Supreme
Court justice visits Lincoln
[NOV.
2, 2001] Standing
Supreme Court Judge Rita Garman took a walking tour of downtown
Lincoln Thursday. Garman is a Republican appointee to the state
court, filling the seat of Judge Ben Miller, who retired in January
of this year.
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A
justice with the court since February, Garman was in town to meet
potential voters and to drum up support for her candidacy for
re-election to the state’s highest court in next year’s March
primary and November’s general election. Garman, one of only two
Republican justices currently on the Supreme Court, is the only
judge who has experience as an associate, circuit and appellate
judge. Her career as a judge, which has spanned 27 years, is one of
the key points in her bid to be elected to the court for the next
decade.
Garman,
accompanied by Circuit Judge John Turner, who replaced Garman when
she was appointed to the state’s highest court, visited stores in
the downtown area in a rare campaign visit to this city by a Supreme
Court candidate.
When
asked what important issues will be before the November docket of
the court, Garman stated that the court will be asked to look at the
new districting proposals which have caused seven different lawsuits
to be filed on behalf of current legislators who feel the new
districts were based on political decisions and not what is best for
the legal concept of "one man, one vote."
Garman,
a resident of Danville, was unanimously appointed by the court to
fill the vacancy created by Miller’s retirement.
[Mike Fak]
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Today’s history
Compiled
by Dave Francis
Friday,
Nov. 2
306th
day of the year
Quotes
"I
was never lost, but I was bewildered once for three days." —
Daniel Boone’s response to being asked if he had ever been lost in
the woods
"Because
that’s where the money is!" — Willie Sutton, on being asked
why he robbed banks
Birthdays
1734
— Daniel Boone, U.S. frontiersman
1755
— Marie-Antoinette, queen of France
1795
— James Knox Polk, North Carolina, 11th president (D) (1845-1849)
1865
— Warren Gamaliel Harding, Ohio, (R) 29th president (1921-23)
1913
— Burt Lancaster, actor
1938
— Patrick Buchanan, conservative political columnist
1958
— Willie McGee, San Francisco, Calif., outfielder (St. Louis
Cardinals, NL MVP 1985)
1961
— k.d. lang [Kathy Dawn], Consort, Alberta, country singer
1971
— Ricky Martin, Puerto Rico, rocker (Menudo) and actor
("General Hospital") [or Dec 24]
Events
1776
— William Demont deserts, becoming the first traitor of the
American Revolution
1783
— Gen. Washington bids farewell to his army
1811
— Battle of Tippecanoe: Gen. Jackson vs. Indians
1841
— Akbar Khan successfully revolts against Shah Shuja in
Afghanistan
1889
— North Dakota and South Dakota admitted into the Union as the
39th and 40th states
1920
— The first radio station in the United States, KDKA of
Pittsburgh, Pa., begins regular broadcasting
1947
— Howard Hughes flies his "Spruce Goose," a huge wooden
airplane, for eight minutes in California
1948
— Harry S. Truman defeats Thomas E. Dewey for the U.S. presidency.
The Chicago Tribune publishes an early edition that has the headline
"DEWEY DEFEATS TRUMAN." The Truman victory surprises many
polls and newspapers.
1950
— George Bernard Shaw, Irish author ("Pygmalion"), dies
at 94
1974
— Braves trade Hank Aaron to Milwaukee Brewers for outfielder Dave
May
1980
— Edith Bunker, character on "All in the Family," dies;
Willie Sutton, U.S. bank robber, dies at 79
1982
— Fire in Salung tunnel, Afghanistan; 1,000-plus Russians die
1983
— U.S. President Ronald Reagan signs a bill establishing a federal
holiday on the third Monday of January in honor of civil rights
leader Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
1984
— Velma Barfield becomes the first woman to be executed in the
United States since 1962. She had been convicted of the poisoning
death of her boyfriend.
1993
— Dow Jones hits record 3697.64.
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Today’s history
Compiled
by Dave Francis
Thursday, Nov. 1
305th
day of the year
Quotes
"For
when the One Great Scorer comes
To
write against your name,
He
marks — not that you won or lost —
But
how you played the game." — Grantland Rice
"I
must study politics and war that my sons may have liberty to study
mathematics and philosophy." — John Adams
Birthdays
Louis
II, the Stutterer, King of France (877-79)
1815
— Douglas Hancock Cooper, brigadier general (Confederate Army);
died in 1879
1825
— Joseph Benjamin Palmer, brigadier general (Confederate Army);
died in 1890
1871
— Stephen Crane, novelist and poet ("The Red Badge of
Courage")
1880
— Grantland Rice, sportswriter (New York Herald Tribune 1914-30,
Colliers 1925-37)
1935
— Gary Player, golfer
1942
— Larry Flynt, Hustler magazine
1957
— Lyle Lovett singer
1972
— Jenny McCarthy, hottie
Events
Pompei
buried by eruption of Mount Vesuvius
1512
— Michelangelo’s paintings on the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel
first exhibited to the public
1604
— "Othello," the tragedy by William Shakespeare, first
presented at Whitehall Palace in London
1765
— Stamp Act goes into effect in the American colonies
1800
— U.S. President John Adams moves into the White House and becomes
the first president to live there
1834
— First published reference to poker (as Mississippi riverboat
game)
1879
— Thomas Edison executes his first patent application for a
high-resistance carbon filament (U.S. Pat. 223,898)
1894
— Russian Emperor Alexander III dies
1917
— In World War I, the first US soldiers are killed in combat
1947
— The famous racehorse Man o’ War dies
1950
— Charles Cooper becomes the first black man to play in the
National Basketball Association
1952
— The United States explodes the first hydrogen bomb, at Eniwetok
in the Marshall Islands
1959
— Jacques Plante, of the Montreal Canadiens, becomes the first
goalie in the NHL to wear a mask
1962
— "The Lucy Show" premieres
1999
— Walter Payton, U.S. football player (No. 34, Chicago Bears),
dies at 45
|
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a friend about
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Anxieties
are high following terrorist attacks and threats
How have
we prepared in
Lincoln and Logan County?
[OCT.
31, 2001] It’s
on the radio, TV, in all the media. You hear it in the office, on
the street and maybe at home — threats of terrorism. America is on
high alert. Here in central Illinois, away from any supposed
practical target areas, perhaps we feel a little less threatened,
but we are still concerned. So how concerned should we be, and how
prepared are we for the types of situations that could occur?
|
Whether
the threat is domestic or foreign, violent, biological or chemical,
our public health and rescue agencies have been preparing to respond
to the situations. Lincoln Daily News has been at meetings where all
the agencies gather together as the Logan County Emergency Planning
Committee to strategize for just such a time. Our reports have not
even provided every detail that every agency has reported; i.e., a
number of representatives from differing agencies such as the health
and fire departments, CILCO and ESDA went to a bioterrorism and
hazmat (hazardous materials) seminar this past August.
Here
are some of the articles that LDN has posted pre- and post-Tuesday,
Sept. 11. Hopefully you will see in them that WE ARE WELL PREPARED.
At least as much as any area can be. Every agency has been planning,
training, submitting for grants to buy equipment long before Sept.
11. We can be thankful for all of the dedicated, insightful leaders
we have in this community.
[to top of second column in
this section]
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The
day after ‘Attack on America’
Area leaders respond to national tragedy
ESDA
and LEPC conduct successful hazardous materials exercise at water
treatment plant
Logan
County ready for action if terrorist event occurs - Part 1
Logan
County ready for action if terrorist event occurs – Part 2
Clinton
nuclear power plant safety measures in place
Logan
County agencies meet to discuss protocol for suspicious mail
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Today’s history
Compiled
by Dave Francis
Wednesday, Oct. 31
303rd
day of the year
Quotes
"Here
I stand; I cannot do otherwise. God help me. Amen!" — Martin
Luther
"Don’t
be discouraged by a failure. It can be a positive experience.
Failure is, in a sense, the highway to success." — John Keats
Birthdays
1795
— John Keats, London, England, romantic poet ("Ode to a
Grecian Urn")
1835
— J.F.W Adolf Ritter von Baeyer, German chemist (Nobel, 1905)
1887
— Chiang Kai-shek, Chekiang Province, China, president of
Nationalist China
1912
— Dale Evans, Uvalde, Texas, cowgirl ("The Roy Rogers
Show")
1920
— Dick Francis, Wales, jockey and novelist ("Whip Hand,"
"High Stakes")
1922
— Barbara Bel Geddes, New York City, actress ("Vertigo,"
Miss Ellie in "Dallas," "Caught")
1931
— Dan Rather, Wharton, Texas, news anchor ("CBS Evening
News," "60 Minutes")
Events
834
— First All Hallows Eve (Halloween) observed to honor the saints
1517
— Luther posts 95 theses on Wittenberg church door; beginning of
Protestant Reformation
1541
— Michelangelo Buonarroti paints "Last Judgment" in
Sistine Chapel
1846
— Donner party, unable to cross the Donner Pass, constructs a
winter camp
1926
— Erich Weiss, better known as magician Harry Houdini, dies in
Detroit
1941
— Mount Rushmore sculpture is completed
1983
— George Halas, NFLer, dies at 88
1984
— Indira Gandhi, prime minister of India, assassinated by two of
her Sikh bodyguards
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Today’s history
Compiled
by Dave Francis
Tuesday, Oct. 30
302nd
day of the year
Quotes
"Power
is given only to those who dare to lower themselves and pick it up.
Only one thing matters, one thing; to be able to dare!" —
Dostoevsky
"It
is humiliating to remain with our hands folded while others write
history. It matters little who wins. To make a people great it is
necessary to send them to battle even if you have to kick them in
the pants. That is what I shall do." — Mussolini
Birthdays
1821
— Feodor Mikhailovich Dostoevski, Russian novelist and writer of
short stories
1882
— William "Bull" F. Halsey, U.S. vice admiral (World War
II, Pacific)
1893
— Charles Atlas, body builder
1918
— Ted Williams, Red Sox hitter (AL MVP 1946, ’49; Triple Crown
’42, ’47)
1921
— Charles Bronson, actor ("The Magnificent Seven,"
"The Dirty Dozen," "Death Wish")
1933
— Michael S. Dukakis, Massachusetts governor, presidential
candidate (Democrat, 1988)
1949
— Larry Holmes, boxer, heavyweight champ (1978-85)
Events
1866
— Jesse James gang robs bank in Lexington, Mo. ($2,000)
1888
— In London, Jack the Ripper murders his last victim
1888
— First ballpoint pen patented
1905
— "October Manifesto"; Russian Tsar Nicholas II grants
civil liberties
1922
— Mussolini forms government in Italy
1938
— Orson Welles panics a nation with broadcast of "The War of
the Worlds"
1944
— Anne Frank (of diary fame) is deported from Auschwitz to Belsen
1945
— U.S. government announces end of shoe rationing
|
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Tell
a friend about
Lincoln Daily
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automotive industry.
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Appointments Necessary |
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Indian
statue rededicated
A
lot was the same as 95 years ago
[OCT.
29, 2001] It
was same date, Oct. 26; same place, Logan County Courthouse lawn;
same names; same clubs; and probably the same attitude,
accomplished; as it was 95 years ago for the unveiling of the Indian
maiden fountain. Perhaps the only difference was that the weather
may have been a little warmer that day on Friday, Oct., 26, 1906,
when Lincoln Woman’s Club, Judge McCormick and Lincoln High School
Glee Club spoke and sang before a large crowd. This time the
40-degree temps with the brisk wind were a sure reminder that winter
is just around the corner.
[Click
here to see more pictures]
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Wendy
Bell, director of Main Street Lincoln, announced that the dedication
was going to follow much of the same format as it was for the
sculpture’s first unveiling.
Bell
introduced Burnetta "Bernie" DePuy from the Lincoln Woman’s
Club, who pioneered much of the fund-raising for the statue
restoration. The efforts began in 1995 to raise the needed funds to
restore and refurbish the beloved statue. It was the Lincoln Woman’s
Club that initialized the original statue. DePuy recalled the
original requirements of a public property sculpture: "Any
sculpture was not only to be a piece of art, but it had to be
functional and useful, as well as educational." The Indian
maiden filled all requirements. It was functional and useful as a
fountain to provide refreshment for people and additionally so with
a lower trough for pets. It was educational, as the Indian maiden
was intended to remind us we are a nation of many people, including
the Indians who were here first.
DePuy,
who is credited with bringing this project to fruition, thanked the
many who have contributed to the restoration, including sculptor
David Seagram, former Sen. Robert Madigan, Dick Logan from Logan
County Board, the former and present members of the Main Street
board, including Kate Orr and the many citizens who have contributed
to cover the costs of restoration. DePuy included in her remarks
that this has "truly been a community affair."
To
the delight of the audience, DePuy was recognized with a gift for
her tireless efforts on the project — a custom-made, artist-signed
clay cast of the formerly missing hand from the statue. With some
chuckles she accepted her gift charmingly, saying, "Thank
you!"
Same
words, song and attitude
Present
at the first dedication was Judge McCormick. To read his very same
words in his stead on this day was his great-great-nephew Tim
McCormick. McCormick read the following from an original newspaper
account:
[to top of second column in
this article]
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Judge
McCormick made a very appropriate speech of acceptance. He said in
part:
"It
is all together fitting that this useful and ornamental piece of
statuary should be built, donated and dedicated to the public
service as a companion piece to this handsome and magnificent
building we here behold outlined against the sky. In accepting this
most generous gift on behalf of Logan County let me express to its
generous givers the thanks and appreciation of all our people. May
no vandal dare with wantoned hand ever marr its sacred beauty or
polute its crystal base. May the virtues, lives and motives of its
givers and of those whose pleasure it is to receive and care
heretofore be ever as pure as the limpid waters that issue forth
from its fount to quench the thirst of the weary pilgrim within our
gates."
The
original sculptor was Charles Mulligan. His great-nephew John and
wife Sharon Mulligan were also present for the ceremony. They
videotaped the event to send to the sculptor’s great-niece who was
the model for the papoose. She now lives in Florida.
The
Indian maiden now sits facing the Arcade on Pulaski Street rather
than on the Kickapoo Street side. As the refurbished statue was
unveiled, the Lincoln Community High School chorale sang
"America" just as the Glee Club did 95 years ago.
If
you go inside the Logan County Courthouse, you will find an
abundance of assorted marble lining the walls of the corridors. Some
of the trim has a pinkish marbled appearance. It is this same stone
the Indian maiden is carved from. The marble comes from Tennessee.
The original statue cost $800.
[Jan
Youngquist]
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Second
annual Trick or Canning event
Lincoln
College student groups help local food bank
[OCT.
29, 2001] Lincoln
College student groups will help the Lincoln/Logan County food bank
by donating items they receive from their second annual Trick or
Canning event.
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Lincoln
College students will go "trick or canning" on
Wednesday, Oct. 31, from 6 to 7:30 p.m. in and around the Mayfair
subdivision in Lincoln. They are not in search of candy, but canned
goods and non-perishable items. All items will be donated to the
Lincoln/Logan County food bank.
Student
groups helping with the event include Student Activities, Operation
Big Help Workers (LC’s student volunteer program) and Student
Admissions Ambassadors.
Angie
Whiteman, director of student activities, is helping organize the
event and says she expects to collect over 100 pounds of food.
"Last year we canvassed the area around campus and collected
about 50 pounds of food. This year we’ve set our goal at 100, and
hopefully with the help of the people of Lincoln we can meet that
goal," she said.
[News
release]
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Today’s history
Compiled
by Dave Francis
Monday, Oct. 29
301st
day of the year
Quotes
"We
enter parliament in order to supply ourselves, in the arsenal of
democracy, with its own weapons.... If democracy is so stupid as to
give us free tickets and salaries for this bear’s work, that is
its affair.... We do not come as friends, nor even as neutrals. We
come as enemies. As the wolf bursts into the flock, so we
come." — Joseph Goebbels
"But
it is hard to know them from friends, they are so obsequious and
full of protestations; for a wolf resembles a dog, so doth a
flatterer a friend." — Sir Walter Raleigh
Birthdays
1656
— Edmund Halley, astronomer (Halley’s comet)
1884
— Bela Lugosi, horror actor ("Dracula," "Body
Snatcher")
1897
— Paul Joseph Goebbels, Nazi propagandist
1940
— John Gotti, Mafia head
1947
— Richard Dreyfuss, Brooklyn, N.Y., actor ("Jaws,"
"Nuts")
1948
— Kate Jackson, Birmingham, Ala., actress ("Rookies,"
"Charlie’s Angels")
Events
B.C.
— Babylon falls to Cyrus the Great of Persia
1618
— Walter Raleigh, English scholar, poet and historian, beheaded
for treason
1911
— Joseph Pulitzer, American newspaperman, dies in Charleston, S.C.
1929
— "Black Tuesday" stock market crash triggers
Great Depression
1942
— Alaska Highway completed
1966
— National Organization of Women founded
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Melanie
Riggs wins
CIMCO award
[OCT.
27, 2001] Melanie
Riggs, Lincoln’s deputy city clerk, has received the 2001
Presidential Award from the Central Illinois Municipal Clerks
Organization for her "effort, time and level of participation
... beyond the norm."
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This
is the third time Riggs has received the award from the 78-member
organization, composed of clerks and deputy clerks from
municipalities in central Illinois. The region extends as far north
as Peru, as far south as Taylorville, west to Galesburg and east to
Danville.
She
received the Presidential Award in 1997 and 1998, when she was
serving as treasurer for CIMCO. In fiscal year 2001, she served as
secretary.
CIMCO
has been in existence since 1988, coincidentally the same year Riggs
came to work at City Hall, although she did not join CIMCO until
several years later. CIMCO provides members friendship and support
and promotes personal growth and professionalism.
At
City Hall, Riggs oversees all accounting and bookkeeping,
coordinating financial accounts from all departments and making sure
they are in balance. She has an A.A. degree in computer programming
and accounting.
According
to Lois Mauney, city payroll and accounts payable clerk, Riggs is
the office "troubleshooter," who can help when others are
having trouble with accounting problems. Her knowledge of the
computer is also very valuable, Mauney says. "She works well
when there is a challenge and is always willing to help."
"She’s
my right hand," says Juanita Josserand, longtime city clerk.
"She is the type of person everybody would want in their office
when it comes to knowledge, expertise and willingness to help
others."
[to top of second column in this
article]
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Riggs
lives in Lincoln with her 6-year-old daughter, Chelsey.
Below is the letter from
Sue McMillan, CIMCO president, announcing Riggs’ award. McMillan
is city clerk of Pekin.
October
10, 2001
One
of the best responsibilities of being president is to be
able to give recognition to a member for their distinguished
service during the past year.
This
year’s
Presidential Award goes to a member whose effort, time, and
level of participation have clearly extended beyond the
norm.
She
has had the initiative to be chair of the Audit Committee,
the graciousness to serve as Treasurer for three years and
the wisdom (or lack of!) to continue her untiring commitment
to the organization by serving as Secretary this past year.
She
is truly a value to our organization, dependable and prompt
with her officer reports and more than anything has always
been there for me.
I
present the 2001 Presidential Award to Melanie
Riggs.
Sincerely,
CENTRAL
ILLINOIS MUNICIPAL
CLERKS
ORGANIZATION
Sue
E. McMillan
President |
[Joan
Crabb]
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Officers
appreciated
[OCT.
27, 2001] The
following letter was received by the Lincoln Police Department
commending the performance of city officers in regard to an unusual
situation and its eventual resolution.
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October
5, 2001
Kelly
McCraith
Tri-County
Special Education Association
812
Lincoln Avenue
Lincoln, IL 62656
Police
Chief Rich Montcalm
911
Pekin Street
Lincoln,
IL 62656
Dear
Police Chief Montcalm,
I
recently contacted the Department of Children and Family
Services regarding a homeless boy and was told that there
was little they could do. DCFS then suggested I call the
police department because there had been an arrest in the
case during the last weekend. Although I was uncertain that
this was the appropriate agency for this situation, I called
anyway. The dispatcher informed me that he would be sending
an officer over to talk to me. Officer Jackson and Officer
Kitner arrived shortly and listened thoroughly to my
concerns about this adolescent. They took my statement and
said that they would follow up on this case and inform me of
any findings.
The
next day Officer Jackson called to let me know of the action
taken. They had tracked down several of this boy’s family
members and friends in town to ensure that he had a place to
stay. They had also contacted the boy’s father in Chicago,
who may be taking custody of him. I felt as though they had
real compassion for this young man in need. The performance
of the two officers I worked with convinced me that the
professionalism in the Lincoln Police Department is
outstanding.
Sincerely,
Kelly
McCraith, SSP
School Psychologist |
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|
Today’s history
Compiled
by Dave Francis
Saturday,
Oct. 27
299th
day of the year
Quotes
"There
can be no 50-50 Americanism in this country. There is room here for
only 100 percent Americanism, only for those who are Americans and
nothing else." — Theodore Roosevelt
"Those
are my principles, and if you don’t like them... well, I have
others." — Groucho Marx (1890-1977)
Birthdays
1728
— James Cook, Scotland, captain and explorer, discovered Sandwich
Islands
1858
— Theodore Roosevelt, (Republican) 26th president (1901-09),
(Nobel, 1906)
1872
— Emily Post, authority on social behavior, writer (Etiquette)
1894
— Fritz Sauckel, German Nazi general of labor
1901
— Marlene Dietrich, German actress and entertainer
("Angel")
1939
— John Cleese, comedian and actor ("Monty Python,"
"Fawlty Towers")
1940
— Lee Greenwood, country singer ("God Bless the USA")
Events
B.C.
— Marcus Brutus, assassinated Julius Caesar, dies in Rome
625
— Honorius I begins his reign as Catholic pope
1775
— U.S. Navy established
1919
— U.S. Congress passes Volstead Act
1938
— DuPont announces its new synthetic fiber will be called
"nylon"
1941
— Chicago Daily Tribune editorializes there will not be war with
Japan
1947
— "You Bet Your Life," with Groucho Marx, premieres on
ABC radio
1978
— Begin and Sadat win Nobel Peace Prize
1997
— U.S. releases a redesigned $50 bill
Sunday,
Oct. 28
300th
day of the year
Quotes
"I
feel that the greatest reward for doing is the opportunity to do
more." — Dr. Jonas Salk
"Tell
The Truth" — Instruction sent by telegram from Grover
Cleveland to his campaign committee, which had been asked to comment
on his fathering an illegitimate child.
Birthdays
1810
— Brig. Gen. Adley H. Gladden, Louisiana, killed at Shiloh
1914
— Dr. Jonas Salk, New York City, medical researcher, made polio a
fear of the past
1926
— Bowie Kuhn, baseball commissioner (1969-1984)
1936
— Charlie Daniels, country music star ("The Devil Went Down
to Georgia")
1949
— Bruce Jenner, U.S. decathalete (Olympic gold-medal winner, 1976)
1955
— Bill Gates, billionaire CEO (Microsoft)
Events
1492
— Christopher Columbus discovers Cuba
1636
— Harvard University (Boston) established
1704
— John Locke, English philosopher ("Two Treatises of
Government"), dies at 72
1776
— Battle of White Plains; Washington retreats to New Jersey
1793
— Eli Whitney applies for a patent on the cotton gin
1886
— Statue of Liberty dedicated by President Grover Cleveland and
celebrated with the first confetti (ticker tape) parade in New York
City
1904
— St. Louis police try a new investigation method: fingerprints
1962
— Khrushchev orders withdrawal of missiles from Cuba, ending
crisis
1965
— Gateway Arch (630 feet high) completed in St Louis, Mo.
|
|
America
strikes back
As
promised, the United States led an attack on Afghanistan. The attack
began Sunday, Oct. 7. American and British military forces made 30 hits on
air defenses, military airfields and terrorist training camps,
destroying aircraft and radar systems. The strike was made targeting
only terrorists.
|
More
than 40 countries in Africa, Asia, Europe and the Middle East have
pledged their cooperation and support the U.S. initiative.
Online
news links
Other
countries
Afghanistan
http://www.afghandaily.com/
http://www.myafghan.com/
http://www.afghan-web.com/aop/
China
http://english.peopledaily.com.cn/
http://www1.chinadaily.com.cn/
Germany
http://www.faz.com/
India
http://www.dailypioneer.com/
http://www.hindustantimes.com/
http://www.timesofindia.com/
Israel
http://www.jpost.com/
http://www.haaretzdaily.com/
England
http://www.thetimes.co.uk/
http://www.guardian.co.uk/
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/
http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/
Pakistan
http://www.dawn.com/
http://frontierpost.com.pk/
Russia
http://english.pravda.ru/
http://www.sptimesrussia.com/
Saudi Arabia
http://www.arabnews.com/
[to top of second column in
this section]
|
United
States
Illinois
http://www.suntimes.com/index/
http://www.chicagotribune.com/
http://www.pantagraph.com/
http://www.qconline.com/
http://www.pjstar.com/
http://www.sj-r.com/
http://www.herald-review.com/
http://www.southernillinoisan.com/
New
York
http://www.nypost.com/
http://www.nytimes.com/
Stars
and Stripes
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Announcements
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Schedule
set for street closings
for railroad crossing repair
[OCT.
29, 2001] The
schedule for railroad crossing closings in downtown Lincoln to allow
Union Pacific to install new crossings has been set, according to
Donnie Osborne, street superintendent. In order for five crossings
to be repaired yet this year, two will be closed at one time, but
they will not be adjacent, he said. Each closing will be for one
week only, unless weather conditions delay the work.
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Pekin
and Clinton streets — Closed week of Oct. 29
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Decatur
and Pulaski streets — Closed week of Nov. 5
-
Broadway
Street — Closed week of Nov. 12
Osborne said repairs will
include new concrete panels and new approaches, which should
eliminate the bumpy crossings motorists have been experiencing
lately. The Tremont Street crossing has already been completed.
[Joan
Crabb]
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Landfill
to be open seven days a week for leaf and brush disposal
[OCT.
12, 2001] The
city landfill on Broadwell Drive will be open seven days a week from
8 a.m. to 4 p.m. for leaf and brush disposal, beginning on Oct. 15,
according to Donnie Osborne, street superintendent. Plans are to
keep the new schedule in place until Dec. 15, he said.
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