LCC/LCS
launches the
building of a new athletic facility
[MARCH
5, 2001]
It
was a big day Friday at Lincoln Christian College and Seminary as they had a
groundbreaking ceremony for their new athletic facility. The new facility
replaces a long-outdated, too small gymnasium that sits behind the cafeteria.
The new $3 million, 30,000-sq.-ft. facility will house some office space,
training rooms, locker rooms, a weight room, a lobby and concession area, and a large gymnasium that will seat more than
1,000 spectators. It will also have its own parking lot. As coach Jeff Mayfield
points out, "You gotta think big to be big."
[click
here to see more photos from the groundbreaking ceremony]
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LCC/LCS
is known for their rigorous studies and high academic standards, but they also
strive to support these standards in all aspects of student development and
personal life. LCC/LCS recognizes that Christian values are communicated in
everything we do, including athletics.
"Whatever
your hand finds to do, do it with all your might," says coach Kevin
Crawford, citing Ecclesiastes 9:10a.
Coach
Nancy Siddens points out, "Winners — everyone playing to their fullest
potential."
It
is in holding to these high standards that the school steps forward with
confidence in the importance of building this new facility. "As an
athlete on the court you represent your family, your hometown, your
home church, Lincoln Christian College and Seminary, and most of all Christ,"
says coach Mayfield.
The
mission statement for the building of this facility reads:
Lincoln
Christian College and Seminary values students and their holistic development in
and out of the classroom. Our objectives and educational philosophy encourage
our students to glorify God in his or her physical body through opportunities
for Christian service, spiritual formation, social development, and individual
physical health. This new athletic facility will be constructed with that end in
mind.
Faculty,
students, board members, supporting church members, and alums gathered in the
chapel at 10 a.m. Friday. Lynn Laughlin, vice president of student development,
former basketball and baseball coach and athletic director, joyously welcomed
everyone. It was with great sentiment that he recalled some of LCC/LCS history.
Then, following some brief introductions of guests and a few words from Dr.
Keith H. Ray, LCC/LCS president, the crowd was led out to the new site that is
located just in back of the chapel.
Several
shifts wielded the honorary gold shovels. In the starting lineup there were Dr.
Marion Henderson, distinguished professor of New Testament, athletic director
1952-1972, men’s basketball coach 1952-1968, baseball coach 1960-1962 and
1969-1975; Jeff Mayfield, director of partnership development, men’s
basketball coach 1990-1996; Nancy Siddens, assistant director of financial aid,
women’s basketball coach 1986-1999; Kevin Crawford, vice president of finance,
women’s volleyball coach 1991-present; Randy Kirk, director of student
services, athletic director, and men’s basketball coach 1996-present; Mike
Gaston, alumnus and friend of LCCS.
Other
dirt-tossing shifts included President Ray and members of the school’s board
of directors.
[to top of
second column in this article]
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Previous
groundbreaking ceremonies were in 1953 for the original campus, in 1964 for
Restoration Hall and in 1970 for Earl C Hargrove Chapel.
While
P.J. Hoerr of Peoria was awarded the new construction, local contractors will be
used for $2 million in renovations. The renovations entail converting
the present service building, which is located in the middle of the campus,
into a student center with offices, reception and conference rooms, a game room,
and a student lounge. A new service building will be constructed at the
edge of the campus. Also in the plans are renovations of dormitories and student
apartments, including new siding, furniture, carpeting and light fixtures,
and replacing flat roofs with new, gabled roofs that will match those of
the new athletic building. Updating building exteriors and interiors also
includes staining yellow exterior brick to match the other brick on campus.
The
current economic impact of LCC/CS on the Lincoln community is a little less than
$15 million a year, considering the money paid to employees and spent locally.
With the new facility LCC/CS will be able to host regional and national sports
tournaments and other sports events. The new athletic facility will increase
that economic impact on Lincoln by bringing people to town for athletic events.
With a
completion goal by the end of 2001, the Preachers and the Angels should start
the new 2002 year playing in glory in their new facility.
[LDN]
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176
weather-alert radios to be
distributed in Logan County
[MARCH
3, 2001]
Radios
that sound a warning tone when dangerous weather threatens are being given to
176 schools, hospitals, day-care centers, public buildings and mobile home
residents in Logan County.
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Tom
Zimmerman, grant manager of the Illinois Emergency Management Agency (IEMA),
announced the grant of the tone-alert radios in connection with the Surviving
Tornadoes through Awareness and Reaction (STAR) program. The program, begun by
IEMA in 2000, aims to encourage early warning and preparedness for severe
weather. Illinois averages 30 tornadoes a year; in 2000 there were 55.
Recipients
of the radios include all schools in Logan County, all day-care centers,
hospitals, nursing homes, government buildings, American Red Cross headquarters
and some mobile home residents. Dan Fulscher, Logan County ESDA coordinator,
said 40 to 50 weather radios will be divided among the mobile home parks in the
county, with a lottery to be held in each park. Recipients of the weather radios
are expected to alert their neighbors to threatening storms.
Speaking
at a March 1 press conference, Zimmerman said Logan County was chosen as a grant
recipient because it has an emergency management program in place and because
recent tornado damage has raised awareness of severe weather danger. Fulscher
said Logan County suffered more weather-related disasters in the last seven
years than any other Illinois county south of Interstate 80; these included
flash floods, tornadoes, high winds and blizzards.
The
STAR program received $150,000 in state funding two years ago. To date it has
awarded 39 grants in cities and counties scattered throughout Illinois.
Zimmerman said he expects to have distributed 8,000 weather radios by the end of
the year.
High-risk
public facilities and mobile home parks have been targeted to receive radios in
order to "provide places of assembly with critical advance warning
time" in potentially life or death cases, Zimmerman said. He displayed a
pie chart showing that in the United States 40 percent of tornado-related deaths
during the past 15 years have occurred in manufactured housing.
"Early
warning capability becomes especially important if you need to go elsewhere to
seek shelter," according to IEMA Director Mike Chamness. "We are not
suggesting that manufactured homes are not a good place to live; we are saying
that they can be made safer if you are aware that severe weather is on the way
and immediately seek appropriate shelter."
Greg
Brinner, associated with Terrace Mobile Home Park, noted that parks are often
located on the edge of town, and therefore are the first to be hit. He said the
industry has long recognized the problem of tornado damage and has an active
program to provide proper setup of homes.
[to top of
second column in this article]
|
[Dan Fulscher, Logan County ESDA coordinator, accepts an Illinois
Emergency Management Agency grant of 176 tone-alert weather radios for Logan
County institutions and residents.]
[Rod Palmer, warning coordination meteorologist with the National
Weather Service, demonstrates a tone-alert weather radio. The pie chart
quantifies where tornado-related fatalities have occurred.]
One
purpose of the STAR program is to promote weather radios as a "silent
partner" in weather alerts. Rod Palmer, warning coordination meteorologist
with the National Weather Service, said he hopes weather radios will become as
common as smoke detectors.
The
radios are programmed to a countywide code that eliminates confusion with
warnings for other areas. They sound an alarm tone when severe weather
threatens. They also broadcast weather information and can be used to issue
civil emergency messages in events such as toxic waste spills. For the hearing
impaired or in a noisy factory, they can activate a strobe light. Portable
versions are available for outdoor activities.
Terry
Storer, Logan County ESDA assistant director, programmed the 176 radios to
receive Logan County information. They can also be programmed to include
adjacent counties to give extra time to prepare. With over 500 U.S. weather
radio stations, travelers can tune in almost anywhere. Illinois has 13 weather
transmitter sites, most built in the last three years. Palmer said that by the
end of the year 97 percent of the state will be covered.
Similar
radios with battery backup cost about $50 and are available at Wal-Mart,
RadioShack and K’s Merchandise. Zimmerman said grant radios will include free
battery replacement for a year.
He
noted that one advantage of tone-alert radios is their ability to sound an alert
at any time. Cable TV overrides and radio announcements provide a valuable
service, he said, but they must be tuned in. Warning sirens are also an
important tool, but people inside a closed building may not hear them. The
radios coupled with weather transmitting stations offer a "warning means
not to be found with older modalities," Zimmerman said.
The
American Red Cross, the National Weather Service and the Illinois Insurance
Association are partners with IEMA in the STAR program. Fay Stubblefield,
representing the Logan County Chapter of the American Red Cross, noted that STAR
meshes with the organization’s interest in preparedness as a means to save
lives.
Lincoln Mayor
Joan Ritter thanked IEMA for the grant, and Logan County Board member Dick Logan
commended Fulscher for his efforts in securing it.
[Lynn
Spellman]
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Beth
Davis wins
Republican mayoral primary
[FEB.
28, 2001]
With
only a couple of precincts to go, Lincoln City Council members and others
who were at the regular council meeting joined the small crowd in the
Logan County Courthouse around 8 p.m. The mood was pleasant and exhilarating.
Various groups of supporters milled around together, awaiting the final outcome.
|
When
the night was over, the numbers told the story. The voters had chosen Beth Davis
to be the Republican candidate in the upcoming mayoral race five weeks from now.
In
last week’s LDN primary poll, Davis received 49 percent of the polled
responses. In the election, she received 44 percent of the final tally, winning
with a comfortable lead.
Interviewed
by Jim Ash and Mike Fak from LincOn-TV Channel 15, smiling Beth Davis accepted
their congratulations and vowed to fulfill her campaign promises if elected to
the office.
In
a statement to Lincoln Daily News, Davis said, "I am very pleased at
the voter turnout. There were five good candidates, and they selected one. I am
very pleased. I hope to do as good or better than the current mayor. I’ll work
on bringing more jobs into the city and county. I’ll try to be a very good
servant for the city of Lincoln. That is what I pledge to do."
[to top of
second column in this article]
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Mayor
Joan Ritter was also interviewed by Ash and Fak, and conceded the election
graciously to Davis, whom she praised as a good candidate. She also had kind
words for the other three candidates and thanked them by name for their
participation in the race. Ritter praised her supporters, especially those who
had closely supported her in this race and during her four-year mayoral term.
She thanked her husband, and concluded by saying that she looked forward to some
rest after 20 years of serving the city as mayor and as an alderman.
Jason
Harlow congratulated the winner of the race. He sent a letter to the LDN editor,
and you can read it by clicking here.
Five weeks from
now, Beth Davis will face the Democratic candidate, Kenneth Gray, in a runoff
for the office of mayor of Lincoln. Until then, her campaign signs will remain
up and her supporters will remain active to persuade voters to bring her to
office.
[Jim
Youngquist]
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Excellent
voter turnout for primary
[FEB.
28, 2001]
For
weeks before the primary, some people around Lincoln were saying that there wasn’t
going to be any surprise at all about the results of the election. But good
weather and five candidates vying for the same office brought voters out in
record numbers for the Republican mayoral primary yesterday, surprising many.
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Of
10,003 registered voters in Lincoln, 3,009 made their way to the polling places
on Tuesday to register their choice.
City
Clerk Juanita Josserand remarked that it was the largest voter turnout for a
mayoral contest in her memory. Josserand said that having five candidates
competing for the same office overcame the usual voter apathy and brought out
such a large number of voters to support their candidate. "Everybody’s
always unhappy about something," she said. "This election brought the
voters out to support the candidate they think can fix things."
[to top of
second column in this article]
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Temperatures
in the low to mid-40s and a little sunshine also contributed to the turnout. The
recent minor snow quickly melted off and allowed Lincoln citizens access to the
polling places.
At
the end of the day, the votes were tallied and the candidates received the
following number of votes:
Jason
Harlow, 5 percent, with 145 votes;
Don Fults, 9
percent, with 278 votes;
Stephen
Mesner, 10 percent, with 310 votes;
Joan Ritter,
32 percent, with 967 votes;
and Beth Davis declared the winner with
1,309 votes, which was 44 percent of the total votes cast.
[Jim
Youngquist]
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City
to adopt bed-and-breakfast code
[FEB.
28, 2001]
To
help encourage bed-and-breakfast businesses in the city, the Lincoln City
Council is reviewing a proposed new ordinance. Alderman Glenn Shelton, chairman
of the ordinance committee, said at Tuesday evening’s work session that
because of increasing interest in this potential new business, he would like to
see the bed-and-breakfast ordinance drafted and passed as soon as possible.
|
Shelton recently
met with the city’s one bed-and-breakfast owner, Larry Steffens, and three
other potential owners, and reported that people considering starting such a
business need some guidelines.
The proposed
ordinance, presented by City Attorney Jonathan Wright, would apply to bed and
breakfasts in residential areas only. "In commercial areas it’s pretty
clear what needs to be done, but there is not much guidance for these businesses
in residential areas," he told the council.
The Illinois
legislature has approved a bed-and-breakfast act, and the city code will adopt
many of its standards, Wright said.
Owners would get
permits through the city code enforcement office, and they would have food
operations certified by the Logan County Health Department, according to the
proposed code. A fire escape map must be posted on the door of each sleeping
room; hallways and stairways must be adequately lighted, including exit signs
and emergency lighting; furnaces must have one-hour-rated fire doors; and smoke
detectors should be hard-wired and interconnected. Owners would also have to
give proof of liability insurance.
The proposed code
also recommends one off-street parking place for each sleeping room in a
residential B and B, as well as a parking space for the owner of the
establishment.
The council must
still decide how long a B-and-B permit would be in force and what fees, if
any, would be charged to the owner.
Les Last, code
enforcement officer, said he thought the off-street parking provision would be a
problem for B-and-B operators who have four or five sleeping rooms. Alderman
Steve Fuhrer agreed.
Alderman Patrick
Madigan suggested there might be a designated smoking room with a separate smoke
alarm, since interconnected smoke alarms might wake people needlessly. Shelton
noted that most potential owners were not going to permit smoking.
The ordinance
committee agreed to meet at 6 p.m. next Monday, before the regular council
meeting, to iron out the details.
[to top of
second column in this article]
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The request by
Action Rental and Furniture Center, 519 Broadway, to change the direction of
traffic in the alley running from Pulaski to Broadway to allow for a drive-up
payment window got another hearing at Tuesday’s meeting.
Traffic is
presently one-way northbound in alleys from Clinton through Pekin streets.
Action Rental has asked that the traffic flow be changed to southbound in the
block from Broadway to Pulaski, so customers can make their payments at a
drive-up window from the passenger side of a car. According the firm’s
president, Henry Baird, the success of Sorrento’s Restaurant, next door to the
firm, has made parking difficult for customers who make regular payments on
their furniture contracts.
Aldermen discussed
the possibility of allowing two-way traffic in the alley, although Street
Superintendent Donnie Osborne said he was not sure there was room for two
vehicles, because of utility poles and outside stairways.
Police Chief
Richard Ludolph recommended that if the Pulaski/Broadway alley becomes two way,
the alley from Pulaski to Clinton streets should also allow two-way traffic. The
matter will be on the agenda for the next regular meeting.
Fire Chief Ken
Ebelherr reported that bids on a new truck will be in by Friday and be opened on
March 13. He also told the council that an $100 million federal grant, the
Firefighters Investment and Response Enhancement Act, will soon become available
for the current year. Fire departments may apply for funds in six categories:
training, purchase of vehicles, equipment, personal protection equipment, fire
prevention, and wellness and fitness. In most categories, a grant will require a
10 percent local match.
Because of an
early deadline, Ebelherr said he would like to apply as soon as possible. The
council agreed to leave it up the fire department to determine what they most
need and what they can realistically ask for this year. Next year, Ebelherr
said, the grant is expected to rise to $300 million, and the fire department
will have more time to consider what they should apply for.
In an adjourned regular meeting before
the work session, the council approved a three-year lease with Darrell and Sarah
Benner of Broadwell to farm the 40 acres the city owns on West Kickapoo Street
for cash rent of $4,000 per year. The Benners recently purchased land adjacent
to the city’s acreage from Welsh Agribusiness, which had previously farmed the
city land.
[Joan
Crabb]
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