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        Saturday, Jan. 4 |  |  |  
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            Newest 
            Lincolnite arrives atALMH 
            Maternity Suites
 First ALMH baby of 2003 [JAN.
            4, 2003]  The 
            first baby of 2003 was born at Abraham Lincoln Memorial Hospital at 
            9:01 a.m., Friday, Jan. 3. |  
            | 
            Nita and Vasant Patel of Lincoln are 
            the proud parents of a son (who is yet to be named). Baby Patel 
            weighed 7 pounds, 1 ounce and stretched out to a length of 19½ 
            inches. He was delivered by Dr. John Wahab of Family Medical 
            Center. 
            The Patels are from India and manage 
            the Comfort Inn in Lincoln. They are also the parents of two 
            daughters, Krishna, age 6, and Jasmine, age 3. Mother and baby 
            are planning on going home today. 
            The first baby received a basket of 
            special gifts from Abraham Lincoln Memorial Hospital. ALMH’s 
            Family Maternity Suites opened in August 2001. ALMH encourages and 
            welcomes 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. 
            [ALMH] | 
             [Photo provided by ALMH]
 
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     Love's Travel Stops & Country 
    Stores, Inc. is coming to Williamsville, IL.
 We 
    have openings for Travel Stop Management at our new location currently under 
    construction in Williamsville. Positions available include: Travel Stop 
    General Manager and Travel Stop Assistant Managers. We are looking for 
    career-minded people to add to our over 140 locations across the U.S. We are 
    opening 8-12 stores per year. 
    Stop by and interview with us on Monday, January 6. Interviews will be held 
    at the Hampton Inn, 3185 S. Dirksen Parkway, Exit 94, Springfield.  
    Interview times are: 9:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. (no appointment necessary).  
    Stop by and meet Todd Wilson, who will be conducting confidential interviews. 
    Please bring your resume (with work references) and a copy of your recent 
    paycheck stub or W-2 form from current or last employer. For early 
    consideration, please e-mail your resume, plus cover letter to
    toddw@loves.com 
    or fax to (405) 749-9145. 
    Our ideal candidates will have grocery, fast-food, convenience store, high-volume retail or travel stop experience. Ability to relocate a PLUS. We 
    offer a base salary up to $40K plus quarterly bonuses up to 20% of annual 
    salary and a competitive benefits package including health, life and 
    disability insurance, 401(k), paid vacation/holidays, sick pay and 
    relocation assistance.  EOE. Come grow with 
    Love's Travel Stops! |  |  
          | 
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            | 
            Year in review -- 
            September and October 
            
            [JAN. 4, 2003]   |  
            | 
            [Click here for January and February news] 
            [Click here for March and 
            April news] 
            [Click here for May 
            and June news] 
            [Click here for 
            July and August news] September Lincoln city  A petition to rezone 
            two lots on Fifth Street across from the new Casey's General Store 
            from residential to commercial use so Steven and Cynthia Goodman 
            could open a flower shop was rejected by the city council 6-4. Since 
            the petition had also been rejected by the planning commission, it 
            needed seven yes votes to pass. Neighbors who reside adjacent to the 
            property had strongly argued their opposition to the request to 
            rezone. Aldermen Benny Huskins, George Mitchell, Joe Stone and Dave 
            Armbrust voted no. The property remains residential. The council also 
            voted to authorize issuing up to $620,000 in general obligation 
            bonds, with First Midstate as underwriters. The bonds are normally 
            renewed every three years, but this time, because the interest rate 
            is good, the renewal is for four years. The money will be used for 
            capital projects such as road work. The council also 
            unanimously passed a zoning ordinance amendment that will allow the 
            Alan G. Ryle Companies to build group homes for the developmentally 
            disabled in areas zoned R-1. The city was facing a federal lawsuit 
            because it would not issue the company a building permit to put a 
            group home on an R-1 lot in the Stonebridge subdivision. The lawsuit 
            will now be dropped, a company spokesman said. However, the council 
            did not agree to give the new CILA a tax exemption. Bids for work on the 
            upgrade to the Lincoln wastewater treatment plant came in just under 
            the wire in September and were submitted to the Illinois 
            Environmental Protection Agency in time to get the $9.8 million 
            low-interest loan and start construction this year. The upgrade will 
            increase the plant's operating capacity from 3.5 million gallons per 
            day to 5.2 million and help it meet higher standards for ammonia 
            required by the IEPA. The upgrade is necessary if the IEPA is to 
            approve any more hookups. The city also 
            approved a four-way stop at Seventh and Union streets at the request 
            of District 27 Superintendent Robert Kidd. The new Central School 
            now under construction will face Seventh Street.   
       County board news In spite of concerns 
            of nearby residents, the Logan County Board granted a request by 
            Bradley Lee Luckhart to rezone 13.452 acres on 840th Avenue, in the 
            north half of Section 28, West Lincoln Township, from agricultural 
            to country homes use. Nearby resident Mike Leslie objected because 
            he believed that building more homes in the area might cause a water 
            shortage. He said Luckhart had originally planned only five-acre 
            lots in his subdivision, but with a possible 15 new residents 
            digging wells, area homeowners could end up hauling in water. Four 
            of the 13 board members voted against the zoning change: Clifford 
            Sullivan, Roger Bock, Lloyd Hellman and Rodney White. White has 
            previously objected in principle to the country home zoning, which 
            is less strict than R-1 zoning, and has said the board should rework 
            its 30-year-old zoning ordinances. Board president Dick Logan also 
            said the zoning ordinances need to be reviewed, but he added that 
            Luckhart has met all the requirements specified in the ordinance as 
            it presently stands. In other business, 
            finance chairman Rodney White reported that the county will be 
            looking at a deficit budget next year, and the deficit for the 
            current year will probably be even greater than anticipated. For 
            fiscal 2002, which ends Nov. 30, auditor Gary Hetherington 
            anticipates expenses will be $400,000 more than revenue, instead of 
            the $300,000 predicted. The fiscal 2003 budget looks even worse, 
            with expenses of $700,000 over revenue. The problem, which is 
            nationwide, is decreasing revenue. Low interest rates cut revenue 
            from investments, and lower sales cut tax revenues. "All revenues 
            are down, across the board. There is no bright spot to look for. The 
            only way to significantly increase revenue is to increase tax 
            levies," White said. The county does not levy the maximum amount it 
            could by law for the general fund.  White said requests 
            from various departments for money from the general fund are up for 
            fiscal 2003. Last year's funding totaled $4,701,200, and this year's 
            requests are $4,779,800 -- $78,600 more. The finance committee has 
            been trying to whittle the budget deficit for 2003. They agreed to 
            present a 0.5 percent increase in the hotel/motel tax to the full 
            board in October. By law proceeds must be spent on tourism. If the 
            board passes the 0.5 percent increase, the levy is expected to raise 
            about $10,667 new dollars. This represents an 11 percent increase 
            from the current $96,000 in annual proceeds. Though raising the 
            hotel/motel tax rate would bring new money to the county, it would 
            not affect the critical general fund, which is used to run most 
            county business. Its principal sources of revenue are sales and 
            property taxes, interest income, and fees levied by county offices.
             Volunteers turned out 
            to help install the first batch of playground equipment for Scully 
            Park in downtown Lincoln Saturday morning. The equipment includes a 
            fire station with a plaque commemorating the victims and rescue 
            workers of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. A new swing set 
            will also be installed. Equipment for the second phase will be 
            purchased later this fall. Local businesses, clubs and individuals 
            have been very generous in contributing to this project, noted Dick 
            Logan, who is a member of the playground committee and chairs the 
            county board's committee on buildings and grounds. School and college news A record number of 
            students have enrolled for fall classes at Lincoln College -- almost 
            800 full-time and part-time students at the Lincoln campus. The 
            figures show an enrollment increase of 10 percent over last year, 
            and the number of students living on campus is up by 19 percent 
            compared with last year's figures. Lincoln College President Jack 
            Nutt says the growth reflects the college's personal approach to 
            helping students work toward an associate degree.      
       Sept. 11 remembered Lincoln Community 
            High School students did not forget Sept. 11, 2001. At a moving and 
            inspiring assembly, the beginning and advanced choirs, the LCHS 
            band, the speech classes of Ms. Carrie Schreiber, and members of the 
            student council helped retell the story and reaffirm the students' 
            faith in a united America. Lincoln firefighters, paramedics and 
            police officers also held a memorial observance to honor the fallen, 
            as did many schools and other Logan County communities. Other September news At the 32nd annual 
            Abraham Lincoln National Railsplitting Contest and Crafts Festival 
            Sept. 14 and 15, visitors experienced old-time entertainment and 
            crafts on the Logan County Fairgrounds. The Indian village and 1800s 
            settler encampment peacefully coexisted, displaying authentic 
            crafts, cooking foods and mingling. Visitors could stop and try 
            their hands at crafts such as dipping candles. Steam engines drove 
            small carts about the grounds, whistling to each other. Antique 
            tractors and antique cars sat on display. Larry Hill and his 
            partner, Marty Yount of Missouri, came in first in several events, 
            including the team split. Hill has been participating in the contest 
            for 17 years. His family participates too. His two sons won second 
            in the team split. This is one contest in which Missouri dominates 
            Illinois, by far. A street dance on 
            Sept. 21 was the first of a series of fund-raisers for the 
            sesquicentennial celebration next August. McLean Street in front of 
            the courthouse was blocked off and stages set at either end of the 
            block. Bands provided six hours of dance music. The body of 
            18-year-old Brian Bobb of Lincoln was found in Kickapoo Creek Park 
            at approximately 9 a.m. Friday, Sept. 27. He was found in a remote 
            area on the north perimeter of the park. Logan County Coroner Chuck 
            Fricke pronounced him dead at the scene at 9:34 a.m. An autopsy was 
            performed Saturday morning at Memorial Medical Center in 
            Springfield. The forensic pathologist determined the cause of death 
            was due to blood loss causing an air embolism in the lung due to 
            neck trauma. The incident is being treated as a homicide. Business news Johnson Brothers 
            Liquor Company, new wholesale wine and liquor distributor on North 
            Kickapoo, expects to employ 35 or 36 people in Lincoln. These 
            include one temporary and three permanent office workers, five 
            drivers and 12 sales representatives. The Lincoln facility supplies 
            wine and spirits to grocery and convenience stores, package stores, 
            bars, and restaurants in an 80-mile-wide belt across central 
            Illinois.  Sports news The Lincoln Lady Railers volleyball squad 
            made short order of the Peoria Richwoods Knights last night in their 
            home opener. In a match that lasted barely a half an hour, LCHS 
            chalked up its first win of this new season by scores of 15-0, 15-9. 
            Not to be outdone, the junior varsity came out strong, winning their 
            match 15-0, 15-8. The LCHS freshmen squad also won, by scores of 
            15-12, 15-11. Their next game was not so easy. It was a tough, 
            seesaw battle where the outcome was in question to the very end. The 
            match time was almost two hours. The final box score for the match 
            looked like this: 15-6, 8-15, 16-14 in favor of LCHS over a scrappy 
            and talented team from Morton. The Lady Railers improve to 2-0. 
      
       October County board files 
            next year's budget The Logan County 
            Board placed on file a fiscal 2003 budget with a general fund 
            property tax increase of 1.6 percent and a deficit of $188,000 in 
            the general fund. The property tax increase, at the 1.6 percent 
            maximum allowed by tax caps, is expected to yield $40,000, bringing 
            the total general fund levy to $874,000. On a $90,000 home, that 
            would mean $1.68 more in property tax next year. In the draft on 
            file in the county clerk's office, expenditures for all funds total 
            $4.7 million. Revenue projected from all sources totals $4.34 
            million.  Before Thursday 
            night's meeting the board's finance committee had cut $300,000 from 
            general fund budget requests. In addition, a net of $250,500 was 
            shifted from other funds to the general fund. The board added 
            $25,000 to general fund expenditures to be used for raises for 
            nonunion employees. Department heads are to distribute the money at 
            their discretion. The cost is expected to be about $25,000 for 31 
            full-time and seven part-time employees. A cut was made and 
            then restored for the Economic Development Council. In 2002 economic 
            development received $25,000 but was allocated only $12,000 this 
            year. Bobbi Abbott, executive director of the Lincoln/Logan County 
            Chamber of Commerce, made an impassioned plea for more than the 
            $12,000. "I really do appeal to you to invest in the future of this 
            community," she said. "We absolutely need to increase tax-producing 
            revenues," such as through the commerce park backed by the EDC. 
            Board EDC representative Terry Werth and member Dale Voyles amended 
            the motion to allocate $25,000 again this year. The board voted 8-4 
            in favor of the amended motion. Roger Bock, Doug Dutz, Lloyd Hellman 
            and Rod White dissented.    
        
         [to top of second column in
this article] |  
         In other business, 
            the board approved a conditional use permit enabling Leslie and 
            Karen Hoagland to operate their motor coach restoration business 
            from their home on 1200th Street in rural Lincoln. The board also 
            approved a subdivision plat submitted by Brad Luckhart of Lincoln. 
            County engineer Tom Hickman said Luckhart and his engineer have 
            corrected all deficiencies and complied with provisions of the 
            subdivision ordinance. A state hydrologist has confirmed that 
            sufficient water is available on the property.  The board also voted 
            to raise the county hotel/motel tax by 0.5 percent. The tax 
            increase, effective Dec. 1, is expected to raise about $10,000 in 
            new money. The finance committee recommends granting $4,750 to the 
            J.H. Hawes Grain Elevator Museum in Atlanta to pay for renovating 
            and restoring a wooden boxcar and extending the railroad siding it 
            sits on. Lincoln city news City council members 
            offered a moment of silence and a prayer for 5th Ward Alderman 
            Joseph Stone, who died suddenly Oct. 7. Assistant Fire Chief 
            Mark Miller was named the Lincoln Fire Department's Officer of the 
            Year, the first time the department has presented such an award. 
            Miller said he was surprised to win and believed much of the credit 
            should go to the firefighters on his shift. City Attorney Bill 
            Bates announced that the city and Firefighters Local 3092 have 
            reached an agreement on contracts, in negotiations that were 
            generally amicable. The contract includes a 9.75 percent raise over 
            three years. The city has also reached an agreement with its 
            clerical workers. Now all four unions representing city workers -- 
            police, firefighters and street department workers-- have approved three-year contracts.
 The council also 
            adopted the proposal to put a referendum for a sales tax increase of 
            0.5 percent on the November ballot. The extra money, perhaps as much 
            as $550,000, will go for infrastructure, mostly road repair. Low 
            rates of interest and low sales tax receipts have put the city in a 
            budget crunch, and there is no money to restore city streets. 
            Aldermen emphasized that the sales tax would not be imposed on food 
            products purchased for home use or prescription drugs and would not 
            be charged on the sale of motor vehicles that are licensed by the 
            state of Illinois. Rich Montcalm, 
            Lincoln police chief, announced the department is using a new 
            program designed to help arrest more drug users and dealers. When 
            scheduling allows, Montcalm pulls an officer from each of the city's 
            four shifts and gives them flextime to work solely on drug 
            enforcement. So far they have made 70 traffic stops and 15 arrests. School and college news The backbones of 
            Central School's new building are going up. The structural steel 
            frame brought a dramatic change to the appearance of the building in 
            just a few days. The District 27 board saw preliminary plans for the 
            new junior high building at their October meeting. The plans show a 
            three-story academic wing on the east end, administrative and 
            general use areas in the center, and a gym on the west. Like Central 
            School, it will have a stage facing both ways between the cafeteria 
            and the gym. Also like Central, it will be a brick veneer building 
            with a pre-engineered frame. The Chester-East 
            Lincoln school district is hoping for a favorable vote on the 
            referendum for a tax increase that is on the ballot Nov. 5. New 
            Superintendent Robert Bagby said the board worked hard to cut the 
            budget -- cutting one administrator, leaving only one administrator 
            on the staff, reducing teaching staff, cutting supplies and 
            materials, and also cutting the music program and the reading 
            recovery program. If the referendum does not pass, there will be 
            more cuts in the spring. The referendum requests an increase in the 
            education fund tax rate from $1.40 to $1.90. Of that 50-cent 
            increase, Bagby said it is likely they will use only about 38 cents. 
            C-EL holds the lowest comparative school tax rate in the area. West 
            Lincoln-Broadwell is at $1.45, and District 27 is at $1.93.  Lincoln College 
            President Jack Nutt has announced his intention to retire from the 
            college at the end of May 2003. President Nutt says his decision is 
            based on chronic health problems he's faced over the past several 
            years. Executive Vice President Ron Schilling will assume full 
            responsibility for the direction of the college. For the balance of 
            the current school year Dr. Nutt will continue to direct the 
            activities of the Advancement Office and work on special projects. 
            Dr. Nutt recently celebrated his 20th anniversary with the college. 
            Over 20 new building projects have been added under his leadership, 
            and Lincoln College enrollment numbers have steadily increased over 
            the past years.   
      
       Looking for Lincoln video completed Shooting the Looking 
            for Lincoln video was wrapped up in late September and early 
            October. The video, which will be used to promote tourism, has been 
            over two years in the planning stages as promoters first sought and 
            then awaited funds from an Illinois Legislature Member Initiative 
            Grant. When the check arrived, it took only two weeks for shooting 
            to begin, thanks to prior selection of sites, key actors and 
            cinematographer Dean Williams of Springfield to direct the film. Scenes in the video 
            represent documented activities of Abraham Lincoln in Logan County 
            and take place at either authentic sites or accessible sites that 
            retain the feel of the mid-1800s. In one scene Lincoln rides on 
            horseback over Elkhart Hill, following the old Edward's Trace. The 
            route was part of the 8th Judicial Circuit that Lincoln traveled. 
            Also authentic is the John D. Gillett house at Cornland. Lincoln 
            drove himself there to invite Gillett to his inauguration in 
            Washington, D.C., as a member of the president's honorary bodyguard. 
            In another shot Lincoln socializes outside Postville Courthouse. 
            Lincoln worked as a surveyor in Logan County, and the video scenes 
            show him surveying for the town of Albany and for Musick's Ferry on 
            Salt Creek north of Middletown. Both scenes were filmed at the 
            Paulus-Conrady farm, also the site of the shooting of the 
            christening of the city of Lincoln with the juice of a watermelon. 
            The video must now be cut and edited. Local citizens fight to stop drug use The death of 
            16-year-old Sean Riggins, a Railer wrestler and football player, 
            caused by a heart attack apparently brought on by the use of ephedra, 
            has sparked a campaign to find some way to control sales of the 
            herbal stimulant, or at least to limit its availability to young 
            people. On Sept. 3 Riggins died at Abraham Lincoln Memorial Hospital 
            after suffering flulike symptoms. A toxicology report showed that 
            Sean had ingested ephedra. His father, Kevin Riggins, learned that 
            many high school students took over-the-counter stimulants to pump 
            up their energy for sports events. The stimulants are readily 
            available in gas stations and convenience stores for a very 
            attractive price -- $1.29 or even 99 cents. The Riggins family 
            and Logan County Coroner Chuck Fricke were contacted by Sen. Dick 
            Durbin and appeared before a U.S. Senate subcommittee to testify 
            about the dangers of these products. Often they contain not only 
            ephedra but other stimulants such as caffeine. Because these 
            products are considered herbal supplements and not drugs, the Food 
            and Drug Administration has no authority to regulate them or check 
            on their quality. Kevin and Debra 
            Riggins believe the young people who take these drugs, like their 
            son, have no idea of the danger posed. They have asked stores and 
            gas stations in the Lincoln area to put the stimulants behind the 
            counter so customers will have to ask for them; they are also 
            requesting that local governmental agencies pass ordinances limiting 
            the sale of these substances. In addition, Sean Riggins' parents are 
            lobbying lawmakers and planning to establish a nonprofit foundation 
            to educate young people about the dangers of both legal and illegal 
            substances. Concerned about the 
            growing evidence of drug and alcohol abuse by area young people, 
            Stacey Martin, herself a mother of teenagers, called for a community 
            time of prayer. An estimated 300 to 400 people answered the call and 
            met at Scully Park on Saturday, Oct. 7. She said the object of the 
            meeting was not to point the finger of blame at anyone but "to help 
            our children and their friends." She said the community had lost 
            nine young people to drugs and alcohol in the last year. Several 
            young people spoke about overcoming an addiction to drugs. Among 
            those attending were Police Chief Rich Montcalm and Mayor Beth 
            Davis.    
             Other October news As part of their 
            training, state and federal Emergency Management Agencies mandate 
            regular exercises that simulate some kind of local emergency. One of 
            these simulations, called a tabletop exercise, took place recently 
            in the lower level of the Logan County Safety Complex on Pekin 
            Street, where 52 emergency responders gathered, not knowing what 
            they would have to cope with. So, at approximately 12:45 p.m. on a 
            pleasant September Sunday, a 727 Air Freight jet plane with a crew 
            of three and 12,000 gallons of fuel on board crashed into downtown 
            Lincoln. Part of its cargo was liquid oxygen canisters, which would 
            become an accelerant for the fire. The "crash" occurred in one room, 
            where a large tabletop layout showed Lincoln streets and buildings 
            from Sangamon to Kankakee and from Pekin to Pulaski streets. In 
            another room, various local agencies set up an Emergency Operations 
            Center, where representatives of fire and rescue services, police, 
            health care systems, local government, and a disaster intelligence 
            team worked to get the on-site team the help they needed and protect 
            Lincoln residents. When the exercise was done, emergency responders 
            had learned another lesson in how to cope but were glad the disaster 
            was only a simulation.   An auction was 
            held on the now-empty campus of the Lincoln Developmental Center, 
            when the Illinois Department of Central Management Services 
            auctioned off surplus property still remaining at the institution. 
            No plans for the empty 80-acre campus have been announced. First the 
            property must be transferred to the CMS, which is expected to take 
            awhile. Then state agencies will be allowed to bid on it. If no 
            stage agency wants the property, it will be offered to local 
            governmental agencies; if none of them bid it will be put up for 
            public auction. Kerosene contaminated 
            by gasoline was blamed for two fires in the Lincoln area, one 
            serious. On Oct. 23 Lincoln Rural Fire Department assisted the New 
            Holland Fire Department with a fire at the Jessie Mosier residence. 
            Mosier reported that the kerosene heater exploded as he was 
            refueling it. He suffered burns on his hands and foot. The house was 
            a total loss. Just barely back from New Holland, Lincoln Rural got a 
            second call. The fire at the Joe Coffman residence at 714 1700th St. 
            was not nearly as intense as the New Holland fire. Coffman had put 
            it out by the time firefighters arrived. Again, a kerosene heater 
            was the apparent cause of the fire. Illinois Clark stations, where 
            the kerosene was purchased, stopped selling it at all Illinois 
            locations until the contaminated product could be removed. Customers at 
            Saturday's Harvest of Talents at Lincoln Christian Church 
            successfully broke past records by raising over $66,000. The 
            fund-raiser includes a 5K run and a craft show and auction. The 
            funds are donated each year to International Disaster Emergency 
            Services. Though fund-raising is not complete until the end of 
            December, the money raised brings the total donated to over $800,000 
            in 19 years. A man apparently jumped from the U.S. 66 
            bridge over Salt Creek on Tuesday. The body of Gary R. Shull, 59, of 
            Lincoln, was found in the creek by a motorcyclist just after noon. 
            Shull had last been seen about 10:30 a.m. He was declared dead by 
            Logan County Deputy Coroner Warren Rogers at 1:45 p.m. Evidence and 
            interviews with the family led the investigators to believe that 
            there was no foul play involved with this incident. 
            [Joan Crabb] |  
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