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Happy Birthday
Abe! Logan
County celebrates birth of the Great
Emancipator
[FEB. 12
2000] “He freed the slaves,” is how Josh
Kastendick, a second grader in Sara McCormick’s class at Zion
Lutheran, remembers Abraham Lincoln. Like schools
throughout the county, Zion Lutheran reaches a high pitch of
activity each year at this time. |
Debbie Barr helped the Zion Lutheran second-graders make banks
that look like Abe Lincoln’s stovepipe hat, an art project
tailored to the season.
Her son, Jordan, a member of the class, recalls one of
many facts the class learned about their city’s namesake: “He studied to be a
lawyer,” says Jordan.
On Friday night, the eve of Lincoln’s birthday, his Grand Old
Party gathered at the Lincoln Knights of Columbus Hall to hear
from Joseph Hampton Jr., Director of the Illinois Department
of Agriculture.
The event was emceed by Eric Robinson; Representative
John Turner led the assembly in the pledge of allegiance and
offered the invocation; and Senator Bob Madigan introduced the
guest speaker.
Congressman Ray LaHood made a brief appearance as
well.

[Zion Lutheran second graders
proudly display Abe Lincoln banks]
Today (Saturday), the City of Lincoln celebrated with
activities beginning at 9:30 a.m. at the Logan County
Courthouse. Paul
Gleason, a noted Logan County historian, spoke on Lincoln's
boyhood. Mayor Joan Ritter made remarks, a wreath was
presented in honor of Lincoln, and the Interveteran's Council
of Lincoln contributed a 21-gun salute and taps.
Debbie Barr helped the Zion Lutheran second-graders make banks
that look like Abe Lincoln’s stovepipe hat, an art project
tailored to the season.
Her son, Jordan, a member of the class, recalls one of
many facts the class learned about their city’s namesake: “He studied to be a
lawyer,” says Jordan. |
On
Friday night, the eve of Lincoln’s birthday, his Grand Old
Party gathered at the Lincoln Knights of Columbus Hall to hear
from Joseph Hampton Jr., Director of the Illinois Department
of Agriculture.
The event was emceed by Eric Robinson; Representative
John Turner led the assembly in the pledge of allegiance and
offered the invocation; and Senator Bob Madigan introduced the
guest speaker.
Congressman Ray LaHood made a brief appearance as
well.
Today (Saturday), the City of Lincoln celebrated with
activities beginning at 9:30 a.m. at the Logan County
Courthouse. Paul
Gleason, a noted Logan County historian, spoke on Lincoln's
boyhood. Mayor Joan Ritter made remarks, a wreath was
presented in honor of Lincoln, and the Interveteran's Council
of Lincoln contributed a 21-gun salute and taps.
Tomorrow (Sunday), Lincoln College, the only college named for
Abraham Lincoln during his lifetime, will hold its
135th anniversary celebration. The celebration will
be held at Johnston Center for the Performing Arts and is open
to the public. A
reception will immediately follow in the Meyer-Evans Student
Center. Lincoln
College will bestow honorary degrees upon Barbara Burkhardt, A
William Maxwell scholar; Charles Cullen, Librarian and
President of the Newberry Library in Chicago; artist, Roland
Ginzel; Congressman Ray LaHood; Norman Hellmers,
Superintendent of the Lincoln Home National Historic Site;
Marion Smoak, retired Ambassador of the United States; and
artist Ellen Lanyon.
In these and many other ways, Logan County residents, from
grade schoolers to college professors, annually pause to
celebrate the man who rose from the common stew of
central-Illinois pioneer families to become America’s most
beloved president.

[Serving Abe's birthday party cake.] |
In Honor of Abe
Local Lincoln impersonator
dies
[FEB. 11, 2000]
Most
people knew Harry Hahn by one name. A name that was in fact
not his own. Children, teen-agers, parents and grandparents
alike would holler "Abe" from near and far when Hahn was
around. They found a connection with him because of his
connection to this community. |
Hahn, who died yesterday, was a
living legend. His tall slender frame, donned in a crisp black
three piece suit complete with starched white shirt black bow
tie, stove pipe hat and a perfectly trimmed rich black beard,
presented an uncanny impression of America’s 16th
President, Abraham Lincoln. Lincoln himself would have been
191 years old tomorrow.
Local historian, Paul Beaver,
reminisces about how he met Hahn while they were in high
school. "He was on a good high school basketball team in 1951.
They would have gone to state except they were beaten by
Lincoln."

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"He’s a fine guy," Beaver
states. "I doubt you could ever find a guy who looks any more
like Lincoln than he did. He was the perfect height, with the
same craggy features and dark coarse hair. He and Charlie Ott
(another local Lincoln impressionist) have done so much good
for so many people."
While Ott, who has also known
Hahn through playing high school basketball in the 50s, says
he didn’t know Hahn on a personal level, but because of their
interest in Abraham Lincoln, they were acquainted
professionally. "We spoke when we saw each other," Ott
stated.
Hahn, known for passing out
pennies to school children telling them that it was his
picture, brought American History to life with his
presentations about the life of Lincoln. Not a detail was
missed from Lincoln’s birth in Hodgenville, Kentucky to
Lincoln’s move to Washington, D.C. when he become President of
the United States.
According to Hahn’s own
literature he traveled throughout the U.S. portraying Lincoln.
He even appeared on the Today Show and PM Magazine. In
addition, he appeared in the Associated Press book Moments in
Time.
He was also the winner of the
1981 Lincoln Look-a-like contest in Springfield and the 1982
Hodgenville, Kentucky, Lincoln Look-a-like contest.
At this time arrangements are
incomplete.
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Clean Bill of
Health
Local nursing center receives two-year
licensure
[FEB. 11, 2000]
Maple
Ridge, a skilled nursing center located at 2202 N. Kickapoo
St., has recently earned a two-year licensure from the
Illinois Department of Public Health. What is typically a
one-year license has been extended for an additional year due
to the results Maple Ridge received on public health surveys
administered annually by the Department of Public
Health. |
Each year, public health
officials conduct surprise inspections to evaluate the level
of service provided by health care facilities, and to detect
any deficiencies that need to be corrected. Officials walk
through the entire facility and observe areas including
nursing, housekeeping and patient care. Additionally, they
shadow nurses as they administer medications and look over
residents’ charts for accuracy. In the past two years,
officials have identified only one deficiency at the Maple
Ridge center.
Lenore Holmes, director of
community relations, says commitment to excellence is reason
Maple Ridge receives such good evaluations. "We have an
administrator who really believes in providing quality care,"
she remarks. "We have high expectations here and the staff
knows it."
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A 120-bed facility, Maple Ridge
also offers the largest Medicare unit in the Logan County
area. It has an alliance with Family Medical Center, and
provides a variety of services ranging from general
rehabilitation to hospice care for both Medicare and
private-pay patients. Additionally, occupational, physical and
speech therapy is available daily, and interactive activities
are offered for all patients.
Maple Ridge is currently owned
by First Health Care, which purchased the facility in 1996.
"We’ve made a lot of changes," says Holmes. "[Administrator]
Lisa Trudeau has a very strong work ethic. She expects
quality."
If you want to check out the how
a particular nursing home performed on the latest public
health survey, log onto http://www.medicare.gov/.
[Katherine
Heller] |
Keeper of The
Dream
[FEB. 10, 2000]
In commemoration of African American History
month, Keeper of The Dream Jim Lucas, a nationally recognized
orator, brought his one-man show, "Reflections," to Lincoln
College earlier this week. His presentation included dramatic
recitations and interpretive readings portraying the life and
times of the Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
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Jim Lucas, a Louisiana native,
walked through the crowd of white, black, Hispanic and Asian
students toward the table top podium in the Meyer-Evans
Student Center, and gave a captivating portrayal of the life
and times of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. He began with
the lyrics to King’s favorite song; "If I could help somebody…
then my living would not be in vain."

He spoke about the life of King
and explained how Rosa Parks’ refusal to give up her seat on
the bus to a white man changed history. Jim Lucas shared
King’s thoughts on how the Southern Christian Leadership
Conference grew out of the Montgomery bus boycott and how it
eventually lead to the Poor Peoples Campaign of 1968, once
King understood that it was the class system and not race that
was the problem. King realized that poor whites weren’t
treated any better than poor blacks. Jim Lucas then recited
excerpts from King’s "I Have a Dream" speech.
In addition he talked about the
many obstacles that African Americans had to overcome in order
to register to vote and how college students today have the
worst voting record of any group. Lucas asked the students to
vote and participate in the political process so that they can
have a voice. He then administered a test that was often given
to African Americans in the south when they tried to register
to vote. He asked for a volunteer to recite the U.S.
Constitution verbatim but the room fell silent with no
takers.

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Lucas shared a story about when
his father went to register to vote in Louisiana. His father
was a farmer with an off-season job as a salesman in a
clothing store. His father, being aware that there would be
consequences to his decision to register to vote, put on his
Sunday suit and told his employer that he was going to
register to vote on his lunch hour. His father asked his
employer if he should bother to come back to work after his
lunch hour. The employer told him to take his time, get
registered and to come back to work.
He spoke about King’s one-on-one
spiritual experience after he had received a call threatening
his life and the lives of his wife and first child. King
prayed in his kitchen over a cup of coffee until he heard a
voice say, "I will be with you until the ends of the earth."
King said that from that moment on he was never
afraid.
"I decided to bring Dr. King to
life after listening to an audiotape of one of his speeches at
a conference," Lucas said. "It was then that I decided that
his words should come to life. Dr. King was a hero of mine and
I chose to emulate and portray him. His legacy is current
history and not ancient history."
[Kym C. Ammons-Scott]
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