‘What to Expect’ author opens up about scare
SUNDAY, MAY 12, 2013
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FBI had eyes on suspected robbers 2 charged in Richmond bank shootout; details emerge
By STEPHEN Di BENEDETTO sdibenedetto@shawmedia.com RICHMOND – Two men were charged with attempted bank robbery after FBI agents tracked them from Chicago and cornered them in a parking lot of a Richmond bank, where agents killed their accomplice Friday. Aaron Russell, 40, 9200 Hunter Drive, Orland Hills, and Roberto Favela, 34, 5547 S. California Ave., Chicago, were each charged late Friday with one count of felony
attempted bank robbery, the FBI and U.S. Attorney’s Office announced. Both men appeared Saturday morning in federal court in Chicago, where they were formally charged and held pending their next court appearance Tuesday morning in Rockford. In a sworn affidavit filed Friday, FBI Special Agent Terry Heatherman said au-
thorities shot and killed an accomplice, Tony Starnes, 45, 7836 S. Marquette Ave., Chicago, after he rammed a Honda Civic into one of the agent’s vehicles at the parking lot of Associated Bank, 10910 N. Main St., Richmond, late Friday morning. The sound of gunshots was the first notice for many surrounding businesses and residents that something
was awry in the small town of Richmond, but the FBI had been investigating Russell and others for a string of armed robberies of Chicago area jewelry stores. Russell and Starnes also were being investigated for a Feb. 2 bank robbery in Poplar Grove, authorities said. The FBI’s surveillance started Friday after agents saw Favela driving a 2004
Chevy Tahoe and Starnes driving a 2005 Honda Civic that had been reported stolen in Chicago in December, according to Heathermen’s affidavit. The two cars traveled from Chicago to an undisclosed location in Wisconsin near the Illinois border, where FBI agents saw Russell leave the Tahoe and enter the back seat of the Civic, according to the
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affidavit. The FBI then followed the cars to Richmond, where the Civic drove past Associated Bank, made a U-turn and parked in front of the bank. The Tahoe then parked in the same lot farther away, the affidavit states. FBI agents immediately surrounded the Civic, then Starnes rammed an agent’s car, causing authorities to shoot and kill him. They then apprehended Russell,
See CHARGES, page A9
Online sales tax a concern for some Added work among worries By SHAWN SHINNEMAN sshinneman@shawmedia.com
Lathan Goumas – lgoumas@shawmedia.com
Lenni Johanson (left) and Erica Sarna, mother and daughter, work together as science teachers at Nippersink Middle School in Richmond. Johanson teaches seventh-grade science, and Sarna teaches eighth-grade science.
Richmond mother-daughter teaching duo has relationship down to a science By EMILY K. COLEMAN ecoleman@shawmedia.com
R
ICHMOND – Lenni Johanson and Erica Sarna have spent summer days floating in the water and talking science. Besides working in the same science depart-
ment at Nippersink Middle School in Richmond, the pair are mother and daughter. “We eat, sleep and dream science a lot,” Johanson said. “If we’re commuting, we’ll usually talk about the day, what we’re going to do, how we’re going to work this, what we need to remember, blah blah blah, and a lot of times, the
ride home is a rehash.” The two live about seven minutes away from each other, just on the other side of the Illinois-Wisconsin border. Sarna and her husband, John, have two children: Logan, 7, and Lucy, 5.
CARY – Since its start in 2005, Michael Ginsberg’s Cary-based Internet retailer has grown to bring in about $4 million in sales a year. Now, with the U.S. House of Representatives mulling a Marketplace Fairness Act passed in the Senate last week, Ginsberg is concerned it could get much harder Michael to sustain that Ginsberg growth. owner of “I’m watch- Cary-based ing the Senate 3Gstore.com hearings, and they’re talking about these remote sellers and how evil they are, and [how] they’re crushing ma and pa, U.S. companies and they’re taking money from the state,” said Ginsberg, the owner and president of 3Gstore.com. “I’m like, that’s me. We’re not that bad. We pay our taxes and hire employees and do all the things right.” Because it brings in more than $1 million a year in gross sales, Ginsberg’s company – which sells 3G and 4G products, accessories and
See DUO, page A9 See TAX, page A9
LOCALLY SPEAKING Holland Sersan, 13, and dad Mark Sersan
LEADERS WANTED AT NONPROFITS As the economy improves, local nonprofits may face challenges finding replacements for leadership positions. A shortage of funding for leadership combined with higher expectations for executives and tight budgets that limit compensation may be partly responsible for some of the nonprofit community’s leadership challenges. For more, see page D1.
Kyle Grillot – kgrillot@shawmedia.com
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Yesterday’s NWHerald.com most-commented stories 1. Letter: Lincoln was a liberal 2. Letter: God or tyrants? 3. Coalition on immigration bill clears first tests
Yesterday’s NWHerald.com most-emailed stories 1. Two charged after FBI thwart attempted bank robbery in Richmond 2. Undersheriff: Spring Grove woman dies in ‘unfortunate accident’ 3. Construction starts on new health clinic for
Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com is published daily, Sundays and holidays by Shaw Media, P.O. Box 250, Crystal Lake, IL 60039-0250.
Sunday, May 12, 2013 • Northwest Herald • NWHerald.com 8LOTTERY
Illinois Lottery
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8NEWS SHOWS ABC’s “This Week” – Sens. John McCain, R-Ariz., and Jack Reed, D-R.I. NBC’s “Meet the Press” – Reps. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., and Adam Kinzinger, R-Ill.; Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif.; ex-diplomat Thomas Pickering, who helped lead the State Department’s review of the attack against the U.S. in Benghazi, Libya. CBS’ “Face the Nation” – Pickering; former Defense Secretary Robert Gates; Sens. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., and Kelly Ayotte, R-N.H. CNN’s “State of the Union” – Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine; former Ambassador Thomas Pickering, co-chairman of the State Department’s accountability review; Reps. Tammy Duckworth, D-Ill., and Tulsi Gabbard, D-Hawaii. “Fox News Sunday” – Reps. Mike Rogers, R-Mich., and Adam Smith, D-Wash.; Rep.-elect Mark Sanford, R-S.C.
Northwest Herald Web Poll Question
Embrace cameras in Ill. courts Illinois Supreme Court Chief Justice County later this month for a noble cause. Kilbride is the keynote speaker at an annual event recognizing local attorneys and law firms that represent less-affluent clients on a pro bono basis. His speech, “Access to Justice, a Work in Progress,” will be May 28 at the awards luncheon sponsored by Prairie State Legal Services and the McHenry County Bar Association. Legal services are expensive. Someone with limited financial resources who needs an attorney for criminal or civil reasons can find themselves in quite a bind. So attorneys who offer their expertise and services to those who can’t afford to pay them should be recognized. That’s not the point of today’s diatribe, though. I’m hoping that Kilbride also delivers another important message when speaking to McHenry County attorneys, prosecutors and judges – the importance of openness in our court system. In January 2012, Kilbride became a bit of a hero to open-government advocates when he introduced a pilot program allowing the news media to bring still and video cameras into Illinois’ circuit courtrooms under strict, agreed-upon criteria. This greater media access to our courtrooms also means greater public access. While most courtrooms and court cases in Illinois are open to the public, our court system generally operates between the hours of 8:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. That’s when most people work. The reality is, the vast majority of local residents don’t have access to our court system. So it’s the media’s role to provide the best information they can. We can do that much better with greater access through video and photography.
• Dan McCaleb of Crystal Lake is group editor of Shaw Media’s suburban publications, which include the Northwest Herald. He can be reached at 815-526-4603, or by email at dmccaleb@ shawmedia.com.
Poll: Belief in JFK conspiracy slips slightly The ASSOCIATED PRESS A clear majority of Americans still suspect there was a conspiracy behind President John F. Kennedy’s assassination, but the percentage who believe Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone is at its highest level since the mid-1960s, according to a new Associated Press-GfK poll. Cheryl Casati, 62, who retired from the Air Force after 20 years, watched it all unfold on television back in November 1963. She said she’s “extremely sure” there was a conspiracy. The killing of Oswald, the accused shooter, just days after the assassination is part of the reason why. “There’s too many holes in explanations,” the Phoenix-area woman said. “That just could not have happened easily in that time and place. And (Jack) Ruby shooting (Oswald) could not have happened as easily as it did.” Pat Sicinski sees it differently. She and her husband recently visited the Texas School Book Depository in Dallas. Looking out the sixthfloor window from which Oswald allegedly fired on Kennedy’s motorcade helped reaffirm the retired school employee’s faith in the Warren Commission conclusion
Count on Me... Bob Sharp
AP file photo
President John F. Kennedy and his wife, Jacqueline Kennedy, are seen upon their arrival Nov. 22, 1963, at Dallas Airport in Dallas shortly before President Kennedy was assassinated. that Oswald was the lone gunman. “Some skepticism is always justified,” the 68-yearold Houston-area woman said. “I just think when people take it to extremes, they lose me.” According to the AP-GfK survey, conducted in midApril, 59 percent of Americans think multiple people were involved in a conspiracy to kill the president, while 24 percent think Oswald acted alone, and 16 percent are unsure. A 2003 Gallup poll found that 75 percent of Americans felt there was a conspiracy.
The Oswald-acted-alone results, meanwhile, are the highest since the period three years after the assassination, when 36 percent said one man was responsible for Kennedy’s death. Robert Mawyer of Blairsville, Ga., is one of them. The 44-year-old IT salesman recently finished reading Bill O’Reilly’s “Killing Kennedy.” Assuming all of that information is correct, he has no problem accepting that Oswald went solo. “The Warren Commission says that’s what happened, so I tend to believe that, I guess,” he said. But, he add-
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ed, “I don’t suppose anybody can be completely positive.” Jon Genova is positive that no one person could have pulled off this crime. “There are just a number of factors that don’t seem to zero out in my mind,” the 46-year-old Denver mechanical engineer said. “How some evidence seemed to be suppressed, and the results are sealed for how many years? And the fact that ... it just seemed like the whole political winds change at the point when Kennedy was assassinated. It just seemed as if he was probably an impediment.” Those who were adults in 1963 were almost as likely as younger Americans to say that Kennedy’s killing was a conspiracy involving multiple people – 55 percent, compared to 61 percent. As for who might have been behind a conspiracy, Genova’s money is on the Central Intelligence Agency. Casati, who wouldn’t divulge her rank or military occupation, was a little more circumspect. “I will tell you that Jack Kennedy was too much of his own person,” she said. “And he made decisions that were not popular with some agencies, as far as I’m concerned.”
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To date, 11 circuit courts covering 28 Illinois counties are participating in the pilot program, including Lake County to the east and Boone County to the west. To date, the pilot program has been a success. In February, a meeting was held at the McHenry County Government Center to discuss the possibility of McHenry County’s circuit court entering the program. It was as well-received as Packers fans at a Bears convention. One by one, judges, retired judges, attorneys and other court officials stood up and stated why greater public access was wrong for our county. Witnesses would be afraid to testify. Attorneys would play to the cameras. Juries would be tainted. People’s lives would be in danger. It was a novel, untested idea. Never mind that dozens of states across the country have allowed cameras in courtrooms for decades. Never mind that these stated concerns have not come to fruition elsewhere. I’m not asking Kilbride to discuss the pilot program during his keynote address. He’s here to talk about the importance of pro bono work and to honor local attorneys who give back. That’s worthy enough. But maybe during the hand-grabbing and informal chitchat that takes place before and after the main event, he can discuss how successful the pilot programs have been around the state. Maybe local attorneys and judges who have concerns about allowing cameras in courtrooms can ask him about the pilot program and those concerns. I think it’s inevitable that all Illinois courtrooms will at some point be opened to cameras. It’s a matter of when, not if. I ask those in the system
to keep an open mind. We at the Northwest Herald look forward to continue working with stakeholders on this. Taxpayers deserve nothing less. ••• Congratulations to the Family Health Partnership Clinic, which broke ground May 1 on its new, expanded site in Crystal Lake. FHPC uses a network of volunteer physicians to provide high-quality health care to McHenry County’s uninsured and underinsured. The Sage Center for Care is being built on Congress Parkway, just north of Route 14, near a number of medical offices. The new clinic will be 9,200 square feet, double its current space in Woodstock and be nearer to public transportation, a larger population base, and its invaluable network of volunteers. Almost 90 percent of the cost to build the center has been raised through private donations so far, including a startup gift from the Foglia Family Foundation. The Sage Center is named for Sage Products, whose founder is Vincent Foglia, a longtime supporter of FHPC. The new clinic is expected to open in October. ••• Thanks, moms: Happy Mother’s Day to all the mothers out there, including my wife, my mom and mother-inlaw and my two sisters. There aren’t enough greeting cards or flower displays in the world to show our appreciation for all that you do. The sacrifices you make for your children and your families are priceless. We certainly shouldn’t wait until today to express our thanks and our love. Please enjoy your day.
8TODAY’S TALKER
What did you do for mom for Mother’s Day?
74%
VIEWS Dan McCaleb
Thomas Kilbride will be in McHenry
The Northwest Herald invites you to voice your opinion. Log on to www. NWHerald.com and vote on today’s poll question:
Have you ever been the victim of a cybercrime?
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Ginsburg: Roe gave opponents target By JASON KEYSER The Associated Press CHICAGO – One of the most liberal members of the U.S. Supreme Court, Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg could be expected to give a rousing defense of Roe v. Wade in reflecting on the landmark vote 40 years after it established a nationwide right to abortion. Instead, Ginsburg told an audience Saturday at the University of Chicago Law School that while she supports a woman’s right to choose, she feels the ruling by her predecessors on the court was too sweeping and gave abortion opponents a symbol to target. Ever since, she said, the momentum has been on the other side, with anger over Roe fueling a stateby-state campaign that has placed more restrictions on abortion. “That was my concern, that the court had given opponents of access to abortion a target to aim at relentlessly,” she told a crowd of students. “... My criticism of Roe is that it seemed to have stopped the momentum that was on the side of change.” The ruling is also a disappointment to a degree, Ginsburg said, because it was not argued in weighty terms of advancing women’s rights. Rather, the Roe opinion, written by Justice Harry Blackmun, centered on the right to privacy and asserted that it extend-
11 counties in Ill. declared disaster areas McHenry County to get federal help The ASSOCIATED PRESS
AP photo
U.S. Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg (right) discusses the Roe v. Wade case Saturday on its 40th anniversary with University of Chicago Law School professor Geoffrey Stone at the University of Chicago Law School in Chicago. ed to a woman’s decision on whether to end a pregnancy. Four decades later, abortion is one of the most polarizing issues in American life, and anti-abortion activists have pushed legislation at the state level in an effort to scale back the 1973 decision. Ginsburg would have rather seen the justices make a narrower decision that struck down only the Texas law that brought the matter before the court. That law allowed abor-
tions only to save a mother’s life. A more restrained judgment would have sent a message while allowing momentum to build at a time when a number of states were expanding abortion rights, she said. She added that it might also have denied opponents the argument that abortion rights resulted from an undemocratic process in the decision by “unelected old men.” Ginsburg told the students
she prefers what she termed “judicial restraint” and argued that such an approach can be more effective than expansive, aggressive decisions. “The court can put its stamp of approval on the side of change and let that change develop in the political process,” she said. A similar dynamic is playing out over gay marriage and the speculation over how the Supreme Court might act on that issue.
SPRINGFIELD – Eleven Illinois counties that suffered damage from last month’s flooding have been declared federal disaster areas. The Illinois Department of Emergency Management said assessments done for 12 days straight since April 29 found nearly 3,700 damaged homes in 14 counties. Severe storms, flooding and winds hit Illinois in April, causing floods in dozens of counties. Four state teams, the Federal Emergency Management Agency, the U.S. Small Business Administration and local officials have taken part in the damage assessment, which is ongoing. “With 49 Illinois counties across the state impacted by flooding, this process takes time,” IEMA Direc-
tor Jonathon Monken said. “The teams are working as quickly as possible, while still taking time to carefully document the full impact of the flood on people and their communities.” President Barack Obama on Friday approved access to federal aid for recovery efforts to Cook, DeKalb, DuPage, Fulton, Grundy, Kane, Kendall, Lake, LaSalle, McHenry and Will counties. The federal assistance could include grant money and loans to pay for repairs, property losses and temporary housing. Gov. Pat Quinn previously declared 49 Illinois counties as state disaster areas. State and federal teams also have started meeting with local government officials to document flood-related expenses.
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Ill. estimates $212M loss in online taxes The ASSOCIATED PRESS SPRINGFIELD – New estimates show the state of Illinois will lose $212 million in unpaid sales taxes from online purchases during 2013. The Illinois Department of Revenue released the updated 2013 figure, which is up from the estimated loss of $183 million in 2012. Including the 2013 figure, total losses for Illinois over the past five years would be $820 million, The State Journal-Register in Springfield reported. “We look at national sales and Illinois online sales trends,” revenue department spokeswoman Sue Hofer said. She said the figure has risen along with the popularity of
online shopping. The revenue department says Illinois collected about $12 million in sales taxes from self-reported online purchases in 2012 – up $500,000 from 2011. “Basically, before we were only getting boats and other big purchases,” Hofer said. “We weren’t getting books and small items.” The updated figure comes as lawmakers in Washington consider legislation that would give states the power to collect sales taxes from Internet purchases. Uncollected sales tax estimates in Illinois were $125 million in 2009; $143 million in 2010; $157 million in 2011; $183 million in 2012 and $212 million for this year.
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City of Dixon targets bank over ex-city official’s theft The ASSOCIATED PRESS DIXON – The city of Dixon is citing a deposition by a former branch manager in its lawsuit against the bank, where former city Comptroller Rita Crundwell had a secret account that she used in her theft of nearly $54 million. The former city bookkeeper was sentenced in February to nearly 20 years in federal prison after pleading guilty to wire fraud. Crundwell stole the money from Dixon over 22 years, using it to support a lavish lifestyle and a renowned horse-breeding operation. The city’s lawsuit blames Fifth Third Bank and its auditors and seeks $53 million in damages. The deposition by former Fifth Third Bank branch manager Amanda Powers ac-
knowledges the bank failed to follow reasonable commercial banking standards in its handling of the account, according to a report Saturday in The (Dixon) Telegraph. Powers said in her deposition that the bank cashed unendorsed checks from Crundwell, cashed checks made payable to “treasurer” without further inquiry and allowed Crundwell’s secret personal account to be opened as a city account without proper verification. The bank is seeking to be removed from the lawsuit because it said Dixon is barred from taking legal action against it by the Illinois Fiduciary Obligations Act, which shields banks from liability for an account holder’s dishonest finances – but only if the bank’s dealings are in “good faith.”
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Suspensions in nuclear force raise questions By ROBERT BURNS The Associated Press WASHINGTON – Beyond the Air Force’s embarrassing suspension of 17 nuclear missile launch officers lie two broader questions. Do those entrusted with the world’s most destructive weapons feel stuck in a deadend career field, given the momentum toward more nuclear arms reductions? And is there a morale crisis among these officers? This matters because the missiles – 450 of them standing in below-ground silos, ready for launch at a moment’s notice – form a critical part of America’s nuclear defenses. There is little room for error. Although none has ever been fired in anger, the risk of accidental launch or unauthorized intrusion is real. In a rare look inside the secretive world of nuclear mis-
siles, The Associated Press reported this past week that the deputy commander of operations for the 91st Missile Wing at Minot Air Force Base, N.D., complained to his officers about “rot” within their ranks. In a confidential email obtained by the AP, Lt. Col. Jay Folds wrote of 17 launch officers, 10 percent of his force, being removed from duty for what he likened to incompetence. They are being given remedial training, with the goal of being back on duty within two months. “If you have this many officers who failed, then how do you explain that and who should be held accountable for their failure?” Robert Gates, a former defense secretary, said Friday. “I think those questions clearly need to be answered.” When faced with similar questions during his Penta-
In South, GOP uses powers to control cities By BILL BARROW The Associated Press ATLANTA – Even with Republicans holding unprecedented political power across the South, Democrats remain mostly in charge of urban centers in otherwise conservative states. Yet increasingly that control is threatened, not at the ballot box, but by Republican-led legislatures reaching into local governing decisions, often over objections. In Georgia and North Carolina, GOP efforts range from regionalizing the Charlotte airport, the Atlanta metro transit system and the Asheville water system to redrawing district lines for local offices to benefit Republican candidates. Republicans insist there’s no power play at work as they do battle with Democrats such as Charlotte Mayor Antony Foxx, who is now President Barack Obama’s nominee to be U.S. transportation secretary, and the board of commissioners in Georgia’s most populous county, which includes most of Atlanta. Georgia state Rep. Edward Lindsey, a key GOP floor leader and a candidate for Congress, said the ideas are intended to make government more responsive and efficient. Some Republicans also note that a few pursuits – like a North Carolina bill that would bar local governments from issuing environmental regulations more stringent than the state’s – apply regardless of who runs a county or municipality. But many Democrats say Republican supermajorities are abusing newfound power to overtake the last lingering Democratic bastions. And some Democrats almost mock Republicans for abandoning the conservative principle – usually attributed to Thomas Jefferson – that the best government is the one closest to home. “This all just flies in the face of Republican thinking,”
said North Carolina state Sen. Floyd McKissick, a Democrat from Durham. In Georgia, race is also at play in the longstanding tension between the majority African-American south Fulton County and the whiter, wealthier areas in newly constituted cities north of Atlanta. “None of this is about making Fulton government better,” said Georgia Democratic Party Chairman Mike Berlon. “This is about taking over Fulton County.” In Georgia, the Republican-led legislature this year redrew lines for the Fulton commissioners to give north Fulton residents, who are reliably more Republican, a greater voice. Two black Democrats in south Fulton must now run against each other. The GOP stripped the commission’s power to appoint the top county elections official and handed the Republican governor the power to appoint the chief local magistrate judge. They also made it easier to fire new county employees. When the General Assembly reconvenes in January, Republicans will pick up two even bigger measures that were stymied this year: One would grant a property tax break that Fulton County officials say would gut their budget. The other would overhaul the Atlanta metro transit system, privatizing many of its functions and giving suburbs more control. There’s also an annual measure for north Fulton to break away from the south altogether and form its own county. Lindsey, who represents the wealthy Atlanta neighborhood of Buckhead, attributed the push in no small part to mismanagement by Fulton officials. Fulton elections have been plagued by voting problems, with thousands of new voters having to cast provisional ballots last November. The transit system has in hand an independent analysis identifying potential savings from some privatization.
8NATION BRIEFS Spacewalking repair halts station leak for now
U.S. Arabs, others engage in national service day
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. – Astronauts making a rare, hastily planned spacewalk replaced a pump outside the International Space Station on Saturday in hopes of plugging a serious ammonia leak. The prospects of success grew as hours passed and no frozen flecks of ammonia appeared. Mission Control said it appeared as though the leak may have been plugged, although monitoring over the coming weeks will be needed before declaring a victory.
DETROIT – Roughly 2,000 Arab-Americans and others in about a dozen communities nationwide were volunteering their time Saturday as part of the National Arab American Service Day, tackling a punch list that included boarding up and tearing down abandoned homes in Detroit and cleaning up areas hard hit by Superstorm Sandy in New York. Bad weather forced a service project in Atlanta to be delayed until Saturday.
– Wire reports
AP file photo
Air Force Secretary Michael Donley (left) and Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. Mark Welsh III testify at a Capitol Hill hearing Thursday on the defense budget for the Air Force in Washington. gon tenure, Gates fired the top two Air Force leaders in 2008. That followed a series of nuclear embarrassments, including the inadvertent transport of six nuclear-tipped missiles on a B-52 bomber,
whose pilot did not know they were aboard when he flew from Minot to Barksdale Air Force Base, La. Gates said in an interview Friday before addressing graduates of the University of
South Carolina in Columbia, S.C., that he was disappointed by the latest revelations but confident that Minot’s weapons were not in jeopardy. The Minot missile wing is responsible for 150 Minuteman 3 missiles, one-third of the Air Force’s entire ICBM force. Inside the missile launch capsules, so called because of their pill-like shape, two officers stand watch, authorized to turn the keys enabled by secret launch codes if the presidential order ever comes. They are 60 feet underground, electronically linked to 10 silos, each with one armed Minuteman 3. That is a lot of responsibility for the young lieutenants and captains that the Air Force puts in these jobs. It’s also an enormous challenge for their commanders to keep them on track – a challenge not always met.
In a March inspection the 91st wing was rated “marginal,” the equivalent of a “D’’ grade, when tested on launch skills. Folds described a deeper problem, citing willful rule violations such as leaving open the multi-ton blast door to their launch compartment while one of the two crew members was asleep. Sleep breaks are authorized, but the open door is not, given the risk of losing control of the capsule to an unauthorized intruder. Publicly, the Air Force insists that its missileers, as they are known within the service, are capable, trustworthy and committed. But Air Force Secretary Michael Donley also acknowledged in congressional testimony that he worries that talk of further shrinking the nation’s nuclear force is having a “corrosive effect” on his troops.
Recovery begins now for 3 Ohio women By JESSE WASHINGTON The Associated Press Year after year, the clock ticked by and the calendar marched forward, carrying the three women further from the real world and pulling them deeper into an isolated nightmare. Now, for the women freed from captivity inside a Cleveland house, the ordeal is not over. Next comes recovery – from sexual abuse and their sudden, jarring re-entry into a world much different from the one they were snatched from a decade ago. Therapists say that with extensive treatment and support, healing is likely for the women, who were 14, 16 and 21 when they were abducted. But it is often a long and difficult process. “It’s sort of like coming out of a coma,” says Dr. Barbara Greenberg, a psychologist who specializes in treating abused teenagers. “It’s a very isolating and bewildering experience.” In the world the women left behind, a gallon of gas cost about $1.80. Barack Obama was a state senator. Phones were barely taking pictures. Things did not “go viral.” There was no YouTube, no Facebook, no iPhone. Emerging into the future is difficult enough. The two younger Cleveland women are doing it without the benefit of crucial formative years.
AP file photo
A missing poster still hangs on a tree Wednesday outside the home of Amanda Berry in Cleveland. For Berry, Gina DeJesus and Michelle Knight, who were freed from captivity inside a Cleveland house earlier this week, the ordeal is not over. Next comes recovery – from sexual abuse and their sudden, jarring reentry into a world much different than the one they were snatched from a decade ago. “By taking away their adolescence, they weren’t able to develop emotional and psychological and social skills,” says Duane Bowers, who counsels traumatized families through the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. “They’re 10 years behind in these skills. Those need to be caught up before they can work on reintegrating into society,” he says. That society can be terrifying. As freed captive Geor-
gina DeJesus arrived home from the hospital, watched by a media horde, she hid herself beneath a hooded sweatshirt. The freed Amanda Berry slipped into her home without being seen. “They weren’t hiding from the press, from the cameras,” Bowers says. “They were hiding from the freedom, from the expansiveness.” In the house owned by Ariel Castro, who is charged with kidnapping and raping the women, claustrophobic
control ruled. Police say that Castro kept them chained in a basement and locked in upstairs rooms, that he fathered a child with one of them and that he starved and beat one captive into multiple miscarriages. In all those years, they only set foot outside of the house twice – and then only as far as the garage. “Something as simple as walking into a Target is going to be a major problem for them,” Bowers says.
WORLD
Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com
AP photo
Supporters of Pakistan Muslim League-N party celebrate the primary unofficial results Saturday of the country’s parliamentary elections at a party office in Lahore, Pakistan.
Pakistan’s Sharif declares victory amid violent vote The ASSOCIATED PRESS ISLAMABAD – Former Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif declared victory after a historic election marred by violence Saturday, a remarkable comeback for a leader once toppled in a military coup and sent into exile. The 63-year-old Sharif, who has twice served as premier, touted his success after unofficial, partial vote counts showed his Pakistan Muslim League-N party with an overwhelming lead. The party weathered a strong campaign by former cricket star Imran Khan that energized Pakistan’s young people. Sharif expressed a desire to work with all parties to solve the country’s problems in a victory speech given to his supporters in the eastern city of Lahore as his lead in the national election became apparent based on vote counts an-
nounced by Pakistan state TV. The results, which need to be officially confirmed, indicated Sharif’s party has an overwhelming lead but would fall short of winning a majority of the 272 directly elected national assembly seats. That means he would have to put together a ruling coalition. “I appeal to all to come sit with me at the table so that this nation can get rid of this curse of power cuts, inflation and unemployment,” Sharif said, as his supporters clapped, cheered and danced in the streets. Despite attacks against candidates, party workers and voters that killed 29 people Saturday, Pakistanis turned out in large numbers to elect the national and provincial assemblies. The high participation was a sign of Pakistanis’ desire for change after years of hardship under the outgoing government,
and it offered a sharp rebuke to Taliban militants and others who have tried to derail the election with attacks that have killed more than 150 people in recent weeks. “Our country is in big trouble,” said Mohammad Ali, a shopkeeper who voted in Lahore. “Our people are jobless. Our business is badly affected. We are dying every day.” The vote marked the first time a civilian government has completed its full five-year term and transferred power in democratic elections in a country that has experienced three coups and constant political instability since it was established in 1947. The election was being watched closely by the United States, which relies on the nuclear-armed country of 180 million people for help fighting Islamic militants and negotiating an end to the war in neighboring Afghanistan.
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WORLD
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Blast kills dozens in Turkey; Syria-linked group blamed By MEHMET GUZEL and SUZAN FRASER The Associated Press
AP photo
Latifa Khedri, 53, the mother of Adel Khedri, walks in the cemetery April 16 where her son is buried in the farming town of Souk al-Jumma, Tunisia. Adel set himself on fire March 12 outside the Municipal Theater in the heart of Tunis.
Vendor’s suicide reflects despair of Mideast youth By KARIN LAUB The Associated Press SOUK AL-JUMMA, Tunisia – On the day he chose to die, Adel Khedri woke up at 6:30 a.m., took his black backpack and headed down to the busy boulevard where he worked as a cigarette peddler. It was the last in a series of odd jobs that had defined his hand-to-mouth existence for almost nine years. He couldn’t afford to pay bribes to get hired as a driver or a guard. The Tunisian army didn’t need him. There were few factory jobs. And the owner at a fast food restaurant in neighboring Libya had cheated him out of wages as a dishwasher. So on March 12, three weeks after his 27th birthday, Adel left the dirty room he shared with his older brother in a Tunis slum for the treelined Avenue Habib Bourguiba, once the stage for the first of the Arab Spring uprisings. He stopped in front of the art deco Municipal Theater.
He poured gasoline over his body. Then he set himself on fire. Adel died 19 hours later. One of his last words to a doctor at the burn center was “faddit” – slang for “fed up.” Adel is one of 178 people in Tunisia who have set themselves on fire since the self-immolation two years ago of another high school dropout-turned-street vendor launched the Arab Spring. These two book-ends of a revolution that toppled four Arab dictators show how little has changed in between for millions of jobless, hopeless 20-somethings across the Middle East and North Africa. The difficulty of finding a job, which helped spark the unrest, is now a prescription for continued turmoil. Youth unemployment worldwide is up to about 12.3 percent, in part because of the global financial crisis that began five years ago. But some areas of the Middle East and North Africa suffer from more
than twice that rate, because of stubborn labor market problems compounded by the turmoil of the Arab Spring. And the future looks worse. In the Middle East, youth unemployment is expected to rise from 27.7 percent in 2011 to 30 percent in 2018, the International Labor Organization reported this week. In North Africa, a slight increase is expected, from 23.3 percent to 23.9 percent. Economists say fixing the problem will require broad and deep changes, such as overhauling education, slashing bloated public sectors and encouraging entrepreneurship. “There is no quick solution that will address all the aspirations of young people looking for jobs now,” said Masood Ahmed, head of the International Monetary Fund for the Middle East and North Africa. In the meantime, the numbers add up to a generation in trouble.
REYHANLI, Turkey – In one of the deadliest attacks in Turkey in recent years, two car bombs exploded near the border with Syria on Saturday, killing 43 and wounding 140 others. Turkish officials blamed the attack on a group linked to Syria, and a deputy prime minister called the neighboring country’s intelligence service and military “the usual suspects.” The blasts, which were 15 minutes apart and hit the town of Reyhanli’s busiest street, raised fears that Turkey could increasingly be drawn into Syria’s brutal civil war. Turkey already hosts Syria’s political opposition and rebel commanders, has given shelter to hundreds of thousands of Syrian refugees and in the past retaliated against Syrian shells that landed in Turkey.
Deputy Prime Minister Besir Atalay said the assailants were from Turkey, but were linked to Syria’s intelligence service. “We have to a great extent completed our work toward identifying the assailants,” he told reporters. “We have established that the organization and assailants have links to the pro-regime mukhabarat [intelligence] organization.” He did not name the group, but said the aim of the attack was to pit Turks against Syrian refugees in Reyhanli. Earlier, another deputy prime minister, Bulent Arinc said: “Our thoughts are that their mukhabarat and armed organizations are the usual suspects in planning and the carrying out of such devilish plans,” he said. Arinc said the attacks were still being investigated, but that If it’s proven that Syrian was behind the attack, Turkey would “do whatever is necessary,” without speci-
fying if that included military action. One of the car bombs exploded outside the city hall while the other went off outside the post office. Reyhanli, a main hub for Syrian refugees and rebels in Turkey’s Hatay province, is just across the border from Syria’s Idlib province. Private NTV television, citing unnamed sources, said the explosions were remote-controlled and that plastic explosives were used. Images showed people frantically carrying the wounded through the rubble-strewn streets to safety. Black smoke billowed from a tall building. The explosions came days before Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan is scheduled to travel to the U.S. for talks, which are expected to be dominated by the situation in Syria. The car bombings also follow allegations by Erdogan the Syrian regime has fired about 200 missiles tipped with chemical weapons.
Friday’s gas explosion happened in neighboring Guizhou province. China’s mines are the deadliest in the world. Authorities have improved safety in recent years, but regulations are often ignored.
pick a successor to President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, a former president who still wields enormous influence, and Esfandiar Rahim Mashaei, a close confident of Ahmadinejad, submitted their official paperwork just before Saturday’s deadline. Each has a good shot at winning the vote, raising a tough challenge to conservative candidates loyal to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
8WORLD BRIEFS Dozens of miners killed in China coal mine blast BEIJING – Authorities say 27 miners were killed in a coal mine blast in southwestern China. The work safety bureau in Sichuan province says 108 miners were working underground when the accident happened Saturday afternoon. Of the 81 rescued, six were seriously injured and nine suffered minor injuries. Less than 24 hours earlier, another coal mine blast in southwestern China killed 12 people.
2 divisive figures enter Iran’s presidential race TEHRAN, Iran – A pair of powerful and divisive figures registered Saturday to run in Iran’s presidential election, jolting the political landscape ahead of next month’s vote to
– Wire reports
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FROM PAGE 1
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Sunday, May 12, 2013 • Page A9
Suspects face max 20 years in prison • CHARGES Continued from page A1 who was wearing a mask and gloves, according to the affidavit. Authorities also arrested Favela in the driver’s seat of the Tahoe. After waiving his Miranda rights, Russell said in an interview with the FBI that he, Starnes and Favela met in Chicago to rob the bank
in Richmond, the affidavit states. Russell explained that Starnes picked the Richmond bank because he was familiar with the area. Russell and Starnes circled the bank to allow customers to leave while Favela served as lookout for police, according to the affidavit. Russell also told authorities that he had two handguns in the back seat of the Civic and that Starnes had a
gun on the front seat of the Tahoe, the affidavit states. “Russell said the goal was not to hurt anyone inside the bank, but that the firearms were real,” Heatherman said in the affidavit. Russell had been previously convicted of armed robbery in 2004 and 1991, FBI officials said. If convicted of the charges, Russell and Favela face a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison.
Duo also operates small resale business H. Rick Bamman – hbamman@shawmedia.com
Cary-based 3Gstore.com employee Bob Deering of Crystal Lake prepares packages for shipping Friday. The company sells more than the $1 million threshold that would make it have to collect taxes under the new act. Owner Michael Ginsberg says he’s not opposed to Internet sales tax, but is concerned that making small companies such as his collect taxes for all 9,000 and more jurisdictions across the country puts an unfair burden on them.
Businesses with sales on $1M or less exempt • TAX Continued from page A1 services – is among a group of small Internet retailers that are worried new legislation could hurt their business significantly. Co-authored by Sen. Dick Durbin, D-III, the act would require Internet retailers to collect sales tax at the rate of the buyer’s local jurisdiction. Those with sales of less than $1 million a year would be exempt. Supporters say the act levels the playing field for struggling brick-and-mortar businesses who frequently fall victim to “showrooming,” in which customers come view and try out products in the store only to buy online. The act would require states to provide software to Internet retailers that collect the taxes, but Ginsberg isn’t satisfied the software would take the burden off his company. He said his company spends about four hours a month compiling Illinois
“Everybody’s not Amazon. There’s a lot of small ones that are out there.” Michael Ginsberg Owner of Cary-based 3Gstore.com sales tax. Having to do that for all the states, he said, is work he’s not ready to take on. He estimates that he’d have to add two employees to his 11-person staff. Ginsberg also is concerned he could be the subject of audits from other states. He said he recently went through an audit in Illinois, and after 10 months, was told he owed a couple of hundred dollars. “The amount of time they spent, the amount of time we spent, it was just insane for that,” he said. For Ginsberg, it’s the added work that is his biggest concern. He’s not concerned that his customers simply having to pay sales tax would drive a significant portion of them away – although, he
admits, it could be a different story at companies that don’t offer such niche products. To reduce the burden on small Internet companies, Ginsberg suggests a service created and moderated by the states. The service communicates directly with the e-commerce platform of the specific site to keep track of how much money is owed and to where. “This organization would know, ‘OK, Texas, we owe them eight bucks,’” Ginsberg said. “So they withdraw the money from our accounts ... [and] they distribute to all the states.” For Ginsberg’s company, there’s a simpler solution. If the act would be amended to exempt companies with sales of up to $10 million rather than $1 million, as companies such as eBay have pushed for, 3Gstore.com no longer would qualify. “Everybody’s not Amazon,” he said. “There’s a lot of small ones that are out there. A million dollars in sales – that’s gross sales. ... It’s not a lot of money.”
Inside
• DUO Continued from page A1 Sarna has two other sisters, Beth and Jessica, one in Idaho and the other outside of Rockford. They have similar teaching styles, focused on empowering the students through programs such as Science Splash, where the students teach younger kids. The programs also provide the students with opportunities to develop nonscience specific skills such as public speaking, time management and problem solving. Over the past three summers, the two have operated a small business called Apron Strings with Mom and Me. They find “treasures” and “weird items that catch our eyes” at flea markets and estate sales, fix them up and resell them. Despite being so close, they don’t draw attention to their relationship. Sarna calls her mother Jo at work, and Johanson calls her Sarna. “It never gets focused on,” Sarna said. “I don’t introduce myself [as her daughter]. Now it’s just known. We’ve been here long enough. When the kids find out, they’re like, ‘That’s your mom?’”
Mom starts bingo nights for charity in memory of son. Turn to page 10 in the Planit Style insert.
Voice your opinion What did you do for mom for Mother’s Day? Vote online at NWHerald.com.
But when they get home, there’s still a mother-daughter relationship. “She’s still the grandma,” Sarna said. “She’s the mom. That doesn’t change. We’re friends, but she’s still my mom.” When Sarna was just starting her career, Johanson would help her out, talking through issues and suggesting new ways to do things – a role Johanson has assumed with a lot of teachers over the years. “I think the biggest thing was I had to make sure I was myself,” Sarna said. “I couldn’t start teaching and think I was going to be as good as my mom right away. I needed to learn the content and learn how I was going to present it.” Growing up, Sarna saw her parents – both of them
teachers – come home with papers to grade and lessons to prepare, and she thought she’d never go into education. But after about three years in sales, she was ready for a change. She got her master’s degree in education, but near graduation and not sure how to navigate this new world, she asked her mother to go along with her to a job fair in Crystal Lake. Johanson, who was working in a small district outside Rockford, ended up getting called about a position at Nippersink Middle School, and a year later, Sarna also joined the staff. Johanson didn’t go straight into teaching, either. She graduated from college as a medical technologist but found she enjoyed the teaching part of it the best. Her husband, Dave – who has taught physical education, science, social studies and building trades – recommended the switch to teaching. Johanson started at St. Patrick Catholic School in Rockford, which no longer exists. “It was where I learned to love the kids,” she said. “It was the best place to learn how to become a teacher.”
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Page A10 â&#x20AC;˘ Sunday, May 12, 2013
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Opinion
John Rung President and Publisher
Dan McCaleb Group Editor
Jason Schaumburg Editor
Sunday, May 12, 2013 • Page A11 • Northwest Herald • NWHerald.com 8OUR VIEW
8SKETCH VIEW
Celebrate Mom today You can buy her flowers. You can send her a card. You can buy her chocolate. But really, today is a day to show our mothers that we care. Like she showed us for so many years. It is Mother’s Day, and it is a day to set aside all our past spats and celebrate the one who brought us into the world and raised us to be who we are. Many of us For the record have close relationships with On this Mother’s Day, make our mothers. sure you let your mother know Others, not so how much you care. much. It’s how life works. But please take one piece of advice. Talk to your mother today. Tell her you love her, and thank her for all she has done for you. If you can, do it face to face. At the least, if it is possible, give her a call. Take her to dinner. Better yet, make her dinner. Unless you’re a chef, it might not be the best meal she’s ever tasted. But it will be heartfelt, and that will almost certainly make her happy. There are plenty of Hallmark holidays out there, meant to drum up business for the card, candy and flower companies. Mother’s Day, however, is not one of them. It’s a day of appreciation. It’s a day of gratitude. It’s a day of respect. So respect your mother; show her you recognize all she’s done for you. Show her you realize she didn’t always have the easiest job in the world. And show her, through your actions, that you appreciate all that she did for you. If you can, do something to make her smile. She was there for you for all those years, through the good and bad times, from infancy up until now. If your mother is no longer with you, remember her today. Share a favorite story about her with a sibling, or with your own children. Keep her memory alive. However you do it, celebrate your mother today. Mothers everywhere deserve the special attention.
8ANOTHER VIEW
Israel’s red line Well, President Barack Obama may have trouble figuring out where his red lines are in Syria, but not so Israel, which launched two airstrikes over the weekend aimed at destroying high-powered weapons destined for the Syrian-backed terrorists of Hezbollah. In doing so, it is trying to prevent a repeat of the 2006 Lebanese war in which Hezbollah launched missiles from Lebanon into northern Israel and as far south as Haifa. The weapons targeted in this weekend’s raid – the Iranianbuilt Fatah-110s – are capable of reaching Tel Aviv, which during the ’06 war served as a safe haven for tens of thousands of Israelis fleeing their homes in the north. The Israelis have repeatedly warned that Hezbollah will not be allowed to acquire Syrian chemical weapons, long-range Scud missiles, missiles capable of attacking naval vessels from the coast and Russian anti-aircraft missiles – the latter destroyed during a January airstrike. That’s their red line. Israel has also deployed two batteries of its Iron Dome defense system in the north just in case the embattled Assad regime decides to take the air raids somewhat more personally. (Opposition activists reported that 42 Syrian soldiers were killed in the raids.) The White House, which has done little to combat the lawlessness that threatens to overtake Syria, has at least defended Israel’s right to defend itself against the kind of terrorism that virtually surrounds it. And Israel for its part has maintained an extraordinary level of diplomatic and military calm even as it deals with the “stray” Syrian shells that have landed in the Golan Heights. Still the contagion that is now Syria is making the region – and the world – a less safe place with every passing day. Boston Herald
8IT’S YOUR WRITE Thanks for the memories To the Editor: Woodstock, and McHenry County, lost a great part of its heritage this past week when longtime journalist and historian Don Peasley passed away. For those of you who didn’t know him, Don grew up on a downstate farm, served in the U.S. Navy during World War II, and settled in Woodstock in 1947. He and his late wife, Fran, raised a family while Don worked for local newspapers and started his own public relations company. I had the pleasure of working with him during my 12 years at the Northwest Herald. Don had many gifts. Like many of us, he had a great sense of history – what happened before him and why it was important. And like so many, he could write, stringing words and sentences together in a way that was simple and easy to read. He also had a great eye with his camera, collecting images from people of our county for more than 65 years. But it was his ability to use these gifts in a way that connected with people that set him apart. Don had God-given abilities and he used them in a way to make this world a better place. How many of us can say we’ve done that? Thanks for the memories, Don. We’ll miss you. Peter Gill Woodstock
Extending a hand To the Editor: Redeemer Lutheran Church is one of seven McHenry County PADS emergency shelter sites for homeless men, women and children. Redeemer hosts an average of 50 homeless people from 7 p.m. each Wednesday to 7 a.m. each Thursday, from Oct. 1 through April 30. Like the other emergency shelters, the Redeemer site operates with volunteers and donated food, funds and supplies. We have no paid staff and receive no tax dollars in any form. Our volunteers and support come from Woodstock High School, Marian Central High
School, Grace Lutheran Church, the McHenry County Jewish Congregation, the Congregational Unitarian Church, the Woodstock Area Community Ministries, other churches and organizations, the community at large, and, of course, Redeemer Lutheran Church. The PADS shelters are a perfect example of our community coming together to extend a hand to those most in need of help. Huge thanks are due all of the volunteers and organizations that have provided efforts and support this season. When you see a homeless person in your daily life, please treat them with the same human kindness and dignity you would like if you were in their place; they are truly our brothers and sisters. Martin Coonen Woodstock
Look in the mirror To the Editor: Interesting article in recent Northwest Herald. It might have been titled, “How the Republicans defeated Romney and elected Obama.” The power that politicians exert and actions they take are often not in our best interest. The only legal action I can take is to vote when the time comes. Millions of Americans are unhappy with state and federal governments. The energy people spend moaning and complaining is incalculable. It goes on daily. Yet many can’t find the time or the ambition to exercise the only power they have to effect change. How this country could evolve if the 42 percent of eligible voters who didn’t vote would harness a tiny bit of that energy and show up at a polling place once every 1,460 days for 10 minutes. Public officials should work for the people, not their personal agendas. If they don’t, and they won’t accept term limits, take action. Vote them out. You have the power. When you don’t vote, however, you give your power to others who don’t think like you, believe what you believe, or have
8SPEAK OUT
Q “Should the state increase the speed limit on some highways to 70 mph?”
SPEAK OUT ON FACEBOOK “What’s the point? Everybody drives too fast anyway. If they lift it to 70, people are going to go 90. To me, that’s nuts.”
“I already see people drive 80, 85. ... If people are already doing it, you might as well make it legal.”
“No, because it would be too scary. There’s too many texters, wild drivers.”
Dale Anderson Crystal Lake
Hector Galvan Oakwood Hills
Holly Haley Cary
Editorial Board: John Rung, Dan McCaleb, Jason Schaumburg, Kevin Lyons, Jon Styf, Kate Schott, Stacia Hahn
Northwest Herald asked this same question on its Facebook page. At right are a few of the responses.
8THE FIRST AMENDMENT
How to sound off We welcome original letters on public issues. Letters must include the author’s full name, home address and day and evening telephone numbers. We limit letters to 250 words and one published letter every 30 days. All letters are subject to editing
your best interest in mind. Your inaction gives them your power. It’s your choice. No action is still action. Every vote cast counts. According to the article, if voter turnout had been similar to past elections, we would probably have a different president. If you didn’t vote, you helped elect our current president. If you’re happy, good. If not, maybe look in the mirror. Ed Riess Cary
Not paying attention To the Editor: We started hating the GOP when we realized that Reaganomics equaled a war on the lower middle class (LMC). Before Reagan, the vast majority of Americans were LMC workers on farms, factories, mines or vehicle drivers, teachers, nurses’ aides and orderlies, etc. Yet most of them raised families and even helped the smarter kids through college on one to one-anda-half incomes. Each generation lived better than the last, even without changing jobs, etc. CEOs made several times what their LMC workers did. Since Reagan, the GOP has fought to defeat unions; lowered taxes on the upper classes; supported almost all mergers, creating lots of “too-big-to-fail” companies; privatized everything in sight to the advantage of the rich over the LMC. The oil companies, banks, etc., that Teddy Roosevelt broke up now are many times larger than ever. They have privatized the profits but socialized the losses as they bail out the screw-ups of these mega-companies.
for length and clarity at the sole discretion of the editor. Submit letters by: • E-mail: letters@nwherald.com • Mail: Northwest Herald “It’s Your Write” Box 250 Crystal Lake, IL 60039-0250
Today, the LMC need two or more incomes to just keep up with their parents’ lifestyles. The CEOs make thousands of times what the LMC workers do, and the GOP works hard with Grover Norquist’s and Paul Ryan’s plans to reduce benefits for the poor and further lower taxes on the rich. And we know, if you subtract the vote of the religious right, racists and the duped, the GOP would lose most elections. Those who are not rich and don’t hate the GOP are just not paying attention. Bob Lambert Lake in the Hills
Interfaith dialogue To the Editor: “It is the duty of all believers, to whichever religion they belong, to proclaim that we can never be happy pitted one against the other, the future of humanity will never be able to be secured by terrorism and by the logic of war.” Pope John Paul II made this powerful statement back in 2003. Today, I am reminded of this same sentiment as I hear Pope Francis reach out to people of all faiths as well as nonbelievers and urge peace, respect and humanity. “We must do much for the good of the poorest, the weak, and those who are suffering, to favor justice, promote reconciliation and build peace.” As a former Catholic, I have a renewed excitement for the church as Pope Francis looks to build bridges of interfaith dialogue and respect – because together we can promote peace and harmony worldwide. Erik Cuchna Crystal Lake
“People already drive that fast if not faster. I think IL Is the only state where the speed limit isn’t 70 mph. They should raise it.”
“Away from the city, yes. Some people can’t drive 50 mph or 55 mph safely. What makes one think they can drive 70 mph safely?”
Debbie Weingart Johnsburg
Rhonda Wyse Crystal Lake
“Easily should be 70 mph. People already speed, not to mention that almost every other state has a high limit.” Joshua Zuelke, Fox River Grove native
JOIN THE DISCUSSION Join future community discussions at Facebook.com/ NWHerald. Follow this specific discussion at http://shawurl. com/ll5
Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.
Sunday, May 12, 2013 Northwest Herald Page A12
Weather TODAY
MON
TUE
55
62
75
Partly sunny, breezy and cool
WED
THU
FRI
SAT
83
75
74
82
Partly sunny and pleasant
Mostly sunny
Mostly sunny with a stray shower
Wind:
Wind:
Wind:
NNW 7-14 mph
WNW 7-14 mph
SE 4-8 mph
Partly sunny and warmer
Partly sunny and warmer
Wind:
Wind:
Some sun with a t-storm possible; warm Wind:
SW 6-12 mph
S 8-16 mph
WSW 10-20 mph
Wind: WNW 10-20 mph
35
49
ALMANAC
62
56
52
60
Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.
at Chicago through 4 p.m. yesterday
Harvard 54/32
Belvidere 56/34
TEMPERATURE HIGH
53
Crystal Lake 55/35
Rockford 56/34
LOW
Hampshire 55/33
90
Waukegan 54/31 Algonquin 55/35
88
LAKE FORECAST WATER TEMP: Chicago Winds: NW at 8-16 kts. 56/36 Waves: 2-4 ft.
50
Aurora 56/33
Sandwich 56/33
39
Oak Park 56/37
St. Charles 55/35
DeKalb 55/35 Dixon 58/34
McHenry 55/32
Today and the start of the week will be cooler with high pressure off to our west. But temperatures will rebound for the middle of next week with a storm to the north. The associated cold front moves through late Wednesday, before another high pressure works in for the weekend with warmer southerly air.
Orland Park 56/36 Normal high
69°
Normal low
47°
Record high
89° in 1982
Record low
33° in 1981
POLLEN COUNT TREES GRASSES
PRECIPITATION 24 hours through 4 p.m. yest.
0.02”
Month to date
0.63”
Normal month to date
1.27”
Year to date
17.90”
Normal year to date
10.67”
SUN AND MOON
WEEDS MOLD
FOX RIVER STAGES as of 7 a.m. yesterday Flood
Current
24hr Chg.
Fox Lake
--
4.58
-0.02
Nippersink Lake
--
4.45
-0.11
Sunrise
5:35 a.m.
New Munster, WI
10
9.72
+0.51
Sunset
8:05 p.m.
McHenry
4
2.78
-0.56
Moonrise
7:29 a.m.
Algonquin
3
1.65
-0.14
Moonset
10:33 p.m.
First
Full
May 17
May 24
Last
New
May 31
Jun 8
AIR QUALITY Saturday’s reading
0-50 Good; 51-100 Moderate; 101-150 Unhealthy for sensitive groups; 151-200 Unhealthy; 201-300 Very Unhealthy; 301-500 Hazardous Source: http://www.epa.state.il.us/air/aqi/index.html
UV INDEX TODAY The higher the AccuWeather.com UV Index™ number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection.
9a
10a 11a Noon 1p
2p
3p
NATIONAL CITIES Today
MOON PHASES
4p
0-2 Low; 3-5 Moderate; 6-7 High; 8-10 Very high; 11+ Extreme
5p
WORLD CITIES
REGIONAL CITIES
Today
City
Hi/Lo/W
City
Hi/Lo/W
Albuquerque Anchorage Atlanta Atlantic City Baltimore Billings Boise Boston Charlotte Cincinnati Cleveland Dallas Denver Des Moines Detroit El Paso Fairbanks Fargo Green Bay Honolulu Houston Indianapolis Jacksonville Kansas City Las Vegas Los Angeles Louisville Memphis
78/55/pc 56/42/c 71/45/s 66/45/pc 67/41/pc 85/58/pc 91/59/pc 66/46/c 73/44/pc 58/36/s 54/36/pc 80/57/s 78/52/pc 64/43/s 51/34/pc 80/56/pc 48/28/c 60/43/s 54/32/pc 84/71/c 84/58/pc 58/37/s 84/57/t 66/47/s 96/75/s 90/64/s 62/39/s 69/47/s
Miami Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New York Norfolk Oklahoma City Orlando Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, OR Reno Richmond Sacramento Salt Lake City San Antonio San Diego San Francisco Seattle Sioux Falls St. Louis St. Paul Tampa Tucson Wash., DC Wichita
87/72/s 52/36/pc 58/38/s 64/38/s 80/59/pc 69/46/pc 70/51/pc 78/54/s 87/67/t 67/44/pc 99/76/s 56/33/pc 73/57/r 89/57/pc 72/42/pc 91/57/pc 85/59/s 82/57/c 79/63/pc 69/53/pc 67/53/r 64/43/s 63/42/s 57/36/s 85/70/pc 92/67/s 68/43/pc 72/51/s
Today
Today
Monday
Tuesday
City
Hi/Lo/W
Hi/Lo/W
Hi/Lo/W
City
Hi/Lo/W
City
Arlington Hts Aurora Bloomington Carbondale Champaign Chicago Clinton Evanston Galesburg Joliet Kankakee Mt. Vernon Naperville Peoria Princeton Rockford Rock Island Springfield Waukegan Wheaton
54/34/pc 56/33/pc 60/38/s 64/38/s 60/36/s 56/36/pc 60/37/s 53/38/pc 60/34/s 57/34/pc 56/35/pc 61/35/s 55/33/pc 60/37/s 58/35/s 56/34/pc 60/34/s 62/37/s 54/31/pc 56/34/pc
61/47/s 64/48/s 66/51/s 70/50/s 66/50/s 62/48/s 67/51/s 59/48/s 68/52/s 63/48/s 63/48/s 69/50/pc 63/47/s 68/53/s 67/50/s 63/50/s 69/52/s 69/54/s 58/45/s 63/48/s
75/61/pc 78/61/pc 82/62/pc 82/58/s 80/63/pc 76/60/pc 83/62/pc 72/61/pc 81/63/pc 77/63/pc 78/63/pc 82/59/pc 77/62/pc 82/65/pc 82/64/pc 81/62/pc 83/63/pc 84/64/pc 69/59/pc 77/62/pc
Acapulco Amsterdam Athens Baghdad Beijing Berlin Brussels Buenos Aires Cairo Cancun Dublin Geneva Hong Kong Islamabad Istanbul Kabul Kingston Lima London Madrid
90/75/pc 53/47/sh 79/60/s 94/71/pc 90/55/s 64/46/c 55/44/sh 68/50/pc 85/71/pc 88/75/s 58/40/r 57/41/r 85/76/s 94/67/t 73/57/s 78/50/s 89/76/s 76/61/pc 59/50/c 77/52/s
Manila Melbourne Mexico City Montreal Moscow New Delhi Paris Rome Santiago Sao Paulo Seoul Singapore Stockholm Sydney Tel Aviv Tokyo Toronto Vancouver Vienna Warsaw
-10s
0s
Source: National Allergy Bureau
Today
Hi/Lo/W
93/82/t 72/59/sh 81/52/pc 57/39/c 80/55/pc 101/78/pc 61/47/pc 72/55/pc 68/50/s 79/59/s 70/49/s 90/77/t 64/45/c 74/57/s 76/62/s 76/61/pc 47/33/c 64/54/r 64/46/r 65/47/t
NATIONAL FORECAST -0s
10s
20s
30s
40s
50s
60s
70s
80s
90s
100s 110s
Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice
Forecasts and graphics, except WFLD forecasts, provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2013
Showers T-storms
New Patient Adult Special
Rain
Flurries
Snow
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
New Patient Child Special
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$49
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Stationary Front
Local&Region
SECTION B Sunday, May 12, 2013 Northwest Herald
Breaking news @ www.NWHerald.com
News editor: Kevin Lyons • kelyons@shawmedia.com
8COMMUNITY NEWS
LITH TO HOST HOME SAFETY EVENT LAKE IN THE HILLS – The Lake in the Hills Community Development Department will host an open house for residents on property maintenance and home improvements from 7 to 8 p.m. Thursday at the Safety Education Center at 1109 Crystal Lake Road. The event is in conjunction with Building Safety Month. A presentation will be provided that will include topics such as property maintenance regulations, how to file a complaint, department procedures on addressing violations and the effects of foreclosures on property maintenance. There also will be a chance for residents to ask questions and obtain information regarding any spring or summer projects they may be planning and what the requirements are to obtain a permit. Beverages and snacks will be provided. For information, call 847-9607440.
– Northwest Herald
Transition from banner year New Prairie Ridge High School principal wants to build on success By JEFF ENGELHARDT jengelhardt@shawmedia.com CRYSTAL LAKE – Steven Koch knows where the bar has been set at Prairie Ridge High School, and he is ready to raise it. Koch, director of staff development for Community High School District 155, is in the rare position of taking the helm of a succeeding
“I’m moving to a building where success is the expectation. But you always have to be asking what’s next and what can we do better. That’s what gets me excited to come to work every day.” Steven Koch, new principal of Prairie Ridge High School high school as he is set to become the principal of Prairie Ridge High School – recently
ranked in the top 35 Illinois high schools by Newsweek America.
The first-time honor for the school creates additional pressure to meet and exceed expectations, but Koch said he thrives on that kind of challenge. “I’m moving to a building where success is the expectation,” he said. “But you always have to be asking what’s next and what can we do better. That’s what gets me excited to come to work
GRADUATION 2013 McHENRY COUNTY COLLEGE
THE NEXT ASSIGNMENT MCC Class of 2013 charged with writing life stories
DRUMSTRONG EVENT SET FOR SATURDAY
CRYSTAL LAKE – Fareed Haque will perform from 2 to 4 p.m. Sunday at The Listening Room at Lakeside Legacy Arts Park, 401 Country Club Road, Crystal Lake. Tickets are $20. For information, call 815-4558000 or visit www.lakesidelegacy.org.
8LOCAL DEATHS Donna M. Bruno of Crystal Lake
By STEPHEN Di BENEDETTO
Photos by Kyle Grillot – kgrillot@shawmedia.com
Joseph Donald Bilodeau leads students into the McHenry County College gym Saturday for the 55th commencement ceremony. By CYNTHIA WOLF editorial@nwherald.com
C
RYSTAL LAKE — John McGowan sat on the bleachers, surrounded by his daughters, Kaitlyn, 7, and Emilie, 10. The Marengo trio beamed as a graduate very special to them was about to join hundreds of others in receiving McHenry County College degrees and certificates. “I am absolutely proud of her,” John McGowan said of his wife, Elizabeth, who graduated Saturday with an associate degree in registered nursing. “She’s been working for this a long time.” The community college in Crystal Lake graduated 650 people this spring, conferring 466 degrees and 241 certificates, according to an MCC press release. Members of the MCC Class of 2013 glanced toward friends and relatives in the crowd
See GRADUATION, page B4
Janice M. Kingsley formerly of Harvard Katherine “Kitty” Langford 62, Richmond Toby Shussin Levin 94, Marengo
LAKE BARRINGTON – Lorna Kube remembers seeing her sister in pristine health during a family party in late March. Now, nearly a month later, Kube and the rest of the family have gone from throwing parties to organizing benefits to help her sister, Lisa Rehling, overcome a life-threatening form of lung cancer. The diagnosis happened in the days after the family party. Rehling, an assistant director of nursing at Fair Oaks in Crystal Lake, visited the doctor to get checked for pneumonia. The doctors instead found that roughly two-thirds of her lung had collapsed, and she was diagnosed with small-cell lung cancer. “It was completely out of the blue,” Kube said. “One day, it wasn’t there and another day it was. ... She really is fighting for her life every day.” Kube said that a small percentage of people with Rehling’s form of lung cancer survive past five years. But
See BENEFIT, page B4
If you go
Jacqueline Anna Kaufmann is greeted by Chairman Ron Parrish after receiving her associate degree in applied science, business management.
Eleanore R. Fiedler 86, formerly of Marengo Carol MaryAnn Kemp 71, Huntley
Cancer patient needs a lift sdibenedetto@shawmedia.com
8LOCAL BEST BET
FAREED HAQUE TO PERFORM IN CL
See PRINCIPAL, page B4
CL worker’s lung is mostly collapsed
McHENRY – DrumStrong McHenry County will be from 2 to 8 p.m. Saturday at 1709 Mar Drive. A simultaneous “Adopt a Painting Art Sale” will be presented by artists Rebecca Schultz and Susan O’Leary, who will be donating 150 paintings. Participants can choose the painting they want, name their price, then make a donation to “Drums For Cures.” All money raised will go toward local and pediatric cancer initiatives, including the Gavers Breast Center. All drums for playing will be provided, but participants may bring their own drum if they have one. For information, call the Rev. Phyllis Mueller at 815-382-0004 or visit https://www.firstgiving. com/fundraiser/PhyllisMueller/ drumstrong-charlotte-2013.
– Northwest Herald
every day.” A change in leadership for one of the area’s most successful schools is of no concern to Superintendent Johnnie Thomas, who has worked with Koch at the administrative offices for the past several years. Thomas said Koch is a perfect fit for the position
SEE MORE PHOTOS ONLINE: For a photo gallery from Saturday’s ceremonies, visit NWHerald.com.
Fourth annual ‘SleepOut for Shelter’ supports PADS
n What: “A Lift for Lisa” benefit featuring a kids’ fair and silent auction to help Lisa Rehling with her lung cancer treatment n When: Noon to 3 p.m. and 6 to 10 p.m. Saturday n Where: The Professional Baseball Instruction of Illinois, 28039 NorthPointe Parkway, Lake Barrington n Cost: Tickets are $10 at the door
WOODSTOCK • MCHENRY • CRYSTAL LAKE • HUNTLEY
BUY 3 GET 1 FREE ON HERCULES TIRES Buy Three and Get One FREE on Hercules Roadtour 655 and Roadtour XUV Tires
By STEPHEN Di BENEDETTO sdibenedetto@shawmedia.com
Dolores E. Martinez 85, Crystal Lake Raymond Nelson Sr. 68, Woodstock Joseph C. White Jr. 70, Algonquin Florence E. Wurtz 92, formerly of Algonquin OBITUARIES on pages B6-8
CRYSTAL LAKE – Nearly 400 McHenry County residents braved cloudy and windy conditions Saturday to pitch tents and sleep in cardboard homes for an overnight fundraiser meant to bring attention to homelessness. Pioneer Center for Human Services’ fourth annual “SleepOut for Shelter” was the largest one yet, drawing more than $50,000 in donations
See PADS, page B4
Get the Auto Tech Advantage: 2 Year Free Flat Repair & Road Hazard Protection ion 30 Day “Trust Our Ride” Test Drive Lifetime Tire Rotations & Wheel Balancing Free Alignment Check & Brake Inspection
www.autotechcenters.com tote Kyle Grillot – kgrillot@shawmedia.com
Blake Thomas, 13, of Crystal Lake works to construct a cardboard shelter during the PADS “SleepOut for Shelter” event Saturday.
M-F 7am-7pm Sat 7:30am-5pm Sun Closed
LOCAL&REGION
Page B2 • Sunday, May 12, 2013
8DETOURS
Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com
HUNTLEY: CANCER SOCIETY EVENT
Fleming detour Relay for Life sets date, seeks sponsors will send drivers to Woodstock NORTHWEST HERALD
By KEVIN CRAVER kcraver@shawmedia.com
FLEMING ROAD: As you read in Friday’s paper, work is starting June 3 to repair the scenic, but decaying, 2 ∏-mile stretch of road that runs through Bull Valley. The road will be closed to through traffic, and a posted detour will reroute drivers through Woodstock along Routes 120, 47 and 14. Work is expected to be finished by the end of July, weather permitting. JOHNSBURG ROAD: The eastbound detour goes into effect Tuesday. Only westbound traffic will be allowed to travel along the road from Chapel Hill Road to Cherokee Drive. Eastbound traffic will be rerouted through a Route 31, Route 120, Chapel Hill Road detour. MILLER ROAD: If your travels take you on Charles Miller Road and River Road near the intersection, anticipate delays. Work is ongoing to create another two-lane span over the Fox River and widen Miller Road to four lanes with dedicated turn lanes from Route 31 to River Road. The first phase, which consists primarily of building the new span, will cost about $12 million and is anticipated to be finished by the end of October, weather permitting. • INTERSTATE 90: Watch for lane closures and slower traffic as work continues on the Route 20 overpass. • WESTERN BYPASS: Watch for workers and delays as
workers continue a $33 million project to build a two-mile, four-lane highway west of downtown Algonquin to relieve congestion on Route 31. Algonquin Road between Main Street and Meyer Drive will be down to one lane through this fall. Watch for lane closures on Route 31/ Main Street. South Main Street has one lane closed between Edgewood and Huntington drives, and North Main Street has one lane closed between Cary-Algonquin Road and Linden Avenue. Huntington Drive will remain closed between Circle Drive and South Main Street through summer 2014. A detour to Edgewood Drive is posted. • WALKUP ROAD: Work on the Walkup Road project is about 85 percent complete and is expected to be finished by June. The three-phase project widens and improves about 6 miles of Walkup Road between Bull Valley Road and Route 176. • ROUTES 31 AND 176: Workers closed East Terra Cotta Avenue, east of the intersection, on April 16. But watch it – work to remove pavement, installation of temporary traffic signals and storm sewer and water main work is scheduled to start this week.
HUNTLEY – Relay for Life of Huntley is scheduled from 6 p.m. June 14 through 6 a.m. June 15 at the Huntley Park District’s Rec Center, 12015 Mill St. This is the American Cancer Society’s signature fundraising event where teams made up of friends, family and co-workers fundraise throughout the year and then come together to walk a track through the night. In advance of the event, Relay for Life of Huntley has a Culver’s Night planned for
If you go
What: Relay for Life of Huntley When: 6 p.m. June 14 through 6 a.m. June 15 Where: Huntley Park District’s Rec Center, 12015 Mill St. More info: Teams also will sell luminaria bags for a $10 donation.
Tuesday. Culver’s will donate a portion of proceeds from sales between 4 and 8 p.m. This year’s theme is “Luau,” and participants are encouraged to decorate their campsites to the theme. Some of the entertainment
planned for the night includes Envision Dance Company, an Intrigue Fitness Hula Hoop presentation, belly dance with Natalie Block of Belly Rhythms, Zumba with Ivette Garven and The Lennys. To celebrate survivors, Relay for Life of Huntley has planned a complimentary dinner at 5:15 p.m. June 14 at the site of the relay. Cancer survivors are encouraged to register for the relay and attend the dinner. The survivors also will kick off the walk by leading the first lap. Teams also will sell luminaria bags for a $10 donation.
The name of a person being remembered or honored is written on each bag. The bags then are placed around the track and illuminated after dark. Relay for Life of Huntley continues to look for businesses in the community to participate either by cash donation, gift in kind, or even forming a fundraising team to walk at the event. To register, visit www. RelayforLife.org/HuntleyIL. For information, call Mike Jostes, American Cancer Society staff partner, at 630-8799009.
Strike Out MS event planned in Johnsburg
The MS Society’s mission is to mobilize people and resources to drive research for a cure and to address the challenges to everyone affected by multiple sclerosis. More than 2.1 million people worldwide are affected by MS. For information or to register, contact the Steinsdoerfer Family at 815-245-3647, taylor7914@aol.com or visit the event page on Facebook at www.facebook.com/Strike. Out.MS.Bowl.
8LOCAL BRIEFS Fleming Road project meeting is May 14 WOODSTOCK – The McHenry County Division of Transportation will host a construction informational meeting Tuesday to outline the Fleming Road construction project. The meeting will be from 7 to 8 p.m. at the McHenry County Administration Building, 667 Ware Road, Woodstock. The meeting will begin with a brief overview of the project followed by a question-andanswer session. Attendees will be able to
view the project plans and speak directly to MCDOT staff and the county’s consultant team that will be on site for the duration of the project. Roadway construction will begin in early June, and improvements will include removing the top 1.5 inches of existing asphalt material, cold in-place recycling of existing asphalt and paving new asphalt surface and safety edge. To obtain the latest project information, visit the project website at www.flemingroad. info.
JOHNSBURG – On Saturday, Raymond’s Bowl & Entertainment Center in Johnsburg will host Strike Out MS, a fundraiser to benefit the National Multiple Sclerosis Society. Participants will enjoy three games of bowling, lunch and a live band, as well as numerous raffles and silent auctions, with the proceeds benefiting the MS Society. Events will start at 2 p.m. at Raymond’s Bowl, 3960 N. Johnsburg Road.
Sources: McHenry County Division of Transportation, city of Crystal Lake, village of Algonquin, Illinois Toll Highway Authority
McHENRY COUNTY: REMOVING ELECTRONICS
Health Department plans recycling event NORTHWEST HERALD WOODSTOCK – The McHenry County Department of Health has partnered with several businesses and community organizations to collect and recycle residential electronics and a variety of other recyclable materials for residents. Residents can drop off items from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday at the McHenry County Courthouse (west parking lot) at Route 47 and Russell Court (2200 N. Seminary Ave., Woodstock). The entrance is on Ware Road, across from the County Administration building. Items that will be accepted are residential electronics (e.g. televisions, computers, VCRs, videogame consoles, printers); latex paint (recycling fees apply); clean clothing (slightly stained or torn accepted); Styrofoam and packing peanuts; eyeglasses; plastic film (bubble wrap, plastic retail bags, dry cleaning bags, zip lock bags); alkaline batteries (AA, AAA, C, D, 9-volt only) and rechargeable batteries (no more than 11 pounds each), and documents for destruction. There is a limit of 10 electronic items per participant. Christmas trees and holiday lights will not be accepted. Latex paint must be in sealed, leak-proof containers. Smaller containers of latex paints may be combined into larger containers. Howev-
If you go What: McHenry County Department of Health recycling event When: 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. May 18 Where: McHenry County Courthouse (west parking lot) at Route 47 and Russell Court (2200 N. Seminary Ave., Woodstock). The entrance is on Ware Road, across from the County Administration building. More info: There is a limit of 10 electronic items per participant. Christmas trees and holiday lights will not be accepted. er, this must be done before dropoff. Latex paint recycling fees include $1.50 per quart, $2.50 per gallon and $8 per 5-gallon pail. No other types of paint or household hazardous waste will be accepted. This recycling event is sponsored by AMS Store and Shred, Battery Solutions, Chicago Textile Recycling, Earth Paints Collection Systems, Environmental Defenders of McHenry County, Harvard Lions Club, Home of the Sparrow, Jewel-Osco, Lou Marchi Total Recycling Institute at McHenry County College, McHenry County Community Foundation, McHenry County Department of Health, Ken Santowski with Chicago Logistics Service and Sims Recycling Solutions. For a complete list of accepted items, visit www. mcdh.info or call Kristy Hecke, solid waste manager, at 815-334-4585.
Drop off donations 24/7
3706 St. Paul Ave., McHenry, IL 60050 or visit www.stpaulmchenry.com
ELGIN
Randall Rd. & Route 20
SCHAUMBURG: 1055 E. Golf Rd. (1 block west of Woodfield Mall) • BATAVIA: N. Randall Rd. & Mill St. LOMBARD: W. Roosevelt Rd. at S. Main St. • DEKALB: Sycamore Rd. at Barber Greene Rd. (Northland Shopping Center) TINLEY PARK: S. 71st Cir. & 159th St. • JOLIET: N. Ridge Plaza Shopping Center on Larkin Ave. • PALATINE: West of Hicks Rd. at E. N.W. Hwy. BRIDGEVIEW: W. 87th at S. Harlem Ave. (Southfield Plaza) • EAST AURORA: S. Route 59 & 75th St. • WESTMONT: E. Ogden Ave. & N. Warwick Ave. BOLINGBROOK: North of Boughton Rd. at Weber Rd. • MT. PROSPECT: Elmhurst at Dempster • CRYSTAL LAKE: S. Main St. at N.W. Hwy. W. CHICAGO: Rt. 59 & Rt. 64 • W. AURORA: Corner of W. Galena Blvd. & Reimers Dr. • MUNDELEIN: Townline Rd. & Oak Creek Plaza ROUND LAKE BEACH: Corner of Rollins & Rt. 83 • McHENRY: N. Richmond Rd. and McCullom Lake Rd. in the McHenry Commons Shopping Center ALGONQUIN: S. Randall Rd. and Corporate Pkwy. in The Esplanade of Algonquin
– Northwest Herald
LOCAL&REGION
Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com
Sunday, May 12, 2013 • Page B3
McHENRY: PARKS AND RECREATION DEPARTMENT
Registration now open for summer water activities NORTHWEST HERALD McHENRY – The McHenry Parks and Recreation Department offers a variety of aquatics programs this summer. • McHenry Marlins Aquatic Club Swim Team: The team competes in the North Central Illinois Swim Conference and is open to novice and experienced swimmers. This swim team program is not designed as a swim lesson program. Students learn strokes, techniques, diving, starts, turns and conditioning. Teams are open to children ages 6 and older, and the program begins May 20 with evening practices at West Campus High School. Morning practices at Knox Park Pool begin June 3. • Swim lessons: The American Red Cross Learn to Swim Program at Knox Park Pool is designed to enhance a par-
ticipant’s ability to progress from one level to the next. Personal water safety skills and information are included in all levels. Six levels of lessons along with parent/ child and preschool lessons are taught. Four two-week sessions will begin June 3. The fee for group lessons is $45 for city residents or $55 for nonresidents. Private and semi-private swim lessons for all ages will be Saturday mornings and begin June 8. The fee for private lessons is $17 per half-hour lesson a person and semi-privates lessons are $14 per half-hour lesson a person. Semi-private lesson participants must register together. • Instructional Water Polo: Grades six through 12. This program is open to new players who would like to learn the sport of water polo. Open to both male and female play-
ers. Classes will be from 8:30 to 10 p.m. Mondays, June 17 through July 22, at Knox Park Pool. The cost is $36 for city residents and $46 for nonresidents. • Club Water Polo: Ages 15 and older. This program offers an opportunity for older and experienced players to compete against one another. Open to both male and female players. The program will be from 8:30 to 10 p.m. Wednesdays, June 12 to July 24, at Knox Park Pool. The cost is $30 for residents and $40 for nonresidents. Advance registration is required. Space is limited. Register in person, by mail, online or by fax at the McHenry Parks and Recreation Department office, 333 S. Green St., in McHenry. Visit www. ci.mchenry.il.us or call 815363-2160 for details on dates, times and fees.
CARY – District 26 has spots available for its blended preschool program, which is entering its fifth year. A morning and afternoon session are being offered. The goal of the program is to provide students with a positive, nurturing environment that fosters social, emotional, physical and cognitive growth, the district said in a news release. The program includes a teacher certified in early childhood education and special education, and two paraprofessionals. Specialist teachers also will provide motor and language-
Monday, May 20, 2013 8 a.m. – 4 p.m. McHenry County Orthopaedics 420 N. IL Route 31 (2nd Floor) Crystal Lake, IL 60012 PHOTO I.D. REQUIRED
8LOCAL BRIEFS D-26 has open spots for preschool program
Coming Together As One Community To Help Save Lives By Giving Blood
development activities. Sessions will be 2.5 hours a day. Students will be able to attend three or four days a week. The morning session is for 3- to 4-year-olds. The afternoon session is for 4- to 5-year-olds, who will miss the kindergarten cut-off date. The program is $165 a month for three days a week, or $190 for four days a week. The program includes children from Cary and surrounding communities. Enrollment is limited and will be on a first-come, first-served basis. For information, call Tamara Spoor at 847-516-6350.
– Joseph Bustos
D-26 to hold its annual curriculum hearing CARY – Community members will be able to give input on the curriculum and curriculum materials in District 26. The school district will hold its annual curriculum hearing for people to discuss curriculum development, program adoption, printed materials, support materials, instructional materials, instructional practice and assessment materials. District 26 will hold its annual curriculum hearing at 5:30 p.m. Monday at Cary Junior High School at 2109 Crystal Lake Road.
– Joseph Bustos
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LOCAL&REGION
Page B4 • Sunday, May 12, 2013
8LOCAL BRIEFS Jazz concert planned at McHenry church McHENRY – The Meisel Music Collective will present Jazz on a Sunday Afternoon at 5 p.m. May 19 at the Unitarian Universalist Congregation in McHenry (Tree of Life), 5603 Bull Valley Road. The Meisel Music Collective formed in 2011 when other jazz musicians were added to the already working trio of Ryan Meisel, James Galinski and Celia Faye.
The group strives to tear down the walls of musical classification. Each member is trained in jazz and classical tradition but are improvisers at heart. The core of the group is composed of Ryan Meisel’s arrangements and saxophone soloing. Celia Faye tops off the group’s power with her gospel, blues and soulful compositions, colorful saxophone playing and singing.
A $10 admission is requested. For information, contact Tom Steffens at tom92109@gmail. com or call 815 404-7908.
Food distribution event planned in Huntley June 1 HUNTLEY – The St. Vincent de Paul Society at St. Mary Church in Huntley is sponsoring a Northern Illinois Food Bank truck and is distributing food to those in need of assistance. The food distribution will be
Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com
from 10 a.m. to noon June 1 in the parking lot of St. Mary Church, 10307 Dundee Road. The food distribution will be on a first-come, first-served basis. Numbers will be given out beginning at 9:30 a.m. Recipients are asked to bring their own storage containers, such as a box, tote or laundry basket. For information, call 847-6693137.
– Northwest Herald
Instructor gives students last assignment • GRADUATION Continued from page B1 as they took their seats in the gym Saturday morning. MCC President Vicky Smith congratulated the graduates and praised their instructors before turning the microphone over to Mary Beth Siddons, one of five inaugural recipients of the new Distinguished MCC Alumni Award. Siddons, a member of the MCC Class of 1983, is president of ITW Food Equipment Group in Troy, Ohio. “Thirty years ago I received my associate’s degree at MCC, and I continue to be reminded of the foundation that was set right here,” she said. The crowd also heard from student trustee Michele Lambert and student speaker Ryan McReynolds, as well as Lindsay Carson, a Spanish instructor who was named the 2013 outstanding full-time faculty member of the year. Carson told class members they had one more assignment. “Begin to write your story,” she said. “Your reward will not come in the form of a letter grade … your reward will be found in the impact you make on others.” Among those hearing her message was Robert Gibbons of Crystal Lake, who turned 21 on Saturday and received his associate’s degree in science. Gibbons will attend the Uni-
Kyle Grillot – kgrillot@shawmedia.com
Candidates for graduation line the halls Saturday before the start of the 55th commencement ceremony at McHenry County College.
“Begin to write your story. Your reward will not come in the form of a letter grade … your reward will be found in the impact you make on others.” Lindsay Carson, MCC Spanish instructor versity of Illinois at Springfield this fall. “I met a lot of great people and made great friendships,” he said of attending MCC first. “Plus, I’m not up to my elbows in debt.” Courtney Plambeck of Crystal Lake received an as-
sociate’s degree in criminal justice. The 22-year-old embraced her grandfather John Marshall in the hallway after the ceremony. “It’s quite an accomplishment,” Marshall said, reveling in the moment with Plambeck’s parents, Tony and
Andrea Plambeck. Courtney Plambeck said MCC set her on a solid path. She reserved special praise for instructor Harriet Johnson. “She’s the one who made me want to take more classes,” Plambeck said. “I’d like to become a police officer.”
More families in need of PADS in past year • PADS Continued from page B1 to support McHenry County PADS, a division of the Pioneer Center that provides shelter and assistance for area homeless. Saturday’s main event at Living Waters Lutheran Church in Crystal Lake had residents outside overnight, sleeping in tents, cardboard boxes and cars. Similar events at locations such as Crystal Lake South High School and Hannah Beardsley Middle School helped Pioneer Center raise record donations for a PADS service that has seen increased demand since the economic recession hit. “With the downturn in the economy being what it was, I think more people understand that everyday families are
Kyle Grillot – kgrillot@shawmedia.com
Summer Goodwin, 10, decorates her cardboard shelter Saturday during the PADS “SleepOut for Shelter” event at Living Waters Lutheran Church. The event is in its fourth year, and it’s the biggest fundraiser for PADS where participants are encouraged to sleep in shelters or tents. being affected by homelessness,” said Christin Kruse, chief development officer for the Pioneer Center. In the past year, the cen-
ter saw a dramatic increase in groups needing PADS services, including a 20 percent increase in families seeking shelter and a 26 percent in-
crease in transitional youth. More than 20 area schools, churches and community groups also helped raise donations for this year’s “SleepOut” event. It featured live music, cookouts, public speakers and a cardboard shelter-making contest. The increased support from the community is needed for a service that lost roughly 30 percent of its funding this year because of discontinued local and state grants, Kruse said. She credited the center’s many workers, who met with community groups throughout the year to express the importance of supporting PADS during tough economic times. “This year, we are most excited about how many schools, how many church groups and how many community organizations are participating,” Kruse said.
Koch wants to build upon past successes • PRINCIPAL Continued from page B1 because of the combination of his experience as an English teacher at the high school and the strong relationships he has built with teachers districtwide. “He’ll step in and provide the vision, but the actual work is done by our teachers,” Thomas said. “It’s part of that team concept where we are focused on constantly working with each other.” Koch is coming into the position with strategies on how to build off the 34th place finish among Illinois high schools. He said the school has focused on bolstering Advanced Placement courses, most recently with the addition of European studies, and he would look to expand that focus to cross-curricular literacy. “Strong literacy skills are important regardless of the discipline of study,” he said. “It’s a buildingwide emphasis already, but I
want to build upon that.” Thomas said Prairie Ridge has the opportunity to receive the same recognition as Cary-Grove High School, which made the Newsweek list for the second consecutive year at 32nd among state high schools and landed on a similar U.S. News & World Report list. While the goal is for all district schools to succeed at that level, Thomas said the outside recognition is the result of the district’s own mission and expectations. “Others will recognize that drive and determination we expect of our staff and students,” Thomas said. “That’s not the focus, though, that’s the result.” Current Principal Paul Humpa will return to the classroom as a math teacher. Thomas said that while he did not expect the move, he is glad to retain the institutional knowledge and professionalism Humpa provides.
‘Lift for Lisa’ benefit will include silent auction • BENEFIT Continued from page B1 the doctors have told Rehling that the early detection means she has a better chance at survival. A mother and grandmother in her 50s, Rehling already has gone through two rounds of chemotherapy, with six more weeks of treatment left, Kube said. Rehling had to stop working at Fair Oaks, and she often frequents the hospital for treatment. Kube, her family and Rehling’s co-workers have organized a daylong benefit Saturday at the Professional Baseball Instruction of Illinois, 28039 NorthPointe Parkway, Lake Barrington. “A Lift for Lisa” benefit features a kids’ fair in the afternoon and a four-hour silent auction in the evening. Children can enjoy
obstacle courses, carnival games and face painting, while the auction features live music and raffle prizes. The items for auction include an iPhone 5, autographed memorabilia from NFL and college football teams, gift cards and gift baskets. Tickets for the allday benefit are $10 at the door. Proceeds will go toward Rehling’s cancer treatment and daily living expenses. The benefit marks a hectic month for Rehling’s family, who have placed more than 30 donation jars throughout businesses in the Crystal Lake area. People also can donate through the A Lift for Lisa website at www.aliftforlisa.com, or by visiting Cary Bank and Trust, 60 E. Main St., Cary. “She’s always been taking care of everybody else, and now we have to take care of her,” Kube said.
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LOCAL&REGION
Page B6 • Sunday, May 12, 2013
8OBITUARIES ELAINE SLAVIN PRICE ALBERTS Born: May 18, 1919; in Hebron Died: May 6, 2013; in Harvard HEBRON – Elaine Slavin Price Alberts, 93, of Hebron, died Monday, May 6, 2013, at Mercy Harvard Care Center in Harvard. She was born in Hebron on May 18, 1919, to Frank and Helen (Stratton) Slavin. She married Paul Alberts in the early 70s. She was a graduate of LaSalle University of Chicago with a degree in art and interior design. She put her education to good use by decorating a 100-year-old farmhouse and barn that was featured in Better Homes and Gardens in the 1950s. She enjoyed photography, painting, sewing, quilting and interior design. She also enjoyed mowing her lawn. She is survived by a son, Jean (Jo Anne) Price; daughter, Helen Elaine Price; two grandchildren, Karen (Paul) Glaeser and Diane (Scott) Cheshire; four great-grandchildren, Kevin , Kaitlyn and Courtney Cheshire and Megan Glaeser; and two nieces, Mary Ann Devito and Sandy Block. She was preceded in death by her parents; son, Gary Price; and brothers, Jean and Frank Slavin Jr. The visitation will be from 4 to 8 p.m. Monday, May 13, 2013, at
Schneider-Leucht-Merwin & Cooney Funeral Home, 1211 N. Seminary Ave., Woodstock. The visitation will continue from 9:30 a.m. until the funeral Mass at 10:30 a.m. Tuesday, May 14, 2013, at St. Mary Catholic Church, 312 Lincoln Ave., Woodstock. Burial will be at Calvary Cemetery in Woodstock. In lieu of flowers, memorials can be made to either St. Mary Catholic Church or St. Joseph Catholic Church in Harvard or Family Home Health Service Hospice or Mercy Hospital Rehab. For information, call the funeral home at 815-338-1710. Sign the guest book at www. NWHerald.com/obits
DONNA M. BRUNO Died: May 6, 2013; in Arlington Heights CRYSTAL LAKE – Donna M. Bruno of Crystal Lake died May 6, 2013, at the Northwest Community Hospital in Arlington Heights. She was born in Chicago, the daughter of Glenn and Frances Cohn. She married her husband, William V. Bruno, on June 20, 1970, at St. Monica Catholic Church in Carpentersville. Donna was the office manager at the Hode Group Inc. after a teaching career at Crystal Lake South High School and the Thunderbird Preschool. She was a “volunteer,” giving
freely of her time to many events and activities at St. Thomas the Apostle Church as well as helping as a substitute teacher at St. Thomas the Apostle School. She was also a Little League mom, helping to keep the team’s scores and statistics. After Little League, Donna graduated to the CABA and was very active in raising funds for the Continental Amateur Baseball Association. With all of the time she spent serving as a volunteer, she was still able to spend quality time with her favorite past time, her children and grandchildren. She is survived by her husband, William; her two sons, Jason (Heather) and Anthony (fiancée Jennifer); her grandchildren, Eli and Nicholas; her mother, Frances Vinck; two brothers, Rob (Sylvia) Cohn and Dennis (Cheryl) Cohn; two sisters, Valerie (Don) Schmidt and Denise Salcedo; and a sister-in-law, Pam Cohn. Donna was preceded in death by her father, Glenn Cohn; and a brother, Steve Cohn. The visitation will be from 4 to 8 p.m. Tuesday at Skaja Bachmann Funeral Home, 7715 W. Route 14, Crystal Lake. Funeral service will be Wednesday from the funeral home to St. Thomas the Apostle Church for Mass at 10 a.m. Interment will be in Windridge Memorial Park. Sign the guest book at www. NWHerald.com/obits
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RINGWOOD: MCCD LIVING HISTORY
History open house set for May 19 NORTHWEST HERALD RINGWOOD – The McHenry County Conservation District will celebrate Local History Month with a program May 19 to help residents discover more about the area’s past. Attendees can step back in time to the 1850s at a Living History Open House from noon to 4 p.m. at Glacial Park’s Powers-Walker House, 6201 Harts Road in Ringwood. Costumed re-enactors will demonstrate seasonal activities and skills that were done
If you go n What: Living History Open House n When: Noon to 4 p.m. May 19 n Where: Glacial Park’s Powers-Walker House, 6201 Harts Road in Ringwood in the 1850s. May’s open house will feature a “Restoration Showcase” of both the house and donated artifacts, including the recently completed restoration of the Winter Kitchen that was made possible
through a grant from the local Questers group and their state organization. A special presentation of “Restoration by the Numbers” is scheduled for 2 p.m. to detail the effort of restoring the Powers-Walker House in time, expenses, volunteers and artifacts. The open house is free, and registration is not required for this drop-in event. For information or to register, contact Prairieview Education Center at 815-479-5779 or www.mccdistrict.org.
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OBITUARIES
Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com * • Continued from page B6
JOYCE ELIZABETH DWYER Born: April 10, 1934; in Dayton, Ohio Died: May 9, 2013; in Crystal Lake CRYSTAL LAKE – Joyce Elizabeth Dwyer, 79, a longtime resident of Crystal Lake, peacefully passed away Thursday, May 9, 2013, at her home. Born April 10, 1934, in Dayton, Ohio, she was the daughter of the late Adam and Lois (Lane) Grismer. After the death of her mother at a young age, she was raised by her father and stepmother, Mary Grismer. Joyce was a loving mother and cherished friend and enjoyed gardening and reading; she was a member of the community choir, which she helped found, and sang in the choir at St. Thomas the Apostle Catholic Church for more than 30 years. She was a member of P.E.O. Women’s Organization, St. Jude Guild and Knit Wits. Joyce was instrumental with her late husband Bill and friends in the founding of Crystal Lake Gala and parade. Finally, she was most proud of her work with the Raue Center for the Arts in Crystal Lake. Joyce is survived by her children, Mary Krikorian, Maureen (Stephen) Regele, Thomas O’Connor, Daniel O’Connor, Daniel Dwyer and Robert (Renee) Dwyer; grandchildren, Kelley Regele, Megan Regele, Joseph Krikorian, Elyse Krikorian, Katherine Regele, Chris (Melissa) Dwyer, Blake (Meagan) Dwyer, Dylan Dwyer and Cameron Dwyer; and great-granddaughter, Delanee Dwyer. She was preceded in death by her husband, William “Bill” Dwyer Jr. in 2011; her sister, Anita Boop; and her brother, Gale Grismer. There will be a Rosary service at 4:30 p.m. followed by a visitation from 5 to 8 p.m., Monday, May 13, at Davenport Family Funeral Home, 419 East Terra Cotta Ave., (Route 176) Crystal Lake. The funeral Mass will begin at 11 a.m. Tuesday, May 14, at St. Thomas the Apostle Catholic Church, 451 West Terra Cotta Ave., Crystal Lake. Interment will be private in Crystal Lake Memorial Park. In lieu of flowers, memorial donations to honor Joyce may be made to the Raue Center for the Arts, 108 Minnie St., Crystal Lake, IL 60014. Online condolences may be sent to her family at www.davenportfamily.com. For information, call the funeral home at 815-459-3411. Sign the guest book at www. NWHerald.com/obits
ELEANORE R. FIEDLER Born: Sept. 23, 1926; in Chicago Died: May 7, 2013; in Waukegan McHENRY – Eleanore R. Fiedler, 86, formerly of Marengo, died Tuesday, May 7, 2013, at the home of her son in Waukegan.
She was born Sept. 23, 1926, in Chicago, the daughter of George and Marie (Gabl) Cairns. She married John Fiedler on July 24, 1948, in Chicago. She worked at Baxter Labs as a secretary. Eleanore enjoyed her trips to Las Vegas, playing Bingo and her children and grandchildren. Survived by her sons, John of McHenry, Don of Waukegan, Tom (Marie) of San Leandro, Calif., and Ron of Livermore, Calif.; five grandchildren; three great-grandchildren; and his brothers, Bill Cairns and Ron (Marge) Cairns. She was preceded in death by her husband, John; parents; a brother, Ken Cairns; and a sister, Charlotte Kriese. Visitation will be from 9 to 11 a.m. Monday, May 13, at Colonial Funeral Home, 591 Ridgeview Drive, McHenry, and going to St. John the Baptist Church, 2302 W. Church St., Johnsburg, for a 11:30 a.m. Mass. Interment will be in the church cemetery. Memorials to the Parkinson Foundation, 1501 NW 9th Ave., Miami, FL 33136 or to EWTN-TV. For information, call the Colonial Funeral Home at 815-3850063. Sign the guest book at www. NWHerald.com/obits
CAROL MARYANN KEMP Born: Aug. 9, 1941; in Chicago Died: May 9, 2013; in Elgin HUNTLEY – Carol MaryAnn Kemp, 71, of Sun City Huntley, formerly of Arlington Heights, passed away on Thursday, May 9, 2013, at Sherman Hospital in Elgin. She was born Aug. 9, 1941, in Chicago, the daughter of Carl J. and Emma Ann (Rinkach) Frenzel. She was raised and educated in Chicago, graduating from Taft High School. She later graduated from Illinois State Teachers College. She was united in marriage to John F. Kemp on Feb. 24, 1961. She taught a few years in Chicago then taught elementary school for more than 25 years in District 25 in Arlington Heights. She retired in June of 2000 and the couple moved to Huntley. She especially enjoyed shopping, cooking, crafts, was a member of the Red Hat Society and multiple Bunco groups. Carol is survived by her husband, John of Huntley; her daughter, Pamela (Dan) Abbink of Round Lake; and many cousins. Visitation will be from 4 to 8 p.m. Monday, May 13, the DeFiore-Jorgensen Funeral Home, 10763 Dundee Road, Huntley. Funeral services will be at 10:30 a.m. on Tuesday, May 14, at the funeral home. A private family graveside service will be at Windridge Cemetery in Cary. Memorials may be made to the Lymphatic Research Foundation, www.lymphaticresearchfoundation.org or the American Cancer Society. For information, please call 847-515-8772 or online condo-
lences can be directed to www. defiorejorgensen.com. Sign the guest book at www. NWHerald.com/obits
JANICE M. KINGSLEY Born: Nov. 8, 1925; in Springfield Died: May 6, 2013; in New Smyrna Beach, Fla. NEW SMYRNA BEACH, Fla. – Janice M. Kingsley died on Monday, May 6, 2013, in New Smyrna Beach. She was born on Nov. 8, 1925, in Springfield. She married Merle Kingsley on May 26, 1946, and they resided in Harvard their entire married life. Janice relocated to New Smyrna Beach a few years ago to be nearer to her daughter. She was a member of Harvard United Methodist Church. She enjoyed reading, camping, playing Bridge and chocolate. After attending Blackburn College, she graduated from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. She was a homemaker, active in volunteering at the church and the hospital auxiliary. She is survived by a daughter, Kristine Hardy; and five grandchildren. She was preceded in death by her husband, Merle Kingsley; and daughter, Donna Kingsley. Arrangements were handled by Dudley Funeral Homes, New Smyrna Beach. For information, call the funeral home at 386-428-6414. Sign the guest book at www. NWHerald.com/obits
KATHERINE ‘KITTY’ LANGFORD Died: May 10, 2013 RICHMOND – Katherine “Kitty” Langford, 62, of Richmond, passed away early Friday, May 10, 2013, after a hard-fought battle with cancer. Kitty’s family was the joy of her life, and she dedicated her time and energy to increasing the happiness of everyone around her. She was a woman of remarkable wit, intelligence and integrity, and will be forever missed by those who loved her most. Kitty is survived by her husband of 38 years, Lou; her daughter, Amy; her sons, Jon and Michael; and three granddaughters, Heather, Natalie and Rosalie. Visitation will be from 4 to 7 p.m. Tuesday, May 14, 2013, at Ehorn-Adams Funeral Home, 10011 Main St., Richmond. A graveside service will be at 11 a.m. Wednesday at Hillside Cemetery in Genoa City, Wis. Memorials may be sent to the funeral home. Sign the guest book at www. NWHerald.com/obits
TOBY SHUSSIN LEVIN Died: April 16, 2013 MARENGO – Toby Shussin Levin of Marengo died on Tuesday, April 16, 2013. The Levin family mourns the loss of their beloved matriarch at
Sunday, May 12, 2013 • Page B7
age 94. Daughter of Abraham and Sarah Shussin; widow of Ralph; mother of Mary, Robert, Barbra, Paul, Trina and Seth; mother-inlaw to David Kay, Debs Wallner, Barbara Bass and Mia Nosanow; and grandmother to Nicolai Levin, Sara Kay, Molly Wallner, Aaron and Ethan Levin, who all take great pride in her strength and determination. She will be missed. In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to the McHenry County Citizens for Choice P.O. Box 16, Woodstock, IL 60098; the Marengo Food Pantry, 829 Greenlee St., Marengo, IL 60152; or a charity of your choice. Two public memorial gatherings have been set to celebrate her life and are open to her many friends and loved ones: from 2 to 4 p.m. June 1, 2013, at her home, 500 Stanford Drive, Marengo; and 2 to 4 p.m. July 14, 2013, at Wolfe Lake Condominiums Party Room, 4820 Park Commons Drive, Minneapolis, MN 55416. Sign the guest book at www. NWHerald.com/obits
DOLORES E. MARTINEZ Died: May 9, 2013 CRYSTAL LAKE – Dolores E. Martinez, 85, of Crystal Lake, passed into eternal life on May 9, 2013, surrounded by her loving family. She married Leonard Martinez on Aug. 10, 1946, in Chicago, and the family moved to Algonquin in 1957. They started Leonard and Sons Building Service Inc. in 1966 and retired to Florida in 1988. She moved to Crystal Lake in December 2012. She is survived by four loving children, Nancy Walden, Len (Mary Ann), Lorrie Kemble (longtime partner Warren Haake) and Rich (Pam); 11 devoted grandchildren, Carrie (Gene) Jenke, Michele (Arland) Wingate, Kris (Phil) Farrell, Joe (Trisha) Martinez, Beth Martinez, David (Tammy Cole) Kemble, Ryan Kemble, Amanda Martinez, Melinda Martinez, Seth (Michelle) Martinez and Caleb (Jaime) Martinez; 17 great-grandchildren who always put a smile on Dolores’ face: Jenna and Keira Jenke; A.J. and Kirsten Wingate; Jack, Ava and Kate Farrell; Hannah, Sarah, Gideon and Isabelle Martinez; Alex Kemble; Zach, Jacob and Kylie Martinez; and Owen and Leo Martinez; sister, Janice Tipping; and many nieces and nephews. She was preceded in death by her loving husband, Leonard; son, Michael; parents; and seven siblings. A memorial visitation will be held Wednesday, May 15, 2013, from 10 a.m. until the time of service at 1 p.m. at Davenport Family Funeral Home, 419 E. Terra Cotta Ave. (Route 176) Crystal Lake, IL 60014. Services will be officiated by Father Chris DiTomo and Pastor Joe Martinez. Inurnment will take place in Florida. Memorials in Dolores’ name can be sent to JourneyCare Hospice, 405 Lake Zurich Road, Barrington, IL 60010 or at www.journeycare. org.
To leave online condolences, please visit www.davenportfamily.com, or call the funeral home at 815-459-3411 for information. Sign the guest book at www. NWHerald.com/obits
RAYMOND NELSON SR. Born: May 8, 1945; in Harvard Died: May 8, 2013 WOODSTOCK – Raymond “Racer Ray” Nelson Sr., 68, of Woodstock, passed away with his loving family by his side on Wednesday, May 8, 2013, after a courageous battle with cancer. He was born on May 8, 1945, in Harvard to Raymond and Lena (John) Nelson. He grew up farming and living the country life. He attended Hebron High School. Ray married Caroline Dorwaldt on April 24, 1964, in Hebron. Ray was a certified GM mechanic working at Ferris Bros. in Harvard for many years before working at Motor Service Company in Harvard. He was a very well-known engine builder. Ray enjoyed many years of racing, which began in the 1960s with drag racing at the local tracks and later progressed to dirt track stock car racing with the Schneiderman and Clemons families. He also enjoyed helping and restoring many classic cars, including his prized 1957 Chevy that he and his family restored from the days of drag racing. Most recently, he was the engine builder for the Roush Brothers championship race car at Rockford Speedway. He was a proud member of the Kroozers of Northern Illinoiz Car Club and enjoyed participating in many car shows and traveling in his ’57. After retirement, Ray enjoyed watching over his grandchildren every day. Ray and his wife returned to the country life. He loved the company of all of their farm animals and could have gotten the new nickname of “Farmer Ray.” Helping fellow farmers by driving tractors and doing other chores was a thrill for him. But most of all, he enjoyed spending time with his family and closest friends. He is survived by his loving wife of 49 years, Caroline Nelson; four children, Donna (Ray) Raupp, Karen (Eddie) Harrison, Raymond Nelson Jr. and Carol (Tony Mills) Nelson; his cherished grandchildren, Eddie Harrison, Kailey Harrison and Deborah Lena Quist; his brother, John (Sue) Nelson; a foster son, Mike (Donna) Dowell; and his nieces and nephew.
He was preceded in death by his parents, Raymond and Lena. A visitation will be held from 4 to 8 p.m. on Tuesday, May 14, 2013, at Schneider-Leucht-Merwin & Cooney Funeral Home, 1211 N. Seminary Ave., in Woodstock. The visitation will continue from 10 a.m. until the time of the funeral service at 11 a.m. on Wednesday, May 15, 2013, at the funeral home. Burial will follow at McHenry County Memorial Park Cemetery in Woodstock. In lieu of flowers, memorials can be made to the family for designation at a later date. For information, call the funeral home at 815-338-1710. Sign the guest book at www. NWHerald.com/obits
MARIA DE LA LUZ SANDOVAL Born: Feb. 5, 1932; in Durango, Mexico Died: May 8, 2013; in Woodstock HARVARD – Maria De La Luz Sandoval, 81, of Harvard, passed away Wednesday, May 8, 2013, at Valley Hi Nursing Home in Woodstock. She was born Feb. 5, 1932, in Durango, Mexico, to Francisca Arreola. On April 16, 1958, she married Zeferino Sandoval Jr. in Laredo, Texas. She had a passion for her family and friends, gardening and the Chicago Cubs. She was the loving mother of nine children, Justo, Maria Elena (Carl), Julia, Nora, Javier (Rosa), Zeferino III (Melissa), Maria Leticia (Bruce), Lupe and Linda; cherished grandmother of 28 grandchildren and 29 great-grandchildren; and dear sister of Ascencion Arreola. She was preceded in death by her loving husband, Zeferino Sandoval Jr.; and her mother. The visitation will be from 4 to 8 p.m. Monday, May 13, at Colonial Funeral Home, 591 Ridgeview Drive, McHenry. The visitation will continue at the funeral home from 9:30 to 10 a.m. Tuesday, May 14, leaving for the funeral Mass to be celebrated at 10:30 a.m. at the Church of Holy Apostles, 5211 W. Bull Valley Road, McHenry. Interment will be in Windridge Memorial Park in Cary. For information, call the funeral home at 815-385-0063. Sign the guest book at www. NWHerald.com/obits • Continued on page B8
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8OBITUARIES For information, call the funeral home at 847-699-9003 or visit glhillsfuneralhome.com. Sign the guest book at www. NWHerald.com/obits
• Continued from page B7
ELIZABETH ‘SKIP’ SEAGREN Born: Oct. 15, 1914; in Harvard Died: May 3, 2013; in Crystal Lake CRYSTAL LAKE – Elizabeth “Skip” Seagren, 98, of Crystal Lake, and formerly of Monona, Wis., died Friday, May 3, 2013, at her home surrounded by family and friends. She was born Oct. 15, 1914, in Harvard, to Erik and Ella (Miethke) Seagren, where she was raised and graduated from high school in 1933. Skip went on to achieve degrees and her teaching certificate from Iowa State Teacher’s College and the University of Wisconsin. Skip served as a WAVE in the United States Navy during World War II and was stationed in Washington, D.C., receiving her honorable discharge in 1946. During her life, she devoted her work to serving children in many ways: as a counselor and director of summer camps; as a guidance counselor through religious education work and church camps; through community children’s programs and the Girl Scouts; and ultimately as a teacher. She was fondly referred to as “Miss Seagren” by her students, serving as a physical education teacher and science instructor at elementary and middle schools in the midwest. She concluded her teaching career in Cottage Grove, Wis., where she continued her vocation until her retirement in 1989 after more than 34 years of service to the educational well-being of young people. “Miss Seagren” was known for going beyond the standard curriculum by cultivating interests such as stamp collecting and rock hounding. She was fluent in Spanish, French and Latin and continued her lifelong love of language by ongoing study of others. She was a quiet person who led a quiet retirement life in Monona, Wis., her home until 2006 when she moved to Crystal Lake. She is survived by three sisters, Edna Seagren of Harvard, Eva (Bill) Brooke of California and Ellen “Kipp” (Richard) Smith of Harvard; many nieces and nephews; great-nieces and -nephews; great-great-nieces and -nephews; her good friend, Frances “Mick” McPherson of Nebraska; and her longtime caregivers, who became loved family members. She was preceded in death by her parents; three brothers, William “Bill” Seagren, Sam Seagren and Richard “Dick” Seagren; two sisters, Eleanor (Charles) Bottlemy and Eloise (Ray) Firn; and her close friend, Lolas “Hal” Halverson. In keeping with her wishes, there will be no visitation or funeral service. In keeping with her life’s work, memorials may be made to the Project Success Program for children and families at FamiliesETC, 620 Dakota St., Crystal Lake, IL 60012. Funeral care is provided by G.L. Hills Funeral Home, 745 Graceland Ave., Des Plaines, IL 60016.
SHIRLEY J. TRACY Born: June 9, 1931; in Crystal Lake Died: April 30, 2013; in Florida LAKELAND, Fla. – Shirley J. Tracy, 81 of Lakeland, formerly of the Huntley area, passed away Tuesday, April 30, 2013, in Florida. She was born June 9, 1931, in Crystal Lake, the daughter of Louis and Isabella (Lapla) Brooke. On Nov. 20, 1947, she married Charles G. Tracy. Shirley loved spending time with her family and her loss will be greatly felt by all who knew her. She is survived by her loving children, Tom (Genel) Tracy, Craig Tracy, Steven (Kathy) Tracy, JoAnne (Bill) Brunner, Penny (Ron) Hackler, Julie Cruz and Laura Tracy; 13 cherished grandchildren; seven great-grandchildren; and two great-great-grandchildren. She was preceded in death by her parents; and her husband, Charles, on Aug. 17, 1994. Visitation will be Tuesday, May 14, 2013, from 10 a.m. until the 11 a.m. funeral service at the James A. O’Connor Funeral Home, 11603 E. Main St., Huntley, with the Rev. Steve Shelton officiating. Burial will be in McHenry County Memorial Park in Woodstock. In lieu of flowers, memorials in her name may be directed to the Huntley Fire Protection District, P. O. Box 517, Huntley, IL 60142. For information, call the funeral home at 847-669-5111 or visit our website at www.jamesaoconnorfuneralhome.com. Sign the guest book at nwherald. com/obits
CARY – The Friends of the Cary Area Public Library will hold a fundraiser May 22 at the Culver’s in Crystal Lake. FOCAL (Friends of the Cary Area Public Library) will receive 10 percent of the day’s sales,
FLORENCE E. WURTZ Born: Jan. 12, 1921; in West Chicago Died: April 24, 2013; in Woodruff, Wis. MINOCQUA, Wis. – Florence E. Wurtz, 92, of Minocqua, formerly of Aurora and Algonquin, died on Wednesday, April 24, 2013, at Seasons of Life Hospice House in Woodruff, Wis. Florence was born on Jan. 12, 1921, in West Chicago, daughter of Frank and Regina Klein. She married Everett C. Wurtz of West Chicago on May 4, 1941. Her beloved husband of 58 years preceded her in death. She is survived by three daughters, Shirley Seidler of Winfield, Dianne Martin Klein of Lake in the Hills and Pamela Stengel and her husband, Jack L. Stengel, of Minocqua; and many grandchildren, greatand great-great-grandchildren. Funeral Mass will be at 1:30 p.m. Tuesday, May 14, at St Mary’s Catholic Church in Huntley, with gathering from 12:30 p.m. until time of service. Burial will follow the funeral Mass at St. Mary’s Cemetery. Sign the guest book at www. NWHerald.com/obits
HIV does not discriminate ARE YOU AT RISK FOR HIV? If you believe your behaviors put you at risk for HIV, you may be tested for FREE at the McHenry County Department of Health. Confidential rapid testing is available. Please call to determine if you qualify.
McHenry County Department of Health 2200 N. Seminary Ave, Woodstock, IL 60098
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JOSEPH C. WHITE JR. Born: May 5, 1943; in Rockford Died: May 10, 2013; in Woodstock ALGONQUIN – Joseph C. White Jr., 70, of Algonquin, died Friday, May 10, 2013, in Woodstock. He was born May 5, 2013, in Rockford, the son of Joseph White Sr. and Genevieve White. Joseph is survived by his wife, Barbara (nee Spahn); children, Terry White, Jolyn White, Becky Klapperich, Debra Lowe, Karen Ledbetter and Donald Ledbetter Jr.; 13 grandchildren; four great-grandsons; and several nieces and nephews. He was preceded in death by his parents; and a brother, Tom Forsberg. The visitation will be from 4 to 9 p.m. Tuesday, May 14, 2013, with the service at 7 p.m. Tuesday at Willow Funeral Home, 1415 W. Algonquin Road, Algonquin. Memorials may be sent to Journey Hospice at 527 W. South St., Woodstock, IL 60098. Sign the guest book at www. NWHerald.com/obits
8LOCAL BRIEF Culver’s fundraiser to aid library FOCAL group
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which will be directed toward future purchases that benefit library patrons. FOCAL members will serve customers from 5 to 8 p.m. at the restaurant, 501 Pingree Road. For information, call the library at 847-639-4210.
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Sports
SECTION C
Breaking news @ www.NWHerald.com
Sports editor: Jon Styf • jstyf@shawmedia.com
GIRLS SOCCER: CLASS 1A HARVARD REGIONAL
BOYS TENNIS: FOX VALLEY CONFERENCE MEET
Striking late for regional crown
EXACTING REVENGE
Skyhawks’ Pruitt nets PK, winning goal after R-B yellow card By PATRICK MASON pmason@shawmedia.com
Kyle Grillot – kgrillot@shawmedia.com
Prairie Ridge’s Brad Henning (left) and Bij Heydari celebrate a point during the Fox Valley Conference No. 1 doubles finals match Saturday at Crystal Lake Central.
PR No. 1 doubles pair wins, leads Wolves to team title By ROB SMITH rsmith@shawmedia.com CRYSTAL LAKE – Prairie Ridge’s Brad Henning and Bij Heydari erased some bad memories Saturday at the Fox Valley Conference boys tennis tournament at Crystal Lake Central. The Wolves’ pair won the No. 1 doubles title and helped Prairie Ridge to a team championship with 102 points. Jacobs was second with 97 points followed by McHenry (82) and Cary-Grove (80). In the doubles championship match, Henning and Heydari de- Top teams feated Jacobs’ B r a n d o n S i d o r 1. Prairie Ridge, and Kingsley Ber- 102 points nardo, 6-1, 6-4. 2. Jacobs, 97 Henning and Hey- 3. McHenry, 82 dari got to the fi- See more results nals with a, 6-3, 4-6, on page C9. 6-4, win against McHenry’s Dennis Quitalig and Nick Higgin in the semifinals. During the season, Henning and Heydari had lost to both those teams, with the loss to Jacobs, where they only won one game, being especially painful. “They were embarrassed,” Wolves coach Naveed Heydari said of his team’s earlier loss to Sidor and Bernardo. “They had revenge on their mind.”
HARVARD – Delaney Pruitt had the best match of her life Saturday and the Johnsburg girls soccer team left the field with a plaque because of it. It took the Johnsburg sophomore just one minute and 42 seconds to change the landscape of a tight, physical match when she scored two important goals in the second half. The first tied the score and the second put the Skyhawks (11-6) Online up for good in a 3-2 victory over Watch highlights Richmond-Bur- of the Johnsburg ton in the Class vs. Richmond1A Harvard Re- Burton girls gional final. The soccer match at win marked the McHenryCounty first time Johns- Sports.com. burg has won a girls soccer regional title since its move to the Fox Valley Conference in 2006. Johnsburg will play Rockford Lutheran in the sectional semifinals Tuesday at Genoa-Kingston High School. “It’s huge for these girls,” Skyhawks coach Rob Eastland said. “They deserved it and have come through as champions.” Johnsburg struck first on an Olivia Jansen goal off a feed from Pruitt in the third minute but Richmond-Burton bounced back. The Rockets (15-1-1) played with the wind at their backs in the first half and took a 2-1 lead into halftime behind two goals from Jessica Guenther. Richmond-Burton ended Johnsburg’s season last year in the regional finals after jumping out to a big lead and it looked poised to do it again, but a quick series of events midway though the second half derailed a shot at a second straight regional title after the Rockets finished third at state last season. With 25:41 showing on the clock, the field referee gave Rockets goalkeeper Hannah Koenig a yellow card for delay of game. By rule, Koenig had to be replaced by backup Annie Campbell for the next few minutes. The Rockets coaches didn’t agree the call because Koenig couldn’t hear the referee over the gusting winds and coach Chris Wagner thought the yellow card was excessive.
Kyle Grillot – kgrillot@shawmedia.com
See WOLVES, page C7
See SKYHAWKS, page C7
Jacobs’ Brandon Sidor hits a return during the Fox Valley Conference tennis tournament Saturday at Crystal Lake Central.
BASEBALL: McHENRY 14, PRAIRIE RIDGE 8
Warriors bounce back from errors, overpower Wolves By JOE STEVENSON joestevenson@shawmedia.com CRYSTAL LAKE – McHenry played in the first inning against Prairie Ridge as if it was allergic to leather. The Warriors had no such problem with metal. McHenry overcame three first-in-
ning errors and five unearned runs with a 13-hit onslaught, led by right fielder Devon Gehrke’s two home runs, and defeated the Wolves, 148, in their Fox Valley Conference Valley Division baseball game Saturday. “We just couldn’t get down [after the first],” Gehrke said. “We put our bats together and took it [to the
opposite field] and put the barrel on the ball in good situations. [Hitting] hasn’t been good lately. We haven’t been seeing the ball well and have been letting too many strikes go by.” The Warriors (18-7 overall, 10-7 FVC Valley) had scored 33 runs in their previous nine games, with 12 of those coming Wednesday against
Richmond-Burton. They were 2-7 in those games. McHenry took a 2-0 lead in the first inning when Gehrke led off with a home run and Jordan Witbeck later had an RBI single. But the Wolves (19-9, 10-6) took advantage of three errors with Will Harvel’s grand slam and took a 5-2 lead.
“I went to the dugout thinking this might be one of those days again,” Warriors coach Brian Rockweiler said. “We kept telling the kids to keep battling and compete. We talked a lot about competing with two strikes. We did a lot better job today with two-strike hitting.”
See WARRIORS, page C7
THE DAILY FEED Tweet from last night
What to watch
Really?
3-pointers
Varsity final: Hampshire 7 WN 6. Tough loss, need to keep plugging away these next two weeks for regionals. #keepingourheadsup Woodstock North baseball @WNHS_baseball Follow our writers on Twitter: Tom Musick – @tcmusick Jeff Arnold – @NWH_JeffArnold Joe Stevenson – @NWH_JoePrepZone
NBA playoffs, conference semifinals, Game 4, San Antonio at Golden State, 2:30 p.m., ABC Golden State’s Stephen Curry is a game-time decision for the Warriors. The Warriors said X-rays on Curry’s ankle were negative and no MRI exam is scheduled in a series that Spurs lead, 2-1.
Sergio Garcia lost his lead in two holes at The Players Championship, and he said it didn’t help playing with Tiger Woods. During the rain delay, Garcia provided a little more fuel to his rivalry with Woods by suggesting he caused the crowd to cheer as Garcia was playing a shot.
New Rutgers basketball coach Eddie Jordan didn’t graduate from Rutgers. Rutgers is standing by its coach. Here are three other resume mishaps: 1. George O’Leary, Notre Dame football 2. Doug Martin, Villanova men’s hoops 3. Tom Williams, Yale football
AP photo
SPORTS
Page C2 • Sunday, May 12, 2013
Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com
SUNDAY’S INSIDE LOOK
POP
Take2
QUIZ
Tom Musick
Prep Zone
and
as told to Jeff Arnold
Jon Styf
with Joe Stevenson – joestevenson@shawmedia.com
I’m just
Saying
jarnold@shawmedia.com
FACE OFF Adam Haimbaugh School: Woodstock North Year: Senior Sport: Football/Track
1. What are three movies from your parents’ era that you love, too? “Alien,” “Starsky and Hutch,” and “Frankenstein”
2. What would your rapper name be? Frito B
3. Who is your least favorite professional athlete? LeBron James What sport do you wish you had the talent to 4. compete in? Cricket
5.
Could the Hokey Pokey really be what it’s all about? It definitely can be.
Emily Michalski School: Dundee-Crown Year: Junior Sport: Volleyball/Basketball/Track
1. What are three movies from your parents’ era
that you love, too?
“Grease,” “The Breakfast Club,” and “Pretty in Pink.”
2. What would your rapper name be? Em M
3. Who is your least favorite professional athlete? LeBron James What sport do you wish you had the talent to 4. compete in? Gymnastics definitely. They always look so cool doing flips and stuff, I’d love to be able to do that.
5.
Could the Hokey Pokey really be what it’s all about? Yes, it is what it’s all about.
Edgar Ross School: Marian Central Year: Senior Sport: Baseball
1.
What are three movies from your parents’ era that you love, too? “Father of the Bride,” “The Godfather,” and “My Cousin Vinny.”
2. What would your rapper name be? Garman
3. Who is your least favorite professional athlete? Kobe Bryant
4. What sport do you wish you had the talent to compete in? Golf
5.
Could the Hokey Pokey really be what it’s all about? It’s possible.
A
s expected, the Blackhawks had little trouble moving past the Minnesota Wild in the Western Conference quarterfinals. Now, only 12 victories separate the Hawks from the Stanley Cup. Sports editor Jon Styf and columnist Tom Musick discuss:
Musick: The Bulls’ playoff run has been a nice story, but I think we all know that will end soon. The Bears have more than two months to go until training camp begins. And baseball in Chicago is, well, you know. So how long can the high-flying Hawks keep us entertained? Styf: Things just got difficult. And the travel will be a bear, so get ready for that. The road to the finals now involve going to California, probably twice. They could play a streaking Sharks team and then, most likely, a Ducks team that can give them fits. Don’t expect any other team to roll over like the Wild did. Musick: That was Joel Quenneville’s mindset after the Hawks’ series-clinching win against the Wild, and he was right. He refused to do any cartwheels, which probably was best for everyone involved considering his age and lack of gymnastics experience. Yet the Hawks were the best team during the regular season, and they gave us no reason to doubt them in Round 1, outscoring an overmatched Minnesota team, 17-7, during a lopsided series. Styf: As a traditionalist and someone charged with sending you to the next series, here’s hoping the Red Wings do us a favor Sunday night. It’s a better rivalry, it’s a closer trip. It just makes more sense for the fans and the penny counters. It’s also a team I’m pretty confident the Blackhawks will beat. I don’t feel so certain about any of those California teams. Musick: I would be happy to spend a few days in Pure Michigan. So would the Hawks. They won all four games against the Wings this season, and they are 12-2-2 in the 2010s (is that what we’re calling this decade?) after losing the 1990s and 2000s. Granted, the Hawks also went 3-0 against the Sharks this season, but San Jose would be a tougher matchup as the more physical team. Musick: This is going to sound weird, but I think all Hawks fans should cheer like crazy for the Wings to win their Game 7. As a species, ducks seem OK (I too like bread), but as a team, the Ducks match up really well against the Hawks. For whatever it’s worth, I see the Hawks advancing past the next round, and if they don’t have to face the Ducks, I see them advancing to the Stanley Cup Final. As far as how they might match up against the champion of the Eastern Conference, I have no idea. That’s anyone’s guess.
8SPORTS SHORTS MCC baseball wins two in NJCAA play The McHenry County College baseball team took one step closer to winning their NJCAA Regional IV Sectional, defeating Prairie State, 7-1, and Sauk Valley, 10-9. The Scots (40-10) scored four runs in the bottom of the ninth to defeat Sauk Valley in Game two, with Kyle Gizynski hitting an RBI single to score the winning run. Pat Towne added three RBIs and a run scored in
Crystal Lake native Joe Affrunti is a PGA Tour player currently working his way back from shoulder surgery on the Web.com Tour. Affrunti is currently 119th on the money list, winning $8,472 in six events this year. Affrunti, who has a major medical exemption, hopes to begin playing the 13 PGA Tour events he is guaranteed after earning his tour card in 2010 before missing 18 months with his shoulder injury. Last week, Affrunti earned a spot in a U.S. Open sectional qualifier after shooting 70 at a local event in Orlando, Fla. Among the more interesting tidbits on his PGA Tour bio is that Affrunti has a shoe fetish, although he insists it was a matter of mistaken word usage.
Unless you’ve been out there, people have no idea – they have no idea how much of a grind it is out there. The Tour players that the regular public watches, they know a Tiger [Woods], they know a Ernie Els, they know Luke Donald and they’ve played, for the most part, great their whole career. They never really truly had to struggle. A struggling year for Luke Donald means he’s only Top 50 on the money list instead of Top 10. But for 85 percent of players on the Tour, they come up through the ranks, they’ve had to struggle on the minitours and get through some humps on the road. By far, it’s not all the glitz and glamour, but when you get out there, it’s worth every ounce of energy you spent on the minitour and on the Web.com Tour and everything you sacrificed. It’s worth every second of it.
[Being injured] is definitely frustrating because you get on a run, you’re playing for a good two-year stretch from minitours to the Nationwide Tour and I get my card through Nationwide and I get out on the big tour. Injuries have definitely been an issue in my career, but at the same time, I do kind of see the big picture and maybe things do happen for a reason. It kind of makes you a little tougher and makes you realize how nice it is to play a sport for a living and you don’t take it for granted when you are out there.
With having such a good run there, you kind of realize how much work it took to get there. It’s a lot of hard work. I thought I would get it back a little quicker and I showed strides of some good golf this winter a little bit at the start of the year, but the consistency part – I’m super close – but it’s totally not there like it was two years ago. So that part of it, you just have to get down and keep grinding and keep working to get it back. So that was a little bit of an eye-opener with how difficult it is and how hard I have to work to get back there. People are like, ‘You have a shoe fetish?’ A fetish, is, uh, not exactly the correct word. I’m just a real fashion-oriented guy. I make sure everything looks good. I usually match my shoes with my belt and so I’m always looking sharp on the course. Guys on tour – they know that I like to look good when I’m out there, but off the course, I like to be put together. I feel like it’s a representation of the person you are. People are just out watching you play on tour and they don’t truly know you so it’s one way of getting your personality out.
I’m Just Saying is a regular Sunday feature. If you’d like to see someone featured in this space, email me at jarnold@shawmedia.com or send me a message on Twitter @NWH_JeffArnold.
Photo provided
Joe Affrunti is currently playing on the Web.com Tour, but plans to begin playing PGA Tour events this year. Affrunti has 13 PGA events to maintain his tour status after earning his card in 2010, but then missed 18 months because of shoulder surgery.
No-kill, cageless, non-proit shelter for dogs and cats. the second game. MCC plays Prairie State on at noon Sunday in double elimination play.
Union beat Fire on McInerney’s goal BRIDGEVIEW – Jack McInerney scored his league-leading seventh goal of the season Saturday and Zac MacMath made six saves to lead the Philadelphia Union to a 1-0 victory over the Fire. McInerney took a 35-yard pass from substitute Sebastien Le
Toux in the 75th minute, danced around defender Jalil Anibaba and slipped the ball by diving goalkeeper Sean Johnson. The victory was the first in three matches for Philadelphia (4-3-3) and only the second in its past seven games. It was the fourth loss for the Fire (2-6-1) in the past six matches and the second straight game without a goal. The Fire have been shut out in five of its nine matches this MLS season.
Swedish rookie leads Players Championship PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. – Swedish rookie David Lingmerth quietly went about his business and wound up atop the leaderboard Saturday at The Players Championship at Sawgrass. Lingmerth finished with a 10foot birdie on the island-green 17th to reach 12-under par when the third round was suspended because of darkness.
– Staff, wire reports
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CUBS 8, NATIONALS 2
AMERICAN LEAGUE CENTRAL DIVISION W L PCT Detroit 20 14 .588 Cleveland 19 15 .559 Kansas City 18 15 .545 Minnesota 17 16 .515 White Sox 14 20 .412 EAST DIVISION W L PCT New York 22 13 .629 Baltimore 22 15 .595 Boston 22 15 .595 Tampa Bay 18 18 .500 Toronto 14 24 .368 WEST DIVISION W L PCT Texas 23 13 .639 Oakland 19 19 .500 Seattle 17 20 .459 Los Angeles 14 22 .389 Houston 10 27 .270
Jackson picks up first win this year
GB — 1 1½ 2½ 6 GB — 1 1 4½ 9½ GB — 5 6½ 9 13½
Saturday’s Games L.A. Angels 3, White Sox 2 Toronto 3, Boston 2 Tampa Bay 8, San Diego 7 Cleveland 7, Detroit 6 Minnesota 8, Baltimore 5 N.Y. Yankees 3, Kansas City 2 Texas 8, Houston 7 Oakland 4, Seattle 3 Sunday’s Games L.A. Angels (C.Wilson 3-1) at White Sox (Sale 3-2), 7:05 p.m. Cleveland (McAllister 3-3) at Detroit (Porcello 1-2), 12:08 p.m. Toronto (Jenkins 0-0) at Boston (Dempster 2-3), 12:35 p.m. San Diego (Stults 3-2) at Tampa Bay (Ro.Hernandez 1-4), 12:40 p.m. Baltimore (W.Chen 2-3) at Minnesota (Diamond 3-2), 1:10 p.m. N.Y. Yankees (Kuroda 4-2) at Kansas City (E.Santana 3-1), 1:10 p.m. Texas (Tepesch 2-3) at Houston (Lyles 1-0), 1:10 p.m. Oakland (Milone 3-4) at Seattle (J.Saunders 2-4), 3:10 p.m. Friday’s Games L.A. Angels 7, White Sox 5 Detroit 10, Cleveland 4 Tampa Bay 6, San Diego 3 Boston 5, Toronto 0 Baltimore 9, Minnesota 6, 10 innings N.Y. Yankees 11, Kansas City 6 Texas 4, Houston 2 Seattle 6, Oakland 3
GB — 3 3½ 7½ 9½ GB — 1 5 5½ 10½ GB — 1 2½ 5½ 7
Saturday’s Games Cubs 8, Washington 2 Pittsburgh 11, N.Y. Mets 2 St. Louis 3, Colorado 0 San Francisco 10, Atlanta 1 Cincinnati 13, Milwaukee 7 Tampa Bay 8, San Diego 7 Philadelphia 3, Arizona 1 L.A. Dodgers 7, Miami 1 Sunday’s Games Cubs (Feldman 3-3) at Washington (G.Gonzalez 3-2), 12:35 p.m. Milwaukee (W.Peralta 3-2) at Cincinnati (Arroyo 2-4), 12:10 p.m. Pittsburgh (J.Gomez 2-0) at N.Y. Mets (Harvey 4-0), 12:10 p.m. San Diego (Stults 3-2) at Tampa Bay (Ro.Hernandez 1-4), 12:40 p.m. Colorado (J.De La Rosa 3-3) at St. Louis (J.Garcia 4-1), 1:15 p.m. Atlanta (Medlen 1-4) at San Francisco (Lincecum 2-2), 3:05 p.m. Miami (Koehler 0-0) at L.A. Dodgers (Capuano 0-2), 3:10 p.m. Philadelphia (K.Kendrick 4-1) at Arizona (McCarthy 0-3), 3:10 p.m. Friday’s Games Washington 7, Cubs 3 Cincinnati 4, Milwaukee 3 Pittsburgh 7, N.Y. Mets 3 Tampa Bay 6, San Diego 3 St. Louis 3, Colorado 0 Arizona 3, Philadelphia 2 Miami 5, L.A. Dodgers 4 San Francisco 8, Atlanta 2
ANGELS 3, WHITE SOX 2 Los Angeles ab Callaspo 3b 3 Trout cf 4 Pujols dh 4 Trumbo lf-1b4 Hamilton rf 4 Kendrick 2b 4 B.Harris ss 4 Iannetta c 2 0Jimenez 1b3 Shuck lf 0 Totals 32
Chicago r 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3
Los Angeles Chicago
h 1 2 1 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 7
bi 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2
201 020
ab De Aza cf 4 Al.Ramirez ss Rios rf 4 Konerko dh4 A.Dunn 1b 4 Viciedo lf 3 Wise pr 0 Keppinger 3b Flowers c 4 Greene 2b 3 Totals 34
r 0 4 0 1 0 1 0 4 0 0 2
h 1 0 1 1 0 3 0 0 0 1 8
bi 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 2
000 000—3 000 000—2
E–A.Dunn (2), De Aza (4), Greene (2). DP– Chicago 2. LOB–Los Angeles 4, Chicago 6. 2B– Hamilton (5). HR–Trout (6). CS–Trout (2). IP H R ER BB SO Los Angeles Williams W,2-1 62/3 7 2 2 1 3 S.Downs H,7 1/3 0 0 0 0 1 Richards H,1 1 0 0 0 0 0 Frieri S,7-8 1 1 0 0 0 1 Chicago Quintana L,2-1 6 5 3 2 1 5 Thornton 1 1 0 0 0 0 Crain 2 1 0 0 1 3 PB–Flowers. Umpires– Jeff Nelson; First, Ed Hickox; Second, Lance Barksdale; Third, Cory Blaser. T–2:58. A–28,774 (40,615).
Washington ab Span cf 3 EPerez cf 1 Berndn rf 3 Zmrmn 3b 3 LaRoch 1b 4 Dsmnd ss 4 Espinos 2b 4 TMoore lf 4 WRams c 4 Strasrg p 1 Tracy ph 1 Duke p 0 Matths p 0 Lmrdzz ph 1 HRdrgz p 0 37 8 12 7 Totals 33
ab DeJess cf 4 SCastro ss 5 Rizzo 1b 5 ASorin lf 5 Schrhlt rf 5 Valuen 3b 2 Ransm 3b 2 Castillo c 3 Barney 2b 3 EJcksn p 2 Camp p 0 Sweeny ph 1 HRndn p 0 Totals
Chicago Washington
r 1 0 0 1 1 0 1 2 1 1 0 0 0
h 1 1 3 2 1 1 1 0 1 1 0 0 0
000 000
bi 2 0 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 2 0 0 0
AP photo
ANGELS 3, WHITE SOX 2
Sox don’t get the message Club commits three errors, leaves six base runners stranded CHICAGO – White Sox manager Robin Ventura had seen enough. Ventura has never been one to call many meetings during two seasons with the Sox, but with his team sitting in last place in the American League Central – largely because of sloppy defense and lack of execution at the plate – he held a team meeting before Saturday’s game against the Angels. “It’s just at a point where I needed to say some stuff and I did,” Ventura said. Ventura’s message didn’t make a difference, at least not Saturday. The Sox (14-20) committed three errors and left six runners on base in a 3-2 loss to the Angels. “It wasn’t like jumping us like crazy, but it also wasn’t the old upbeat positive one,” Konerko said of the meeting. “It was probably somewhere in the middle. Sometimes meetings like that, it doesn’t come out right away, it takes a few days. It’s kind of a delayed effect.” In a showdown between the two worst defensive teams in the American League, the Sox’s defensive miscues ultimately cost them the game. Second baseman Tyler Greene threw away a routine grounder, rushing his throw to first as Josh Hamilton ran down the line. Instead of recording
r 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2
h 0 0 0 0 1 3 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 6
bi 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2
044 000 — 8 011 000 — 2
E–Zimmerman 2 (7). DP–Washington 1. LOB– Chicago 6, Washington 6. 2B–A.Soriano 2 (9), Valbuena (5), Ransom (4), Barney (6), E.Jackson (1), Desmond (13). 3B–Lombardozzi (1). HR–Desmond (6). CS–Rizzo (3). S–E.Jackson. IP H R ER BB SO Chicago E.Jackson W,1-5 51/3 4 2 2 2 3 Camp 12/3 2 0 0 0 2 H.Rondon 2 0 0 0 0 2 Washington Strasburg L,1-5 5 5 4 0 2 7 Duke 2/3 4 4 4 0 0 Mattheus 11/3 1 0 0 0 1 H.Rodriguez 2 2 0 0 0 2 HBP–by Duke (Castillo). WP–Duke. Umpires–Home, Doug Eddings; First, John Tumpane; Second, Paul Nauert; Third, Angel Hernandez. T–3:07. A–37,116 (41,418).
SOX INSIDER Meghan Montemurro the final out of the third, Greene’s error set up the game-winning run. Albert Pujols advanced to third on the play and scored four pitches later on catcher Tyler Flowers’ passed ball to give the Angels a 3-2 lead. The Sox’s mistakes haven’t been limited to just one player. Center fielder Alejandro De Aza picked up his fourth error of the season in the first when he mishandled Hamilton’s hit while Adam Dunn, starting at first base, dropped a pop up in shallow right field, although he recovered to throw out Pujols at first when he went too far rounding the base. “This year it’s been the mistakes we make, the hits we don’t get, it’s coming from a place of trying too hard,” Konerko said. “ … If we weren’t going about it right, there would be issues there. It’s just not the case.” Ventura classified most of the Sox’s errors as physical, not mental, mistakes. But that doesn’t justify the Sox’s five errors in two games against the Angels. Saturday’s three-error performance was their seventh multiple error game of the
ANGELS 3, WHITE SOX 2 Tipping point: An unearned run in the third inning derailed the White Sox for their fourth loss in six games. The Angels needed only six pitches to jump to a 2-0 lead in the first inning on Mike Trout’s two-run homer off Sox starter Jose Quintana. The Sox made three errors in the loss. On the mound: Quintana did what he needed to do to put the Sox in a position to win. The left-hander threw a career-high 117 pitches in six innings and held the Angels to three runs (two earned) on five hits in his quality start. Quintana struck out five batters while walking one. At the plate: Dayan Viciedo isn’t displaying any rust after spending 15 days on the disabled list with an oblique strain. Viciedo went 3 for 3 with a walk and run scored in the loss. Adam Dunn’s batting average dropped to .137 after he struck out three times in four at-bats and went hitless. Alejandro De Aza and Tyler Flowers drove in the Sox’s only runs. Under the radar: Of the Sox’s 34 games this season, 29 have been decided by three runs or less. The Sox are 7-9 in one-run games after Saturday’s loss to the Angels. season and their second game with at least three. “Those are things I don’t control,” starting pitcher Jose Quintana said through a translator. “I’m sure my teammates didn’t want to make a mistake.” Through 34 games, the Sox’s 27 errors tie them with the Angels for most in the AL and fourth in the majors. The Sox didn’t commit their 27th error until June 8 last season. “Physical stuff you get, but you know it’s just one of those that you do have to do it better,” Ventura said. “It’s that simple.” At this point, the Sox can only hope they break out of their funk. They’re 32
games back – of fourth-place Minnesota. The Sox haven’t given any indications this team is capable of competing for a playoff spot. “I feel if we just keep going at it the right way, it’s got to come out,” Konerko said. “You’ve got to believe that. Sometimes it’s hard to believe that, but as a player I’ve seen it happen a lot.”
• Meghan Montemurro covers the White Sox and Cubs for Shaw Media. Write to her at mmontemurro@ shawmedia.com. Read the Sox Insider and Inside the Cubs blogs at NWHerald. com and on Twitter @ Sox_Insider and @InsideTheCubs.
SOX NOTES
Keppinger dropped in batting order By MEGHAN MONTEMURRO mmontemurro@shawmedia.com
CUBS 8, NATIONALS 2 Chicago
The Associated Press
The Los Angeles Angels’ Albert Pujols (bottom) scores as White Sox pitcher Jose Quintana applies a late tag during the third inning Saturday at U.S. Cellular Field.
NATIONAL LEAGUE CENTRAL DIVISION W L PCT St. Louis 23 12 .657 Cincinnati 21 16 .568 Pittsburgh 20 16 .556 Milwaukee 15 19 .441 Cubs 14 22 .389 EAST DIVISION W L PCT Atlanta 21 15 .583 Washington 20 16 .556 Philadelphia 17 21 .447 New York 14 19 .424 Miami 11 26 .297 WEST DIVISION W L PCT San Francisco 22 15 .595 Arizona 21 16 .568 Colorado 19 17 .528 San Diego 16 20 .444 Los Angeles 14 21 .400
By HOWARD FENDRICH
CHICAGO – The White Sox signed infielder Jeff Keppinger during the offseason with the hope his plate discipline would create plenty of opportunities for him to reach base. It hasn’t worked out that way thus far. Keppinger has yet to draw a walk in 28 games (121 plate appearances) while hitting below .200. Manager Robin Ventura finally dropped Keppinger to the bottom half of the Sox’s lineup in order to try and get him going offensively. Keppinger hit seventh for the first time this season, though he was originally slated to bat eighth but was bumped up a spot when Conor Gillaspie was scratched from the lineup because of an upper respiratory issue caused by allergies. Before Saturday’s game against the Angels, Kepping-
Next for the Sox Angels at Sox, 7:05 p.m. Sunday, ESPN, AM-670
er hit in the No. 2 spot in all but one of his starts. Keppinger, who went 1 for 4 in the Sox’s 3-2 loss to the Angels, loaded the bases in the Sox’s two-run second with a single, the third of the inning. “You know what the track record is and you are trying to get it out of him,” Ventura said. “He fits in a lot of different spots in the lineup with the way he can handle the bat. So, hopefully there will be some guys on and he can knock in some runs.” Beckham progressing: Second baseman Gordon Beckham believes he is only a few weeks away from returning
to the Sox’s lineup. Beckham, who had surgery April 16 to fix his fractured left hamate bone, hit off a tee Saturday for the second consecutive day with plans to hit soft toss beginning Monday and participate in batting practice by the end of the week. Beckham said he was concerned his wrist and hand would be sore when he woke up Saturday, but everything felt good. Beckham projected his first rehab assignment would come May 20, possibly sooner. “I’m out there running, doing stuff baseball related and taking ground balls – the only thing that I haven’t gotten is game situation,” Beckham said. “It’s been a pretty long layoff, but at the same time, I’ve been at pretty much every game so I’ve been watching the game. It’s just a matter of my body reacting to a game.” However Beckham, who was hitting .316 in seven
games before his injury, isn’t convinced his return as well as starting pitcher John Danks’ will be enough to fix the Sox’s problems. Danks (left shoulder) is on track to rejoin the Sox’s rotation within the next couple weeks. “I think we’re going to help, but it’s deeper than just one player, two players,” Beckham said. “We’ve got to play better baseball. At the end of the day, I think everybody knows that.” Quick hits: Reliever Jesse Crain extended his scoreless game streak to 13 games (121/3 innings) with two innings of one-hit ball and three strikeouts in relief Saturday against the Angels. … Danks makes another rehab start today with Triple-A Charlotte against Pawtucket. He has been on the disabled list since March 22. In two rehab starts, Danks has allowed four runs on nine hits in 12 innings pitched.
WASHINGTON – A day before facing each other as opposing starting pitchers, Edwin Jackson and Stephen Strasburg spent some time chatting as former teammates. “Told him I’d be ready for the gas he’s throwing,” Jackson recounted. Easy to joke around after the way Jackson finally picked up his first win of 2013 – and first win under the $52 million, fouryear contract that took him from the Washington Nationals to the Cubs. Jackson retired 12 of Washington’s first 13 batters while pitching into the sixth inning Saturday, and hit a two-run double off Strasburg for good measure, leading the Cubs to an 8-2 victory Next for that ended the the Cubs Nationals’ fivegame winning Cubs at streak. Washington, The game was scoreless with 12:35 p.m. two outs in the Sunday, WGN, fifth when one of AM-720 Nationals third baseman Ryan Zimmerman’s two errors gave the Cubs a base runner. Strasburg followed with his first walk, to No. 8 hitter Darwin Barney, he of the .160 batting average. Then up came Jackson, 0 for 10 at the plate with zero RBIs this season until that point. “If Strasburg punches him out there,” Cubs manager Dale Sveum said, “it’s a whole different ballgame.” But with the count full, Jackson delivered his double to right-center to make it 2-0. “I figured he was going to try and come at me because he doesn’t want to walk a pitcher,” said Jackson (1-5), who gave up two runs over 51/3 innings. “I just got a pitch that I could drive.” Unraveling en route to dropping a fifth consecutive decision, Strasburg (1-5) walked another batter and gave up Starlin Castro’s single to load the bases. Anthony Rizzo grounded a single up the middle, the ball bounding into center to score two more runs. Instead of backing up home plate on the play, Strasburg ambled around on the infield grass and looked into the dugout. All four runs were unearned, and Strasburg’s ERA actually dipped to 3.10. David DeJesus’ two-run single was the highlight as the Cubs scored four more in the sixth against reliever Zach Duke. Washington’s lone lefty in the bullpen got only two outs and gave up four hits and a wild pitch. He also hit a batter. Sveum thought Jackson’s performance dipped because he sat in the dugout during the long top of the fifth and sixth, while the Cubs were scoring all of their runs.
AP photo
Cubs starting pitcher Edwin Jackson winds up to deliver a pitch against the Washington Nationals during the first inning Saturday, in Washington.
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PREPS
Page C6 • Sunday, May 12, 2013
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ROUNDUP
CLC soccer wins FVC Fox NORTHWEST HERALD The Crystal Lake Central girls soccer team captured the Fox Valley Conference Fox Division championship with a 1-0 win over Grayslake Central. After a scoreless first half, Staci Wolfgram scored on a penalty kick for the Tigers (75-1, 5-1-0) with 6:28 left in the match. Caitlyn Payton made four saves in goal for the Tigers, as they have won five straight matches in a row dating back to April 25. CL South 3, Jacobs 0: At Crystal Lake, Liz Foster made eight saves in goal for the Golden Eagles (6-12-1, 2-4) in their FVC Valley loss to the Gators (10-4-1, 2-3).
BASEBALL CL Central 11, Johnsburg 1 (6 inn.): At Crystal Lake, Jake Van Scoyoc, Parker Harold, Matt Tegtmeier and Tanner Larkins all had two hits for the Tigers (15-9, 9-8), with Larkins and Harold each driving in two runs in their FVC Fox win over the Skyhawks (7-15, 6-12). Ottawa Triangular: At Ottawa, Alden-Hebron fell in two nonconference games, falling 12-2 in six innings to Hall and 7-1 to Ottawa Marquette. Hunter Ogle went 2 for 3 in Game 1 for the Giants (10-101), with Andrew Tieman going 2 for 3 in Game 2.
Marengo 8, Genoa-Kingston 0: At Genoa, Justin Vogel allowed five hits over six innings with five strikeouts for the Indians (10-6, 8-4), with Ethan Walsweer going 2 for 3 with a double and two RBIs in their BNC East win.
Marian Central 13, Walther Lutheran 2 (5 inn.): At Woodsotck, Tony Milone, Zach Hoijer and Trent Faucne all went 2 for 3 for the Hurricanes (12-8, 8-6), with Milone and Hoijer each adding two RBIs in their SCC win. CL South 3-0, Jacobs 2-1: At Algonquin, Tom Gaede drove
in the winning run on a single in the eighth inning to give the Gators (15-5, 12-5) the FVC Valley win in Game 1, with Jake Bigos going 4 for 7 with a home run and three runs scored in both games. Aaron Meciej scored Grant Kale in the bottom seventh to take Game 2 for the Golden Eagles (17-9, 9-7).
Woodstock 9, Indian Creek 1: At Woodstock, Jordan Turner struck out eight in five innings and went 3 for 3 with three runs scored for the Blue Streaks (7-11), with Austin Butts adding two RBIs in their nonconference win.
Hampshire 7, Woodstock North 6: At Hampshire, Brandon Wescher went 3 for 3 with an RBI and Tyler Crater added two RBIs for the Whip-Purs (12-12, 5-11) in their FVC Fox win. Shane Zieman went 2 for 3 with an RBI and two runs scored for the Thunder (2-16, 1-13).
SOFTBALL Prairie Ridge 3, McHenry 2: At Crystal Lake, Kirsten Stevens hit a walk-off home run for the Wolves (22-3, 9-2) and picked up her 17th win of the season, with Kate Didier adding two RBIs on two hits in their FVC Valley win. Kristin Koepke drove in both runs for the Warriors (17-9, 7-3).
Marian Central 13, Guerin Prep 0 (5 inn.): At River Grove, Dianna Ricotta, Hannah O’Hagan and Mary Black all scored three runs for the Hurricanes (7-10, 5-6), with Ricotta adding a home run and four RBIs and O’Hagan adding a home run and two RBIs.
Richmond-Burton 10-8, Oregon 0-2: At Richmond, Haylea Hoskins allowed one hit over five innings in her Game 1 win for the Rockets (7-10), with Sam Dahlen, Taylor Mell, and Katie Kroll homering in their BNC crossover wins. Sycamore triangular: At Sycamore, Marengo defeated Huntley, 13-4, and Sycamore,
17-5. Huntley defeated Sycamore, 6-3. Veronica Reulis went 8 for 8 in both games, totaling nine RBIs, six runs scored with a home run for the Indians (238), with Taylor Carlson adding 6 for 9 with seven RBIs, four runs scored and a home run in two games. Miranda Peterson totaled five hits, two doubles, a home run, a run scored and four RBIs in both games for the Red Raiders (18-9).
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PREPS
Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com
Sunday, May 12, 2013 • Page C7
Tennis looking toward sectionals Handball leads to Johnsburg PK Get the scores
• WOLVES
• SKYHAWKS
Continued from page C1
Continued from page C1
Despite the previous lopsided loss, Bij Heydari said they entered the finals encouraged by the win against McHenry. “I think this time we had confidence,” he said. “It was nice to get another shot at it.” That confidence was buoyed when Sidor and Bernardo had some unforced errors early in the match. “We got a lead at the beginning and used that momentum the rest of the match,” Henning said. The match was also important from a team perspective with Prairie Ridge and Jacobs battling for the team title. It was the Wolves’ consistency that was the difference, taking three firsts, two seconds, a third and a fifth place finish. “We were both thinking this is for our team,” Bij Heydari said. “All of them did their part.” Hampshire’s Elisha Hougland also had redemption on his mind in the No. 1 singles championship match against Jacobs Kailash Panchapakesan. Hougland had lost in straight sets to Panchapakesan during the season.
“He said that Hannah was holding the ball too long and warned her three times,” Wagner said recalling the conversation with the referee. “He didn’t get an acknowledgment from her because she couldn’t hear him in the wind and then he pulled the yellow card.” Shortly after play resumed, the Rockets were called for a handball in the goal box. On the resulting penalty kick, Pruitt tied the score at 2, placing it past Campbell and starting a huge momentum swing. “I was thinking just not to miss and just relax,” Pruitt said. “I was just the slightest bit nervous, but I
Kyle Grillot – kgrillot@shawmedia.com
Prairie Ridge’s Bij Heydari hits a return during the Fox Valley Conference tennis meet Saturday at Crystal Lake Central. The title match was a marathon with Hougland winning 6-4, 5-7, 7-5. Hougland said he was a little discouraged needing to go three sets after winning the first, but knew he had to press on. “I was tired,” Hougland said. “I’m going to put all my energy into this set.” Hougland said he was a lot more consistent in this match and had a stronger serve. “My serve was doing a lot better,” Hougland said. “I think that’s what clinched it.” The win also was important looking ahead to section-
als next weekend where Hougland should get one of the top seeds at the Elgin Sectional. “It’s a big help,” Whip-Purs coach Jon Betts said. “Having a win like this will give us a better chance for a 1-2 seed.” Also winning championships for Prairie Ridge were Jack Lamar and Danny Van Bosch at No. 2 doubles and Mitch Mohr and Ross Carpenter at No. 4 doubles. Jacobs won three titles – Kendrick Chong at No. 2 singles, Riley Rowan at No. 3 singles and Kyle Powell and Matt Toomire at No. 3 doubles.
Can’t make it to the game? We’ll deliver the score to you. iPhone users can download the free McHenryCountyScores app from the online App Store. felt confident, and I just had to take a deep breath.” With the score tied and the wind at Johnsburg’s back, the Skyhawks continued to apply pressure offensively and Pruitt was able to break through for her second goal in the 55th minute. It proved to be the regional title winner. “[Pruitt] has been unbelievable all season,” East-
Six weeks starting June 5th One hour of instruction, followed by a round of golf
PR’s Getzelman to return Monday against Cary-Grove said. “It was really good for us to get back on track. It’s always good to get two hits in an inning.” The 14-run outburst came less than 24 hours after Wolves right-hander Steven Ladd fired a 10-strikeout two-hitter at the Warriors in a 3-0 Prairie Ridge victory. Three of McHenry’s runs Saturday were unearned, but Wolves coach Glen Pecoraro thought his team could have fielded much better. “We’ve played some clean baseball this week,” Pecora-
• WARRIORS Continued from page C1 Gehrke’s homers, Cole Hoeppel-Tranter’s two fifth-inning hits and Zak Teuber’s RBI single in the fifth all came with two strikes. Hoeppel-Tranter led off that inning with a single and capped the eight-run inning with a threeRBI double. “I knew I had to get it started off and once I did that, everybody’d pick me up and we’d score,” Hoeppel-Tranter
ro said. “We had great clean games with [Crystal Lake] South and Jacobs. We played clean last night, but today, not so much. We have to take care of the ball on defense, and we have to pitch better.” Prairie Ridge center fielder Jordan Getzelman missed the McHenry series, but will return for Cary-Grove on Monday. Getzelman said he has methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, a bacterial infection, on his left leg that forced him out of the games.
land said. “Her and Allie [Layton] up front have torn some team’s defenses to shreds this season, and she stepped up in a pressure moment and delivered.” With the 3-2 lead and 25 minutes remaining, the Skyhawks main focus shifted to stopping the Rockets and their explosive offense that put up eight goals in the first half against North Boone on Monday in the regional semifinal. Johnsburg keyed on dynamic players such as Halley Havlicek and Guenther. “It was tough getting back and forth running with Halley, but I knew I could do it,” said Skyhawks defender Kortnee Hass who marked Havlicek throughout the match. “I know my coach trusted me to shut her down, so I was mentally prepared.”
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PRO BASKETBALL
Page C8 • Sunday, May 12, 2013
EASTERN CONFERENCE SEMIFINALS: BULLS-HEAT
Bosh outduels Boozer By ANDREW SELIGMAN The Associated Press CHICAGO – Welcome to the Eastern Conference semifinals, Chris Bosh and Carlos Boozer. All but absent the first two games, the big men for Miami and the Bulls asserted themselves in a big way in Game 3 on Friday night. Bosh scored 20 points and hauled in 19 rebounds to help the Heat beat the Bulls, 104-94. Boozer wasn’t bad, either, with 21 points for the Bulls, but it was Miami coming away with a 2-1 lead in the series. Game 4 is Monday at the United Center. A big reason the Heat won Friday was Bosh stepping up on a night when the other “Big Three” struggled. LeBron James was off target for most of the game before coming on strong down the stretch to finish with 25 points and Dwyane Wade was a nonfactor. Bosh, however, got going early on. He knocked down shots from the baseline and top of the key. He hit a 3-pointer, too. But he was also active on the glass, finishing one rebound shy of the Heat’s postseason record. It was the sort of performance Miami envisioned seeing on a more regular basis when it formed that superstar triumvirate back in the summer of 2010. “I try to move around as
AP photo
Bulls power forward Carlos Boozer shoots over Miami Heat center Chris Bosh during the first half of Game 3 of an NBA Eastern Conference semifinal Friday at the United Center. much as possible,” he said. “Dwyane and LeBron, they’re very unselfish basketball players. They’re going to be making a lot of plays for us and Mario [Chalmers] as well. I try to mix it up a lot. I try to space. I try to dive. I try to get behind the defense to get easy buckets, but if I move to the open spot, usually they find me. Those are my opportunities to be aggressive.” That aggression has been questioned. He tends to fade at times, blend in rather than assert himself. It was that way in the
first two games of this series, when he scored nine and then 13 points, but it was a different story for him on Friday. Same for Boozer. “There’s a lot of different ways he can score – running the floor, going to the offensive boards, ducking in, facing up,” coach Tom Thibodeau said. “I thought he did a combination of all those things. I thought that got him into a rhythm.” He clearly had his best game of the series and was involved from the start after scoring a total of 14 points in the first two.
NBA PLAYOFF ROUNDUP
Grizzlies beat Thunder, take 2-1 lead The ASSOCIATED PRESS MEMPHIS, Tenn. – Marc Gasol scored 20 points and hit two free throws with 1:03 left to put Memphis ahead to stay, and the Grizzlies held off the Oklahoma City Thunder, 87-81, Saturday to take a 2-1 lead in this Western Conference semifinal. Gasol scored 16 in the sec-
ond half as Memphis remained unbeaten at home in the postseason. The Grizzlies pulled out the win in an ugly performance for both teams after a three-day layoff since Game 2. Pacers 82, Knicks 71: At Indianapolis, Roy Hibbert had 24 points and 12 rebounds and Paul George had 14 points, eight rebounds and eight assist
to lead the Pacers past New York in Game of the Eastern Conference semifinals. The Pacers lead the series, 2-1. Carmelo Anthony scored 21 points to lead the Knicks, who led only once in the game for a total of 76 seconds. New York spent the final 45 minutes trying to play catch-up but never did.
Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com
FINE PRINT
Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com
Sunday, May 12, 2013 • Page C9
FIVE-DAY PLANNER
HORSE RACING
TEAM
ARLINGTON PARK ENTRIES Sunday’s post time: 1 p.m. First, $38,000, Maiden special weight, 3 yo’s & up, F & M (fillies and mares), Six Furlongs 1 Virginia’s Joy Emigh 118 3-1 1a Silent Rap Emigh 118 3-1 2 Hollywood Beba Esquivel 111 10-1 3 Bonita Moonlite Thornton 118 6-1 4 Defiant Susie Geroux 118 8-1 5 Hurray Day Perez 124 10-1 6 Sunny Suprise Desormeaux 118 5-1 7 Ellie’s the Boss Perez 118 4-1 8 So Long for Now Hill 118 9-2 Second, $42,000, AOC $80,000, 3 yo’s & up, Six Furlongs 1 Que Posse Homeister Jr. 122 6-1 2 Banner Bill Desormeaux 122 10-1 3 Browneyed Bachelor Graham 122 8-1 4 Bet Seattle Martinez 122 6-1 5 Francois Geroux 122 9-2 6 Saint Leon Baird 122 2-1 7 Hogy Emigh 122 5-2 Third, $10,500, Claiming $7,500, 3 yo’s & up, F & M (fillies and mares), One Mile 1 Afleet Abaco Campbell 122 4-1 2 Perfect Stranger Perez 122 10-1 3 Sligo Rose Slinger 115 6-1 4 Hard Rock Girl Diego 122 12-1 5 It’sallaboutred Esquivel 115 8-1 6 Saint Patty Ann Sanchez 122 20-1 7 Reckless Moment Contreras 122 9-2 8 Queen of Heat Baird 116 8-5 Fourth, $10,500, Maiden Claiming $12,500-$10,000,
3 yo’s & up, F & M (fillies and mares), One Mile 1 Queen of Style Homeister Jr. 124 7-2 1a Molniya Homeister Jr. 124 7-2 2 Chicago Ruhls Geroux 116 15-1 3 Okra Wind Free Esquivel 111 5-1 4 Bear Medicine Slinger 115 12-1 5 True Nightmare Fox 116 20-1 6 Sarah’s Splendor Diego 122 6-1 7 Lioness Lahr Graham 118 7-5 8 A Certain Sparkle Lopez 118 10-1 Fifth, $16,000, SOC $14,000-$7,500, 3 yo’s & up, F & M (fillies and mares), Five Furlongs (Turf) 1 Stivers Suprise Lantz 122 10-1 2 Stone Free Graham 122 2-1 3 Rainy Rain Perez 122 8-1 4 Wild Oration Geroux 122 7-2 5 Candyonmymind Homeister Jr. 122 5-1 6 Naughty and Nice Montalvo 122 12-1 7 Cross Eyed Mary Martinez 122 3-1 Sixth, $25,000, WCL $20,000-$18,000, 3 yo’s & up, Six Furlongs 1 De Green Light Roman 119 12-1 2 Strike the Tiger Desormeaux 121 7-2 3 Slick Pardoned Me Perez 119 8-1 4 Moroccan Brew Martinez 121 4-1 5 A’intyoudreamin Vigil 119 8-1 6 What Do You Mean Esquivel 114 5-1 7 Roarin Missile Sanchez 121 2-1 Seventh, $39,000, Allowance, 3 yo’s & up, F & M (fillies and mares), Five Furlongs (Turf) 1 Cajun Diva Martinez 121 12-1 2 Maryjean Roman 121 20-1 3 Prettyhotprincess Homeister Jr. 115 9-2
SUNDAY
MONDAY
TUESDAY
THURSDAY
at Miami* 6 p.m. TNT AM-1000
MIAMI* 6 p.m. TNT AM-1000
4 Somali Byrd Felix 121 5-1 5 Hoist the Colors Baird 121 7-2 6 Midnight Lace Contreras 121 10-1 7 Royal Posh Desormeaux 121 4-1 8 Banded Graham 121 3-1 Eighth, $10,500, Claiming $7,500, 3 yo’s & up, F & M (fillies and mares), Six Furlongs 1 Lastochka Geroux 122 10-1 1a Wine Angel Desormeaux 116 10-1 2 Rosie’s Wild Tale Perez 122 20-1 3 Eileen Evelyn Martinez 122 10-1 4 Che Serai Vigil 122 20-1 5 Sikura’s Gift Contreras 122 12-1 6 Quiet Nicole Hamilton 122 5-2 7 Royal Seven Meza 122 12-1 8 Martinisonthebay Esquivel 115 15-1 9 Mirka Montalvo 122 12-1 10 Brick House Road Roman 116 6-1 11 Lil Miss Richie Baird 116 9-2 12 Dukette’s Flame Felix 122 12-1 Ninth, $10,500, Maiden Claiming $15,000-$10,000, 3 yo’s & up, One Mile 1 Conor John Fox 122 5-1 2 Shue View Geroux 118 7-2 3 Pow Wow Star Esquivel 117 12-1 4 Ballistic Tim Contreras 124 12-1 5 Mister Paddy Felix 118 2-1 6 Redbone Perez 122 15-1 7 Sterlingten Montalvo 122 8-1 8 C C and Moonlight Meza 124 10-1 9 Looks to Spare Vigil 118 8-1
WEDNESDAY
PLAYOFFS TBD
at Washington 12:35 p.m. WGN AM-720
COLORADO 7:05 p.m. WCIU AM-720
COLORADO 7:05 p.m. CSN AM-720
COLORADO 7:05 p.m. CSN AM-720
L.A. Angels 7:05 p.m. ESPN AM-670
at Minnesota 7:10 p.m. CSN AM-670
at Minnesota 7:10 p.m. WCIU AM-670
at Minnesota 12:10 p.m. WGN AM-670
at L.A. Angels 9:05 p.m. CSN AM-670
Next Game May 18 PHILADELPHIA
ARLINGTON PARK RESULTS
* Playoff game
Payouts based on $2 bet except for Trifecta (.50) and Superfecta (.10) Saturday’s results First - Purse $29,000, Claiming $50,000-$40,000, 3 yo’s & up, One And One Sixteenth Miles 5 Breaking Ball, Graham $7.80 $3.60 $3.00 1 Bethel, Geroux $3.60 $2.80 3 Doimakeyahappy, Hill $4.80 Race Time: 1:44.99 $2 Exacta (5-1), $22.20; $0.10 Superfecta (5-1-3-6), $30.42; $0.50 Trifecta (5-1-3), $55.50 Second - Purse $9,500, WCL $5,000, 3 yo’s & up, Five And A Half Furlongs 2 Carson’s Hawk, Martinez $17.80 $8.20 $3.80 3 Dictum, Graham $5.40 $3.40 1 Grand Row, Fox $5.80 Race Time: 1:06.71 $2 Daily Double (5-2), $141.80; $2 Exacta (2-3), $114.40; $0.10 Superfecta (2-3-1-5), $122.41; $0.50 Trifecta (2-3-1), $176.95 Third - Purse $42,000, AOC $80,000, 3 yo’s & up, One Mile (Turf) 3 La Tia, Roman $18.00 $8.40 $5.80 1 Goldway, Homeister Jr. $12.40 $6.60 5 Grandma’s Rules, Graham $3.80 Late Scratches: Miz Ida Race Time: 1:37.60 $2 Daily Double (2-3), $154.80; $2 Exacta (3-1), $130.20; $0.10 Superfecta (3-1-5-6), $87.42; $0.50 Trifecta (3-1-5), $117.50; $1 Pic 3 (5-2-3), $604.10 Fourth - Purse $14,000, Claiming $16,000, 3 yo’s & up, One And One Sixteenth Miles 4 Static Charge, Homeister Jr. $10.80 $6.80 $4.20 5 Dani Nikki, Esquivel $14.20 $6.00 3 Mya Faccia Bella, Desormeaux $4.60 Race Time: 1:47.04 $2 Daily Double (3-4), $121.60; $2 Exacta (4-5), $130.20; $0.10 Superfecta (4-5-3-6), $127.97; $0.50 Trifecta (4-53), $165.55; $1 Pic 3 (2-3-4), $585.70
Fifth - Purse $40,000, AOC $40,000, 3 yo’s & up, One And One Sixteenth Miles (Turf) 2 Cave Creeker, Graham $12.20 $5.40 $4.00 6 Ann of the Dance, Hill $5.00 $3.20 7 Mourette, Homeister Jr. $4.40 Race Time: 1:47.76 $2 Daily Double (4-2), $65.40; $2 Exacta (2-6), $48.00; $0.10 Superfecta (2-6-7-1), $89.43; $0.50 Trifecta (2-6-7), $74.15; $1 Pic 3 (3-4-2), $335.00; $0.50 Pic 4 (2-3-4-2), $1278.10 Sixth - Purse $10,500, Maiden Claiming $12,500$10,000, 3 yo’s & up, One Mile 2 Scot’s Sunnyriver, Graham $10.20 $5.40 $4.20 11 No Time to Kid (IRE), Roman $7.40 $4.40 5 Charmed N Dangerus, Homeister Jr. $6.80 Race Time: 1:38.91 $2 Daily Double (2-2), $89.60; $2 Exacta (2-11), $91.00; $0.10 Superfecta (2-11-5-6), $154.14; $0.50 Trifecta (2-11-5), $241.60; $1 Pic 3 (4-2-2), $219.80 Seventh - Purse $39,000, Allowance, 3 yo’s & up, Six Furlongs 11 Work All Week, Geroux $5.20 $3.00 $2.80 5 Static Kill, Perez $4.60 $3.40 7 Hughes the Daddy, Desormeaux $4.00 Late Scratches: Lollipop (ARG), Next Speaker Race Time: 1:09.21 $2 Daily Double (2-11), $40.80; $2 Exacta (11-5), $21.60; $0.10 Superfecta (11-5-7-10), $16.90; $0.50 Trifecta (115-7), $30.10; $1 Pic 3 (2-2-2/6/11), $119.90 Eighth - Purse $16,000, Maiden Claiming $25,000$20,000, 3 yo’s & up, One Mile (Turf) 3 Myles, Hill $8.00 $3.80 $3.40 2 Counterblow, Graham $3.00 $2.60 4 Classic Recital, Montalvo $10.40 Late Scratches: Vperyod Seryoga Race Time: 1:39.54 $2 Daily Double (11-3), $24.80; $2 Exacta (3-2), $20.60; $0.10 Superfecta (3-2-4-1), $59.96; $0.50 Trifecta (3-2-4),
ON TAP TODAY
$45.05; $1 Pic 3 (2-2/6/11-3), $70.00 Ninth - Purse $38,000, Maiden special weight, 3 yo’s & up, Five And A Half Furlongs 12 Plunder, Graham $8.60 $5.00 $4.00 1 He’saruler, Felix $7.40 $5.40 9 Smarty Boy, Desormeaux $4.00 Late Scratches: Richie’s Lifestyle, Thorson Race Time: 1:05.17 $2 Daily Double (3-12), $65.00; $2 Exacta (12-1), $88.20; $0.10 Superfecta (12-1-9-8), $98.12; $0.50 Trifecta (12-19), $79.75; $1 Pic 3 (2/6/11-3-12), $79.40; $0.10 Pic 9 (6 OF 9), $961.50 Carryover $5,239.00 Tenth - Purse $25,000, Claiming $20,000-$18,000, 3 yo’s & up, One Mile (Turf) 5 Broken Trust Fund, Geroux $7.20 $4.00 $2.80 1 Millennium Star, Vigil $9.80 $5.80 4 Richysthunderingal, Baird $3.40 Late Scratches: Spanish Ambassador, The Best Option Race Time: 1:38.31 $2 Daily Double (12-5), $51.20; $2 Exacta (5-1), $82.80; $0.10 Superfecta (5-1-4-9), $191.04; $0.50 Trifecta (5-14), $71.90; $1 Pic 3 (3-12-5), $99.00 Eleventh - Purse $16,000, Maiden Claiming $25,000$20,000, 3 yo’s & up, Five Furlongs (Turf) 6 She’s Intoxicated, Baird $5.00 $3.60 $3.00 1 Tactical Katie, Contreras $5.40 $3.60 4 Chica Silver, Roman $6.60 Late Scratches: Blue Door Race Time: :59.56 $2 Daily Double (5-6), $24.20; $2 Daily Double (5-9), $7.80; $2 Exacta (6-1), $28.00; $0.10 Superfecta (6-1-45), $104.20; $1 High 5 (6-1-4-5-7), $4199.10 Carryover $33,374.00; $0.50 Trifecta (6-1-4), $63.65; $1 Pic 3 (12-56/9), $60.80; $0.50 Pic 4 (3-12-5-6/9), $131.40; $0.50 Pic 5 (2/6/11-3-12-5-6/9), $300.60; $1 Pic 6 (2-2/6/11-3-125-6/9), $15.80; $1 Pic 6 (2-2/6/11-3-12-5-6/9), $5546.60
PREPS BASEBALL McHENRY 14, PRAIRIE RIDGE 8 McHenry Prairie Ridge
200 180 3 –14 13 5 500 011 1 – 8 9 3
WP: Freund, 5-0 (7IP, 9H, 8R, 3ER, 2BB, 1K). LP: Buchta, 0-2 (41/3IP, 7H, 6R, 6ER, 2BB, 3K). Top hitters: McHenry - Gehrke 4-4 (2HRs, 3B, 2RBI, 3R), Mattson 3-4 (RBI, 3R), Hoeppel-Tranter 2-4 (2B, 3RBI). Prairie Ridge - Klendworth 2-5 (2B, R), Harvel 3-4 (2 HRs, 5RBI, 3R), Pecoraro 3-4 (RBI).
CL SOUTH 3, JACOBS 2 (8 INN.) Jacobs CL South
001 100 00 - 2 8 1 101 000 01 - 3 6 0
WP: Fruhauf, 2-1 (1IP, 0R, 0ER, 1H, 1K, 0BB). LP: Sargent (12/3IP, 1R, 1ER, 2H, 4K). Top hitters: CL South - Bigos 2-3 (HR, RBI, 3R, SB), Gaede 2-4 (RBI); Jacobs Kale 3-4, Sargent 1-2 (RBI).
JACOBS 1, CL SOUTH 0 CL South Jacobs
000 000 0 - 0 5 1 000 000 1 - 1 7 1
WP: Parquette, 2-2 (61/3IP, 1R, 1ER, 4K, 0BB). LP: Peltier (7IP, 0R, 5H, 8K, 2BB). Top hitters: CL South - Bigos 2-4; Jacobs - Mecij 2-3 (RBI), Murray 2-3.
4BB). Top hitters: CL Central - Van Scoyoc 2-3 (3B, RBI), Harold 2-4 (2RBI), Tegtmier 2-3 (2R, 2SB, 3B), Larkins 2-3.
HALL 12, ALDEN-HEBRON 2 (6 INN.)
MARENGO 8, GENOA-KINGSTON 0
A-H Hall
100 001 - 2 6 4 220 215 - 12 13 1
LP: Lalor, 1-5 (4IP, 6H, 6R, 2ER, 1BB, 3K). Top hitters: Alden-Hebron - Ogle 2-3, O’Halleran 1-3 (RBI), LeJeune 1-3 ( R).
Marengo G-K
WP: Vogel (6IP, 5H, 0R, 0ER, 5K). Top hitters: Marengo - Walsweer 2-3 (2B, 2RBI), Conroy 1-2 (2BB).
000 001 0 - 1 5 5 111 103 x - 7 9 2
LP: Nelson, 3-1 (4IP, 5H, 4R, 1ER, 1BB, 1K). Top hitters: Alden-Hebron - Tieman 2-3, Talbert 1-2, Redlin 1-3.
CL CENTRAL 11 JOHNSBURG 1 (6 INN.) Johnsburg CLC
000 100 - 1 4 4 001 442 - 11 11 3
WP: Leverenz (6IP, 4H, 1R, 1ER, 2K, 2BB). LP: Ridout (42/3IP, 8R, 7ER, 2K,
WP: Parchutz, 3-2 (5IP, 2R, 2ER, 5H, 4K, 3BB). Top hitters: Marian Central - Milone 2-3 (3B, 2SB, 2R, 2RBI), Hoijer 2-3 (2R, 2RBI), Faunce 2-3 (2B, RBI).
100 000 0 - 1 5 0 410 130 x - 9 13 1
Johnsburg Richmond-Burton
FVC INVITE Team scores: 1. Prairie Ridge 102, 2. Jacobs 97, 3. McHenry 82, 4. Cary-Grove 80, t5. Crystal Lake South, Grayslake Central, Grayslake North 67, t8. Huntley, Crystal Lake Central 64, 10. Hampshire 56, 11. Johnsburg 52, 12. Dundee-Crown 50, 13. Woodstock 35, 14. Woodstock North 25 Championship Singles No. 1: Hougland (Hamp) d. Panchapakesan (Jac), 6-4, 5-7, 7-5 No. 2: Chong (Jac) d. Alas (PR), 6-2, 6-1 No. 3: Rowan (Jac) d. Venet (CG), 6-4, 6-1 Doubles No. 1: Heydari/Henning (PR) d. Sidor/Ki. Bernardo (Jac), 6-1, 6-4 No. 2: Lamar/Van Bosch (PR) d. Kr. Bernardo/ Gaspari (Jac), 2-6, 6-4, 6-2 No. 3: Powell/Toomire (Jac) d. Cox/Altman (PR), 6-1, 7-5 No. 4: Mohr/Carpenter (PR) d. Powers/Kerlin (CG), 6-1, 6-1 Third place No. 1: Russell (CG) d. Jarva (CLS), 6-4, 7-5
GIRLS TRACK
Team scores: 1. Kaneland 83, 2. Hampshire 74, 3. Burlington Central 69, 4. Sterling 58, 5. Sycamore 52, 6. Rock Falls 40, 7. Freeport 38, 8. Dixon 37, 9. Boylan 31, 10. Rochelle 20, 11. Genoa-Kingston 19, 12. Galena 14, 12. Rockford Christian 14, 14. Belvidere 5, 15. Winnebago 4. Hampshire State qualifiers Shot put: 1. Dumoulin 40’
1 2
2 0
- 3 - 2
0 0
1 0
- 1 - 0
Second half CLC- Wolfgram Goalkeeper saves: Payton (CLC) 4.
4x800 relay: 4. Hampshire (Evans, N. Dumoulin, Sztukowski, T. Dumoulin) 10:03.55 4x100 relay: 2. Hampshire (Graff, Trzebunia, Fouch, Wozniak) 50.96 4x200 relay: 1. Hampshire (N. Dumoulin, DeLeon, Trzebunia, Wozniak) 1:50.46 400 dash: 1. Fouch (H) 1:00.56 4x400 relay: 1. Hampshire (Evans, N. Dumoulin, T. Dumoulin, J. Dumoulin) 4:06.67
LACROSSE CARY-GROVE 24, CL CENTRAL 2 Cary-Grove goals: Dorn 7, Taylor 5, Johnson 3, McDade 2, Lindberg 1, Cost 1, Zoellner 1, Steiner 1, Stokes 1, Nolan 1, Ladewig 1. Cary-Grove assists: Taylor 4, Johnson 3, Dorn 2, Zintl 2, Cost 2, Zoellner 2, Houston 1, Dornian 1, Stokes 1, Blair 1, Nolan 1.
CL SOUTH 8, CARMEL 7 CL South goals: Mortenson 3, Dziedzic 2, Klinsky 2, Dowejko 1. CL South assists: Grant 2, Mortensen 2, Van Dyke 1.
4 p.m.: Tour of California, stage 1, at Escondido, Calif., NBCSN
9:30 a.m.: IIHF World Championship, preliminary round, United States vs. Germany, at Helsinki (same-day tape), NBCSN
12:30 p.m.: Cubs at Washington, WGN, AM-720 12:30 p.m.: Toronto at Boston, TBS 7 p.m.: L.A. Angels at White Sox, ESPN, AM-670
MEN’S COLLEGE LACROSSE
GOLF 1 p.m.: PGA Tour, The Players Championship, inal round, at Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla., NBC
Noon: NCAA, Division I, playoffs, irst round, Cornell at Maryland, ESPN2
AUTO RACING
SOCCER
6:30 a.m.: Formula One, Spanish Grand Prix, at Barcelona, Spain, NBCSN
6 p.m.: Mexican Primera Division, Clausura playoffs, quarterinals, second leg, Cruz Azul at Morelia, ESPN2
SOFTBALL McH PR
000 020 0 - 2 5 0 00 021 x - 3 8 2
RICHMOND-BURTON 10 OREGON 0 (5 INN.) Oregon R-B
CL CENTRAL 1 GRAYSLAKE CENTRAL 0 CLC GC
CYCLING
HOCKEY MLB BASEBALL
WP: Stevens, 17-3 (7IP, 5H, 2R, 2ER, 4K, 2BB). LP: Koepke (7IP, 8H, 3R, 3ER, 8K, 1BB). Top hitters: Prairie Ridge - Didier 2-3 (2RBI), Stevens 1-3 (HR, RBI), Hempen 2-3; McHenry - Koepke 2-4 (2RBI).
Goalkeeper saves: Calmeyer (J) 7; Koenig (RB) 9.
From Friday
CLASS 2A BURLINGTON CENTRAL SECTIONAL
1 p.m.: Mississippi State at Mississippi, CSN
3:30 p.m.: Conference quarterinals, Game 6, N.Y. Rangers at Washington, CNBC 6:30 p.m.: Conference quarterinals, Game 6, Boston at Toronto, NBCSN 9 p.m.: Conference quarterinals, Game 7, Detroit at Anaheim, NBCSN
PRAIRIE RIDGE 3, McHENRY 2
First half J- Jansen (Pruitt) RB- Guenther RB - Guenther (Havlicek) Second half J- Pruitt J- Pruitt
WP: Turner (5IP, 4H, 1R, 1ER, 0BB, 8K). Top hitters: Woodstock - Butts 1-4 (2RBI), Turner 3-3 (3R), Ellegood 2-4 (R, RBI).
No. 2: Kizhakkadthu (GLN) d. Ramos (CLS) No. 3: Dzvirisin (PR) d. Arriola (McH), 6-3, 6-7, 6-2 Doubles No. 1: Quitalig/Higgin (McH) d. O’Connell/O’Connell (CLC), 6-4, 6-3 No. 2: Stanek/Maher (McH) d. Frederick/Grabner (Hunt), 6-3, 6-0 No. 3: Knight/Hutchins (GLC) d. Phillips/Bromir (McH), 6-0, 6-1 No. 4: Pacini/Baietto (CLS) d. Sedlacko/Kula (GLC), 6-4, 6-1
COLLEGE BASEBALL
NHL PLAYOFFS
PREPS
JOHNSBURG 3 RICHMOND-BURTON 2
PREPS BOYS TENNIS
Noon: Big Ten Tournament, Championship, Minnesota vs. Wisconsin, BTN
2:30 p.m.: Conference semiinals, Game 4, San Antonio at Golden State, ABC
IHSA Class 1A Harvard Regional Championship
WOODSTOCK 9, INDIAN CREEK 1 Indian Creek Woodstock
COLLEGE SOFTBALL
NBA PLAYOFFS
GIRLS SOCCER
MARIAN CENTRAL 13 WALTHER LUTHERAN 2 (5 INN.)
OTTAWA MARQUETTE 7,HEBRON 1 A-H OM
014 300 0 - 8 8 0 000 000 0 - 0 5 3
TV/Radio
000 00 - 0 1 2 000(10)x-10 12 1
WP: Hoskins (5IP, 1H, 0R, 0ER, 4K, 0BB). Top hitters: R-B - Schwegel 2-3 (2B), Etten 2-3 (2B), Dahlen 2-3 (HR), Mell 1-3 (HR), Hoskins 2-3.
RICHMOND-BURTON 8 OREGON 2 (6 INN.)
Oregon R-B
000 300 - 3 7 1 101 033 - 8 15 0
WP: Fionda (4K, 2BB). Top hitters: R-B - Kroll 2-4 (HR), Spohr 2-3 (2B), Mell 3-3 (2B).
HUNTLEY 6, SYCAMORE 3 Huntley Sycamore
100 004 1 - 6 9 0 002 000 1 - 3 9 0
WP: Spannraft, 13-8 (7IP, 3R, 3ER, 9H, 2BB, 4K). Top hitters: Huntley - Peterson 3-4 (2B, 2RBI), Brown 1-2 (2B, R), Walsh 1-3 (2B, 3RBI).
1-2 (2B, RBI), Funke 1-2.
MARENGO 17, SYCAMORE 5 Marengo Sycamore
WP: Kissack (7IP, 9H, 5R, 4ER, 1BB, 5K). Top hitters: Marengo - Reulius 3-3 (3RBI, 3R), Carlson 3-4 (4RBI, 2R), Kissack 3-5 (3R, RBI).
MARIAN CENTRAL 13 GUERIN PREP (5 INN.)
MARENGO 13, HUNTLEY 4 Marengo Huntley
004 403 2 - 13 17 3 210 001 0 - 4 7 3
WP: Kissack (7IP, 5H, 4R, 2ER, 2BB, 1K). LP: Spannraft, 13-9 (7IP, 17H, 13R, 9ER, 3BB, 1K). Top hitters: Marengo - Ruelius 5-5 (HR, 6RBI, 3R), Carlson 3-5 (HR, 3RBI, 2R), Cartwright 2-4 (RBI, 2R); Huntley Peterson 2-3 (2B, HR, R, 2RBI), Baczewski
212 103 8 - 17 20 2 310 100 0 - 5 9 3
MC Guerin
003 64 - 13 9 1 000 00 - 0 2 5
WP: Maxiener, 5-7 (5IP, 2H, 0R, 0ER, 3BB, 6K). Top hitters: Marian Central - Ricotta 3-4 (3R, 4RBI, HR, 3B), O’Hagan 2-3 (3R, 2RBI, HR, BB), Black 1-2 (3R, 3B, BB).
Page C10 â&#x20AC;˘ Sunday, May 12, 2013
Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com
INSIDE TODAY AY BUSINESS 2 BUSINESS Faces & Places. Page D2 • Time Capsule. Page D3 • For the Record. Page D3
Bob Sandidge & Anne Ward Have high expectations of your introverted employees. Page D2
M CHENRY COUNTY
EVERY WEEK IN THE BUSINESS SECTION
Business
Shari Gray Be a good neighbor – support local businesses. Page D5
Breaking news @ www.NWHerald.com
Business editor: Chris Cashman • ccashman@shawmedia.com DAVE SAYS Dave Ramsey
SECTION D Sunday, May 12, 2013 Northwest Herald
Home building worker shortage
“We have some very strong and highly talented leaders. But we’ll never have enough.”
Don’t put wants ahead of needs
Suzanne Hoban, executive director of Family Health Partnership Clinic in Woodstock
Dear Dave, Can you please define “necessities” in today’s world while trying to get out of debt and live on a budget?
By ALEX VEIGA
– Matthew
AP Real Estate Writer
Dear Matthew, Whether you’re talking about the world today or 50 years ago, necessities haven’t changed. Necessities are still food, shelter, clothing, transportation and utilities. We’re talking about needs versus wants. The problem is that many people were never taught that there’s a difference between the two – a big difference. Most people have enough food to eat and a decent place to live. Those are necessities. I’m not talking about eating out or having a big, fancy house. Those are wants. Most people also have enough clothes in the closet and a way to get around town. They may not have designer clothes or a fancy foreign sports car, but again, those are wants, not needs. Keeping the lights on and the house warm in winter and cool during the summer? Utilities are a need. But no one needs a $300 superdeluxe cable television package. Now, there are some important wants. I want you to have life insurance to protect your family. I also want you to have a will and health insurance. I want you to have some other nice things, too, like a better car or a nicer house. There’s nothing wrong, at some point, with having a few toys or eating at a good restaurant once in a while. But again, these things are wants, not needs. There’s nothing wrong with having a few wants, but you should define them correctly – and never, ever put them ahead of your needs!
– Dave
Dear Dave, I’d like to start investing in mutual funds, but I have no idea how they work. Could you explain about them please?
– Jennifer
Dear Jennifer, Simply put, a mutual fund – if it’s a stock mutual fund – is a group of 90–200 stocks. If it’s a growth stock mutual fund, then it’s a group of 90–200 growth stocks. Analysts buy the stocks they think will increase in price and sell the stocks they feel will go down in price. When the analysts buy growth stocks, it turns it into a growth stock mutual fund. If they buy bonds instead, it becomes a bond mutual fund. Several people put money into these groups, and that’s where you get the name “mutual fund.” They’re mutually funded. These types of investments are much safer than single stock investing because your money is spread across several different stocks. Plus, you’ve got people who know what they’re doing picking the stocks. My advice would be to take a hard look at mutual funds that have been out there for 10 to 20 years and have a good track record for a long period of time.
– Dave • Follow Dave on Twitter at @ DaveRamsey and on the web at daveramsey.com.
Kyle Grillot – kgrillot@shawmedia.com
Steve Otten, executive director of United Way of Greater McHenry County, poses for a portrait in his McHenry office Wednesday. “This job is not for everybody,” Otten said. “You have to be willing to give it everything for less than you think you’re worth.” Otten has been in his position since June 2012.
Leaders wanted Nonprofits face challenge in filling top spots By BRETT ROWLAND browland@shawmedia.com CRYSTAL LAKE – Local nonprofits could face growing recruitment challenges as the economy improves and Baby Boomers retire. This comes as social service agencies and charity organizations are serving more people than ever on smaller budgets. Some McHenry County nonprofit groups have struggled in recent years to fill top leadership positions. It took the McHenry County Community Foundation 21 months to find an executive director after its previous leader was let go in January 2011. In the interim, a board member filled the position. Other agencies have opted to hire executives from outside the area, including from other states. Last year, for example, Pioneer Center for Human Services brought president and CEO Patrick Maynard in from Cincinnati. A shortage of funding for leadership training combined with higher expectations for executives and tight budgets that limit compensation may be partly responsible for some of the nonprofit community’s
Sarah Nader – snader@shawmedia.com
Robin Doeden in her Woodstock office. Doeden was named CEO of the McHenry County Community Foundation last October. leadership challenges. Local service organizations would benefit from having more qualified executives, but the area doesn’t have a significant brain drain or talent drought, said Suzanne Hoban, executive director of Family Health Partnership Clinic in Woodstock.
Their “Free” Checking
“We have some very strong and highly talented leaders,” said Hoban, who has been instrumental in the county’s nonprofit community for many years. “But we’ll never have enough.” Several area nonprofits are seeking candidates for senior management
positions, including the Friends of McHenry County College Foundation and the Raue Center for the Arts. Growth in employment and wages in the nonprofit sector has outpaced the business and government sectors since 2008, according to a 2012 study from the Urban Institute. As the government and for-profit businesses and corporations shed jobs due to the recession and financial crisis, some workers migrated to the nonprofit industry. Retaining those employees could become more difficult in the future, according to the 2013 Nonprofit Employment Trends Survey by Nonprofit HR Solutions, a human resources firm with offices in Washington, D.C., and Chicago. “[Nonprofits] will face challenges ahead with the sector predicting a slow rise in turnover rates in the coming years as the economy improves,” the survey concluded. “Individual nonprofit organizations, and the sector as a whole, may begin to lose highly skilled and experienced employees in the years ahead.”
See LEADERS, page D5
The resurgent U.S. housing market has sent builders calling again for Richard Vap, who owns a drywall installation company. Vap would love to help — if he could hire enough qualified people. “There is a shortage of manpower,” says Vap, owner of South Valley Drywall in Littleton, Colo. “We’re probably only hiring about 75 or 80 percent of what we actually need.” U.S. builders and the subcontractors they depend on are struggling to hire fast enough to meet rising demand for new homes. Builders would be starting work on more homes – and contributing more to the economy – if they could fill more job openings. In the meantime, workers in the right locations with the right skills are commanding higher pay. The shortage of labor ranges across occupations – from construction superintendents and purchasing agents to painters, cabinet makers and drywall installers. The National Association of Home Builders says its members have complained of too few framers, roofers, plumbers and carpenters. The shortage is most acute in areas where demand for new homes has recovered fastest, notably in Arizona, California, Texas, Colorado and Florida. The problem results largely from an exodus of workers from the industry after the housing bubble burst. Experienced construction workers lost jobs. And many found new work – in commercial building or in booming and sometimes higher-paying industries like mining and natural gas drilling – and aren’t eager to come back. Hispanic immigrants, largely from Mexico, who had filled jobs during the boom were among those who left the industry and, in some cases, the United States. Dave Erickson, president of Greyhawk Homes in Columbus, Ga., lost an employee who took a job this year in Texas. The former employee is now installing fiber-optic cable and earning 30 percent more than he did as a construction supervisor. “I think he’s frustrated with the cycle we went through in recent years,” Erickson says.
See SHORTAGE, page D5
Ours
Golden Eagle Community Bank www.bankgoldeneagle.com g g Focused on You 815-321-5000 975 Country Club Road, PO Box 1930, Woodstock, IL 60098
Lobby Hours: M-F 9-5 • Sat. 9-1
BUSINESS
Page D2 • Sunday, May 12, 2013
Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com
Have high expectations of your introverts Anne’s story: I remember it so well. The meeting took place more than 20 years ago, but it’s colored by that emotional resonance that makes distant events feel like they just occurred. I had started my first business a year before that National Association of Women Business Owners (NAWBO) meeting in the Chicago Loop. I knew it was time to start networking, to meet other business owners. There was so much to learn – about sales, about the kinds of business services I needed, and about how to run a successful business. I thought that getting together with other women who were also business owners might be easier for me since I had never been to such an event. By the time I walked in, dozens of women were already gathered. This is my perception of that first meeting: Everyone was dressed like a Fortune 500 executive. Everyone had obviously just freshened their flawless makeup. And, of course, everyone was already fully engaged
in a group, talking and laughing. I felt like a donkey wandering into a stable of Arabian stallions. Believe it or not, I joined NAWBO that evening and I kept going to the monthly meetings. For the first several months, I had to steel myself to walk into that room filled with so many perfect specimens of the female business world. Eventually, I realized I wasn’t the lone outsider. There was always someone new or someone who, like me, braved a couple of evenings each month to make and keep connections for her business. I met women at NAWBO who I did business with for years. It got easier. Bob has had similar experiences. We both tend more toward the introverted end of the introversion/ extroversion continuum. During a seven-hour drive last year, we listened together to the audiobook version of Susan Cain’s 2012 book, “Quiet: The Power of Introverts in a World That Can’t Stop Talking.” One of the facts Susan reported surprised us. Depending on how
MANAGEMENT Bob Sandidge & Anne Ward you measure, one-third to one-half of our population is introverted. We assumed the number was much smaller – but then we thought about all of the times people told us they were surprised that we considered ourselves to be introverts. Cain wrote an entire chapter about what she calls pseudo-extroversion: people who appear more extroverted in areas of their lives that demand they show up socially, such as working with people in an office, at conferences, or networking events. That brought Anne back to her NAWBO experiences. By the end of that first year, she looked more extroverted in the group. The more comfortable we are, the more extroverted we appear. Through the years, we’ve learned skills that allow us to feel more
comfortable and to reach out to others who could use a bit of comfort in large gatherings with new people. One really good conversation is worth more than 100 business cards. And yet, we still require a good bit of quiet time after such events because introverts expend so much energy just being in social situations, even when they’re enjoyable and productive. We’d like to offer our fellow business friends a few tips to help make your business environment work better for the introverts in your company so they can work better for you: • In meetings, get thoughts and input from everyone, not just those who tend to speak first, loudest, or most often. Introverts need time to think. Sending an agenda in advance allows them to gather information and ideas. • When you’re facilitating a larger group, have people write down their answers to important questions before they start talking in groups. This allows introverts to
explore their thoughts without the overwhelming energy of so many people talking. • Design a mix of open/social spaces along with private/solo spaces for people to do different types of work. A smaller, more intimate space often allows introverts more thinking space for one-to-one conversations or smaller meetings. • Have high expectations of your introverts: assume that everyone has at least one superpower. Help people find and develop their powers, and you’ll reap the benefits.
• Anne Ward and Bob Sandidge, CreativeCore Media in Algonquin, are marketing, communication, management and training consultants who help small business and non-profits overcome the marketing and motivational myths that are keeping them and their businesses from unbounded success. AnneBob@CreativeCore.com – www.NLPeople.com.
8FACES & PLACES
Provided photo
Forrest Press Printing, 1010 W. Northwest Hwy., Lake Barrington, recently celebrated façade improvements to its 3,000-square-foot, ranch-style facility owned by the Olker family – Char and sons Steve and Chuck. The business has been printing for the business community since 1963. Pictured at a ribbon-cutting ceremony are (from left): Cary Grove chamber Executive Director Suzanne Corr, Chuck Barrett of Frisch & Barrett Insurance Agency, Steve, Char and Chuck Olker of Forrest Press, and Lisa Raupp of Mary Kay Cosmetics.
Provided photo
New Crystal Lake Chamber of Commerce member Crystal Lake Family Dental, 651 W. Terra Cotta Ave. #201, had a ribbon cutting recently. Pictured (from left, going up the stairs, then down)) are: Denise Rakofsky, Dr. David H. Min, Ann Viger, John Pletz, Barbara Dinkelman, Dawn Moll, Molly Mungle, Lauren Mueller, and Alexandra Lambert.
Provided photo
Provided photo
Prairie Community Bank ended its recent eStatement campaign with a drawing for $500 cash. The campaign encouraged customers to receive their account statements electronically, reducing paper, increasing security and saving them time. The winner of the $500 cash prize, Paul Fritz, is pictured with Christine Blum, vice president of Prairie Community Bank.
The McHenry Area Chamber of Commerce celebrated a ribbon cutting for the 20th anniversary of Greenscape Design Inc. in McHenry. Pictured (from left) are: Todd Lowenheim, Lowenheim Insurance Agency; Wayne Seely, Visual Horizons Internet Marketing; Lisa Cowger, Palmarium Home Inspection Service Inc.; Kay Rial Bates, McHenry Area Chamber of Commerce holding Daniel Reyes; Joan Lila, owner; Tom Riggs, Any Key Computer Services; Kerry Webster, True Blue Coupons; Gina Kappler, The Gum Gal; Frank Hosticka, LegalShield; Greg Mayer, Country Financial; and Kurt Rice, A Better Water Treatment Co.
Provided photo
The Crystal Lake Chamber of Commerce staff participated in the Bob Blazier Run for the Arts 5K Run/Walk May 5, finishing with a time of 54 minutes (they walked). Pictured (from left) are: Anne O’Hara, Sharon Repplinger, Gary Reece, Jackie Ruiz and Sue Bechtold. The annual event benefits the Raue Center for the Arts, a nonprofit theater and arts organization in Crystal Lake.
Provided photo
Modern Wave Salon and Spa, 395 Cary-Algonquin Road, Cary, recently participated with Aveda Salons nationwide toward a Guinness World Record for haircuts and raised money locally for the Alliance for the Great Lakes, a regional organization dedicated to conserving and restoring the world’s largest fresh water resource. During the event, held on Earth Day April 22, Modern Wave performed 100 cuts with proceeds benefiting the Alliance and their efforts to protect the Great Lakes. Modern Wave hair stylists and staff were out in force during the cut-a-thon, which also featured celebrity appearances by former Blackhawk Murray Bannerman, shown above in middle of front row.
Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com
8FOR THE RECORD The following information was provided by Record Information Services (www.public-record. com) of Kaneville, a company that compiles public record information from Cook, DuPage, Kane, Kendall, Lake, McHenry and Will counties. This list contains business-to-business filings and does not represent the entire public record. These McHenry County records were gathered as of May 10:
Incorporations April 12 – JGW Real Estate Services Inc., 6606 Thistle Ct., Cary 60013-1492, Joseph Woodbury April 19 – Mystic Martini Inc., 263 King St., Crystal Lake 60014-5708, Michelle Rozovics
Business licenses April 12 – Dominics Plumbing, 443 W. Washington St., Marengo 60152-2153, Mike Huron April 12 – Extra Eyez Inspections, 1401 Savannah Ln., Woodstock 60098, Donald Fischer April 12 – Fox Valley Window Cleaning, 709 Bayberry Dr., Cary 60013-2460, James Nixon April 12 – Honeycraft, 1120 Pond Point Rd., Woodstock 60098-9290, Amy Furrow April 12 – Hub Lounge, 15 N. Ayer St., Harvard 60033-2860, Eric Brehm April 12 – Jenkins Custom Photography, 239 N. River Rd., Algonquin 60102-2494, Beverly Jenkins April 12 – Northern Love Golden Retrievers, 677 Saddle Rdg., Crystal Lake 60012-3600, Nancy Gadd April 12 – Superheat Hvac, 19518 Bunker Hill Rd., Woodstock 60098-9282, Robert Michelau April 12 – Tax Appeal Chicago, 801 W. Algonquin Rd. Unit 7492, Algonquin 60102-1021, Alex Kowalkoski April 12 – Woodstock Tax, 810 Robert Dr., Woodstock 600982485, Ricky Nevsimal April 19 – AGP Mobile Entertainment, 830 Kingston Ln., Crystal Lake 60014-7624, Alan Perri April 19 – Bm Powered Coaching, 14 Riverdale Ct., Algonquin 60102-6821, Stephanie Drawhorn April 19 – Bonafide Home Services, 415 Eastview Ave., Lakemoor 60051-3209, Louis Molenda April 19 – Century Manor Publishing, 9622 Main St., Hebron 60034-8942, Kenneth Pedraza April 19 – Elefawn Designs, 7702 Gene Dr., Wonder Lake 60097-9332, Katherine Erickson April 19 – EMCS Enterprise, 5810 Wilmot Rd., McHenry
8TIME CAPSULE 60051-8400, Eric Mancilla April 19 – Loony Acres, 2211 N. Queen Anne Rd., Woodstock 60098-8490, Theresa Gould April 19 – Me & Bean, 4590 Rolling Hills Dr., Lake in the Hills 60156-5526, Cari Deflorio April 19 – MSR Enterprises, 7420 Maple Dr., Wonder Lake 60097-9520, Michael Kunz April 19 – PR Save Inc. Co., 105 1/2 E. Church St., Woodstock 60098-3348, Armando Escutia April 26 – Ameriformance LLC, 450 Jennings Dr. Ste. D, Lake in the Hills 60156-1600, Neal Tatroe April 26 – Asharta Music, 512 Lincoln Ave., Fox River Grove 60021-1409, Amy Dixon Kolar April 26 – Diamond Window Service, 1204 S. Green St., McHenry 60050-8186, Brigid Sterwerf April 26 – Dyno Dogs, 1122 W. Northeast Shore Dr., McHenry 60051-9212, William Crenshaw April 26 – Need To Know, 303 W. Jackson St. Apt. 2A, Woodstock 60098-3180, Terry Barnhill Jr. April 26 – Property Management Services, 5010 W. Lake Shore Dr., Wonder Lake 600978714, Alvin Johnson April 26 – Route 47 Storage, 10403 N. Route 47, Huntley 60142, Magdalena Gogol April 26 – Sunrise Underground Sprinklers LLC, 2802 Shorewood Dr., McHenry 60050-2647, Tamara Tomasello April 26 – Supreme Backyards, 707 S. Emerald Dr., McHenry 60051-9441, Camille Perkins April 26 – TD Team Icon, 581 S. Route 31 Unit 230, McHenry 60050, Daniel Marko April 26 – Verde Landscaping, 2801 Benjamin Dr., Wonder Lake 60097-8551, Eloy Pablo April 26 – Wonder Lake Country Store, 6014 N. Mill Dr. Unit C, Wonder Lake 60097-9110, Betsy Manshoor May 3 – Carlson Admin, 1575 Lowe Dr., Algonquin 601022335, Susan Malcolm (Store, office, commercial properties) $285,000, 1065 Lake Ave., Woodstock 60098-7422, 13 09 305 008 0000, American Community Bank & Trust to Lake Avenue Office Center LLC, March 22 $900,000, 1411 S Eastwood Dr., Woodstock 60098-4650, 13 09 351 023 0000, Southgate Fabric Care Co to 88 Group LLC, March 26 $14,700, 20503 Telegraph St., Marengo 60152-9479, 11 36 201 002 0000, Victory Rock Fellowship Trustee to IDOT, April 1
Tuesday, May 21
• 5 to 7 p.m.: Multi-chamber mixer at The Barn Nursey & Landscape, 8109 S. Route 31, Cary.
• 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m.: Alliance of Professional Women Luncheon: The Power of Habit Book Club, Famous Dave’s, 1521 S. Randall Road, Algonquin. RSVP: 847-658-5300. • 5 to 7 p.m.: Gary Lang Auto Group multi-chamber mixer, 1107 S. Route 31, McHenry.
Thursday, May 16 • 11:30 a.m.: Woodstock chamber hosts annual State of the City luncheon at Woodstock Country Club, 10310 Country Club Road, Woodstock. • 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m.: Crystal Lake chamber Out To Lunch at Chen Chinese Cuisine, 6100 Northwest Hwy., Crystal Lake. • 5 to 7 p.m.: Business after Hours mixer at Algonquin Bank & Trust, 4049 W. Algonquin Road, Algonquin.
‘Judge’ Buehler’s Grocery Store in Crystal Lake This photo, taken in about 1906, shows the grocery store of John “Judge” Buehler on the corner of McHenry Avenue and Virginia Street in Crystal Lake. It was known at the time as “Buehler’s Corner.” Buehler was born in 1851 in Germany. He was orphaned at age 10 by the death of his parents and apprenticed to a shoemaker. At age 17 he set out for America. He lived in New York, Chicago, and Algonquin and finally settled in Crystal Lake in about 1870. He opened a small grocery business, and then gradually expanded into a general merchandise and hardware operation. In 1889 he added an insurance business and in 1900 a real estate operation. He remained at that location many years. Although having little formal education himself, he was very active in promoting civic and education advancement. He served on the town board for 15 years, was Justice of the Peace for 30 years (earning the name “Judge”), helped in the building of three new schoolhouses and organized the first German language Sunday School. John Buehler died in 1927.
Photo provided by the McHenry County Historical Society
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Tuesday, May 14
• 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.: McHenry chamber Golf Outing, “Home of TaylorMade,” McHenry Country Club, 820 N. John St.; $135 per person for golf, lunch and dinner. Call 815385-4300. • 10:30 a.m. to 3 p.m.: Algonquin Lake in the Hills chamber wwWednesday Social Media Meet Up, chamber office, 2114 W. Algonquin Road, Lake in the Hills.
Sunday, May 12, 2013 • Page D3
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8CALENDAR
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$99.99 2-yr. price – $50 mail-in rebate debit card.
All phones require a new 2-yr. activation.
Wednesday, May 22 • 11:30 a.m. to 1:15 p.m.: “Change Your Money Mindset, Change Your Life,” WINGs luncheon, 31 North Banquet & Conference Center, 217 N. Route 31, McHenry; $28 chamber members, $33 nonmembers. Call 815-385-4300. • 5 to 6:15 p.m.: Discover the Chamber orientation, McHenry chamber office, 1257 N. Green St.
Take your entertainment to go on a sleek 7" screen with the
Friday, May 24
Samsung Galaxy Tab® 2 (7.0) $ 99
• 7:30 to 8:30 a.m.: Followup networking extravaganza, McHenry chamber office, 1257 N. Green St., McHenry.
Wednesday, May 29 • 6 to 9 p.m.: Crystal Lake chamber Annual Dinner, Crystal Lake Country Club, 721 Country Club Road, Crystal Lake. Call 815-459-1300, ext. 14.
199
Requires new 2-yr. activation.
Now, get a headset with total comfort and extended range, on the
MOTOROLA HX550 Bluetooth® Headset WAS $59.99 NOW $ 99 JUST
39
1.800.256.4646 • VERIZON.COM/REDHOT • VZW.COM/STORELOCATOR Activation/upgrade fee/line: Up to $35. IMPORTANT CONSUMER INFORMATION: Subject to Cust. Agmt, Calling Plan, rebate form & credit approval. Up to $350 early termination fee/line. Offers & coverage, varying by svc, not available everywhere; see vzw.com. While supplies last. Limited-time offers. Restocking fee may apply. Rebate debit card takes up to 6 wks & expires in 12 months. LTE is a trademark of ETSI. 4G LTE is available in more than 475 markets in the U.S. DROID is a trademark of Lucasfilm Ltd. and its related companies. Used under license. © 2013 Samsung Telecommunications America, LLC (“Samsung”). Samsung and Galaxy Tab are both trademarks of Samsung Electronics America, Inc. and/or its related entities. © 2013 Verizon Wireless. IRHMD
Page D4 â&#x20AC;˘ Sunday, May 12, 2013
Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com
BUSINESS
Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com
8WALL STREET WEEK IN REVIEW
Stocks increase for third week in a row The Associated Press NEW YORK – The stock market closed out its third straight week of gains, led by small-company stocks. The Dow Jones industrial average rose 35 points to 15,118 points Friday, a gain of 0.2 percent. The Dow rose 1 percent for the week and 15 percent so far this year. The Standard & Poor’s 500 rose seven points to 1,633, or 0.4 percent. The Nasdaq rose 27 points to 3,436, or 0.8 percent. Small-company stocks rose even more than the rest of the market. The Russell 2000 rose nine points, or 0.9 percent, to 975. Its weekly gain of 2.2 percent is twice as much as the Dow and S&P 500. Two stocks rose for every one that fell on the New York Stock Exchange. Volume was light at 3 billion shares. The gains in the stock market were broad. Nine of the 10 industry groups in the S&P 500 index were higher. Health care stocks rose the most, 1.1 percent. Dow stocks were held back by falling commodity prices. Exxon Mobil, Caterpillar and Alcoa – Dow members whose fortunes are tied to the prices of crude oil and other basic materials – closed down 1 percent or more. The price of commodities including crude oil and gold fell sharply as the dollar strengthened against other currencies, especially the Japanese yen. When the dollar rises against other currencies, it tends to weaken demand for commodities. Since commodities are priced in dollars, buyers using other currencies get less for their money when the dollar appreciates, and they respond by buying less. Prices for crude oil and gold fell. Crude fell 35 cents to $96.04 a barrel in New York, a loss of 0.4 percent. Gold fell $32 to $1,436 an ounce, or 2.2 percent. Stocks have benefited from record-high corporate profits. Nearly all companies in the S&P 500 have reported first
quarter earnings. The average net income for companies in the index is expected to rise 5 percent, according to S&P Capital IQ, a research firm. “The talk at the end of April was company earnings are slowing” and investors might sell, said Gary Flam, who manages stock portfolios at Bel Air Investment Advisors. “But clearly that’s not been the case in the first ten days.” The S&P rose every day since the beginning of the month until Thursday, when it fell six points. On Friday it closed up 7.03 points at 1,633.70, an increase of 0.4 percent. Flam speculates that stocks are rising partly because investors have shifted from fear to greed. “The last few years, risk was defined as losing money,” he said. “The last few months, it’s been defined as not making money.” Among stocks in the news: • Priceline.com and chip maker Nvidia both rose about 4 percent after reporting higher earnings. Priceline jumped $27.91 to $765 and Nvidia was up 63 cents to $14.54. • Clothing store chain Gap rose after reporting higher sales in April and predicting first-quarter earnings that were higher than financial analysts expected. Gap rose $2.18 to $40.99, or 5.6 percent. • True Religion Apparel, known for high-priced jeans, rose $2.38, or 8 percent, to $31.82 after announcing it had agreed to a buyout offer of about $826 million from the investment management firm TowerBrook Capital Partners LP. • Dell climbed after activist investor Carl Icahn and another big investor fighting founder Michael Dell’s offer to take the company private launched another broadside against the plan. In a letter to Dell’s board, they proposed a deal that would keep the company public and pay shareholders cash or stock worth $12 a share. Dell rose 13 cents, or 1 percent, to $13.45 per share.
Stock
Friday close
P/E ratio
50-day 200-day avg. avg.
Abbott AbbVie AGLResources Allstate Apple AptarGroup AT&T BankofMontreal Baxter CMEGroup Coca-Cola Comcast Covidien DeanFoods DowChemical Exelon ExxonMobil Facebook Ford GeneralMotors Google Hillshire IBM JPMorganChase Kohl’s KraftFoods LiveNation McDonald’s Microsoft Modine MotoSolutions OfficeMax Pepsico PulteGroup Safeway Sears Snap-on SouthwestAir SUPERVALU TargetCorp. UnitedContinent. Wal-Mart Walgreen WasteMgmt. WintrustFinancial
36.17 45.01 43.59 49.39 452.97 56.49 37.36 61.63 70.76 62.52 42.15 43.08 66.18 18.98 34.46 35.75 90.14 26.68 14.11 31.42 880.23 35.19 204.47 48.96 48.90 55.22 14.07 100.20 32.69 9.42 56.48 11.62 83.00 23.22 24.46 56.83 89.34 14.16 6.45 69.74 32.88 78.89 48.72 41.21 36.46
11.02 13.31 17.35 10.72 10.81 24.24 28.89 10.00 17.09 23.95 22.06 18.16 17.19 22.22 42.39 32.03 9.17 580.00 9.57 10.78 26.34 5.36 14.10 8.74 11.73 20.08 18.58 16.87 17.80 2.45 21.27 29.85 9.16 16.58 27.66 15.43 15.72 21.66 23.55 14.88
36.13 42.71 42.75 49.16 431.59 56.18 37.49 62.11 70.53 60.94 41.40 41.15 66.28 18.48 32.21 35.63 89.02 26.63 13.29 29.41 805.29 34.75 205.62 48.30 47.30 50.89 12.50 100.81 28.63 9.10 60.94 11.47 80.60 20.18 25.38 50.02 83.67 13.27 5.38 69.23 31.16 77.31 48.14 39.36 36.50
33.48 39.08 40.73 44.42 505.66 52.07 35.41 61.59 67.86 56.90 38.55 38.71 61.49 18.50 31.79 32.13 88.93 26.16 12.58 27.65 744.27 30.97 199.33 45.93 46.89 47.31 10.50 93.73 27.94 9.13 58.03 10.48 73.99 20.23 20.72 49.49 80.35 11.31 3.84 64.24 25.94 72.49 40.57 35.82 36.93
52-week range 28.46-37.55 33.33-46.32 36.59-44.32 32.42-50.56 385.10-705.07 45.19-57.69 32.71-39.00 50.95-64.79 48.98-72.85 49.54-63.63 35.58-42.96 28.09-43.36 50.25-68.83 11.66-19.57 27.45-35.06 28.40-39.82 77.13-93.67 17.55-45.00 8.82-14.30 18.72-32.44 556.52-880.54 24.31-36.18 181.85-215.90 30.83-51.00 41.35-55.25 42.00-55.69 8.16-14.13 83.31-103.70 26.26-33.91 5.50-9.63 44.49-64.72 4.10-14.92 66.32-84.32 7.63-23.59 14.73-28.42 38.40-68.77 56.88-89.95 8.00-14.49 1.68-6.58 54.68-70.99 17.45-33.92 58.81-79.50 28.53-50.35 30.82-41.55 31.67-39.81
Sunday, May 12, 2013 • Page D5
Good neighbors shop local On Thursday, the Woodstock chamber will host the city of Woodstock’s annual State of the City address to chamber members. This address is an event that is highly anticipated and this year’s luncheon is no exception. Woodstock’s new City Manager Roscoe Stelford and Mayor Brian Sager will report on the state of Woodstock. While the city of Woodstock has done an outstanding job of presenting an annual balanced budget and shown fiscal responsibility in adhering to those budget constraints, the state of Illinois has not done so well. Increased frustration over a lack of a plan addressing the state’s fiscal woes has generated additional chatter among small business owners. We all have our opinion as to how we got where we are and what needs to be done to correct it. Perhaps the one group that is most vulnerable to the decisions being made and their overall impact are the small business owners. The chamber’s membership is made up of mostly small businesses that have five or fewer employees. For these business owners, customers are the lifeblood of their businesses. Without a customer base there is little to no hope on their ability to thrive and/or survive. The impact of losing just one busi-
CHAMBER NEWS Shari Gray ness can create a snowball effect in many facets of life in Woodstock. It affects our local tax dollars, jobs, commerce, housing and schools. If you frequent a local business and it goes under, it may cause you to seek a like business or service outside of the area. Now you’re supporting the commerce of a community that’s not your own. This also means the loss of employment and revenue to a household in Woodstock. With the loss of income comes the possibility of moving to where the jobs are. Again, this results in dollars leaving our community. The Woodstock Chamber of Commerce & Industry supports a pledge of “Shop Local First.” This is more than a matter of civic pride; it’s a fiscal responsibility to the betterment of the Woodstock community. Think of it as a best-case scenario of the trickle-down effect. You dine at a local restaurant, your money goes to support the locally owned establishment. Not only that, but the locally based wait staff, kitchen staff and management all
• LEADERS Continued from page D1 Demand for nonprofit services has been on the rise since the recession, but declines in donations and government funding have put additional pressures on many organizations. The nonprofit sector has long been at a disadvantage in attracting top talent, largely because it has been unable to match the pay available to leaders in business and government. “Nonprofits remain focused on doing the most good so they want the best and brightest, but it’s difficult because they don’t have the budgets and resources,” said Lindsay Nichols, a spokeswoman for GuideStar, an organization that provides information on the nonprofit industry. Nearly a third of the organizations surveyed by Nonprofit HR Solutions cited an inability to pay competitive salaries as their top obstacle to retaining employees. “Compensation is a really big factor when it comes to finding qualified candidates,” said Robyn Ostrem, executive director of Big Brothers Big Sisters of McHenry County. While the county has an “incredible talent pool,” Ostrem said it can be a struggle to connect the right people with the right organizations. The expectations for nonprofit leaders has changed significantly in recent decades. Executives must be passionate about an agency’s mission and possess
Northwest Herald file photo
Suzanne Hoban, executive director of Family Health Partnership in Woodstock, accepts a 2012 Women of Distinction award. the skills needed to raise money, balance budgets, and motivate volunteers. They also need to be more transparent about nonprofit finance. “Every aspect of nonprofit leadership has changed in the last 15 years,” said Robin Doeden, executive director of McHenry County Community Foundation. Nonprofit leaders are expected to be
• SHORTAGE Continued from page D1 A shortage of labor in a well-paying industry might seem incongruous in an economy stuck with a still-high 7.5 percent unemployment rate. But it reflects just how many former skilled construction workers have moved on to other fields. In 2006, when the boom peaked, 3.4 million people worked in homebuilding. By 2011, the figure had bottomed at about 2 million. As of last month, about 2.1 million people were employed in residential construction. Jobs in the industry did rise 4.1 percent in April from a year earlier, faster than overall U.S. job growth. But they’d have to surge 24 percent more to reach 2.6 million, their 2002 level — “the last time the market was normal,” says David Crowe, chief economist for the National Association of Home Builders. For now, the industry is building faster than it’s hiring. In February, builders began work on single-family homes at the fastest pace in five years. And in March, new home construction broke the 1 million mark for the first time since June 2008. Permits for future construction are also near a five-year high. In the 12 months that ended in March, housing starts surged 47 percent. Yet over the same period, the industry’s employment grew just 3.7 percent. Normally, a rebound in home construction helps propel an economy after a recession. But even with the steady gains in housing starts, sales and prices since last year, the industry remains below levels considered healthy. The National Association of Home Builders says nearly half its members who responded to a survey in March said a scarcity of labor has led to delays in completing work. Fifteen percent have had to turn down some projects. “I can’t find qualified people to fill the positions that I have open,” says Vishaal Gupta, president of Park Square Homes in Orlando, Fla. If not for the labor shortage, “I would be able to build more homes this year and meet more demand
AP photo
Richard Vap, owner of South Valley Drywall, poses for a photo at a home construction site with one of his crews working in the background in Lakewood, Colo. The resurgent U.S. housing market has sent builders calling again for Vap, but Vap says he is having trouble hiring enough qualified people. than I can handle today.” Gupta’s company is facing a side effect of the labor shortage: Demand for higher pay from qualified workers. On some occasions, he says he’s been outbid by rivals that need contractors for their own projects. Gupta’s preferred paint contractor left for a rival that paid more. His new cabinet contractor is about 10 percent more expensive than the one Gupta used before. The higher pay they’re handing out helps explain why builders have been gradually raising prices on new homes. The median price was $247,000 in March, up about 12 percent from the same month in 2011, the Commerce Department says. The industry may have to look more aggressively for workers at vocational schools, federally funded programs like Job Corps and elsewhere, says Crowe of the homebuilders group. “We’ll have to recruit more,” he says. Vap, owner of South Valley Drywall, rode out the downturn after the housing crash in part by relying on commercial construction projects. He cut his residential construction staff from 244 in 2006 to 80 in 2009. This year, Vap has hired 15 field employees for residential construction and says he needs to hire 35 more to do the work he foresees in 2013. During the 2005-2006 housing boom years, Gupta had to bring in work-
get a piece of the pie. This is not to mention the tax dollars that go to the city, which in turn supports police, and other civic entities. I like to think that living in Woodstock is more than mere residency – it is belonging to a fellowship and with that comes responsibility. Being a good neighbor is more than mowing your lawn in a timely fashion, it is supporting local businesses – ensuring their survival and, in turn, their ability to also be a good neighbor. Washington, D.C., is a long way from Woodstock and for better or for worse the impending decisions on the national economy are now in the hands of our elected officials. But in terms of the local economy, your voice is heard with every dollar you spend – whether you decide to shop local first and support Woodstock’s small business owners, or whether you choose to invest in someone else’s community. So, I encourage you to be empowered. Make the conscious decision to spend your dollars locally and to support our small businesses. It is in your hands to keep Woodstock strong.
• Shari Gray is executive director of the Woodstock Chamber of Commerce & Industry.
just as professional and polished as their colleagues in the for-profit sector, she added. The McHenry County Community Foundation recently joined with a much larger nonprofit organization, the Chicago Community Trust. Having the trust’s back-office staff to handle administrative tasks such as payroll and accounting enables the local foundation’s staff to spend more time on projects in McHenry County, Doeden said. Such collaboration could become more common in the future. As could the use of temporary employees and consultants, according to the 2013 Nonprofit Employment Trends Survey. The hurdles are even higher for smaller nonprofit groups with smaller budgets, said Steve Otten executive director of United Way of Greater McHenry County. Even so, Otten said the county’s nonprofit community remains strong. “I’ve been really impressed with the leadership of the United Way’s partner agencies,” he said. “McHenry County is truly blessed.” Nonetheless, the community could do more to cultivate future nonprofit executives as a today’s veteran leaders prepare to retire. Hoban challenged philanthropists and donors to consider helping charitable organizations by giving them money for training and leadership development. “We need to educate people about the need for that kind of funding,” she said.
ers from Texas because there weren’t enough employees in Florida to keep up with construction. He doubts many of those veterans will return. “A lot of people who are from other states or from Mexico are not willing to come back here as fast as they did last time because of what they experienced,” Gupta says. Between 2005 and 2010, 1.4 million Mexicans moved from the United States to Mexico — roughly twice as many as in the previous five-year period, according to the Pew Research Center. Though an estimated 11 million people remain in the United States illegally, the influx of illegal immigration from Mexico has essentially stopped, says Douglas Massey, a professor of sociology at Princeton University. “The Mexican economy is doing quite well, with strong growth in manufacturing and both skilled and unskilled services,” Massey notes. “If construction demand picks up, we may see an uptick in Mexican immigration, but I think the boom years are likely over.” Crowe and other economists predict that as demand for new homes strengthens further, higher wages will woo back many laborers who took up other jobs during the downturn. The homebuilders association is pushing Congress to let more immigrants enter the country through a worker visa program. The association cites census data showing that foreign-born workers make up about 22 percent of the U.S. home construction work force. It estimates there are 116,000 unfilled jobs. Still, even if builders find more workers to hire, two other factors could hold back the industry for a while: A tight supply of building materials and readyto-build land. Surveys by the National Association of Home Builders show that builders have grown concerned about those obstacles. In part, that’s why Crowe thinks employment in single-family home building won’t return to its 2002 total until 2016. And he isn’t unhappy about that. “In a perverse sort of way, the mild housing recovery is probably a good thing,” Crowe says. “We need to rebuild the infrastructure of the industry.”
Page D6 â&#x20AC;˘ Sunday, May 12, 2013
Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com
Sunday,February May 12, 2013 Tuesday, 22, 2011
jobs
Classified Ads Inside!
Call 815-455-4800 Toll free 800-589-8237
E-mail: classified@shawsuburban.com
10 Questions to Ask When Negotiating Salary By Dona DeZube, Monster Finance Careers Expert
situation,” he says. “If they have no tolerance for questions, you need to know that up front.”
What you ask for during a salary negotiation doesn’t just influence how much you earn -- it also tells your future employer whether you’re good at negotiating, which is a skill you can put to work for the employer once you’re hired. Negotiating salary doesn’t come naturally to many Americans, says Matthew DeLuca, author of
Think of a salary negotiation as your chance to shine. “The person on the other side of the desk is evaluating you,” DeLuca says. “This is going to show you’re astute in dealing with the outside world. When you get the offer, don’t let your guard down -- you’re still on the firing line. Feel confident, because they’ve come to you with an offer.”
Perfect Phrases for Negotiating Salary and Job Offers: Hundreds of Ready-to-Use Phrases to Help You Get the Best Possible Salary, Perks, or Promotion. “Most people in our country are not used to bargaining,” he says, “But if you don’t bargain, you’re not going to get all you should.” Perfect Phrases explains how to negotiate salary, but DeLuca’s tips also apply to contract and project-based pay negotiations. In both cases, the people on the other side of the salary negotiations are trying to get you for the most cost-effective price. To win your best salary, continue talking until you get everything you want, whether that’s a higher base, an early salary review or companypaid childcare, DeLuca says. “There’s always a risk involved with any questions you raise when the offer is made, but it’s better to ask questions then, because if [the company is] uncompromising, that’s not a healthy
To make sure you get all you deserve, DeLuca recommends asking these 10 questions:
Assistant Controller
Demonstrate that you’re professional, polished and polite by saying thank you, and immediately follow to make sure that you really have just been offered a job.
Don’t accept an offer that isn’t in writing. Not everyone is honest. If you quit a job based on the verbal promise of a new job that then falls through, you’ll have no job and no recourse.
2. “Is this negotiable?”
6. “Will there be a sign-on Once the salary offer is revealed, bonus?” it never hurts to ask if they’ll put more money on the table. If they say no, you can move on to negotiate other items.
3. “Is this base only?” Asking if the figure you’re offered is total compensation or base compensation lets the interviewer know you’re interested in the details of bonuses and stock options, and it opens up other questions about bonus opportunities.
Brown Printing Co., a leader in the magazine publishing industry, is seeking entry-level Bindery Utility workers with prior machine operating experience. Must be willing to work flexible hours and have a high school diploma or GED. We offer a clean, safe work environment and a competitive benefit package.
-Heavy highway construction. See our website at www.plote.com for job listing. Fax resume: 847-628-6113 or e-mail: hrdept@plote.com EOE
Apply in person 8am - 4pm at:
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BRICKLAYERS - Experienced
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DELI SERVER - $9/hr CASHIER – Exp. -$11/hr. STOCKING/ CLEANING-Exp. 1309 North Ave. Crystal Lake 815-477-4141
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Brown Printing Company 11595 McConnell Rd Woodstock, IL EOE/AAP Call 815-337-5913
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Never accept a job offer on the spot. In our society, you’re perceived as more effective if you’re thoughtful. Plus, stalling gives you time to consider your negotiation strategy. You can say, “This is a great job, and I really want it, but in my experience, I’m better off thinking about it and coming back to you.” Never say you need to discuss it with your spouse -- you want to appear confident and capable of making a decision on your own.
5. “Will I get the offer in writing?”
1. “Thanks -- is this a firm job offer?”
BINDERY WORKERS
Accounting
4. “When would you like an answer?”
Manufacturing
Camfil Farr, a leader in the air filtration industry has immediate employment opportunities for in its Crystal Lake facility for the following positions:
Light Weight Assemblers in our Pleated Filter Department - 3 openings on 2nd shift (2pm – 10:30pm), 1 opening on 1st shift (5:30pm - 2pm). Responsibilities include assembling proper components to make a pleated filter. Must have the ability to read and interpret standard work procedures. Proficiency in all units of measure is preferred. High School education or GED is required. Background check and drug test are required. Must be able to read, write and understand English.
If they say no, your response is, “OK, I’m just asking.” Just because the pay isn’t negotiable doesn’t mean other aspects of the job aren’t. Ask for flextime, telecommuting or anything else that’s important to you.
7. “What is the start date?” This is a way to reaffirm that the offer is serious. Most people want you to start immediately but will
DELIVERY DRIVER Experienced delivery driver wanted Full-time, 1st shift for a large heavy duty truck dealership in the Northwest Suburbs. Job Requirements: Must have C license or better Good driving record Unassisted lifting up to 75 lbs We offer excellent pay and benefits. Please send resume to: yourofficemgr@yahoo.com
RECRUIT LOCAL! Target your recruitment message to McHenry County or reach our entire area. For more information, call 800-589-8237 or email: helpwanted@ shawsuburban.com
DRIVERS
3 FT positions avail. Weekends a must. No drinking/no drugs. Subject to random drug test. Must have clean driving record. Over 24 yrs. nec. Must have positive attitude and team player. We focus and strive on making people get home safe. Serious inquiries only. Start ASAP.
To set up interview call: 773-614-9749
Send your Help Wanted Advertising 24/7 to: Email: helpwanted@ shawsuburban.com Fax: 815-477-8898
SOCIAL SERVICES
DSPs, C.N.A.s & CARING HEARTS! Provide support to adults with severe disabilities at our group homes located throughout McHenry County. Shifts cover afternoons, evenings, overnights and weekends. If you have related experience, WE WILL TRAIN the right individuals. You must be at least 21 years of age. High school diploma/GED, valid driver's license, good driving record & minimum required automobile insurance, and background check are all required.
View available shifts under Program Tech and apply on-line at www.pioneercenter.org
MAINTENANCE MECHANIC 2nd Shift
TRANSPORT SERVICE CO. is hiring...
CLASS A CDL DRIVERS out of Lake in the Hills, IL! We offer competitive pay, medical benefits for you and your family, paid training on product handling, paid uniforms, paid vacations, 401K & MORE! 1 year Tractor-Trailer experience, Tank & Hazmat endorsements (or ability to obtain) & Safe Driving Record.
APPLY NOW at: TheKAG.com Or call (800) 871-4581 Factory
1st, 2nd 3rd shift factory work McHenry Co, call 815-455-4490 Lake Co, call 847-587-2442 Working World Staffing
General Applications are being accepted for IPHA AmeriCorps members. Full-time, 11 month position includes monthly stipend, education award, & health insurance. Position descriptions and electronic application available at: www.ipha.com/americorps Deadline to apply is 06/14/13 EOE
Receiving Clerk - 1st shift (7:30am - 4pm) Immediate opening for Receiving Clerk. Responsibilities include receiving all ordered materials, entering them into the inventory control system, warehousing all materials, keeping the receiving dock clean & organized, & other duties as assigned by the warehouse supervisor. Forklift, receiving, and warehousing experience are all a must. Shipping and order picking/packing experience a plus. Must have the ability to read and interpret standard work procedures. High School education or GED is required. Background check and drug test are required. Must be able to read, write and understand English.
Electrician/General Maintenance - 3rd shift (11pm - 7:30am) Ideal candidate will have experience with installation, maintenance, trouble-shooting, 480 volt 3 phase AC power distribution, AC / DC drives and associated control circuitry, AC electrical wiring and conduit, DC control circuits, PLC's, low voltage drivers, knowledge of basis electrical codes and a strong mechanical aptitude. High School education or GED is required. Background check & drug test are required. Must be able to read, write and understand English.
Production Supervisor The ideal candidate to supervise our production department of roughly 40 employees will possess strong supervisory skills including coaching, mentoring and discipline. We are looking for a detail oriented person with a high sense of urgency who handles a fast paced environment well. Further, the candidate will need to be personable, able to work well within a diverse work environment, and be computer literate. Lean manufacturing, kanban systems, and 6s experience are a must. High School education or GED is required. Must be able to read, write and understand English.
Interested parties may send resumes to
CLJobs@camfilfarr.com
(with the position applying for noted in the subject line) or apply in person on May 16th or 17th from 1pm-3pm at:
POLICE OFFICER City of McHenry The Board of Police Commissioners of the City of McHenry is seeking applicants for the purpose of creating a Police Officer Eligibility List.
Applications are now available at: City of McHenry - Administration Department 333 S. Green St., McHenry, IL 60050 A $25.00 non-refundable administrative and processing fee is required before an application can be obtained. Completed applications will be accepted NO LATER than Friday, June 7th at 5:00 p.m.
COMPENSATION/BENEFITS PACKAGE: $54,548 to $84,219 after 7 years Dual Career Path plan offered which can significantly increase the salary range Two weeks of vacation after one year (1 week after 6 months) Four personal days per year Twelve sick days per year Police pension program Medical, dental, vision, and life insurance 457 Deferred compensation programs Medical and Dependent Care Savings Accounts Other voluntary offerings: Life insurance for self and family, AFLAC, LTD/STD, Identity Theft Shield, Pre-Paid Legal
MINIMUM REQUIREMENTS U.S. Citizenship or Permanent Resident Be at least 21 years of age and under 35 at the time of application Possess a Bachelor Degree OR an Associate Degree with at least 2 years previous law enforcement experience or an Honorable Discharge from military service Possess a valid Illinois driver's license Have no felony convictions Have no misdemeanor arrests pertaining to domestic violence Meet other criteria as established by the Police Commission Have a current NIPSTA Power Test ID Card A mandatory Orientation Session for all qualified candidates will be held on July 10th at 7:00 pm. A mandatory written exam for all qualified candidates will be held on July 13th at 9:00am
500 S. Main Street Crystal Lake, IL 60014 No phone calls please.
BY ORDER OF THE MCHENRY BOARD OF POLICE COMMISSION The City of McHenry and the McHenry Police Department are an Equal Opportunity Employer
If your current employer’s health coverage will end before you’re covered by the new employer’s plan, you can negotiate for the new employer to pay the cost of extending your old policy under COBRA.
9. “How and when will I be evaluated, and will there be an
Drivers
to gathering necessary information, you’re showing your new boss that you’re a good negotiator. “You want them to know they’re smart to offer you the job, but you’re not going to come cheap,” DeLuca says.
10. “Regarding benefits, please Copyright 2012 - Monster Worldprovide the details -- when do wide, Inc. All Rights Reserved. they start?” You may not copy, reproduce or
This question verifies the job you’re being hired to do is the job described during the interview process -- and is a job you’re capable of doing.
Shipping, Order Picking/Packing - 1st shift (7:30am - 4pm) Immediate opening for Shipping and Warehouse personnel. Responsibilities include order picking and packing and preparing them for shipping accurately and on time to our customers. Forklift, shipping, and picking/packing orders experience are all a must. Receiving experience a plus. Must have the ability to read and interpret standard work procedures. High School education or GED is required. Background check and drug test are required. Must be able to read, write and understand English.
These questions separate out when you’ll be evaluated and when you’ll be eligible for a raise. Those two events are often, but not always, linked.
8. “May I please have a job description?”
60 NEW POSITIONS
PART-TIME DIRECT SUPPORT PROFESSIONALS
increase on the basis of that As you ask these 10 questions, keep in mind that in addition evaluation?”
be disappointed if you agree to do so. If you leave your current employer in the lurch, the concern is that you might do the same to this company someday. If you’re switching jobs rather than coming off unemployment, build in time to close out your existing job and take a vacation.
Miner Enterprises, Inc. a well established century-old supplier to the railroad industry has an excellent opportunity for a 2nd shift Maint. Mechanic. The qualified candidate should possess a minimum of 8-10 years experience in all areas of industrial maintenance including: injection molding maintenance, pneumatic, hydraulic and piping systems, 480v electrical, PLCs, welding and fabrication, hydraulic presses, and automated assembly equipment. This position will also be responsible for the troubleshooting and repairing of production and building machinery. Salary commensurate with experience. Interested candidates should send resume & salary requirements to: Jobs@minerent.com; Fax: 630-232-3198 or mail: Attn: Human Resources, MINER ENTERPRISES, INC., 1200 E. State Street, Geneva, IL 60134 EOE M/F/D/V
MEAT CUTTER FT/PT. Must be experienced. McHenry / Kane Co area. Call 847-710-2638
PAINTER 2 years minimum experience. Must have good transportation. Call 847-774-1447
distribute this article without the prior written permission of Monster Worldwide. This article first appeared on Monster.com. To see other career-related articles, visitcareer-advice.monster.com. For recruitment articles, visit hiring. monster.com/hr/hr-best-practices.aspx.
Retail
Part-Time Help Wanted We need a self-motivated, cheerful person who is great with customers. Must be available weekends. Retail cashier and sales exp. req'd. See Lisa weekdays 10-2:30 at the Volo Antique Malls 27640 W. Volo Village Rd. Volo, IL. 60073
STABLE HELP Part time. Richmond IL. area. Must be experienced with horses and have references. 815-675-6676.
DENTAL CHAIRSIDE ASSISTANT for established & growing Dental office in Dundee area. PT/FT. Experience needed. Bilingual Spanish preferred. Fast learner. Fax resume to attn Jeannie 847-426-3269 or email: info@neufamilydental.com
Has a great opportunity for an individual wanting to start their won delivery business by becoming an owner/operator of a
! RN / LPN ! All shifts. Pediatric exp. Wknds. Medical Biller in office also avail. McHenry & Kane Co. 815-356-8400
Wings Etc. now hiring... Apply within: 5899 NW Hwy. Crystal Lake, IL 60014 or email: WingsEtcMOD@ WingsEtcStr10.comcastbiz.net
Tues. May 14th 8am-2pm Over 50 Openings! Cherry Pickers, clamp forklift assemblers, picker and packer Quality Audtior, Team Leads Maintenance Mechanics and more... SURESTAFF 1302 E. Algonquin Rd. Algonquin, IL 60102 847-658-8900 Mfessler@sure-staff.com LANDSCAPE WORKERS, FT DL req. Start immediately. Some experience required. Please call (847) 658-2480
SERVICE TECH 25 year old HVAC company looking for experienced Service Tech with 3 to 5 years experience. Call 815-404-4634
A growing rubber mold shop looking for a full time Machine Setup Operator, Must have Mazak Machine experience.
Please fax resume to: 847-669-7885 or email us at: info@ndmold.com
Send your Classified Advertising 24/7 to: Email: classified@ shawsuburban.com Fax: 815-477-8898 or online at: www.nwherald.com
Vanity Comestics Store Closing Sale 5/16 & 5/17 10a-4p 5/18 10a-6p 87 Grant St. Any other dates prior, please call for appt. 815-219-3081 EVERYTHING MUST GO INCLUDING FIXTURES All Sales Final!
DELIVERY TRUCK! This GREAT opportunity comes with SUPER SECURITY and UNLIMITED Earning Potential. This is YOUR opportunity to work with the #1 Home Improvement Center. Call: 715-876-4000
Dog: orange w/white patch on chest, male, part Pit bull & Lab mix, weighs about 45-50lbs, lost around Coventry subdivision area in Crystal Lake on 5/7, $REWARD$ 608-228-6804 815-861-9199 Gold Chain w/Saggitarius Medal lost week of May 1, 2013 at Hinsdale Hospital. REWARD. 708-246-0106
❤Ceremonies of the Heart❤ Rev Anne 847-431-4014 Weddings, Blessings, Memorials, Christenings
WELDERS FABRICATORS With truck & trailer repair exp. 2 positions available. Now accepting applications at: Botts Welding & Truck Service 335 N Eastwood Dr (Rt 47) in Woodstock, ask for John.
McHenry Expressive Learners Structured days of fun as you learn and rates to meet any budget. 815-236-5460
DAYCARE OPENINGS!
MACHINE SETUP OPERATOR Huntley, IL.
Contact the Better Business Bureau www.chicago.bbb.org - or Federal Trade Commission www.ftc.gov
BE YOUR OWN BOSS!
Restaurant
SPRING JOB FAIR
ALWAYS INVESTIGATE BEFORE INVESTING ANY MONEY
NOW HIRING Exp. LIVE-IN Caregivers & CNAs $130 per day, 1-3 days/week. Visiting Angels of Crystal Lake Apply online at: va175.ersp.biz/employment
PAINTER – EXPERIENCED
Shift Supervisor- PT/FT
Anything to do with Wood We can Fix or Replace Doors and Windows Sr. Disc. 815-943-4765
CAREGIVERS & CNAs
for McHenry business. Minimum 5 years experience with interior & exterior work. Must have drivers license & own transportation. Fax resume & references to 815-385-1196
Job Fair
HANDYMAN
CAREGIVERS & CNAs NOW HIRING $130 per day, 1-3 days/week. Exp. LIVE-IN Caregivers & CNAs Visiting Angels of Crystal Lake Apply online at va175.ersp.biz/employment
Mother of 4, FT/PT. Meals, fun and very educational. CPR/1st Aid Cert. Exp & Ref Avail. 262-949-9217
Experienced Care Provider looking for job in Crystal Lake or within 20 miles. References available. 773-308-6801 or 815-455-6628
DRIVER Local Milk Delivery - Huntley Early AM start. CDL B req. Send Resume and MVR to: P.O. Box 1319 Crystal Lake, IL 60039. No phone calls please.
CARY HUGE 1 BEDROOM Washer/dryer in unit. Recently updated, full size kitchen, parking. $735/mo. 815-404-1354
CLEANING / JANITORIAL jobs in Crystal Lake, exp a plus. Part Time -- $9.50 /hour. For more info email betsy@cardbldgmnt.com or call 708-385-3575
Woodstock Studio $585/mo+sec. Efficiency $550/mo + sec.1-BR $650/mo + sec, all 3 furn'd w/all utils incl. No Pets. 815-509-5876
MAILBOX POSTS INSTALLED 815-653-7095 ~ 815-341-7822 www.mailboxpostman.com
CARPET INSTALLED Repaired and Re-Stretched 815-219-2823
www.HuskieWire.com All NIU Sports... All The Time
Cary/Fox River Grove 1BR All utils incl. Starting at $800/mo. 815-814-8593
Crystal Lake 1BR $760
Quiet building, hardwood floors, heat and water incl. No pets. 815-455-6964
CRYSTAL LAKE 2BR
No smoking/pets, $795 + sec. 815-893-0059 ~ Lv Msg
CLASSIFIED
Page F2• Sunday, May 12, 2013
McCullum Lake. Newer Doll Crystal Lake Large 2BR Units Close to metra + lots of extras, $885/mo. Call Stan 815-923-2521~815-245-6098
McHenry - Route 31 IRISH PRAIRIE APTS
Crystal Lake Small Building
With W/D & Fitness Center. 815/363-0322 cunatinc.com
1 & 2 BEDROOM
1BR, 2nd floor, $800/mo, no pets/ smoking. Heat incl, near metra. Garage available. 815-344-5797
Algonquin 2BR Sharp Ranch Townhome Neutral décor, all appl incl W/D, garage, no smoking, $1025/mo. 708-302-0876 CARY 3 BED 2 BATH TOWNHOME $1200 a month. Newly painted. 2 parking spaces & access to community pool. Appliances included. Contact Cindy 773-3874798 or Mike 773-419-8525
Fox Lake Good Value! Very large 1 bedroom, dining area, balcony, storage and laundry in building, no dogs, $695/mo. Agent Owned 815-814-3348
Crystal Lake 1st floor, 2BR, 2BA, condo, W/D, clubhouse, exercise room & pool, avail 6/1 $975/mo. 815-477-2229
FOX LAKE ~ 2BR, 1BA
McHenry Next to Riverwalk 2BR, 1BA, quiet, secure building. 1st floor, lndry, no pets. $810/mo. Avail mid May. 847-347-8808
condo, 55 + Area. gar, w/golf, pool, & gated community, $825/month 847-587-0573
HEBRON 2BR CONDO
HUNTLEY – Newer 2BR 1 FREE adult pool/fitness membership. Clean, move in cond. Att garage. $1160/m. 708-456-1620
WOODSTOCK
SILVERCREEK 1 & 2 Bedroom
HEBRON ~ 1 BEDROOM Appl + W/D, a/c , no pets/smkg. $645/mo + sec includes heat only. 815-355-2158
% %
Affordable Apts. Garage Included
815-334-9380 www.cunat.com
McHenry 2-3BR, 2-3BA Almost New! 2 car, appls. Rent To Own, $1150-$1250/mo. Pets OK. Available now. 815-385-5525
MCHENRY ~ 3BR, 2.5BA TH Bsmt, W/D, 2 car garage. No pets/ smoking, near NIMC, $1400/mo. Agent Owned 847-722-8911
WOODSTOCK 1BR $595, 2BR $745. All appliances, D/W, wall to wall carpet. A/C, balcony/ patio, on site lndry. No pets. 847-382-2313 or 708-204-3823
MARENGO Duplex 2br, 2bath, full base, 1 car att gar, c/a. $900 + util 815-762-1961
WOODSTOCK Modern Loft Apartment ~ 2BR Historic Rogers Hall, $825/mo. NO DOGS! 815-482-4909
WOODSTOCK 3 BEDROOM 1.5 Bath, A/C, Stove, Refrigerator, Garage, No Pets. Broker Owned. 847-683-7944 HURRY!!
WOODSTOCK STUDIO
Quiet building, no pets. $825 + security. 847-526-4435
Marengo Large 1 & 3 BR most utilities included Broker Owner $650 & UP 815-347-1712 Marengo Newly Remodeled 3BR Large eat-in-kitchen, $750/mo + garage and utilities. No dogs. Agent Owned. 815-814-3348
Close to Square, no pets/smoking. $435/mo + utilities + security. 815-338-1742
Crystal Lake On Lake Beautiful Views! Large wooded grounds, beach, may have boat, 3-4 bedroom, 1.5 bath, porches. NO PETS! $1750/mo. 630-655-2888
Near square, D/W, W/D. Spacious, clean and just painted. $720/mo. 815-394-9050
Crystal Lake. 3BR, 2BA, 3 car garage. Close to downtown. Month to month. $1700/mo. No pets. 815-693-3902 JOHNSBURG - 3 BR, 1 bath Nice Ranch house for rent. 1 car attached garage, C/A Johnsburg Schools. Newly remodeled. $1,100 per month. 847-274-8287
Small 1BR Cottage includes storage area in barn, $555/mo. Pet with deposit. 815-291-9456
Marengo Upper 1 BR Quiet bldg, heat incl, W/D on site. No dogs, no smkg, $550. 815-596-1363
JOHNSBURG 2 BEDROOM
Bath, W/D, $895/mo + security. Additional security for pets. 815-236-3694
WOODSTOCK ~ 2 BEDROOM Heat, water, garbage included. Laundry facilities, no dogs. $825 + sec dep. 815-529-3782
WOODSTOCK. Studio apt., just
remodeled, historic area, close to square/park/train. $610 815-338-8762
$750 for 1625 Sq Ft commercial space for rent. 25' wide x 65' long. 12'x14' overhead door. New and clean. Has heat and bathroom. Call Chuck @ 815-482-0224
McHenry Patriot Estates 2BR, 2BA + Loft TH Large master bath, full bsmt, 2 car garage. $1250/mo + sec. 1BR, 1BA Ranch Duplex Full basement, 2 car, $1100/mo. Age Restrictions may apply. Free Health Club Membership. Pet Friendly. 815-363-5919 Or 815-363-0322
MCHENRY ~ 4 BEDROOM
Crystal Lake Barn Storage
Approx 11x57' (627 Sq Ft). OH Door 7'10”Wx6'10”H. Plus A 3 Car Garage, 2 OH Doors. 815-477-7175
Rent to Buy. Choose from 400 listed homes. Flexible Credit Rules. Gary Swift. Prudential First Realty. 815-814-6004
SPRING GROVE 3BR, 3BA 2300 sq ft, appliances, 3 car garage, full basement, pets OK. 2150/mo + sec. 815-403-9631
Wonder Lake 2 Bedroom
1 bath, fenced yard, garage avail, no pets. $900 with garage. $850 w/o garage + 1 mo sec. 815-728-8000
PUBLIC NOTICE
Large garage spaces. Call Stan for details. 815-923-2521 or 815-245-6098 Lake In The Hills 15'Wx40'Lx16'H 12'x14' OH door, vehicles, boats, contractors, full house of furniture. Only $290/mo. 847-658-7360
Woodstock: 2100sq ft, overhead door, heavy power, $750/mo. Broker Owned 815-347-1712
Crystal Lake Hurry Last One Left Clean Office Suite. 400 SF. Incl. all utils + High Speed DSL. $525/mo. 815-790-0240
Mature woman looking for room to rent, main flr, non smoker, 815-546-8329
(Published in the Northwest Herald May 12, 19, 26, 2013 #A911)
IN THE MATTER OF THE PETITION OF Tyler Drengacz FOR CHANGE OF NAME
PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE
Case Number 13MR241 NOTICE OF PUBLICATION (ADULT) Public notice is hereby given that I have filed a Petition for Change of Name and scheduled a hearing on my Petition on June 21, 2013, at 9:00 a.m. in the Circuit Court of the Twenty-Second Judicial Circuit, McHenry County, Illinois, praying for the change of my name from Tyler Drengacz to that of Tyler Kamick pursuant to the Illinois Compiled Statutes on Change of Names. Dated at McHenry County, Illinois, May 3, 2013 . /s/Tyler Drengacz Petitioner's Signature Name: Tyler Drengacz Address: 28680 W. Harvest Glen Circle, Cary IL 60013 847-961-0051 (Published in the Northwest Herald May 5, 12, 19 2013)
PUBLIC NOTICE STATE OF ILLINOIS IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE TWENTY-SECOND JUDICIAL CIRCUIT McHENRY COUNTY IN PROBATE
Wonder Lake ~ West Side
3BR, 1BA, broker owned. $995/mo + sec. Pets OK with dep. Call Shawn 224-577-5521
JOHNSBURG 3BR 1 bath, 2 car garage. $1000/mo. 815-814-1731 Johnsburg. 3-4BR, 2BA fin. bsmnt, very clean, 2 car gar. All appls. Close to Walmart. $1300/mo+sec.815-382-2451
BREAKING NEWS available 24/7 at NWHerald.com
Johnsburg: 2BR, 1.5BA, 2 car heated gar., exc. cond. , avail. 7/1, $1000 815-908-9961
2BR, 1BA, broker owned. $825 + sec. Pets OK with deposit. Call Shawn 224-577-5521 Wonder Lake. 2 BR.- Lrg. lot with gar., No pets. Walk to lake. $850/m + sec + utils. 847-276-5685 Wonder Lake: large 3BR, 1BA, 1 car garage, fenced yard, east side of lake $975/month Broker Owned 815-347-1712 Woodstock. 3BR, 1.5BA. Partially finished bmnt w/den & office. Nice yard, no gar., lrg driveway., Sec 8 OK. $1250/mo. 847-810-9115 Woodstock. Rural. 2BR, full bsmnt. 1 car garage space. All appls. New carpet. No pets. $800/mo+utils. Write: PO Box 1732, Woodstock, IL 60098
Female Roommate in
Ringwood Room w/ private bath, Call for details 815-728-1701
In the Matter of the Estate of DUNN MIZELL Deceased
Carpentersville Raised Ranch
Cabin on Buffalo Lake. Hunting, Fishing, 30 mi. from Wisconsin Dells. $80K. Call John at First Weber. (608) 297-9228 Having a Birthday, Anniversary, Graduation or Event Coming Up? Share It With Everyone by Placing a HAPPY AD!
Marengo - Furnished Room
With cable, utilities included. $115/wk or $460/mo + deposit. 815-482-6347 McHenryCountySports.com is McHenry County Sports
Northwest Herald Classified 800-589-8237 www.nwherald.com
Huntley High School Athletic Field Improvements Bid Release #3 Consolidated School District #158 will receive sealed bids for the following trade packages: Excavation/Landscaping/Athletic Equipment, Fencing, Irrigation, and Electrical for the Huntley High School Athletic Field Improvements Bid Release #3 project until 3:00 p.m. local time on May 29, 2013 at the District Office, 650 Academic Drive, Algonquin, Illinois, 60102, at which time and place all bids will be publicly opened and read aloud. Proposals complying with the bid documents will be received for the projects until the specified closing time. Bids shall be submitted on or before the specified closing time in an opaque sealed envelope marked "Huntley High School Athletic Field Improvements - Bid Release #3" on the outside and addressed to: Dr. John Burkey, Superintendent of Schools, Consolidated School District No. 158, Administrative Office, 650 Academic Drive, Algonquin, Illinois 60102. Bids shall be opened publicly and the contents announced at the specified closing time and at the location immediately above. Bids received after stated time will not be accepted and will be returned unopened.
Make proposals on the bid forms supplied in the Project Manual. No oral, telegraphic or telephonic proposals or modifications will be considered. Submit with each bid, a certified check or acceptable bidder's bond payable to Consolidated School District #158 in an amount equal to ten percent (10%) of the total bid. The successful bidder will be required to furnish satisfactory Labor and Material Payment Bond, and Performance Bond. All bids submitted shall be valid for a period of at least (60) sixty days from the date of bid opening. The only alterations, which may be allowed, will be those approved by the Board of Education. No immediate decision shall be rendered concerning the bids submitted at time of opening. The Bidder shall be actively engaged in work of the nature of the services for which bid is submitted as described in the bid specifications and shall have adequate equipment and personnel to do the work. Lamp Incorporated Qualification forms must be submitted to Lamp Incorporated by May 22, 2013. Qualification forms are available with the bidding documents on GradeBeam. The Board of Education of Consolidated School District No. 158 reserves the right to reject any or all bids or parts thereof, to waive any irregularities or informalities in the bidding procedures and to award the contracts in a manner serving the best interest of the school district. All bidders must comply with the applicable Illinois Law requiring the payment of prevailing wages by all contractors working on public projects, and bidders must comply with the Illinois Statutory requirements regarding labor and bidding, including Equal Opportunity Laws. Prospective bidders may obtain bid documents for their use and submission by contacting Lamp In-
Case No. 13 PR 123 CLAIM NOTICE
2400 Sq Ft, 9 Rooms, 4BR, 3BA New appliances, carpeting, large fenced yard, deck, $285,000. 847-381-4843 ~ 708-204-3823
Montello, WI
Claims may be filed in the office of the Clerk of Circuit Court at the McHenry County Government Center, 2200 North Seminary Avenue, Woodstock, Illinois 60098, or with the representative, or both. Copies of claims filed with the Clerk must be mailed or delivered to the representative and to his attorney within ten days after it has been filed. /s/ Katherine M. Keefe Clerk of the Circuit Court
STATE OF ILLINOIS IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE 22nd JUDICIAL CIRCUIT McHENRY COUNTY
Crystal Lake Close to Metra
Pets OK. Dish washer, central air. $1090/mo. Available now! 773-510-3643 ~ 773-510-3117 McHenry. 2BR, Kitch, DR, 1BA, C/A, all appls. 1.5 car garage, shed. Fenced yard. $1100/mo+sec dep. 815-385-3269
unope
MCHENRY: in condo, room w/bath, garage, nicely furnished, prefer female, $110/wk. 815-344-5975
Wonder Lake ~ West Side
Woodstock Upper 1 Bedroom
MARENGO RURAL SETTING
McHenry $199 Move-In Special Large 1BR, from $699. 2BR, 1.5BA from $799. Appl, carpet and laundry. 815-385-2181
847-651-9906 MCHENRY - cute/clean 1BR, 1BT, W/D, Electric incl. $885 mo 1st/last mo & $400 sec dep to move in. 815-245-2982. MCHENRY 3BR in Winding Creek Sub 2BA, 2 Car, BSMT, Fenced yard $1650/month Riverwoods School dist. 815-363-7285
All appl, patio, private entrance. $750 - 900, garage available. 815-455-8310
HARVARD 1 MONTH FREE* Autumn Glen Luxury Apts. Spacious 2 bdrm Apts avail Free extra storage Free heat!! Pets welcome! Rents from: $800 Free 55” flat screen TV CALL TODAY! 815-943-6700 www.gallinacos.com M-F: 10am-6pm Sat: By Appt (*2nd floor units only)
ISLAND LAKE 2 BEDROOM
House Ranch, 2BR, ctrl AC, fncd. yard, pets are welcome.
Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com
DEKALB
Notice is given of the death of: DUNN MIZELL of: CRYSTAL LAKE, IL Letters of office were issued on: 5/3/2013 to: Representative: LEE MIZELL 1805 ASHFORD DR, GOSHEN, KY 40026-8418 whose attorney is: THOMS, JEANNINE A 101 N VIRGINIA STREET SUITE 108 CRYSTAL LAKE, IL 60014 Claims against the estate may be filed within six months from the date of first publication. Any claim not filed within six months from the date of first publication or claims not filed within three months from the date of mailing or delivery of Notice to Creditor, whichever is later, shall be barred.
Immaculate 4,280 sq ft Office / Warehouse. Air conditioned office area and bathrooms Great location near airport & tollway in DeKalb.
815-754-5831
Golf Rd. (Rt. 58) • Hoffman Estates, IL
800/935-5909 www.motorwerks.com
ANDERSON BMW
AVENUE CHEVROLET
360 N. Rte. 31 • Crystal Lake, IL
1998 W. McKee at Randall Road Batavia, IL
888/682-4485 www.andersoncars.com
BILL JACOBS BMW 1564 W. Ogden Ave. • Naperville, IL
800/731-5824
866/233-4837 www.avenuechevrolet.com
MARTIN CHEVROLET
BUSS FORD
INFINITI OF HOFFMAN ESTATES
MERCEDES-BENZ OF ST. CHARLES
1075 W. Golf Rd. Hoffman Estates, IL
225 N. Randall Road • St. Charles, IL
www.bussford.com
SPRING HILL FORD
888/280-6844 www.infinitihoffman.com
www.st-charles.mercedesdealer.com
111 S. Rte 31 • McHenry, IL
815/385-2000
KNAUZ CONTINENTAL AUTOS
800 Dundee Ave. • East Dundee, IL
888/600-8053 www.springhillford.com
www.billjacobs.com
5220 W. Northwest Highway Crystal Lake, IL
KNAUZ BMW
815/459-4000
TOM PECK FORD
ANTIOCH CHRYSLER DODGE JEEP
www.martin-chevy.com
13900 Auto Mall Dr. • Huntley, IL
105 Rt. 173• Antioch, IL
847/669-6060
800/628-6087
www.TomPeckFord.com
www.antiochfivestar.com
866/561-8676
ZIMMERMAN FORD
www.raychevrolet.com
2525 E. Main Street • St. Charles, IL
CRYSTAL LAKE CHRYSLER JEEP DODGE
407 Skokie Valley Hwy. • Lake Bluff, IL
847/604-5000 www.KnauzBMW.com
MOTOR WERKS BMW Barrington & Dundee Rds. Barrington, IL
800/935-5913 www.motorwerks.com
MOTOR WERKS CERTIFIED OUTLET Late Model Luxury PreOwned Vehicles 1001 W. Higgins Rd. (Rt. 71) or 1000 W. Golf Rd. (Rt. 58) • Hoffman Estates, IL
RAY CHEVROLET 39 N. Rte. 12 • Fox Lake, IL
RAYMOND CHEVROLET
630/584-1800 www.zimmermanford.com
www.raymondchevrolet.com
REICHERT CHEVROLET 2145 S. Eastwood Dr. • Woodstock, IL
815/338-2780 www.reichertautos.com
AUTO GROUP - GARY LANG GMC Route 31, between Crystal Lake & McHenry
CRYSTAL LAKE CHRYSLER JEEP DODGE
O’HARE HONDA River Rd & Oakton, • Des Plaines, IL
RAYMOND KIA 119 Route 173 • Antioch, IL
224/603-8611
KNAUZ MINI 409A Skokie Valley Hwy • Lake Bluff, IL
847/604-5050 www.Knauz-mini.com
888/538-4492
BILL JACOBS LAND ROVER HINSDALE
AUTO GROUP GARY LANG MITSUBISHI
300 East Ogden Ave. • Hinsdale, IL
www.billjacobs.com
888/794-5502
www.sunnysidecompany.com
www.elginhyundai.com
LAND ROVER LAKE BLUFF
KNAUZ HYUNDAI
847/604-8100
775 Rockland Road Routes 41 & 176 in the Knauz Autopark • Lake Bluff, IL Experience the best…Since 1934
www.knauzlandrover.com
www.antiochfivestar.com
CRYSTAL LAKE CHRYSLER JEEP DODGE 5404 S. Rt. 31 • Crystal Lake, IL
888/800-6100
375 Skokie Valley Hwy • Lake Bluff, IL
847/234-2800
LAND ROVER HOFFMAN ESTATES
www.knauzhyundai.com
1051 W. Higgins • Hoffman Estates, IL
O’HARE HYUNDAI
111 S. Rte 31 • McHenry, IL
815/385-2000
www.rosenrosenrosen.com
Route 120 • McHenry, IL
815/385-7220
ANDERSON MAZDA 360 N. Rt. 31 • Crystal Lake, IL
888/682-4485 www.andersoncars.com
800/935-5913
BIGGERS MAZDA
www.motorwerks.com
1460 S. Eastwood Dr. • Woodstock, IL
1320 East Chicago Street The Mazda Machine on Rt. 19, Elgin, IL
800/407-0223
847/628-6000
www.bullvalleyford.com
www.libertyvillemitsubishi.com
1035 S. Rt. 31, One Mile South of Rt. 14 Crystal Lake, IL
815/459-7100 or 847/658-9050 www.paulytoyota.com
ANDERSON VOLKSWAGEN 360 N. Rt. 31 • Crystal Lake, IL
888/682-4485 www.andersoncars.com
BILL JACOBS VOLKSWAGEN 2211 Aurora Avenue • Naperville, IL
800/720-7036 www.billjacobs.com
800/935-5913
MOTOR WERKS CERTIFIED OUTLET Late Model Luxury Pre-Owned Vehicles
771 S. Randall Rd. • Algonquin, IL
866/469-0114
BULL VALLEY FORD/ MERCURY
847/816-6660
www.motorwerks.com
SUNNYSIDE COMPANY CHRYSLER DODGE
Barrington & Dundee Rds. Barrington, IL
1119 S. Milwaukee Ave.• Libertyville, IL
BUSS FORD LINCOLN MERCURY
ROSEN HYUNDAI
MOTOR WERKS INFINITI
847/741-2100
Barrington & Dundee Rds., Barrington, IL
CALL FOR THE LOWEST PRICES IN CHICAGOLAND
847/426-2000
1200 E. Chicago St. Elgin, IL
MOTOR WERKS PORCHE
888/553-9036
www.clcjd.com
www.piemontegroup.com
LIBERTYVILLE MITSUBISHI
www.billjacobs.com
www.oharehyundai.com
770 Dundee Ave. (Rt. 25) • Dundee, IL
ELGIN TOYOTA
www.garylangauto.com
800/731-5760
River Rd & Oakton, • Des Plaines, IL
www.sunnysidecompany.com
www.raysuzuki.com
PAULY TOYOTA
www.oharehonda.com
847/888-8222
800/628-6087
888/446-8743 847/587-3300
www.elgintoyota.com
www.raymondkia.com
815/385-7220
105 Rt. 173 Antioch, IL
AL PIEMONTE CHEVROLET
www.billjacobs.com
www.arlingtonkia.com
888/204-0042
200 N. Cook St. • Barrington, IL
www.garylangauto.com
1400 E. Dundee Rd., Palatine, IL
847/202-3900
1564 W. Ogden Ave. • Naperville, IL
881 E. Chicago St. • Elgin, IL
MOTOR WERKS CADILLAC
888/794-5502
800/295-0166
ELGIN HYUNDAI
ANTIOCH CHRYSLER DODGE JEEP
Route 31, between Crystal Lake & McHenry
ARLINGTON KIA IN PALATINE
Route 120 • McHenry, IL
www.garylangauto.com
AUTO GROUP - GARY LANG CHEVROLET
BILL JACOBS MINI
Route 31, between Crystal Lake & McHenry
888/794-5502
www.motorwerks.com
111 S. Rte 31 • McHenry, IL
SUNNYSIDE COMPANY CHRYSLER DODGE
Route 31, between Crystal Lake & McHenry
800/935-5923
www.motorwerks.com
888/800-6100
847/683-2424
AUTO GROUP - GARY LANG CADILLAC
800/935-5913
www.clcjd.com
www.reichertautos.com
www.garylangauto.com
815/385-2000
www.garylangauto.com
Route 31, between Crystal Lake & McHenry
FENZEL MOTOR SALES
888/794-5502
RAY SUZUKI
Barrington & Dundee Rds. Barrington, IL
206 S. State Street • Hampshire, IL
AUTO GROUP GARY LANG KIA
BUSS FORD LINCOLN MERCURY
Route 31, between Crystal Lake & McHenry
23 N. Route 12 • Fox Lake
MOTOR WERKS HONDA
2145 S. Eastwood Dr. • Woodstock, IL
800/407-0223
AUTO GROUP GARY LANG SUBARU
866/480-9527
800/628-6087
815/338-2780
1460 S. Eastwood Dr. • Woodstock, IL
815/459-7100 or 847/658-9050
1107 S Rt. 31 between Crystal Lake and McHenry
www.antiochfivestar.com
REICHERT BUICK
BULL VALLEY FORD/ MERCURY
PAULY SCION 1035 S. Rt. 31, One Mile South of Rt. 14 Crystal Lake, IL
www.garylangauto.com
AUTO GROUP - GARY LANG BUICK
5404 S. Rt. 31 • Crystal Lake, IL
www.Knauzcontinentalauto.com
800/935-5393 www.motorwerks.com
888/794-5502
ANTIOCH CHRYSLER DODGE JEEP 105 Rt. 173 • Antioch, IL
409 Skokie Valley Hwy • Lake Bluff, IL
847/234-1700
www.bullvalleyford.com
www.motorwerks.com
www.garylangauto.com
888/800-6100
847/395-3600
800/935-5909
888/794-5502
5404 S. Rt. 31 • Crystal Lake, IL
www.clcjd.com
118 Route 173 • Antioch, IL
877/226-5099
MOTOR WERKS SAAB 200 N. Cook Street • Barrington, IL
1001 W. Higgins Rd. (Rt. 71) or 1000 W. 1000 W. Golf Rd. (Rt. 58) Hoffman Estates, IL
800/935-5909 www.motorwerks.com
PRE-OWNED KNAUZ NORTH 2950 N. Skokie Hwy • North Chicago, IL
847/235-8300 www.knauznorth.com
BARRINGTON VOLVO 300 N. Hough (Rt. 59) • Barrington, IL
847/381-9400
CLASSIFIED
Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com
Sunday, May 12, 2013 • Page F3
▲ ▲
No. 0505
CROSSWORD CRUNCH TIME By Alan Arbesfeld / Edited by Will Shortz
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Across
5 2 O b a m a ’s b i r t h p l a c e
1 Fancy footwear
5 5 Tr a d i t i o n a l
6 Tu r n i n g p o i n t a t t h e station?
59 Priest, in an Ogden Nash poem
12 Remote control a b b r.
63 Spanish precious metal
15 Banned apple spray
6 5 Wr i t e r G o r d i m e r
19 American Dance Theater founder
67 Syrup source
20 Planets and notes in the musical scale 21 Agitated 23 Early entrepreneurial e ff o r t s 2 5 A rg u e d a g a i n s t 2 6 C a l i f o r n i a ’s o l d F o r t ___ 2 7 Tu r n ( o ff ) 28 Florentine attraction 30 Small African antelopes
37 Running with scissors and others 3 8 S h o w - o ff s 40 Kind of tax 4 5 S a n t a ’s l a n d i n g s p o t
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17 Corroded
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1 8 A l b e r t a ’s t h i r d l a rg e s t c i t y, n a m e d after an animal
6 8 J o h a n n e s b u rg - b o r n golf champion
1 2 2 G e o rg e W. B u s h acquisition of 2008
29 Noted taleteller 3 1 Wi t h d r e w
69 Birthplace of Harry Houdini
123 Homes up high
32 Old Cosby show
124 Developed
73 “Survivor” construction
125 G.I. rations
38 Pitch
74 On the fence
1 2 6 T h a t , i n Ti j u a n a
76 Jerks
127 Makes an assertion
41 Grinning symbols
77 Jobs in technology
1 2 8 H u n t f o r w a t e r, s a y
84 River to the North Sea
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52 Certain tournaments
4 A f t e r- d i n n e r o r d e r
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15 Boy or girl lead-in
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54 Precipitousness
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53 Perfectly fine
5 8 “ We l l , w e l l ! ”
1 4 C h a rg e f o r bloodwork, say
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51 Okla. or Oreg., once
13 Situation after a l e a d o ff s i n g l e
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3 How trout may be p r e p a r e d : Va r.
12 Good qualities
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11 “ H e y ! ”
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10 Augments
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36 40
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5 0 D e l i o ff e r i n g s
7 Start to give trouble to
109 Blue Ribbons and others
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2 French pantomime character
93 Big name in feminism
1 0 8 C a r s o n ’s predecessor
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1 Old gunfight locales
56 What makes you you?
105 Designer Gernreich
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6 “Oh my!”
104 German : Strasse :: French : ___
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9 Fire
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4 4 Vi n t a g e w h e e l s
5 Barrett of Pink Floyd
103 Arab League headquarters
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42 Championship
92 Something said before grace?
101 Ogre, to a kid
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47 Crush competitor
8 It needs a signature
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49 52
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39 Nursery gift?
Down
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46 Native Nebraskan
81 “Friends” co-star
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34 Some successful plays, for short
79 Doubters
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22 Amérique du ___ 24 Soccer header?
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16 Neighbor of a Belarussian
11 8 D o e s s p y w o r k
99 Sign of stress
43 Food to go?
For any three answers, call from a touch-tone phone: 1-900-285-5656, $1.49 each minute; or, with a credit card, 1-800814-5554.
11 7 C u t e
89 Defense grp. that disbanded in 1977
3 6 S e r p e n t ’s t a i l ?
50 Persevered
11 6 S u b j e c t o f t h e 1 9 9 8 biography “King of t h e Wo r l d ”
87 Not give ___
35 Feudal laborer
49 Court hearing
11 4 To l e d o t i d b i t
85 Whenever
33 When repeated, an engine sound
48 Not so important
11 0 J u s t m a k e s t h e 7:47, perhaps
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57 Pool activity
126
8 6 N i l e Va l l e y r e g i o n
71 Part of a trap
88 Isak Dinesen novel setting
6 0 Wo r d b e f o r e a n d after “to,” in a religious phrase
72 Fed. property overseer
61 Purple shade
78 Universal recipient designation
89 Cutting comments
75 Flurry
62 More suitable 6 4 To u c h e s 66 Hydroxyl compound 70 20th-century novelist whose first name is an anagram of 66-Down
80 ___ Canals 82 “Great” kid-lit detective 8 3 Yo u m i g h t h a v e a good one after a breakup
9 0 Wo r l d ’s l e a d i n g exporter of bananas 91 Nail polish remover component 9 3 E a g l e s ’ o rg .
94 ___ d’Amérique 95 Harangues 96 Renounce
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11 2 C h i n e s e d y n a s t y
97 Naïve 98 “Fuhgeddaboud-it!” 100 High pitch
during the time of Christ
102 Sleep problem, to Brits
11 3 C e r t a i n
106 50-page book, maybe?
11 5 D u r a n g o d i n e r o
107 ___ blank (had no idea) 1 0 9 W h a t ’s e x p e c t e d 111 S p o r t s c a s t e r Collinsworth
supermarkets
11 9 S u ff i x w i t h t r i c k 120 Ungentlemanly sort
121 Spanish precious metal
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HOROSCOPE
TODAY - People like you, and chances are you have more friends than you realize. In the year ahead, good things could develop through several pals whom you’ve never fully appreciated. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) -- If you spend time searching for ways to increase your income, you will find numerous ways to do so. Make the most of them. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) -- It is important to maintain as much control as you can over an arrangement in which you’re
presently involved. Don’t hesitate to assert yourself if need be. CANCER (June 21-July 22) -- You tend to get hunches all the time, but the ones you get today could be especially strong, enabling you to forecast the outcome of events with remarkable accuracy. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -- Although your basic belief system might be tested, after you’ve had time to analyze things the results will end up reinforcing what you’ve always thought to be true.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -- Major objectives can be accomplished, so don’t waste your time on petty goals. Go after something truly important that will give you a real sense of achievement. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) -- There is no reason to give up on traditional methods that have proven successful in the past. Lady Luck is inclined to follow her same, familiar footsteps. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) -- A significant change could be in the offing for a
situation of vital importance. Don’t fret -- the winds will shift in your direction. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) -- A partnership is likely to be more effective than an independent endeavor. Start forming alliances now. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -- You tend to be extremely successful when you’re prepared to work hard. Go ahead and put the pedal to the metal. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) -- A group endeavor could be in need of reorganization.
Your ideas and advice could prove especially helpful. PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) -- Be nice to your neighbors, because something fortuitous could develop through a friendly acquaintance with one of them. ARIES (March 21-April 19) -- Don’t hesitate to think big, regardless of the scope of the project at hand. You shouldn’t have any trouble taking things as far as you want them to go.
SUNDAY EVENING MAY 12, 2013 5:00
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CBS Evening CBS 2 News at 60 Minutes (N) ’ (CC) Survivor: Caramoan -- Fans vs. Favorites (Season Finale) A contestant Survivor: Caramoan -- Fans vs. CBS 2 News at (:35) Criminal Minds Killer asks the (:35) CSI: Miami “Camp Fear” A girl (:35) Leverage A ^ WBBM News (N) (CC) is found dead near a camp. crew of thieves. Favorites “Reunion Show” (N) ’ 10PM (N) (CC) team to help him stop. (CC) 5:30PM (N) ’ wins the grand prize. (N) ’ (CC) Sports Sunday (:05) Open (1:00) PGA Tour Golf: The Players The Voice “The Live Playoffs, Part 1” The top 16 contestants perform. ’ All-Star Celebrity Apprentice “May the Spoon Be With You” The finalists NBC 5 News (:35) 1st Look ’ (12:05) Extra (N) ’ (CC) % WMAQ Championship, Final Round. (N) Sunday (N) (N) (CC) (CC) House ’ (CC) create ice cream flavors. (N) ’ (CC) Weekend ABC7 ABC World America’s Funniest Home Videos Once Upon a Time “And Straight Revenge “Truth” (Season Finale) Emily is forced to evaluate her quest. Weekend ABC7 News (N) ’ (CC) Inside Edition Windy City Castle ’ (CC) _ WLS News (N) (CC) News Weekend (N) ’ Weekend (N) ’ (CC) On ’Til Morning” ’ (CC) (N) ’ (CC) Chicago’s Best Friends ’ (CC) Friends ’ (Part Family Guy ’ 30 Rock “Jack- According to (4:00) Movie: ››› “Gangs of NewYork” (2002) Leonardo DiCaprio. A Nikita “Invisible Hand” Alex receives Supernatural “Clip Show” Sam and WGN News at (:40) Instant ) WGN man vows vengeance on the gangster who killed his father. Nine (N) (CC) Replay (N) (CC) “Best Steaks 2” 1 of 2) (CC) (CC) Jim ’ (CC) Tor” ’ (CC) an intriguing offer. (N) ’ Dean reunite with Castiel. ’ 30 Good Min- Arts Across The Queen’s Palaces The rise of Doctor Who “The Girl Who Waited” Afropop:The Ultimate Cultural Call the Midwife X-ray screening Call the Midwife Cynthia’s patient Masterpiece Classic F.W. Wool- 10 Buildings That Changed + WTTW America Amy is trapped. (CC) worth discounts Harry. (N) (CC) Exchange ’ (CC) America (N) ’ (CC) utes ’ Buckingham Palace. ’ (CC) program. (N) ’ (CC) bullies his wife. (N) ’ (CC) Inside Washing- Beyond the Beltway Schools That Change Communi- Tavis Smiley Reports Juvenile POV “Mugabe and the White African” Michael Campbell How to Go to War “Staying Alive” Inside Washing- In the Loop Moyers & Company ’ (CC) 4 WYCC ton ’ (CC) ton ’ (CC) ties ’ (CC) justice system and dropouts. ’ defends his farm. ’ (CC) Are We There That ’70s Show Futurama “The Family Guy ’ Bones “Yanks in the U.K.” The Bones “A Boy in a Bush” Suspects. Burn Notice “Fearless Leader” Ring of Honor Wrestling (CC) Burn Notice Brennan vows to Cheaters In a hot tub with another 8 WCGV Yet? murder of a young British heiress. ’ (CC) Former flame. (CC) release valuable data. (CC) woman. (N) ’ (CC) ’ (CC) Sting” ’ (CC) (CC) The King of Meet the Browns Meet the Browns Tyler Perry’s Tyler Perry’s Mr. Box Office Mr. Box Office The First Family The First Family Are We There Are We There Rules of EnRules of EnSeinfeld “The The King of ’Til Death ’ : WCIU Queens (CC) Queens (CC) (CC) House of Payne House of Payne ’ (CC) Yet? Yet? gagement ’ gagement ’ Stock Tip” ’ ’ (CC) ’ (CC) ’ (CC) The Simpsons Cleveland Show The Simpsons Bob’s Burgers Family Guy (N) American Dad Fox 32 News at Nine (N) The Final Word Whacked Out Whacked Out (:35) Cops ’ Hollyscoop (N) Montel Williams @ WFLD King of the Hill The Office ’ International Adelante McLaughlin Jubilee Harmonica player Rod Nature “The Private Life of Deer” Secrets of the Dead Deaths of Irish Secrets of the Dead German Independent Lens An aging man Anna May Wong: In Her Own Arts Page ’ D WMVT Focus Group (N) White-tailed deer in the U.S. (N) (CC) Piazza performs. ’ (CC) immigrants. (N) ’ POWs reveal secrets. ’ finds Chinese bride online. (N) ’ Words ’ (CC) Without a Trace “Bait” ’ (CC) Without a Trace “In the Dark” ’ Without a Trace ’ (CC) F WCPX Law & Order: Criminal Intent ’ Law & Order: Criminal Intent ’ Law & Order: Criminal Intent ’ Law & Order: Criminal Intent ’ Without a Trace ’ (CC) Big Bang The Simpsons Cleveland Show The Simpsons Bob’s Burgers Family Guy (N) American Dad News Big Bang Two/Half Men Big Bang Family Guy ’ Family Guy ’ Futurama (CC) Futurama (CC) G WQRF Big Bang It’s Always Mancow Mashup Comedy.TV ’ (CC) Paid Program Law & Order “Damaged” Murder Law & Order “Castoff” Shooter hits The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang How I MetYour How I MetYour It’s Always R WPWR and rape occur at a high school. Theory (CC) Theory (CC) Theory (CC) Theory (CC) Mother (CC) Mother (CC) Sunny in Phila. Sunny in Phila. reputable doctor. ’ (CC) CABLE 5:00 5:30 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30 Hoggers Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty (CC) Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty (12:01) Duck Dynasty (CC) (A&E) Hoggers Mad Men SCDP tries to pacify (:04) Mad Men SCDP tries to pacify (:08) Mad Men SCDP tries to pacify (12:12) CSI: Miami An explosion (4:00) Movie ›› “Sixteen Candles” Movie ››› “As Good as It Gets” (1997, Comedy-Drama) Jack Nicholson, Helen Hunt, Greg Kinnear. (AMC) competing clients. (N) (CC) competing clients. (CC) competing clients. (CC) (1984) Molly Ringwald.‘PG’ Premiere. A mean-spirited New York author finds love with a waitress.‘PG-13’ threatens agents’ lives. ’ (CC) Ice Cold Gold “Hitting the Wall” Ice Cold Gold “Hitting the Wall” (ANPL) To Be Announced Ice Cold Gold “Fractured” ’ River Monsters ’ River Monsters (N) ’ River Monsters ’ River Monsters ’ Anthony Bourdain Parts Unknown Anthony Bourdain Parts Unknown Manhunt:The Search for bin Laden The hunt for Osama bin Laden. Anthony Bourdain Parts Unknown Manhunt-bin Laden CNN Newsroom (N) CNN Newsroom (N) (CNN) Kevin Hart: Seriously Funny Aziz Ansari: Dangerously Pete Holmes: Nice Try, the Devil (:01) Kevin Hart: Seriously Funny (12:02) Tosh.0 Amy Schumer (COM) Nacho Libre Movie: ››› “Coming to America” (1988, Comedy) Eddie Murphy, Arsenio Hall. (CC) TBA Courtside Jones Golf Chicago SportsNet Cent Inside Look H. Bank Award World Poker Tour: Season 11 SportsNet Cent SportsNet Cent Fight Sports SportsNet Cent Baseball Heartland Poker Tour (CC) (CSN) Alaska:The Last Frontier (CC) Alaska:The Last Frontier (CC) Great Bear Stakeout Grizzlies leave hibernation to eat. (N) ’ (CC) Alaska:The Last Frontier (CC) (DISC) Alaska:The Last Frontier (CC) Great Bear Stakeout Grizzlies leave hibernation to eat. ’ (CC) Wizards of Wizards of The Suite Life The Suite Life Good Luck Jessie “Used Good Luck Dog With a Blog Shake It Up! “In Austin & Ally ’ Jessie “Evil A.N.T. Farm ’ Austin & Ally ’ Austin & Ally ’ A.N.T. Farm ’ Jessie ’ (CC) (DISN) Waverly Place Waverly Place on Deck (CC) on Deck (CC) Charlie (CC) Karma” (CC) the Bag it Up” (CC) (CC) (CC) (CC) Charlie (N) ’ (N) ’ Times Two” ’ (CC) (3:40) “Lethal Movie: › “Billy Madison” (1995, Comedy) Adam Movie: ›› “Spinout” (1966) Elvis Presley. A singing (:35) Movie: › “Zookeeper” (2011, Comedy) Kevin James. Talking (:20) Movie: ››› “Lethal Weapon” (1987, Action) (12:10) Movie: ›› “Riding the (ENC) Weapon” (1987) Bullet” (2004) Jonathan Jackson. Sandler, Darren McGavin, Bridgette Wilson. ’ (CC) auto racer prefers music and cars to romance. animals teach their shy caretaker how to woo a woman. ’ (CC) Mel Gibson, Danny Glover, Gary Busey. ’ (CC) Baseball Tonight (N) (Live) (CC) MLB Baseball: Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim at Chicago White Sox. (N) (Live) (CC) SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC) SportsCenter (CC) (ESPN) SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC) 2012 World Series of Poker 2012 World Series of Poker 2012 World Series of Poker 2012 World Series of Poker 2012 World Series of Poker 2012 World Series of Poker MLB Baseball (ESPN2) 2012 World Series of Poker America’s Funniest Home Videos Joel Osteen Kerry Shook Paid Program Paid Program (FAM) (3:00) “Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince” Movie: ››› “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1” (2010, Fantasy) Daniel Radcliffe, Rupert Grint. Premiere. Fox News Sunday Fox News Sunday Huckabee Stossel FOX Report (N) Huckabee (N) (FNC) Geraldo at Large (N) ’ (CC) Geraldo at Large ’ (CC) Iron Chef America:Tournament Cupcake Wars (N) Iron Chef America:Tournament Restaurant: Impossible (N) Restaurant: Impossible Iron Chef America:Tournament Restaurant: Impossible (FOOD) Chopped (FX) Movie: › “The Waterboy” (1998) Adam Sandler, Kathy Bates. Movie: ›› “Step Brothers” (2008) Will Ferrell, John C. Reilly. Movie: ›› “Step Brothers” (2008) Will Ferrell, John C. Reilly. Movie: ›› “Baby Mama” (2008, Comedy) Tina Fey, Amy Poehler. The Golden Movie:“Beverly Lewis’The Confession” (2013) Sherry Stringfield. A Frasier “Selling Frasier “Oops!” Frasier “Death Frasier ’ (CC) The Golden (4:00) Movie: ››› “Back toYou Movie: ››› “Your Love Never Fails” (2011) Elisa Donovan, Kirstin (HALL) man hatches a devious scheme to inherit his dying wife’s estate. (CC) Becomes Him” and Me” (2005, Drama) (CC) Dorn. Laura has to move to Texas with her daughter, Kelsey. (CC) Girls ’ (CC) Girls ’ (CC) Out” ’ (CC) ’ (CC) House Hunters Hunters Int’l House Hunters Hunters Int’l Hawaii Life Hawaii Life House Hunters Hunters Int’l You Live in What? (CC) Extreme Homes (N) (CC) Extreme Homes (CC) (HGTV) House Hunters Hunters Int’l Larry the Cable Guy Swamp People “Devoured” Ax Men “Hell or High Water” Ax Men “The Final Straw” (N) Swamp People (CC) (:01) Ax Men “Hell or High Water” (12:01) Ax Men “The Final Straw” (HIST) Swamp People “Ride or Die” (4:00) Movie:“A Mother’s Night- Movie:“Abducted:The Carlina White Story” (2012) Aunjanue Ellis. Ann Army Wives “Reckoning” Maggie The Client List “What Part of No” (:01) Movie:“Abducted:The Carlina White Story” (2012, Docudrama) (12:02) Army Wives “Reckoning” (LIFE) mare” (2012) Annabeth Gish. (CC) Pettway kidnaps an infant and raises the child as her daughter. bonds with Caroline. (N) (CC) Lacey is attacked. (N) (CC) Aunjanue Ellis, Keke Palmer, Sherri Shepherd. (CC) Maggie bonds with Caroline. MSNBC Documentary MSNBC Documentary MSNBC Documentary MSNBC Documentary MSNBC Documentary MSNBC Documentary MSNBC Documentary (MSNBC) MSNBC Documentary Ke$ha: My Cr. Ke$ha: My Cr. Teen Mom 2 ’ (Part 1 of 2) Zach Stone Is The Show With The Real World ’ (CC) (MTV) 16 and Pregnant “Mackenzie” ’ 16 and Pregnant “Myranda” ’ Girl Code ’ Awkward. ’ Girl Code ’ Girl Code ’ SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob See Dad Run Wendell-Vinnie Movie: ››› “Clueless” (1995) Alicia Silverstone. Premiere. ’ (CC) Friends (CC) (:33) Friends ’ (:06) Friends (:39) Friends See Dad Run George Lopez (NICK) SpongeBob (4:30) Bar Movie: ›› “Four Brothers” (2005, Crime Drama) Mark Wahlberg, Tyrese Gibson, André Movie: ›› “The Fast and the Furious:Tokyo Drift” (2006, Action) Lucas Black, Zachery Ty Bar Rescue Jon Taffer helps a bar Bar Rescue “Downey’s and Out” Bar Rescue ’ (SPIKE) Jon Taffer resuscitates Downey’s. Rescue ’ owner in Boston. ’ Benjamin. Siblings seek revenge for their adoptive mother’s murder. ’ Bryan, Bow Wow. An American street racer takes on a Japanese champion. ’ (3:00) Movie: Movie: ›› “Star Trek Generations” (1994, Science Fiction) Patrick Stewart, William Shat- Movie: ›› “Star Trek: Nemesis” (2002, Science Fiction) Patrick Stewart, Jonathan Frakes, Movie: ›› “Star Trek: Insurrection” (1998) Patrick Stewart. The Enter- Weird or What? (SYFY) “Outlander” ner, Malcolm McDowell. The Enterprise crew encounters a deranged scientist. Brent Spiner. Capt. Picard faces his Romulan-engineered clone. prise crew leads a revolt against the Federation. (CC) ’ Judex A 1916 Judex A 1916 Judex A 1916 (4:15) Movie: ››› “Peyton Place” (1957, Drama) Lana Turner. Grace Movie: ››› “Roughly Speaking” (1945) Rosalind Russell. A career- Movie: ›››› “I Remember Mama” (1948, Comedy-Drama) Irene Dunne, Barbara Bel (TCM) French serial. French serial. French serial. Metalious’ steamy tale of life in a New England town. (CC) minded woman faces hardship raising two families. (CC) Geddes. Writer recalls her Norwegian mother and San Francisco kin. (CC) (DVS) Island Medium Island Medium Island Medium Island Medium Long Island Medium: On the Island Medium Island Medium Breaking Amish: Brave New Island Medium Island Medium Breaking Amish: Brave New Long Island Medium: On the (TLC) Inside the NBA (N) (Live) (CC) (TNT) (4:30) Movie: ›› “Lara Croft:Tomb Raider” (CC) NBA Tip-Off (N) NBA Basketball: Conference Semifinal: Teams TBA. (N) (Live) (CC) Movie: › “Biker Boyz” (2003) Laurence Fishburne, Derek Luke. (CC) D.O.A.: Dead Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls King of Queens King of Queens King of Queens King of Queens That ’70s Show (TVL) Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Suits “Zane vs. Zane” Harvey goes (:01) Movie: ›› “It’s Complicated” (2009) Meryl Streep, Steve Martin. A (USA) against Rachel’s father. divorcee is caught between her ex and an architect. (CC) The murder of a nanny. ’ “Closet” ’ (CC) “Sin” ’ (CC) A student dies at a party. ’ “Undercover” ’ (CC) T.I. and Tiny T.I. and Tiny Model Employee Models arrive. Love & Hip Hop: Atlanta ’ (VH1) Movie: ››› “The Nutty Professor” (1996) Eddie Murphy. ’ I’m Married to A... ’ I’m Married to A... (N) ’ I’m Married to A... ’ (WTBS) Movie: ›› “Meet the Browns” (2008) Tyler Perry. (CC) (DVS) Movie: ›› “Why Did I Get Married?” (2007) Tyler Perry, Janet Jackson. (CC) (DVS) Movie: ›› “Tyler Perry’s I Can Do Bad All By Myself” (2009) Tyler Perry. (CC) (DVS) Movie: › “Our Family Wedding” PREMIUM 5:00 5:30 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30 Game of Thrones Dany exchanges Veep “Helsinki” Family Tree “The Game of Thrones Dany exchanges Veep “Helsinki” Family Tree “The Movie › “Abraham Lincoln:Vam(4:30) Movie ›› “Journey 2:The (:15) Movie › “Wrath of the Titans” (2012, Fantasy) Sam Worthington. (HBO) gifts with a slave lord. (N) pire Hunter” (2012) ‘R’ (CC) (N) ’ (CC) Box” ’ gifts with a slave lord. ’ ’ (CC) Box” ’ Mysterious Island” (2012) ’ Perseus must rescue Zeus from the underworld. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) (4:45) Movie ›››› “Alien” (1979, Science Fiction) (:40) Movie ›››› “Aliens” (1986, Science Fiction) Sigourney Weaver, Carrie Henn, Movie ››› “Alien 3” (1992) Sigourney Weaver. Lone woman finds Movie ›› “Alien Resurrection” (1997) Sigourney Weaver. Ripley’s clone (MAX) Tom Skerritt, Sigourney Weaver. ’ ‘R’ (CC) Michael Biehn. Space Marines battle an army of deadly monsters. ’ ‘R’ (CC) thugs, zealots and horror on prison planet. ’ ‘R’ (CC) and mercenaries battle escaped aliens. ’ ‘R’ (CC) (3:45) Movie The Big C: Hereafter “You Can’t The Borgias Farnese discovers Nurse Jackie Nurse Jackie Nurse Jackie The Borgias Cesare’s mission is a The Borgias Cesare’s mission is a Nurse Jackie The Big C: Hereafter “You Can’t The Borgias ’ (SHOW) “Mean Girls” “Good Thing” “Good Thing” (CC) Take It With You” ’ (CC) Versucci’s theft. ’ (CC) “Lost Girls” ’ “Good Thing” success. (N) ’ (CC) success. ’ (CC) Take It With You” ’ (CC) (3:40) “From (:20) Movie ›› “Peace, Love & Misunderstanding” Movie ››› “The Help” (2011, Drama) Viola Davis, Emma Stone, Bryce Dallas Howard. An Movie › “Def Jam’s How to Be a Player” (1997, (:05) Movie ›› “Blues Brothers 2000” (1998) Dan Aykroyd. Elwood (TMC) Time to Time” (2011) Jane Fonda. ’ ‘R’ (CC) aspiring writer captures the experiences of black women. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) Comedy) Bill Bellamy, Natalie Desselle. ’ ‘R’ (CC) Blues tries to start up a new Blues Brothers band. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC)
CLASSIFIED
Page F4• Sunday, May 12, 2013
Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com
AT YOUR SERVICE
In print daily Online 24/7
Visit the Local Business Directory online at NWHerald.com/localbusiness. Call to advertise 815-455-4800
Eddie's Landscaping ✦ ✦ ✦ ✦ ✦ ✦ ✦ ✦ ✦ ✦
✦
HANDYMAN SERVICES ● Power
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Washing
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● Decks ● Painting ● Carpentry ● Handyman
Services
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Over 25 yrs experience
$50 off your first $250 ● Low Rates ● Senior Discounts ● Free
Estimates
Call Mike & Get It Done RIGHT! 815-823-3161
Father & Son Heating * Furnace & A/C Insulations * Duck Work & Gas Pipings * Commercial/Residential & Maintenance Service
FREE ESTIMATES FULLY INSURED
30 + Years Established 847-630-2223
FLOOD & WATER DAMAGE MK Drywall / Renew Restoration Take Care of the "Mold" Before it Starts! Serving McHenry County for over 25 Years Fully Insured Call for free estimates
Stonetree Landscapes Inc.
815-648-1515 262-770-9503
JUNK REMOVAL SERVICES
*Mulch *Landscape Stone *Sand & Gravels *Topsoil *Garden Mixes *Flagstone *Boulders
! Springtime !
Free Pick-Up
LUCAS CUSTOM CONCRETE
Appliances, Electronics Any Kind of Metal or Batteries
Custom Design of Patios & Driveways, Including Stamped, Color, and Exposed Concrete. We also specialize in Brick & Stone Work Bobcat & Trucking Serv. Provided
Pick Up & Delivery ✲ ✲ ✲ ✲
815-482-8406 ✲ ✲ ✲ ✲
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815-337-8200 stonetreelandscapes.net
We Accept Visa Mastercard & Discover
Dark Brown Mulch
$25 Cubic Yard Installed
D. K. QUALITY TUCKPOINTING & MASONRY ✦ Tuckpointing ✦ Chimney Repair/Caps ✦ Brick & Stone
815-482-6990 Delivery Available!
Fully Insured Free Estimates
♦
Owner Is Always On Job Site!
♦ ♦ ♦ ♦
847-525-9920 www.dkquality.com
♦
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Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com
Sunday, May 12, 2013 • Page F5
AT YOUR SERVICE
In print daily Online 24/7
Visit the Local Business Directory online at NWHerald.com/localbusiness. Call to advertise 815-455-4800 Nippersink Landscape Supply
LAKEVIEW HOME IMPROVEMENTS
Spring
Interior * Exterior Painting * Staining Cedar Staining
Mulch Specials double ground triple ground ruby red top soil compost gravel
$30.00 $32.00 $45.00 $30.00 $30.00 $30.00
BIG JOB's SMALL JOB's
DECK REFINISING!
Free Delivery to Richmond, Spring Grove & Johnsburg
Commercial & Residential
For More Info, or to schedule delivery; 8713 NORTH SOLON ROAD
www.mulchmania.com
Free Estimates Fully Insured Impeccable Ref.
815-675-0900 847-514-9671 847-833-2598
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED! 815-528-0586
C.R.O.
ROOTER PLUMBERS
PAINTING AND DECORATING
Lic. Bonded Ins.
DRAIN CLEANING
As low as $49.00
Interior/Exterior 2 Story Foyers Trim Painting Drywall Repair Power washing Wallpaper Removal
*Sump Pumps & Injector Pumps Installed
FULLY INSURED FREE ESTIMATES
10%OFF *Plumbing Repairs *Sewer Repairs
Chris McHenryCountySports.com is McHenry County Sports
NOTICE PUBLICATION POLICIES This publication reserves the right to edit or reject any ads without comment. This publication is careful to review all advertising but the burden of truthful content belongs to the advertiser. We use standard abbreviations and we reserve the right to properly classify your ad. All ads are subject to credit approval. We reserve the right to require prepayment. We accept cash, check, Visa, Mastercard and Discover. CHECK YOUR AD Please check your ad the first day it is published. If you see an error, call us immediately and it will be corrected for the next available publication date. Our liability is for only one publication date and shall not exceed the total cost of the first day of publication.
by ng mp corporated (mcomiskey@lampinc.net or 847-741-7220 x324) and requesting an Invitation to Bid from GradeBeam. Bidders may download drawings for free from GradeBeam. Lamp will be utilizing GradeBeam for the entire bidding process, including addenda. All interested bidders MUST contact Lamp Incorporated to access the GradeBeam website. Bidding documents will be on file and may be obtained from the Consolidated School District 158 website (www.district158.org) or by calling the office of the Director of Operations and Maintenance, 650 Academic, Algonquin, Illinois 60102, telephone (847) 6596163, fax (847) 659-6126. A pre-bid meeting will be held at 3:00 P.M. on May 21, 2013 at the Huntley High School Athletic Fields, 13719 Harmony Road, Huntley, Illinois 60142. Dr. John D. Burkey, Superintendent Consolidated School District 158 (Published in the Northwest Herald on May 12, 2013 #A909)
PUBLIC NOTICE REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL for Contracted Information Technology Services Date: May 10, 2013 RFP Number: RFP03-2012 Purpose: This Request for Proposal is for the purpose of contracting with a qualified vendor to provide McHenry County Mental Health Board with a Service Level Agreement for contracted Information Technology services providing support in the following divisions; workstation, server and network management. The responder must also clearly delineate their approach and capabilities for addressing each of these components: 1.) Support and Monitoring, 2.) Disaster Preparedness and Recovery, 3.) Accessibility, 4.) Security, 5.) Infrastructure. Copies of the RFP are available online at www.mc708.org/RFP or by obtaining a copy in person at the McHenry County Mental Health Board, 620 Dakota St., Crystal Lake, IL 60012. (Published in the Northwest Herald May 12, 2013 A914)
Call to advertise 815-455-4800
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42nd ANNUAL AUTO SHOW
For 2001 Expedition, medium grey leather, exc cond, $100. 847-516-8015 Car Top Carrier – Sears X Cargo Enclosed – Like New $75 815-790-8213 Lv. Msg.
SUN, MAY 26 8-3 Adults $5 Sandwich Fair Grounds Sandwich, IL. Show Cars $10, Car Corrral $20 & Specialty Trucks $20
815-970-4371
1997 Ford Expedition XLT 4x4
Loaded, 115K miles, 3rd row seat. Leather, no rust, no dents, excellent condition! Looks and runs great! $3,900 815-245-8871 2000 Jeep Grand Cherokee. Fully loaded. Leather Seats. Sun roof. 232K mi. Must see! $3000 OBO. 312-813-0765
2002 Jeep Grand Cherokee 4WD, V8, Gray exterior with black leather interior, sunroof, stereo, runs good, some minor body work needed, no rust, tires near new. 141K miles. $3000 OBO. Call (815) 354-8569
2008 Mitsubishi Outlander SUV 6 cylinder, 4WD, silver with black cloth interior. CD changer, remote keyless entry, fog lights and third row seating, 48,000 miles. Excellent Condition!
$14,500 Call Dan 847-812-4016
Check out the
3rd Row Seat
CONTRACTOR TOP - 8',
$325. obo. 847-875-6739 Roof Rack – For 2010 Jeep Liberty – Used Once – 2 Months Old Paid $225 – Asking $100. 815-334-8278 after 3 pm Starter & Alternator For 2.4 Chrysler Engine ( Rebuilt Starter & Good Alternator - $100 for both 815-236-4755
"" "" """ "" ""
I BUY CARS, TRUCKS, VANS & SUVs 1990 & Newer Will beat anyone's price by $300.
If it rains on your sale, we will run your ad again the next week for FREE!
Call 800-589-8237 or email:
classified@shawsuburban.com
1994 Chrysler LeBaron Grey, V6, 4 door, 136K miles. Garage kept, runs great! $2500. 847-587-5875
2000 Lincoln Continental
80K Mi, well maintained, $5500 815-459-9078 2003 Ford Mustang $17000 40k miles. potent street rod, procharged 815-349-9443
2011 Jeep Liberty with factory warranty, 6cyl, silver/black, RWD, power window/mirror. LIKE NEW. $15,295. 224-643-7744
1957 Chevy Pickup. Barn Find Restoration project. 87K miles. $2500. obo. 847-875-6739
Will BUY UR USED CAR, TRUCK, SUV,
Our Great Garage Sale Guarantee!
1975 Triumph Spitfire Convertible Fully restored. Excellent cond. 24K original mi. Runs great, looks great! $7500. 847-458-8556
www.HuskieWire.com All NIU Sports... All The Time
If it rains on your sale, we will run your ad again the next week for FREE!
Call 800-589-8237 or email:
classified@shawsuburban.com
ALL TYPES OF ROOFING
✦All
and Repairs types of masonry work
Free Estimate. Fully Insured
Don't worry about rain!
36 Years Exp.
All work is Guaranteed.
847-857-8783
5% OFF
In business since 1998 with an unrivaled commitment to detail and quality workmanship.
With This Ad
www.AnchorMasonry.com
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BBB - Excellent O.C.F. Preferred Contractor
Angie's List Member Northwest Herald Local news that's Closer to home! Subscribe today 800-589-9363
With our Great Garage Sale Guarantee you'll have great weather for your sale, or we'll run your ad again for FREE. Call to advertise 815-455-4800
Register for FREE today at
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TV 13” With VHS Player Free 815-363-1903
2000 HONDA GL1500C VALKYRIE $5800 O.B.O. Moving, must sell. Great Bike! 847-361-3150
WILL BEAT ANY QUOTE GIVEN!! $400 - $2000 “don't wait.... call 2day”!!
Men's suits, leather coats, winter coats, sizes 40-44. All suits cleaned (new were $1000, coats were $500). $100 ea. 224-321-7536 Charlie.
2004 Class A 30' Four Winds RV. Perfect condition, Ford gas engine, 17K miles, 1 slide out, AC, 4 leveling jacks, 5.5 generator sleeps 6, patio awning Queen bed Must sell, asking 38K. 815-382-5521
MOST CASH
Motorcycle Leather Jacket
Black, (men, size 44), like new! $65 847-516-8015
HORSE MANURE - FREE. clean no rocks or twine. U haul we will load. take a lot or a little. 815-566-1155
HORSE MANURE
Boto Commercial Truck Tires New Steer & Drive 11R22.5 295/75R22.5 $325 per tire Call 708-372-7987
Will load for you on your pick up. 815-344-9205
MATTRESS ~ KING SIZE Newer, excellent condition! 815-546-3788
* 815-575-5153 *
WANTED: OLD CARS & TRUCKS FOR
$CASH$ We pay and can Tow it away!
Call us today: 815-338-2800 ROUTE 14 AUTO PARTS
Red Devils, size 25x8x12 front & 25x10x12 rear. Brand new, $300/obo 815-236-1048
"" "" """ "" ""
1999 Chevy Suburban: 4 wheel drive, 3 rd row seat, leather interior, towing packing, excellent condition $4500. 815-337-8219
OPEN HOUSES Watch for the Northwest Classified Open House Directory every Friday, Saturday & Sunday. Include your listing by calling 800-589-8237 or email: classified@shawsuburban.com
815-814-1224
✦Tuckpointing ✦Chimney Rebuilding
Leather Coat – Women's - Long Black – Size Large - $100 815-323-0091 1pm-4pm
ATV TIRES (4) or
Free Estimates
A-1 AUTO
Will pay extra for Honda, Toyota & Nissan
815-814-1964
A. M. R. CONTRACTING, INC.
815-334-8616 847-931-2433
1-800-272-1936 NWHerald.com/jobs
A. JAYNE ROOFING
1980 Lund Power Boat 17ft. Open bow fiberglass. I/O. 160HP, Good Condition. EZ Loader trailer. Sound system. Marine Radio, Down riggers, Depth Founder, $3,500. Good Condition. 847-740-9244 Canoe - Mad River Passage 16 canoe. $235. Call after 4pm 443-206-3446 Canoe – Coleman 15ft – Exc. Cond. W/Paddles $245 815-988-8934 OUTBOARD MOTOR – 9.5 HP Older Johnson (1969-1976), runs, needs a few things, $200 obo. Call 8am-8pm, 630-642-0276
PADDLE BOAT
With canopy, seats 5. Excellent condition, asking $300. 815-943-7711
1992 HD Heritage Softail $7500 OBO, 33k, S&S Carb, Cams, Straight Pipes, Whtwalls, Blu, Pass Seat, Windshield, 815-260-3721
Sofa 84 inch, beautiful. Free! 815-459-2277
Pandora Bracelet – Clasp lock – 7 Charms = Car, Monkey See, Suitcase, Bible, Tea Cup, Elephant, Pig $200 815-385-8718 QUINCEANERA CELEBRATION DRESS - Stunning fancy full special occasion dress, intricate detailing, beautiful with gorgeous bead work, white, size 12. Communion, junior bride, flower girl. $75. 815-477-9023. Rosary – Vintage Silver/Black Made In Italy – Nice Detail $25obo & Shipping if necessary 847-961-5564 Before 9PM
WE'VE GOT IT! Northwest Classified 800-589-8237 www.NWHerald.com
Television- Sony 27 inch color TV with remote, FREE. 815-459-2277
ANSWERS TO CROSSWORD S A L O O N S
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O P E N S
A L L O K
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E C U A D O R
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S Y D E S I S S P R Y E O A B U U R T I S S O N T R H E A B N L E
G O S H
A C T U P H O U N R L D N D A E C S O O Y O
S T A T U T E L A P S
N U B U D I SAT R A L E A W S A
C A P A D S N D S S T T T D O G S R K E I N E D I N E S THU C H M L E B A S R B E A S P A I N G O E A E R S A Y
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A S T U T D A
L A T V I S T A M I N I T L L A E E S Y H S T E Y S A P FRI E D C A I A B S A C O V A R O D O W
A T E I N T O
R E D D E E R
M A U V E
A P T E R
A R T L E S S
N O S I R E E
CLASSIFIED
Page F6• Sunday, May 12, 2013
Northwest HeraldSunday, / NWHerald.com May 12, 2013 “Finally Springtime!!!” Photo by: Sue
Upload your photos on My Photos – McHenry County’s community photo post! Photos on My Photos are eligible to appear in print in Northwest Herald Classified. Go to NWHerald.com/myphotos
SATCHEL PURSE - Lg Vinyl Brown / Khaki W Cargo Pant Pockets. 18" W x 14" H. Black lining w/ pockets of same material. $35. McHenry 815-236-1747 TRENCH COAT - Classic Ladies Regal Royal Blue, Size 3/4 lined, practically brand new. Gorgeous! $45. 815 477-9023 Watches – 2 – (1) Seiko Black Face w/Gold Band & (1) Boccia Titanium All Gray - $250 obo (will separate) 815-344-3073
DRYER - Amana Gas dryer. White $85.00. Good condition 815-670-2829 Dryer. Maytag. Gas. White. Great condition. $299. 630-973-3528 Dryer. Whirlpool. Electric. Extra large. Excellent cond. $175. Call Karen: 262-723-1746 GRILL Weber Genisis 3 burner push button start needs cleaning. $50, call after 5 PM: 815 455-4140 Microwave: NEW! 30” Overhead w/fan. $100 815-742-1631 Reconditioned & Guaranteed Appliances: Washers, dryers, stoves, refrigerators, & dishwashers. Assured Appliance 847-293-0047 STOVE (GE) & MICROWAVE (Sanyo) $95. 815-355-8048 WASHER / ELECTRIC DRYER Inglis 4300 series with owner's manual. Excellent condition. $600/obo. 815-477-3743
BABY CLOTHES - For baby boy, size newborn-12 months. Fisher-Price, Carters, The Children's Place & more! All seasons. Good condition, no rips/stains. $5 each or $25 for the whole box. Crystal Lake 815-893-6955 8am-8pm CAR SEAT - Graco, gender-neutral "Bancroft" pattern, excellent condition (no accidents). Get the matching stroller for free! Pix available. $25 OBO Crystal Lake. 815-893-6955 8am-8pm DIAPERS ~ 100% COTTON New in package, flat 27”x27”. $8/dozen, pre-fold, 14”x20”. $9/dozen. 630-721-0068 Exer Saucer – Even Flo – Exc. Cond. $30 847-639-6457 9am-6pm GRACO PACK & PLAY - Gender-neutral "Bancroft" pattern with coordinating sheets. Excellent condition, barely used. $40 OBO Crystal Lake 815-893-6955 8am-8pm High Chair $10 815-742-1631 HIGH CHAIR - Graco Harmony High Chair, gender neutral "Abbington" pattern. Very good condition, pix available. $25 OBO. Crystal Lake 815-893-6955 8am-8pm PLAYTEX DIAPER GENIE II - Excellent condition, CLEAN. $10 OBO. Crystal Lake 815-893-6955 8a-8p Pre-Fold Cloth Diapers. 24/15-30 lbs. 24/30-45 lbs. 10 diaper covers. Used 1 yr. $280 value. Asking $100. 847-476-6771 Toddlers Bed, White Good Condition, $50. 815-742-1631
Washer/ Gas Dryer: Sears Kenmore 90 series, exc. working cond. w/owners manual, $400/OBO 815-546-1037
American Flyer S Guage Train Set. Locomotive, 4 cars. $175. 815-814-4289 Baseball Cards. Topps 1993 set. 94, '08, '12. 3000+ cards. Worth $300+ Asking $140. 815-338-4829 Basketball “Star” Cards. 200+ cards. Worth $225+ Asking $99. 815-338-4829 CHAIR - Antique Child's Red Wooden Chair - 24-1/2" high at back. $28. McHenry. 815-236-1747
CHINA CABINET
With glass doors, 50 + years old, good condition! $400. 815-356-0883 Collector Plate Holders (3) New – Oak – Each holds 4 Plates – Wall Mount $10 each 815-363-1903 Crock J.Peck & Son 20 gallon. $175. 815-823-2929 Dolls (4) – Porcelain – In Boxes w/ Stands $25. each 815-653-9304 Folding Chairs (4). Wood Slatted. Pre-1950's. Used at social events. Asking $99/all. 815-338-4829 Gas Stove: Porcelain 1920's, MFG, crown stove, works $225 815-568-8036 Hanging lamp – Kerosene – Brass w/White Globe – Very Nice – One Of A Kind - $75 obo 847-639-3154 JAR - Glass w/ metal Lid. Outside red w/ ridges in glass. Top opening 5" diameter, Jar is 7 1/2" diameter & 7" high. $25. McHenry. 815-236-1747 Mantel Clock - Sessions brand, 1915. Works. Exc. Cond. $200. 815-459-7485 MIXING BOWLS - 3 matching: "Hall's Superior Quality Kitchenware - Eureka Homewood Pattern". Lg 8 5/8", Med 7 3/8", Sm 6 1/8". $49. McHenry. 815-236-1747 NORMAN ROCKWELL PRINTS Professionally framed, excellent condition. A dozen available. Reasonably priced. 847-515-8012 Picture: Washboard Blues, good condition $75 262-279-2968 Poloroid Land Camera Swinger Model 20. Mint w/case & papers. $25. 815-459-7485 Shot Gun – Springfield Model 18 12 gauge By Savage – Maybe 1950's – Must Have Valid Foid Card - $250obo 815-790-5517 No Calls After 7PM Snowblower MTD – Single Stage Electric Starter – w/operator's Manual – Excellent Condition $75 obo 847-639-3154 TOOL BOX - Antique Refinished Pine 28-1/2" x 13" x 8-3/4" w/ 7 sectioned drawer & brass latch dowel carrying handle. $145. McHenry. 815-236-1747 Trains – Set of 3 – 1)Bachmann Big Haulers:Thunderbolt Express w/additional Quaker State Tanker, 2)Bachmann Big Haulers:Royal Blue Passenger, 3)Thunderbolt Express:Ho Train Set. Plus Asseccories All Layed Out On 12'x7' Table $300. 815-338-5172 VANITY - Beautiful pine vanity with attached mirror & center drawer. This beautiful antique piece was brought from England by the dealer. 37-1/4" wide, 20" deep & 29-1/2" to top of vanity. Mirror 22-3/8" wide by 35-3/8" high. Center drawer has metal pull & 14" wide. Legs & side mirror supports have charming decorative sculptured detail. $450. 815-236-1747
26” Blue Mt. Fury Roadmaster 5 speed, good condition, 1 flat tire $12 815-675-2216
HIGH - FI W/RADIO $35 815-385-4450 Kenwood Cassette Deck: 1970's KX-830, wood cabinet, excellent condition $150 815-578-0212 Kenwood Receiver, 1970's KR-6030, wood cabinet excellent condition, $250 815-578-0212 Printer ~ Digital Photo Sony DPPEX50. Prints wonderful pictures, $55/obo. 847-829-4546 Tape Recorder –– Reel To Reel – Concord Stereophonic 880 3 Heads Sound n Sound Includes Microphone $45 – 815-338-5083 9am-9pm TELEVISION - 54” Hitachi, Big screen. Black Marble Case. Excellent condtion. $125. Best time to call, after 9am. 815-526-2307 TV - 36" Toshiba $35. Call 815-355-8048 TV - Toshiba – 36” Color Works Great $60 847-409-1838 TV TOSHIBA 20” DVD/VCR combo, excellent working condition! $125 847-829-4546
Wii With 8 Games
Exercise board, 2 controllers, charger and more, $275. 815-356-0883
AB-LOUNGE 2 - $30. 815-356-5826
Trampoline ~ Large
Less Than A Year Old - Looks Great! $200 815-943-5319 Weider platinum 600 workout machine. good shape runs great $150/obo. 815-566-1155 Weidner Master Trainer Exercise Machine In good shape. $100 847-302-7009
BIKE - 10 SPEED
Vintage 1973 Women's Schwinn. Varsity green, great shape! $300. 847-516-3668 BOYS - 24" Boys Murray 10 speed Bicycle. $35. 815-385-1732 GIRLS - 26" Girls Murray Bicycle $35. 815-385-1732
Doors Interior 3 Panel
White, 32”x80”, $10/ea or 3 for $25. 847-848-0285
Drywall Metal Outcorners
197 pieces, $25. 847-516-8015 Wall Funace – Natural Gas – 29000btu w/Blower – thermostat Controled – 6' High – 14”Wide 12” D - $300.obo 815-943-3305 Day Windows: 2 30x30” Vinyl Sash Windows w/screens, $110 good for garage or shed 815-354-2462
Ashton Drake - Winter Bride Porcelain Doll. Excellent Condition in box. $30. email for photo: trichalin@aol.com CANISTER SET - Mary Engelbreit Cherries Jubilee Collection ceramic hard to find, retired set. Very pretty in shades of deep apple green, golden yellow and bright cherry red, adorable. Excellent. $75. 815-477-9023 CERAMIC NAPKIN HOLDER PFALTZGRAFF Pattern DELICIOUS, discontinued. Simple American Country retro nostalgic red and white gingham check with apples. Great addition to your existing pattern or stand alone beautifully! Hard to find item. Perfect Cond. $25. 815-477-9023 Marie Osmond Tiny Tot Dolls Porcelain. Excellent Condition. 6 Dolls - four have boxes and tags. $150. Email for photo and more information: trichalin@aol.com Marilyn Monroe plate and hanger $30. 815-385-1732 VINTAGE INDUSTRIAL TYPE 3-HOLE PUNCH - Made by Master Products Mfg. Co. Model 3-25 black heavy duty, adjustable with lever action, works well. Made in the USA. $35. 815-477-9023 Yachting magazines. Years 19902010 excellent condition- great for water or boat person. $10 obo Call anytime, 815-344-9665
ANTIQUE DRY SINK - Charming shabby chic painted wood antique dry sink with attached adjustable mirror and white enamel metal bowl. 25-3/4" wide, 21-1/2" deep & 29" high. 2 attached wood towel racks on each side for a total width of 33". White enamel bowl 15" diameter, 6" deep. Bottom shelf 6" from floor. Top section with mirror is 20-1/2" high & 25-3/4" wide & has 2 drawers, each 6" wide & 2-3/4" high. $380 Bring Cash. 815-236-1747 ANTIQUE OAK CHAIR - 36" high at back & seat 16-1/2" wide. 2 curved accent braces as shown. Chair is in excellent condition and is very sturdy. $52. 815-236-1747
Arm Chair - Rattan Chair & footstool, w/ pads. Like New! $95. 847-802-4049 BAR STOOLS - durable hardwood 2 counter height stools with grey suede seat covers. Excellent $75. 815-477-9023 Bar stools w/tan seats: Rattan 4/$200 815-385-4353 BED - Full size, white bed with box spring and mattress. $125/obo 815-670-2829 Bed – Head & Foot Board – King Size – Beautiful Light Washed Cane – Solid Wood w/Carving Orig.$2,800. Asking $250 815-790-8213 Beds w/Headboards – 2 Twin Size $30 815-323-0091 1pm-4pm CHAIRS & TABLE - 4 gray fabric, swivel, high back, w/ arm rest chairs & black table, size 59” length, 36” width & 30” high. Chairs $50 for 4; Table $25 or $65 for all. Call 262-945-5207 before 9pm Chairs & Table: 6 upholstered chairs with table and 1 leaf excellent condition. 100/OBO. 815-385-1311 Chipper/Shredder: Craftsman 5HP w/McCullough, weed wacker/brush cutter $150obo 815-568-8036
COFFEE & SIDE TABLES
Computer Battery Back-up
600 watts. $75. 630-624-8250
Computer Desk
with 3 drawers and lots of storage, $325. 815-356-0883 Find !t here! PlanitNorthwest.com
OnLine Auctions Everyday Vehicles; Trucks; Trailers; Tractors; Snow Blowers; Golf Carts; ATV's; Motorcycles; Mowers & Landscape Equip.; Tools; Boats; Bikes; Computers; Coins; Guns; Jewelry; Misc
www.ObenaufAuctions OnLine.com
847-489-1820
LOVE SEAT – Green love Seat with 2 Rose Patterend Pillows. Excellent condition. $75. Best time to call, afer 9am. 815-526-2307. Luxury Leather Sofa-7.5 ft long, 3 cushion, deep rich brown, carved wood frame, padded arms have carved wood at front, padded curved back, massive, comfortable, fits modern or traditional home, beautiful condition. $350/firm. 331-442-1556 9am – 9:30pm Mattress Set – King Size – Stearns & Foster – Edmond Series $110 815-790-8213 Moving Out of State, MUST SELL! Lovely old player piano in excellent condition w/bench, cabinet filled w/music rolls and 2 crystal hurricane lamps - $2,000 for all; 4-chair oak dinette set-$200; Large 80" Choc. Brown leather sofa w/recliner (like new)-$500; Antique coffee cart w/glass top$475; Beautiful framed pictures.various prices; Brown Bear's head mount -$50; Baby Fawn full body mount-$375: mounts are nice for a den or "man-cave". Johnsburg, IL 815-382-4574 Office Chair – Leather Swivel $30 Office Desk – 7 Drawer 54”x24x29” $40obo Bamboo Swing Chair w/Metal Frame & Ottoman $45obo Bamboo PaPa San Chair $45 Bamboo Princess Chair (Fan Back) $45. 815-568-8036 Office Chair Like new condition $50 815-742-1631 PATIO CHAISE LOUNGES – 2 Reclining chairs with heavy duty adjustable steel frames and padded leg, seat, back , arms and comfort pillow. Forest green color, like new condition. Folds easily for compact storage in box. $45 each. Companion steel table has 4 legs and round top & is 17 inches high x 16 inches wide. $10. 815-477-7638. Patio Table: oval glass top 6ftx4ft 4 chairs, umbrella & stand, new $1700 asking $400/OBO 847-515-3502 Pictures/Tropical Palm Trees (2) $35/ea. 847-829-4546 Rocking chairs: white, w/wood slats, matching pair, excellent condition $100 815-578-0212 Roll Top Desk and barrel chair, $100 815-385-4353 Room dividers (2): rattan $50 815-385-4353
GLASS PEDESTAL CAKE STAND AND COVER - Classic, extra large glass cake plate pedestal with a dome handle at the top and a lip along the inside of the cake plate. Imagine how cute to serve at your next tea party. Very good condition. $15. 815-477-9023 Homer Laughlin china made in the USA in the 1940's. Eggshell Georgian pattern. (delicate pink & blue flowers) Service for 8 plus several serving pieces plus extra pieces for replacement purposes. Moving soon so need to sell. Asking $80 or best offer. Photos emailed upon request. Cash only. No returns. Call Dolores @ 815-219-0204. Lamp Shade-cloth, eggshell color, new in wrapping. Size L12” W8” D5.5”. $10 OBO 815-344-9665 STORM DOOR - Larsen new wood core storm door White 36x80. $25. 815-482-9429
8”x26” wood laid w/custom bench, tooling included, runs perfect $140 will trade up for larger wood laid 708-363-2004 Bandsaw – Wood Cutting 14” Central Machinery – Floor Model 93½” Blade - Very Good Condition $175 847-669-5898 8am-4:30p
BATTERIES (3)
DeWalt Power Tool batteries. 2 new and 1 used and charger. $80/all. 815-209-5665 Hand Tools. Planes, Sockets w/Ratches, Staple Gun, Multimeter, Dremel Set & more. $10/ea & under. 815-575-4858 Hydraulic Engine Jack on wheels $100 847-302-7009
POWER WASHER
Electric, Huskie, like new! $65. 847-516-8015
Andorra Juniper Bushes (3) $20/ea. 815-455-5454 Annual Seedlings for Sale
GARDENER AVAILABLE
$15
Wood-Working Planer
5-1/8” Jointer-Planer, excellent condition with stand if needed. $175 815-568-6364 Aft 4pm
815-276-9461
BEAUTIFUL LAWN Call us for aerating, fertilizing, slit seeding, de-thatching, soil tests. 815-482-0171 Composter – Suncast – Tumbling $20 815-385-9610 COMPOSTER – Suncast Tumbling Barrel Composter. Used, Very Good Condition, Assembled, Owner's Manual, Barrel 30x24 – Holds 60 lbs. Retail $90. Asking price $40. Best time to call, afternoons. 815-943-3226. Hedge Trimmer. Lesco-Echo. Gas powered. Good cond. $60. 815-759-8766 Horse Manure - Take a lot or a little. U haul. will load. FREE Harvard 815-566-1155 or 815-391-0550
Commode – Folding - Steel – Free Standing Or Over Toilet – Heavy Duty Up To 650lbs. - New In Box $40 815-455-3004
2 Wool blankets 52 x 70 used
by WWII veteran in 1942-43. $60 for both. 815-338-2061
CARD TABLE SET Table and 4 padded chairs. $30. 815-356 5826
GARDEN LOVERS SALE
CHESS SET - Carved Onyx Marble Natural Pink/ Black, 18" board. $30. 815-459-1378
Gas Grill – 5 Burner – Brickman. Slightly Used, Excellent Condition. $100 obo 815-459-4590
Mower for Parts. MTD 7 Speed $250 or best offer 815-690-1538
ORTIZ LANDSCAPING Spring Clean-Up Mulch, brick patios, tree removal, maint work. Insured. 815-355-2121
PATIO SET
48” round white table w/ 4 recliner high back chairs, $150. 815-385-4353
PATIO SET
5 pieces, table and 4 chairs, taupe, glass top, $75. 815-385-1157
PATIO SET tan w/glass hexagon 6 chairs, umbrella w/stand $125 815-385-4353
Raspberry Bushes
Red, big, sweet berries. $5/ea, 5 for $20. 815-477-7916
DECK STAIN $25 815-479-1000
$20
847-516-8015
GLOVES ~ LATEX
GRILLS~ BRINKMAN & WEBER excellent condition, many new parts $100-$300 847-942-4442 Hitch: PRO SERIES HITCH W/SPRING SWAY BARS 10K lb trailer wt. 1K lb hitch wt Paid $500 asking $325 847-669-5426 Metal Wall Hook, Ivory, Bright Shabby Chic Decor, Ornate Hanger, Key Holder, Bathroom Fixture, Bedroom, Laundry, Nursery $25. 815-477-9023
Folding Chairs (4). Wood Slatted. Pre-1950's. Used at social events. Asking $99/all. 815-338-4829 FURNITURE FOR SALE – 1 Couch - $100, 2 Chairs + Ottoman - $75, 1 Recliner - $40, TV Cabinet - $40, 2 Small Tables - $10/each, 1 mirror - $10, Bookcase - $5. Best to call days or evenings. 815-455-7606 McHenryCountySports.com is McHenry County Sports
2 stall barn for rent $375/mo. Supply your own grain & feed 815-728-1701
Steel Cabinet 21X36x27, 2 doors, lexan top. Very nice, $50. 815-459-7485 Storage Shed: Rubbermaid 74”H 65”D 63”W Easy to assemble & disassemble $200 847-658-6293
ASH TRAYS - Set of 6 matching onyx ash trays. Cash only. $15. No returns. Photos emailed upon request. Dolores @ 815-219-0204.
Tanning Half Bed, on rollers, 9 lamps, Sunquest 2000S. Wolff system, $150. Call: 815-385-4353
Bamboo pull up blinds, good condition, 4 large 2 small, $200/OBO will sell separately 815-385-0020 BASEMENT WELL WINDOW New basement double pane well window from Innerweld 37x31 $50. 815-482-9429 Bathroom - 24" 3-Light fixture, Price Pfister faucet, towel bar, toilet paper holder, switch covers. All brushed nickel, like new! $95. 815-459-1378 Bathroom - unframed mirror, 30 x 42. $10. 815-459-1378 Bed Pillow ~Light Blue Velour $12. 630-624-8250 CANISTER SET - 4 ceramic, cream shaped canisters with assorted fruit on top. $20. Call 815-814-8138. Champagne Glasses 66 – 4½oz Libbey – Used Once $20 815-790-8213 Lv. Msg.
Haier Room Air Conditioner. 6,000 BTU's, almost brand new, with box, hardly used. (Pd $200) $100 Call anytime, 815-403-4614 POOL SLIDE! Above ground pool slide. Excellent condition. Serious inquiries only please! $50 OBO 815-509-0442 WICKER CHAIRS - Vintage garden appeal, hand painted lime green, sturdy construction, durable, classic, very cute cottage chic! $195. 815-477-9023
VACUUM
Scraper Blade 6ft – 3pt. Category 1 Solid Spindles/with Gussets $345 815-988-8934
Simplicity Lawn Tractor 16HP Hydrostatic transmission 44” Mower Deck, runs well-$600 815-459-7456 Table. Wrought Iron. 42”. Better Homes & Garden. NEW in box. $75. 815-338-4829 V & V Lawn Care 815-814-8542 Lawn Maint, Gravel Clean-up from Plows, Mowing, Garden Tilling, Reasonable Rates. Free Estimates. WOODEN ROCKER GLIDER - Handcrafted double seat glider bench. Great for the patio, porch or among flowering plants in your garden. Handpainted a chippy grey for that cottage setting. Built and designed to last. $225. 815-477-9023.
Hoover Wind Tunnel Self Propelled Bagless Upright with HEPA filter. $100/cash. 847-639-8572
HOT TUB - Jasmine Platinum model - Seating for 6. Mood Lights, AM/FM/CD Stereo System, Water purification system included. 92”x92”x36” $2,200 obo. Call: 847-849-7099
Notre Dame Mini Blind – White Vinyl w/Fightin' Irish logo 23”x64” $15 815-477-7640
CLARINET - Vito by LeBlanc clarinet, perfect for new student. $150. Call 847-516-2003 KEYBOARD – Casio. Excellent condition. Used once, comes with stand. Keys light up to learn to play, can turn off lighted keys also. Can download songs. This is an exceptional product. $100. email: trichalin@aol.com
6117 Sands Road (off Rt. 31 & Crystal Lake Ave)
533 Eagle St
Route 14, W Dole Ave., Left Eagle St May 10th,11th & 12th Cash only Pots, Gardening Tools, Old Books, Wire rack shelfs, Water Drum, Fishing Stuff, Twin bed, retro dresser, 5pc larde wood book shelf, Outdoor furniture, camping stuff, window A/C unit, Tools & more
LAKE IN THE HILLS 3860 PEARTREE DR MOVING SALE SAT-SUN 9-3 (May 11-12) All must go! Furniture-Dressers, tables, DINING ROOM SET, tv, grill, fire pits, ladders, household goods, Bookshelf and more.
DON'T NEED IT? SELL IT FAST! Northwest Classified Call 800-589-8237
We are At Your Service!
Water Skis; Obrien Kevlar performers 68". $45. 847-344-2750 YAKIMA BIKE RACK - Like new! Fits standard 2" car hitch. Holds 4 bikes. Inc all straps & orig parts. $150 or best offer. 815-206-2847
BIG WHEEL - Dora The Explorer lights and sounds. Ages 3-5. $15. 847-302-4511
Disney Princess Table
New in box, with 2 chairs, $25 815-356-0883 PLAY KITCHEN - Dora the Explorer talking play kitchen. Excellent condition. $35. 847-302-4511
ALBUMS - Set of 6 children's 33rpm music albums, circa 1980. Included are Mr. Rogers, Sesame Street, Mickey Mouse. $10. Cash only. No returns. Call Dolores @ 815-219-0204
Sat & Sun, 9 am-4pm
WINDMILL
GOLF CLUBS, $25 815-455-5454
Smoker – LG. SS. Masterbuilt Digital Smoker – w/$50 Of Extras – Used Twice – Exc. Cond. $200 815-455-3203 Lv. Msg.
Beautiful Flower Pots, Unbelievable Prices Different Sizes and Colors Make a wonderful Mother's Day gift!
CRYSTAL LAKE
GOLF BAG, $20
WINE RACK Metal with glass top. Holds 21 wine bottles, 36”x16”, $95. 847-829-4546
3705 W. ELM Starting Mar 28 NEW HOURS THURS & FRI 11-5 SAT & SUN 8-5 815-363-3532
MOVING OUT OF STATE SALE
SNOWBLOWER ~Yardman MTD 4.5HP 21”, excellent condition, $200 630-290-1412
TV STAND/PLANT STAND Oak, 37”Hx15”Wx12”D. Excellent cond $85. 847-829-4546
ECKEL'S MCHENRY FLEA MARKET
Pomeranian Pups for sale: male, sable, adorable koosh balls ACA, $700 815-814-5213 or 815-814-7786
Rustic wood look with 2 planter boxes below, 4'H, $45. 815-578-0212
Sewing Machine: Singer, w/stool & accessories $60 815-385-4353
Oak with 27 TV. Great for family or kids room, $225. 815-356-0883
ETHAN ALLEN GEORGIAN CHINA CABINET Ethan Allen Georgian Court China Cabinet For Sale. 2 Piece with Top Glass at 46", 58"W, 13"D; Bottom 33"H, 60"W, 20"D. Total Height of 79". Good condition with some scratches wear and tear. $350 OBO. Contact 847-302-4903
PENNY 6 1/2 year old female Brown Tabby DSH. We should all do what gives us joy, even if it is only picking flowers or sorting laundry. Let's do something joyful together. www.helpingpaws.net 815-338-400
PARROTLETS - Proven pair of Parrotlets, approx. 4 years old. excellent health. Cage not included. $120 for the pair. 847-658-4134
815-219-6250 after 12 noon
Tufted Chair
Floral Blue and Taupe, $60 815-385-1157
Kitties for sale: beautiful, all types of colors, 1 for $15 or 2 for $25 please call Virginia 847-354-9318
With Aloe Organic, case of 1000. $55 815-578-0212
Router – Heavy Duty – Hitachi 1/2in. YR-12 – 3h.p. Ex. Condition $250 815-568-6364 or
Etegere - Excellent Condition. $60. email for picture: trichalin@aol.com Etegere and TV Unit – Matching. Light Oak - good condition, very sturdy. $300. email: trichalin@aol.com
847-778-0169
Crystal Lake
TABLES - Matching Cocktail Table and End Table - light oak, glass and chrome. $75. email for photo: trichalin@aol.com
Entertainment Center – Sauder 50Wx17Dx48H - $40 obo 815-568-8036 Entertainment Center. Solid oak, convert to wine cabinet. Pictures available. $100. 815-354-2462
Between Rte 20/72 & Plank Rd
Beer Tapper w/co2 Tank $200 815-385-4450
Table: round oak 50” $80 815-385-4353
ENTERTAINMENT CENTER
CORA 2 month old female Terrier mix I like to take the time to count the colors of the sky at sunset, and to listen to the ocean's voice. We could leave our footprints at the water's edge. www.helpingpaws.net 815-338-4400
May 8th-12th 8am-5pm Antiques & Collectables Cash Only
Lawn Mower. Snapper. Self propelled. 4HP. Runs good. $65. 815-823-2929 Lawn Tractor – Craftsman Riding Kohler 18hp – Hydrostatic – Automatic – 42” Cut Width – Good Condition $399 obo 815-245-7182
COTTAGE HUTCH - Charming for a young girls room, painted in a tranquil lavender, would be perfect to display pretty items. Great vintage French country appeal. $295. 815-477-9023
Desk Set - 2 Piece
HAMPSHIRE
13N340 State Route 47
Auto parts & supplies for trailersheavy duty equalizing hitch. $250 Call 9 – 5 815-344-9644.
PATIO SET Round 38" glass top table, 4 padded folding chairs, umbrella, dark green & off white striped, never used. $50. 815-356-5826
Wood, 20x66x29H, 36x72x29H. $80. 847-476-6771
BONNIE 2 month old female Jack Russell mix. I believe in saving for a sunny day. I believe that being organized is highly overrated. Until I can't find my toys. Please help me! www.helpingpaws.net 815-338-4400
Lawn Mower – Push – 3 Years Old w/Catch Bag $30 224-858-4754After 5PM
Swivel Rocker – High Back Brown Tweed w/Side Head Rest Large $50 815-385-4450
From Z Gallery, color gold. Good condition! $150 815-382-1249 DESK CHAIR – OAK. Wheels. No arms. Adjustable seat height. $25. Call 815-814-8138.
Bird Cages – 1Parakeet cage & 1 Cockatiel Cage (Both w/Stands) All w/Accessories Included $50 each/obo 847-658-9866
Lawn leaf sweeper, 42 inches, good condition, hooks up to mower. $100 0r best offer. Call 815-690-1538
Mower – Craftsman – Self Propelled w/bag $50 815-385-4450
SOFA: Like New, 90” long, Gold & Avocado,$50 847-516-2909
BIRD CAGE ~ VISION
“Less Mess” cage, 29Wx22Hx12D. $75/cash. 847-639-8572
Army Boxes: 6 hooking latches, steel, sturdy, 12 inch square box by 4 ft. high – humidity indicator, 3/8 seal top, handles, 70 lbs. Perfect for long term storage. $65 815-569-2277
Gas Fireplace Logs
Sofa Sleeper – Green & Burgandy Plaid – Queen Size – Like New $300 815-455-5964 or 815-592-6252
BIRD CAGE
18Wx21Hx18D on black stand with wheels. New, $60/cash. 847-639-8572
Never used, seat 18” wide. Removable foot rests, $95. 815-578-0212
MOWER – Craftsman / Briggs & Stratton 21" push lawnmower. NEW $145. Huntley 847-669-1806
Cream with optional chocolate brown slip cover from BB&B included. All in excellent condition! $350 for the set. 815-788-1180
6126 Northwest Hwy (Next to Jewel, Rt 14 & Main 815-455-5479
Wheel Chair ~ New in Box
Sofa - 8 Feet
Sofa Couch & Matching Sofa Chair
Petland
WANTED TO BUY: Vintage or New, working or not. Bicycles, Outboard motors, fishing gear, motorcycles or mopeds, chainsaws, tools etc. Cash on the spot. Cell: 815-322-6383
Tool Chest. Craftsman Mechanic. 7 drawers with keys. 27X12x18” $175. 815-575-4858
LAWNCRAFTER brand fertilizer/seed spreader very good condition. $20 email me at: bpk31257@yahoo.com
Sofa – Burgandy & Green w/Stripes & Print $50 815-323-0091 1pm-4pm
All puppies come with * Health Warranty * Free Vet Visit * Free Training DVD * Financing Available
630-624-8250
Show case for Jewelry. Glass top & front, storage in back bottom. Good for collectibles. 10 ft. long, 18 in. wide, 38 in high. $125 0b0 Call anytime, 815-943-0325. Cream with small blue & cranberry flowers. Excellent condition. $100. 815-385-4353
Adorable Puppies
Shop Vac. Wet & Dry. 2.5 Gal. All Landscape Stone, Mulch, Topsoil, Trees & Shrubs. We Deliver, Yard Now Open, Stonetree Landscapes, 815-337-8200
Glass and brass, oval, $75, $125/both. SOFA TALBE, Smoked Glass, $50 815-385-4353
COUCH ~ OVERSIZED
30 AUDIOSOURCE AMPLIFIERS AMP 200 Audio Source brand by Phoenix Gold professional / home and DJ amplifiers some repairs needed all power on Need to sell , make an offer for all. 847-721-8417 CB - Cobra 2000 40 Channel CB / SSB / PA Base station. All in original box with speaker. Beautiful working order great shape solid 9.9 out of 10 a real collectible piece, no holes drilled. $330/obo. 847-721-8417 CHARGING KIT 3 in 1 for Samsung Galaxy, BlackBerry, and most Android phones. Pink. Brand new and in original packaging. Micro SB Wall Charger, USB Car Charger. Purchased by mistake. $10. Call 815-814-8138
HIGH CHAIR - Antique Pine Child's. 39" high 17" wide with removable metal tray. Tray arm lifts. McHenry $125. 815-236-1747
RC Helicopters (2)
Fly indoors or out, includes radio and chargers, $125/obo. 815-245-0717
The Northwest Herald reaches 137,000 adult readers in print every week, and 259,000 unique visitors on NWHerald.com every month.
Call to advertise in the At Your Service directory.
Old Lever Actions, Winchesters, Marlins, Savages, etc. Old Pistols and Revolvers. Cash for Collection. FFL License 815-338-4731
In the Northwest Herald classified everyday and on PlanitNorthwest Local Business Directory 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.
Lionel & American Flyer Trains
classified@shawsuburban.com
Antique and Modern Guns
815-353-7668
planitnorthwest.com/business
800-589-8237