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Features
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Logan
County 7th graders PARTY all day
[MARCH
9, 2001] Today
Logan County seventh graders gathered in Lincoln Christian College’s
chapel for a PARTY! Positive Actions Relating To Youth is an annual,
full-day prevention program.
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No
less than 15 years ago, Logan County Health Department began PARTY
for the seventh graders of Logan County. At that time, only sixth
graders were involved in DARE. The Health Department believed that
older students were still vulnerable to being pressured into
dangerous habits, so they began a prevention program.
The
goal of the program is "to help students gain information,
self-confidence, and skills needed for better decision-making
towards their lifetime goals." According to director Marcia
Dowling, the program is helping. She hesitated to answer, because
it is difficult to evaluate the success of prevention; but as a
small part of all the prevention programs in Logan County, Dowling
believes PARTY is making a difference.
Each
year, for PARTY, the Health Department and others coordinate a day
full of activities: a keynote speaker, 10 different workshops and
lunch. Many groups and individuals helped to plan and execute the
program: teachers, high school students, seventh- and eighth-grade
students, the Police Department, the U of I Extension, Logan/Mason
Mental Health, Chestnut Health Systems, and more. TOUCH (Teaching
Others Using Chemicals Hurts) and the Regional Superintendent’s
Office funded the program and speaker.
Seventh
and eighth graders suggested topics for workshops. Fifty high
school students from Lincoln, Mount Pulaski and Hartsburg-Emden
helped with or ran the workshops. They also registered the seventh
graders, prepared skits and served lunch. All of the sack lunches
were prepared by Mount Pulaski’s Future Homemakers Association.
Teachers and police officers donated time to help with the day’s
activities as well.
This
year’s keynote speaker was David Goerlitz, the former
"Winston Man"—not to be confused, he says, with the
Marlboro man who died five years ago of lung cancer. For seven
years, Goerlitz modeled for Winston cigarettes, making a total of
42 advertisements. The fact that he has made more ads than any
other model is not something for which he is proud, rather he uses
his "inside knowledge" to better discuss tobacco use and
addiction. His desire is to be part of the solution in tobacco
prevention, since he used to be part of the problem. Goerlitz also
hopes to see more tobacco settlement money being used for tobacco
use prevention. He believes that Illinois is doing a better job
than most states—a lot better than his home state of New Jersey—but
there is always room for improvement.
[to top of second
column in this article]
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[This
year’s keynote speaker was David Goerlitz, the former “Winston
Man.”]
[For
seven years, Goerlitz modeled for Winston cigarettes, making a
total of 42 advertisements.]
[In
his humorous presentation, the former Winston Man reminded Logan
County’s seventh graders that they have known smoking was bad
since the age of 5.]
David
Goerlitz explained that he began smoking a little bit and
eventually smoked his way up to three packs of cigarettes a day.
During his presentation, Goerlitz emphasized that young people
know smoking will kill them when they are older, but they dismiss
the fact that they might have health problems earlier in life. He
realized this at the young age of 34. While acting as a photo
double for Harrison Ford during the making of the movie
"Witness," Goerlitz had a slight stroke, which took away
the feeling in his left leg.
In
his humorous presentation, the former Winston Man reminded Logan
County’s seventh graders that they have known smoking was bad
since the age of 5. He relayed an Illinois state statistic that
quoted 21 percent of Illinois teenagers as smokers. He asked his
audience if they believed the number was too low, and most
students raised their hands. Throughout the rest of the
presentation, Goerlitz labored to explain to students why some
choose to ignore what they have learned from kindergarten and
slowly kill themselves with "cancer sticks."
After
the main session, students picked four of 10 workshops to attend:
•
"Days of Our High School Lives" showed seventh graders
what to expect in high school.
•
"My Friends, Girlfriends, and Boyfriends" discussed the
privileges and responsibilities of friendships and dating.
•
"WOW! Do I Really Look Like That?" compared how
individuals viewed themselves with how others viewed them.
•
A Mobile Ropes Challenge Course was provided by the Illinois
National Guard.
•
"Turning Around from Drugs and Alcohol" portrayed the
difficulties of detoxification.
•
"Anger—Constructive or Destructive" helped students
better understand their emotions.
•
"Personal Safety—Don’t Be a Target" gave students
tools for safety at school, on the street, at home and on the
Internet.
•
"Violence in our School" compared violence in school,
student’s lives and in entertainment.
•
"Obsessing or Stressing??? Is My Body Healthy?" was
designed to teach teenagers more about eating habits and exercise.
•
"It Takes Two" encouraged students to practice good
communication.
Marcia
Dowling was excited about PARTY day, and "the kids certainly
enjoy the day." Hopefully PARTY, along with Logan County’s
other prevention programs, will be successful in guiding students
away from dangerous habits toward productive habits.
[Jean
Ann Carnley]
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American Cancer Society
hosts Relay For Life
Overnight
fun, food and survivorship!
[JAN.
30, 2001] Sneakers,
sleeping bags and cancer education? It must be the American Cancer
Society’s Relay For Life, an overnight event to celebrate
survivorship and raise funds for cancer research, education, advocacy
and services.
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The
Logan County Unit of the American Cancer Society Relay For Life
will be at the Lincoln Recreation Center beginning at 8 p.m.
Friday, April 20, and concluding around 2 p.m. Saturday, April 21.
The
Relay For Life brings together teams from local businesses,
schools, churches and families for camaraderie, food, music and
entertainment — all while team members take turns walking or
running on a track.
Relay
For Life begins with students and participating teams from around
the county who walk the track overnight as a reminder that cancer
never sleeps. Saturday morning activities begin with a Cancer
Survivors Walk and reception to celebrate life. Later in the day,
a luminaria ceremony honors those who are battling cancer and
remembers those who have lost their fight.
"Relay
For Life brings communities together," said Kathy Blaum,
co-chair of the 2001 relay. "We honor each person who has
been touched by this disease, while raising money for much needed
cancer research, education, advocacy and service."
"In
Logan County, our goal is to raise $57,000 for the American Cancer
Society. We’re grateful to the people and the businesses helping
us to achieve that goal," said Blaum.
[to top of second
column in this section]
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Major
sponsors of the event include Family Medical Center, Wal-Mart,
Lincoln Furniture and Floor Covering, Country Companies and Lee’s
Home Furnishings.
The
Logan County American Cancer Society kicks off its fourth annual
relay at 6 p.m., Thursday, Feb. 22, at the Lincoln Park District
Recreation Center, 1400 Primm Road in Lincoln. For more
information regarding the relay, contact co-chairs Kathy Blaum at
732-9372 or Mary Ellen Martin at 732-3349.
The
American Cancer Society is the leading nationwide community-based
voluntary health organization dedicated to eliminating cancer as a
major health problem by preventing cancer, saving lives and
diminishing suffering from cancer, through research, education,
advocacy and service. For information about Relay For Life or
about cancer, call toll-free anytime 1-800-ACS-2345 or visit the
American Cancer Society website at www.cancer.org.
[Logan
County American Cancer Society
news release]
Click
here for a list of Cancer Society programs available to people in
Logan County.
Click
here to see a research fact sheet from the American Cancer
Society.
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Programs
in Logan County assist cancer patients
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Tell-A-Friend
A
program conducted among friends, family, and acquaintances.
Trained volunteer callers contact five friends or other women they
know to encourage them to get a mammogram. This strategy is called
"peer counseling" because the volunteers are contacting
other women much like themselves. It is also a strategy that has
been tested and shown to work. For more information, call
1-800-252-5302.
Road
to Recovery
A
program that provides ground transportation for cancer patients to
and from local treatment centers. This program is dependent on the
availability of local volunteer drivers. Coordinator is Dick Eimer,
phone 732-8338.
Reach
to Recovery
A
program that helps breast cancer patients cope with their
diagnosis, treatment and recovery. Reach to Recovery works through
carefully selected and trained volunteers who are breast cancer
survivors themselves and who have fully adjusted to their own
surgery. Local contact is Mary Bruns, phone 732-3761.
Look
Good…..Feel Better
This
program teaches female cancer patients beauty techniques to help
enhance their appearance and self-image during chemotherapy and
radiation treatments. Volunteer cosmetologists attend a four-hour
certification class to become a Look Good….Feel Better
volunteer. Local contact is Judy Worth at Fabulous Hairstyles, 108
S. Chicago in Lincoln, 735-1453.
[to top of second
column in this article]
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Wigs
and temporary prostheses
The
ACS office at 1-800-252-5302 has an inventory of wigs and
temporary prostheses for women who are in need of these items.
Call 1-800-252-5302.
Special
Friends
Special
Friends is a program in which children with cancer are paired with
medical students from the SIU School of Medicine. The program
focuses mainly on forming friendships between the children, ages 7
to 15, and the students. Picnics, sporting events and even quiet
time together reduce the fear and psychological barriers often
associated with cancer treatment and visits to the physician’s
office. The children’s siblings are also invited to be a part of
this program. Call 1-800-252-5302 for more information.
Referral
service
Our
area office has a list of organizations that provide services in
our community to individuals in need. Our ACS national call center
is open 24 hours a day, seven days a week. Individuals can call
the 1-800-ACS-2345 number and receive answers to their questions
about cancer and related topics as well as accessing support
services and local resources.
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American
Cancer Society research fact sheet
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Research
program contributions
The
American Cancer Society national research program began in 1946.
Strong accomplishments in the early detection, prevention and
treatment of cancers have been made through this research, such
as:
The
program has funded over $2 billion in research nationwide. Thirty
society-funded researchers have gone on to win the Nobel Prize.
[to top of second
column in this article]
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Cancer
facts and figures
- Nearly nine million
people alive today have a history of cancer.
- Men have a one-in-two
lifetime risk of developing cancer, while women have a
one-in-three lifetime risk of developing the disease.
- The five-year survival
rate for all cancers combined has increased from 50 percent in
1974 to 60 percent in 2001.
- An estimated 1.3
million new cancer cases will be diagnosed this year; nearly
57,000 will be Illinois residents.
- Nearly 553,400
Americans will die from cancer in 2001; approximately 25,000
will be Illinois residents.
Resources
The
American Cancer Society provides a wealth of information and
resources on cancer that are available 24 hours a day/seven days a
week.
- 1-800-ACS-2345, the
National Cancer Information Center
- www.cancer.org,
the American Cancer Society website
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Honors
& Awards
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March
of Dimes honors nurse, Anderson
[FEB.
27, 2001] Mary
Anderson, RN, BSN recently received an Outstanding Nurse Recognition
Award from March of Dimes. Mary has been employed as a public health
nurse and communicable disease investigator at Logan County Health
Department for the past 11 years. She was nominated by Logan County
Health Department. Mary was recognized by March of Dimes for her work
in improving the health of infants, children, youth and adults through
education about vaccine-preventable disease and immunizations.
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Announcements
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Mobile
health unit schedule
[FEB.
5, 2001] The
Rural Health Partnership has announced the schedule for its mobile
health unit. Effective Feb. 1, 2001, the unit will run as follows:
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Morning:
9-11 a.m. |
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Afternoon:
1-3:30 p.m. |
Monday |
1st and 3rd |
Hartsburg |
1st and 3rd |
Emden |
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2nd and 4th |
San Jose |
2nd and 4th |
Greenview |
Tuesday |
Weekly |
Chestnut |
Weekly |
Mount Pulaski |
Wednesday |
Weekly |
New Holland |
Weekly |
Middletown |
Thursday |
1st, 2nd,
3rd |
Elkhart |
Weekly |
Atlanta |
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4th |
Friendship
Manor-Lincoln |
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Friday |
1st, 2nd,
4th |
Latham |
1st |
Beason |
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2nd and 4th |
Broadwell |
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3rd |
Maintenance/ special
events |
3rd |
Maintenance/
special events
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The
mobile health unit does not operate on the following dates/holidays
during 2001: Feb. 19 (President’s Day), April 13 (Good
Friday), May 28 (Memorial Day), July 4 (Independence Day), Sept. 3
(Labor Day), Oct. 8 (Columbus Day), Nov. 12 (Veterans Day), Nov. 22-23
(Thanksgiving break), and Dec. 24 - Jan. 1, 2002 (Christmas break).
For more
information on the mobile health unit schedule and services, contact
Dayle Eldredge at (217) 732-2161, Ext. 409.
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This
family resource list to save and use is provided by the Healthy
Communities Partnership (732-2161, Ext. 409) and the Healthy
Families Task Force.
Resources
for Logan County families
Agency |
Phone number |
Address |
911 |
911 (Emergencies)
732-3911 (Office -- non-emergency)
|
911 Pekin St.
Lincoln, IL 62656
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Abraham Lincoln
Memorial Hospital |
732-2161
|
315 Eighth St.
Lincoln, IL 62656
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Aging (Department of) |
785-3356 |
421 E. Capitol, #100
Springfield, IL 62701-1789
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American Cancer Society |
546-7586 (24 hour) |
1305 Wabash, Ste. J
Springfield, IL 62704
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American Red Cross |
732-2134
1-800-412-0100
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125 S. Kickapoo
Lincoln, IL 62656
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Catholic Social
Services |
732-3771 |
310 S. Logan
Lincoln, IL 62656
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Chamber of Commerce |
735-2385 |
303 S. Kickapoo St.
Lincoln, IL 62656
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Community Action (CIEDC) |
732-2159
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1800 Fifth St.
Lincoln, IL 62656
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Community Child Care
Connection |
525-2805
1-800-676-2805
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1004 N. Milton Ave.
Springfield, IL 62702-443
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Crisis Pregnancy Center |
735-4838 |
513 Pulaski St.
Lincoln, IL 62656
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DCFS (Department of
Children & Family Services) |
735-4402
1-800-252-2873
(crisis hotline)
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1100 Keokuk St.
Lincoln, IL 62656
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Heartland Community
College GED Program |
735-1731 |
620 Broadway St.
Lincoln, IL 62656
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Hospice Care of
Illinois |
1-800-342-4862
(24 hour)
732-2161, Ext. 444
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720 N. Bond
Springfield, IL 62702
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Housing Authority |
732-7776
732-6312 (24 hour)
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1028 N. College St.
Lincoln, IL 62656
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Illinois Breast &
Cervical Cancer Program |
735-2317
1-800-269-4019
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LCHD - 109 Third St.
Lincoln, IL 62656
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Illinois Department of
Public Health |
782-4977
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535 W. Jefferson
Springfield, IL 62761
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Illinois Employment
& Training Center (JTPA) |
735-5441 |
812 Lincoln Ave.
Lincoln, IL 62656
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Legal Assistance
Foundation |
(217) 753-3300
1-800-252-8629
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730 E. Vine St., Ste.
214
Springfield, IL 62703
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Library - Atlanta |
(217) 648-2112 |
100 Race St.
Atlanta, IL 61723 |
Library - Elkhart |
(217) 947-2313 |
121 E. Bohan
Elkhart, IL 62634 |
Library - Lincoln |
732-8878 |
725 Pekin St.
Lincoln, IL 62656 |
Library - Mount Pulaski |
792-5919
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320 N. Washington
Mount Pulaski, IL 62548
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Lincoln Area YMCA
|
735-3915 |
319 W. Kickapoo St.
Lincoln, IL 62656
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Lincoln/Logan Food
Pantry |
732-2204
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P.O. Box 773
Lincoln, IL 62656
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Lincoln Parents’
Center |
735-4192 |
100 S. Maple
Lincoln, IL 62656
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Lincoln Park District |
732-8770 |
1400 Primm Rd.
Lincoln, IL 62656
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Logan County Department
of Human Services (Public Aid) |
735-2306 |
1550 Fourth St., P.O.
Box 310
Lincoln, IL 62656
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Logan County Health
Department |
735-2317 |
109 Third St., P.O. Box
508
Lincoln, IL 62656
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Logan Mason Mental
Health |
735-2272
1-888-832-3600
(crisis line)
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304 Eighth St.
Lincoln, IL 62656
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Logan-Mason
Rehabilitation Center |
735-1413 |
760 S. Postville Dr.
Lincoln, IL 62656
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Oasis (Senior Citizens
of Logan County) |
732-6132 |
501 Pulaski St.
Lincoln, IL 62656
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Project READ
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735-1731 |
620 Broadway St.
Lincoln, IL 62656
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Salvation Army |
732-7890
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1501 N. Kickapoo
Lincoln, IL 62656
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Senior Services of
Central Illinois |
732-6213
1-800-252-8966
(crisis line)
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109 Third St.
Lincoln, IL 62656
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Sojourn Shelter &
Service Inc. |
732-8988
(217) 726-5200 (24-hour hotline)
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1800 Westchester Blvd.
Springfield, IL 62704
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U. of I. Division of
Specialized Care for Children |
524-2000
1-800-946-8468 |
421 S. Grand Ave. West,
2nd Floor
Springfield, IL 62704
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U. of I. Extension
Service |
732-8289 |
122 S. McLean St.
Lincoln, IL 62656
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