Union
lawsuit seeks to stop LDC closure
[JAN.
8, 2002] Monday saw a new step in the fight against Lincoln
Developmental Center’s closing.
The American Federation of State, County and Municipal
Employees (AFSCME) filed a lawsuit in the Logan County Circuit Court
in Lincoln to keep Gov. George Ryan from closing LDC.
|
The
suit filed by AFSCME Council 31, which represents the nearly 700 LDC
employees, gives two reasons why Gov. Ryan cannot legally close the
center. The first part of the suit asserts that, since the
Illinois General Assembly appropriated funding for LDC for the
entire fiscal year, then the center cannot be closed until June 30,
when the budget officially expires. The second part of the
suit asserts that no health care facility can be closed without a
permit from the State Health Facilities Planning Board because the
closing would mean a change in state-provided health care.
[to top of second column in this
article]
|
“The
purpose of our lawsuit,” states AFSCME Regional Director Kent
Beauchamp, “is to block the unilateral action that the Governor is
threatening to take to close this facility, an action which we
believe to be illegal. It is also intended to give the General
Assembly time to reaffirm its commitment to LDC by once again
adopting a budget—this time for the upcoming fiscal year that
begins on July 1, 2002—that includes full funding for this
facility.”
A
press conference was held by the plaintiffs to announce their suit.
Plaintiffs consist of AFSCME (represented by Kent Beauchamp and
local president Don Todd), Sen. Larry Bomke (R-Springfield) and
Eleanor and Norlan Newmister (parents of an LDC resident).
[LDN]
|
|
City council
report
[JAN.
8, 2002] At
Monday night’s largely routine Lincoln City Council meeting, the
announcements overshadowed the votes.
|
First,
Mayor Beth Davis announced a rally in support of Lincoln
Developmental Center at 10 a.m., Saturday, Jan. 12. AFCSME is
sponsoring the rally at the Lincoln Community High School
auditorium. Davis also noted that two hearings on LDC are scheduled
for this week, one in Chicago on Tuesday, Jan. 8 and an Illinois
Senate hearing on Thursday, Jan. 10.
Second,
the Lincoln Sewage Treatment Plant has been chosen to receive the
2001 George W. Burke Safety Award. Plant Manager Grant Eaton said
this is an unusual honor, awarded to only one person or group in the
state of Illinois per year. Presentation of the Burke Safety Award
will be made in the spring.
Mayor
Davis announced two free workshops to guide participants in
researching the history of homes and other buildings. The workshops,
sponsored by the Lincoln Historic Preservation of Homes and
Structures Commission, will be conducted Tuesday, Jan. 8 from 6:30
to 8 p.m. and Tuesday, Jan. 15 from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. at the
Lincoln Public Library.
Also
at the city council meeting, the mayor and her department heads
submitted their six-month reports. In Davis’s case, it was
actually a nine-month report. She claimed three commissions
established during her nine-month tenure: the Lincoln Mayor’s
Commission on Disabilities, Minorities, Seniors, Veterans and Youth;
the historic preservation commission and the Lincoln
Sesquicentennial Commission to plan the Aug. 27, 2003 celebration of
the city’s 150th anniversary.
Receipt
of a $28,900 grant to be used for a youth violence prevention
program conducted through the schools was a key point in Police
Chief Rich Montcalm’s police department report. He also emphasized
formation of the 16-member emergency response team equipped with
infrared rifles and protective gear. Montcalm said the team was
implemented in a couple of drug busts where the situations were
judged to be dangerous. After police obtain a warrant, the procedure
calls for the emergency response team to secure the building before
the arresting officers enter.
[to top of second column in this
article]
|
Fire
Department Chief Bucky Washam reported work on systematizing the
training program and the procedures manual. He said the six
firefighters who toured Ground Zero in New York and attended
ceremonies there paid their own expenses for the four-day trip. City
Engineer Mark Mathon said he is pursuing grants for the sewage
treatment plant upgrade. Work on Union Street is finished. The Primm
Road and Wyatt Avenue project is done except for some black dirt to
be added, leveled and landscaped in the spring. Bids for resurfacing
North Kickapoo from Keokuk to Lincoln Parkway will be let in April
for work to be done in the summer of 2002.
Zoning
Officer Les Last said that he is trying to speed follow-up on
reports of nuisances and building violations. Two volunteers help to
report the property violations.
The
street department is planning to upgrade downtown sidewalks, ramps
and business entrances. Mayor Beth Davis is seeking disabilities
funding for part of the project.
City
Attorney Bill Bates said that, at the direction of the Streets and
Alleys and Finance committees, he is modifying the Illinois
Municipal League policy on employee drug and alcohol testing to
create a zero tolerance policy. That is, employees may be fired
after one positive drug test. Samples taken are split, however, and
an employee can ask for a second test using the other part of the
sample. If the second test does not support the first, the positive
test is cancelled, and the employee does not have to pay for the
re-test. The council has not yet voted on the policy.
Union
contracts for city fire, police and streets and alleys employees
expire May 1. Bates asked committee members to prepare recommended
contract changes to take to the bargaining table.
Votes
taken during the meeting were routine acceptance of reports and
bills.
[Lynn
Shearer Spellman]
|
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Police
release sketch of bank robbery suspect
[JAN.
8, 2002]
|
|
Police
have released a sketch of the bank robbery suspect (shown here,
left).
No
further details have been released about the brazen daytime robber
who hit the Sangamon Street branch of the State Bank of Lincoln on
Friday, Dec. 28.
|
|
|
Part
6
A year in review
World
and national events hit home big in 2001 as
everyday challenges and victories unfolded and prevailed
[JAN.
8, 2002] For
the people in Logan County, like those everywhere else in the
nation, the defining event of the year 2001 was Sept. 11. Logan
County’s response to the tragedy was not one of hate and fear, but
instead a message of hope and healing. Many gathered on the
courthouse lawn on Sept. 14 to honor the New York rescue workers who
gave their lives to save the lives of others as well as to honor
their own police officers, firefighters and rescue workers. Many
also contributed to the fund-raising effort by county emergency
workers to help the families of the New York fire, police and rescue
personnel who died at the World Trade Center. And many found a new
definition of hero — not an entertainer with a multimillion-dollar
salary, but a man or woman, maybe one who lives next door, doing a
job that needs to be done to help others.
However,
other news also happened in Logan County throughout this
unforgettable year. Here is our roundup of some of the more
important and interesting local matters.
|
[Click here for a
review of local events in January and February 2001]
[Click here for
March and April events]
[Click here for May
and June events]
[Click here for July
events]
[Click here for
August and September events]
[Click here for
October and November events]
DECEMBER
With an average
temperature of 46.5 F, the Midwest experienced its warmest November
on the climate record, which dates back to 1895, shattering the 1931
record by 1.5 degrees, according to the Midwestern Regional Climate
Center located at the Illinois State Water Survey in Champaign. Four
states set records for highest monthly average temperatures: Iowa
(47.3), Michigan (43.7), Wisconsin (42.9), and Minnesota (40.8).
It
was also the third warmest November in Illinois (49.4), Indiana
(49.0), and Ohio (47.8); fourth warmest in Missouri (50.7); and
fifth warmest in Kentucky (51.5).
Three-year
Main Street Lincoln Director Wendy Bell announced that she will
leave the Lincoln program in January, 2002, to accept a position
with the state of Illinois Main Street program as program associate.
Some of the highlights of her leadership have included the
restoration of Scully Park, the completed mural on the back of the
Neal Tire building, the restoration of the sculpture of the Indian
Maiden and the first official City of Lincoln Christmas Ornaments,
now in its third year as a collectible series.
Jonathan
Wright, R-Hartsburg, announced that he would not run for a seat in
the Illinois House of Representative next term. Wright could have
run in either the 87th or the 100th District. He lives in what will
be the 87th District, but because the 100th District in the new
Democratic-drawn legislative map contains part of the current 90th
District, he was eligible to run there as well. Wright said his
conservative philosophy will be represented in the 87th district by
incumbent Bill Mitchell, R-Forsythe, and in the 100th District by
Rich Brauer, a newcomer from Petersburg. Brauer challenges incumbent
Gwenn Klingler in the March 19 Republican primary election. Wright
was appointed last summer to fill the unexpired term of John Turner
of Atlanta, who accepted a seat on the Illinois Appellate Court.
All
but one of the six new Logan County Board districts will have
contests in the March 19 Republican primary. Four Republicans vie
for the opportunity to challenge incumbent Sheriff Tony Solomon. The
close of filing on Dec. 17 also showed two Republican candidates in
both the regional superintendent of schools and District 100 General
Assembly races.
Republicans
James J. Pinney, Henry Bartman, Robert J. Brandt and Steven G.
Nichols will oppose Sheriff Tony Solomon, a Democrat, in November.
In the new General Assembly District 100, which includes Lincoln and
southwestern Logan County, Gwenn Klingler of Springfield and Rich
Brauer are the two Republican candidates. Vying for regional
superintendent of schools in Logan, Mason and Menard counties are
Jean R. Anderson of Lincoln and Robert P. Turk of Topeka. Incumbent
George Janet has announced his retirement.
In
countywide races, County Clerk Sally Litterly and Treasurer Mary
Bruns, both Republicans, face no opposition in either party. Neither
does Bill Mitchell, a Republican from Forsyth, running in General
Assembly District 87, which includes the majority of Logan County.
[to top of second column in this
article]
|
For
the county board, which will elect representatives by districts
rather than at-large, six districts of approximately equal
population have been created. Each will elect two board members.
Candidates include 20 Republicans and one Democrat. In District 5,
the four candidates include three current board members: Jim
Griffin, Clifford "Sonny" Sullivan and Dale A. Voyles.
Opposing them for the GOP slots is Patrick L. O’Neill. In District
6, there are three candidates for the two seats, all Republicans:
incumbent Paul E. Gleason plus William "Mitch" Brown and
Veronica Board Hasprey. In District 3, incumbents Tom Cash and
Gloria Luster, both appointed in 2001 to fill vacancies, will
compete with John L. Stewart for the two Republican slots. Democrat
Harold G. Dingman will be the Democratic opponent in the November
general election. The District 4 field of Republican candidates
includes incumbents Terry "TW" Werth and David R. Hepler
and challengers Stephan A. Mesner and Julia Pegram Gerardot. In
District 2, incumbents Richard E. "Dick" Logan and Roger
W. Bock face Scott E. Doerr and Robert D. Farmer in the Republican
primary. District 1 has no contest, with only Republicans Charles E.
Ruben and incumbent Lloyd Hellman filing. Two of the current 13
Logan County Board members are retiring at the end of their current
term, Finance Committee Chairman Rod White and Law Enforcement and
ESDA Chairman Doug Dutz.
The
Lincoln City Council passed an ordinance that will put new sewer
rates into effect as of Jan. 1, 2002. The two-step plan will raise
rates for city residents from $11 a month to $14 a month for the
first 18 months. After 18 months, unless the city gets additional
money for the $9.8 million sewer plant upgrade, fees will go up to
$16.39 a month. Commercial, industrial and institutional rates will
also rise under a complicated formula that will increase fees
considerably for many.
Both
the City Council and the Logan County Board agreed to extend the
present enterprise zone along I-55 to Elkhart, to the new power
plant that will be built by Corn Belt energy. Corn Belt officials
said that not only will the plant bring new jobs to the area, it may
also open new possibilities for using Illinois coal. The
environmentally friendly concept plant will use a new low-emission
boiler system to reduce nitrous oxide, a greenhouse gas that
contributes to global warming, and scrubbers to reduce sulfur
dioxide emissions. If the plant succeeds in reducing emissions as
expected, it will give utilities a new way to burn Illinois coal and
still meet strict clean-air standards, and Illinois may once again
begin using its huge coal reserves, Corn Belt officials said.
Among
the heartwarming Christmas stories, for the second year in a row Erv
Guyett, owner of Collision Concepts, gave a car to a local person
who truly needed one. Susan Cotton, who had been walking to her new
job every day, got a 1990 Buick Century. The car had been repaired
with about $1,000 worth of parts donated by Graue Motors.
Carroll Catholic School won the $5,000 in the Ho Ho Dough
drawing, thanks to parents and friends who donated tickets.
Principal Mrs. Mahler held the winning ticket.
In
a daring daylight robbery at State Bank of Lincoln’s Sangamon
Street location, a lone felon advised a bank teller that he had a
gun in his pocket and demanded she empty her cash drawer just before
closing time. The man, described only as tall and thin, never
produced a weapon during the brief robbery. The bank employee was
able to trigger a silent alarm, but the man had fled before Lincoln
Police could get there.
By
the end of the year, the threatened closure of Lincoln Developmental
Center had not yet occurred, with Gov. Ryan saying he would make up
his mind sometime in January. Parents of the residents continued to
meet and to urge Ryan to keep the facility open, saying it is a good
home for their loved ones. State Rep. Jonathan Wright, U. S. Rep.
Ray LaHood, other politicians and area business and civic leaders
have supported keeping LDC open. Signs saying “We support LDC”
have sprung up in many Lincoln yards. Ryan has moved more than 100
residents to other facilities to increase the staff-resident ratio
and sent a 27-man team of inspectors to assess whether LDC is
meeting state and federal health and safety guidelines. Although
state officials said LDC is still out of compliance in some areas,
the $17 million federal funding was restored at the end of December,
giving some hope to those in the area that the more than
100-year-old institution still has a future in Lincoln.
[Joan
Crabb]
|
|
Today’s history
Compiled
by Dave Francis
|
Tuesday, Jan. 8
8th
day of the year
Quotes
"If
we find the answer to that, it would be the ultimate triumph of
human reason — for then we would know the mind of God." —
Stephen Hawking
"Israel
is still the only country in the world against which there is a
written document to the effect that it must disappear." —
Menachem Begin
Birthdays
1862
— Frank Nelson Doubleday, publisher, founder of Doubleday &
Co.
1891
— Bronislava Nijinska, ballet choreographer
19--
— Fernand Petiot, bartender at Harry’s New York Bar in Paris,
created the Bloody Mary
19--
— Hans Von Bulow, murder suspect (Sunny Von Bulow)
1902
— Georgy M. Malenkov, Stalin’s successor as head of CPSU, prime
minister (1953-55)
1933
— Charles Osgood, New York City, news anchor ("CBS Weekend
News")
1935
— Elvis Aaron Presley, Tupelo, Miss., singer
1941
— Graham Chapman, England, comedian ("Monty Python’s Flying
Circus")
1942
— Stephen Hawking, English physicist ("Black Holes and Baby
Universes")
1947
— David Bowie [Jones], London, singer and actor
Events
1324
— Marco Polo, Venetian explorer and governor of Nanking, dies
1499
— Louis XII of France after papal divorce marries Anne
1675
— First American commercial corporation chartered (N.Y. Fishing
Co.)
1838
— First telegraph message sent using dots and dashes (New Jersey)
1889
— First computer patented
1926
— Abdul-Aziz ibn Sa’ud becomes king of Hejaz; renames it Saudi
Arabia
1954
— Elvis Presley pays $4 to a Memphis studio and records his first
two songs
1962
— Golfer Jack Nicklaus, 21, first pro appearance; came in 50th
1976
— Chou En-lai, China’s prime minister (1949-76), dies of cancer
in Beijing at 78
1992
— Menachim Begin, Israeli prime minister, dies at 78 of a heart
attack
1994
— Harvey Haddix, pitcher (pitched game of 12 perfect innings),
dies at 68
1996
— Francois Mitterrand, president of France (1981-95), dies of
cancer at 79
|
|
|
Part
5
A year in review
World
and national events hit home big in 2001 as
everyday challenges and victories unfolded and prevailed
[JAN.
7, 2002] For
the people in Logan County, like those everywhere else in the
nation, the defining event of the year 2001 was Sept. 11. Logan
County’s response to the tragedy was not one of hate and fear, but
instead a message of hope and healing. Many gathered on the
courthouse lawn on Sept. 14 to honor the New York rescue workers who
gave their lives to save the lives of others as well as to honor
their own police officers, firefighters and rescue workers. Many
also contributed to the fund-raising effort by county emergency
workers to help the families of the New York fire, police and rescue
personnel who died at the World Trade Center. And many found a new
definition of hero — not an entertainer with a multimillion-dollar
salary, but a man or woman, maybe one who lives next door, doing a
job that needs to be done to help others.
However,
other news also happened in Logan County throughout this
unforgettable year. Here is our roundup of some of the more
important and interesting local matters.
|
[Click here for a
review of local events in January and February 2001]
[Click here for
March and April events]
[Click here for May
and June events]
[Click here for July
events]
[Click here for
August and September events]
OCTOBER
In
October, it was a local story that shocked Logan County residents,
when the news came to light that a federal inspection of the Lincoln
Developmental Center put the facility in danger of losing its
certification and 700 workers in danger of losing jobs if LDC
closed. The $17 million in federal money LDC would lose is half its
$35 million budget. Inspectors cited a shortage of workers, a lack
of training for those workers and three incidents in which
patients’ health was endangered.
Gov.
George Ryan ordered a series of reforms, including moving 90
residents from the 370-bed facility to other state facilities for
the developmentally disabled and beginning a series of 30-day
assessments of LDC. Administrative changes were also made, with Gwen
Thornton, a former state prison warden, replaced as LDC director by
Peggy Davidsmeyer, who has had 30 years experience working with the
developmentally disabled.
Members
of AFSCME and a group of parents of LDC residents protested moving
residents for whom LDC has been home for a number of years. State
lawmakers, local groups and individuals expressed their desire to
keep LDC open and many, like the Lincoln-Logan Chamber of Commerce,
began letter-writing campaigns. The parents group pleaded with Gov.
Ryan not to close the institution, saying LDC has not recently had
the staff and the leadership needed to operate at its best and
suggesting that the state wants to close LDC basically for financial
reasons. Gov. Ryan said he was thinking only of the welfare of the
residents.
In
other news in October, the Lincoln City Council learned that
construction of Phase 1 of Brainard Landing, an affordable apartment
complex to be developed at 21st and State streets, may begin as
early as March of next year. Phase 1 will include four of the eight
planned housing units and cost about $45 million. The entire 56
units in the finished development will be rented to those at or
below median income — in the $18,000 to $36,000 range, depending
on family size.
Logan
County ESDA and LEPC successfully completed an exercise that tested
emergency reaction to release of a hazardous material, in this case
chlorine, from the Illinois American Water Company treatment plant
at 1730 North Jefferson Street. Firefighters and police officers
turned out to protect the community from the potentially lethal gas
and stop the leak. State observers from Illinois Emergency
Management Agency agreed that the county was capable of implementing
their hazardous materials plan.
Facing
a deficit of approximately half a million dollars in its fiscal year
2002 budget, the county board voted to ask all officeholders and
department heads to review their budgets for possible cuts in the
approximately $5 million budget. Budget chairman Rodney White
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.
On
the heels of a sellout of its first classic film offering, the Logan
County Arts Association planned its next event, a classical Spanish
guitar performance by Christian Culleton at Trinity Episcopal
Church. Association President Marshall Jacobs reported a meeting at
which a "workable framework" for transfer of the Lincoln
Cinema’s theater to the Lincoln/Logan Chamber of Commerce was
devised. He said plans are for the arts association to restore the
interior of the building with office space on the second floor. Work
would start after GKC has completed a new theater complex, probably
in the fall of 2002.
A
check for $32,540 for the families of firefighters, paramedics and
police officers who died in the World Trade Center terrorist attack
was unveiled at a candlelight ceremony at the Logan County
courthouse. The funds were raised by county firefighters, paramedics
and police officers, who held fund drives at their local fire
stations.
Development
of a proposed 63-acre industrial park north of town could bring the
Lincoln/Logan County area many financial benefits, but first the
community must commit to supporting the project, according to Mark
Smith, economic development director. Members of the Lincoln/Logan
County Economic Development Council have been seeking a site for an
industrial park for the past 18 months and now have an option to
purchase 63.5 acres at Business 55 and Kruger Road, between the
north Interstate 55 interchange and the Logan County Airport, for
$678,000, he told a group assembled in the Lincoln College Library
lecture room. The creation of the industrial park hinges on getting
community support to finance the project, which will add up to a
total investment of $3.1 to $3.3 million. Smith said he was looking
for some future commitment from the city and the county board.
The
Indian Maiden statue, now repaired, was returned to the lawn of the
Logan County courthouse, this time on the south side, in a ceremony
much like the first dedication ceremony 95 years ago, when the
statue was first presented to the town by the Lincoln Women’s
Club. Club member Burnetta “Bernie” DePuy was commended for her
work in the fundraising effort to repair the marble statue.
In
sports news, the Lady Railers volleyball team advanced to the
sectional championship match by beating Effngham two games to one,
after losing the first game 12-15.
[to top of second column in this
article]
|
NOVEMBER
The on-again,
off-again status of Casey’s General Store coming to a Fifth Street
location in Lincoln is now on for good. By a vote of 8-2, the
Lincoln City Council agreed to vacate an unused alley so the firm
can build a facility at 314 South Jefferson Street, across from the
Postville Courthouse. A title search showed that the alley belonged
to the city but had not been used or maintained. Casey’s will
begin building in the spring.
The city council also
learned that what was planned as one of the city’s chief tourist
attractions, a drink from the Lincoln Well across from the historic
Postville Courthouse on Fifth Street, may not be possible because
the well has serious contamination problems. County Board member
Terry Werth said the well has been pumped out three times, and each
time it fills up the water is found to be contaminated with bacteria
from human or animal waste. Werth said one solution might be to
drill the well deeper in the existing hole, then line the well with
a metal shield to prevent groundwater from seeping in.
Abraham
Lincoln Memorial Hospital has opened a new area for patients
receiving outpatient care. The new same-day care area features
private patient rooms in a newly refurbished area. ALMH has also
joined the Regional TeleBurn Network being launched by Memorial
Medical Center and Southern Illinois University School of Medicine,
both in Springfield. The network will make possible improved early
treatment of burn victims at ALMH by establishing a real-time,
visual link between Memorial and Abraham Lincoln Memorial Hospital.
The
county board heard the report of a feasibility study for a golf
course at Logan County Airport and tentatively voted to approve the
concept of an industrial park. Daniel Conway of THK Associates in
Denver gave the results of his firm’s market feasibility study for
an airport golf course. Based on demographics and number of existing
courses, he said the area could support one more 18-hole course.
Before
signaling that they would approve the industrial park concept, board
members assured themselves that they were committing no funds.
Economic Development Director Mark Smith said the Logan County
Development Foundation would fund the feasibility study for the
project and he was only asking for endorsement of the concept at
this time. He added that if the board and the Lincoln City Council
indicated they thought it was a bad idea, the Economic Development
Council would reconsider.
The
Lincoln City Council also heard Smith’s request for support but
did not put the matter to a vote. Several spoke in favor of the idea
but others said it was not the right time for such a major project.
Smith said he was satisfied with the fact that there were “no
strong objections” to the industrial park proposal from the city
council. An e-mail poll conducted by the Lincoln Daily News showed
that 91 percent of those voting were in favor of the industrial park
and only 9 percent against it.
The
county board passed a 2002 budget with $8.94 million total
expenditures and a $314,000 deficit in the general fund, the first
time it has passed a deficit budget in seven years. Projected
general fund revenues were $3.76 million and expenditures were $4.07
million. Levies designed to raise almost $2.6 million were also
passed.
Lincoln
College professor and museum supervisor Ron Keller told the Looking
for Lincoln committee that tourism revenue sales are up after
September 11, saying tourism has not slowed at all. Postville
Courthouse representative Shirley Bartelmay also said Postville has
had visitors recently from New York, Iowa, Texas and Florida.
Bartelmay was recently credited by the state of Illinois for
coordinating volunteers and was rewarded with a plaque for overall
dedication.
On
the last day of November, a groundbreaking ceremony for the new
47,000-square-foot Central School was held. The school will be built
on the Seventh Street side of the grounds of the present Central
School. Board members and state representatives took the shovels
first, then Central School students were given spoons and plastic
bags so scoop up a bit of dirt for a souvenir. After the new school
is built, students at Lincoln Junior High will move to the present
Central School, the junior high will be razed and a new one built,
then the present Central School will be taken down.
In
the ongoing story of LDC’s threatened closing, the 100-year-old
facility survived another round of budget cuts at the state level,
but is still facing decertification and loss of $17 million in
federal funds. Gov. George Ryan gave the facility another 30-day
extension to correct problems, but has continued the transfer of
residents to other state institutions to improve the resident-staff
ratio. The parents group continued to rally and urge Gov. Ryan to
keep LDC open.
There
was good news on the business front in November. It seems that
Lincoln will once again have a retail business supply store. Glenn
Brunk Stationers of Springfield has announced that they plan to open
a Lincoln store somewhere downtown, perhaps by the first of the
year. The firm is already serving customers in Lincoln.
Groundbreaking
ceremonies were held for a new warehouse at Willamette Industries,
Inc., at the intersection of Lincoln Parkway and Fifth Street Road.
The 70,000-square-foot warehouse is expected to be completed in
April. The plant has already added six new employees and expects to
add an additional four later. Willamette employs about 100 people in
Lincoln.
Terry
J. Brown, president and chief executive officer of State Bank of
Lincoln, will retire the first of January. Chosen to be the new
chief executive is Steve Aughenbaugh, currently department head for
commercial and installment loans. Brown said his most significant
achievement is the growth the bank has experienced during his
17-year tenure.
Construction
has begun on a Russell Stover Candies store on Lincoln’s west
side, and the company expects to open it around Feb. 1. The site is
at 901 Heitmann Drive, along Route 10 between GB Oil Travel Plaza
and Holiday Inn Express. The company intends to employ 10 to 15
people locally and will hold a job fair for prospective employees.
The store will carry the company’s full line of first-quality
boxed chocolates as well as intermediates and seconds, both to be
sold at discounted prices.
In
sports, the LCHS Lady Railers volleyball team had a super
season, even though they lost the super-sectional to Normal
Community. Their season record of 29-8-1 is among the best in
central Illinois. They were the winners of two regular season
tournaments in Champaign and East Peoria. They lost only one Central
State Eight Conference match and took second place in the
conference. They repeated as IHSA Regional champions. They made the
LCHS history books by being the first volleyball team to repeat as
IHSA Sectional champions. Coach Charissa Howe reached her 100th win
early in the season. Christina Xamis tied a school service record
with eight aces in one game — the sectional semifinal. Senior team
members Tina Cook, Kelli Gleason and Darcy White have all been
recruited and will play college volleyball.
Coach
Kevin Crawford and his Lincoln Christian College Angels advanced to
the Elite Eight at nationals, then once again made it to the Final
Four and brought home a third-place place trophy. That makes six
trips to the national tournament, including a national title, two
third-place finishes, one fourth and two Elite Eights. Crawford was
named NCCAA National Coach of the Year for the second time.
In
Class A volleyball, Mount Pulaski took third place at the state
tournament. They lost their semifinal game against Quincy Notre Dame
on Saturday, 8-15, 15-9, 15-8. They then played Augusta
Southeastern, who lost to Breese Mater Dei 15-12, 15-6. Mount
Pulaski defeated Augusta Southeastern 15-6, 15-1. Breese Mater Dei
defeated Quincy Notre Dame for the championship 15-8, 15-7.
(To
be continued)
[Joan
Crabb]
|
|
Warmer
December 2001 means lower heating bills
[JAN.
7, 2002] "Below
normal temperatures after Christmas Eve led to December 2001
dropping from 4th to 14th warmest December since 1895. Even so,
temperatures were 5.6 degrees above average for the month,"
says State Climatologist Jim Angel of the Illinois State Water
Survey in Champaign. The coldest December on record occurred in 1983
with temperatures 12.1 degrees below average.
|
"A
bonus of these warmer-than-average temperatures will be lower
heating bills for Illinois consumers than in December 2000, the
second coldest December on record with temperatures 11.6 degrees
below average. December 2001 heating-degree totals were 16 percent
below the long-term average and two-thirds of December 2000
totals," says Angel.
In
addition to warm temperatures, there has been a lack of snowfall
compared to last December, which will be remembered as one of the
snowiest. December snowfall normally ranges from two inches (south)
to four to five inches (central) to eight inches (north), but
December 2001 totals of one to four inches were confined to the
northern half of Illinois. The snowiest station, Chatsworth (near
Springfield,) reported five inches (21 inches in December 2000);
Springfield, 3.3 inches (ten inches in December 2000); Chicago at
O'Hare, 1.6 inches (30.9 inches in December 2000); Rockford, 0.5
inches (30.1 inches in December 2000); and Peoria, 0.4 inches (21.2
inches in December 2000).
[to top of second column in this
article]
|
Soil
temperatures at the 4-inch level also have dropped below freezing
across the northern half of the state due to the recent cold without
the protection of insulating snow cover. "Cooler soil
temperatures may help kill off overwintering pests, but the lack of
snow cover may leave some crops and landscape plants more vulnerable
to cold temperatures.
"While
precipitation has been below average in the northern half of the
state due to a lack of snow, above average rainfall in southern
Illinois resulted in some reports of damage to winter wheat due to
saturated fields," says Angel.
For
example, Anna reported 7.11 inches of rain in December.
[Illinois
State Water Survey news release]
|
|
Today’s history
Compiled
by Dave Francis
|
Monday, Jan. 7
7th
day of the year
Quotes
"Mahomet
made the people believe that he would call a hill to him, and from
the top of it offer up his prayers for the observers of the Law. The
people assembled; Mahomet called the hill to come to him again and
again; and when the hill stood still, he was never a whit abashed,
but said, ‘If the hill will not come to Mahomet, Mahomet will go
to the hill.’" — Francis Bacon, on boldness
"And
yet ... it moves." — Galileo
Birthdays
1800
— Millard Fillmore, Locke, N.Y., (Whig) 13th president (1850-53)
1822
— Lucius C.M. Bakker, Frisian physician and author (Goethe)
1910
— Alain de Rothschild, France, banker and baron
1928
— William Peter Blatty, New York City, author and director
("The Exorcist")
1942
— Vasili Alexeyev, U.S.S.R, weightlifter (Olympic gold, ’72, ’76)
1946
— Jann S. Wenner, publisher (Rolling Stone)
1957
— Katie [Katherine] Couric, Arlington, Va., TV news host
("Today")
Events
1285
— Charles I of Anjou, king of Naples and brother of King Louis IX,
dies at 58
1536
— Catherine of Aragon, first wife of England’s King Henry VIII,
dies
1584
— Last day of the Julian calendar in Bohemia and Holy Roman Empire
1598
— Boris Godunov seizes Russian throne on death of Feodore I
1601
— Robert, Earl of Essex, leads revolt in London against Queen
Elizabeth
1608
— Fire destroys Jamestown, Va.
1610
— Galileo discovers first three Jupiter satellites: Io, Europa and
Ganymede
1618
— Francis Bacon becomes English lord chancellor
1695
— Mary II Stuart, queen of England, dies at 32
1714
— Typewriter patented by Englishman Henry Mill (built years later)
1782
— First U.S. commercial bank, Bank of North America, opens in
Philadelphia
1890
— W.B. Purvis patents fountain pen
1914
— First steamboat passes through Panama Canal
1927
— Harlem Globetrotters play first game (Hinckley, Ill.)
1929
— "Buck Rogers," first sci-fi comic strip, premieres
1929
— "Tarzan," one of the first adventure comic strips,
first appears
1943
— Nikola Tesla, Yugoslavian physicist (Tesla motor), dies at 86
|
|
|
Part
4
A year in review
World
and national events hit home big in 2001 as
everyday challenges and victories unfolded and prevailed
[JAN.
5, 2002] For
the people in Logan County, like those everywhere else in the
nation, the defining event of the year 2001 was Sept. 11. Logan
County’s response to the tragedy was not one of hate and fear, but
instead a message of hope and healing. Many gathered on the
courthouse lawn on Sept. 14 to honor the New York rescue workers who
gave their lives to save the lives of others as well as to honor
their own police officers, firefighters and rescue workers. Many
also contributed to the fund-raising effort by county emergency
workers to help the families of the New York fire, police and rescue
personnel who died at the World Trade Center. And many found a new
definition of hero — not an entertainer with a multimillion-dollar
salary, but a man or woman, maybe one who lives next door, doing a
job that needs to be done to help others.
However,
other news also happened in Logan County throughout this
unforgettable year. Here is our roundup of some of the more
important and interesting local matters.
|
[Click here for a
review of local events in January and February 2001]
[Click here for
March and April events]
[Click here for May
and June events]
[Click here for July
events]
AUGUST
On
the day she celebrated her 20th birthday, July 31, Nicole
Fink was chosen Miss Logan County Fair of 2001. Daughter of Mike and
Brenda Fink of Beason, Nicole, a Lincoln Community High School
graduate, is now a sophomore at St. Mary of the Woods College in
Terre Haute, Ind. Nicole was chosen from a field of six. Other
contestants were Katheryne Stoll of Chestnut, Erin Wind of Lincoln,
Mary Wood of Lincoln, Anna Schmidt of Lincoln and Ginnifer Sparks of
Emden.
There
was plenty of talent at the fair on Aug. 1. Winning in the senior
talent contest were two Lincoln girls, Brandi Montgomery and Kirsten
Gandenberger, who clogged their way to first place to the tune of
"The Devil Went Down to Georgia." Winning first in the
junior contest was 9-year-old Kayla Kubinski, who sang "I
Believe" in a surprisingly mature voice.
Among
the old favorites at the fair — exhibits of livestock and cooking,
harness races and horse shows, rides and cotton candy — the
children’s scrambles remained a popular event. Bleachers filled up
as fairgoers watched 4-H members of various ages
"scramble" to catch chickens, goats, greased pigs and
stubborn young calves.
Abraham
Lincoln Memorial Hospital celebrated the opening of its newest
addition, the Women’s Health Unit and Family Maternity Suites,
with an open house on Sunday, Aug. 12. The Women’s Health Unit is
designed to promote the lifelong good health of women in any stage
in their lives and will focus on women’s inpatient gynecological
surgical procedures. It includes five private rooms. Labor,
delivery, recovery and postpartum care are now possible in a
spacious single room, with no need for the mother to move to another
room after delivery.
Bill
Bates was named Lincoln city attorney to replace Jonathan Wright,
who resigned after accepting the appointment to the seat in the
state House of Representatives vacated by John Turner. Bates, a
Lincoln native, has been practicing law here since 1979.
Controversy
over handicapped-parking tickets became so heated it even reached
news media outside the area, giving Lincoln some bad press.
Handicapped citizens, both from Lincoln and from other cities,
contended they were ticketed when parked in a handicapped area even
though they had placards properly displayed on their windshields.
Those who ticketed the handicapped, some of whom are handicapped
themselves, said these placards were not placed where they could be
seen from outside the vehicle and thus were not within the law.
Lincoln
Mayor Beth Davis supported the ticketing program and said the city
has lost considerable money in fines by tossing out tickets given to
the handicapped. Others said the tickets would be thrown out of
court and the city was wasting its time issuing them. A consensus
was reached that in cases where a ticket clearly ought to be
dropped, the mayor, the city attorney or the police chief could
nullify it.
Two
of the city’s goals, historic preservation and economic
development, went head-to-head in August when representatives of the
Casey’s General Store asked for a zoning change so the firm could
put in a facility at 314 Jefferson St., across from the historic
Postville Courthouse. Mayor Beth Davis had already said she would
like the area from the Postville Courthouse west to Postville Road
to be designated a historic preservation district, which would
include the property Casey’s wanted to buy. Mayor Davis had
presented the council with a proposed historic preservation
ordinance, but aldermen found problems with the ordinance,
especially with the power it gave to the 11 members to be appointed
to the historic preservation committee. The city council decided the
ordinance needed work and put it on hold, clearing the way for Casey’s
to go in.
The
Lincoln Planning Commission, however, turned down Casey’s request
for rezoning the property from residential to commercial. In spite
of protests from neighbors and businessmen in the Fifth Street area,
the city council overrode the planning commission’s recommendation
and voted to rezone the property. However, a rear setback
requirement still kept the property from meeting city codes until it
could be determined who owns the alley behind the proposed Casey
site.
Main
Street Lincoln received a state grant, facilitated by former Sen.
Bob Madigan and totaling $37,000, from the Department of Commerce
and Community Affairs. More than half the amount, $20,000, will be
used for an incentive plan for new downtown businesses. Some money
will also be used to pay for restoration of the statue of the Indian
woman and for playground equipment for newly renovated Scully Park.
Good
crowds turned out for one of Lincoln’s most popular summer events,
the Art Fair and Balloon Fest. Eighty-one artists showed all kinds
of work at the 28th annual Art Fair in Latham Park on Aug. 25 and
26. Thirty-five artists from previous years were there, along with
46 new ones.
[to top of second column in
this section]
|
At
the Logan County Fairgrounds, 47 hot-air balloons ascended on Friday
evening and again on Saturday morning, although threatening weather
kept them on the ground Saturday evening and also prevented the
traditional balloon glow. Fireworks, craft sales, rides, games and
plenty of food were all on hand at the fairgrounds. Other weekend
events included a soapbox derby, an Oasis flea market, a display
of19th century trades and artwork at the Postville Courthouse, a
Porsche car show, and the Children’s Adventure Zone, with special
events for children across the street from the Art Fair.
The
Logan County Board voted to spend up to $9,500 to determine the
economic feasibility of a golf course at the airport. THK Associates
was hired to investigate whether the community can support a
nine-hole public golf course built on the grounds of Logan County
Airport. Roger Bock, chairman of the airport committee, said the
study could be completed in 30 to 45 days. If the projection is
favorable, a developer would have to be found and a layout planned.
Bock acknowledged that some holes might have to be short to work
around airport facilities.
SEPTEMBER
On
Sept. 11, 2001, the people of Logan County, along with those in the
rest of the world, learned of the terrorist attack that destroyed
the twin towers of the World Trade Center in New York City and took
thousands of lives. Community leaders expressed their shock and
sympathy, and many prayer vigils, masses and patriotic assemblies
were scheduled in Lincoln and the rest of the county.
On
Friday, Sept. 14, at least 1,500 people gathered on the Logan County
Courthouse lawn to take part in a ceremony to show they were a
community that cared. Firefighters from all over Logan County, and a
few from beyond, lined the walkway on the Broadway side of the
courthouse during the ceremony. Some had tears running down their
cheeks, as did many in the audience.
Recently
appointed state Rep. Jonathan Wright put the community’s
sentiments into words: "The enemy expected us to respond
selfishly. Instead Americans are giving their lives to try to save
others. They expected us to respond with fear, but we responded with
courage. They expected us to respond with regionalism, saying ‘That’s
New York City’s problem.’ Instead citizens have stepped forward,
saying ‘How can I help?’ Freedom never shines so brightly as in
the darkest hour. I have always been proud to be an American
citizen, but I have never been so proud as I am today."
Dan
Fulscher of the Emergency Services and Disaster Agency announced a
fund drive for families of the firefighters and rescue workers who
died trying to save the lives of others, and Lincoln Fire and Police
Department members volunteered to go to New York to help if needed.
Fulscher
said: "It is obvious we are very vulnerable to terrorism. This
event may change the perception of the man on the street, but
agencies like ESDA, fire and police departments, EMS, the Health
Department and others have been working very hard to prepare for
such an emergency."
Three
Missouri railsplitters and one from Illinois walked away from the
Logan County Fairgrounds with the honors and the prize money at the
31st annual Abraham Lincoln National Railsplitting Contest on Sept.
15 and 16. Marty Yount of Hiram, Mo., was once again the national
railsplitting champion, taking home a cash prize of $1,000. Taking
second place was another Missouri contestant, Ryan Evans, only 21
years old, of Silva. At the other end of the age range, Oliver
Friedlein, 63, of Hull, Ill., took third. Roy Usery of Des Arc, Mo.,
placed fourth. Visitors to the fairgrounds could see demonstrations
of early American crafts, a frontier farm, historic displays from
all over Logan County, a quilt show, a display of steam-powered
machines, the Fred Hoppin memorial watermelon contest and many other
contests.
Lincoln
Public Library head Richard Sumrall reviewed "One Hour ’til
Dawn," the book recently published by Mike Fak of Lincoln, a
free-lance journalist for both the Courier and Lincoln Daily News, a
member of the LincOn-TV community television station, and co-host of
the weekly talk show "The Fak’s Machine." Sumrall noted
that the essays and stories cover a variety of topics: political
commentary, hilarious happenings in the Fak home and sensitive
writing about his son, handicapped by cerebral palsy. Sumrall said,
"‘One Hour ’til Dawn’ is a very entertaining book that
will find an appreciative audience. Many of the articles are
intended to spark debate and discussion on a wide range of topics.
Readers will also enjoy the down-home philosophy that serves as the
inspiration for the more humorous entries. Other will find
encouragement and hope in the stories about life in the Fak
household." The book is still available at Lincoln Daily News,
601 Keokuk St., or from Mike Fak.
Making
business news, MKS Jewelers celebrated its 20th anniversary on the
square in Lincoln on Sept. 7-15. The store’s present location at
614 Broadway is its third, a disastrous fire being the reason for
one of the moves. Melody Kay Shew, owner, said her philosophy is
customer-centered. "We try to carry what people are asking for.
I’m selling products that I would be proud to wear myself."
(To
be continued)
[Joan
Crabb]
|
|
Today’s history
Compiled
by Dave Francis
|
Saturday, Jan. 5
5th
day of the year
Quotes
"The
unexamined life is not worth living for man." — Socrates
"Only
the stupidest calves choose their own butcher." — Konrad
Adenauer
Birthdays
B.C.
— Socrates, Greek philosopher, son of Sophroniscus and Phaenarette
1787
— John Burke, Irish genealogist ("Burke’s Peerage")
1837
— Algernon Charles Swinburne, writer [or April 5]
1876
— Konrad Adenauer, Cologne, Germany, chancellor of Germany
1914
— George Reeves [George Lescher Bessolo], actor
("Superman")
1918
— Jeane Dixon, psychic ("A Gift of Prophecy")
1931
— Robert Duvall, San Diego Calif, actor ("Great Santini,"
"Taxi Driver")
1932
— Chuck Noll, Cleveland, NFL coach (Pittsburgh Steelers)
1942
— Charlie Rose, Henderson NC, newscaster ("CBS Night
Watch")
1969
— Marilyn Manson, singer and musician
Events
1531
— Pope Clemens VII forbids English king Henry VIII to remarry
1589
— Catherine de’ Medici, queen mother of France, dies at 69
1836
— Davy Crockett arrives Texas, just in time for the Alamo
1895
— French Capt. Alfred Dreyfus, convicted of treason, publicly
stripped
1896
— German physicist Wilhelm Roentgen discovers X-rays
1919
— National Socialist Party (Nazi) forms as German Farmers Party
1925
— Nellie Taylor Ross became governor of Wyoming; first woman
governor in the United States
1933
— Calvin Coolidge, 30th president (1923-29), dies in Massachusetts
at 60
1943
— George Washington Carver, famous black scientist, dies at 81
1956
— Elvis Presley records "Heartbreak Hotel"
1959
— "Bozo the Clown," live children’s show, premieres on
TV
1959
— Buddy Holly releases his last record, "It Doesn’t
Matter"
1963
— Rogers Hornsby, baseball player, dies of a heart ailment at 66
1971
— Sonny Liston, world champion heavyweight boxer (1962-64), found
dead at 36
1987
— Surrogate Baby M case begins in Hackensack, N.J.
1988
— "Pistol Pete" Mavarich, NBAer (Atlanta), dies of a
heart attack at 40
1994
— Thomas P. "Tip" O’Neill, D-Mass., speaker of House
(1977-86), dies at 81
[to top of second column in
this section]
|
Sunday,
Jan. 6
6th
day of the year
Quotes
"If
you want to get along, go along." — Sam Rayburn
"Slang
is a language that rolls up its sleeves, spits on its hands and goes
to work." — Carl Sandburg
"When
you have eliminated the impossible, whatever remains, however
improbable, must be the truth." — Sherlock Holmes
Birthdays
1412
— Joan of Arc, Domremy, martyr
1826
— Herman Grimm, Germany, writer and novelist (Ralph Waldo Emerson)
1854
— Sherlock Holmes, Mycroft, fictional detective (via Arthur Conan
Doyle)
1878
— Carl Sandburg, American poet and biographer of Lincoln
("The People, Yes")
1880
— Tom Mix, Mix Run, Penn., silent screen cowboy actor ("Dick
Turpin")
1882
— Samuel Rayburn, Tennessee, representative, D-Texas, speaker of
the House (1940-57)
1914
— Danny Thomas, Deerfield, Mich., comedian ("Danny Thomas
Show")
1920
— Sun Myung Moon, evangelist (Unification Church, Moonies)
1925
— John Z. DeLorean, former automaker (DeLorean)
1961
— Howie Long, former NFL tackle, actor and broadcaster
("Broken Arrow")
Events
1088
— Berengarius of Tours, French theologian, dies
1496
— Moorish fortress Alhambra, near Grenada, surrenders to the
Christians
1535
— City of Lima, Peru, founded by Francisco Pizarro
1540
— King Henry VIII of England married his fourth wife, Anne of
Cleves
1702
— Thomas Franklin, English smith, uncle of Benjamin Franklin, dies
1759
— George Washington marries Martha Dandridge Curtis
1838
— Samuel Morse made first public demonstration of telegraph
1884
— Gregor Mendel, Augustine monk and heredity pioneer, dies at 61
1914
— Stock brokerage firm of Merrill Lynch founded
1919
— Theodore Roosevelt, 26th president (1901-09), dies in New York
at 60
1963
— "Mutual of Omaha’s Wild Kingdom" with Marl Perkins
begins on NBC
1976
— Ted Turner purchases Atlanta Braves for reported $12 million
1985
— Robert H.W. Welch Jr., founder and leader of John Birch Society,
dies at 85
1989
— Hirohito, Japan`s emperor (1922-89), dies at 87 after 62-year
reign
1993
— John B. "Dizzy" Gillespe, blues trumpeter, dies of
cancer at 75
1993
— Rudolph Nureyev, Russian ballet dancer (Kirov), dies of AIDS at
54
1994
— Ice skater Nancy Kerrigan is attacked by Tonya Harding’s
bodyguard
|
|
Flames
engulf American
Legion
in early morning fire
[JAN.
4, 2002] Flames
consumed the Lincoln American Legion building at 1740 Fifth St.
early this morning.
|
A
cleaning person was in the building when he heard a loud pop in the
kitchen. Lincoln Fire Department received the call and responded at
approximately 6:30 a.m. Unofficial early reports suspect it to be a
grease fire.
The
fire was reported under control at about 10 a.m., though damage
appears to be extensive. Local fire inspectors are on the scene
investigating the incident.
The
building was formerly a restaurant next to the Ramada Inn before the
American Legion bought and remodeled it. It appears to be a total
loss.
As
of noon, the hoses were being rolled up as firefighters prepared to
return to their firehouses. Investigators will remain on the scene
this afternoon.
[LDN]
[Click
here for pictures]
|
|
|
Part
3
A year in review
World
and national events hit home big in 2001 as
everyday challenges and victories unfolded and prevailed
[JAN.
4, 2002] For
the people in Logan County, like those everywhere else in the
nation, the defining event of the year 2001 was Sept. 11. Logan
County’s response to the tragedy was not one of hate and fear, but
instead a message of hope and healing. Many gathered on the
courthouse lawn on Sept. 14 to honor the New York rescue workers who
gave their lives to save the lives of others as well as to honor
their own police officers, firefighters and rescue workers. Many
also contributed to the fund-raising effort by county emergency
workers to help the families of the New York fire, police and rescue
personnel who died at the World Trade Center. And many found a new
definition of hero — not an entertainer with a multimillion-dollar
salary, but a man or woman, maybe one who lives next door, doing a
job that needs to be done to help others.
However,
other news also happened in Logan County throughout this
unforgettable year. Here is our roundup of some of the more
important and interesting local matters.
|
[Click here for a
review of local events in January and February 2001]
MARCH
In
March the ground was shaking with some major groundbreaking
activities. The biggest took place at Lincoln Christian College as
they stepped forward with their plans to build a $3 million,
30,000-square-foot athletic facility to replace their outdated
gymnasium. The new gym will seat 1,000 spectators, and the building
will also provide office space, training rooms, locker rooms, a
weight room, a lobby and concessions.
Across
town at Lincoln College, a new dormitory was going up and an old
one, Spatz Hall, was coming down.
CCA
Online, Lincoln’s major Internet provider, broke ground to set the
footing for a tower that will supply high-speed wireless Internet
service to the city of Lincoln. The tower is on the CCA site at
Logan and Woodlawn streets.
In
Mount Pulaski, in the midst of swirling snowflakes on an empty lot,
ground was broken for Logan County’s newest Habitat for Humanity
home. The house will go to Cheryl Mittelsteadt and her two sons, J.T.
and Austin, who are all grateful for the opportunity to have a home
of their own. This is the first Habitat house to be built in Mount
Pulaski.
An
open house at the Lincoln’s Public Library celebrated
administrator Richard Sumrall’s 10th anniversary as head of the
library. During his term, circulation has increased from 72,000 to
112,000 books a year and many non-print formats have been added,
such as books on tape, videos, CD-ROMs, electronic and online
databases. Also during this time the annex was added across the
alley from the main building and the original building was
renovated, with new carpeting and ceramic tile and cleaning and
lighting of the stained glass dome.
Postman
Steve Jones noticed that for several days the mail was not collected
and newspapers remained in the yard at the home of a woman on his
route. He called the police, who found the woman had fallen and was
not able to get up. Jones later visited her while she was recovering
at Abraham Lincoln Memorial Hospital.
Emergency
Services and Disaster Agency and the Local Emergency Planning
Committee discussed the threat of terrorism, especially bioterrorism,
and the plans being put into place to combat it. LEPC is a
state-mandated group that will spearhead a community response during
any incident involving hazardous materials.
Volunteers
are making it possible for the Postville Courthouse to be open five
days a week instead of only two, according to Richard Schachtsiek,
site manager. Volunteers, under the management of Shirley Bartelmay,
will keep the historic site open Tuesdays, Wednesday, Thursdays,
Saturdays and Sundays.
The
2000 census figures show that while Logan County and Lincoln haven’t
lost population, they haven’t gained much, either. Actually,
Lincoln is down by 49, while the total number of folks in Logan
County is up by 385, from 30,798 in 1990 to 31,183 in 2000.
Businesses
making news included the Pink Shutter Thrift Shop, which relocated
to 114 N. McLean St. and had a grand opening in mid-March. The shop
has been owned and operated by ALMH Auxiliary sine 1962. The new
location offers more room and is more convenient.
Team
Express, a subsidiary of Team Electronics Super Store in Decatur,
had the grand opening of its new store at 411 Pulaski St. The
business offers cellular services and accessories. Manager is Leigh
Horner and assistant manger is Mandy Cook, both of Lincoln
The
big news in sports was that Illinois won the Big Ten championship.
In a late surge, the Illini overcame the Minnesota Gophers to win
67-59. Frank Williams scored eight of his team-high 15 points in the
last three minutes, and Lincoln’s Brian Cook added five points
during this stretch, including a 3-point play.
By
beating the Kansas Jayhawks 80-64, the Illini made it to the Elite
Eight, only one win away from making it to the Final Four.
Girls
volleyball was in good shape in Logan County, especially in
Hartsburg-Emden and Mount Pulaski schools. In the 7A competition,
Hartem’s Lady Stags claimed third and Mount Pulaski’s Honeybears
second at the state tournament in Pawnee.
In
the 8A competition they did even better. Mount Pulaski, with an
undefeated 29-0 season, beat its rival Hartem in two games to win
the state title. Hartem had to settle for second best in the state.
APRIL
The
April 3 general election decided four Logan County mayoral contests.
Republican Beth Davis won handily over Democrat Kenneth S. Gray
(1,458-130) to become mayor of Lincoln. In Mount Pulaski, alderman
William C. Glaze, polling 330 votes, won out over Delmar L. Stewart,
a former mayor but not an incumbent, polling 240, and Robert W.
Letterle, who brought in 41 votes.
In
Atlanta, incumbent Republican Bill Martin beat challenger Taplia
"Jack" Renfrow 262-208. In San Jose, Citizens Party
candidate Duane Worlaw, with 159 votes, won easily over Independent
candidate Ida M. McWilliam, who polled only 21 votes.
Logan
County voters spoke loud and clear about their preference for a
districtwide election for county board members instead of the
present at-large method. The advisory referendum passed by a more
than 3-1 margin. The board later rescinded their former vote to keep
the membership elected at large and voted to choose members by
district.
The
Lincoln City Council passed the city’s first bed-and-breakfast
ordinance, to give prospective B & B owners guidelines to
follow. Owners must get permits from the city code enforcement
office and have food operations certified by the Logan County Health
Department. Off-street parking requirements were waived, and B &
Bs will be permitted in residential districts.
This
month the new radio station, WMNW, 96.3 FM, headquartered in Atlanta
near Lazy Row, went on the air, with Jim Ash as general manager. The
station broadcasts classic rock of the ’60s, ’70s and ’80s to
listeners in Logan, McLean and Sangamon counties and will keep its
listeners informed of important breaking news. Ash was with WPRC
radio in Lincoln and later with WUIS in Springfield.
The
Illinois State Police and the Logan County Sheriff’s Department
confiscated more than 240 pounds of cocaine April 24, in one of the
largest drug seizures in downstate Illinois. A Texas man, Victor
Caballero, was charged with substance trafficking and intent to
deliver a controlled substance and could serve from 30 to 120 years
in prison.
[to top of second column in
this section]
|
Plans
for District 27’s new Central School are almost complete, said
Superintendent Robert Kidd. The brick building will face south on
Seventh Street and will have double gables over either side of the
entrance. It will have 14 classrooms, a kitchen and cafeteria, a
6,860-square-foot gymnasium, a stage, a music room, a media center,
a library, rooms for special education, and office space and a
conference room for teachers and administrators.
Lincoln
College President Jack Nutt announced that at its Normal campus the
college will begin offering courses that will lead to a bachelor’s
degree in liberal arts. Nutt said this has been in the planning
stages for several years and meets the needs of both two-year
graduates and working adults.
In
business news, the Tropics Steak and Pasta House at 1007 Hickory
Drive, on historic Route 66, opened under the management of Tim
Dalipi, serving a menu of Italian and American dishes. Five members
of the Dalipi family are involved in the restaurant operation. The
former coffee shop is now the dining room for smokers, and the two
dining rooms have been redecorated. The menu offers a variety of
items.
In
sports, Lincoln had a new state champion in April — Dart Man.
Brian Dutz captured two state titles in the 2001 State Dart
Championships at the Civic Center in Peoria, winning in both Open
Singles and Open Singles Cricket, the first person ever to take both
titles.
[Click here for a review of
local events in May and June 2001]
JULY
Judy
Dopp, Lincoln Community High School National Honor Society sponsor,
announced at the city’s council meeting on Monday that Lincoln had
won a Governor’s Home Town Award for 2000 for the plantings done
by the National Honor Society and the biochemistry classes taught by
Jim Vipond. The Plant the Tree program for 2000 included extensive
plantings at the Logan County Fairgrounds and in the Don Shay
parking lot across from Scully Park in downtown Lincoln, as well as
plantings at Memorial Park and at two nursing homes. The program has
been going on for the past five years.
Community
members, friends, family and workers — all gathered for dedication
services July 4 at the newest Habitat House in Mount Pulaski. Keys
for the sixth completed Habitat for Humanity of Logan County home
were turned over to the Cheryl Mittlesteadt family. Cheryl and her
sons, James T. and Austin M. Berger, planned to move into their new
home at 317 Vine St., Mount Pulaski, on Saturday.
The
climax of the Healthy Communities Partnership report to the
community on Thursday was the presentation of the National
Outstanding Rural Health Practice Award to Dayle Eldredge, director
of the Rural Health Partnership Task Force and of the overall
partnership. Among the projects of the RHP are the mobile health
unit which provides health care throughout Logan County, educational
seminars including one on prostate and testicular cancer conducted
June 27, farm safety programs offered in conjunction with the
University of Illinois Cooperative Extension Service, and assistance
to farm families with a disabled member. Later in the month HCP also
received the Outstanding Rural Health Practice Award of the National
Rural Health Association, which represents providers of health-care
services, agricultural associations, government and industry.
The
Logan County Genealogical and Historical Society has been awarded a
$10,000 state grant, according to an announcement by Sen. Bob
Madigan before he left his legislative position. The money will be
used to help purchase the building that is currently home to the
society. The organization recently moved from Arcade Court to 114 N.
Chicago in Lincoln. Society member Dorothy Gleason said the new
location gives them much-needed breathing room.
Rod
White’s East Park subdivision, which was stalled last month when
the Lincoln City Council requested that he pay the entire cost of
upgrading North Sherman Street in front of the new development, is
back on again. The council took another look at the wording of the
ordinance that says a development must bring all streets in the
subdivison up to city code. However, they decided, that is mandatory
only for new streets, and Sherman is an existing street. White will
pay for curbs and gutters and said he would begin work on the new
subdivision immediately.
A
report from economic development director Mark Smith notes that in
late April, the U.S. Census Bureau began releasing all kinds of
information collected during the 2000 census. Some of it tells us
something about Logan County. Our official population is 31,183,
only 385 more people than in 1990. Our growth rate was 1.3 percent.
Our median age is 37.0 years, almost three years higher than the
state figure. The percentage of our population below 18 is 5 percent
less than the state average. There are 11,872 total housing units in
the county. Of those units, 11,113 were occupied at census time. Of
the vacant units, 20.2 percent were for sale, 26.7 percent were for
rent and 3.7 percent were used seasonally or for recreational
purposes.
From
a "textbook" perspective, Logan County could be viewed as
holding its own — barely. Over the past decade, population and new
housing developments have been flat. Our population is aging faster
than average. Based on these preliminary statistics, and if the
trend does not improve, there may be cause for concern as the next
decade unfolds, Smith’s report said.
Claude
"Bud" Stone, Morton, Tazewell County Republican Party
chairman, has been chosen to fill the unexpired term of former Sen.
Robert Madigan of Lincoln. Madigan resigned at the end of June to
take a post with the Illinois Industrial Commission. The choice was
made at a meeting of the seven GOP county chairmen whose counties
are all or in part in 45th Senatorial District. Stone will serve
until Madigan’s term expires in January of 2003.
The
first meeting of Lincoln’s Historic Homes and Buildings Committee
was on July 16 in the office of Mayor Beth Davis. Its mission is
"to promote and preserve historic homes and buildings within
Lincoln, Illinois, for the purpose of recognizing and preserving
their historic value." The committee will be chaired by Lincoln
resident Betty York.
On
a hot 31st of July, the 65th Logan County Fair
was officially opened when Lincoln Mayor Beth Davis and Fair 2000
Queen Elizabeth Stoll, along with members of Lincoln/Logan County
Chamber of Commerce, cut the ribbon.
In
business news, the local branch of APAC Customer Services announced
it would hire at least 30 full-time and 30 part-time telephone sales
representatives at its Lincoln customer interaction center, 2500
Woodlawn, before the end of July. The additional employees will
serve expanding business volume from a major financial services
client that was assigned to Lincoln recently.
Lincoln
Dairy Queen, under new ownership, celebrated a grand opening in
July. New owners Mitzie Welsh and Scott Werner plan to operate the
business on an extended season, March 1 to Oct. 31 each year.
A
downtown Lincoln business, Camel’s Hair’em, has changed owners
and has a new name. Paula Landess, a Lincoln native, has purchased
the hair-styling business and changed the name to Cape Landing
Salon. The telephone number, 735-4247, remains the same.
(To
be continued)
[Joan
Crabb]
[Click
here for Part 4]
|
|
Robbery
at State Bank still under investigation
[JAN.
4, 2002] Investigators
looking into last Friday’s robbery at the Sangamon State branch of
the State Bank of Lincoln are still not releasing any information.
Lincoln Police Department Detectives Mike Harberts and John Bunner
have been working in collaboration with the FBI since the early
evening robbery on Dec. 28.
The
robbery suspect is said to have been a man and is described only as
tall and thin. He entered the bank just before 5 p.m., advised a
bank teller that he had a gun in his pocket and demanded she empty
her cash drawer. He never produced a weapon and fled the scene on
foot. A triggered silent alarm brought police to the scene within
minutes.
[LDN]
|
|
Drug trafficking investigation
nets five suspects
[JAN.
4, 2002] Five
felony arrests of local people are the result of a long-term
investigation made by Central Illinois Enforcement Group working
with the Lincoln City Police Department. The suspects — John
Buckner, 35, Paul Mount, 43, Mark Mount, 19, Delwyn Trout, 37, and
Michelle Quisenberry, 31 — were all arrested on drug charges. The
five are charged with counts of possession with intent to deliver
cannabis, 30-500 grams; possession of drug paraphernalia; and
criminal drug conspiracy.
Armed
with search warrants, officers raided three residences — 114
Lincoln Country Inn, 929 Lake St. and 1399 1950th St. —
at 9:15 p.m. Wednesday evening. The officers confiscated
approximately $2,000 cash, 336 grams cannabis and numerous items of
drug paraphernalia including scales, baggies and smoking pipes.
[LDN]
|
|
Today’s history
Compiled
by Dave Francis
|
Friday, Jan. 4
4th
day of the year
Quotes
"If
I have seen further [than certain other men] it is by standing upon
the shoulders of giants." — Isaac Newton
"To
be prepared for war is one of the most effectual means of preserving
peace." — George Washington
Birthdays
1643
— Isaac Newton, scientist
1785
— Jacob Ludwig Carl Grimm, Germany, librarian (fairy tale
collector)
1809
— Louis Braille, Coupvray, France, developer of reading system for
blind
1813
— Isaac Pitman, Britain, inventor of stenographic shorthand
1813
— Louis L. Bonaparte, English and French linguist and senator
1890
— Alfred G. Jodl, German Wehrmacht general and chief of staff
1896
— Everett McKinley Dirkson, senator, R-Ill.
1914
— Jane Wyman, St. Joseph, Mo., first Mrs. Ron Reagan, actress
("Magnificent Obsession")
1914
— Mohammed Sahir, shah (Afghanistan)
1930
— Don Shula, winningest NFL coach (Miami Dolphins)
1935
— Floyd Patterson, heavyweight champ (1956-59, 1960-62) (gold
medal, 1952 Olympics)
Events
1493
— Columbus left New World on return from first voyage
1642
— King Charles I with 400 soldiers attacks the English Parliament
1786
— Mozes Mendelssohn, Jewish and German philosopher (Haksalah),
dies at 56
1790
— President Washington delivers first "State of the
Union" address
1821
— Elizabeth Ann Seton, first native-born American saint, dies in
Maryland
1863
— Four-wheeled roller skates patented by James Plimpton of New
York
1877
— Cornelius Vanderbilt, U.S. robber baron, dies at 82
1965
— T.S. Eliot, poet ("Washed Country"), dies in London at
76
1970
— Beatles last recording session at EMI studios
1974
— Nixon refuses to hand over tapes subpoenaed by Watergate
Committee
1995
— Newt Gingrich (R) becomes speaker of the House
|
|
|
Newest
Lincolnite arrives
[JAN.
3, 2002] The
first baby of the new year was born at Abraham Lincoln Memorial
Hospital at 12:02 a.m., Tuesday, Jan. 1.
|
Athena
Patricia Lambros, daughter of Lynn Lambros of Lincoln, weighed 7
pounds, 11 ounces and was 20½ inches long. Athena was welcomed into
the family by mom and big sister Samantha.
ALMH’s
new Family Maternity Suites, which opened in August, encourage and
welcome families to share in the wonder and excitement of
childbirth. Labor, delivery, recovery and postpartum care can all be
administered inside one of the private birthing suites, eliminating
the need to move the mother to another room.
|
|
|
Part
2
A year in review
World
and national events hit home big in 2001 as
everyday challenges and victories unfolded and prevailed
[JAN.
3, 2002] For
the people in Logan County, like those everywhere else in the
nation, the defining event of the year 2001 was Sept. 11. Logan
County’s response to the tragedy was not one of hate and fear, but
instead a message of hope and healing. Many gathered on the
courthouse lawn on Sept. 14 to honor the New York rescue workers who
gave their lives to save the lives of others as well as to honor
their own police officers, firefighters and rescue workers. Many
also contributed to the fund-raising effort by county emergency
workers to help the families of the New York fire, police and rescue
personnel who died at the World Trade Center. And many found a new
definition of hero — not an entertainer with a multimillion-dollar
salary, but a man or woman, maybe one who lives next door, doing a
job that needs to be done to help others.
However,
other news also happened in Logan County throughout this
unforgettable year. Here is our roundup of some of the more
important and interesting local matters.
|
[Click here for
Part 1: January and February 2001]
(Due
to a technical error March and April’s reviews will be posted
tomorrow.
MAY
Lincoln
College hosted a dedication ceremony for the Anna K. and Bernard E.
Behrends Admissions Building on May 12. The building was named
because of the generous support of two siblings from Lincoln who are
graduates of the college: Anna K. Behrends, class of 1936, retired
after 40 years as an elementary teacher, and her brother Bernard E.
Behrends, class of 1948, currently CEO of Hartsburg State Bank.
Lincoln’s
new mayor, Elizabeth "Beth" Davis, appointed new police
and fire chiefs at her first regular meeting with the city council,
on May 8. Rich Montcalm, a 12-year member of the police force, was
named to head the Police Department. Robert "Bucky" Washam,
a firefighter for 26 years, was named fire chief. Montcalm replaced
former chief Richard Ludolph, and Washam replaced Ken Ebelherr.
Ludolph has since taken a position on the staff of the Supreme Court
Administration Office of the Illinois Courts Association. Ebelherr
remains on the Lincoln City Fire Department. Staying on with the
city were Jonathan Wright as city attorney, Les Last as building and
zoning officer, and Donnie Osborne as street superintendent.
Three
lives were lost during the second week of May. A fire at Friendship
Manor at 925 Primm Road claimed the life of 87-year-old Ray Money. A
traffic accident claimed two lives: William Robert Hazard, 71, of
Mason City, and Linda Rose Coffey, 54, of Bend, Ore. Coffey was in
Lincoln to attend the funeral of her father.
A
historic well across from the Postville Courthouse — a well from
which Abraham Lincoln often drank — was opened on May 14 by the
Looking for Lincoln Committee of Logan County. The well is just
outside the VFW Post at 915 Fifth St., where the Deskins Tavern once
stood. Along with Lincoln, other historic figures such as Stephen
Logan, David Davis, John Stuart and Samuel H. Trent made the tavern
their headquarters while traveling on the 8th Judicial
Circuit. The committee hopes to make the well usable again as a
tourist attraction.
In
sports news, West Lincoln-Broadwell School took second place in the
Class 7A girls track-and-field meet in East Peoria. Helping to
garner winning points were Christine Presswood, who took first place
in both the 800-meter and the 1,600-meter races and set a meet
record in the latter. Kylie Courtwright also took first in the high
jump.
John
Turner of Atlanta, the Illinois state representative for the 90th
House District, received an appointment as a judge on the Illinois
Appellate Court for the 4th Judicial District and
announced he would step down from his House seat on June 1. Logan
County area candidates announcing their candidacy for the position
included Carla Bender, Logan County Court clerk; Jonathan Wright,
Lincoln city attorney; and Dave Hawkinson, former director of the
Lincoln/Logan County Chamber of Commerce. Bender later dropped out
of the race, citing family responsibilities. Three more Logan County
candidates announced later: George E. Davis, retiring administrator
of St. Clara’s Manor; John Guzzardo, former mayor of Lincoln and
restaurant owner; and Lois Olson, Elkhart, with the Illinois
Department of Financial Institutions.
A
well-attended Antiques Roadshow and the ninth annual Mayor’s
Awards for Historic Preservation climaxed the four-day celebration
of National Historic Preservation Week in Lincoln. The Antiques
Roadshow brought in everything from china dolls to Indian artifacts,
keeping the 10 experts who were on hand busy trying to date and
value the items. Jerry and Colleen Roate won the Mayor’s Award in
the residential category for the "sympathetic alterations"
of their home at 146 Ninth St. The nonresidential award went to the
State Farm building at 200 N. Chicago St., owned by Jane Wright,
which was part of the downtown façade renovation done last summer.
The
statue of the Indian woman was removed from its home on the west
lawn of the Logan County Courthouse. She has been badly in need of
repair, having lost one hand and part of the water jug it held. The
statue was a gift to the town by the Lincoln Woman’s Club in 1906.
Sculptor David Seagraves of Elizabeth, Ill., took the statue to his
studio to do the restoration work.
The
Lincoln City Council chambers were standing room only as folks came
to hear the Rev. S.M. Davis give his proposal to erect a giant
statue of Abraham Lincoln christening the town of Lincoln with
watermelon juice. Davis said the 305-foot statue would be a city
landmark and tourist attraction and the focus of a theme park or
playground. He said it could bring in from 5,000 to 15,000 tourists
a day, promote the building of motels and restaurants, raise
property values, and perhaps double the size of the city. A
committee is looking into finding corporation sponsorship to build
the $150 million project.
Making
business news, Integrity Data, a technology and computer programming
organization, completed renovations of its headquarters at 110 N.
Kickapoo. The firm purchased the former Schick building at 640
Broadway and 110 N. Kickapoo. Integrity Date’s new office space is
on the second floor on the Kickapoo side. Midwest Bible occupies
part of the first floor. Integrity Data, Inc. is owned and operated
by Patrick Doolin, a Lincoln native, and Mark Hisken of Willmar,
Minn.
Logan
County Chamber of Commerce ambassadors were on hand to celebrate a
ribbon-cutting and open house at Insight Communications (formerly
Media One) at its new quarters at 1102 Keokuk St.
[to top of second column in
this section]
|
JUNE
The
completion of the crisis management center in the lower level of the
Logan Safety Complex makes Logan County one of the most
disaster-prepared counties in the state, according to Emergency
Services and Disaster Agency Director Dan Fulscher. The entire lower
level supports emergency disaster efforts, especially the Central
Command Center, he said. The new facility was dedicated to the
memory of Larry Schroyer, an early civil defense director whose
planning in the ’50s, ’60s and ’70s led to the ESDA
organization of today.
Lincoln
College received a $1 million grant from the Department of Commerce
and Community Affairs through Build Illinois, which college
president Jack Nutt said would be put toward building a new Lincoln
College Museum. The museum, which has many Abraham Lincoln
artifacts, will be expanded from the present 1,200 square feet to
6,000.
Plans
for a proposed 16-home East Park subdivision, which have been under
discussion by developer Rodney White and the Lincoln City Council
for several months, came to a halt over the question of who will
foot the bill for upgrading Sherman Street, which the subdivison
will face. White, who said he was trying to develop "affordable
housing" in the $80,000 to $90,000 range, said it was not
feasible for him to pay the entire cost of upgrading the street. The
council was also told it would have to make some decision on sewer
rate increases in order to secure the $10 million loan to upgrade
the sewage treatment plant.
The
Logan County Board, reviewing options for changing from at-large to
district representation, finally voted to accept a plan for six
districts with two members each. A motion to add a 13th
at-large member to act as a tie-breaker was defeated. Gloria Luster
of Mount Pulaski was appointed to fill the vacancy left by the
resignation of Beth Davis, who was recently elected mayor of
Lincoln. The board earlier tabled a motion to increase members’
pay from $35 to $50 per committee meeting and from $40 to $75 for
each general board meeting.
The
newly formed Logan County Arts Association was officially
incorporated on June 8. Its mission is "To enhance the quality
of life by actively promoting arts dissemination, thereby making the
arts an integral component of life in our community and the
surrounding area." The association later announced plans for
several classic movie presentations.
Jonathan
Wright, city attorney for Lincoln and Atlanta, was named to fill the
90th District Illinois House seat vacated by John Turner.
He was chosen by the six GOP county chairmen in the district from a
field of seven candidates. The choice was unanimous, said Mary Jane
Jones, Mason County GOP chairman. "He will do a good job
replacing Mr. Turner," said Tazewell County GOP Chairman Claude
Stone. Wright was sworn in by Turner at a standing-room-only
ceremony in the second-floor courtroom of the Logan County
Courthouse.
Another
resignation from state government left Logan County without a member
in the Illinois Senate. After 14 years in the 45th Senate
District, Sen. Robert Madigan, R-Lincoln, resigned to take a
position on the Illinois Industrial Commission, the administrative
court for workers’ compensation cases. His resignation is
effective July 2 and means that Republican county chairmen, many of
whom just went through the appointment process to select Jonathan
Wright, must meet again to find a candidate to fill Madigan’s
seat.
Before
leaving office, Sen. Madigan announced that Main Street Lincoln will
receive a $10,000 grant from the Department of Commerce and
Community Affairs to restore the Abraham Lincoln well. Wendy Bell,
Main Street program manager, said the money would be used to make
the well usable as a public drinking fountain and to bottle the
water for sale, with a label depicting Mr. Lincoln.
Business
news wasn’t good this month. As of June 30, Lincoln will no longer
have a downtown office store, a handy place where somebody who just
ran out of copy paper or ink cartridges can run over and stock up.
June 29 is the last day the U.S. Office Products store on the corner
of Broadway and Chicago Streets will be open for business. U.S.
Office Products was recently sold to Corporate Express, which does
not keep retail outlets open. "This had nothing to do with our
location or the amount of business transacted here. It is just a
corporate business decision to close all retail stores," said
Gail Rawlins, manager of the Lincoln store.
Motorists
breathed a little easier as they watched gasoline prices continue to
plunge lower after reaching highs of more than $2 a gallon in some
places. The average price at the pump in Illinois at the end of June
was reported at $1.65. Area stations were posting prices of $1.49
for their base grade this morning. Prices dipped as low as $1.34 in
Bloomington in a regional gasoline price war.
In
sports news, Olympia’s Lady Stags softball team came home carrying
their first state championship trophy, this one for second place.
Having beaten two-year champion Casey-Westfield earlier in the day,
the Lady Stags lost to Nashville 0-3.
[Joan
Crabb]
[Click
here for Part 3]
|
|
Today’s history
Compiled
by Dave Francis
|
Thursday, Jan. 3
3rd
day of the year
Quotes
"While
the sick man has life, there is hope." — Marcus Cicero
"I
cannot and will not recant anything, for to go against conscience is
neither right nor safe. Here I stand, I can do no other, so help me
God. Amen." — Martin Luther
Birthdays
B.C.
— Marcus Tullius Cicero, Rome, statesman and author ("Academica")
1624
— William Tucker, first black child born America
1939
— Bobby Hull, NHL forward (Chicago Blackhawk 1957-72)
1945
— Stephen Stills, Dallas, Texas, songwriter and guitarist (Cosby
Stills & Nash)
1945
— Victoria Principal, Fukuoka Japan, actress
("Earthquake," Pamela in "Dallas")
1946
— John Paul Jones, rocker (Led Zeppelin, "Stairway to
Heaven")
1956
— Mel Gibson, Peekskill, N.Y., actor ("Mad Max,"
"Mrs. Soffel," "Lethal Weapon")
[to top of second column in
this section]
|
Events
1431
— Joan of Arc handed over to the bishop
1521
— Martin Luther excommunicated by Roman Catholic Church
1543
— Juan Cabrillo, conqueror of Central America, discoverer of
California, dies
1847
— California town of Yerba Buena renamed San Francisco
1870
— Brooklyn Bridge construction begins; completed May 24, 1883
1871
— Oleomargarine patented by Henry Bradley, Binghamton, N.Y.
1876
— First free kindergarten in United States opens in Florence,
Mass.
1888
— First wax
drinking straw patented, by Marvin C. Stone, Washington, D.C. ["It’s
Drinking Straw Day!"]
1920
— N.Y. Yankees purchase Babe Ruth from Red Sox for $125,000
1924
— British Egyptologist Howard Carter finds sarcophagus of
Tutankhamun
1925
— Mussolini dissolves Italian parliament, becomes dictator
1946
— William Joyce (Lord Haw Haw), hanged in Britain for treason
1952
— "Dragnet" with Jack Webb premieres on NBC-TV
1958
— Edmund Hillary reaches South Pole overland
1967
— Jack Ruby, assassin who killed assassin Lee Harvey Oswald, dies
at 55
1973
— George Steinbrenner III buys Yankees from CBS for $12 million
1979
— Conrad Hilton, founder of Hilton Hotels, dies at 91
|
|
Part
1
A year in review
World
and national events hit home big in 2001 as
everyday challenges and victories unfolded and prevailed
[JAN.
2, 2002]
|
JANUARY
January
2001 opened cold and snowy, after two cold months and record
December snow. Some local stores had trouble keeping their shelves
stocked with birdseed as thoughtful Logan County residents filled
feeders for hungry birds.
The
first month of the year also brought a buying spree for 1-cent
stamps, because the cost of a first-class stamp went up from 33 to
34 cents on Jan. 7.
Jim
Ash of Linc-On TV was named general manager of the new radio
station, WNMW 96.3 FM, based in Atlanta. Ash was a familiar voice to
the former Lincoln station WPRC listeners until its demise several
years ago.
The
Logan County Board began debating whether to put an advisory
referendum on the April 3 ballot to elect representatives based upon
population (by district) rather than on the at-large system.
Initially, the board voted down the advisory referendum.
Lincoln
Christian College representatives asked the city of Lincoln to allow
the college to purchase economic development revenue bonds through
the city to fund a building program that would add a new
30,000-square-foot athletic facility, renovate student housing and
update building exteriors. The city agreed to the request, which
saved the college from paying federal taxes on the new construction
work.
On
the evening of Jan. 16, smoke began pouring from the historic Scully
Building on the corner of Kickapoo and Pekin streets. Before the
fire, believed to be arson, was extinguished, the four upstairs
apartments were destroyed and two businesses on the ground floor
damaged. The silhouette of the historic building was changed from a
pitched roofline to three gables and two chimneys outlined starkly
against the sky. Barricades were in place for many weeks before the
gables were stabilized so they would not fall.
Five
candidates announced their intention to run for mayor of Lincoln in
the April primary: then-incumbent Joan Ritter, Jason Harlow,
then-incumbent alderman Stephen Mesner, Don Fults and county board
member Beth Davis.
The
Lincoln City Council continued its discussion of a new liquor code
but got bogged down when it came to raising fees for license
holders. The issue has been put on the back burner and is still
unresolved, with the existing liquor license fees and code still in
effect.
Deputy
Jason Lucas, a two-year veteran of the Logan County Sheriff’s
Department, was given recognition by the Logan County Board for an
act of heroism. On the night of Dec. 31, 2000, Lucas rescued an
incapacitated man from a burning house.
In
sports, Lincoln’s own Brian Cook led the University of Illinois to
their fourth conference win of the year at Northwestern University
in Evanston. Cook scored eight straight points to help the Fighting
Illini beat Northwestern 19-6.
[to top of second column in
this section]
|
FEBRUARY
A
ruptured sewer main on Route 10 in front of Greyhound Lube forced
eastbound motorists to find an alternate route to get into Lincoln for more than a week. Many, including trucks, had to take
Connolley Road to Fifth Street because the Illinois Department of
Transportation decided it was unsafe for eastbound traffic to be
channeled into one of the two westbound lanes.
On
Jan. 26, now called Black Friday, news of the disastrous 7.9
magnitude earthquake in India stunned the world. There was an
outpouring of concern and relief efforts sent from around the world
in the days and weeks to follow. Super 8 Motel manager Sunil (Neal)
Patel helped set up the local fund at the Illini Bank for quake
victims. [http://archives.lincolndailynews.com/2001/
Feb/06/news/today/today_a.shtml#India earthquake shocks felt in
Lincoln]
On
Feb. 8, Mount Pulaski’s seventh-grade boys won the championship
round of the Class 7A State Basketball Tournament in Wenona against
Pontiac St. Mary’s. Coach Robert Gasaway said the game was
"hard fought." The final score was 42-34. They had a 25-0
season with no close games.
The
West Lincoln-Broadwell eighth-grade boys basketball team went all
the way to state. The team competed in the Class 8A state
championship Feb. 15 in Concord against Normal Metcalf. Normal won the
game 41-33, and WL-B received the second-place title in the state of
Illinois.
The
Lincoln City Council learned in February that the city’s sewage
treatment plant must be upgraded because it is at capacity and
without an overhaul could soon be out of compliance with Illinois
Environmental Protection Agency requirements. An estimated $9
million upgrade is in the planning stages. The plant was built in
the 1930s and has not had a major renovation since 1972, the council
was told.
Chester-East
Lincoln "mathletes" team, competing against six other
schools, finished second in the regional Mathcounts competition at
Millikin University in Decatur.
This month folks began hearing about
the plan of the Rev. S.M. Davis of the Park Meadows Baptist Church
to build a giant statue of Abraham Lincoln as a city landmark and
tourist attraction. The 305-foot statue (the height of the Statue of
Liberty) would be located close to Interstate 55 and would be
visible as far as 50 miles away. Along with the statue, a theme park
with an observation deck, a visitors’ center and other amenities
would bring visitors and new prosperity to Lincoln. Davis suggested
corporate sponsorship to fund the $150 million project.
The
Feb. 27 Republican primary election brought out 3,009 of the 10,003
registered voters, probably because of the five-way race for mayor
of Lincoln. Beth Davis won with 44 percent of the vote (1,309
votes); incumbent Joan Ritter polled 32 percent (967); alderman
Stephen Mesner got 10 percent (310); Don Fults polled 9 percent
(278); and Jason Harlow came in last with 5 percent (145 votes).
In
sports, wrestling made the news. Olympia High School wrestlers took
second in the state, beating Harvard in the quarterfinals, 49-19, and
Oregon in the semifinals, 30-29. Sandwich defeated them for the
championship, 31-24.
[Joan
Crabb]
[Click
here for Part 2]
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|
Today’s
history
Compiled by Dave Francis
|
Wednesday, Jan. 2
2nd
day of the year
Quotes
"Although
problems and catastrophes may be inevitable, solutions are
not." — Isaac Asimov
"Golf
courses are the best place to observe ministers, but none of them
are above cheating a bit." — John D. Rockefeller
Birthdays
1647
— Nathaniel Bacon, leader of Bacon’s Rebellion in Virginia
(1676)
1863
— Lucia Zarate, became lightest-known adult human (2.1 kilograms
at 17)
1920
— Isaac Asimov, Russia, scientist/writer ("I, Robot,"
"Foundation Trilogy")
1936
— Roger Miller, Fort Worth, Texas, country singer ("King of
the Road")
1939
— Jim Bakker, televangelist (PTL Club)/rapist (Jessica Hahn)
Events
1570
— Tsar Ivan the Terrible’s march to Novgorod begins
1861
— Frederik Willem IV, king Prussia (1840-61) and Germany
(1849-61), dies at 65
1882
— Because of anti-monopoly laws, Standard Oil is organized as a
trust
1935
— Bruno R. Hauptmann trial begins for kidnap-murder of Lindbergh
baby
1936
— First electron tube to enable night vision described, St. Louis,
Mo.
1945
— Kentucky begins 130 home-basketball-game winning streak that
ends in 1955
1960
— John F. Kennedy announces run for U.S. presidency
1977
— Bowie Kuhn suspends Braves owner Ted Turner for one year due to
tampering charges in Gary Matthews free-agency signing
1990
— Alan Hale Jr., skipper on "Gilligan’s Island," dies
of cancer at 71
Tuesday, Jan. 1
1st
day of the year.
Quotes
"The
only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do
nothing." — Edmund Burke
"Above
all, I would teach him to tell the truth … Truth-telling, I have
found, is the key to responsible citizenship. The thousands of
criminals I have seen 40 years of law enforcement have had one thing
common: Every single one was a liar." — J. Edgar Hoover
Birthdays
1449
— Lorenzo de’ Medici [The Magnificent] of Florence
1729
— Edmund Burke, British author
1887
— Wilhelm Canaris, German admiral and head of German military
intelligence
1895
— J. Edgar Hoover, Mr. FBI
1900
— Xavier Cugat, Barcelona, Spain, band leader (married Abbe Lane,
Charo)
1909
— Barry Goldwater, senator, R-Ariz. (1953-65, ‘69-86) and
presidential candidate (R, 1964)
1912
— Kim Philby, British spy, Soviet mole
1912,
Victor Reuther, Wheeling W.Va., labor leader
1919
— J.D. Salinger, novelist. ("Catcher in the Rye")
1922
— Ernest F. Hollings, senator, D-S.C. (1966- )
1958
— Grandmaster Flash [Joseph Saddler], New York City, rocker
("Message from Beat Street")
[to top of second column in
this section]
|
Events
Origin
of Christian era
1515
— Louis XII, "the Justified," king of France
(1498-1515), dies at 52
1622
— Papal Chancery adopts Jan. 1 as beginning of the year (was March
25)
1701
— Great Britain-Ireland union is effect, creating United Kingdom
1772
— First traveler’s checks issued (London)
1776
— Gen. George Washington hoists Continental Union flag
1782
— Johann Christian Bach, German composer and Mozart’s tutor,
dies at 46
1785
— "Daily Universal Register" (Times of London) publishes
first issue
1787
— Arthur Middleton, U.S. farmer (signed Declaration of
Independence), dies at 44
1788
— London’s Daily Universal Registrar becomes the Times
1788
— Quakers in Pennsylvania emancipate their slaves
1797
— Albany replaces New York City as capital of New York
1808
— Congress prohibits importation of slaves
1840
— First recorded bowling match in United States, at Knickerbocker
Alleys, New York City
1861
— President Lincoln declares slavery in Confederate states
unlawful
1863
— First homestead under the Homestead Act claimed, near Beatrice,
Neb.
1863
— Emancipation Proclamation (ending slavery) issued by Lincoln
1874
— New York City annexes the Bronx
1880
— Building of Panama Canal begins
1886
— First Tournament of Roses (Pasadena, Calif.)
1892
— Ellis Island becomes reception center for new immigrants
1897
— Brooklyn merges with New York to form present city of New York
1902
— First Rose Bowl game (Pasadena, Calif.) (University of Michigan
49, Sanford 0)
1907
— President Theodore Roosevelt shakes a record 8,513 hands in one
day
1908
— First time ball signifying new year is dropped at Times Square
1923
— Union of Socialist Soviet Republics established
1928
— First U.S. air-conditioned office building opens, San Antonio
1934
— Alcatraz officially becomes a federal prison
1934
— Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. (U.S. bank guarantor) effective
1934
— International Telecommunication Union established
1935
— First Sugar Bowl and first Orange Bowl
1935
— Associated Press inaugurates Wirephoto
1935
— Eastern Airlines hires Eddie Rickenbacker as general manager
1946
— ENIAC, first computer in United States finished by Mauchly and
Eckert
1953
— Hank Williams, country singer ("Cold Cold Heart"),
dies at 29
1959
— Castro leads Cuba to victory as Fulgencio Batista flees to
Dominican Republic
1968
— Evel Knievel fails his attempt to jump Caesar’s Palace
fountain
1969
— Ian Fleming, writer (James Bond), dies at 80
1994
— Cesar Romero, U.S. actor (Joker in "Batman"), dies at
86
1995
— Last "Far Side" by cartoonist Gary Larson (started
1980)
|
|
Military
addresses sought
It
is a year like no other. Since Sept. 11 we are a changed nation.
Individually, our daily sensitivity toward whom and what we have in
our lives has been heightened. We are more conscious and
appreciative, first about those we love and see everyday. Next, we
have a newfound appreciation for those who risk their lives every
day as rescue workers and protectors of life and property in our
communities. We also now think more about our military men and women
who are committed to serve and protect our country. Many are away
engaged in battle, some are in waiting to go, all are ready to lay
their lives on the line in defense of our freedom.
|
Lincoln
Daily News is
seeking the names and addresses, including e-mail addresses, of
friends and relatives who are serving in the armed forces. They need
not be from here in Logan County. If you know someone serving,
please send the information to ldneditor@lincolndailynews.com.
A complete list will be made available and kept updated through the
site so we might all hold them in our thoughts, prayers and well
wishes.
[Click
here for names available now.]
|
Name
of person in military:
Branch
of service:
Current
location of service:
Postal
address:
E-mail
address:
Relationship to LDN reader
sending information (optional):
[LDN]
|
|
Are
we prepared for terrorism
in Logan County?
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]
|
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
|
|
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
(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/
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Announcements
|
Time
to register to vote
[JAN.
3, 2002] Are
you registered to vote?
|
The
March 19 primary is rapidly approaching. The close of registration
is Feb. 19. If you have moved, or if you have married and changed
your name, it is necessary that you change your voter registration
with our office in order to cast your vote in the election.
If
you have questions about your voting eligibility, please contact
our office at (217) 732-4148.
Sally
J. Litterly
Logan
County Clerk
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