Coming
up to the times
New
security machine at Logan County Courthouse
[JAN.
22, 2002] A
Lincoln visitor’s eyes widened as he recalled his weekend air
travel experience. Flying from Louisiana to St. Louis he made a
flight transfer at the George Bush Intercontinental Airport at
Houston, Texas. He was glad that he was merely doing a transfer, as
it allowed him and his companion travelers to bypass the newcomer
check-in security system. The airline passengers just getting on
their first flight had to pass through an impressive, highly
intimidating, flashing blue light-emanating contraption. Whether in
the bypass line or just checking in line, all travelers then faced
the now common sight of Tommy gun-carrying National Guardsmen
dressed in fatigues in the waiting terminal.
|
The
whole sight was a little overwhelming to the traveler, but it is a
new day in America. We must adopt new practices. We are now probably
where we should have been years ago — more security conscious like
most of the rest of the world.
Today,
Logan County completed another phase of beefing up its security. An
X-ray machine has been installed and is operational at the Logan
County Courthouse. Sheriff Tony Soloman said the plans to get one of
these began long before Sept. 11. He first got approval to order a
machine through the county board and law enforcement committee. In
June 2001 they sent out for bids on one. They were able to order one
in October, but because there was such a rush on them at that time
it was slow to become available. The company they ordered from is
based in Chicago and serves mostly federal government; their orders
came first.
The
machine has been purchased at no expense to Logan County taxpayers.
Years ago Judge Gerald Dehner saw the need to start a security
system in the courthouse. A certain percentage of criminal fines are
put aside in a security fund. The fund has bought the current metal
detector and pays for security officer wages. Sheriff Soloman said
he thought it was time for a metal detector, and when he checked it
out the funds were sufficient. The machines themselves are made in
New Jersey. The total cost is $14,600.
[to top of second column in this
article]
|
All
packages and purses will be run through the machine. This can be
done quickly and most conveniently. One of the greatest benefits to
this device is that it spares anyone any embarrassment of searching
through personal items, and a sense of privacy is maintained.
The
particular setup Sheriff Soloman has chosen is a mobile unit. It can
be used elsewhere for any number of occasions. It is not too bulky
to use in offices or schools. If we have visiting dignitaries, such
as when the governor came to LDC, the machine can be set up on
location. If a school gets a threat that a student is bringing
something to school, it can be taken there. It can also be used at
any other public assemblies anywhere else.
[Jan
Youngquist]
|
|
Entrepreneurs
and small businesses are invited to conference, awards banquet
[JAN.
22, 2002] SPRINGFIELD
— Gov. George Ryan has invited representatives of Illinois small
businesses and entrepreneurs to attend the governor’s 2002 Small
Business Conference and Awards Banquet, scheduled for Feb. 5-6 at
the Crowne Plaza Hotel in Springfield.
|
"Small
businesses are the foundation of the Illinois economy," Gov.
Ryan said. "Our state’s more than 625,000 small businesses
provide jobs for more than 2.5 million Illinois workers. As a former
small-business owner, I understand the challenges these business
people face every day. This conference is designed to provide
opportunities and information to help them meet those
challenges."
Pam
McDonough, director of the Department
of Commerce and Community Affairs, said the 2002 conference
supports small-business growth and entrepreneurship in Illinois
through information, resources and training targeted specifically
toward small businesses. Featured topics include: "eBusiness
Strategies," "Accessing Business Financing for Business
Expansion and Start-Up," "Tips on Thriving in Today’s
Economy," "Low Cost Marketing Strategies" and
"Small Business Security."
The
conference also will feature a resource area including exhibits from
a number of state agencies and associations. Exhibitors’
representatives will be available throughout the conference to
discuss the services they offer to small-business owners and
entrepreneurs in Illinois.
[to top of second
column in this article]
|
"A
strong Illinois small-business community means jobs for Illinois
workers and a more diversified Illinois economy," McDonough
said. "This conference combines practical training with
networking opportunities that can help our small businesses and
entrepreneurs achieve success."
Highlighting
the conference will be the awards banquet on Feb. 5, celebrating the
success of Illinois small businesses and entrepreneurs. Awards to be
presented include the Small Business Person of the Year, Small
Business Women’s Advocate of the Year, Small Business Minority
Advocate, Entrepreneur Success Award, and Young Entrepreneur Award.
The
fee to attend the conference is $50 per person, which includes the
banquet and awards program. To register, download the registration
form by clicking here.
Registration forms may also be requested by calling (217) 698-7066
[TTY (800) 524-5856] or DCCA’s Small Business Office at (217)
524-5856 [TTY (217) 785-6055]. Completed registrations may be faxed
to (217) 793-0041 if accompanied by a credit card number, or may be
mailed with a check or money order made payable to Governor’s 2002
Small Business Conference to: Governor’s 2002 Small Business
Conference, 1224 Centre West, Suite 200B, Springfield, IL 62704.
[News
release]
|
|
Today’s
history
Compiled
by Dave Francis
Tuesday,
Jan. 22
The
22nd day of the year
|
Quotes
"No
pleasure is comparable to the standing upon the vantage-ground of
truth." — Francis Bacon
"I
once told Nixon that the Presidency is like being a jackass caught
in a hail storm. You’ve got to just stand there and take it."
— Lyndon B. Johnson
Birthdays
1440
— Ivan III, the Great, Russian czar (1462-1505)
1561
— Francis Bacon, England, statesman and essayist ("Novum
Organum")
1788
— Lord [George Gordon Noel] Byron, England, romantic poet (Don
Juan)
1800
— Nat Turner, slave that revolted
1937
— Joseph Wambaugh, East Pittsburgh, Pa., police writer
("Onion Fields")
Events
1528
— England and France declare war on Emperor Charles V
1552
— Edward Seymour, Duke of Somerset, beheaded for treason
[to top of second column in
this section]
|
1905
— Bloody Sunday: Russian demonstrators fired on by tsarist troops
1939
— Uranium atom first split, Columbia University
1944
— During World War II, Allied forces begin landing at Anzio, Italy
1946
— U.S. president sets up CIA, Central Intelligence Agency
1951
— Fidel Castro ejected from a Winter League game after beaning
batter
1969
— Judy Garland, singer and actress ("Wizard of Oz"),
dies at 48 of an overdose
1973
— George Foreman TKOs Joe Frazier in two for heavyweight boxing
title
1973
— Roe vs. Wade: U.S. Supreme Court legalizes some abortions
1973
— Lyndon B. Johnson, president (1963-69), dies at his Texas ranch
at 64
1980
— Dissidents Andrei Sacharov and Jelena Bonner banished to Gorki
1995
— Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy, mother of President John F. Kennedy,
dies at 104
|
Tell
a friend about
Lincoln Daily
News.com |
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Dr. Robert Turk
Regional
Superintendent of Schools
Logan, Mason & Menard Counties
Vote for
Experience and Leadership:
Current Assistant Regional Superintendent
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Former Principal and Teacher
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|
|
Today’s
history
Compiled
by Dave Francis
Monday,
Jan. 21
The
21st day of the year
|
Quotes
"It
is true that liberty is precious — so precious that it must be
rationed." — I. Lenin
"Myths
which are believed in tend to become true." — George Orwell
Birthdays
1824
— Thomas Jonathan "Stonewall" Jackson, lieutenant
general, 2nd Corps (ANV, Confederacy)
1855
— John M. Browning, United States, weapons manufacturer
1905
— Christian Dior, Normandy, France, fashion designer
1924
— Telly Savalas, Garden City, N.J., actor ("Kojak")
1933
— William Wrigley III, chewing gum mogul (Wrigleys)
1939
— Wolfman Jack [Bob Smith], Brooklyn, N.Y., DJ ("Midnight
Special")
1940
— Jack Nicklaus, Columbus, Ohio, golfer (Player of Year 1967, ’72, ’73, ’75, ’76)
1941
— Placido Domingo, Madrid, Spain, opera tenor (Pinkerton in
"Mme. Butterfly")
[to top of second column in
this section]
|
Events
1189
— Philip II, Henry II and Richard Lionhearted initiate third
Crusade
1604
— Tsar Ivan IV defeats False Dmitri, who claims to be the true
tsar
1789
— First American novel, W.H. Brown’s "Power of
Sympathy," is published
1813
— Pineapple introduced to Hawaii (or 01-111)
1903
— "Wizard of Oz," premieres in New York City
1903
— Harry Houdini escapes police station Halvemaansteeg in Amsterdam
1924
— Vladimir Ilyich Ulyanov Lenin, Russian leader, dies of a stroke
at 53
1950
— New York jury finds former State Department official Alger Hiss
guilty of perjury
1950
— George Orwell, author ("Animal Farm,"
"1984"), dies in London at 46
1959
— Cecil B[lount] de Mille, producer ("The Ten
Commandments"), dies at 77
1991
— Howard "Red" Grange, football’s galloping ghost,
dies at 87
1997
— Colonel Tom Parker, manager (Elvis Presley), dies at 87
|
|
Lincoln Christian Seminary’s
50th anniversary
|
LCS celebrates 50 years —
Still
impacting the world for Christ
[JAN.
19, 2002] This
year marks the 50th anniversary of Lincoln Christian Seminary. The
seminary will celebrate its jubilee year with an impressive list of
featured alumni who will speak during chapel in Restoration Hall
throughout the spring semester.
|
Lincoln
Christian Seminary was established in 1952 as the dream of founder
Earl C Hargrove, who worked hard to make his dream a reality by
raising the funds to build an administration and library building in
1960 and a graduate building named Restoration Hall in 1966.
With its own building, and expanding library, Lincoln Christian
Seminary entered an era of rapid growth.
Today,
Lincoln Christian Seminary has grown to more than 300 students, who
are instructed by 11 full-time faculty members and 20 adjunct
faculty. In 2000 LCS graduated its 1000th student. LCS
graduates serve in 38 countries and across the United States,
preaching in churches, teaching in Bible colleges and seminaries,
and serving the Lord in many different ministry capacities.
The
seminary has a reputation for its high-quality faculty who bring
years of experience and expertise into the classroom. Students cite
the excellence of the faculty as their top reason for choosing LCS.
The curriculum now includes three degree programs — the Master of
Divinity, the Master of Arts and the Master of Arts in Counseling
Ministry. Lincoln Christian Seminary is accredited by the
Association of Theological Schools in the United States and Canada,
and the North Central Association of Colleges and Schools.
[to top of second
column in this article]
|
The
seminary is led under the direction of the vice president of
academics, Dr. Tom Tanner, and associate deans Dr. Robert Lowery
and Dr. Paul Boatman. Prior to Dr. Tanner’s inauguration, Dr.
Wayne Shaw served as the seminary’s academic dean for 26 years,
and Enos Dowling served for 22 years. Together as deans, Shaw and
Dowling spanned 48 years of Lincoln Christian Seminary’s 50 years.
Dr. Keith H. Ray, a graduate of Lincoln Christian College and
Seminary, serves as president.
Below
is a schedule of guest speakers for the month of January. Each
chapel service begins at 9:30 a.m. in the chapel of Restoration
Hall. All are welcome to attend.
[News
release]
|
|
LCS 50th anniversary:
January
chapel schedule
[JAN.
19, 2002]
|
Jan.
15
Doug
Maris;
“Jubilee:
A Year for New Beginnings”
Jan.
16
Gary
Johnson
“Still
Impacting the World — Still Finishing Strong”
|
Jan.
23
Jim
Johnson and Jeff Snell
“Still
Impacting the World for Christ: Through
Balanced Ministry/Through Focused Ministry”
Jan.
30
Rick
Walston
“A
Word from God for Troubled Lives”
[News
release] |
|
Today’s
history
Compiled
by Dave Francis
|
Saturday, Jan. 19
The
19th day of the year
Quotes
"We
deal with a right of privacy older than the Bill of Rights — older
than our political parties, older than our school system." —
William O. Douglas
"While
the angels, all pallid and wan,
Uprising,
unveiling, affirm
That
the play is the tragedy ‘Man,’
And
its hero the Conqueror Worm."
—
Edgar Alan Poe
Birthdays
??
— Mohammed, Islamic prophet (Koran)
1736
— James Watt, Scotland, inventor (steam engine)
1809
— Edgar Allan Poe, Boston, author
1839
— Paul Cezanne, France, impressionist painter (Bathers)
1918
— John H. Johnson, United States, publisher (Negro Digest, Ebony,
Jet)
1943
— Janis Joplin, Port Arthur, Texas, bluesy rock singer ("Down
on Me")
Events
1419
— French city of Rouen surrenders to Henry V in Hundred Years War
1793
— French King Louis XVI sentenced to death
1825
— Ezra Daggett and nephew Thomas Kensett patent food storage in
tin cans
1829
— Johann von Goethe’s "Faust, Part 1," premieres
1833
— Charles Darwin reaches Straits Ponsonby, Fireland
1937
— Millionaire Howard Hughes sets transcontinental air record
1939
— Ernest Hausen of Wisconsin sets chicken-plucking record: 4.4 sec
1954
— Sydney Greenstreet, actor ("The Maltese Falcon"), dies
at 74
1955
— Scrabble debuts on board game market
1955
— First presidential news conference filmed for TV (Eisenhower)
1975
— Thomas Heart Benson, U.S. artist, dies at 85
1980
— William O. Douglas, member U.S. Supreme Court (1939-75), dies at
81
[to top of second column in
this section]
|
Sunday,
Jan. 20
The
20th day of the year
Quotes
"All
art is autobiographical; the pearl is the oyster’s
autobiography." — Frederico Fellini
"What
do we, as a nation, care about books? How much do you think we spend
altogether on our libraries, public or private, as compared with
what we spend on our horses?" — John Ruskin
Birthdays
1732
— Richard H. Lee, U.S. farmer (signed Declaration of Independence)
1896
— George Burns [Nathan Birnbaum], New York City, actor and
comedian ("Oh, God!")
1920
— Federico Fellini, Rimini, Italy, director
Events
1612
— Rudolf II von Habsburg, emperor of Germany (1576-1612), dies at
59
1778
— First American military court martial trial begins, Cambridge,
Mass.
1783
— Hostilities cease in Revolutionary War
1819
— Carlos IV, King of Spain (1788-1808), dies at 70
1900
— John Ruskin, English writer ("Dearest Mama Talbot"),
dies of flu at 81
1945
— FDR sworn in for an unprecedented fourth term as president
1948
— Mahatma Gandhi, India’s pacifist, assassinated
1984
— Johnny Weissmuller, U.S. swimmer (Olympics, five golds, 1924,
’28), dies at 79
1997
— Curt Flood, center fielder (Cards), dies of throat cancer at 59
|
|
Oasis
dedicates ‘Reflections’ mural, which honors financial
contributors
[JAN.
18, 2002] It
was with great pleasure that Oasis director Dominic Dalpoas unveiled
the newly developed "Reflections" mural at the annual
meeting of the Senior Citizens of Logan County, Inc. The mural,
mounted on the south wall of the activity and dining area at the
Oasis Senior Center, was dedicated last evening, Thursday, Jan. 17.
|
The
new mural is a means to recognize individuals and organizations that
have contributed financially to the senior citizens organization.
Contributors are honored with a nameplate on the mural so that the
Oasis membership and others can reflect on the contributions, which
make a difference in the lives of the seniors of today and those who
will follow.
[Photo by Bob Frank]
The
colored plaques mounted on the mural display the name of the
individual or organization and the year the contribution was
received. A coding key mounted next to the mural indicates the five
levels of contributors honored: $500-$999.99, black;
$1,000-$4,999.99, green; $5,000-$9,999.99, blue; $10,000-$24,999.99,
red; $25,000 and above, brass.
The
mural represents financial contributions since Jan. 1, 2000.
The
meeting also reviewed the accomplishments of the center in 2001, set
goals for the 2002 calendar year and selected this year’s board of
directors and officers.
[to top of second
column in this article]
|
Board
members re-elected for a second three-year term were Harold Boyer,
Betty Burger, Alice Davis, Darlene Freeman, John Hart, Bob Shanle
and LaVeta Zurkammer.
Nominees
Rich Bumba and Marcia Howen were selected to replace Weldon B.
Frantz and Phyllis Koehler on the board. Koehler was not eligible
for re-election, as she had completed her second term at the end of
December.
Officers
elected were David LaForge, president; LaVeta Zurkhammer, vice
president; Alice Davis, secretary; and Barbara Raycraft, treasurer.
[Photo by Bob Frank]
Plaques
were given to the exiting board members, Weldon Frantz and Phyllis
Koehler, and to Dean Baker for his service as president from 1998 to
2001.
Entertainment
and refreshments followed the business meeting.
[News
release]
|
|
Klingler
visits ALMH,
tells stand on issues
[JAN.
18, 2002] State
Rep. Gwenn Klingler, R-Springfield, spent Thursday morning at
Abraham Lincoln Memorial Hospital, getting to know the health care
issues in what she hopes will be part of her new district after the
next general election. She also let board members, employees and
other community leaders know where she stands on a number of issues
that concern Logan County residents.
|
Klingler,
who represents the 100th District, will run against Rich
Brauer in the March primary. The recent redistricting has changed
the map so that about 60 percent of Klingler’s current district in
southern Sangamon County will be in the new 100th
District, along with the southwest quarter of Logan County,
including Lincoln. The new 100th District includes
two-thirds of Logan County voters — about 19,000 people
Although
no Democratic candidate has yet announced, if she wins the primary
she expects to have opposition in the general election in November.
Addressing
a subject of immediate interest to many in Logan County, Klingler
said she favors keeping Lincoln Developmental Center open and is
talking with other elected officials about support for the
100-year-old institution. She has also written to Gov. George Ryan
to let him know where she stands on the issue. "The governor
knows my feelings," she said.
"I
think it is important to have options for people with disabilities.
It is important to keep institutionalized care. Group homes may work
for some, but I don’t think one solution fits everybody."
She
also addressed the recent budget cuts that affect health care
institutions statewide, in particular the $125 million cut in
Medicaid payments. Hospitals now receive only 75 percent
reimbursement for the cost of treatment for Medicaid patients and
will lose even more funds because state Medicaid payments are
matched dollar-for-dollar by the federal government.
"If
we are going to make cuts, they should be throughout the entire
spectrum of government, not just human services," she said.
"I felt the cuts were aimed at human services and social
services for people in need, and especially for health care."
The
governor’s decision to restore $24 million to hospitals and
substitute a 2 percent reduction in reimbursement to health care
providers isn’t a solution, she said. "It doesn’t help the
system to cut doctors 2 percent and give the money back to the
hospitals."
Woody
Hester, CEO at ALMH, said the governor’s first cuts in Medicaid
reimbursement took $172,000 out of the $600,000 operating margin at
the hospital. The $24 million will restore only $12,000, so that
ALMH’s final cut will be $160,000. He said the hospital
"might have to discontinue some programs," although there
has not yet been time to determine exactly what those might be.
The
solution, Klingler said, is that "budget cuts have to be spread
everywhere. We in the legislature have to look at all areas."
The present cuts affect only areas over which the governor has
control and do not affect expenses of the judiciary or the
legislature. She said the legislature has a duty to make some of the
cuts and not leave it all up to the governor, and she expects the
next session at the Statehouse to be "pretty contentious."
[Klingler put on scrubs to visit ALMH’s surgical center. Here
surgical nurse manager Debi Morrow shows her the video machine in
the endoscopy department.
All photos by Joan Crabb.]
[Klingler talks to Woody Hester, CEO at ALMH,
after a tour of the
new maternity wing.] [to top of second
column in this article]
|
Regarding
the possibility of massive layoffs announced this week by the
governor’s office, Klingler said she hoped that might just be a
"scare tactic." Instead of layoffs, she is pushing an
early retirement bill to encourage those near retirement —
anywhere from 4,000 to 10,000 employees — to leave. "This
removes from the payroll those with the highest incomes, while job
cuts remove mostly those with the lowest incomes," she said.
She
also said this is not the time for the legislature to consider new
programs, because there are already too many unfunded mandates in
place. "We can’t have ‘feel-good programs’ and not fund
them," she said.
Klingler
was first elected to the House in 1994, and this year is seeking her
fifth term. She has a special interest in health care and has been
on the health care committee for eight years. Her husband and two
children are physicians.
Another
issue of interest to Klingler is education, and she said she worked
hard to get the former Sangamon State University to become the
University of Illinois at Springfield and to establish a four-year
program there.
She
said she would also like to see the school construction grant
program continued. This program provides funds to school districts
that need new buildings and is presently one of the funding sources
for the construction of District 27’s new Central and junior high
schools.
Klingler
is an attorney and has worked for the attorney general’s office
and as a state’s attorney appellate prosecutor. She also served on
a Springfield school board and on the Springfield City Council.
She
has been visiting communities in what will be the new 100th
District to get to know their concerns. "I’ve been to four
village board meetings in eight days," she said.
At
ALHM, she donned green scrubs and visited the new surgical facility.
She also toured the new maternity ward and other areas of the
hospital, then went outside and climbed aboard the rural health van.
The van makes weekly visits to Logan County communities to provide
on-site health care.
"It’s
delightful to see a state representative who takes her
responsibilities so seriously that she wants to learn as much as she’s
learning here," Hester said during the tour.
Hester
introduced her as a state representative with a good track record in
the General Assembly on health care issues. "I do have a lot of
respect for a representative who has earned the respect of her peers
and who influences the votes of others in the House without selling
her soul," he added.
He
said in the past Lincoln was very fortunate in having both a state
representative, John Turner, and a state senator, Robert Madigan.
"We could see them in the barber shop."
"There’s
a lot of anger about the redistricting," Klingler replied.
"If I’m re-elected, I’ll be up here a lot. I didn’t draw
the map, but I’ll try to do my best."
[Joan
Crabb]
[Dayle Eldredge, head of Healthy Communities Partnership, gives
Klingler a tour of the rural health van.]
[Klingler inside rural health van]
|
|
Today’s
history
Compiled
by Dave Francis
Friday,
Jan. 18
The
18th day of the year
|
Quotes
"Whatever
makes men good Christians makes them good citizens." — Daniel
Webster
"Walk
wide o’ the Widow at Windsor,
For
’alf o’ Creation she owns:
We
’ave bought ’er the same with the sword an’ the flame,
An’
we’ve salted it down with our bones." — Rudyard Kipling
Birthdays
1779
— Peter Roget, of thesaurus fame and inventor of slide rule and
pocket chessboard
1782
— Daniel Webster, Salisbury, N.H., orator, politician, lawyer
1854
— Thomas A. Watson, needed by Bell, inventor’s assistant
(telephone)
1856 — Daniel Nathan Hale Williams, surgeon (first open heart
operation)
1882
— Alan Alexander Milne, English author ("Winnie the
Pooh")
1892
— Oliver Hardy, Harlem, Ga., comedy team member (Laurel and Hardy)
1904 — Cary Grant, England, actor ("Arsenic and Old
Lace," "North by Northwest")
1933
— Ray Dolby, sound expert and inventor (Dolby noise limiting
system)
[to top of second column in
this section]
|
Events
1478 — Grand Duke Ivan II of Moscow occupies Novgorod
1486 — King Henry VII of England marries Elizabeth, daughter of
Edward IV
1535 — Francisco Pizarro founds Lima, Peru
1644 — First UFO sighting in America, by perplexed pilgrims in
Boston
1671 — Pirate Henry Morgan defeats Spanish defenders, captures
Panama
1730 — Peter II, czar of Russia (1727-30), dies at 14
1778 — Capt. James Cook stumbles over Sandwich Islands (Hawaiian
Islands)
1854 — Filibuster William Walker proclaims Republic of Sonora in
northwest Mexico
1862 — John Tyler, 10th U.S. president (1841-45), dies in Richmond,
Va., at 71
1911 — First shipboard landing of a plane (Tanforan Park on USS
Pennsylvania)
1919 — World War I Peace Congress opens in Versailles, France
1936 — Rudyard Kipling, author ("Gunga Din," Nobel 1907), dies at 70
1943 — Jews in Warsaw Ghetto begin resistance of Nazis
1943 — Pre-sliced bread sale banned to reduce bakery demand for
metal parts
1943 — Soviets announce they broke long Nazi siege of Leningrad
1973 — John Cleese’s final episode on "Monty Python’s Flying
Circus," on BBC
1996 — Minnesota Fats [Rudolf Wanderone Jr.], billiard hustler, dies
at 82
|
|
School
construction on schedule
From
The Building Times
[JAN.
17, 2002] The
first phase of construction of the new Central School is complete,
and the project remains on schedule. Work performed in the first
phase included dismantling and moving the playground equipment,
demolition of the tennis courts, and removal of the old fence and
installation of a construction fence.
|
Construction
of the storm sewer is under way, and the sewer for the new school
has been connected to the sewer of the existing building. Large
earth-moving equipment has been leveling and grading the land, and
the new building has been staked out and marked by surveyors.
The
new building will fill most of the area behind the existing building
and will come within feet of existing structures on the property.
Already
there have been many changes and considerable activity, all in
keeping with the district’s construction schedule.
Phase
II of construction begins
Phase
II of construction began Monday, Jan. 7, with the arrival of pier
drilling machines on the site. The machines are drilling cement
piers into the ground to make the base for the beams that will
become the foundation of the new building. The cement piers will be
drilled deeply to rest on firm earth because the new building is
being erected on the site of the original 1867 Central School. That
building was demolished and buried after construction of the present
Central School was complete. The type of foundation chosen will
provide a very stable support for the new building.
We’re
in the money!
The
Capital Development Board has issued District 27 the first of many
checks to fund the construction of two new schools. The district has
met all the criteria established by the Illinois Historic
Preservation Agency to qualify for funding. Most recently, the
district completed a project to develop an architecture curriculum
to assist teachers in instructing students about various new and old
architectural styles. A compact disc containing the curriculum and
photographs of many architectural styles was delivered to the IHPA
in mid-December.
[to top of second column in this
article]
|
New
building — new spaces — new versatility
The
new Central School building will have an exciting new
multi-functional space called a cafetorium. This room will be the
eating area for students — the cafeteria — and will also serve
as a fully functional auditorium, complete with stage — thus, the
name cafetorium.
Students
will eat lunch at round tables instead of the long
institutional-type tables long associated with school lunches. The
tables can be moved to a nearby storage area and chairs arranged in
rows when the cafetorium is needed for performances and assemblies.
The
floor of the cafetorium will be graduated in the "stadium
seating" style for optimal viewing of the stage when in use for
performances. A set of steps running across the front of the stage
will serve as risers for choral performances.
The
stage is strategically located between the cafetorium and the
gymnasium. To accommodate larger audiences, the stage can also be
opened and used on the gymnasium side — still fully functional, of
course.
The
Central faculty is very excited about the many ways that this
innovative and versatile area can be used.
[District
27 Lincoln Elementary Schools]
|
|
Council
gets requests, reports from Main Street
Lincoln, fire
and police committees
[JAN.
17, 2002] Jan
Schumacher, vice-president of Main Street Lincoln, said that
organization is looking for a new director after the resignation of
Wendy Bell. Bell left to work with the state of Illinois Main Street
program.
|
Schumacher
said Main Street Lincoln has already received several resumes and
hopes to have a new director by March or at the latest, April. She
said the new director would be required to live in Lincoln.
She
asked if the city would help pay for a part-time office worker until
a new director is hired, as well as help with other expenses. Bates
said the city will want to see some actual figures for these
expenses at the next meeting, Jan. 22. The city has paid $15,000
toward the salary of the Main Street Lincoln director.
Alderman
Pat Madigan reported that an inspection of the floor of the
firehouse where two trucks are parked shows "some design
deficiencies but nothing to the point where we have to worry about
tracks falling through the floor." There is a basement under
Bays 1 and 2 in the firehouse.
[to top of second
column in this article]
|
Madigan
said engineers recommended regular inspections to check on the floor
for any unusual stress. Fire Chief Bucky Washam said the department’s
new truck, which weighs 43,000 pounds — 5,000 pounds more than the
old trucks — will not be parked in Bays 1 or 2, even though a big
hose nozzle cannot be installed on the top of the truck when it is
parked in Bays 3 or 4, because the door are not high enough. He said
the hose will have to be stored in a compartment in the truck.
The
police committee recommended the purchase of a new squad car, which
will cost about $23,000. There is only $15,973 in the budget for a
new vehicle, Alderman Verl Prather said, but the extra $7,000 could
come from the appropriations item in the budget. The committee
recommended keeping an old squad car instead of trading it in for
about $3,000. This car can be used as a backup and also can be
driven home by various officers and parked in neighborhoods as a
deterrent to crime. The item was put on the agenda for the next
meeting.
[Joan
Crabb]
|
|
Lincoln
Fire Department’s newest pride and joy
[JAN.
17, 2002] Citizens
of Lincoln may have seen a fancy new truck streaking through town in
the past few weeks. The Fire Department has recently obtained a
brand new firetruck, which, according to Chief Bucky Washam, has
many more "bells and whistles" than the older ones.
This
truck can hold up to 500 gallons of water and can pump 1,500 gallons
per minute. It also has deep compartments that hold emergency rescue
equipment and medical supplies.
All
of this extra storage causes the truck to be much heavier than the
standard trucks in Lincoln. This has caused a problem at the
department because they cannot house it in Bay 1, which would allow
the loading of more equipment than any other. There are questions as
to Bay 1’s floor strength. Because of this, the truck must
currently make its home in Bay 4.
[Gina
Sennett]
|
|
Today’s
history
Compiled
by Dave Francis
Thursday, Jan. 17
The
17th day of the year
|
Quotes
"We
must — indeed all hang together, or, most assuredly, we shall all
hang separately." Benjamin Franklin
"This
American system of ours ... call it Americanism, call it capitalism,
call it what you like, gives to each and every one of us a great
opportunity if we only seize it with both hands and make the most of
it." — Al Capone
Birthdays
1706
— Benjamin Franklin, Boston, kite flyer, statesman, wit, inventor
1732
— Stanislaw II August Poniatowski, last king of Poland (1764-95)
1820 — Anne Bronte, English novelist and poet ("The Tenant of
Wildfell Hall")
1880
— Mack Sennett, movie creator ("Keystone Kops")
1899
— Al Capone, Italy, gangster (Chicago bootlegging)
1925
— Rock Hudson, Winnetka, Ill., actor ("McMillan and
Wife")
1931
— James Earl Jones, Miss., actor ("Darth Vader,"
"Exorcist II," "Soul Man")
1931
— L. Douglas Wilder, governor, D-Va.
1933
— Aga Khan, religious leader (Muslims)
1942
— Muhammad Ali [Cassius Clay], heavyweight champ boxer
1962
— Jim Carrey, Ontario, Canada, actor ("In Living Color,"
"Dumb and Dumber," "The Mask")
[to top of second column in
this section]
|
Events
1229
— Albert, bishop of Riga and founder of Sword Knights, dies at
about 68
1562
— Edict of St. Germain recognizes Huguenots in France
1773
— Capt. James Cook becomes first to cross Antarctic Circle
1775
— Nine old women burnt as witches for causing bad harvests, Kalisk,
Poland
1821
— Mexico permits Austin and 300 U.S. families to settle in Texas
1893
— Rutherford B. Hayes, 19th U.S. president (1877-81), dies in
Fremont, Ohio, at 70
1977
— Gary Gilmore executed in Utah; first U.S. execution since 1967
1991
— Operation Desert Storm begins; United States leads allies vs.
Iraq
1995
— Los Angeles Rams announce that they are moving to St. Louis
|
|
Council
hears details of new handicapped parking laws
[JAN.
16, 2002] Illinois
drivers who cheat and use handicapped-parking spaces illegally will
now have a harder time avoiding getting caught, the Lincoln City
Council learned at its committee of the whole meeting Tuesday
evening.
|
William
A. Bogdan, disability liaison with the department of senior and
community services of the Illinois secretary of state’s office,
explained the new legislation that went into effect on Jan. 1 of
this year. Key to cutting down abuse of the program are new parking
placards that will be harder for unauthorized drivers to use and
easier for police to spot.
Bogdan
showed a brief video of a recent "sting" operation in
Chicago, set up to find out how prevalent cheating was. The seven
stings caught 150 people, most of whom kept handicapped parking
spaces tied up all day, he said. Four of those caught were using
placards they had made themselves. Bogdan also said placards have
been for sale on e-Bay for anywhere from $2 to $30.
To
stop this abuse, permanent placards are redesigned with a punch card
expiration date corresponding to the holder’s birth month, and the
holder will also be identified by gender. This will make it easier
for police to check whether the driver is actually the authorized
cardholder, Bogdan said. Officers can see if the birth month on the
placard corresponds with the birth month on the driver’s license.
Also
police can now seize a placard being used illegally as well as write
a $100 ticket. This will make it more difficult for "a teen
using grandma’s placard," Bogdan added. If the placard is
seized, the authorized cardholder will have to go to court to get it
back.
Temporary
placards will also be identified by gender and show the card’s
expiration date. There is also a new category, organization
placards, that will be issued to groups that transport those with
disabilities. A hologram image of the wheelchair symbol appears on
these placards, making it more difficult to copy.
Bogdan
addressed the question of proper display of the placard, an issue
that has caused some controversy in Lincoln. Last year there were a
series of complaints that tickets were issued to vehicles that had
handicapped placards. Owners of some of the vehicles said they did
have placards displayed, but the volunteers doing the ticketing said
the placards were not visible. The city has authorized several
handicapped volunteers to issue tickets.
[to top of second
column in this article]
|
Bogdan
told the council that if the card is not hanging where police can
see it, it is not properly displayed.
"It’s
the job of the person with a disability to see that the placard is
properly displayed," he said. If the card is hanging from the
rearview mirror, its view should not be obstructed by baby shoes or
other decorations. "It needs to be in clear view," he
added.
He
said police officers have the discretion whether to write a ticket
or not when there is doubt about the proper display of a placard.
Police
Chief Rich Montcalm said from eight to 10 tickets are given each
month for handicapped parking violations, half of them first
offenses. He said the present city policy is for first offenses to
be dismissed. Second offenses go before a committee of three, City
Attorney Bill Bates, Mayor Beth Davis and Montcalm, and are decided
on a case-by-case basis.
Bogdan
also said that as of Jan. 1 it is illegal to park in an access isle,
the striped space next to a handicapped parking space, even if the
driver has a handicapped placard and cannot find another parking
space. The access isle must be left clear to allow those in
wheelchairs to enter and leave a vehicle.
He
said there are now about 700,000 drivers with handicapped license
plates or placards in Illinois. He is traveling throughout the state
to educate the public on the new parking legislation, House Bill
846. He said a manual will be sent to police departments explaining
the new program.
Pete
Fredericks, owner of Pete’s Hardware, asked why he has to
designate a handicapped parking area for his store, which has only a
few parking spots. "Why can’t mine go out on the
street?" he said. "A person who owns property should have
some input."
Mayor
Davis said that people with disabilities "only want a level
playing field." City Attorney Bates said Fredericks was
questioning a state law, not one the city passed. Later Davis said
later the city would try to work with Fredericks on the handicapped
parking issue.
[Joan
Crabb]
|
|
Country
homes rezoning petition narrowly passes
[JAN.
16, 2002] By
the thinnest of margins the Logan County Board voted Tuesday night
to rezone three acres near Chester from agricultural to country
homes use. In another matter that had previously been disputed,
board members were unanimous in extending the employment of Animal
Control Warden Sheila Farmer for 11 months.
|
On
the zoning matter a narrow 7-6 majority voted to allow Alan Roos to
carve three one-acre home sites from his 120-acre farm in Aetna
Township. Zoning officer Bud Miller said the petition meets all
zoning requirements, and State’s Attorney Tim Huyett said the
project does not fall under the subdivision act since it does not
involve building a street or sewer. Board member Dale Voyles called
the petition "a very clear-cut opportunity for limited growth
in the county." Both the Regional Planning Commission and the
Zoning Board of Appeals had previously approved the project.
County
board member Rod White said he voted against the petition because he
objects in general to "spot zoning." The zoning ordinance
does not require country home plots to have services such as water,
electricity or sewer and therefore "may open up the county to
situations detrimental to buyer and seller," White warned. He
said there are areas in the county where a well will not hit water.
A lot buyer might sue after discovering that the ground was not
suitable for building a home, thus causing trouble for the seller
also. White also objected to rezoning a plot before there is a
prospective home-builder.
Board
member Gloria Luster said that Roos’ property avoids many of the
potential pitfalls in the zoning ordinance. The land is located very
close to Chestnut and has city water and natural gas as well as a
buried phone line. A power line runs on the other side of the road.
The
vote to rezone the three acres passed 7-6, with Roger Bock, Paul
Gleason, Lloyd Hellman, Dave Hepler, Dick Logan and White voting
against.
A
committee to review the zoning ordinance is already being formed by
Regional Planning Commissioner Phil Mahler. Its members so far
include himself, Miller, County Engineer Tom Hickman, Director of
Economic Development Mark Smith, county board members Hepler and
Terry Werth, Health Department Director of Environmental Health
Kathy Waldo, Lincoln City Safety Inspector Les Last, Atlanta Mayor
Bill Martin, farmer Kent Paulus, Jim Drew of the Logan County Farm
Bureau and Delmar Veech, a 30-year member of the planning
commission. Mahler said he intends to add a township road
commissioner and that any county resident interested in joining the
committee can call him at 732-8835 or 737-9765.
Mahler
said review of the zoning ordinance may take a year. "I want
orderly growth and a growth that makes sense," he added. The
final decision on any changes will be made by the county board.
The
board reappointed Dean Toohey of Mount Pulaski to the Zoning Board
of Appeals. Doug Dutz cast the only dissenting vote.
[to top of second
column in this article]
|
Regarding
the animal control warden, all members of the board voted to hire
Sheila Farmer for the remainder of the fiscal year. Jim Griffin, a
member of the Animal Control Committee, said he changed his earlier
vote on Farmer’s employment because the committee is addressing
problems and complaints. As one example, committee chairman Cliff
"Sonny" Sullivan said phone calls are now being forwarded
to the warden’s cell phone, so a human being now answers the
telephone.
The
county board also voted unanimously in favor of funding two bridge
projects:
•
$40,000 to correct a scour problem on the Kickapoo Creek bridge on
the Waynesville blacktop. County Engineer Tom Hickman explained that
the strength of the bridge is based on the piling’s being in
contact with dirt, and there is a 3- or 4-foot section of exposed
piling. Heavy rock will be laid to stop the wash and divert the
channel away from the piling. Additional funding for the project
will come from the federal government and state motor fuel taxes.
•
$18,400 as the county’s share of bridge construction in Sheridan
Township. A double box culvert will be replaced with a pre-cast,
pre-stressed concrete deck beam bridge. Funding for the project is
shared, with the state picking up 80 percent, the county 10 percent
and the township 10 percent.
In
other business Finance Committee chair Rod White said a 50 percent
advance on tax funds is being given to the three agencies that
receive money from the senior citizens tax — The Oasis, CIEDC and
Rural Health Partnership. Last year the board gave a 100 percent
advance, and it plans not to give any next year. The advance,
including about $300 in interest which the agencies will not return,
is paid from the county general fund.
The
board approved resolutions honoring three people who have benefited
the county:
•
Wendy Bell, for her creative service as program manager of Main
Street Lincoln.
•
Charles M. Ott, for 30 years of acting as an ambassador to the
public through his portrayal of Abraham Lincoln.
•
Roger Dennison and Turris Coal Co., for their "vital role in
bringing large-scale industry to Logan County." Dennison is
president of Turris Coal, which has been a major employer in the
county for 20 years.
[Lynn
Shearer Spellman]
|
|
Today’s
history
Compiled
by Dave Francis
Wednesday,
Jan. 16
The
16th day of the year
Quotes
"Our
culture is ill-equipped to assert the bourgeois values which would
be the salvation of the underclass, because we have lost those
values ourselves." — Norman Podhoretz
"History
... is, indeed, little more than the register of the crimes, follies
and misfortunes of mankind." — Edward Gibbon
Birthdays
1697
— Richard Savage, poet
1878
— Harry Carey Sr., Bronx, N.Y., actor ("Aces Wild,"
"Border Cafe," "Air Force")
1890
— Lloyd Bacon, San Jose, Calif., actor (Charlie Chaplin)
1901
— Fulgencio Batista, president and dictator of Cuba (1933-44,
1952-59)
1911
— Jay Hanna "Dizzy" Dean, Hall of Fall baseball pitcher
(St. Louis Cardinals)
1930
— Norman Podhoretz, Brooklyn, N.Y., author and editor (N.Y. Post)
1933
— Susan Sonntag, writer
1935
— A.J. Foyt, Houston, auto race driver (Indy 500 winner in 1961,
’64, ’67, ’77)
[to top of second column in
this section]
|
Events
1493
— Columbus returns to Spain on his first trip
1547
— Ivan IV the Terrible (17) crowns himself first tsar of Moscow
1794
— Edward Gibbon, historian ("The Decline and Fall of the
Roman Empire"), dies in
London at 56
1914
— Writer Maksim Gorki returns to Russia
1919
— Prohibition ratified by three-fourths of states; Nebraska is
36th
1925
— Leon Trotsky dismissed as CEO of Russian Revolution Military
Council
1968
— Robert R "Bob" Jones, founder of Bob Jones University,
dies at 84
1970
— Curt Flood files a civil lawsuit challenging baseball’s
reserve clause
1973
— NBC presents 440th and final showing of "Bonanza"
1979
— Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlevi of Iran flees Iran for Egypt
1981
— Boxer Leon Spinks is mugged; his assailants even take his gold
teeth
|
|
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/
|
|
Announcements
|
Voter
registration for disabled
March
19 general primary election notice to the elderly and people with
disabilities
[JAN.
15, 2002] Citizens
who are not registered to vote and cannot leave their home,
hospital, nursing home or other institution because of a permanent
physical disability can arrange for voter registration by contacting
a deputy registrar or the county clerk’s office.
Voter
registration will close on Feb. 19 for the March 19 general primary
election.
If
you are physically able, you may register to vote by going to the
county clerk’s office, Room 20 in the Logan County Courthouse, 601
Broadway in Lincoln. Hours are 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday through
Friday. You will need to show two forms of identification, one with
your current address on it.
For
people with physical disabilities and the elderly, election judges
will be available at the polling place on election day to assist
voters when a friend or relative is unable to help.
Handicapped-voter booths will be available for your convenience.
Physically impaired or elderly persons may be eligible to vote
absentee. Please contact the Logan County clerk’s office for
information.
For
any information concerning voter registration or voting for the
elderly or disabled, please call the Logan County clerk’s office
at (217) 732-4148.
[Sally
J. Litterly, Logan County clerk]
|
|
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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