Today’s history

Compiled by Dave Francis

Tuesday, Oct. 23

295th day of the year

Quotes

"Never continue in a job you don’t enjoy. If you’re happy in what you’re doing, you’ll like yourself, you’ll have inner peace. And if you have that, along with physical health, you will have had more success than you could possibly have imagined." — Johnny Carson

"A single death is a tragedy, a million deaths is a statistic." — Joseph Stalin

Birthdays

1905 — Felix Bloch, U.S. physicist (Nobel, 1952)

1925 — Johnny Carson, Corning, Iowa, comedian ("The Tonight Show," "Who Do You Trust?")

1935 — Chi Chi Rodriguez, golfer (PGA Seniors, 1987)

1956 — Dwight Yoakam, country singer ("If There Was a Way")

1959 — "Weird Al" Yankovic, parody singer ("Eat It," "UHF," "Naked Gun")

1962 — Doug Flute, WFL-NFL quarterback (Generals, Bears, Patriots)

Events

1939 — Zane Grey, U.S. Western writer ("The Spirit of the Border"), dies at 67

1941 — Walt Disney’s "Dumbo" released

1942 — During World War II, Britain launches major offensive at El Alamein, Egypt

1944 — Soviet army invades Hungary

1945 — Jackie Robinson signs Montreal Royal contract

1950 — Al Jolson [Asa Yoelson], singer and actor ("The Jazz Singer"), dies at 64

1983 — Suicide terrorist truck bomb kills 243 U.S. personnel in Beirut

 


Identifying homes and buildings of historic, architectural and cultural significance

[OCT. 22, 2001]  The city of Lincoln’s Historic Homes and Buildings Committee had its regular meeting on Monday, Oct. 15, in the office of Mayor Beth Davis.

The committee finalized plans for two workshops designed to educate participants on sources of information available for research of properties in Lincoln. "Follow the Information Trail" will be presented at the Lincoln Public Library on Jan. 8, 2002, from 6:30 to 8 p.m.; a repeat of the workshop will be at the library on Jan. 15 from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m.

The committee continues to develop a list of criteria for identifying homes and buildings of historic, architectural and cultural significance.

The next meeting of the committee is at 5 p.m. Nov. 19 at City Hall.

[News release]

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Today’s history

Compiled by Dave Francis

Monday, Oct. 22

294th day of the year

Quotes

"Tune in, turn on, drop out." — Dr. Timothy Leary

"Forgive your enemies, but never forget their names." — John Fitzgerald Kennedy

Birthdays

1810 — Henry Bohlen, brigadier general (Union volunteers), died in 1862

1887 — John Reed, journalist who reported on Mexican, Russian revolutions

1920 — Timothy Leary, Harvard professor, LSD taker

Events

1721 — Czar Peter the Great becomes "All-Russian Emperor"

1746 — Princeton University (N.J.) received its charter

1836 — Sam Houston inaugurated as first elected president of Republic of Texas

1934 — Charles "Pretty Boy" Floyd shot dead by FBI in Ohio

1938 — First Xerox copy made

1962 — JFK addresses TV about Russian missile bases in Cuba

1962 — JFK imposes naval blockade on Cuba, beginning missile crisis

1981 — U.S. national debt tops $1 trillion

 


‘No question, things will be different’

Rep. Jonathan Wright speaks to local genealogical society

[OCT. 20, 2001]  State Rep. Jonathan Wright, Republican, of the 90th District of Illinois was the guest speaker at this month’s meeting of the Logan County Genealogical and Historical Society, held Monday at their storefront on Chicago Street in Lincoln.

Phyllis Bryson presided over the meeting, and Dorothy Gleason introduced Rep. Wright.

Wright began by briefly telling about his wife, his three daughters and his parents. His father is a retired history teacher, and his mother, who is very interested in genealogy, traced his family back to the American Revolution.

His topic for the evening was the events of Sept. 11, as he said that he did not feel that any speech given now could cover anything else. However, he took a different approach, a challenge.

"I think the challenge is yet before us as a country how it will change us. No question, it will change us. No question, things will be different. But it still lies within our control how we will be changed. We can be changed for the better; we can be changed for the worse. And that decision is not Osama bin Laden’s. That decision is not the decision of the al Qaeda. That decision is not the decision of the Taliban government in Afghanistan. That’s the decision that the American people as a nation have to make."

He then went on to describe how America has already changed. America is different now because we are in a war that is unlike any other war we have ever been in, with different battlefields and different tactics. We are attacking the enemy by freezing their assets, by taking away possible recruits because of the aid we are sending to the civilians in Afghanistan, and by bombing their bases.

"Yes," he said, "there are civilian casualties…But we’d better make sure that we understand that it’s not the fault of the United States of America. We didn’t drive a plane into the World Trade Center. And we didn’t hide the terrorists who did it." And he went on to say that it was those acts that caused this war, and all wars have civilian casualties. And this is a war that could continue for a long time.

Another change he spoke of was a change in our national security. He mentioned the new security measures in airports and how they may extend soon to other forms of mass transportation. He explained the concept of "racial profiling," which he described as not merely stopping someone because of their race ("That’s discrimination"), but combining certain "red flags" with their race gives a person enough reason to investigate further. He told the historical society of a law being discussed that would lessen the restrictions on wiretapping, expanding the time allowed and allowing taps to extend to multiple phones. He also said that there are changes in the economy, including more money spent on national security.

 

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The third change he addressed was a change in the priorities of the American people. The society is returning to the basic priorities left behind, "love of God, love of family, love of country." People now, instead of spending all of their time in selfish pursuits, are concentrating on what is truly important in life. He made it very clear that this is one way in which the change in American can be positive.

The last change he spoke of was fear. "The greatest battle we have before us is not Afghanistan. It’s not the Taliban government. It’s battling our own fear," he said. The terrorists want us to be afraid. But we cannot be crippled by it.

"The reason we’re battling with fear in this country is because we are looking to ourselves and our own strength for security." No person can guarantee complete safety.

He quoted from Abraham Lincoln’s "Proclamation Appointing a National Fast Day" on March 30, 1863:

"We have been the recipients of the choicest bounties of Heaven. We have been preserved, these many years, in peace and prosperity. We have grown in numbers, wealth and power, as no other nation has ever grown. But we have forgotten God. We have forgotten the gracious hand which preserved us in peace, and multiplied and enriched and strengthened us; and we have vainly imagined, in the deceitfulness of our hearts, that all these blessings were produced by some superior wisdom and virtue of our own. Intoxicated with unbroken success, we have become too self-sufficient to feel the necessity of redeeming and preserving grace, too proud to pray to the God that made us!"

He said that our greatest challenge is to remember that everything we have as a nation comes from God. "Will we succumb to fear, or will we rise to it…to prove ourselves to be the great nation that I know we are?"

[Gina Sennett]

 


Today's history

Compiled by Dave Francis

Saturday, Oct. 20

292nd day of the year

Quotes

"I still lack to a considerable degree that naturally superior kind of manner that I would dearly like to possess." — Heinrich Himmler (1900-1945)

"There’s a sucker born every minute." — P.T. Barnum (1810-1891)

Birthdays

1820 — Benjamin Franklin Cheatham, major general (Confederate Army)

1820 — George Jerrison Stannard, brigadier general of volunteers (Union Army)

1822 — Mansfield Lovell, major general (Confederate Army), died in 1884

1900 — Heinrich Himmler, head of Gestapo

1925 — Art Buchwald, Mount Vernon, N.Y., columnist and author ("Have I Ever Lied to You")

1930 — "Grandpa" Louis M. Jones, Niagara, Ky., country singer and banjoist ("Hee Haw")

1931 — Mickey Mantle, N.Y. Yankee, home run slugger (1956 Triple Crown)

1946 — Connie Chung, Washington, D.C., news anchor (NBC, CBS)

Events

1097 — First Crusaders arrive in Antioch

1803 — U.S. Senate ratifies the Louisiana Purchase

1864 — Lincoln formally establishes Thanksgiving as a national holiday

1873 — P.T. Barnum Hippodrome featuring "Greatest Show on Earth," opens (New York City)

1944 — U.S. forces under Gen. Douglas MacArthur return to the Philippines

1964 — Herbert Hoover, 31st president of U.S., dies in New York at 90

1968 — Jacqueline Kennedy marries Aristotle Onassis

1983 — IBM-PC DOS Version 2.1 released

 

Sunday, Oct. 21

293rd day of the year

Quotes

"I should arise and prepare myself and slay my enemies with their own weapons." — Nat Turner

"Cause the registration of all firearms on some pretext, with the view of confiscating them and leaving the population defenseless." — Vladimir Ilich Lenin

Birthdays

1833 — Alfred Bernhard Nobel, Stockholm, created dynamite and Nobel Peace Prizes

1928 — Edward "Whitey" Ford, Hall of Fame pitcher (N.Y. Yankees)

1949 — Benjamin Netanyahu, Israeli prime minister

Events

2137 B.C. — First recorded total eclipse of the sun, China

1797 — U.S. Navy frigate Constitution, "Old Ironsides," launched in Boston

1805 — Adm. Horatio Nelson dies in the Battle of Trafalgar

1831 — Nat Turner and associates die by hanging

1879 — Thomas Edison perfects the carbonized cotton filament light bulb

1916 — U.S. Army forms Reserve Officers Training Corps

1917 — First Americans see action on front lines of World War I

1917 — Communist Revolution led by Vladimir Lenin gains control of Russian capital

1975 — Mexico City’s first major subway accident takes 26 lives

1975 — Red Sox Carlton Fisk’s 12th-inning home run beats Reds 7-6 in Game 6 of World Series

1977 — Ronnie Van Zant, singer (Lynyrd Skynyrd Band), killed in plane crash

1977 — Stevie Gaines, guitarist (Lynyrd Skynyrd Band), killed in plane crash


City on sound financial
course, says treasurer

[OCT. 19, 2001]  The city of Lincoln is on a sound fiscal course, City Treasurer Lester Plotner told the City Council members at a recent meeting, after presenting the aldermen with a detailed report for the fiscal year ending April 30, 2001.

"As city treasurer, I believe the City Council operates within the framework of fiscally responsible perimeters, which allows many services to be provided without undue stress to the taxpayers in Lincoln," he said in his report.

"As most of you realize, you can’t be all things to all people when governing a city, but you can strive to serve the majority of the citizens in an efficient and reasonable manner.

"You must think about tomorrow when making decisions today which may affect the financial stability of the city of Lincoln," he said. "Council members should look to past fiscal patterns to make decisions about spending and suggested improvements," he added.

To help the aldermen understand these past fiscal patterns, Plotner presented them with reports on income and expenditures, complete with breakdowns of revenue and costs, graphs, summaries, and year-by-year comparisons.

The city’s general fund for the past fiscal year, 2001, went down when compared with previous years: $1,642,500 compared with the year 2000 total of $2,311,719. That was because last year the city completed a number of road rehabilitation projects, more than were done the year before, according to Melanie Riggs, deputy city clerk.

Last year the city also took a "double hit" on the payroll increases, Riggs said, because of salary increases for members of police, fire, street and alley, and clerical departments, increases that were not paid in fiscal year 2000 because the union contracts were not settled.

Special revenue funds, however, went up from last year: $1,316,000 in 2001 compared with $982,724 for 2000.

The enterprise fund was down from fiscal year 2000 and particularly from fiscal year 1999. The 2001 fund contained only $137,702, against $437,229 for the year 2000 and $2,151,763 for 1999. These funds, which come from sewerage revenues, were used for the west side sewer project and the beginning of the sewage treatment plant upgrade.

 

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Grants increased from $6,167 to $657,570, largely because of the downtown enhancement grant that paid for the renovation of downtown buildings.

Interest income increased from $968,724 in 1999-2000 to $1,262,206 for 2000-2001. However, Plotner has warned the council several times that interest rates are very low and will probably not rise in the near future, so the city should be prepared to see less revenue from this source. Plotner has been investing police and fire pension funds in Illinois Funds (previously the Illinois Public Treasurer’s Investment Pool), a state-run fund, when that fund has better interest rates than can be found at local banks.

Motor fuel tax funds, an important source of revenue, went up 7.9 percent last year, and state income tax funds, another important revenue source, were 3.2 percent higher than last year. Sales taxes, a third important source, increased $19,825 over last fiscal year. Plotner said that the state of the economy, less spending than usual and the lowering of the rate of tax by the state of Illinois for a period of time probably made this figure lower than it would otherwise have been.

In fiscal year 2001, the city got $43,638 in drug forfeiture funds, compared to zero dollars last year. This came from the Drug Task Force, which covers Lincoln and other communities in central Illinois.

Revenue sources that went down last fiscal year were building permits, a 26 percent decrease, and property taxes, a 1.9 percent decrease over the previous year.

Overall, the city spent 1.77 percent less money in fiscal year 2001 than in 2000, though more than was spent in 1999. Expenditures for 2001 were $9,960,723; for 2000 they were $10,140,811; and for 1999, $8,705,909.

[Joan Crabb]


Candlelight ceremony marks dedication of donations for New York City families

[OCT. 19, 2001]  A fund-raising effort that began with a moving ceremony on the courthouse lawn ended with an equally moving ceremony in the third-floor courtroom Thursday evening, when about 250 Logan County firefighters, paramedics and police officers saw the unveiling of a check for the families of their New York City "brothers and sisters" who died in the World Trade Center tragedy.

The check, for $32,540, represents something that Logan County Board Chairman Dick Logan was hoping for at the beginning of the fund drive but didn’t really expect, a dollar for every resident of the county.

 

It represents, too, the brotherhood felt by the rescue workers here with those in New York City who died trying to save the lives of others.

"All of us have a bond of brotherhood," said Norma Bathe, firefighter, EMT and 911 vice chairman from Hartsburg, who is also a fifth-grade teacher at Hartsburg-Emden School. "Our firefighters share the grief and sadness of those in New York City."

The generous contributions are also evidence of the renewed respect and appreciation Logan County residents feel for their own firefighters, paramedics and police, as well as their ability to come together in a crisis.

Lincoln Police Chief Rich Montcalm remembers how moved he was on Sept. 14 when the crowd at the outdoor ceremony on the north lawn of the courthouse began clapping and cheering as police, firefighters and paramedics began marching from City Hall to the courthouse.

"I hadn’t expected that emotion for law enforcement," he told the audience. "It was a new emotion of support."

"The community had extraordinarily come together. After the ceremony, I talked to a senior citizen who told me Lincoln always comes together when times get tough."

Perhaps, more than anything else, the Logan County contribution helps to prove that, although the terrorists destroyed American buildings and took American lives, they could not destroy American values.

"They brought us together more than they tore us apart," said Dan Fulscher, director of the Logan County Emergency Services and Disaster Agency and one of the organizers of the fund-raising drive.

"This was not just an attack on the World Trade Center or the Pentagon," state Rep. Jonathan Wright told the audience. "It was an attack on our values. Our enemies attacked the very thing they could never destroy."

Those who came to the courthouse Thursday evening were greeted by a huge, lighted American flag, seemingly hanging in midair across from the north lawn. Supported by a firetruck lift, the flag is a gift to the Lincoln Fire Department from businessman Gene Burwell.

 

The check presentation opened with a welcome by Norma Bathe and a candle-lighting ceremony, in which representatives from all the fire, rescue and police departments in the county came forward and lit a candle.

Representatives for Armington, Atlanta, Beason, Broadwell, Chestnut, Cornland, Elkhart, Emden, Hartsburg, Latham, Lincoln City, Lincoln Rural, Lincoln and Logan County government and ESDA, Logan County Paramedics Association, Logan County Sheriff’s Department and Auxiliary Police, Middletown, Mount Pulaski, New Holland, San Jose and Williamsville all lit candles.

 

 

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One candle, a black one in the center of the candelabrum, remained unlit. It stood for the firefighters who died in New York City.

Jim Turley, wearing traditional kilts, played "Amazing Grace" on the bagpipes, and Debbie Ross sang "America the Beautiful" and led the audience in singing "God Bless America" at the end of the program.

 

Jonathan Wright, who introduced the various speakers, said that Americans had witnessed the beginning of a war on Sept. 11, and he prayed for the day when Americans will be able to remember the end of this war, as they remember Armistice Day as the end of World War I and V-J Day as the end of World War II.

Dick Logan offered a prayer and then told the audience he was happy to see people helping each other the way they should. "I am proud to be part of Logan County," he said.

Logan County Circuit Court Clerk Carla Bender echoed his sentiments. "My heart is full of pride to be part of this community," she told the audience. The tragedy, she said, will make us love our family and community with a little more awareness. "We will hug our kids a little tighter and be nicer to our fellow citizens."

Steve Siltman, Logan County EMS, said the police, fire and EMS represent service, integrity and preparedness, and they work together with mutual respect.

"One way we can send a message to the Taliban is do as President Bush says, resume our normal lives. Sending assistance to the families of the fallen sends another message to the Taliban," he added.

"Thirty-eight days ago, a terrorist act took the lives of thousands of people, and hundreds of emergency workers perished and will never be forgotten. The lessons we learned are that we must prepare for the unthinkable and the unimaginable," said Mark Miller, representing the Lincoln Fire Department.

Lincoln Fire Chief Bucky Washam rang the fire bell, the "last alarm" in honor of the firefighters who died.

 

"Make no mistake, America is at war," Fulscher said. He told the crowd how moved he was when several women came to Wal-Mart and volunteered to set up chairs for the fund drive, and when "little kids with quarters" made their contributions.
"When we started fund-raising, Dick Logan said if we got $10,000 he would be elated. Well, we stormed past $10,000 and $20,000 to bring in $32,540," he said, before turning to ask Mary Ellen Bruns, Logan County treasurer, and Dianne Ruff, ESDA office manager, to unveil the giant facsimile of the check.

"Let us not just mark tonight by remembering," Wright said in closing. "Look forward, strive to bring honor to those who lost their lives, who kept responding without any hesitation, not knowing what was on the other side of the situation.

"Cling to the values that make this the greatest country on the face of the earth."

[Joan Crabb]


First bids to be let for new Central School

[OCT. 18, 2001]  The first set of bids for the new Central School construction will be opened on Nov. 20, and the District 27 board will have a special meeting Nov. 21 to accept the low bids.

The first five "packages" to be bid will be for grading and site preparation, site utilities, drilled piers, foundations, and concrete flatwork, according to architect Dave Leonatti and construction manager Bill Ahal.

A more-than-usual amount of site preparation must be done before Lincoln’s third Central School can be built behind the present Central School. The new school will face Seventh Street and will be located on roughly the same site the first Central School occupied.

The first Central School, built about 1867, shortly after the Civil War, was demolished and used as fill to level the ground after the second Central School, which faces Eighth Street, was built in 1915. Because of the fill and also because of generally poor soil conditions, the third Central School will have a drilled pier foundation to keep the building stabilized.

Piers will be sunk to various depths on the site, until they reach stable soil. Then the piers will be connected with reinforced concrete beams. The concrete floor will be poured on top of this foundation, Ahal said.

Before this can be done, the site must be cleared of tennis courts, fences and playground equipment, and the sewer line must be moved. The new 8-inch sewer, which will connect to the sewer line on Union Street, will be capable of serving both the old and the new Central Schools while they are both in operation, according to Leonatti.

The bids will be advertised in newspapers and industry outlets in central Illinois, including Bloomington, Peoria, Decatur, Champaign, Springfield and Lincoln. Leonatti said that if possible he will use local contractors, although he did not think there were Lincoln firms who would be able to do the foundation work.

Leonatti said he hopes to get some work done on the site before the end of the year. He told the board that drawings for the entire Central School project are 85 to 90 percent complete. Getting the bids out in the various packages is "to our advantage," he said, because some bids can be let soon, while contractors are looking for work and prices for materials are low.

Four student council officers from Washington-Monroe School, who were attending the meeting, were invited by board president Bruce Carmitchel to study the blueprints. Arielle Alley, president; Nickie Kodatt, vice president; Jessie Owen, secretary; and Kelsey Dallas, treasurer, took advantage of the opportunity to get a "sneak preview" of the plans for the new school.

Additional Title I grant funds received

Superintendent Robert Kidd announced that the district has had an additional Title I grant from the State Board of Education of $133,282. This, added to the original grant of $186,127, gives the district $319,409 for Title I.

 

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The board approved an agreement with the Illinois Historic Preservation Agency to preserve the history of the present Central School by means of photographs and other documents.

District may ‘lend’ outdated computers

The board also discussed how to handle disposal of outdated and unused computer equipment. According to law the school district cannot give such equipment away, and usually no one wants to buy it, so the board discussed whether they might "lend" outdated computers to other groups who might be able to use them, such as Christian Village and the Sunshine Before and After School Program. Superintendent Robert Kidd was authorized to put the computers up for sale; then, if no buyers respond, to lend them to other organizations.

District costs, salaries below state average

The board also approved making copies of the 2001 Illinois School Report Card available to students to take home to parents.

The report shows that in 1999-2000, District 27 spent less than the state average both for instructional expenses and operating expenses: $3,673 per pupil for instruction, compared with $4,425 for the state average, and $5,571 per pupil operating expenses, compared with the state average of $7,483.

The average teacher salary in District 27, $39,689, is less than the state average of $47,914; and the average administrator’s salary, $69,966, is less than the state average of $84,273.

Students meet state average on ISAT tests

Districtwide, the overall performance of elementary students last year on the Illinois Standards Achievement Test was average for the state. Dr. Kidd pointed out that the scores of special education students are included in these averages.

Throughout the district, third-grade students were about average in reading and writing and slightly lower in math, while fourth-grade students were several points above average in both science and social science.

In grade five, students were a little below average in reading and mathematics but above average in writing.

In grade seven, students lagged in both science and social science, while in grade eight students were just slightly below average in reading but slightly above average in mathematics and writing.

The regular meeting date for the board has been changed to Nov. 13, and a special meeting has been set for 6 p.m. Nov. 21 to accept bids for the first phases of the work on the new school.

[Joan Crabb]


Rep. Wright attends governor’s briefing on domestic preparedness

[OCT. 17, 2001]  State Rep. Jonathan Wright, R-Hartsburg, attended a briefing Monday on the state of Illinois’ preparedness for a potential terrorist attack.

Gov. George Ryan conducted the briefing in the wake of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks in New York, Washington, D.C., and Pennsylvania to update legislators and state and local officials on Illinois’ emergency response plan should a terrorist attack occur in our state. Rep. Wright said the governor’s main message was, "We are prepared."

"While our lives may never be the same following the tragic events of Sept. 11, local families should be reassured that our state emergency and health officials are on alert and prepared to respond to any terrorist threat in Illinois," Wright said.

Wright said the governor reported on the progress of the state’s Terrorism Task Force, created last year to assess the strengths and weaknesses within our response plan and to coordinate response efforts at the local level. The task force includes 64 special response teams, 32 of which are specially trained to respond to a biological, chemical or nuclear incident. Wright also noted that the state’s Department of Health has activated its statewide Health Alert Network so that any indication of biological or chemical threats can be immediately detected and reported.

 

[to top of second column in this article]

On the Monday the governor also proposed additional measures to increase preparedness statewide, including a series of regional training seminars to be conducted by the Illinois Emergency Management Agency for local government and residents, and a soon-to-be-announced emergency spending package to help identify and address security needs in cities and rural areas.

"While it’s impossible to be completely prepared for any possible type of attack a terrorist could devise, I’m confident that the state is doing everything possible to safeguard the public," Wright concluded. "And we must remember that the best way we can all help defeat the terrorist threat is to simply go on with our daily lives."

[News release from Rep. Jonathan Wright]


Logan County Board

Final budget meeting set for Oct. 25; zoning issue returns to appeals board

[OCT. 17, 2001]  Facing a deficit of approximately half a million dollars in its fiscal year 2002 budget, the Logan County Board voted Tuesday night to ask all officeholders and department heads to review their budgets for possible cuts. Board members will meet with their auditor at 7 p.m., Oct. 25, in the first-floor boardroom to set figures in the approximately $5 million budget. Final action will be taken at the November board meeting.

Additions to the proposed budget discussed Tuesday night include a 3.4 percent increase in the Oasis and CIEDC portions of the senior citizens tax, $3,000 each for extra part-time help for the board’s secretary and the county treasurer, $12,000 in additional requests for the Logan County Health Department and $23,333 for non-union salary increases of 3.4 percent. Tentative deletions include $15,000 previously slated for economic development, $147,500 for county offices and $10,000 for a 4x4 for ESDA.

After reviewing these and other changes requested since Thursday’s work session, Finance Committee Chairman Rod White said, "We’re still faced with a deficit budget of about $500,000." In the first year the county is fortunate enough to have a surplus, and no personnel or programs will be eliminated, he said, but if the deficit continues for a second year, board members will have to consider cuts.

White also pointed out that the tentative budget contains no money for extra security or for new economic development initiatives. A memo read at the meeting announced formation of a Homeland Security Committee consisting of Sheriff Tony Soloman, board Chairman Dick Logan, Law Enforcement Committee Chairman Doug Dutz and Insurance Committee Chairman Dale Voyles. The committee is charged with improving security in the seven county buildings. In addition, Logan County Economic Development Director Mark Smith announced an informational meeting at Lincoln College on Oct. 24. The meeting, to be at 7 p.m. in the McKinstry Library lecture room, will present a proposal for economic development.

In a zoning matter, an issue on which a straw vote was taken at Thursday night’s meeting was returned to the Zoning Board of Appeals. Amending a motion by Planning and Zoning Committee Chairman David Hepler, the board voted 7-6 to return to the appeals board Carol Litwiller’s request to rezone 2.1 acres of agricultural land so it can be divided for building two homes. Voting in favor of the amendment were Roger Bock, Paul Gleason, Dick Logan, Gloria Luster, Dale Voyles, Terry Werth and Rod White, while Tom Cash, Doug Dutz, Jim Griffin, David Hepler and Clifford Sullivan opposed it.

Normal procedure is for the Planning and Zoning Committee to hear a zoning request first, but Litwiller was unable to attend the scheduled meeting. The appeals board then considered the case and voted 5-0 to deny the request. Later it was discovered that the term of one appeals board member, Wilbur Paulus, had expired in December 2000.

 

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County Board member Cash charged that the "Zoning Board of Appeals acted more or less out of order" when it met before the Planning and Zoning Committee had acted. State’s Attorney Tim Huyett said that while hearings by both bodies are required, the reversed order was not necessarily illegal. Voyles made the motion to send the issue back to the appeals board.

Later in the meeting board Chairman Dick Logan’s reappointment of Paulus to the Logan County Zoning Board of Appeals was approved by an 11-2 margin, with Dutz and Griffin opposing. The five-year term was made retroactive to December 2000. Paulus has served on the appeals board since 1970.

Two other appointments were unanimously approved. Judith S. Emrick will fill L.K. Buckles’s unexpired term on the Housing Authority of Logan County. Buckles resigned the position. Alderman Dave Armbrust will serve on the Regional Planning Commission. At the request of Mayor Beth Davis, Armbrust replaces fellow Alderman Michael Montcalm, who was unable to attend the meetings.

A unanimous vote authorized Airport Chairman Roger Bock to bid on a tractor and bat-wing mower at an Illinois Department of Transportation surplus sale Oct. 25.

ESDA Director Dan Fulscher said that police are to be trained Wednesday to collect and seal suspicious mail. Sheriff Tony Soloman and Police Chief Rich Montcalm will determine case by case whether there is a credible threat and, if so, send the sample to a lab for testing. Fulscher echoed Soloman, "Let’s not succumb to panic."

County resident Pete Fredericks protested to the board about having to pay for a second septic system permit when the first system, installed according to Logan County Health Department dictates, failed in 2½ years. Fredericks said he did not put undue demand on the system. "There are only two of us and the dog," he said, "and we make the dog go outdoors." Fredericks was advised to consult the Health Department board.

Regional Superintendent of Schools George Janet and Logan County Supervisor of Assessments Rosanne Brosamer have moved into the Dr. John Logan County Building, according to board member Terry Werth. He thanked Soloman for assisting in the move.

Board member Paul Gleason reported his work on computerizing information contained in county documents from the 1850s and ’60s. He said he will make copies of relevant documents for display in county offices.

[Lynn Shearer Spellman]


Gifts to benevolent fund will be dedicated Thursday

[OCT. 17, 2001]  A candlelight service at 7 p.m. Thursday will dedicate money collected for the benevolent fund for the families of New York City emergency workers killed in the terrorist attack. Members of the police and fire departments and Emergency Services Disaster Agency will participate, and the public is invited to the service, to be in the third-floor courtroom at the Logan County Courthouse.


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/ 

 

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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
(serving the U.S. military community)

http://www.estripes.com/ 

Washington, D.C.

http://www.whitehouse.gov/

http://www.washingtonpost.com/

http://www.washtimes.com/

 

More newspaper links

http://www.thepaperboy.com/ 


Announcements

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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