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            Twelve third-graders from Carroll 
            Catholic Elementary School, wearing their "Cops and Kids" T-shirts, 
            gave the crowd of more than 70 a rousing chorus of their own 
            original song, "Stop the Violence." 
              
             [Photos by Bob Frank]
 [The highlight of the program: Kids from Carroll 
            Catholic perform "Stop the Violence.]
 
            The message of the song told about ways 
            to solve problems without resorting to violence and also about 
            saying no to drugs and alcohol. "Together we can do it," was part of 
            every chorus. 
            The youngsters were so well received 
            they had to repeat the performance, even though some of them said 
            they were hungry and ready for lunch. In spite of their protests, 
            though, they presented their encore with as much enthusiasm as 
            they’d shown in the original performance. 
            Pointing to the group as they left the 
            stage, Dayle Eldredge, director of HCP, said, "That’s our future." 
              
             ["That's our future."]
 
            The Healthy Community Partnership is an 
            organization whose mission is to protect, maintain and improve the 
            health and quality of life of all residents of Lincoln and Logan 
            County. It currently has five task forces. At the semiannual Report 
            to the Community meeting, each group gives an update on its 
            activities. 
            Speaking for the Alcohol, Tobacco and 
            Other Drug Task Force, Marcia Greenslate said 400 young people and 
            adults attended the Family Fun Day activities in April, and another 
            Fun Day is planned for August at the Lincoln Park District 
            facilities. The post-prom activities sponsored by a grant from the 
            Illinois Department of Transportation — an "all-nighter" at the 
            recreation center — were another success. 
            She also said the task force is 
            continuing its Victim Impact panels, a program mandated by the 
            courts, in which those charged with automobile accidents caused by 
            alcohol or drugs as well as victims of such accidents speak out in a 
            public forum.  
              
            
       
            Mr. and Mrs. Dick Logan gave a donation 
            of $2,287 to ATOD in memory of their son, Daniel Joseph Logan, 
            killed in April of this year in an accident involving alcohol. 
            Darrell Sisk, Sojourn advocate, 
            reported on the Domestic Abuse and Violence Task Force. Sisk said 
            that although incidents of domestic battery and arrest for battery 
            are going down, for some reason orders of protection granted by the 
            court have gone up this year. Eldredge suggested that these numbers 
            might have risen because more women who need protection against 
            domestic violence are learning they can get help. 
            Four Lincoln patrolmen are getting 
            training in ways to deal with domestic violence, and fifth-graders 
            in area schools are learning about dating relationships, Sisk said.
             
            Cells phones are being collected for 
            victims of domestic violence so they can call for help whenever 
            needed, and Lincoln police officers are transporting victims to a 
            shelter in Springfield if that is necessary. 
            Jennifer Boeke, speaking for the 
            Healthy Families Task Force, said the task force is working in three 
            areas: reducing teen pregnancy, increasing parenting knowledge and 
            increasing community awareness.   
            [to top of second column in
this article]
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            The Baby-Think-It-Over program, which 
            uses a programmable life-size baby doll that cries, wets and needs 
            to be fed, is going to be expanded from junior high into freshman 
            health classes, she said. The HCP has purchased two new dolls for 
            the program. 
              
             [Jennifer Boeke, holding the Baby-Think-It-Over baby 
            doll, speaks for the Healthy Families 
            Task Force.]
 
            Several Chester-East Lincoln students 
            who had been in the Baby-Think-It-Over program told the audience it 
            has taught them a lot about the responsibility of having a real 
            baby. 
            Andrew, who just graduated from the 
            eighth grade, said he hadn’t realized a baby needed so much 
            attention. "They need attention and they need it now," he said. "And 
            I needed multiple arms instead of just two, getting off the bus with 
            a baby, a stroller and all my own stuff. 
            "This program made me see I’m not 
            ready. I shouldn’t be raising a child while I’m a child myself." 
            Senior Issues Task Force spokesperson 
            Linda Marini said an Alzheimer’s caregivers group has been started 
            to give support to those who must deal with loved ones with 
            Alzheimer’s. She said she is working with Tim Butterfield of the 
            Lincoln Police Department on a Senior Safe Program, to identify 
            seniors who would need help in case of an emergency in the 
            community. 
              
            
             
            The Senior Task Force is also taking 
            over the Grandparents raising Grandchildren program, which will meet 
            at the Oasis Senior Center. She also said the group is studying 
            possible parish nursing programs in area churches. 
            Kristi Lessen of the Rural Health 
            Partnership, who formerly taught ATOD material to seventh- and 
            eighth-graders in area schools, said she is now working to raise 
            community awareness of alcohol and drug issues. She is working on a 
            Web page for schools and parents and also will speak or do research 
            for community groups. 
            She said she is trying to get a 
            parents’ group established and also hopes to organize a MADD 
            (Mothers Against Drunk Driving) chapter in the area. 
            She said there are many new drugs 
            available. "Kids have the information about these substances and 
            parents don’t. Substance abuse is a communitywide problem and we are 
            trying to get the message to the community." 
              
             [One of many task force information displays at the 
            semiannual report.]
 
            Reporting on the rural health van, 
            usually called the "corn bus" because of the rural scenes painted on 
            its exterior, Eldredge said that along with providing health care 
            and diagnostic services, the corn bus also educates its clients.
             
            "In addition to giving shots and 
            drawing blood, they do a lot of health education," she said of the 
            nurses who staff the van. "Twenty percent of that education is about 
            heart and cardiovascular problems, 13 percent about medications, and 
            48 percent about immunizations," she said. Out-of-town 
            visitors who attended the Report to the Community included John 
            Record of the SIU School of Medicine in Springfield and Julia Kasper 
            of the Illinois Department of Public Health. [Joan
Crabb] | 
        
            | McGee identified 920 
            schools that fit the definition of low-income, and Washington-Monroe 
            was in the top 60, Kidd said.   
            
         Kidd also explained 
            that the new federal school legislation proposed by President George 
            W. Bush and approved recently by Congress will not affect District 
            27 this year but will in the future. "The  No Child Left 
            Behind act says that if you have a school on remediation, you will 
            have to transfer kids to more successful schools if parents ask for 
            that," he said.  The new law calls for 
            every school to have at least 40 percent of its students meet or 
            exceed state standards in reading, math and one other subject this 
            year, 45 percent next year, and will continue to move that 
            percentage up so that in 2014 every school in the nation is supposed 
            to have 100 percent of its students meet or exceed state standards, 
            Kidd said.   
             He said he believed 
            the odds of any school in the nation having 100 percent of its 
            students meet or exceed these stands would be very low. "We’re all right now, 
            but I don’t know how long I will be able to say that," he said. The board voted 5-1 
            to give $4,000 to the Junior High Booster Club to build a concession 
            stand at the ball diamond. Leta Herrington voted against the 
            measure. The board also agreed 
            to make some changes in the junior high handbook regarding dress 
            codes and rules for participating in athletic events. Currently the dress 
            code calls for students to be covered from shoulder to midthigh and 
            prohibits shirts with profanity, advertisements for alcohol, tobacco 
            or drugs, or with offensive and vulgar language, junior high 
            Principal Curt Nettles said.   
            [to top of second column in
this article]
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 The dress code will 
            now ban sagging pants with legs dragging on the ground, in part 
            because of safety considerations, Nettles said. Dragging pant legs 
            can be a hazard for students going up or down stairs. Shirts must 
            also be long enough to cover the waistband. The board also voted 
            in a somewhat stricter code for allowing students to participate in 
            extracurricular activities, especially athletics. Students who are 
            suspended during a quarter will not be allowed to attend any 
            extracurricular activities, including sports, at any time during 
            that quarter.   
      
       Students caught using 
            tobacco the first time will not be allowed to take part in any 
            sports for 33 percent of the competitions in the present season, and 
            if less than 33 percent of those events remain, the suspension will 
            continue into the next year, Nettles said. For example, if a 
            student in basketball is caught using tobacco and only three 
            basketball games remain, he will be suspended for those three games 
            plus whatever number constitutes 33 percent in the next year, or in 
            the next sport event in which he participates. The second time a 
            student is caught using tobacco, he is suspended from all athletic 
            activities for one calendar year. Students caught using 
            alcohol or any controlled substances do not get a second chance but 
            will be suspended for one calendar year. Family gatherings and 
            religious ceremonies are not considered a violation of the rule. Five members of the board voted in favor 
            of the new rules. Carmitchel voted no. Joe Brewer was absent from 
            the meeting. [Joan
Crabb]   
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