSOR:
            Logan County Board
 WHO: Public
 WHAT:
            FY 2002
            budget review hearings
 WHERE:
            Logan County Courthouse, third-floor jury room
 WHEN:
            9 am - noon
 Wednesday,
            Aug. 22SPONSOR:
            Logan County Board
 WHO: Public
 WHAT:
            FY 2002
            budget review hearings
 WHERE:
            Logan County Courthouse, third-floor jury room
 WHEN:
            8 am - noon
 WHO: PublicWHAT:
            American
            Red Cross blood
            drive
 WHERE:
            Mount Pulaski Christian Church
 WHEN:
            11 am - 5 pm
 Thursday,
            Aug. 23SPONSOR:
            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. 24SPONSOR:
            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.
            24-26WHO: Public
 WHAT:
            
            Lincoln Art and Balloon Festival
 WHERE:
            Logan County Fairgrounds and downtown
 Saturday,
            Aug. 25SPONSOR:
            Lincoln Park District
 WHO: Public
 WHAT:
            
            Sky's the Limit 5K run
 WHERE:
            Lincoln Park District
 Saturday
            and Sunday, Aug. 25 and 26SPONSOR:
            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: PublicWHAT:
            1800s Craft Fair
 WHERE:
            Postville Courthouse State Historic Site
 WHEN:  10 am - 4 pm
 |    
              
              
              
              
              
              
              
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          | SPECIAL EVENTS AND ANNOUNCEMENTS: 
            Osteoporosis
            screenings available at the fair,  Informational
            meeting for Postville Courthouse volunteers,  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,  Oasis
           |  
          | 
 |  
          | SPECIAL
            EVENTS AND ANNOUNCEMENTS |  
            | Osteoporosis
            screenings available at the fair  Logan
            County Health Department will offer free osteoporosis screenings on
            Senior Day, Friday, Aug. 3, at the Logan County Fairgrounds, from
            11:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Women over 50 years of age are encouraged to
            get the free bone density screening along with educational
            materials. The bone density screenings will be done by radiology
            technicians from Family Medical Center. The screenings are funded by
            the Illinois Department of Public Health, Office of Women's Health.
            For more information, call the Logan County Health Department, (217)
            735-2317.
 
 Informational
            meeting forPostville Courthouse volunteers
 A
            meeting for current volunteers and people interested in becoming
            Postville Courthouse volunteers will be Wednesday, Aug. 1, at 7 p.m.
            Come to the Postville Courthouse, 914 Fifth St. For more
            information, call (217) 732-8930. 
 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. 
              
                
                  | 
            
              
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 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 |  
            | Red
Cross blood drives in August NAPA
Auto Parts will sponsor two blood drives in August at the Lincoln Sports
Complex. Hours for those drives, on Aug. 1 and 15, will be from noon until 5
p.m. 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
will be available in July at both the Rec Center and the Lincoln Chamber office. 
 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. Regularly
scheduled activities Think
Tank Clarence
Barney of H&R Block will be the guest speaker for the meeting starting at 9
a.m. Wednesday, Aug. 1. His topic will be "The New Tax Law and How It
Impacts Seniors." Don’t miss this important information.  Circuit
Breaker assistance
 The
representative will be on site at the Oasis Monday, Aug. 6, from 9 a.m. to 3
p.m. Please call for an appointment. Computer
classes There
are a few spaces available for the Monday, Aug. 6, classes. Beginning computer
instruction will be at 1:30 p.m. and word processing at 2:30 p.m. There is a $3
fee for each class. Garden
Club The
garden tour scheduled for Tuesday, Aug. 7, will be hosted by Bob and Lynn Neal
at the "Old Scully Homestead." Please join the group at the Oasis by 9
a.m.  Grandparents
Raising Grandchildren
 The
regularly scheduled meeting for your support group is scheduled for Wednesday
evening, Aug. 8, at 7 p.m. Please join us. We missed you two weeks ago. 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 Weekday
pinochle winners for July 20 and 24 were Mable Hoagland and Easter Behrends
respectively. Winners on Friday night were Helen Cart for pinochle and Betty
Berger, Henry Warnisher and Lois Johnson for 5 in 1. Alice Thonton won the pool
game. Harley Heath won at pool on Sunday night. Special
Events  Senior
Day at the Logan County Fair
 This
Friday, Aug. 3, starting at noon, the Oasis Senior Center will sponsor the
Senior Day activities. Please join us for free health screenings that include
hearing, eyes, bone density and blood pressure. Information will also be
provided about the Mobile Rural Health Unit and Logan County Senior Services.
Stretch aerobics and entertainment will also be part of the day’s activities. 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.
             |  
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          | Milestones
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          | Fund-raisers
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            | Officer
            Sisk found a positive approachto working with juveniles
 [JULY
            16, 2001]  Darrell
            Sisk, who retired in March, was the Lincoln Police Department’s
            juvenile officer for more than 20 years. It was a job he loved, but
            he admits that it had some negative aspects. |  
            | [Click
            here for Part 1] "In
            police work, as a general rule, the job is negative. Who likes to
            give tickets? A lot of our job is surrounded by a negative
            atmosphere. "But
            DARE [Drug Abuse Resistance Education] is surrounded by a positive
            atmosphere. Parents support it, the community appreciates it, and
            the kids love it. When school opens, the sixth graders are already
            asking when DARE starts." Sisk,
            who recalls that he "taught sixth grade in every school in
            Lincoln," was the department’s first DARE teacher. "When
            I started 18 years ago, DARE was a brand-new concept out of
            California. I was the only DARE teacher. Today five guys are
            teaching it. "Everyone
            thinks it’s just about drugs. It’s not. It’s about stress and
            how to cope. It’s about how to build self-esteem, how to stand up
            to peer pressure, and it’s all positive. We don’t get into
            negatives. There are DARE dances, DARE picnics, DARE fishing
            tournaments, DARE baseball, softball and basketball teams. At the
            DARE picnic in May, there were 400 to 500 kids. And they keep coming
            up with new ideas, like the DARE bowling tournament." Sisk
            emphasizes that DARE teachers aren’t trying to get kids to narc
            (tattle) on other kids, like telling them who is using drugs.
            "This is about you," he would tell the kids, "not
            about somebody else." Although
            he took the DARE classes seriously, Sisk could also have a little
            fun with the sixth graders. "The
            kids used to ask me how old I was," he remembers. "I would
            always tell them I was 37. Then I would tell them I’d been with
            the Lincoln Police Department for 30 years. "There
            would be silence. Then about 15 minutes later one kid would raise
            his hand and say, ‘Wait a minute, you can’t be 37.’ "I
            would say, ‘I started with the police department when I was 7.’" Sisk
            believes DARE is here to stay. "I’ve
            worked with many mayors and chiefs of police, and never did any of
            them ever even remotely talk about eliminating DARE," he says.
            "If they had, they’d probably have seen the biggest uprising
            in the city’s history. City Hall wouldn’t be able to hold
            it." Along
            with DARE, Sisk also taught fifth grade VEGA (Violence Education and
            Gang Awareness programs). VEGA leads into DARE in sixth grade, and
            the program was later expanded to reach junior high and high school
            students. The
            Illinois State Police do the DARE training, and there are yearly
            conferences of DARE officers. "People at the conferences
            started to recognize that the program needed reinforcement after
            fifth and sixth grades," Sisk recalls. "First they came up
            with the idea it needed reinforcement in junior high school, and
            over the years they recognized a need to reinforce it in high
            school. "A
            lot of communities haven’t done what we are doing, teaching a
            short DARE curriculum in junior high and high school," he says.
            "The Lincoln Police Department has a consistent program from
            kindergarten through 12th grade, and the difference it has made is
            clear. "If
            a police officer in uniform had gone to the high school and walked
            around 15 years ago, he would have felt out of place. He would have
            been an outsider. "Today
            the kids know who we are, and they will talk to us. They relate to
            officers in uniform. It’s a positive thing. If they have a
            problem, kids feel comfortable to come to a police officer,
            especially DARE officers, but others too. "It’s
            helped the whole police department. We have officers that go out to
            the high school and eat lunch with the kids. Eighteen years ago, if
            the chief of police had said to an officer, ‘Go out to the high
            school and eat lunch,’ everybody would have thought he was crazy.
            Now it’s part of the day. "That’s
            the concept of community policing." Sisk’s
            efforts to be a positive influence on Lincoln’s youth are
            recognized by those who have worked with him. "He
            was one heck of a juvenile officer," Detective Mike Harberts
            says. "He related so well with kids. The kids in this town
            trusted Darrell and would bring him information. We solved many
            crimes, both juvenile and adult, because of that. "And
            he was a wonderful DARE teacher. He had an innate ability to get
            down to their level. He was compassionate, and he could see where
            they were coming from. He treated each kid as an individual with a
            story of their own. "He
            was a wonderful colleague too. Detective Bunner and I very much
            enjoyed working with Darrell on investigations. Any time we had a
            juvenile involved with any kind of crime, he was a wealth of
            information."     [to top of second column in
      this article]
             | 
 "Darrell
            created the Lincoln DARE program," Police Chief Rich Montcalm
            says. "He was the second officer in the state to be trained in
            DARE. He put his heart into it. His wife helped him make his own
            posters for the program, and the state used some of those posters in
            their statewide training. "He
            was also instrumental getting us to proceed into the junior high and
            high school level. We are one of the few police departments in the
            state that does it. "Everybody
            here still considers him part of the department. We look on him as a
            resource. We’re fortunate he’s still in the area and we can ask
            him questions." Ron
            Robbins, who was police chief from 1989 to 1997, remembers that he
            heard nothing but high praise for Sisk from teachers, principals and
            superintendents. "I would hear it from Washington-Monroe
            School, then a month later from Northwest, then later from Central.
            That’s how I knew it was true. "Darrell
            started the role model program. He would pick Lincoln High School
            students who had good personalities, were popular and had good
            grades. Sometimes he would get basketball and football players,
            because the younger kids knew who the sports stars were. Then those
            role models would go around with him to the grade schools and give
            the kids there a positive message 
 —
             don’t do drugs, don’t
            smoke. "Darrell
            is the main reason our DARE program is what it is today,"
            Robbins adds. "As chief I sat in on some of his classes. He
            just had a way of working with kids that helped him get his message
            across. He really did care about the kids." Dean
            Langdon, now assistant principal at Lincoln Community High School,
            worked with Darrell for six years, ever since he came to Lincoln in
            1995. "He
            was a great asset, and he will be missed," Langdon says.
            "Darrell made himself totally available to us, whether we
            needed help or just advice. We could reach him anytime we needed
            him. "He
            had a great relationship with the kids, very proactive. He always
            wanted to prevent trouble from happening, and he was always
            interested in kids learning a lesson from their behavior. "He
            had a nice balance between being a law enforcement officer and being
            an educator. He preferred to be an educator, but when needed he
            could take a firm stand. "He
            had a post outside a certain door. Kids would come in, and it wasn’t
            unusual to hear them talking to him, maybe about law enforcement,
            maybe about fishing, maybe about their personal problems at home. He
            would give them advice about what they could do if they thought
            something bad was going to happen at home. He believed in kids’
            rights to be free from abuse. "Because
            of the program, there is a different attitude about police officers.
            The trust that Darrell built in the schools has worked to the good
            of the community," Langdon says. Although
            he misses his role in the lives of school children, Sisk is enjoying
            his work with Sojourn and is looking forward to new developments. "For
            the most part, I am a court advocate. I assist victims of domestic
            battery to get orders of protection against abusers." He doesn’t
            talk about details, because confidentiality is necessary for the
            safety of the victims. He is
            looking forward to a new program. "Sojourn is in the process of
            putting together a curriculum to teach group sessions at Lincoln
            Correctional Center. Some of these people have been involved in
            domestic violence issues. They’re going to be released from prison
            some day. We can give them better skills to cope with relationships. "I’m
            on a mission that’s not been done around here. It’s going to be
            exciting." Langdon thinks it is a natural transition for Sisk
            to go from working with young people to the Sojourn program. "He
            has gone from helping one group of people in the community to
            helping another. Victims of domestic violence have kids. His
            expertise with children in a school context is a natural transition
            to working with young families. He has seen the effects of domestic
            violence in the schools. From there it is a natural step into the
            home with victims of domestic violence." "He’ll do a
            wonderful job in his new career in Sojourn," Robbins agrees.
            "When it comes to helping someone, whether it’s a kid or an
            adult, he’ll do fine. He’ll see that they get the necessary
            help. Darrell will always be there for these people." [Joan
Crabb]
             |  
            | 
 |  
            | Juvenile
            Officer Darrell Siskmade a difference to Lincoln kids
 [JULY
            13, 2001]  Although
            Darrell Sisk retired from the Lincoln Police Department on March 1,
            he didn’t go very far away. Just a couple of blocks. |  
            | Today
            you can find him in his office in the lower level of the Logan
            County Courthouse, where he is a court advocate for Sojourn, an
            organization that gives shelter and service to victims of domestic
            violence.    [Darrell Sisk]
 He
            likes the new job. "There’s a real demand for this service,
            even more so than I thought when I was a cop," he says. The new
            job keeps him on his toes, the way he had to be as a police officer.
            "It’s educational, challenging, demanding, and sometimes
            frustrating and confusing," he says. Still,
            he misses the old job. He keeps in touch with what’s happening in
            the police department and is happy that his old friend, Rich
            Montcalm, now police chief, is inaugurating some new programs. "Many
            of the programs Rich is putting into place are things he and I
            worked on while I was in the department," Sisk says. He’s
            especially pleased that Montcalm is establishing an Emergency
            Response Team that will be prepared to deal with a serious incident
            in any Lincoln-area school, because kids were such a big part of his
            life as a police officer.    [Darrell Sisk and Police Chief Rich Montcalm]
 "We’ve
            got to have a policy to deal with a school crisis such as a
            shooting. We’ve got to know who’s in charge, where the phones
            are, what door to go in, even how to deal with the media. The first
            people to get to a school emergency are going to be the local
            police, and they need to have the training and the equipment to end
            the threat. That’s what the Emergency Response Team is all
            about." Sisk
            spent almost 31 years (he’s one month shy) with the Lincoln Police
            Department, and for more than 20 of those years he was a juvenile
            officer, a DARE teacher, a VEGA teacher, and a recognized authority
            on juvenile investigation and crime. He
            designed and wrote the Lincoln Police Department policy manual for
            juvenile procedures, which is still in use. He assisted in writing
            school discipline policies and served on many committees concerning
            school discipline. He organized all juvenile records for the city of
            Lincoln and for Logan County, helped start the teen court for
            juvenile offenders, which is still operating, helped coordinate
            community youth programs of all kinds, and more. He
            grew up in Lincoln, was drafted in 1967 and spent two years in the
            Army, 19 months of that time in Vietnam, came back and started to
            work in the Sheriff’s Department as a radio dispatcher under Glenn
            Nichols. Shortly after that he applied for a job as a city policeman
            and got it. He
            started as a patrolman, driving around in a squad car. The car, he
            remembers, had one light on top and one little hand-held radio, with
            the radio equipment taking up the entire car trunk. "To
            use the radar unit, you had to stand outside the car and point it at
            someone," he recalls. "If I got into a squad car today, I’d
            have no idea what all that high-tech equipment is. It’s like being
            inside a spaceship." He
            moved up to sergeant and then became a shift commander. But on May
            11, 1980, his career took a sudden turn. That was the night he got
            shot, and, ironically, he was shot by two juveniles who had escaped
            from St. Charles Juvenile Detention Center, although he didn’t
            know that at the time. "They
            were 15 and 16, the kind of kids we teach now," he says. He saw
            the two youths running around the old K-Mart building at 2 a.m. and
            decided to see what was happening. "I got out of the car, and
            the next thing I knew I was lying in a flower bed. A state trooper
            found me." He
            should have been dead; a combination of good luck and good thinking
            saved his life. It happened that he was wearing the only bulletproof
            vest available to the Lincoln Police Department at the time, and
            that one was a "loaner."     [to top of second column in
      this article]
             | 
             "Back
            in the old days, vests were heavy 
 — about 30
            pounds," he says. "Today you can’t tell whether an
            officer is wearing one or not. But in 1980 they were just coming
            out. The department was trying to find idiots to wear this one
            because it was so heavy. I volunteered because I was working
            nights." When
            he was shot in the back, he was standing close to a steel door. He
            spun into the door and hit it so hard he got a concussion, but the
            borrowed vest stopped the bullets and saved his life, at least the
            first time. The concussion probably saved his life the second time. An old
            friend, Detective Mike Harberts, adds some details to the story.
            Harberts was a patrolman then, relatively new to the department. "It
            was the night before Mother’s Day. I had taken the night off, and
            he was checking my building," Harberts recalls. "There
            were a lot of flats of plants around the K-Mart. Darrell was near
            the double doors on the east side, walking down a row of flowers,
            when he was shot in the back two times. The force of the bullets
            hitting him drove him into the doors. He was knocked unconscious and
            thrown in a table full of flowers. That saved his life. If the kids
            hadn’t thought he was dead, they would have killed him. They were
            going to shoot him in the head with his own gun." The
            juveniles fled south, finally killing a 23-year-old detective in
            Little Rock, Ark. They are now in jail in Arkansas, serving life
            without parole. "They
            thought they killed Darrell too," Harberts says. "They
            told the police down there they had killed a police officer in a
            town between Bloomington and Springfield." After
            the shooting, Sisk gave up patrolling the streets and became a
            juvenile officer. He didn’t know, when he took the job, that he’d
            been shot by juveniles. But finding that out didn’t keep him from
            becoming what those who worked with him call an outstanding juvenile
            officer, one who liked and understood the kids he was working with. "I
            worked on any crime that involved a child 
 — burglary, armed
            robbery, sexual abuse cases, anything. I did the investigation. I
            worked with the detectives on major crimes." The
            most common crimes, he remembers, were fights and thefts. He recalls
            only one murder involving juveniles. "I
            was involved in the court system, putting kids in various
            institutions. Back in the old days, in 1980, a police officer could
            put a juvenile in detention. If I picked up a kid for retail theft,
            I’d put him in detention. In 1980 the police could hold a kid 48
            hours, then take him before a judge. Today it’s a whole different
            system. A juvenile probation officer has to authorize detention.
            That officer will be the deciding factor whether the kid is detained
            or released to his parents." But
            Sisk would always rather find a way to keep a kid out of the
            juvenile justice system than a way to get him into it. To help do
            that, he designed a juvenile diversion and citation program, another
            program still in practice today. "The
            largest percent of calls to the police department involved juveniles
            
 —
             a kid riding a bicycle through a garden, a kid
            throwing snowballs," he recalls. "I created a special
            citation. I would write everything down on the ticket, give it to
            the kid and tell him to take it home to his parents. If I didn’t
            get a call from the parents within two days, I’d write them a
            letter. The kids knew a letter was going to follow and they’d
            better tell their folks." He
            also had some special techniques for the "station
            adjustments," when a youngster was brought to the station after
            doing something he shouldn’t have. "In
            the early days, I used to target hair," Sisk says. "If the
            kid had long hair, I’d tell him the next time he got caught doing
            whatever he was doing, he was going to lose six inches of hair. The
            kid would sign a form that he agreed to that. Or if he was caught
            riding a minibike in the street, he’d sign a form agreeing that if
            he got caught doing it again, he was going to sell the bike." However,
            it’s the positive, not the negative, side of his job as a juvenile
            officer that Sisk remembers and misses the most. He was the
            department’s first DARE (Drug Abuse Resistance Education) teacher,
            and he still believes it’s a great program. While teaching DARE, he
            was with every sixth-grade class in town once a week for 17 weeks.
            "I taught sixth grade in every school in Lincoln," he
            says. "I loved it. That’s the part I really miss." (To be continued) [Joan
Crabb]
             [Click
            here for Part 2]
             |  
        | 
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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 |  
          |  |  |  
          | 
 |  
          | Reunions
           |  
          | LCHS
              class of ’76  reunion [JULY
              10, 2001]   The
              25th year reunion for the Lincoln Community High School class of
              1976 is planned for Saturday, Aug. 4. Any
              classmates who would still like to attend, please call or e-mail
              Janice Greer, (217) 735-2621, jjmm@abelink.com |  
          | 
 |  
          | Ongoing
              class reunion in cyberspace for 1960 graduates of LCHS http://www.geocities.com/lincolnhigh1960/ |  
          | 
 |  
          | 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 |  
          | Back
            to top
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