NWH-1-19-2013

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Saturday, JaNuary 19, 2013

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Board: No chair vote

County won’t have referendum on popularly electing leader

Gun rules complicate factors for mentally ill Docs: Those in fear of losing rights may not be truthful By CHelSea mcdougall

cmcdougall@shawmedia.com

Photos by Monica Maschak – mmaschak@shawmedia.com

(Clockwise from top left) nick Provenzano, r-mcHenry; County Board Chairwoman tina Hill, r-Woodstock; michael Walkup, r-Crystal lake; and michael Skala, r-Huntley, speak at the Friday morning special meeting of the mcHenry County Board in favor of putting a referendum on the april 9 ballot to ask voters whether they want to popularly elect the board chairman. the board narrowly defeated the proposal, 11-9. By keVin P. CraVer

kcraver@shawmedia.com WOODSTOCK – A referendum asking voters whether they want to popularly elect the McHenry County Board chairman will not be on the April ballot. Board members at a special meeting Friday voted, 11-9, to

reject the referendum, citing a lack of information, discomfort with perceived haste and support for the current system in which the board’s 24 members elect the chairman from among themselves after each November general election. The issue has its roots in recent efforts by state Rep. Jack Franks, D-Marengo, to

try to force direct election of the chairman. Franks was behind a referendum on the November ballot that, had voters said yes, would have created a popularly elected county executive with wide-ranging powers. County Board member Nick Provenzano, R-McHenry, spearheaded Friday’s special

meeting to consider placing the County Board chairman measure on the April 9 ballot after the Management Services Committee on Monday did not act. Governments have until Tuesday to put a referendum on the ballot.

See CHairman, page a8

It sounds good: Provide easier access to mental health care. It seems right: Keep guns out of the hands of those deemed mentally ill. But what some health care professionals fear are the unintended consequences of President Barack Obama’s gun-control measures unveiled this week. Some gun violence prevention legislation, they said, may further stigmatize mental illness, and those who need treatment might not seek it. “If any time someone made an emotionally reactive comment and there was a report made, the mental health profession would become defunct,” said Dr. Larry Gelman of Northern Illinois Counseling Associates in Crystal Lake. “Because no one would feel safe enough talking in private, talking in confidence to their mental health provider.” While some patients could censor themselves, others might fear losing their rights to own a gun. “I predict that people who are hunters and people who shoot guns for sport will be

“Privacy is of paramount importance in doctorpatient relations – it’s almost sacrosanct.” Dr. Larry Gelman

of Northern Illinois Counseling Associates in Crystal Lake

See mental HealtH, page a8

Algerian army takes hard line

an ambulance enters the ain amenas hospital where people injured in a hostage situation at a nearby gas plant were taken. the hostage crisis in the remote desert of algeria is not over, Britain said Friday, after an algerian raid unleashed chaos.

Toll in militant kidnapping still unclear; 1 American man killed the aSSoCiated PreSS

ALGIERS, Algeria – The militants had filled five jeeps with hostages and begun to move when Algerian government attack helicopters opened up on them, leaving four in smoking ruins. The fifth vehicle crashed, allowing an Irish hostage inside to clamber out to safety with explosives still strapped around his neck. Three days into the crisis at a

natural gas plant deep in the Sahara, it remained unclear how many had perished in the face-off between Africa’s most uncompromising militant group and the region’s most ruthless military. By Friday, about 100 of the 135 foreign workers on the site had been freed and 18 of an estimated 30 kidnappers had been slain, according to the Algerian government, still leaving a major hostage situation at the refinery.

LOCALLY SPEAKING

The government said 12 workers were confirmed dead. But extremists have put the number at 35. And the government attack Thursday on the convoy – as pieced together from official, witness and media accounts – suggested the toll could go higher. In Washington, U.S. officials said one American – a Texan – was known to have died.

See algeria, page a8

AP photo

jOHNSbuRG

Sunday meeting on Clerk iSSue At a special meeting called for Sunday morning, the Johnsburg Village Board will vote whether to ask voters by referendum in April whether they want to elect their clerk. Johnsburg resident and village president candidate Maggie Haney wants the question put on a ballot, but the village attorney doesn’t think the board has that power. For more, see page b1.

Sarah Nader – snader@shawmedia.com

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Yesterday’s NWHerald.com most-commented stories 1. Letter: Level playing field 2. Letter: Gun ownership 3. Letter: Corporate gun industry

Yesterday’s NWHerald.com most-emailed stories 1. Dog survives plunge into icy Fox River 2. Busy McHenry Avenue set to be reworked 3. Teachers taking classes digital

Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com is published daily, Sundays and holidays by Shaw Media, P.O. Box 250, Crystal Lake, IL 60039-0250.

Saturday, January 19, 2013 • Northwest Herald • NWHerald.com

May the Death Star be with you

I remember well the year 1977. Back then, gasoline was 65 cents a gallon, and the first Apple computers went on sale. Jimmy Carter was elected president, and Seattle Slew won the Triple Crown. ABBA was singing about a Dancing Queen and the whole country spent Thursday evenings with a family named the Waltons. Goodnight, Elizabeth … Goodnight, John-Boy … Goodnight, Jim-Bob. But there was something even more special about 1977 than low gas prices and snappy tunes. I’m talking about the release of the first “Star Wars” movie in May of that year. Beginning with the opening crawl that explained the back story of the film, audiences sat mesmerized by a realm filled with droids and tractor beams and ionization blasters. Suddenly we began our anecdotes with, “A long time ago in a galaxy far, far away” and sent our farewells to friends with the encouragement, “May the Force be with you.” Back in that year, we entered the fantasy world of Rebel Alliances and Galactic Empires. We wielded light-sabers and fought Stormtroopers. We fell for a

8LOTTERY

JUST HUMOR ME Michael Penkava princess named Leia and piloted a spaceship named the Millennium Falcon. But perhaps the most chilling scene of that movie was when the heroes first caught sight of the huge, moonlike Death Star. As Obi-Wan Kenobi observed, “That’s no moon … it’s a space station.” Luke’s reaction summed up what all of us were thinking: “I have a very bad feeling about this.” Yep, we all had a bad feeling until Luke flew his T-65 X-wing Starfighter to the Death Star and fired his proton torpedoes into an exhaust vent to destroy the Empire’s DS-1 Orbital Battle Station. As Han Solo remarked, “Great shot kid, that was one in a million.” Sorry for the disturbance in the Force, Darth. But that was back in 1977. Fastforward to 2013. Sure, there have been more “Star Wars” episodes. But recently the Death Star has again raised

its ugly head. No, it’s not back on the silver screen. But apparently it has been found in a petition signed by 34,000 humanoids demanding that the government immediately construct its own fully operational Death Star. The White House denied the request, citing among reasons, the extreme cost ($850 quadrillion), as well as its obvious vulnerability to a rogue flying apprentice Jedi Knight. Be that as it may, the idea of implementing movie technology into real life offers some very interesting possibilities. Take, for example, the DeLorean DMC-12 time machine car from the “Back to the Future” movies. Imagine the possibilities of experiencing history firsthand and gaining futuristic knowledge by means of this vehicle. Envision traveling centuries into the future to watch the Cubs finally play in a World Series! Or how about the possibility of going into the past to the time when there used to be snacks called “Twinkies”? We could even put to rest the ridiculous claim that Elvis is dead and finally prove that he is alive and well in Canton, Ohio.

Sure, we’d have to develop a Flux Capacitor that could generate 1.21 gigawatts of electricity to access the Space-Time Continuum. Plus, without a “Mr. Fusion” energy reactor, we’re kinda stuck back in the present. But, hey, I would rather invest in time travel and a near-Elvis experience than take a chance on total planetary annihilation by the Death Star. I suppose there are other cinema technology petition possibilities out there, too. Who of us wouldn’t love to be beamed around like in “Star Trek”? And give me a Tricorder health scan rather than a colonoscopy any day. So keep on coming up with those petitions, folks. It’s nix on the Death Star plans, but bringing back that 65 cents a gallon gasoline doesn’t sound like a bad idea. May the Force be with that petition.

• Michael Penkava is a retired teacher who taught for 35 years at West Elementary School in Crystal Lake. He thinks Princess Leia makes Kim Kardashian look like a Wookiee. He can be reached at mikepenkava@comcast.net.

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8WATER COOLER Sheriff: Calif. burglar was using sauna

SAN ANDREAS, Calif. – Authorities in Northern California say a man arrested in nothing but a trench coat and socks after a break-in told investigators he had been using the homeowner’s sauna. Calaveras County sheriff’s deputies arrested 49-year-old Robert London this week after they responded to a report of a burglary at a home in San Andreas. He pleaded not guilty Thursday to charges of burglary and possession of stolen property. Sheriff’s Sgt. Chris Hewitt said London told investigators he thought the house was vacant, and he had used the sauna there in the past.

– Wire report

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Experts on deception say everyone lies The ASSOCIATED PRESS Lance Armstrong may have been branded liar and cheat of the month, but experts say he’s not as different from the rest of us as we’d like to believe. Lying, they say, is part of the human condition, something most people do every day. And that’s reflected in the cavalcade of celebrities cowed into confession after their deceptions were exposed – from Richard Nixon’s denial of the Watergate break-in to Bill Clinton’s denial of an affair with

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cause they are telling us what we want to believe. “We want to believe Lance Armstrong was a great superhero who overcame cancer and went on to win Tour de France after Tour de France,” Feldman said. “We always want to believe in the great comeback story.” Armstrong, he said, was unusually energetic in trying to silence the opposition and damage his critics – a trait that, in the end, might be viewed as less forgivable than his lying.

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ity for a serious injury, only to be found puttering around the golf course. The guy who says his car broke down because he is late for work. The dog who ate your homework. People lie to protect their self-image,” Feldman said. “Once they’ve told a lie, they are in it, they live in it, and they justify hurting others to protect the lie because they don’t see any way out.” People who live a deception at the level of Lance Armstrong have what Feldman calls the “liar’s advantage” be-

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an intern, from drug-abusing baseball players to fraudulent Wall Street executives. “The world is rife with great liars,” said Robert Feldman, a professor of psychology at the University of Massachusetts who studies lying and deception. “Nothing about the Lance Armstrong case is shocking. We all lie every day. We live in a culture where lying is quite acceptable.” The husband who says he is working late when he is having an affair. The worker who takes long-term disabil-

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state

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Saturday, January 19, 2013 • Page A3

Fitzgerald will Autopsy done on lottery winner be ‘new guy’ in U of I position the assOCIateD PRess

By DaVID MeRCeR

The Associated Press

CHAMPAIGN – Former U.S. Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald is taking on a new role, as a University of Illinois trustee. Gov. Pat Quinn announced Friday that he appointed Chicago’s former top federal prosecutor and corruption buster to the university’s board that oversees the three-campus university system. Fitzgerald, best known as the tenacious prosecutor who helped put former Illinois Govs. George Ryan and Rod Blagojevich in prison, said Quinn approached him about the position earlier this month. “He called me a week or so ago and asked me,” Fitzgerald said. “I was sold at the question, so I told him I would be perfectly delighted to do it.” Fitzgerald said he comes to the job with limited knowledge about the university and the issues facing it, such as diminishing state monetary support and the affect the state government’s financial troubles have on public higher education. “I’ll be rolling up my sleeves as the new guy on the block,” he said. “It’s helpful sometimes to have someone come in with more questions than answers.” Quinn said in a printed

statement that Fitzgerald’s appointment continues his service to the state. “Patrick Fitzgerald has served the people of Illinois well and he will be an outstanding member of our outstanding leadership team at Illinois’ flagship university.” Patrick Quinn also Fitzgerald reappointed board members James Montgomery, a Chicago attorney, and Rockford anesthesiologist Timothy Koritz. Fitzgerald replaces first-term trustee Lawrence Oliver II. The 13-member board oversees campuses at Urbana-Champaign, Chicago and Springfield, and a budget of $5.4 billion. Combined, the campuses have about 77,000 students and 22,900 employees. As U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Illinois, Fitzgerald also oversaw the prosecutions of former Vice President Dick Cheney’s top aide, I. Lewis “Scooter” Libby, and media mogul Conrad Black, as well as terror suspects and organized-crime figures. Fitzgerald retired from the job last year and now works at the Chicago office of the Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom law firm.

CHICAGO – Authorities on Friday exhumed the body a Chicago man who was poisoned with cyanide after winning the lottery and conducted an autopsy in the hopes that it will help solve the mystery surrounding his death. The body of Urooj Khan was exhumed from a cemetery Friday morning and placed inside a black hearse, which was escorted by four police cars to the Cook County Medical Examiner’s Office. Pathologists collected samples of hair, nails and most major body organs, as well as contents of the stomach, Medical Examiner Stephen Cina said. Tests might determine whether Khan swallowed, inhaled or was injected with the poison, Cina said. Khan, 46, died in July

AP photo

Workers place the body of Urooj Khan into a hearse after it was exhumed Friday for an autopsy at Rosehill Cemetery in Chicago to help solve the mystery surrounding his death. Khan, 46, who died in July, was later found to have been poisoned with cyanide. as he was about to collect $425,000 in lottery winnings. His death initially was ruled a result of natural causes. But a relative whose identity remains a mystery asked for further tests that revealed in

January

CHICAGO – A 36-year-old Joliet man has pleaded guilty to setting fire to the home of an African-American family that moved onto the street of his residence. In a plea deal, Brian James Moudry admitted he splashed gasoline on the home in the early morning of June 17, 2007 and ignited it. Eight children and an adult were inside at the time but were able to escape the blaze. Moudry pleaded guilty Friday in federal court in Chicago to using fire to interfere with housing rights on the basis of race.

Gynecologist convicted of raping patient in ’02

CHICAGO – A jury has convicted a Chicago gynecologist of raping a patient who was eight months pregnant. The Chicago Sun-Times report-

$

ed that Bruce Sylvester Smith, 60, was convicted Thursday, a day after he testified the victim initiated the sexual contact during an exam. The jury believed the victim, who immediately reported the rape to police. The rape occurred in August 2002, but Smith wasn’t arrested until 2010. Prosecutors admitted “mistakes were made” because Smith’s DNA sample was never taken after the woman reported the attack.

Scholarships available for zoo summer camp

CHICAGO – Chicago’s Lincoln Park Zoo is accepting applications for scholarships for its two summer camp programs. The zoo will award 25 needbased full or partial scholarships this year. The deadline to apply is April 26. The form is available on the zoo’s website, www.lpzoo.org/camps.

– Wire reports

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8StAte briefS Guilty plea in attack on African-American family

November that he had been poisoned. Khan was given a religious burial and his body was not embalmed. The body was wrapped in a shroud and placed inside a wooden box

with a Styrofoam lid that was itself inside a concrete vault. Cina said the body had not come into contact with soil from the grave. “The body was in a state of advanced decomposition, but we were able to identify the major organs and take samples of each of these for toxicological analysis,” Cina said. Given the length of time Khan’s body was in the ground, Cina said it was not certain investigators would be able to determine exactly how he ingested the poison. “I can’t really predict how the results are going to turn out. Cyanide over the post mortem period actually can essentially evaporate and leave the tissues. So it is possible that cyanide that was in the tissues is no longer in the tissues after several months,” he told reporters during an afternoon news conference.

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Page A4 • Saturday, January 19, 2013

NATION

Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

Obama looks to turn page with speech House

to vote on debt ceiling

Address will touch on issues for next term The ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON – President Barack Obama has been looking to historians for guidance on how to shape his second inaugural’s words into a speech for the ages, eager to make good use of his twice-ina-lifetime opportunity to command the world’s attention. He will take the oath of office Sunday in an intimate White House ceremony witnessed by family, and then again Monday at the Capitol before a crowd of hundreds of thousands on the National Mall. Washington will also play host to the traditional inaugural parade and formal balls Monday, as well as a day of service today that kicks off the festivities. But it’s Obama’s inaugural address that will be the centerpiece of the three-day affair. The president will seek to turn the page on a first term consumed by economic turmoil and set an optimistic tone for four more years that will help define his legacy. The president has been working on his speech since early December, writing out draft after draft on yellow legal pads, aides say. He’s read several second-term inaugural addressed delivered by his predecessors. And last week, he invited a small group of historians to the White House to discuss the potential – and the pitfalls – of second-term inaugurals. Heading into his speech, Obama does have history on his mind, particularly two of the great American leaders he most deeply admires, Abraham Lincoln and Martin

GOP leader: Bill would provide 3-month reprieve By ANDREW TAYLOR The Associated Press

AP photo

A painter touches up an entrance post on Friday outside the White House in Washington, D.C., in preparation for this weekend’s 57th presidential inauguration, where President Barack Obama will be sworn in for a second term.

Big crowd The crowd before Barack Obama is expected to be much smaller than the record 1.8 million who packed the National Mall four years ago to see him sworn in as the nation’s first black president. But the estimates of 600,000 to 800,000 this time still would make it the largest attendance ever for a second presidential inauguration. Luther King Jr. The start of Obama’s second term coincides with the 150th anniversary of Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation and the 50th anniversary of King’s March on Washington, and he has chosen to take the public oath with his hand on both their bibles stacked together.

“Their actions, the movements they represented are the only reason it’s possible for me to be inaugurated,” Obama said of Lincoln and King in a video released Friday by the Presidential Inaugural Committee. “It’s also a reminder for me that this country has gone through very tough times before but we always come out on the other side.” Aides say the president will touch on some of the challenges he’ll take on in a second term but won’t delve deeply into the policy objectives he’ll tackle in the next four years. Those details will be saved for his Feb. 12 State of the Union address. But the tone and theme of Monday’s speech will set the stage for the policy fights to

come. Obama may reference the Connecticut elementary school shooting that pushed gun control to the top of his agenda. He may also speak of a need to tackle comprehensive immigration reform, another second-term priority, and to bring U.S. troops home from Afghanistan. Obama’s speech won’t be overly political. But aides said he will make the point that while the nation’s political system doesn’t require politicians to resolve all of their differences, it does require Washington to act where there is common ground. And he will speak about how the nation’s core principles can still guide a country that has changed immensely since its founding. The president was still working on his speech heading

into inauguration weekend. He’s been hammering out the details for many weeks with longtime speechwriter Jon Favreau, who worked with the president on his first inaugural address and nearly every other high-profile speech he’s given since. White House spokesman Jay Carney said the president takes the responsibility of a second term “enormously seriously.” “He didn’t seek re-election just to be re-elected,” Carney said. “He believes that we have work to do, and he believes that both the agenda he has put forward so far and the agenda he will put forward in the future will help this country move forward in a variety of ways. This is something he feels very deeply.”

Ex-New Orleans mayor charged with bribery

Indictment: He took thousands in exchange for help By MICHAEL KUNZELMAN The Associated Press

NEW ORLEANS – More than a decade ago, Ray Nagin was elected mayor of New Orleans on a vow to root out corruption in a city plagued by decades of it. On Friday, the former mayor was indicted on charges he lined his pockets with bribe money, payoffs and gratuities while the chronically poor city struggled to recover from Hurricane Katrina’s punishing blow. The federal indictment alleges that city contractors paid Nagin more than $200,000 in bribes and subsidized his trips to Hawaii, Jamaica and other places in exchange for his help securing millions of dollars in work for the city. The charges against Nagin

are the product of a City Hall corruption investigation that already has resulted in guilty pleas by two former city officials and two businessmen and a prison sentence for a former city vendor. The case also punctuates the reversal of political and personal fortune for Nagin, who had what New Orleans Magazine editor Errol Laborde called “rock star status” soon after his election in 2002. Nagin, a former cable television executive, took office with an image as a largely apolitical businessman ready to root out corruption. But Nagin’s popularity and support waned in the years after Katrina. The federal investigation of his administration was mushrooming by the time he left office in 2010. Rafael Goyeneche, head of the nonprofit watchdog agency the Metropolitan Crime Commission, remembers Nagin entering office with a call for the public to let authori-

AP file photo

Former Mayor Ray Nagin arrives to talk about his new book, “Katrina’s Secrets,” at a June 2011 news conference in New Orleans. Nagin was indicted Friday on charges that he used his office for personal gain. ties know about corruption. “To go from the mandate that he was elected with to reading this indictment today and finding out that he was in many respects, if these allegations are true, a complete fraud, is eye-opening,” Goyeneche said Friday.

In inauguration remarks May 6, 2002, Nagin promised a City Hall “where permits and licenses are provided quickly, predictably and honestly; where contracts are awarded based on what you can do, not who you know.” Soon afterward, his admin-

istration’s probe into corruption in taxi cab regulation resulted in numerous arrests. “We’re basically trying to send the signal ... that what has happened in the past, and the way people played in the gray areas, is no longer acceptable,” Nagin said at the time. Friday’s indictment accuses Nagin of accepting more than $160,000 in bribes and truckloads of free granite for his family business in exchange for promoting the interests of a local businessman who secured millions of dollars in city contract work after the 2005 hurricane. The businessman, Frank Fradella, pleaded guilty in June to conspiracy to commit bribery and has been cooperating with federal authorities. Nagin, 56, also is charged with accepting at least $60,000 in payoffs from another businessman, Rodney Williams, for his help in securing city contracts for architectural, engineering and management services work.

WASHINGTON – House Republican leaders Friday offered President Barack Obama a three-month reprieve to a looming, market-rattling debt crisis, backing off demands that any immediate extension of the government’s borrowing authority be accompanied by stiff spending cuts. The retreat came with a caveat aimed at prodding Senate Democrats to pass a budget after almost four years of failing to do so: a threat to cut off the pay of lawmakers in either House or Senate if their chamber fails to pass a budget this year. House Republicans have passed budgets for two consecutive years. The idea got a frosty reception from House Democrats but a more measured response from the White House and Democratic Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada. Republicans hadn’t settled on full details, but the measure would give the government about three more months of borrowing authority beyond a deadline expected to hit as early as mid-February, No. 2 House Republican Eric Cantor of Virginia said Friday. The legislation wouldn’t require immediate spending cuts as earlier promised by GOP leaders like Speaker John Boehner of Ohio. Instead, it’s aimed at forcing the Democraticcontrolled Senate to join the House in debating the federal budget. “We are going to pursue strategies that will obligate the Senate to finally join the House in confronting the government’s spending problem,” Boehner told GOP lawmakers at a retreat in Williamsburg, Va. “The principle is simple: ‘No budget, no pay.’ ” But the move ran into opposition from House Democrats, including leader Nancy Pelosi of California, who called it a gimmick because it would set up another potential confrontation in just a few months. Votes from Democrats may be needed to help pass the measure if GOP conservatives opposed to any increase in the debt limit withhold their support.

Outflanking NRA is goal for Obama gun control backers The ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON – Sup porters of President Barack Obama’s gun-control proposals are planning a methodical, state-by-state campaign to try to persuade lawmakers that it’s in their political interest to back his sweeping effort to crack down on firearms and ammunition sales and expand criminal background checks. To succeed will require overturning two decades of conventional wisdom that gun control is bad politics. The National Rifle Association is confident that argument won’t sell. But with polls showing majorities supporting new gun laws a month after the Connecticut shooting deaths of 20 schoolchildren and six adults, gun-control ac-

tivists say the political calculus has changed. Their goal in coming weeks is to convince lawmakers of that, too, and to counter the NRA’s proven ability to mobilize voters. Gun-control advocates are focused first on the Senate, which is expected to act before the House on Obama’s gun proposals. How Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., proceeds will depend in part on what he hears from Democrats in conservative states where voters favor gun rights. These include some who are eyeing re-election fights in 2014, such as Mark Pryor of Arkansas, Mark Begich of Alaska and Max Baucus of Montana. “We need to tell our members of Congress that they’ve got to stand up for sensible gun laws, and if they do that,

we will stand up for them, and if they don’t, we will stand up for whoever runs against them,” New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg told the U.S. Conference of Mayors on Friday. “Because that’s exactly what the NRA is trying to do.” Bloomberg’sgroup,Mayors Against Illegal Guns, is among a coalition of some 50 labor unions, advocacy groups and others that have been meeting since before Christmas to plot strategy, in loose coordination with the White House, according to people involved. But the NRA, which claims some 4 million members, has already activated its base. And as publicity spreads about Obama’s proposals, the group has been adding about 8,000 members a day, according to NRA president David Keene.

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Saturday, January 19, 2013 • Page A5


Page A6 • Saturday, January 19, 2013

world

Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

Palestinians: Israel may become apartheid state By MoHAMMEd dArAGHMEH The Associated Press

RAMALLAH, West Bank – The Palestinians have long complained that Israel’s rightwing government is killing peace prospects by settling the West Bank with Jews, but now there is something new. The Palestinian president is warning that Benjamin Netanyahu’s expected victory in next week’s election could lead to an Arab-majority country in

the Holy Land that will eventually replace what is now Israel – unless he pursues a more moderate path of a twostate solution to the conflict. Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas has been careful not to intervene in Tuesday’s Israeli election, but it is no secret that the Palestinians hope that Netanyahu will either be ousted or at least soften his position in a new term. He has shown no sign of doing so, and opinion polls showing hard-

Bolshoi ballet chief attacked with acid The ASSoCIATEd PrESS

MOSCOW – An acid attack on the artistic director of the Bolshoi ballet has shone the spotlight on the fierce “Black Swan”-like competition for starring roles at the famed Russian dance company. The attack on Sergei Filin could be in retaliation for his selection of certain dancers over others for the prized roles, his colleagues said Friday. They expressed fears that Filin, a 42-year-old former Bolshoi star, could be left partially blind after a masked assailant threw acid in his face as he returned home in Moscow late Thursday. Filin suffered third-degree burns on his face and underwent eye surgery Friday evening to try to save his sight, Bolshoi spokeswoman Katerina Novikova said. Doctors said his right eye was badly burned and it would not be clear for days whether the operation was a success. The Bolshoi Theater is one of Russia’s premier cultural institutions, best known for “Swan Lake” and the other classical ballets that grace its Moscow stage. But backstage, the company has been trou-

bled by intrigue and infighting that has led to the departure of several artistic directors over the past few years. The Bolshoi’s general director, Anatoly Iksanov, said he believes the attack was linked to Filin’s work. “He is a man of principle and never compromised,”Iksanov said on Channel One state television. “If he believed that this Sergei Filin or that dancer was not ready or was unable to perform this or that part, he would turn them down.” Anastasia Volochkova, a former Bolshoi ballerina who danced with Filin, described a “terrible, wild fight” for roles at the Bolshoi. “The cruelty of the ballet world is astoundingly pathological,” Volochkova said in an interview on Ekho Moskvy radio. But she said Filin had done nothing to deserve such an attack. Filin, speaking from a hospital bed, said he was unable to recognize his attacker, who wore a hood and either a mask or a scarf so that only his eyes were visible.

line, pro-settlement parties well ahead days ahead of the vote have led to a sense of despair among the Palestinians. During Netanyahu’s current term, the Israeli leader has pressed forward with construction of Jewish settlements in the West Bank and east Jerusalem, which along with the Gaza Strip were captured by Israel in the 1967 war from Jordan. Abbas says he wants to set up a state in the territories that would exist

peacefully next to Israel. The international community considers settlement construction illegal or illegitimate. And the Palestinians have refused to negotiate with Netanyahu while he continues to allow settlements to be built, saying it is a sign of bad faith. Israeli backers of creation of a Palestinian state say relinquishing control of the Palestinian territories and its residents is the only way to ensure

Israel’s future as a democracy with a Jewish majority. Mohammed Ishtayeh, a top aide to Abbas, told The Associated Press on Friday that his boss has been warning that won’t be possible if settlement building continues and Israel could end up with a Jewish minority ruling over an Arab majority. He warned Israel could end up with “an apartheid-style state, similar to the one of former South Africa.”

“In the long run it will be against the Israeli interests because ... we Palestinians will be the majority and will struggle for equality,” he said, adding that Abbas had met repeated this message in meetings with several Israeli leaders in the past year. Abbas “told them frankly there are Palestinians who are now calling for the one-state solution, because they no longer [consider] the two-state solution viable,” Ishtayeh said.

Bombs cap bloody week in Syria By BASSEM MroUE The Associated Press

BEIRUT – A rocket slammed into a building in Syria’s northern city of Aleppo and two suicide bombers struck near a mosque in the south Friday, capping a particularly bloody week in the country’s civil war with more than 800 civilians killed, including an unusually large proportion in governmentheld areas. The residential building struck in Aleppo was in a part of the city controlled by regime forces, as was a university hit earlier in the week in an attack that killed 87 people, mostly students. The government accused rebels in both attacks, saying they hit the locations with rockets, a claim the opposition denies. But if confirmed it would signal that the rebels have acquired more sophisticated weaponry from captured regime bases and are now using them to take the fight more into government-held areas in an attempt to break a monthslong stalemate in the war. Rebels have in the past posted videos showing them capturing heavy rockets, apparently of the style fired

SANA photo

This photo released by the Syrian official news agency SANA shows damage after a rocket slammed into a building Friday, killing at least 12 people, in Aleppo, Syria. from truck-mounted launchers, at regime military bases that they have overrun. But it is not clear whether the fighters have used any of the ballistics, or are even able to. The rebels’ main weaponry includes automatic rifles and rocket-propelled grenades. Rockets would for the first time give them a greater range, an advantage that until now the regime military has overwhelmingly held, with its arsenal of warplanes, helicopters, artillery, rockets

and mortars. Regime bombardment has caused heavy civilian casualties – and if the rebels start blasting back with sometimes inaccurate rockets, the civilian toll would likely rise. But the opposition has denied being behind the Aleppo university strike and the hit Friday on the residential building, which one activist group said killed 12 people. The Local Coordination Committees of Syria, an activist group, and the Aleppo Media

Center, a network of anti-regime activists, of hitting the building with an airstrike. “It was an air raid,” said Aleppo-based activist Abu Raed al-Halabi. When asked why the regime would attack a government-held area, alHalabi said most people in Aleppo are opposed to the regime in Aleppo. Al-Halabi said the rebels have captured some rockets around the capital Damascus but not in the Aleppo region. “If they have such missile they would have fired it at the Military Intelligence headquarters,” he said. Even if the rebels have captured surface-to-surface rockets it won’t be a turning point in their battle against the regime of President Bashar Assad, said Aram Nerguizian, a Middle East security expert at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington. Such systems would “do little to erode [regime] air power, effectively target [its] infrastructure, turn the tide of the conflict or change the broader strategic picture,” he said. And rebel use of rockets could backfire since “these inaccurate systems are more likely to produce either no impact or kill more civilians than Syrian military forces.”


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from page 1

Page A8 • Saturday, January 19, 2013

Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

Many who voted ‘yes’ also opposed popular election

• CHAIRMAN

Continued from page A1 Provenzano has said that, in essence, board members who urged voters to reject the executive form of county government in November made a deal to give them the opportunity to weigh in on electing the chairman. “I instigated this not because I want to advocate for direct election. I did it because we should have an opportunity for an up-or-down vote,” Provenzano said. The referendum would have asked voters whether the board chairman should be elected at-large to a four-year term. It also specified that the chairman would not be counted as a board member, in effect creating a 25-member board – 24 members and a chairman. The chairman would vote only to break ties. Opponents of the referendum were not convinced that

the way the chairman is chosen is a problem in need of a solution, and said it would in fact backfire on those who support it in the name of accountability and transparency. “Candidates would need to appeal to corporate and wealthy donors, thereby being beholden to them, and this scenario would be repeated every four years,” said member Nick Chirikos, D-Algonquin. “The chairperson’s time would be torn between his or her duty to the citizens and the need to solicit funds, as we now see in Congress.” And many of those who voted in favor of a referendum made it clear that they oppose the idea, but want to give voters a say. Joe Gottemoller, R-Crystal Lake, called popular election a bad idea but said that after two years of dealing with the issue, it was time to put it to rest with a referendum. Before the executive referendum, Franks filed a bill a

Online To view video from the McHenry County Board meeting, visit NWHerald.com. year ago to force counties with more than 300,000 residents to allow citizens to directly elect their board chairmen. It resoundingly failed in the House on a 100-16 vote. The bill was targeted at McHenry and Lake counties, the only two in the state that meet the population threshold. The County Board called an August special meeting to ponder putting a popular-election referendum on the ballot to give voters a choice over the executive referendum. Board members rejected the idea, citing the voter confusion that could ensue. “The only way to get past this is to put this on the ballot,” Gottemoller said.

Donna Kurtz, R-Crystal Lake, voted yes for the referendum but said she feared that a popularly elected chairman could result in a “greater accumulation of power” that would diminish the accountability she seeks from county government. “We have to make a decision on something that may not solve the problem, and in fact may make the problem worse,” Kurtz said. Both Chirikos and Anna May Miller, R-Cary, said that they have heard nothing from their constituents about wanting to elect the chairman. Chirikos said he has heard them talk about their property-tax burden, roads, jobs and other issues to which the County Board’s time would be better used. Board member Mike Skala, R-Huntley, voted for the referendum but alleged that the entire “messy” issue has been manufactured by “outside influences,” including Franks

and the Northwest Herald. “That’s messy, and that’s disturbing,” Skala said. The Management Services Committee on Monday decided to attempt reform by changing County Board rules, which the committee reviews after every election. One idea would be to take away the chairman’s power to appoint the heads of standing committees. Critics, such as committee member Michael Walkup, RCrystal Lake, allege that the chairman election is heavily weighted in favor of the incumbent. It takes 13 votes to be re-elected by the board, and an incumbent can secure 11 of those votes, not counting his or her own, through assigning the sought-after chairmanships of the board’s standing committees. “I think this gives us a renewed impetus to do that and avoid the need to even reconsider this issue,” said Walkup, who also voted in favor of a referendum.

Law already requires doctors to report suspected threats • MENTAL HEALTH

Continued from page A1

very anxious about identifying themselves as having sought any kind of mental health services for fear their guns will be taken away from them and they will no longer have that legal right,” Gelman said. Obama’s executive orders require “relevant data” be made available during background checks to buy a gun. From this, a new debate emerges – one in which privacy rights are weighed against the safety of the public. “Privacy is of paramount importance in doctor-patient relations – it’s almost sacrosanct,” Gelman said. Furthermore, if medical records are open for inspec-

RL

tion in order to buy or own a gun, individuals might not get the most effective treatment. “They would know what not to say,” said Dr. Linda Bedsole of Creative Counseling in Crystal Lake. “ ... [dangerous or violent individuals] might not share that information with anyone if they’re told that their confidence [would be] broken. In that circumstance, they wouldn’t share [violent thoughts], so then the law is really having no effect, in essence.” Doctors already are required to notify authorities when it’s suspected, probable or there is imminent risk that individuals will harm themselves or others. Patients know this, too, Bedsole said. It’s discussed during their appointment.

Physicians must weigh statements and decide whether threats are actual or an emotional response to situations, Gelman said. In marital counseling, for example, one might say his or her spouse made them so angry they could strangle them, but it takes careful assessment to determine whether that is a genuine threat. “There are clinical judgments at play with regard to the duty to warn or otherwise notify the authorities,” Gelman said. But Chris Gleason, the director of Rosecrance McHenry County, said easier access to mental health care removes the stigma on those who are mentally ill. One executive order the president signed committed to finalizing mental health

parity, which prohibits limiting insurance benefits to those seeking mental health treatment. In essence, it orders that mental health care be covered to the same extent as medical or surgical care. “It will open the doors,” Gleason said. “People who wouldn’t generally ask for service will seek it because they can afford it. If we provide more access, it normalizes mental illness.” Unfairly or not, the finger often is pointed at the mentally ill when gun violence occurs, and the public is quick to link the two. But research indicates the majority of those who are mentally ill do not commit acts of violence. “Not everyone who is violent is mental ill, and not ev-

eryone who’s mentally ill is violent,” Gleason said. “The vast majority of people who are violent do not suffer from mental illnesses,” according to the American Psychiatric Association. Furthermore, those with alcohol or substance-abuse disorders were more than twice as likely as those with a severe mental illness, such as schizophrenia, to report violent behavior, a National Institute of Mental Health study found. Predictably, mental health professionals lauded the presidential order that starts a national dialogue on mental health. “For as long as I’ve been in practice, I have always been astounded at how low a priority mental health services are in our society,” Gelman said.

Mali fight prompted kidnapping • ALGERIA

Continued from page A1

Meanwhile, the al-Qaida-linked Masked Brigade behind the operation offered to trade two American hostages for two terrorists behind bars in the U.S., including the mastermind of the 1993 World Trade Center bombing. The U.S. rejected the deal out of hand. “The United States does not negotiate with terrorists,” declared State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland. A statement from Nuland said Frederick Buttaccio, a Texas resident who worked at the natural gas complex was found dead. His cause of death was not explained. It was not immediately clear whether Buttaccio was the only American killed in the standoff. The Algerian government released few details about the continuing siege at the Ain Amenas plant, which is jointly run by BP, Norway’s Statoil and Algeria’s state-owned oil company. By Friday, however, the outlines of the takeover by Islamic militants were coming into focus. The attack had been in the works for two months, a member of the Masked Brigade told a Mauritanian news outlet that often carries al-Qaida-related announcements. The band of attackers included militants from Algeria, Mali, Egypt, Niger, Mauritania and Canada, he said. He said militants targeted Algeria because they expected the country to support the international effort to root out extremists in neighboring Mali.

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Opinion

John Rung Publisher

Dan McCaleb Senior Editor

Saturday, January 19, 2013 • Page A9 • Northwest Herald • NWHerald.com 8OUR VIEW

The NHL is back; will fans follow?

The National Hockey League is back and we’re excited, tentatively. You should be too. Just don’t let it ever, ever, ever happen again, NHL. Hockey fans are resilient and the players are the most down-toearth of athletes For the record in the major professional sports. The Blackhawks open the But the league has season today at the defending done us wrong. Stanley Cup champion L.A. Three work Kings. Will you be watching? stoppages in less than 20 years is simply too much. Two seasons shortened, one completely lost. The league and its teams need to recognize that and appreciate the fans who return while doing whatever it can to bring back those it lost. Hockey has been mismanaged financially for years. The biggest blunder was that, after missing the entire 2004-05 season due to a lockout, the resulting collective bargaining agreement was so ill-conceived that it led to another work stoppage just seven years later, after salaries spiraled out of control in size and breadth. Fans do not want to hear about work stoppages and labor agreements. If a flaw emerges in this agreement, just fix it. Sit down and resolve it civilly, in a timely fashion. Fans won’t sit through another delay. Many have already had enough. The league needs to recognize it is out of mulligans. It needs to take advantage of the opportunity in front of it and make the fans feel appreciated and welcome. Sports are there for our enjoyment, not to increase our stress levels. In the Chicago area, we love hockey. We need hockey. There is really no substitute. So play the game. And don’t stop. Don’t let numbers get in the way again. Eventually, we might forget about missing the past two months. Next time, we will not.

8ANOTHER VIEW

Troop withdrawal

President Barack Obama is accelerating one of his biggest and riskiest foreign pledges: a withdrawal from Afghanistan that will hand the fighting to Afghan troops by spring instead of summer with nearly all U.S. forces gone by the end of this year. It’s a stepped-up pace with success hinging on Afghan troops shouldering fighting even as Taliban forces are poised to take control of the southern and eastern parts of the country. But Obama is clearly ready. The fighting has cost more than 2,100 U.S. lives and $557 billion since it began in the months after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. By 2014, the U.S. will have only a few thousand military advisers there with Afghan President Hamid Karzai backed up by Pentagon hardware and civilian aid. A costly war is coming to a close, just as the far larger Iraq conflict did. In Afghanistan’s case, the future remains uncertain and worrisome.

San Francisco Chronicle

8SKETCH VIEW

8IT’S YOUR WRITE Tired argument

To the Editor: Imagine my shock when in reading “Our View” on Dec. 5, I found out the teachers in District 300 were striking because of money, not because there would be any benefit for the students. According to this newspaper’s Editorial Board, those teachers “turned their backs on their students.” Why must teachers be different from everyone else? They chose a profession, some possibly for altruistic reasons, but a profession nonetheless, and professionals get paid what they are worth, or should. What is it worth to you to have a good education for your children? And please don’t give me that tired argument about the quality of the teachers. When an evaluation system is found that grades how well the students, their parents and the teachers do, I’ll be the first one to endorse it. In the meantime, to have the students’ grades be the sole basis for judging a teacher is like having the presence or absence of cavities be the sole judge of a dentist. Did the head of the teachers’ union president say something about “fighting for our children?” Yeah, so? It’s a negotiation. Did the teachers have to strike? Apparently so, because negotiations suddenly started moving when they struck. Maybe the cost of the Northwest Herald would go down, instead of

up as it recently did, if the editors decided to work for free. You know, for the honor of bringing their truth to us. Nat Leighton Crystal Lake

Special attention

To the Editor: We as a people need to take a closer look at what is happening in our society when it comes to violence. As soon as tragedy strikes, especially concerning guns, we all jump to the conclusion that banning guns will stop the crime. It won’t. From that point of view, it would be like making the basketball responsible for Michael Jordan being a great player, or the bat for Mickey Mantle’s success. We as humans don’t want to take responsibility for sometimes producing defective offspring. As a young man, my family had a thoroughbred breeding farm where we took great measures to breed the best with the best to only produce the finest-quality foals. Any farmer/breeder of most livestock will agree to this method. As humans, we will never go through this process to have children, and we shouldn’t have to. But what we need to do is identify the children and young adults who display any abnormal behaviors, a signal that this individual may pose a threat to society. This may be pointed out by teachers and/ or coaches. This is not to say that they should be labeled as outcasts,

How to sound off

We welcome original letters on public issues. Letters must include the author’s full name, home address and telephone numbers. We limit letters to 250 words and one published letter every 30 days. All letters are subject to

but they should be given special attention to properly help them in their time of need. This may sound barbaric and crude, but we are animals and capable of horrible things. We need to stop asking lawmakers for more laws that don’t solve the problem and look at the cause of the problem instead. Christ E. DiVito Huntley

Baseball tourney returns

To the Editor: For the past 20 years, a dedicated group of your neighbors has been orchestrating what is considered by many to be the top international amateur youth baseball event in the country right here in your own backyards. The McHenry County Youth Sports Association and the Summer International Championships will return to McHenry County on July 26. More than 120 youth baseball teams from eight countries and across the U.S. will come to our communities and spend about $2 million in our hotels, restaurants and retail stores during a 10-day

editing for length and clarity. Submit letters by: • E-mail: letters@nwherald.com • Mail: Northwest Herald “It’s Your Write” Box 250 Crystal Lake, IL 60039-0250

period, helping to boost our local economy and giving our local athletes the opportunity to compete against some of the best players in the world. We need your help. Please consider volunteering or even hosting two of our international players. Businesses that benefit immensely from the event, please support us as a sponsor. For two decades, MCYSA has been driving revenue into your businesses. Support us so that this event can continue for the next 20 years. In 2013, SIC is a free event for the community. There are no admission fees. Come out, watch a game, and buy a program, T-shirt and hot dog. Enjoy some of the best baseball that you will ever see on the amateur level. Japan, Brazil, Sri Lanka, Puerto Rico, Venezuela, Mexico, Canada, the Dominican Republic and the United States. Fifteen-, 13- and 11-year-olds playing for the love of the game. Visit www.MCYSASports.org to learn more about this diamond in the our community. Jack Sebesta

Executive tournament director, Crystal Lake

Nobody rises to low expectations; set bar high for children

A child upon whom there are low or no expectations is a rudderless ship. She casts about her life with no sense of purpose or direction. If his parents don’t help him navigate, he may accomplish little or find someone else to give his life direction. Many times, that someone else might be a peer or gang member who won’t have your child’s best interest at heart. Our job as parents and teachers is to set high expectations for our children so they can succeed in life. How do we set high goals for our children? I found that telling my teenagers anything directly was usually met with resistance and excuses about why they did not need to do it. Then, I remembered that my parents never said things like, “You will go to college!” Instead their expectations were implied. My mother always spoke of how college was the best time in her life. My father said, “You and your sister argue so much, you should be lawyers.” But the most important message always was to do our best. And that was communicated by the way they took the time to give us direction.

Editorial Board: John Rung, Dan McCaleb, Kevin Lyons, Stacia Hahn, Jon Styf, Kate Schott

My first-quarter grades in high school were mediocre at best. And while I put up the usual teenage tears and resistance, my father sat down with me and showed me how he learned to study for tests: take notes in class, outline the important points from your notes, and study those. This method carried me through high school, college and into my professional work. He took the time, he held firm, and this in turn let me know what was valued in our family. Success and happiness lie in setting standards for family members. Parents teach children what is acceptable and unacceptable behavior: dress up for church, television off during dinner, homework must be done, cellphones given to Mom or Dad at bedtime. Is this old-fashioned? I don’t think so. Children crave structure. When they are young, they want to know how to please adults; when they are teens, they want to know where the boundaries are, so they can abide by them or choose to cross them and suffer the consequences. I substitute-taught for a few years when I first started out. I learned that

TEACHABLE MOMENTS Leslie Schermerhorn supervising a kindergarten class without following the established daily routine was like herding cats. By second grade, the students were not shy about telling me what came next or what I’d not done in the way their regular teacher did. By junior high, children needed more latitude; they wanted to be listened to, and to be given options and avenues for their creativity, but they still needed firm guidance in order to know how to direct their energy. High school is the perfect time for children to focus on their goals for the future, and a parent is their sounding board as they navigate what might be the best direction to take. A four-year college is not for everyone, nor should it be. We all come into this world with different interests, aptitudes and strengths. In McHenry County, there are multiple avenues for students to explore possible career choices, but

8THE FIRST AMENDMENT

they can only do this if they are enrolled and attending school. Those who choose to drop out lose this opportunity and are truly cast adrift. The minimum expectation for any child must be to graduate from high school. Why? Many young adults come to the Regional Office of Education to register for the GED test because they cannot get hired for even the most basic job without the GED certificate or a high school diploma. The GED is not regarded as highly by employers as a high school diploma. The current cost to take the GED test is $50, and this cost will more than double in 2013 when the GED will only be offered online. Additionally, your child will miss out on all the significant events that coincide with being enrolled in high school. All of the high schools in McHenry County offer programs and pathways of study that will lead students to the career path of their choice. High school offerings lead to post-secondary community college programs, where the student can earn an associate degree and/or industry-based certification. Both

of these may then lead to a career or four-year college degree. The career pathways available in McHenry County schools include agriculture science, automotive tech, construction/trade skills, advanced standing in STEM (science, technology, engineering and math), culinary arts, CAD/drafting, accounting, finance, management, cosmetology and the computer sciences. McHenry County College also offers technical classes to McHenry County high school juniors and seniors. There are programs for automotive technology, early childhood education, fire science and emergency medical technicians, criminal justice, fitness instructor training, nurse assistant, robotics, web development and culinary management. It is not always clear which decisions to make and which to enforce, but we cannot leave our children drifting rudderless in the sea of this chaotic world. We have to do our best, even when we may be too tired to stay the course.

• Leslie Schermerhorn is regional superintendent of McHenry County schools.

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.


Weather TODAY

SUN

MON

16

45

Partly sunny, windy and mild

Saturday, January 19, 2013 Northwest Herald Page A10

9

Partly sunny, breezy and cold with flurries Wind:

Mostly cloudy, frigid with chance flurries Wind:

NW 10-20 mph

NW 10-20 mph

Wind: WSW 15-25 mph

14

6

ALMANAC

TUE

WED

12

23

FRI

39

Wind:

Wind:

Partly sunny, warmer with rain possible Wind:

WNW 10-15 mph

WNW 10 mph

SSW 10-20 mph

Partly sunny, cold with flurries

-2

Partly sunny

5

15

28 Cloudy with snow possible Wind:

W 10-15 mph

25

10

Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.

at Chicago through 4 p.m. yesterday

Harvard 42/5

Belvidere 45/7

TEMPERATURE HIGH

THU

Crystal Lake 45/14

Rockford 45/7

LOW

Hampshire 45/8

Algonquin 47/8

90

88

Sandwich 47/9

39

Waukegan 47/9

Oak Park 47/13

St. Charles 45/14

DeKalb 45/14 Dixon 47/8

McHenry 44/7

Saturday will be mild and windy with highs in the mid-40s under partly to mostly cloudy skies. A clipper type system will pass to the north and flurries are possible. Temperatures fall Sunday as an Arctic front passes by ushering in the coldest air in two years. Highs only in single digits and teens through Tuesday.

LAKE FORECAST

40

WATER TEMP: Chicago Winds: SW at 15-30 kts. 47/14 Waves: 3-5 ft.

Aurora 46/7

Orland Park 48/11 31° 16°

Record high

61° in 1996

Record low

-21° in 1994

Q.

?

Where do most storms enter the United States?

PRECIPITATION 0.00”

Month to date

1.12”

Normal month to date

1.07”

Year to date

1.12”

Normal year to date

1.07”

About 60 percent arrive in the Pacific Northwest.

24 hours through 4 p.m. yest.

FOX RIVER STAGES as of 7 a.m. yesterday Flood

Current

24hr Chg.

Fox Lake

--

3.04

+0.02

Nippersink Lake

--

3.04

+0.02

7:17 a.m.

New Munster, WI

10

7.36

-0.06

4:51 p.m.

McHenry

4

1.26

+0.06

Moonrise

11:19 a.m.

Algonquin

3

1.50

+0.05

Moonset

12:50 a.m.

Sunrise

SUN AND MOON

Sunset

MOON PHASES

Full

Last

Jan 26

Feb 10

First

Feb 17

AIR QUALITY Friday’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

Today

City

New

Feb 3

NATIONAL CITIES

4p

0-2 Low; 3-5 Moderate; 6-7 High; 8-10 Very high; 11+ Extreme

5p

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

49/24/s 26/23/sf 56/37/s 46/39/s 50/35/s 33/12/pc 18/12/pc 45/37/pc 51/32/s 54/28/s 44/23/pc 65/40/s 54/26/s 46/11/pc 44/20/c 59/33/s -9/-14/pc 20/-15/sf 38/2/sf 77/64/s 65/42/s 51/20/pc 66/47/pc 56/22/s 58/37/s 78/50/s 52/32/s 56/38/s

WORLD CITIES

REGIONAL CITIES

WEATHER TRIVIA™

A.

Normal high Normal low

Today

City

Hi/Lo/W

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

78/67/sh 40/8/sf 32/-5/sf 54/34/s 64/46/s 48/37/s 53/37/s 64/33/s 74/57/c 49/36/s 72/44/s 48/31/pc 44/26/c 40/15/s 54/32/s 60/30/s 28/12/c 65/44/s 74/48/s 60/42/s 43/28/pc 34/-1/pc 59/25/s 33/-3/sf 74/58/c 71/42/s 52/34/s 60/25/s

Hi/Lo/W

Today

Sunday

Monday Hi/Lo/W

City

Hi/Lo/W

City

Hi/Lo/W

Arlington Hts Aurora Bloomington Carbondale Champaign Chicago Clinton Evanston Galesburg Joliet Kankakee Mt. Vernon Naperville Peoria Princeton Rockford Rock Island Springfield Waukegan Wheaton

47/12/pc 46/7/pc 50/15/pc 53/27/s 53/16/pc 47/14/pc 53/16/pc 47/12/pc 50/13/pc 47/11/pc 49/12/pc 54/23/s 47/9/pc 51/15/pc 47/10/pc 45/7/pc 47/10/pc 50/18/pc 47/9/pc 47/10/pc

19/3/pc 19/3/pc 24/7/pc 38/19/s 27/9/c 19/5/pc 26/9/pc 20/5/c 22/3/sf 21/5/c 23/6/c 35/16/s 20/4/c 24/6/sf 20/5/sf 17/2/sf 21/3/sf 29/10/pc 19/2/pc 19/3/c

11/-2/pc 11/-5/pc 14/0/pc 28/14/pc 16/0/pc 12/1/pc 15/2/pc 11/0/pc 12/-2/pc 12/-1/pc 13/-2/pc 24/8/pc 11/-3/pc 14/1/pc 11/-1/pc 8/-4/pc 11/-2/pc 18/4/pc 9/-5/pc 11/-3/pc

Acapulco Amsterdam Athens Baghdad Beijing Berlin Brussels Buenos Aires Cairo Cancun Dublin Geneva Hong Kong Islamabad Istanbul Kabul Kingston Lima London Madrid

90/74/pc 26/22/c 56/45/s 68/49/s 38/26/pc 28/14/c 28/22/c 81/61/pc 69/48/s 80/65/pc 37/32/pc 37/35/r 64/61/pc 64/38/s 52/45/sh 42/14/s 87/75/s 82/66/s 37/30/sf 52/36/r

Manila Melbourne Mexico City Montreal Moscow New Delhi Paris Rome Santiago Sao Paulo Seoul Singapore Stockholm Sydney Tel Aviv Tokyo Toronto Vancouver Vienna Warsaw

84/73/pc 72/54/pc 71/44/s 34/31/sn 17/4/sf 63/45/s 34/29/c 52/47/r 88/59/s 80/64/sh 37/25/s 84/76/t 25/18/sf 78/65/t 68/52/s 45/36/s 40/18/c 45/35/pc 28/18/pc 29/12/sf

-10s

0s

-0s

Hi/Lo/W

10s

Today

NATIONAL FORECAST 20s

30s

40s

50s

60s

70s

80s

100s 110s

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

Rain

Flurries

Snow

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Local&Region News editor: Kevin Lyons • kelyons@shawmedia.com

8COMMUNITY NEWS

MARENGO MAN KILLED IN CRASH

SYCAMORE – A 37-year-old Marengo man was killed Friday morning when his minvan crossed the center line of Route 64 near Motel Road and ran head-on into a shuttle bus, police said. Brian K. Hopper, of the 600 block of Francis Street, was pronounced dead at the scene. The shuttle driver and only one on the bus, Robert Wright, 53, of Williams, Ariz., was being treated Friday evening at Kishwaukee Community Hospital. His condition was unavailable. Hopper was driving a 2005 Chevrolet Uplander west on Route 64 when the crash occurred about 11:20 a.m., said DeKalb County Chief Deputy Gary Dumdie. The new 2013 Gillis shuttle bus was headed for Midway International Airport to transport passengers around the airport campus, Dumdie said. The accident remains under investigation. Dumdie said the road was clear and dry. Route 64 reopened to traffic about 2:15 p.m.

SECTION B

Saturday, January 19, 2013 Northwest Herald

Breaking news @ www.NWHerald.com

Island Lake to farm out 911

Six to lose jobs; Lake Zurich will be dispatcher in money-saving move By JANE HuH

jhuh@shawmedia.com ISLAND LAKE – Village officials voted to lay off six full-time police dispatchers and contract for emergency communications with the village of Lake Zurich. The vote was 6-1 at Thursday’s special board meeting. Officials said the consolidation would save the village at least $144,000 in salaries and insurance the first year. Trustee Laura Rabattini cast the lone “no” vote. “The economics of such a decision

are quite clear and rather stark,” the board said in a statement Thursday after the vote. “Given the contracting opportunities available to the village, Island Lake can contract for roundthe-clock dispatching service from another agency for about one-third the cost of maintaining its own dispatching operation.” Island Lake’s dispatch service costs $333,815 a year, village administrators said. The board considered two options: merge its dispatch operations with Lake County or Lake Zurich.

Consolidating with Lake County’s system was estimated at $207,000 the first year. Lake Zurich’s proposed five-year contract, estimated at $186,719 the first year, offered the most in cost savings. Village leaders also pointed to Lake Zurich’s “state-of-the-art” operation. “Our current dispatch center can’t begin to match these technological advances,” the village statement said. Once the village of Lake Zurich approves an intergovernmental agree-

ment, the transition is expected to take up to two months to complete. In that time, the dispatchers’ union, the Illinois FOP Labor Council and the village will negotiate severance pay and cessation of existing operations. The Lake Zurich Village Board is expected to vote on the agreement next month, Village Administrator Jason Slowinski said. Wayne Schnell, a critic of Village President Debbie Herrmann and the current administration, questioned

J’burg: Clerk a ballot issue?

ALBERT ‘ALBY’ AdAMS

– Shaw Media

DRIvER fAIR, HIt pOLE ON ROutE 176

PRAIRIE GROVE – A 27-year-old Marengo man was listed in fair condition Friday night after his car crashed into a telephone pole along Route 176, police said. Joseph Laudicina was driving east at 3:57 p.m. in a 1999 Pontiac Grand Am when he drove off the road just east of Bayview Beach Road and hit a telephone pole at a high rate of speed, Prairie Grove Detective Jim Page said. Laudicina’s car was bent in half and broke the telephone pole, Page said. Laudicina was flown to Advocate Condell Medical Center in Libertyville, where he was listed in fair condition, Page said. Route 176 between Valley View and Nish roads was closed about 45 minutes. Laudicina was charged with driving under the influence, failure to reduce speed and failure to wear a seat belt, police said.

– Joseph Bustos

8LOCAL BEST BETS

30 pRESCHOOLS At fAIR tODAY

CRYSTAL LAKE – A Preschool Fair runs from 9:30 a.m. to noon today at the Crystal Lake Public Library, 126 Paddock St. Representatives from more than 30 area preschools will be available for parents and children. No registration is required. For information, call the library at 815-459-1687 or visit www. crystallakelibrary.org.

GuESt tO SHARE AfRICA ExpERIENCE

FOX RIVER GROVE – “Kilimanjaro and Me: My Journey to the Rooftop of Africa” – 1 to 2:30 p.m. today at the Fox River Grove Public Library, 407 Lincoln Ave. – is the experience of Doug Dvorak. Register at the Circulation Desk. Call 847-639-2744 or visit www.frgml.lib.il.

8LOCAL DEATHS Patricia Ann Abner 65, Lake Villa Beverly A. Cluts 82, Trout Valley Hildegarde A. Kinast 84, McHenry OBItuARIES on page B2, 4

See ISLAND LAKE, page B2

Board to meet, decide Sunday By EMILY K. COLEMAN

ecoleman@shawmedia.com

Provided photo

Volunteers construct the 30-foot snowmobile bridge between McHenry Township Park and Ringwood. The bridge built last year was named for Albert “Alby” Adams, who started the county’s first snowmobile association 45 years ago and currently is president of the McHenry Sno-Birds Snowmobile Club.

Albert ‘Alby’ Adams The 85-yearold McHenry resident and former McHenry Township supervisor organized snowmobile enthusiasts into an association responsible for more than 200 miles of trails that crisscross the county from Harvard in the west to Fox Lake and Wauconda in the east.

Bridge given the name of snowmobiling giant Links Ringwood, township park By EMILY K. COLEMAN

ecoleman@shawmedia.com McHENRY – The newest improvement to McHenry County’s snowmobiling trails is named for the man who started it all. Albert “Alby” Adams, always recognizable in his signature cowboy hat, started the first local snowmobile association, served as its first president and worked out agreements with area farmers for snowmobilers to ride across their land. About 45 years later, some 200 miles crisscross the county from Harvard in the west to Fox Lake and Wauconda in

the east. One of the yearly improvements to the trail is a 30-foot bridge connecting McHenry Township Park to Ringwood, said Craig Adams, a member of the McHenry County Snowmobile Association. He is not related to Albert Adams. The bridge, built with private club funds and a lot of volunteer labor, was dedicated and named for Albert Adams last weekend, Craig Adams said. It addresses a problem spot where the ground dips and sometimes floods. Last year, snowmobiles became stuck when the water didn’t freeze, he said. The clubs that make up the McHenry County Snowmobile Association also rebuilt two other bridges, one in Glacier

Park and another in Johnsburg. Albert Adams, now an 85year-old McHenry resident, is a former McHenry Township supervisor and is credited with obtaining state funding to build a snowmobile warming shelter in McHenry Township Park. It, too, is named for him. The shelter also is used by sledders. Albert Adams currently is president of the McHenry Sno-Birds Snowmobile Club, which he started around 1970. “He’s always been very involved in the McHenry community and has done a lot of for a lot of people in the community, not just for snowmobiling but when he was supervisor,” Craig Adams said. “He’s well-respected in the McHenry community.”

Meeting to explore cameras in courts By SARAH SutSCHEK

ssutschek@shawmedia.com WOODSTOCK – A public meeting about the possibility of allowing media cameras in McHenry County courtrooms has been set for 2 p.m. Feb. 1 at the McHenry County Government Center. Illinois has allowed news cameras in the Supreme Court and appellate courts since 1983 but was one of 14 states where cameras in trial courtrooms were banned or so restricted that they hardly were used.

About a year ago, Illinois Supreme Court Chief Justice Thomas Kilbride authorized “extended media coverage” in circuit courts on an experimental basis. That coverage, which includes no more than two still cameras and two video cameras, has limitations. For example, juvenile, adoption and child custody cases are off-limits. So are jurors. Anyone who objects to camera coverage also can file a written objection. Illinois Supreme Court spokesman Joseph Tybor will attend the meet-

ing to answer questions and address concerns. Tom Jackway, deputy court administrator for the 17th Judicial Circuit that serves Boone and Winnebago counties, also will attend. Cameras have been used in his circuit. The meeting will be in the jury assembly area on the third floor of the government center, 2200 N. Seminary Ave., Woodstock. Questions or further information about the meeting may be directed to Trial Court Administrator Dan Wallis at jdwallis@co.mchenry.il.us or by calling 815-334-4351.

JOHNSBURG – The village attorney doesn’t think it’s legal, but the Johnsburg Village Board is going to give it a vote anyway. At a special meeting called for Sunday morning, the board will vote whether to put a referendum on the April ballot to ask voters whether they want to elect their clerk. Currently, the duties of village clerk – taking meeting minutes, signing paperwork and election obligations – are handled by Village Administrator Claudett Peters. Other village employees assist in taking minutes. Johnsburg resident and village president candidate Maggie Haney wants residents to have a choice. She brought the issue before the board Jan. 8 and advocated for it again at Thursday’s Village Board meeting. The board doesn’t have the authority to put the question on the ballot, though, Village Attorney Michael Smoron has maintained since the first meeting. Residents can petition to get the issue on the ballot, he said. Regardless, the board will hold a special meeting to discuss the issue and vote. Village President Ed Hettermann said he doesn’t have a problem with the clerk being elected as long as that’s what the residents want. He said he is concerned about the Village Board doing something it’s not allowed to do. “I’m reluctant to do anything the village attorney doesn’t think is legal,” he said. “That’s why we have a village attorney.” But Hettermann doesn’t get a vote. The village president votes only to break a tie. Despite planning to vote for it, Trustee Ron Zanko said he isn’t optimistic the ordinance to put the referendum on the ballot will pass. If the referendum makes the ballot, and voters approve it in April, the next election in which they would pick a clerk would be November. “I have no problem with the position being elected,” Zanko said. “There’s always talk about transparency in government, and if one individual wears all the hats, it does not portray transparency. It’s too much power under one person’s control.”

If you go The Johnsburg Village Board will meet at 10 a.m. Sunday at Johnsburg Village Hall, 1515 Channel Beach Ave.


Page B2 • Saturday, January 19, 2013

Fire destroys garage in McHenry

cRYsTal lake: Wellness

LOCAL&REGION

Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

Firefighters of the McHenry township Fire Protection District investigate a fire about 3:05 p.m. Friday that destroyed a detached garage at 5120 Willow Lane in McHenry. Firefighters prevented the fire from spreading to nearby houses, but “wind was a huge factor in this fire,” Lt. Dave Harwood said. the fire was brought under control in about 15 minutes. No injuries were reported. the cause of the blaze remains under investigation, but is not believed to be suspicious, Lt. tom Ruggero said. Officials estimated the loss to be about $15,000.

Healthful day geared for women nORTHWesT HeRald

CRYSTAL LAKE – Centegra Health System will host its seventh annual Health Strong Woman event Feb. 21 as a reminder to women of McHenry County to take care of their health and wellness. The event runs from 9:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Holiday Inn in Crystal Lake. Admission is $10. There will be a healthy lunch and free screenings: blood pressure, bone density, carpal tunnel, diabetes and foot screenings. A risk assessment tool will estimate a heart’s age. Attendees will receive a $10 gift card to Algonquin Commons and have the opportunity to win raffle prizes, many donated by Algonquin Commons. Every woman also will receive a free freshwater pearl. Attendees will meet two of Centegra’s specialty physicians who will discuss heart health and arthritis concerns. During a lunch-andlearn program, women will dine with one of many Centegra professionals. Each year, Centegra hosts a special guest speaker. This year, it’s author, humorist and cancer survivor Mimi Donaldson. In her book, “Bless Your Stress – It Means You’re Alive,” Donaldson shares simple strategies on how to laugh at all that life throws. Seating is limited and tickets sell quickly. The first 300 to register and attend will receive a free salad shaker. To register, visit centegra.org/healthstrong or call 877-236-8347.

McHenRY: TRaining class

Centegra seeks animal-assisted therapy dogs nORTHWesT HeRald McHENRY – Centegra Health System’s Caring Paws Program is looking for a few good dogs. Centegra has offered animal-assisted therapy for years and is working to increase the number of patients visited by furry friends. The Caring Paws Program is offering an animal-assisted therapy class from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Feb. 16 at Centegra Hospital – McHenry.

Lisa Niemann, MBA First Vice PresidentBranch Manager

• island lake

Continued from page B1 the timing of “such a major decision like this 80 days before election time.” Several hotly contested campaigns are under way in Island Lake, a village of about 8,000 residents. Schnell serves as campaign manager for the candi-

Martie DeVoy Senior Registered Client Associate

Peter Behrns Associate Vice PresidentInvestments

develop such strong bonds with people that the interactions between the two have proved to be a huge benefit in the healing process of patients. “Therapy dogs are an aid in that they help to fill needs that cannot be met in other ways,” Feuillan said in a news release. “They are a source of unconditional love and concentrated attention that provides relief, a stimulus for exercise and also gives much pleasure to patients.”

Anil Rathi Vice PresidentInvestments David Reilly Financial Consultant

Linda Kozlowski Senior Registered Client Associate

Brian Reilly Senior Vice PresidentInvestments Rick Setser Vice PresidentInvestments

scheduled to meet Thursday for the second hearing on the objections. Schnell opined that village officials made their decisions without allowing the public enough opportunity to weigh in. “It was pretty sad the way they presented it to the public,” he said. “This is a small community and things like this affect us in a big way.

Joe Benedetti, AAMS®, CFP® First Vice PresidentInvestments

Grant Birkley, CRPC® First Vice PresidentInvestments PIM Portfolio Manager

Kozlowski Registered Associate

Alan Hafferkamp Vice PresidentInvestments

Brian Reilly Senior Vice PresidentInvestments

dates running on the “For The People” slate, which includes mayoral hopeful Charles Amrich and trustee candidate Anthony Sciarrone. Two residents with business ties to the village filed objections to Amrich and Sciarrone’s nominating petitions. The village’s electoral board, which comprises incumbents Herrmann and Clerk Connie Mascillino, is

Peter Behrns Associate Vice PresidentInvestments

Jim Goehl Vice PresidentInvestments

Jim Goehl Vice PresidentInvestments

Trish Overly, AAMS® Vice President Investments

Anil Rathi Vice PresidentInvestments

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Martie DeVoy Senior Registered Client Associate

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Participating dogs must have basic obedience skills and love meeting new people. Upon completion of the two-part program, the handler and his or her dog will be eligible for national registration through Pet Partners, a leading international resource for the human-animal bond. Katherine Feuillan, coordinator of Animal Assisted Therapy at Centegra Health System, said studies have shown that animals can

Feuillan said many patients are motivated to work harder toward recovery with animal therapy because it is more fun than working solely with a human therapist. The cost of the animalassisted therapy classes is $100. Attendance is required for participation in the evaluation. Registration and payment must be received by Feb. 13. For information or to register, call 815-759-4334.

Candidate to lead village criticizes timing of move

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Niemann, MBA ce PresidentBranch Manager

Oman, CRPC® Financial Advisor

Sarah Nader – snader@shawmedia.com

Grant Birkley, CRPC® First Vice PresidentInvestments PIM Portfolio Manager

Cynthia Brown Komarek, CRPC® First Vice PresidentInvestments

Lisa Micklevitz Senior Registered Client Associate

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David Reilly Financial Consultant

Cynthia

Bobrowicz Senior Vice

Anne Butcher Senior Registered Client Associate

Firstesident-

Investments

Jeff Bobrowicz Senior Vice PresidentInvestments

Phil Miller Senior Vice President���������� ������

We had no time to digest and actually research the facts as they call it in there.” Herrmann said the board’s decision comes after months of collective-bargaining negotiations. “This has been going on for six months,” she said. “It’s not about the people in the audience. It’s between employees represented by their union and the Village Board.”

Mark V. Murphy, AAMS® Associate Vice PresidentInvestments

born: Jan. 18, 1947; in Woodstock Died: Jan. 16, 2013; in Libertyville LAKE VILLA – Patricia Ann Abner, 65, of Lake Villa, passed away Wednesday, Jan. 16, 2013, at Advocate Condell Medical Center, Libertyville. She was born Jan. 18, 1947, in Woodstock, the daughter of William “Mick” and Helen (Cernicek) Duggan. Patricia moved to Lake Villa from 1975 until 1981, when she relocated to Antioch, and in 1997 she settled back in Lake Villa. She loved gambling of all types and solving crossword puzzles. She was a country music and Chicago Cubs fan, and enjoyed boating and spending time with her family and friends. On Sept. 16, 1968, she married Robert Abner. He died Dec. 9, 1991. Survivors include her daughter, Tina (Bob Jackson) Abner of Lake Villa; her mother, Helen Riley; siblings, Sharon Duggan of Park Ridge, Bill “Sonny” Duggan of Lake Villa, Bobby Duggan of Sarasota, Fla., Jean Dotson of McHenry, Maureen (Al) Swanson of McHenry, Diane (Russ) Dean of Island Lake and David Duggan of McHenry; sisters-in-law, Naomi White, Linda Duggan and Bea Abner; two aunts, Irene Suchor and Blanche Vogel; and many nieces, nephews and cousins. Patricia was preceded in death by her husband; father, William “Mick” Duggan; stepfather, James Riley; sister, Sandy Duggan; and stepbrother, Jim Riley. The visitation will be from 4 p.m. until the service at 7 p.m. Monday, Jan. 21, at Strang Funeral Home of Antioch, 1055 Main St. (Route 83). Interment will be private. In lieu of flowers, those desiring may make contributions in her memory to the American Heart Association. Please sign the online guest book at www.strangfh.com. For information, call the funeral home at 847-395-4000. Sign the guest book at www. NWHerald.com/obits

Continued on page b4

Tim Butcher, CRPC®, CFP ® Associate Vice PresidentInvestments

Tim Butcher, CRPC®, CFP ® Associate Vice PresidentInvestments

Anne Butcher Senior Registered Client Associate

Mark V. Murphy, AAMS® Associate Vice PresidentInvestments

8OBITUARIES PAtRICIA ANN AbNER

Jenny L. Murray, AAMS® Senior Registered Client Associate

Timothy J. O’Connor, CFP® First Vice President���������� ������

Dee Canez Senior Client Associate

James Newcomb, MBA, CRPC® First Vice President - Investments

Timothy Oman, CRPC® Financial Advisor

Timothy

Trish Overly, AAMS® Vice President Investments

Vi

Pam Weber Client Associate

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Saturday, January 19, 2013 • Page B3

Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

January 19 & 20

Welcome to Plan!t Weekend planitnorthwest.com

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Autumn and PlanitNorthwest.com bring you the most complete listing of events for you and your family each week! Please email Autumn at asiegmeier@shawmedia for the Planit calendar or questions.

California Bound ■ AUTUMN SIEGMEIER, PLANITNORTHWEST.COM

The Golfer in My Life and I are heading to San Diego next weekend. That is the destination for JANUARY 19 his yearly trip with the fellow golfers, most of them WINTER CONCERT SERIES: golf course superintendents. He suggested I come out with him a few days prior to the guys arrival THE ELEVATE PROJECT as I have never been there. Let me interject this STARLINE, HARVARD alert right now: San Diego, prepare for not-soThis eclectic band plays a mix of Latin-influenced good weather. When I travel, it can be 50/50 on funk, soul and Christian music. Tickets are temperature and precipitation. McHenry County, $10 adults, $8 seniors, $5 students 18 under prepare for bad weather. When the Golfer travels, and kids under 12 are free. Proceeds from this our weather usually turns nasty. Anyways, I have performance benefit the Harvard Diggins Library. never gone anywhere during January so I am really Concert starts at 7 p.m. looking forward to this long weekend.

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In my almost fourteen years with the Golfer, he and I have only physically flown together alone once. In this time, we have definitely travelled: he has gone to Shanghai, Mexico City, Toronto and all JANUARY 20 over the US and I to France, Spain and Bulgaria. BRIDAL EXPO Even when we have gone to the same place, we’ve PARK PLACE, CRYSTAL LAKE either not travelled to the destination together or flown with additional people, like the kids. I will Join the Crystal Lake Park District for their never forget the time I flew to meet him in Mon4th annual Park Place Bridal Fair with vendors treal, where he had been for work for three weeks. from every wedding category: caters, florists, The plan was for me to meet him after he had cominvitations, transportation, jewelry, reception favors, sweets, photographers, tablescape rentals pleted the project and we would spend a few days and more! There will be a bridal fashion show and in the city. On the return trip, I was flying stand-by. raffle prizes. Admission is free. He boards the plane and I patiently wait for the gate agent to call my name. My name is never crystallakeparks.org called and there goes the Golfer on the plane! This was prior to my obsessive need to have a plan for everything; we had never even talked about what to do if I didn’t make the flight. So I am at the Please note; we try to be as accurate as possible with our events but things are subject terminal, he is on a plane and I don’t even know to change without notice. Check the listing and confirm before heading to an event. if he realizes I am not on the flight! I got the next

3

flight a few hours later and he was at the gate when I landed. Of course, he did admit that the flight attendant had been calling “Passenger Siegmeier” on the plane and he didn’t say a word! He’s lucky he still is the golfer in my life after that!

As in all relationships, each person has a role; not surprisingly, I am the Trip Coordinator for the two of us. We have learned we enjoy our vacations the most when we hit the perfect balance between completely scheduled days and having nothing planned at all. I always want to explore shopping and places to eat. The restaurant hunting is definitely inherited from my father. I remember he would always find the best restaurants, even if it was his first time in a city. Even more remarkable, this was long before yelp, iphones.... heck, even the internet! I have been researching reader’s and critic’s choice winners for Best BBQ, for the Golfer and Best Seafood, for me. It also seems San Diego has a thriving food truck industry that I hope to experience. For the Golfer, he always enjoys some historical element, whether it be a monument, museum or walking tour. By the time we land, I hope to have a general itinerary but nothing set in stone; you never know what surprises we may find there. So this next week will be all about watching the weather, figuring out what to pack, making sure there is food for the kids and checking things off the list I have already made! If anybody has any suggestions for a “must do” or great restaurant in San Diego, please email me. Have a good weekend! Autumn

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OBITUARIES

Page B4 • Saturday, January 19, 2013

Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

8FUNERAL ARRANGEMENTS

patricia Ann Abner: The visitation will be from 4 p.m. until the service at 7 p.m. Monday, Jan. 21, at Strang Funeral Home of Antioch, 1055 Main St. (Route 83), Antioch. Interment will be private. For information, call the funeral home at 847-395-4000. Jesse James “Jim” Berry Jr.: A memorial visitation will be from 1 to 5 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 19, at Marengo-Union Funeral Home, 505 E. Grant Highway, Marengo. The memorial service will be at 5 p.m. For information, call the funeral home at 815-568-8131. millie Chewning: The funeral Mass celebration will be at 10:30 a.m. Saturday, Jan. 19, at Sacred Heart Catholic Church, 323 N. Taylor St., Marengo. For information, call Davenport Funeral Home at 815-459-3411. Karen m. Dronen: A celebration of Karen’s life will be at 12:30 p.m. Sunday, Jan. 20, at Mount Zion Christian Church, 2330 Highway 120, Lake Geneva, Wis. For information, call Derrick Funeral Home and Cremation Services at 262-248-2031. Wesley E. Eaton: A memorial service will be at 2 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 26, at Holy Cross Lutheran Church, Cary. Elroy p. Fitzgerald Sr.: The funeral service will be at 11 a.m. Saturday, Jan. 19, at St. John’s

Evangelical Lutheran Church, 320 Jefferson St., Algonquin. Burial will be in Cary Cemetery. For information, call Kahle-Moore Funeral Home at 847-639-3817. Rosalie (Raia) gossage: The visitation will be from 4 to 8 p.m. Monday, Jan. 21, at Windridge Funeral Home, 104 High Road (just west of West Main Street and Route 14), Cary. The visitation will continue from 10 a.m. until the Mass celebration at 10:30 a.m. Tuesday, Jan. 22, at Sts. Peter and Paul Catholic Church, 410 N. First St., Cary. Burial will be at Windridge Memorial Park in Cary. For information, call the funeral home at 847-639-2191. Richard Allen graf: A memorial service will be Saturday, Jan. 19, in Tennessee. maribeth guzi: A celebration of her life will be from 6 to 8 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 22, at the Sundy House in Delray Beach, Fla. hildegarde A. Kinast: The visitation will be from 2 to 6 p.m. Sunday, Jan. 20, at Justen Funeral Home & Crematory, 3700 W. Charles J. Miller Road, McHenry. The funeral service will be at 1 p.m. Monday, Jan 21, in the funeral home. Inurnment will be in Immanuel Lutheran Cemetery in Glenview at a later date. For information, call the funeral home 815-385-2400.

paul F. Kudlach: A private memorial gathering will be from noon until the 2 p.m. memorial service Saturday, Jan. 19, at DeFioreJorgensen Funeral & Cremation Service, 10763 Dundee Road, Huntley. Burial will be in St. Mary Cemetery, Huntley. For information, call the funeral home at 847-515-8772. Thomas Francis mcgovern: The memorial gathering will be from 1 to 4 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 19, at Schneider-Leucht-Merwin & Cooney Funeral Home, 1211 N. Seminary Ave. in Woodstock. Funeral and interment services will be private. For information, call the funeral home at 815-3381710. laverne miltimore: Friends may meet the family from 1 p.m. until the memorial service at 3 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 19, at Justen Funeral Home & Crematory, 3700 W. Charles J. Miller Road, McHenry. For information, call the funeral home at 815-3852400. grace l. mursewick: A memorial visitation will be from 2 p.m. until the service at 4:30 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 19, at James A. O’Connor Funeral Home, 11603 E. Main St., Huntley. For information, call the funeral home at 847-669-5111. Ryan Timothy neal: The visitation will be from noon Sunday, Jan.

20, until the funeral service at 4 p.m. at the Schneider-LeuchtMerwin & Cooney Funeral Home, 1211 N. Seminary Ave., Woodstock. All other services will be private. For information, call the funeral home at 815-338-1710. Roseal R. O’Donnell: The visitation will be from 8:30 a.m. until prayers are said at 9:30 a.m. Saturday, Jan. 19, at Justen Funeral Home & Crematory, 3700 W. Charles J. Miller Road, McHenry. After prayers, the funeral procession will leave for a 10 a.m. funeral Mass celebration at The Church of Holy Apostles, McHenry. Interment will be in The Church of Holy Apostles Cemetery, McHenry. For information, call the funeral home at 815-385-2400. James A. Ogle Jr.: The visitation will be from 10 a.m. until the funeral service at 11 a.m. Saturday, Jan. 19, at Grace Lutheran Church, 1300 Kishwaukee Valley Road, Woodstock. Burial with full military honors by VFW Post 5040 will follow in Oakland Cemetery. For information, call Schneider-Leucht-Merwin & Cooney Funeral Home at 815338-1710. Ralph potter: The memorial service will be at 10 a.m. Saturday, Jan. 19, at St. Martin’s United Church of Christ, 7890 Dittmer

Ridge Road, Dittmer, Mo., with a luncheon to follow. grace viola (Schrack) Salava: A memorial service with a luncheon afterward will be Saturday, Jan. 26, at Trinity Evangelical Lutheran Church, 25519 W. Route 134, Ingleside (Long Lake). Call the church at 847-546-2109 for the time. Inurnment will be private in Grant Township Cemetery. For information, call K.K. Hamsher Funeral Home at 847-587-2100. patrick harold Sheahan: Graveside services will be at 2 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 19, in Algonquin Cemetery at Route 31 and Cary Algonquin Road. Cremation rites have been accorded. For information, call Wait Ross Allanson Funeral & Cremation Services Chapel at 847-658-4232. Robert J. “Bob” Solka: The funeral service will begin at 9 a.m. Saturday, Jan. 19, at Cumberland Chapels, 8300 W. Lawrence Ave., Norridge, and proceed to St. Eugene Church for a Mass celebration at 10 a.m. Interment will be in All Saints Cemetery. For information, call the funeral home at 708-456-8300. mary C. Stemm: A memorial gathering will be from 10 a.m. until the memorial Mass celebration at 11 a.m. Saturday, Jan. 19, at the St. Mary Catholic Church, 312 Lincoln Ave., Woodstock.

Interment will be private in St. Joseph Cemetery in River Grove. For information, call SchneiderLeucht-Merwin & Cooney Funeral Home at 815-338-1710. William g. Thomas Jr.: The visitation will be from 9 a.m. Saturday, Jan. 19, until the funeral service at 11 a.m. at Willow Creek Community Church Chapel, 67 E. Algonquin Road, South Barrington. For information, call Lauterburg & Oehler Funeral Home at 847253-5423. Brenda p. Tomlinson: The visitation will be from 4:30 p.m. until the memorial service at 5:30 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 19, at DeFioreJorgensen Funeral Home-10763 Dundee Road-Huntley. For information, call the funeral home at 847-515-8772. george Wendt: Friends may call from 11 a.m. until the funeral service at 1 p.m. Monday, Jan. 21, at Faith Community Church, Janesville, Wis. Entombment will be in Windridge Memorial Park, Cary. For information, call Schneider Apfel Schneider & Schneider Funeral Directors at 608-754-4444. lawrence F. “larry” Wilkas: The visitation will be from 9:30 a.m. until a Mass celebration at 10:30 a.m. Saturday, Jan. 26, at Mary, Seat of Wisdom Church, 1352 S Cumberland Ave. Park Ridge.

E. South St., Crown Point. It is two blocks east of Broadway. Funeral prayers will be said at 9:15 a.m. Monday, Jan. 21, at the reception center in Crown Point, followed by a Mass of Christian Burial at 10 a.m. at St. Matthias Catholic Church, 101 W. Burrell Drive, Crown Point. Father James Wozniak will officiate. Interment will be in Holy Cross Cemetery in Calumet City, Ill. To view directions and/or sign a guestbook, visit www.GeisenFuneralHome.com or call the funeral home at 219-663-2500. Sign the guest book at www. NWHerald.com/obits

generous man who loved music and sang in several church choirs. He loved football and was an avid fan of the Chicago Bears. A memorial Mass will be celebrated 10:30 a.m. Friday, Jan. 25, at St. Mary Church, 10307 Dundee Road, Huntley. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to St. Mary’s Haitian Ministry or the American Lung Association, 3000 Kelley Lane, Springfield, IL 62711. Sign the guest book at www. NWHerald.com/obits

or to a church or charity of the donor’s choice. For information, call the funeral home at 815-385-2400 or visit www.justenfh.com, where friends may leave the family an online condolence message. Sign the guest book at www. NWHerald.com/obits

BEvERly A. ClUTS

hIlDEgARDE A. KInAST

proud grandmother and greatgrandmother. Survivors include three children, Nancy (William) Timmons of Toms River, N.J., Dennis (Lynn) Kinast of McHenry and Connie Flosi of McHenry; son-in-law, Nick Flosi; six grandchildren, Dawn, Sean, Melissa, Michelle, Jamie and Laura Arla; 11 great-grandchildren, Monica, Jonathan, Ella, Charles, Faith, Aidan, Ainslie, Tyler, Brandon, Katelynn and Danny; a brother, Albert (Marion) Weber; a sister, Esther Reinbold; a sister-in-law, Marilyn Weber; and a brother-inlaw, Richard Moore. She was preceded in death by her parents; her husband, Leroy “Stormy” Clarence Kinast on Sept. 14, 1990; a grandson, Kevin Timmons on Aug. 15, 1986; a brother, Walter Weber; a sister, Loretta Moore; and a brother-in-law, Stuart Reinbold. The visitation will be from 2 to 6 p.m. Sunday, Jan. 20, at Justen Funeral Home & Crematory, 3700 W. Charles J. Miller Road, McHenry. The funeral service will be at 1 p.m. Monday, Jan. 21, in the funeral home, with the Rev. John Zellmer of Good Shepherd Lutheran Church officiating. Inurnment will be in Immanuel Lutheran Cemetery in Glenview at a later date. For those wishing to send an expression of condolence, her family suggests memorials to Hospice of Northeastern Illinois, 405 Lake Zurich Road, Barrington, IL 60010,

Truck Lines, Elkhorn, Wis., for 24 years, retiring in 2003. He was a member of Teamsters Local No. 579 in Janesville, Wis. He was a member of Grace Lutheran Church in Richmond. Robert is survived by his wife, Marilyn; three sons, Jack (Mary) Woods of Lake Geneva, Wis., Mark Woods of Genoa City, Wis., and Tim (Debra) Woods of Powers Lake, Wis.; nine grandchildren; six greatgrandchildren; two sisters, Betty (Gordon) Kaskin of Twin Lakes, Wis., and Lois (George) Schultz of Bassett, Wis.; and a sister-in-law, Mary Woods of Aurora. He was preceded by a son, Robert H. Woods; a sister, Margaret Bullis; and a brother, Leonard “Pat” Woods. No services are planned at this time. For information, call Ehorn-Adams Funeral Home at 815 678-7311 or visit www.ehornadams.com. Sign the guest book at www. NWHerald.com/obits

8OBITUARIES • Continued from page B2 AngElO CApAREllI Died: Jan. 16, 2013

CROWN POINT, Ind. – Angelo Caparelli, 74, of Crown Point, formerly of Calumet City, Ill., passed away Wednesday, Jan. 16, 2013. Angelo was admired for his strength, dignity, compassion and perseverance as he bravely fought a short, difficult fight with lung cancer. He worked for 43 years at Republic and LTV Steel. He was a loving husband to (late) Barbara for 48 years and a terrific dad and loving Papa to his grandchildren. Angelo was a wonderful friend to many and a strong supporter of The Sons of Italy and the Relay For Life, and was a member of St. Matthias Catholic Church. He was an avid Chicago Bears football fan and enjoyed spending time with his family and friends, as well as gardening and caring for his lawn. His grandchildren were his world and top priority – he was always there for them in many endless ways. Angelo will be missed by the many lives he touched and his family will miss him immensely. Angelo is survived by two daughters, Nancy (Richard) Heitz of Marengo and Lynette (Robert) Gilmack of Crown Point; four grandchildren, Krysten (fiance Ryan Harres) Heitz, Kourtney Heitz, and Justin and Kyle Gilmack; two brothers, Joseph (Dolores) Caparelli and Anthony (Rosemary) Caparelli; brother- and sister-in-law, Thomas and RoseMarie Skorch; and many nieces and nephews. He was preceded in death by his wife, Barbara; and parents, Armando and Binuzza Caparelli. Friends may visit with the family from 2 to 8 p.m. Sunday, Jan. 20, at Geisen Funeral-Cremation & Reception Centre, 606 E. 113th Ave./

Died: Jan. 18, 2013; in Barrington TROUT VALLEY – Beverly A. Cluts, 82, of Trout Valley, passed away Friday, Jan. 18, 2013, at Advocate Good Shepherd Hospital in Barrington. Arrangements are pending at Kahle-Moore Funeral Home, Cary. For information, call the funeral home at 847-639-3817.

RIChARD COmmOn Died: Dec. 31, 2012

MESA, Ariz. – Richard D. “Rick” Common, 76, beloved husband of Edie; father of Michele Kent, Andrea Bradshaw and Mark; proud grandfather of Eric, Brian, Kevin, Julia, Ben, Leslie, Kayla, Alex and Matthew; brother of Judy Mioduch and Ken, passed away after a long illness Monday, Dec. 31, 2012, in Mesa, surrounded by his family. Rick was born in Royal Oak, Mich., and served as photographer and courier at SHAPE Headquarters in Paris, France. He graduated from Northeastern University in Chicago and worked in financial services in the Chicago area. Rick was a compassionate and

Born: Dec. 21, 1928; in Glenview Died: Jan. 17, 2013; in Barrington

McHENRY – Hildegarde A. Kinast, 84, of McHenry, died Thursday, Jan. 17, 2013, at Pepper Family Hospice of Northeastern Illinois in Barrington. She was born Dec. 21, 1928, in Glenview, to Fredrick and Selma (Bierlein) Weber. On June 12, 1948, she married Leroy “Stormy” Kinast in Glenview. A resident of McHenry since 2003, Hildegarde was formerly of Glenview. She was a member of Good Shepherd Lutheran Church in Lake Villa, where she sang in the choir. She also enjoyed gardening with her sister, Loretta, and was a

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ROBERT C. ‘ChUCK’ WOODS

Born: June 23, 1928; in Chicago Died: Jan. 17, 2013; in Richmond RICHMOND – Robert C. “Chuck” Woods, 84, of Richmond, passed away Thursday, Jan. 17, 2013, while in the company of family members at his home. Robert was born in Chicago on June 23, 1928, a son of the late Robert and Helen (Haack) Woods. He was married to Marilyn Pierce on May 29, 1951, in Williams Bay, Wis. He worked as a mechanic at LCL

Pedro Sanchez Perez was an honorable man who worked hard to achieve his goals in life. He was 17 years old when he arrived in America, studied English and became a diesel engine mechanic. He married Eustaquia and together they had seven children: Prudencio, Abel, Benito, Roberto, Arturo, Higinia and Lenor. He was an exemplary man of Catholic belief and lived his life as such. Unfortunately he became ill and suffered humiliations, and improper care he succumbed. He is dearly loved and missed. May he rest in peace. Pedro Sanchez: te recordamos Dios nos lo dio, Dios nos lo quito, de la tierra vienes a la tierra vuelves. El no a muerto vive en nuestros corazones.

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QUICKCRITIC

Mini-reviewS & local ShowtiMeS of cUrrent MovieS

Page B5 • Saturday, January 19, 2013

On screen now “Broken City” HH

rated r for pervasive language, some sexual content and violence, 1 hour, 49 minutes

STARRING: Mark wahlberg, russell crowe, catherine Zeta-Jones, Jeffrey wright PLOT: During a tight election, new York city’s mayor (crowe) hires an ex-cop turned private eye (wahlberg) to investigate his wife (Zeta-Jones) for infidelity. once he completes his assignment, wahlberg discovers the corrupt mayor has set him up. VERDICT: although set in present-day new York, this is a throwback to the classic hard-boiled detective stories of raymond chandler and Dashiel hammett. the look of the film is competent, and the performances are strong. Unfortunately, director allen hughes (making his first feature without his brother albert) and writer Brian tucker just take the detective genre’s clichés and put them in modern dress. a complicated plot is e! xpected, but the script has enough double crosses and hidden motives to push it past riveting to absurd. – Jeffrey westhoff, the

northwest herald

•••••••

“Django Unchained” HH

rated r for strong graphic violence throughout, a vicious fight, language and some nudity, 2 hours, 35 minutes

STARRING: Jamie foxx, christoph walz, leonardo Dicaprio PLOT: with the help of his mentor, a slave-turned-bounty hunter sets out to rescue his wife from a brutal Mississippi plantation owner. VERDICT: Granted, there’s something gleefully satisfying in watching evil people get what they have coming. But the film is tarantino at his most puerile and least inventive, the premise offering little more than cold, nasty revenge and barrels of squishing, squirting blood. the usual tarantino genre mishmash – a dab of blaxploitation here, a dollop of Spaghetti western there – is so familiar now that it’s tiresome, more so because the filmmaker continues to linger with chortling delight over every scene, letting conversations run on interminably and gunfights carry on to grotesque excess. tarantino always gets good actors who deliver, though, and it’s the performances by foxx, leonardo Dicaprio, christoph waltz and Samuel l. Jackson that make the film intermittently entertaining amid moments when the characters are either talking one another to death or just plain killing each other. – David

Germain, the associated Press •••••••

“Gangster Squad” H½

rated r for strong violence and language, 1 hour, 53 minutes

STARRING: Sean Penn, ryan Gosling, emma Stone PLOT: a chronicle of the laPD’s fight to keep east coast Mafia types out of los angeles in the 1940s and ’50s. VERDICT: “Gangster Squad,” a pulpy, violent tale of cops and mobsters in 1949 los angeles, rides an uncomfortable line between outlandishness and outright parody, and it’s difficult to tell which is director ruben fleischer’s intention. which is a problem. while the film wallows in period detail and has some sporadic moments of amusing banter, it’s mostly flashy, empty and cacophonous, and it woefully wastes a strong cast led by Josh Brolin, ryan Gosling and emma Stone in barely developed, one-note roles. at its center is a performance from Sean Penn as mob king Mickey cohen. with his mashed-up boxer’s mug, thick Brooklyn accent and volatile bursts of anger, he’s as cartoony as a Dick tracy villain. – christy lemire,

the associated Press •••••••

“The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey” HHH

PG-13 for frightening images and extended sequences of intense fantasy action and violence, 2 hours, 49 minutes

STARRING: Martin freeman, ian McKellen, richard armitage, andy Serkis PLOT: the hobbit Bilbo Baggins (freeman) joins Gandalf the wizard (McKellen) and a company of 13 dwarves in a quest to reclaim the dwarves’ homeland from an invading dragon. they encounter monstrous obstacles in the first leg of their journey. VERDICT: from the opening frames we are back in Peter Jackson’s Middle earth, and it’s a comfortable place to be. So comfortable, it is easy to overlook many of the film’s flaws. the idea that Jackson would turn J.r.r. tolkien’s slim children’s novel into a

Local showtimes

NOW PLAYING

THEATERS Classic Cinemas Woodstock 209 Main St., woodstock, 815-338-8555 www.classiccinemas.com AMC Lake in the Hills 12 randall road, lake in the hills, 800-fandango www.amctheatres.com/lakehills McHenry Downtown Theatre 1204 n. Green St., Mchenry, 815-578-0500 http://cyouatthemovies.com Regal Cinemas 5600 w. route 14, crystal lake, 800-fandango www.regmovies.com

RATINGS HHHH - excellent HHH - recommended HH - not recommended H - awful three-film epic is nuts, but the first of these films is entertaining enough, even when the padding shows in a narrative nearly three hours long. Bilbo’s encounter with Gollum (andy Serkis) is a showstopper. avoid seeing the 3-D version shown at 48 frames per second, because it makes an expensive movie look as cheap as a 1970s BBc production. – Jeffrey

westhoff, northwest herald •••••••

“Jack Reacher” HHH

rated PG-13 for violence, language and some drug material, 2 hours, 10 minutes STARRING: tom cruise, rosamund Pike, richard Jenkins, robert Duvall PLOT: a homicide investigator digs deeper into a case involving a trained military sniper who shot five random victims. VERDICT: the idea of watching a movie in which a sniper methodically manufactures his own bullets, practices weekly at a gun range, then waits quietly in an empty parking garage before shooting five people dead may not sound like the most appealing form of entertainment during these tragic days. nevertheless, it’s important to assess “Jack reacher” on its own terms, for what it is and what it isn’t. Besides being caught in some unfortunate timing, it’s also clever, well-crafted and darkly humorous, and it features one of those effortless bad-ass performances from tom cruise that remind us that he is indeed a movie star, first and foremost. oK, so maybe cruise doesn’t exactly resemble the reacher of British novelist lee child’s books: a 6-foot-5, 250-pound, blond behemoth. if you haven’t read them, you probably won’t care. even if you have read them, christopher McQuarrie’s film – the first he’s directed and written since 2000’s “the way of the Gun” – moves so fluidly and with such confidence, it’ll suck you in from the start. – christy lemire, the

associated Press

•••••••

“The Last Stand” HHH

r for strong, bloody violence throughout and language, 1 hour, 47 minutes STARRING: arnold Schwarzenegger, forest whitaker, Johnny Knoxville PLOT: the leader of a drug cartel busts out of a courthouse and speeds to the Mexican border, where the only thing in his path is a sheriff and his inexperienced staff. VERDICT: ”the last Stand” is the arnold Schwarzenegger movie you didn’t even realize you wanted to see. this is the action superstar’s first leading role in a decade, having left acting to serve as the governor of california and whatnot, and while it may not have occurred to you to miss him during that time, it’s still surprisingly good to see him on the big screen again. he is not exactly pushing himself here. Korean director Kim Jee-woon’s american filmmaking debut turns out to be an extremely Schwarzeneggerish Schwarzenegger film, full of big, violent set pieces and broad comedy. he may look a little creaky (and facially freaky) these days, but arnold proves he’s still game for the mayhem as he fires off rounds and tosses off one-liners, and the movie at least has the decency to acknowledge that it knows that you know that he’s old. – christy lemire,

the associated Press •••••••

PLOT: Years after ex-prisoner Jean valjean (Jackman) breaks his parole to become a virtuous man, fanatical policeman Javert (crowe) continues to hunt him. while avoiding Javert, valjean helps a dying prostitute (hathaway) and, years later, her daughter (Seyfried). VERDICT: Director tom hooper’s interpretation of the blockbuster stage show is a musical in close-up. with his actors singing their roles “live,” hooper can push his camera’s right into their faces. this is riveting for the first hour, then becomes repetitive. Jackman, crowe and hathaway are electrifying. this film was made for fans of the stage show. others who don’t know the story going in will be lucky if they know it going out. – Jef-

frey westhoff, northwest herald •••••••

– christy lemire, the associated Press •••••••

“Lincoln” HHH

“Zero Dark Thirty” HHH½

STARRING: Daniel Day-lewis, Sally field, David Strathairn, Joseph Gordon-levitt PLOT: as the civil war continues to rage, america’s president struggles with continuing carnage on the battlefield as he fights with many inside his own cabinet on the decision to emancipate the slaves. VERDICT: for anyone who cringed just a little while watching the trailer for “lincoln” and worried it might be a near-parody of a Steven Spielberg film, with its heartfelt proclamations, sentimental tones and inspiring John williams score, fret not. the movie itself is actually a lot more reserved than that – more a wonky, nuts-andbolts lesson about the way political machinery operates than a sweeping historical epic that tries to encapsulate the entirety of the revered 16th president’s life. that was a smart move on the part of Spielberg and screenwriter tony Kushner, a Pulitzer prize-winner for the play “angels in america” who also wrote the script for Spielberg’s “Munich.” it’s talky and intimate but also surprisingly funny. –

STARRING: Jessica chastain, Jason clarke, Jennifer ehle, James Gandolfini PLOT: a cia officer (chastain) leads an eight-year hunt for osama bin laden, which climaxes with a daring nighttime raid in Pakistan. VERDICT: Much like her oscar-winning “the hurt locker,” director Kathryn Bigelow’s account of the cia’s search for osama bin laden is compelling filmmaking that can be difficult to watch at times, as it should be. Bigelow and screenwriter Mark Boal (who also wrote “hurt locker”) have been criticized for glamorizing torture. while they do not glamorize it (the torture scenes are horrifying), they should have been more critical of it rather than present it as a necessary evil. that said, this still is a hypnotic procedural that chronicles nearly a decade of frustrations and setbacks before the navy Seal’s celebrated raid on bin laden’s compound. chastain is dynamite as the flinty professional who remains focused on her mission even as her superiors begin to give up. even though we know the outcome, the story is charged with suspense.

rated PG-13 for an intense scene of war violence, some images of carnage and brief strong language, 2 hours, 30 minutes

christy lemire, the associated Press •••••••

“Mama” HHH

PG-13 for violence and terror, some disturbing images and thematic elements, 1 hour, 40 minutes STARRING: Jessica chastain, nikolaj coster-waldau and Megan charpentier PLOT: annabel and lucas are faced with the challenge of raising his young nieces that were left alone in the forest for 5 years ... but how alone were they? VERDICT: a playful, elegantly made little horror film, “Mama” teasingly sustains a game of hide-and-seek as it tantalizes the audience with fleeting apparitions of the title character while maintaining interest in two deeply disturbed little orphan girls. “Mama” represents a throwback and a modest delight for people who like a good scare but prefer not to be terrorized or grossed out. with fine special effects and a good sense of creating a mood and pacing the jolts, andy Muschietti shows a reassuringly confident hand for a first-time director, pulling off some fine visual coups through smart camera placement and cutting, and not taking the whole thing so seriously that it becomes overwrought. – todd Mc-

carthy, the hollywood reporter •••••••

“Promised Land” HH

rated r for language, 1 hour, 46 minutes STARRING: Matt Damon, frances McDormand, John Krasinski PLOT: a salesman for a natural gas company experiences life-changing events after arriving in a small town, where his corporation wants to tap into the available resources. VERDICT: an experience that’s alternately amusing and frustrating, full of impassioned earnestness and “C” You At The Movies - McHenry Downtown Theatre

$5 Matinees (CHILD/SENIORS ALL SHOWS)

$7 Adult (NON-MATINEE)

1204 N. Green St. • 815-578-0500 www.cyouatthemovies.com – SHOWTIMES FOR FRI, JANUARY 18 THROUGH THURS, JANUARY 24 –

LES MISERABLES (PG-13) (158 minutes)

“Les Misérables” HH½

Fri & Sat: 12:00, 3:00, 6:15, 9:30 Sun & Mon: 12:30, 3:45, 7:00 Tues, Wed, Thurs: 6:45

STARRING: hugh Jackman, russell crowe, anne hathaway, amanda Seyfreid

Fri & Sat: 12:15, 3:15, 6:30, 9:45 Sun & Mon: 12:45, 4:00, 7:15 Tues, Wed, Thurs: 7:00

rated PG-13 for suggestive and sexual material, violence and thematic elements, 2 hours, 37 minutes

saggy sections. Director Gus van Sant has the challenge of taking the topic of fracking and trying to make it cinematic. working from a script by co-stars Matt Damon and John Krasinski, based on a story by Dave eggers, he succeeds in fits and starts. the impoverished small town that’s the tale’s setting, a place in need of the kind of economic rejuvenation fracking could provide, is full of folksy folks whose interactions with the main characters don’t always ring true. “Promised land” has its heart is on its sleeve and makes its proenvironment message quite clear, but it’s in the looser and more ambiguous places that the film actually works.

GANGSTER SQUAD (R) (113 minutes)

rated r for language and strong violence including brutal disturbing images, 2 hours, 37 minutes

– Jeffrey westhoff, northwest herald

“BROKEN CITY”

AMC Lake in the Hills 12 – 10:50 a.m., 1:30, 4:20, 7:30, 10:10 p.m. Classic Cinemas Carpentersville – 12:15, 2:40, 5:05, 7:30, 9:55 p.m. Regal Cinemas – 1:10, 4:10, 7:10, 10:00 p.m.

Classic Cinemas Carpentersville – 1:00, 4:15, 7:30 p.m. Classic Cinemas Woodstock – 12:45, 4:00, 7:15 p.m. McHenry Downtown Theater – 12:00, 3:00, 6:15, 9:30 p.m. Regal Cinemas – 2:10, 6:30, 10:05 p.m.

“DJANGO UNCHAINED”

“LINCOLN”

AMC Lake in the Hills 12 – 12:40, 4:15, 8:00 p.m. Classic Cinemas Carpentersville – 1:00, 4:20, 7:45 p.m. Regal Cinemas – 2:20, 6:00, 9:40 p.m.

AMC Lake in the Hills 12 – 1:00, 4:45, 8:10 p.m. Regal Cinemas – 1:30, 5:20, 8:50 p.m.

“GANGSTER SQUAD”

AMC Lake in the Hills 12 – 11:30 a.m., 2:00, 4:30, 7:00, 9:30 p.m. Classic Cinemas Carpentersville – 12:45, 3:00, 5:15, 7:30, 9:45 p.m. Regal Cinemas – 1:40, 4:50, 7:30, 10:10 p.m.

Saturday, Jan. 19

Saturday, Jan. 19

Saturday, Jan. 19

AMC Lake in the Hills 12 – 11:00 a.m., 1:50, 4:30, 7:20, 10:10 p.m. Classic Cinemas Carpentersville – 12:00, 2:25, 4:50, 7:15, 9:40 p.m. McHenry Downtown Theater – 12:15, 3:15, 6:30, 9:45 p.m. Regal Cinemas – 1:20, 4:20, 5:00, 7:20, 10:15, 10:50 p.m.

Saturday, Jan. 19

“MAMA”

Saturday, Jan. 19

“PARENTAL GUIDANCE”

Saturday, Jan. 19

“THE HOBBIT: AN UNExPECTED JOURNEY”

AMC Lake in the Hills 12 – 10:50 a.m., 1:20, 3:50 p.m. Classic Cinemas Carpentersville – 12:00, 2:20, 4:40, 7:00, 9:20 p.m. Regal Cinemas – 1:05, 7:25 p.m.

AMC Lake in the Hills 12 – 5:00, 9:00 p.m. Classic Cinemas Carpentersville – 12:35, 4:00, 7:25 p.m. Regal Cinemas – 2D: 1:40, 10:40 p.m.; 3D: 6:50 p.m.

Saturday, Jan. 19

Saturday, Jan. 19

“JACK REACHER”

Saturday, Jan. 19

Classic Cinemas Carpentersville – 9:20 p.m. Regal Cinemas – 4:45, 10:35 p.m.

“THE LAST STAND” Saturday, Jan. 19

AMC Lake in the Hills 12 – 11:20 a.m., 2:10, 4:50, 7:40, 10:20 p.m. Classic Cinemas Carpentersville – 12:10, 2:30, 4:50, 7:10, 9:30 p.m. Regal Cinemas – 2:00, 4:40, 7:40, 10:20 p.m.

“LES MISERABLES”

Saturday, Jan. 19

AMC Lake in the Hills 12 – 1:10, 4:40, 8:15 p.m.

“SILVER LININGS PLAYBOOK”

AMC Lake in the Hills 12 – 12:50, 3:45, 6:40, 9:45 p.m. Classic Cinemas Carpentersville – 1:40, 4:20, 7:00, 9:40 p.m. Regal Cinemas – 1:15, 4:25, 7:15, 10:25 p.m.

“THIS IS 40”

Saturday, Jan. 19

AMC Lake in the Hills 12 – 6:50, 9:55 p.m. Regal Cinemas – 4:15, 10:45 p.m.

“ZERO DARK THIRTY”

Saturday, Jan. 19

AMC Lake in the Hills 12 – 12:30, 4:00, 7:50 p.m. Classic Cinemas Carpentersville – 12:00, 3:15, 6:30, 9:45 p.m. Regal Cinemas – 1:00, 2:30, 4:30, 7:00, 8:00, 10:30 p.m.


ADVICE

Page B6 • Saturday, January 19, 2013

Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

Sticky-handed wedding guests load up on keepsake glasses

Dear Abby: My daughter recently was married. My niece – a talented artist – hand-painted flowers on wine glasses for the dinner reception after the ceremony. They were intended to be keepsakes for each of the adult guests. The glasses turned out beautifully and made each place setting extra special. I knew they’d be treasured by our family for years to come. At the end of the evening, I gathered four glasses from our family’s table, then glanced at the bridal table of eight – as some guests approached to offer thanks for a fabulous evening. When I turned around, the four

DEAR ABBY Jeanne Phillips glasses were gone. Not only had glasses disappeared from our table, but also from the head table and from my niece’s (the artist). Those of us who had worked hardest on the wedding were left with nothing – and that includes the bride and groom. The next day, someone mentioned to me they had seen certain guests leave with four to six glasses each. One woman even had her child, who was loaded down with glasses, make several

trips to her car. We’ve figured out who the culprits were: some out-oftowners who stayed at the home of one of the groom’s relatives. I heard the glassware covered the entire top of their dining room table. My question: Should we ask these people to return the glasses? Thanks for your input, Abby. – Mother Of The

Bride In Mesa, Ariz.

Dear Mother: By all means ask – but there is no guarantee they’ll be returned. People who take more than their share usually feel an inflated sense of entitlement. Although their manners were atrocious, please don’t let this cause in-law prob-

lems before the marriage has even begun. Perhaps out of sympathy, the artist will be generous enough to craft another pair of goblets for the bride and groom. Dear Abby: I am in a one-year relationship with a wonderful man who is divorced with two children. The kids and I get along great – or at least I thought we did. It turns out they are making up lies about me and telling their mother. My boyfriend and his ex have a strained relationship and fight about everything. I love his children, but I don’t know how to handle this. What do you think I am doing wrong? –

Telling The Truth In Duluth

Dear Telling The Truth:

You’re not doing anything wrong. Either the kids are trying to cause a breakup with the idea their parents will reunite, or they are telling their mother things they think she wants to hear. There’s nothing you can do about it. Your boyfriend will have to clear the air with his former spouse. Dear Abby: I am a woman who was raised in the South by a very proper mother. She told me a man should never give a woman “intimate” gifts like lingerie. A friend and I have argued about whether this “rule” applies today. I still believe the practice is unacceptable,

even if you are engaged. She thinks it is OK. Please settle this so we can get on with our lives. – Confused In Oregon Dear Confused: Perhaps the two of you should agree to disagree on this one. Your mother is part of the “hands off” generation, and the logic was that knowing lingerie sizes was “too intimate” for couples who weren’t married. In today’s world, however, such logic would put companies such as La Perla and Victoria’s Secret out of business.

• Write Dear Abby at www.dearabby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.

Appendicitis needs immediate attention

Dear Dr. K: Every time my husband has abdominal pain, he worries it’s appendicitis. Can you tell me the actual symptoms so I can assure him he’s fine? Dear Reader: Many different conditions can cause abdominal pain. The cause of most abdominal pain is a temporary and simple disorder, such as a pocket of gas trapped in the intestine, or stomach acid causing heartburn. But serious conditions also cause abdominal pain, and appendicitis is one of the most common of those serious conditions. It affects one in every 500 people in the United States each year. Appendicitis is an inflammation of the appendix. Your appendix is a small, fingerlike tube. We don’t know of anything good the appendix does for us – we just know it can cause trouble. Many people worry about appendicitis whenever they get a pain in their belly. It’s worth worrying about: Appendicitis can have serious and life-threatening consequences. Left untreated, an inflamed appendix can burst.

ASK DR. K Dr. Anthony Komaroff The infection can then spread throughout the abdominal cavity and into the bloodstream. The appendix hangs from the lower right side of the large intestine. If your husband’s pain is predominantly on his left side, it’s probably not appendicitis. Appendicitis causes the following symptoms: • Abdominal pain: This usually starts just above the belly button, then moves over several hours to the right lower side of the abdomen. • Nausea • Vomiting • Abdominal swelling • Pain when the right side of the abdomen is touched • Low-grade fever • Inability to pass gas • Change in normal bowel pattern Appendicitis is an emergency and requires immediate attention to avoid the risk of a ruptured appendix. If your husband ever has

symptoms of appendicitis, he should contact his doctor right away. The doctor will ask about his symptoms, then check for pain in the lower right abdomen. Blood tests, ultrasound or a computed tomography (CT) scan also can provide evidence for or against the diagnosis. When the symptoms, physical examination and tests all strongly suggest a person has appendicitis, surgery to remove the appendix (an appendectomy) is required as soon as possible. That’s because a ruptured appendix can be life-threatening, while an appendectomy is a relatively low-risk operation. Still, our diagnostic accuracy is not perfect: In about 10 percent to 25 percent of appendectomies, the appendix is normal. It’s usually removed anyway, since it’s easy to do once the abdomen has been opened, and because it could cause trouble in the future.

• Write to Dr. Komaroff at www.askdoctork.com or Ask Doctor K, 10 Shattuck St., Second Floor, Boston, MA 02115.

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COMICS

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Anna opens our eyes, ears and minds to some of the most challenging aspects of our lives, and in so doing helps give others the courage to do the same.” Darren Walker, of the Ford Foundation, who was on the selection committee that awarded actress and playwright Anna Deavere Smith the Dorothy and Lillian Gish Prize

Bernal travels to Sundance

Things

worTh TALKin’ AbouT

Saturday, January 19, 2013 • PlanitNorthwest.com/buzz

Oprah interview boosts OWN

Oprah Winfrey’s interview with Lance Armstrong is more than an illustration of a hero athlete tumbling from the heights. It’s also a pivotal moment for a famous media figure trying to climb the ladder back up. Winfrey’s OWN network is showing signs of life after a rocky start, and the Armstrong interview offered a chance for many more viewers to check it out. The former Tour de France cyclist admitted to cheating with performance enhancing drugs throughout his career during the first half of the interview Thursday night. That program was seen by a total of 4.3 million viewers in Thursday’s back-to-back airings, OWN said Friday. But it drew only 3.2 million viewers in its first airing, an audience that fell short of OWN’s most-viewed telecast: an interview Winfrey conducted with the Whitney Houston family last March after the singer’s death the previous month. Ratings were not yet available for the second half of the Armstrong interview that aired Friday night. The interview “showcases the No. 1 asset this network has over everybody else – and that’s Oprah Winfrey,” said Erik Logan, copresident of the network with Sheri Solata. It also showcased about everything else; OWN relentlessly advertised its programming on just about every commercial break. Winfrey hosts “Oprah’s Master Class,” ‘’Oprah’s Life Class” and a weekly interview show on OWN.

Gael Garcia Bernal has journeyed north to the Sundance Film Festival to share the tragic story of another traveler. The Mexican actor is a producer on the immigration documentary “Who Is Dayani Cristal?”, in which Bernal also appears on-screen to dramatize the path that the film’s subject took to the United States. Bernal and director Marc Silver sought to unravel the mystery of a body found rotting in the Arizona desert in August 2010. The man bore the tattoo “Dayani Cristal” across his chest. Bernal and Silver said the intent was to put a human face on one of the anonymous hundreds who have died in the Arizona desert seeking better lives in the United States.

BUZZWORTHY

More celeb news at PlanitNorthwest.com/buzz

Alicia Keys to sing at Super Bowl

‘Django’ action figures discontinued

Alicia Keys is adding her voice to the Super Bowl show for the third time. The Grammy-winning R&B singer will perform the national anthem before the NFL championship game on Feb. 3 in New Orleans. The league said Friday Keys’ three performances at the Super Bowl will Alicia Keys be the most in the event’s history. She sang “America the Beautiful” before the 2005 game, and was part of the pregame show in 2008.

Colbert’s sister eyes Congress

No joke: Comedian Stephen Colbert’s sister is running in earnest for a vacant South Carolina congressional seat. Campaign manager Bill Romjue said Friday that Elizabeth Colbert-Busch plans to file next week and make a formal announcement. She did not immediately return messages from The Associated Press. Colbert-Busch will file as a Democrat seeking the vacant 1st District seat. Colbert-Bush is a Charleston native like her brother and development director at the Clemson University Restoration Institute in nearby North Charleston.

The Weinstein Co. has asked a toy maker to discontinue a line of “Django Unchained” action figures after receiving complaints they were offensive. The studio said Friday such collectibles have been created for all of director Quentin Tarantino’s films, including “Inglourious Basterds,” and they were meant for people 17 and older, the audience for the film. Civil rights groups argued the toys trivialized the horrors of slavery. “We have tremendous respect for the audience and it was never our intent to offend anyone,” The Weinstein Co. said in a statement.

Items from Studio 54 go to auction

A trove of memorabilia from Studio 54 is going up for bid in an auction that is resurrecting those long-ago nights at the iconic 1970s clubhouse with a legacy greater than its lifespan. Mementos kept by the late Studio 54 co-owner Steve Rubell, including paparazzi photographs, letters and artwork once belonging to the New York club’s A-list guests, are being auctioned off Saturday in West Palm Beach. Rubell’s partner, Bill Hamilton, finally decided to part with the treasures, more than 23 years after Rubell’s death at age 45.

TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS Actress Jean Stapleton is 90. Actor Fritz Weaver is 87. Actress Tippi Hedren is 83. Movie director Richard Lester is 81. Singer Phil Everly of the Everly Brothers is 74. Actorsinger Michael Crawford is 71. Actress Shelley Fabares is 69. Country singer Dolly Parton is 67. TV chef Paula Deen is 66. Singer Martha Davis of The Motels is 62. Singer Dewey Bunnell of America is 61. Actor Desi Arnaz Jr. is 60. Actress Katey Sagal (“Married ... With Children”) is 59. Comedian

Paul Rodriguez is 58. Keyboardist Mickey Virtue of UB40 is 56. Actor Paul McCrane (“ER”) is 52. Singer Whitfield Crane of Ugly Kid Joe is 45. Singer Trey Lorenz is 44. Actor Shawn Wayans (“White Chicks,” “Scary Movie”) is 42. Singer-guitarist John Wozniak of Marcy Playground is 42. Actress Drea de Matteo (“Joey,” “The Sopranos”) is 41. Actress Bitsie Tulloch (“Grimm”) is 32. Actress Jodie Sweetin (“Pants-Off Dance-Off,” “Full House”) is 31.

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Rockets ready this time

Josh Peckler – jpeckler@shawmedia.com

Richmond-Burton’s Michael Kaska (right) and Rockford Christian’s Chase Gould chase down a loose ball during the second quarter Friday in Richmond.

After close call in 1st meeting, R-B dominates rematch RICHMOND – Chris Vlasak hadn’t forgotten. Rockford Christian had made an impression on Richmond-Burton’s only starting senior with its fast start when the two boys basketball teams met in early December. Vlasak made sure that didn’t happen again Friday. The Rockets outpaced the Royal Lions from the start

BLACKHAWKS: ANALYSIS

and cruised to a 53-36 Big Northern Conference East Division win. “Last time, they came at us in the first quarter and got a bit of a lead,” said Vlasak, who scored 11 points including a pair of first-quarter 3-pointers. “So we wanted to come out quick, and we did that.” R-B won the teams’ December meeting, 49-45. Vlasak received plenty of help from his teammates, including starting junior Michael Kaska, who

By TOM MUSICK

Date

Opponent

Time

Today

at Los Angeles

2 p.m.

Sunday

at Phoenix

9 p.m

Tuesday

ST. LOUIS

7:30 p.m.

Thursday at Dallas

7:30 p.m.

Jan. 26

at Columbus

6 p.m.

Jan. 27

DETROIT

6 p.m.

Jan. 30 at Minnesota

7 p.m.

scored a team-high 16 points on seven baskets, and junior reserve Nick Pittser, who scored 10 points off the bench Friday. But Rockets coach Brandon Creason credited his veteran point guard. “We give [Vlasak] a little more freedom as a third-year guy to create and do some things, and he did a nice job tonight because we didn’t really take him out,” Creason said. “We asked him to carry a heavy load and he did that.”

Jake Dachman controlled the backcourt for Rockford Christian and scored a team-high 16 points for the Royal Lions. “Dachman was really physical – he was a little faster than I expected, but I adjusted to it later in the game,” Vlasak said. “It took a little while for [my teammates] to get used to the speed [of varsity], but now we’re starting to get the hang of it.”

See ROCKETS, page C2

★★

VIEWS Tom Musick

Tucker’s defense will be question Strange things happened during my visit to Jacksonville almost three months ago. I saw a lizard in a tree. I saw everyday people wearing Blaine Gabbert jerseys. I saw Bears thirdstring running back Armando Allen rush for a 46-yard touchdown. Like I said, strange things happened. As I watched the Bears clobber the Jaguars, 41-3, beneath an impeccably blue Florida sky, I never could have imagined a late-season nosedive that would cost Lovie Smith his job. Nor Mel Tucker could I have imagined that the man behind the Jaguars’ overmatched defense would be lured to lead the Bears’ defense in 2013. Yet that’s what happened. I’m telling you, strange things. Say hello to Mel Tucker, the Bears’ new defensive coordinator. The Bears hired Tucker on Friday after he spent four seasons in the same role with the Jaguars and one season before that in the same role with the Cleveland Browns. Tucker will replace Rod Marinelli, who decided that it was time for a fresh start instead of returning to the Bears for a fifth season. New Bears coach Marc Trestman had hoped that Marinelli would stick around, but the veteran coach opted to reunite with longtime friend Monte Kiffin as the defensive line coach of the Dallas Cowboys. By adding Marinelli, the Cowboys’ defense became better Friday than it was Thursday. Can the same be said for the Bears? Hey, it’s possible. No one will know for sure until the opening kickoff next fall. But Tucker has some big cleats to fill. Or, you know, whatever footwear coaches prefer. For months (make that years) (actually, decades), Bears fans begged and pleaded for improvements on offense. Those fans were met with disappointment after almost every season, including the most recent one in which the Bears finished No. 28 in total offense.

See MUSICK, page C4

Cavanaugh returns Matt Cavanaugh, the Bears’ offensive coordinator from 1997 to 1998, is back with the team as quarterbacks coach, one of four new assistants named Friday. PAGE C4

Time to drop puck on season tmusick@shawmedia.com

January schedule

RICHMOND-BURTON 53, ROCKFORD CHRISTIAN 36

By CHRIS BURROWS

★ ★★

Breaking news @ www.NWHerald.com

Sports editor: Jon Styf • jstyf@shawmedia.com

cburrows@shawmedia.com

Sports

SECTION C

Saturday, January 19, 2013 Northwest Herald

Here come the Hawks. We mean the Blackhawks, of course. Not the Atlanta Hawks or the Quincy Hawks or the fans of Ken “Hawk” Harrelson. These Hawks wear sharp skates and carry sticks. More often than not, they smell terrible. Their elbows outnumber their teeth. Maybe. And finally – finally! – these Hawks are about to play hockey again. They were locked out for 113 days

On the air today

Blackhawks at Los Angeles, 2 p.m., NBC, AM-720 by NHL commissioner Gary Bettman and the owners before agreeing to a new labor deal that salvaged a shortened season. It all starts today when the Hawks go on the road to play the Los Angeles Kings. Before the puck drops, the Hawks will be forced to wait and watch as the defending champion Kings raise their 2011-12 Stanley Cup banner

to the rafters. More than two years have passed since the Hawks raised a championship banner. They want another one. Here’s what to know as the Hawks begin their pursuit:

1. WHO are they? For the most part, the Hawks are the same team that went 4526-11 a season ago but were bounced out of the playoffs by the Phoenix Coyotes in a six-game series. See HAWKS, page C5

AP photo

Forward Jonathan Toews leads the Blackhawks into today’s season opener against the Kings in Los Angeles.

THE daIly fEEd Tweet from last night

What to watch

Really?

3-pointers

I just lost a contact. It flipped out of my eye and fell to its demise on the Trojan hardwood. #travesty

NBA: Memphis at Bulls, 7 p.m., WGN: The Bulls will take on the Grizzlies a night after a 100-99 overtime win in Boston. PAGE C5

The Honolulu Star-Advertiser reported that the woman perpetrating the Lennay Kekua hoax reportedly told Manti Te’o in early December that she had to fake her own death to elude drug dealers. Te’o gave his first post-Deadspin story interview, off camera, to ESPN’s Jeremy Schaap on Friday night. PAGE C4

Lance Armstrong told us “It’s not about the bike” in his 2000 book, written by Sally Jenkins. Here are three things it apparently was about: 1. Money 2. Lies 3. Drugs More on armstrong, page C4

Patrick Mason @pm222

Follow our writers on Twitter: Tom Musick – @tcmusick Jeff Arnold – @NWH_JeffArnold Joe Stevenson – @NWH_JoePrepZone

Story, page C2

AP file photo


PREPS

Page C2 • Saturday, January 19, 2013

Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

CARy-GROvE 48, CL SOuTh 36

C-G grabs share of Valley lead By PATRICK MASON

pmason@shawmedia.com

CARY – No one had to remind the CaryGrove girls basketball team how important the Fox Valley Conference Valley Division game against Crystal Lake South was. The winner would move into a first place tie atop the division with Huntley while the loser would fall to second. So the Trojans (14-6 overall, 7-1 FVC Valley) prepared with that in mind, looking to avenge an early season loss to the Gators on Dec. 7. They did, winning 48-36 over the visiting Gators on Friday. “It feels awesome,” said Joslyn Nicholson, who had a game-high 14 points while playing superb defense. “We are playing the way we need to be playing lately and to get back at [the Gators] is just, wow, it feels great. “We have been getting mentally preSarah Nader – snader@shawmedia.com pared for this all week and focused on not Cary-Grove’s Joslyn Nicholson makes a shot during the third quar- freaking out and how to handle their deter Friday in Cary. C-G beat Crystal Lake South, 48-36. fense.”

PREP ROuNDuP

The Trojans worked around the Gators’ 2-3 zone defense well with a mixture of jump shots, layups and moving the ball. At times, the Trojans were stifled but they were able to crack the defense that had their number in the first meeting. Olivia Jakubicek scored 13 points, highlighted by nice finishes at the rim. She also added five assists. The Trojans saw four bench players combine for 14 points while the Gators didn’t see bench points until Carina Madoni scored six points in the last four minutes of the game. C-G also played spectacular defense, giving South (17-5, 5-2) fits all game. The Trojans played a tough halfcourt trap that confused the Gators and kept them off balance. “For us, everything starts on the defense, everything,” Trojans coach Rod Saffert said. His team forced 19 turnovers in the game. “The defense has got to a level where you only see that play at the end of the season. It’s really exciting to see.”

The tough Trojan defense held the Gators without a basket for 12 minutes and gave up just one point on a free throw in the third quarter. “We didn’t want to play quite that fast,” Gators’ coach Kyle McCaughn said of the Trojans’ style. “But that’s what they do and that’s how the make you play. They hit us right in the chops and we answered it two times, but coming out in the third quarter we couldn’t answer. We needed to make that next stop and that next shot but we just couldn’t get it. “Tonight we just made an extra pass too many times that we didn’t need to and we missed out on some open shots. We weren’t ready to pull the trigger. We maybe made too many passes and turned the ball over because of it.” Sara Mickow just missed a double-double for the Gators, scoring nine points and posting 12 rebounds while Rachel Rasmussen led the team with 10 points. “Mickow is unbelievable on the boards,” Saffert said. “She’s great and really tough to defend.”

WRESTLING: hARvARD TRIANGuLAR

Harvard knocks off CL Central, Marian Central Rosga, McHenry hold off Chargers By ANDREW hANSEN

anhansen@shawmedia.com

Huntley girls win to stay tied for 1st NORThWEST hERALD

CARPENTERSVILLE – Alissa Rosga scored eight of her 17 points in the fourth quarter for McHenry to hold off Dundee-Crown, 58-55, in Fox Valley Conference Valley Division girls basketball action Friday. Rosga’s points included three 3-pointers. The Warriors needed all of their 22 fourth-quarter points to match the Chargers who pumped in 24 in the final quarter. Also for McHenry (11-13 overall, 3-5 FVC Valley), McKayla Snedeker scored 11 and Laura D’Angelo had nine. Jesenia Laboy led the Chargers (2-18, 0-8) with 12 points and Jordan Bartelt and Emily Michalski each added 10.

Huntley 55, Prairie Ridge 41: At Huntley, Ali Andrews

tossed in 16 points and Sam Andrews added 15 as the Red Raiders (16-4, 7-1 FVC Valley) defeated the Wolves in Ali their division Andrews game. The victory keeps Huntley in a tie with Cary-Grove for first place in the Valley. Bethany Zornow added nine points for the Raiders. Prairie Ridge (13-8, 3-5) was led by Kelsey Bear with 13 points.

HARVARD – After graduating 10 starters from his lineup, Harvard wrestling coach Tim Haak expected a few growing pains early. But two weeks out from regionals and the dual team tournament, Haak likes where his team stands. The Hornets defeated Crystal Lake Central, 43-23, and Marian Central, 73-4, with six Harvard wrestlers going 2-0 on the day. “You can tell we’re starting to do the little things in the matches,” Haak said. “That’s what’s making the difference.” Anthony Luis (106 pounds), Irvin Pena (120), Chance Shelton (126), Johnny Peterson (132), Travis Heck (152) and Christian Popoca (220) all had two wins for the Hornets.

Haak has been especially pleased with the recent progress of Pena, a senior, and Peterson, a freshman. Peterson escaped from the bottom early in the third against Logan Lundelius to gain a one-point lead. With 11 seconds left in the match, Lundelius hit a single leg that brought Peterson to the mat, but Peterson used a counter move to cause a stalemate to close the match. Peterson’s second match was a 1-minute, 52-second pin. Peterson said he’s much more comfortable on the mat than the beginning of the season, and is learning to deal with more experienced wrestlers. “The strength difference is pretty big,” Peterson said. “You have to outwrestle everybody. You just can’t go out there and out-muscle everyone.” Tied heading into the final quarter, Pena escaped from the bottom on Cen-

CARy-GROvE FOOTBALL

Norberg to visit Iowa next week By JOE STEvENSON

joestevenson@shawmedia.com Cary-Grove senior Kyle Norberg will visit the University of Iowa next weekend, his second official visit to an NCAA Division I school for football. Norberg made a soft commitment to D-I North Dakota and turned down an offer to D-II Grand Valley State. Iowa coach Kirk Ferentz called Norberg on Friday afternoon to talk about next week’s visit. “I don’t know what’s going to happen, but I’m excited,” Norberg said. “They told me I’m not in their top 85 players, but if somebody they have

there goes to another school, a spot could open up.” While many schools are looking at Norberg (6-foot-1, 215 pounds) as a linebacker, the position he played as a sophomore and junior, Iowa wants to look at him at fullback. Norberg played offense and defense this season, helping C-G to the IHSA Class 6A state championship game, where it lost to Crete-Monee, 33-26. Norberg put together one of the area’s best rushing seasons ever with 2,218 yards and 27 touchdowns, averaging 9.4 yards a carry. “Recently, North Dakota State (the Football Champi-

Woodstock North 61, Johnsburg 48: At Woodstock, Sami

Ahr scored 14 points and Ashley Jones hit three 3-pointers for the Thunder (13-8, 5-3) in an FVC Fox Division win. Megan Landazzi scored 18 for the Skyhawks (8-11, 1-4).

CL Central 53, Woodstock 48: At Woodstock, Kelsey

Schmitt scored 18 points for the Tigers (10-10, 2-5) in an FVC Fox Division win. Sami Ludwig scored 18 for the Blue Streaks (8-13, 2-6), including four 3-pointers.

Grayslake Central 38, Hampshire 35: At Hampshire, the

Rams (13-9, 6-1) defeated the Whip-Purs (8-11, 3-4) in an FVC Fox Division game.

WRESTLING McHenry 69, Woodstock 6:

At McHenry, Brad Ostdick at 132-pounds, Wade Lardy (152) and Cam Pait (160) all won by technical fall for the Warriors, who improved to 21-0 to set a school record for dual wins in a season. Ryan Plourde won by pin at 170 for the Blue Streaks. • Rob Smith contributed to this report.

tral’s Ian Zietler and got a stalling call for a 2-0 win. Pena’s second win was a 11-3 major decision, with Pena cutting Marian’s Jack McGuire twice in the final period to get two takedowns to earn the extra team point. Pena has found confidence since placing seventh at the Princeton Invitational the first weekend of January. “I’ve been working hard in the wrestling room,” Pena said. “My teammates are the ones that help me out.” The Hornets won the first six matches against the Tigers. “Our lower weights didn’t come to wrestle today,” Central coach Justen Lehr said. Back-to-back pins from Andrew Marsden (170) and Brent Pfaff (182) cut Harvard’s lead to five, but the Hornets were able to hold on. Darwin Stone (220) was leading 12-8

Josh Peckler – jpeckler@shawmedia.com

Richmond-Burton’s Sam Kaufman goes up for a shot in front of Rockford Christian’s Alec Johnson in the second quarter Friday.

R-B bolts to 12-0 lead

• ROCKETS Continued from page C1

R-B (4-13 overall, 3-1 BNC East Division) took an early 12-0 lead and forced eight firstquarter turnovers. “We came out active and forced the issue,” Creason said. “When we score out of transition we’re so much better because we don’t have a very big team, so we have to make turnovers into buckets.” Dachman hit a baseline 3-pointer at the end of the quarter to end the shutout, but the Rockets weren’t done. R-B posted runs of 9-2 and 7-2 in the second quarter, and after a pair of floaters in the lane from sophomore Sam

Kaufman (8 points), the Rockets led by 21 points, 31-10, with only seconds remaining in the half. The Royal Lions (12-7, 4-3) had drained only four baskets by halftime. “Our defense translates into our offense,” Kaska said. “We get tips; we get steals; we get transition buckets, and that’s what we saw in the first half.” The Rockets have now won back-to-back games for the first time this season. “It’s a step forward,” Creason said. “We’re a young team, and we’re an undersized team. We’re thankful for every win, because youp don’t know when the next one’s coming.”

onship Subdivision national champion) also contacted me,” Norberg said. “They were going to have a coaches meeting and wanted to see my film.” The recruitment process has progressed a little slower for Norberg than many players, but now he is seeing more opportunities. “I’m kind of glad I waited a little bit,” he said. “You want to make a decision and get it over with.” Norberg’s teammate, running back Ryan Mahoney, committed to Grand Valley State last month, but Norberg will not be joining him. “Saying no to Grand Valley was tough,” he said.

in the third period for the Tigers before being disqualified, giving the win to Popoca. “I guess that [the ref] thought he bowed his back or something,” Lehr said. Luis had two pins for the Hornets, both in less than 30 seconds. Shelton had a fall in 1:52 against Marian and won a 9-3 decision against Central. Heck won a 10-0 major decision against Central and got a pin in 1:31 with a head scissor for his second win. Popoca got a reversal and three nearfall points in the final quarter to earn a 7-2 decision against the Hurricanes. Nick Remke (138) won the lone match for the Hurricanes against Harvard. Remke was up 13-1 heading into the final match and was looking for the pin, but came away with a 15-1 major decision.

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Saturday, January 19, 2013 • Page C3


SPORTS

Page C4 • Saturday, January 19, 2013

Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

NOTRe dame fOOTball

Te’o tells ESPN: Not involved in creating hoax The aSSOCIaTed PReSS

AP file photo

luke armstrong tries to touch the winner’s trophy held by his father, lance armstrong, after armstrong won his seventh straight Tour de france title July 24, 2005, in Paris. during the second part of Oprah Winfrey’s interview with armstrong, he discussed talking with luke recently after his son had defended him concerning doping allegations.

PRO CyClINg

Armstrong turns emotional by JIm lITKe

The Associated Press

CHICAGO – Lance Armstrong finally cracked. Not while expressing deep remorse or regrets, though there was plenty of that in Friday night’s second part of Armstrong’s interview with Oprah Winfrey. It wasn’t over the $75 million in sponsorship deals that evaporated over the course of two days, or having to walk away from the Livestrong cancer charity he founded and called his “sixth child.” It wasn’t even about his lifetime ban from competition, though he said that was more than he deserved. It was another bit of collateral damage that Armstrong said he wasn’t prepared to deal with. “I saw my son defending me and saying, ‘That’s not true. What you’re saying about my dad is not true,’ ” Armstrong recalled. “That’s when I knew I had to tell him.” Armstrong was near tears at that point, referring to 13-year-old Luke, the oldest of his five children. He blinked, looked away from Winfrey, and with his lip trembling, struggled to compose himself.

It came just past the midpoint of the hourlong program on Winfrey’s OWN network. In the first part, broadcast Thursday, the disgraced cycling champion admitted using performance-enhancing drugs when he won seven straight Tour de France titles. Critics said he hadn’t been contrite enough in the first half of the interview, which was taped Monday in Austin, but Armstrong seemed to lose his composure when Winfrey zeroed in on the emotional drama involving his personal life. “What did you say?” Winfrey asked. “I said, ‘Listen, there’s been a lot of questions about your dad. My career. Whether I doped or did not dope. I’ve always denied that and I’ve always been ruthless and defiant about that. You guys have seen that. That’s probably why you trusted me on it.’ Which makes it even sicker,” Armstrong said. “And uh, I told Luke, I said,” and here Armstrong paused for a long time to collect himself, “I said, ‘Don’t defend me anymore. Don’t.’ “He said OK. He just said, ‘Look, I love you. You’re my dad. This won’t change that.” Winfrey also drew Armstrong out on his ex-wife, Kristin, whom he claimed knew just enough about both the doping

and lying to ask him to stop. He credited her with making him promise that his comeback in 2009 would be drug-free. “She said to me, ‘You can do it under one condition: That you never cross that line again,’ ” Armstrong recalled. “The line of drugs?” Winfrey asked. “Yes. And I said, ‘You’ve got a deal,’ ” he replied. “And I never would have betrayed that with her.” Armstrong said in the first part of the interview that he had stayed clean in the comeback, a claim that runs counter to the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency report that exposed him as the leader of an elaborate doping scheme on his U.S. Postal Service cycling team. And that wasn’t the only portion of the interview likely to rile anti-doping officials. Winfrey asked Armstrong about a “60 Minutes Sports” interview in which USADA chief executive Travis Tygart said a representative of the cyclist had offered a donation that the agency turned down. “Were you trying to pay off USADA?” she asked. “No, that’s not true,” he replied, repeating, “That is not true.” Winfrey asks the question three more times, in different forms.

SaN fRaNCISCO 49eRS

Crabtree questioned in sexual assault by JaSON deaReN

The Associated Press

SAN FRANCISCO – Police are investigating a sexual assault allegation involving 49ers wide receiver Michael Crabtree, authorities said Friday. The alleged assault occurred in a San Francisco hotel room early Sunday, after the 49ers’ playoff victory over the Green Bay Packers, police said in a written statement. Crabtree has been interviewed with his attorney present and has cooperated with the probe, the statement said. The receiver hasn’t been detained or arrested, and he agreed to be available for more questions in the future. The probe is being handled by the department’s special victims unit. When the investigation is done, the findings will be forwarded to the district attorney’s office, which decides if charges should be filed. Authorities didn’t release any further details. 49ers general manager Trent Baal-

ke said the team is aware of the allegations. “The 49ers take such matters very seriously,” he said in a statement. “We will have no further comment at this time as the legal process is ongoing.” San Francisco is preparing to play the Atlanta Falcons in the NFC Championship game Sunday. The winner goes to the Super Bowl. The 49ers said Crabtree made the trip to Atlanta. The team referred all other questions about the matter to Crabtree’s attorney, who was not immediately identified. This season, Crabtree became the first San Francisco wide receiver to log more than 1,000 yards in a season since Terrell Owens in 2003. He had a career-best 1,105 yards receiving, including a single-game high 172 yards on eight receptions in a win over Arizona. In Saturday’s NFC division matchup against the Packers, Crabtree caught two touchdown passes and wound up with nine receptions and 119 yards for the Niners (12-4-1).

In response, the Bears dumped Smith and hired Trestman, an accomplished coach who assembled some of the NFL’s top offenses in San Francisco and Oakland before he headed to the Canadian Football League. Trestman then bolstered the Bears’ coaching staff by hiring offensive coordinator Aaron Kromer, an expert when it comes to the offensive line. Zero doubt exists in my mind that the Bears’ offense will be better next season. As for the defense, I am far

less certain. While Trestman and Kromer and others confer with Jay Cutler and decide how best to use Matt Forte and Brandon Marshall, Tucker will be on an island with the Bears’ defense. It’s an island filled with talent, absolutely, but an island nonetheless. Tucker will inherit a defense better than any other he has coached. Behind the guidance of Smith and Marinelli, the Bears led the NFL with 44 takeaways in 2012 to go along with a franchise-record nine defensive touchdowns, 41 sacks and 54 tackles for

AP file photo

Notre dame linebacker manti Te’o told eSPN on friday he was not involved in creating a hoax involving a dead girlfriend.

The Heisman Trophy finalist and his family had planned to go public with the story Monday, but Deadspin. com broke the news first on Wednesday. Te’o led the Fighting Irish to a 12-0 regular season and the BCS title game, where they were routed 42-14 by Alabama and Te’o played poorly.

Minor league teams use Te’o hoax for promotion The aSSOCIaTed PReSS FLORENCE, Ky. – The Kentucky-based Florence Freedom minor league baseball team is jumping on the Manti Te’o girlfriend hoax story, offering a bobblehead giveaway of the girlfriend – only the boxes will be empty. And the New York Mets’ Class A Brooklyn Cyclones will hold a “Fictitious Friday” on June 21. Sid Finch will make his professional debut against Roy Hobbs and the New York Knights – all fictional. The Cyclones said they will have a petting zoo “featuring a unicorn, a mermaid and a Minotaur,” adding they “are also in discussions with the Loch Ness Monster and Big Foot to throw out a ceremonial first pitch.” The Freedom, a member of the Frontier League, said Friday that the boxes will go to the first 1,000 fans on May 23. They also will rope off a special section just for people to bring imaginary friends. Freedom General Manager Josh Anderson said fans can make the bobblehead out to be whatever they want it to be. Te’o, an All-American from Notre Dame, said this week he was duped in a bizarre scheme involving a fake “girlfriend” he met online. The tale of how

Te’o played through the pain of the pain of the girlfriend’s “death” became a major story line during the 2012 season. The Cyclones will honor Finch, the pitcher with the 168 mph fastball in the fictional Sports Illustrated story from April Fool’s Day 1985, and Hobbs and the Knights from “The Natural,” a 1952 novel and 1984 movie. “Fans should be sure to arrive early because prior to the game, The Beatles will reunite for a once-in-a-lifetime concert event,” Cyclones spokesman Jason Solomon said in an email, adding, “OK, that’s apparently not true either, but this girl I met online told me she could make it happen.” Brooklyn’s video board will feature player headshots of “random people whose photos we found on the Internet.” “Everywhere you look, there seems to be another story about an athlete that was covering up something,” said Cyclones General Manager Steve Cohen said. “People don’t know who, or what, to believe any more. That got us thinking – let’s have a night where our fans don’t have to worry about what’s real and what’s not, we’ll just tell them everything planned for that night is a hoax.”

beaRS NOTeS

AP file photo

Police in San francisco say they’re investigating a sexual assault allegation involving 49ers wide receiver michael Crabtree.

Bears’ offense will be improved, but defense? • mUSICK Continued from page C1

NEW YORK – Notre Dame linebacker Manti Te’o maintains he was never involved in creating the dead girlfriend hoax. He told ESPN in an off-camera interview Friday night: “When they hear the facts they’ll know. They’ll know there is no way I could be a part of this.” The comments were Te’o’s first public remarks since Deadspin.com reported that his girlfriend not only didn’t die but, in fact, never existed. Notre Dame and Te’o insist he was the victim of a cruel joke. Still unanswered are questions why the All-American never made it clear he knew the woman only online and by telephone. Earlier Friday, athletic director Jack Swarbrick urged Te’o and his family to speak publicly about the hoax. Te’o was interviewed at the IMG Training Academy in Bradenton, Fla., where he is preparing for the NFL draft. ESPN said a public relations consultant was with him.

losses. Yet the stars of the group are aging. Brian Urlacher will turn 35 years old in May and might not re-sign with the Bears as an unrestricted free agent. Julius Peppers celebrated his 33rd birthday on Friday. Lance Briggs will turn 33 next season. Charles Tillman will turn 32 next month. Henry Melton is a young star on the defensive line, but he also will be a free agent. Will Melton want to join one of his favorite coaches (Marinelli) in his hometown (Dallas)? It’s completely possible

that Tucker will be a success with the Bears. He coached the Jaguars’ defense to a No. 6 ranking in 2011 before they slid to No. 30 in 2012, and he has proved to be adaptable with both 4-3 and 3-4 schemes in his background. But Tucker, like Trestman, will have to prove himself to his new players. Let’s wait and see whether he can tackle the job. • Northwest Herald columnist Tom Musick can be reached at tmusick@ shawmedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @tcmusick and @ Bears_Insider.

Cavanaugh returns as 1 of new assistants by TOm mUSICK

tmusick@shawmedia.com A busy week at Halas Hall continued Friday as the Bears hired four position coaches in addition to defensive coordinator Mel Tucker. The Bears named Matt Cavanaugh as quarterbacks coach, Skip Peete as running backs coach, Andy Bischoff as tight ends coach and Michael Sinclair as assistant defensive line coach. All four will work alongside head coach Marc Trestman, who took over three days ago when he was selected to replace Lovie Smith. Cavanaugh, who will work closely with Jay Cutler, spent the previous four seasons as the New York Jets quarterbacks coach. Cavanaugh also served as the Bears’ offensive coordinator from 1997 to 1998. In his first season calling plays, Erik Kramer passed for 3,011 yards and Raymont Harris rushed for

1,033 yards. Peete, who is the brother of former NFL quarterback Rodney Peete, was named as running backs coach after spending the past six seasons in the same role with the Dallas Cowboys. He also worked alongside Trestman in Oakland, where the Raiders led the league in rushing in 2000 and posted the NFL’s No. 1 overall offense in 2002. BischoffandSinclairworked on Trestman’s staff with the Montreal Alouettes of the Canadian Football League. Bischoff served as assistant head coach, running backs coach and special-teams coordinator of the Alouettes, while Sinclair spent the past five seasons as the team’s defensive line coach. Sinclair enjoyed a terrific career as a defensive lineman with the Seattle Seahawks, where he registered 73½ sacks and forced 24 fumbles from 1992 to 2001.


SPORTS

Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

Team core remains from 2012 • HAWKS Continued from page C1

The core remains the same: Jonathan Toews, Patrick Kane, Patrick Sharp, Marian Hossa, Duncan Keith and Brent Seabrook. The goaltenders remain the same: Corey Crawford and Ray Emery. The coach remains the same: Joel Quenneville. The Hawks’ biggest freeagent acquisition was Sheldon Brookbank, a 32-year-old defenseman who spent the past four seasons in Anaheim. Some young players such as 20-year-old forward Brandon Saad also could play a more prominent role.

2. WHAT will a shortened season mean? Much like the

shortened NBA season of 2011-12, this year’s 48-game NHL season will feature a bunch of games in a short amount of time. Look no further than this weekend, when the Hawks will open with two games in two cities in two days. A jam-packed schedule would seem to favor teams with the best depth. During stretches that are particularly grueling, the Hawks might need to lean on players from the third or fourth line to log extra ice time. Also, look for Crawford and Emery each to receive a fair amount of work because of so many back-to-back games.

3. WHEN will they return

home? Soon, but then they’ll head back out on the road. The Hawks’ home opener is Tuesday against the St. Louis Blues, a division rival who tends to elicit low-scoring games that feature a fight or two (or three). The Hawks won’t spend much time at the United Center for the rest of the month. Ten of their first 12 games will be on the road before a seven-game home stand that starts Feb. 12.

BullS 100, CElTiCS 99 (OT)

Belinelli’s basket lifts Bulls Friday road winning streak extended to 14

5. WHY didn’t general manager Stan Bowman make more changes? Two seasons

removed from a Stanley Cup championship, Bowman decided the Hawks would be best served with minor tweaks instead of a major overhaul. He could have shopped Kane in the trade market or opened the team’s wallet for a prized free agent such as Zach Parise, but instead he opted for continuity. Another first-round playoff exit (or no playoff appearance at all) could prompt big changes. Quenneville has guided the Hawks to 100point campaigns in three of the past four seasons, but he and his players know a deep playoff run is a must in 2013. 6. HOW will they do? Check back in a couple of months, and we’ll have a better idea. Bottom line: The Hawks are loaded with talented players, and they absolutely should be a playoff team. And in the NHL, much like the NFL, every playoff team has a chance to win the championship if it gets hot at the right time. But nothing will be handed to the Hawks. They’ll have to earn every point in a Western Conference that is packed with skilled teams from Los Angeles to Vancouver to Detroit and many places in between. Here come the Hawks. Enjoy the season.

Next for the Bulls

By KEN POWTAK

The Associated Press BOSTON – Marco Belinelli made an off-balance, gamewinning jumper with 3.1 seconds left, Jimmy Butler scored six points in overtime, and the Bulls extended their Friday night road show by beating the Boston Celtics, 100-99. Carlos Boozer had 19 points and 20 rebounds, and Joakim Noah added 14 points and 13 boards as the Bulls won their 14th straight road game on a Friday. They haven’t lost since AP photo April 2011. Marco Belinelli (8) is congratuRajon Rondo scored a sealated by Joakim Noah after hit- son-high 30 points for Boston ting a shot in overtime to give before fouling out with 1:16 to play in overtime. the Bulls a 100-99 victory.

Memphis at Bulls, 7 p.m. today, WGN, AM-1000

Kevin Garnett had 16 points and Paul Pierce passed former Celtics star Robert Parish for 22nd on the NBA’s career scoring list by chipping in 13 points. Pierce has 23,342 points and Parish 23,334. Brandon Bass added 13 points for Boston, which lost for the second time in eight games. Richard Hamilton had 20 points for the Bulls, who have

won four of five. JasonTerry’sjumperpushed Boston ahead 99-98 in OT before Belinelli’s game-winner just to the left of the foul line. The teams traded leads twice in the opening 3 minutes of overtime before Terry’s 3-pointer from the right corner gave Boston a 93-92 lead with 1:57 to play. Butler had a basket on the other end to move the Bulls back in front and, after Boston missed on the offensive end, Rondo was called for a loose ball foul, sending Butler to the line. He nailed both, making it 96-93 with 1:16 left. The Bulls had another threepoint lead, 98-95, after Belinelli’s two free throws with 51 seconds to go.

8SPORTS SHORTS Cowboys hire Marinelli as defensive line coach

IRVING, Texas – The Dallas Cowboys hired former Bears defensive coordinator Rod Marinelli as defensive line coach. The Cowboys reported the move on the team’s website Friday. Marinelli was the defensive coordinator under Lovie Smith with the Bears, but decided not to stay on the staff of Smith’s replacement, Marc Trestman.

Suns, Gentry ‘part ways’

PHOENIX – The Phoenix Suns said the team and coach Alvin Gentry have “mutually agreed to part ways.” The team said an interim coach from within the organization is expected to be named within 24 to 48 hours. – Wire reports

CuBS NOTES

Cubs, pitcher Samardzija avoid arbitration By TOM MuSiCK

Cubs general manager Jed Hoyer said he and his boss, team president Theo Epstein, were happy with both deals. Arbitration hearings can be awkward as teams and agents publicly debate a players’ value. “Theo’s never been to arbitration, I’ve never been,” Hoyer said. “We’ll go if we have to go, but if you can work Jeff out deals with agents, Samardzija it’s a far better way to go. So, we’re really happy, and talking to Jeff and talking to James, it’s a great thing to get those kind of deals done.” Samardzija, a 6-foot-5-inch righthander who will turn 28 years old next week, emerged as a reliable starting pitcher last season with a 9-13 record and a 3.81 ERA in 28 starts. Russell,

tmusick@shawmedia.com CHICAGO – Jeff Samardzija strolled into a reception room at the downtown Sheraton Hotel with his left hand in his pocket and his right hand clutching a Stella Artois beer. Every day is a good day to be Samardzija, but Friday was better than most. The Cubs agreed to a one-year, $2.64 million deal with Samardzija, thus avoiding salary arbitration. The deal includes an additional $125,000 in possible performance bonuses. In addition, the Cubs agreed to a one-year, $1.075 million contract with left-handed relief pitcher James Russell to avoid salary arbitration. Both deals were announced before the start of the annual Cubs Convention, which started Friday and continues through the weekend.

27, posted a 7-1 record with a 3.25 ERA in 77 appearances out of the bullpen. Good times: Samardzija said he was in South Florida when Notre Dame played Alabama in the BCS national championship game, although he didn’t go to the game. Samardzija played wide receiver for three seasons with the Irish before going full-time to baseball. While in Florida, he bumped into many teammates he had not seen in a long time. “A five-year reunion, essentially,” Samardzija said. “I guess you had to graduate for it to be a reunion.” Did he see Manti Te’o’s girlfriend? “She wasn’t there, actually,” Samardzija said with a smile. Like most people, Samardzija said he wasn’t sure what to think about the blockbuster story regarding Te’o’s alleged fake girlfriend. Regardless, Samardzija said, the spotlight on

the Irish shined bright. “It’s Notre Dame, and you understand that when you go to Notre Dame, you take on a different role of being under the spotlight,” Samardzija said. “If things do go great, it’s a great place to be. You get tons of accolades for it. You get all of the front-page articles, you get Sports Illustrated, you get ESPN. “But then if something doesn’t go well, you pay for that, too. So you need to understand if something doesn’t go well, you’ve got to be a responsible grown-up and an adult, and you’ve got to make the right decisions.” Cubs bits: Matt Garza said he was ahead of schedule in recovering from an elbow injury, and he did not expect to have any limitations in spring training. … Alfonso Soriano, whose name was mentioned in trade rumors this winter, said he hoped to finish his career with the Cubs.

Tied for first and ready to crush Faccone.

4. WHERE are their main strengths and weaknesses?

On paper, the Hawks’ biggest strength will be scoring. They matched the Vancouver Canucks for first in the Western Conference with 241 goals last season, and all of their firepower returns with Toews, Sharp, Hossa, Kane, Viktor Stalberg and so on. Once again, the Hawks seem to have a shortage of physical players who can win corner battles and protect the teams’ stars. Crawford and Emery also must improve in the net after the Hawks posted the fifth-worst save percentage (.901) in the NHL last season.

Saturday, January 19, 2013 • Page C5

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College & FINe PRINT

Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

C-G grad McDonald honored

After playing forward throughout his high school soccer career at Cary-Grove, Nick McDonald’s first season at the University of Dubuque in 2009 was spent on defense. “I thought [Dubuque coach Brad Johnson] was crazy,” McDonald said with a laugh. “At first, I was really confused. But we had outstanding forwards at the time. After playing defense, it was one of the funnest positions I’ve ever played.” After the past three seasons back at forward, McDonald is leaving Dubuque as the Nick NCAA Division III McDonald school’s top goal scorer and its first All-American in the 11-year-old program’s history. “This is what I’ve been working for my whole life, to accomplish things on the college level,” said McDonald, who was named as a third-team selection to the D3Soccer.com All-America team last month. “It means a lot to me.” McDonald’s senior season this fall was his most impressive. While helping the team to an 11-6-1 record, McDonald scored 21 goals, tallied seven assists and compiled 49 points. The goal and point totals both ranked seventh in the nation during the fall season. “He earned everything he’s gotten because he works very hard for it,” Johnson said. McDonald, who is the Spartans’ career leader in goals (49), points (110), game-winning goals (16) and three other categories, credits his groundbreaking season to a short offseason. “The Monday after my junior season ended, I was back in the gym with my teammates,” he said. “I’m not a very big guy. During the season, I’m 145 or 150 pounds, so I have to work out hard. Work ethic, to me, is everything.”

on caMPus Barry Bottino McDonald said he spent much of the offseason working on finishing around the net and shooting. “I’ve always been an offensiveminded player,” he said. “But I needed to work on finishing.” His breakthrough senior season earned McDonald first-team honors on the National Soccer Coaches Association of America’s All-North Region team for the third consecutive season, a first for any Dubuque player. “He’s a guy who always wanted more,” Johnson said. “He was always looking to work out more with our strength and conditioning coach. He leads by example.” McDonald and fellow seniors Tyler Cuchna (C-G) and Sam McKee (Jacobs) were part of a class that went 52-20-5, winning the Iowa Intercollegiate Athletic Conference in 2010, placing second twice and taking third once. “The freshman class that Nick came in with is a fantastic group of guys,” Johnson said. A four-time All-IIAC honoree, McDonald also did plenty to get his teammates involved in the offense. “He’s not a guy who has to score six or seven goals a game,” Johnson said. “The progression of his career over four years is one of Nick’s biggest accomplishments.” In 18 matches during the fall, McDonald had seven multigoal games. “If the best chance for us to score is for me to shoot, I’ll shoot,” he said. “If the best chance for us to score is for me to pass it off, I’ll pass it off. I always try to get my teammates involved.” warhawk winner: WisconsinWhitewater wrestler Jake Fredricksen is ranked in the top 10 by two national polls in the 141-pound weight class.

transactions Pros MLB COMMISSIONER’S OFFICE — Suspended Oakland RHP Gary Daley Jr. and free agent 1B Austin Gallagher 50 games for violations of the Minor League Drug Prevention and Treatment Program. American League WHITE SOX — Agreed to terms with 2B Gordon Beckham and OF Alejandro De Aza on one-year contracts. BALTIMORE ORIOLES — Agreed to terms with C Matt Wieters, INF Chris Davis, LHP Troy Patton and LHP Brian Matusz on one-year contracts. BOSTON RED SOX — Agreed to terms with RHP Alfredo Aceves, RHP Andrew Bailey, RHP Daniel Bard, RHP Joel Hanrahan, LHP Andrew Miller, LHP Franklin Morales and OF Jacoby Ellsbury on one-year contracts. CLEVELAND INDIANS — Agreed to terms with RHP Chris Perez, RHP Justin Masterson,RHP Joe Smith, RHP Matt Albers, OF Drew Stubbs and C Lou Marson on one-year contracts. DETROIT TIGERS — Agreed to terms with RHP Doug Fister, RHP Rick Porcello, LHP Phil Coke, C Alex Avila, OF Brennan Boesch and OF Austin Jackson on oneyear contracts. HOUSTON ASTROS — Agreed to terms with SS Jed Lowrie, RHP Bud Norris and LHP Wesley Wright on one-year contracts. KANSAS CITY ROYALS — Agreed to terms with RHP Luke Hochevar on a one-year contract. LOS ANGELES ANGELS — Agreed to terms with LHP Jason Vargas and RHP Tommy Hanson on one-year contracts. MINNESOTA TWINS — Agreed to terms with LHP Brian Duensing and C Drew Butera on one-year contracts. NEW YORK YANKEES — Agreed to terms with LHP Boone Logan on a oneyear contract. OAKLAND ATHLETICS — Agreed to terms with LHP Jerry Blevins and 1B Brandon Moss on one-year contracts. SEATTLE MARINERS — Agreed to terms with 1B/DH Kendrys Morales and SS Brendan Ryan on one-year contracts. TAMPA BAY RAYS — Agreed to terms with OF Sam Fuld, INF Matt Joyce, RHP Jeff Niemann and INF Ryan Roberts on one-year contracts. TORONTO BLUE JAYS — Agreed to terms with LHP J.A. Happ and INF/OF Emilio Bonifacio on one-year contracts and C Josh Thole on a two-year contract. National League CUBS — Agreed to terms with RHP Jeff Samardzija and LHP James Russell on one-year contracts. ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS — Agreed to terms with RHP Ian Kennedy, RHP Brad Ziegler, INF Chris Johnson and LHP Tony Sipp on one-year contracts. ATLANTA BRAVES — Agreed to terms with OF Jason Heyward, RHP Cristhian Martinez, RHP Kris Medlen, LHP Eric O’Flaherty and LHP Jonny Venters on one-year contracts. COLORADO ROCKIES — Agreed to terms with OF Tyler Colvin on a one-year contract. LOS ANGELES DODGERS — Agreed to terms with C A.J. Ellis and RHP Ronald Belisario on one-year contracts. MIAMI MARLINS — Agreed to terms with RHP Ryan Webb on a one-year contract. MILWAUKEE BREWERS — Agreed to terms with RHP John Axford, RHP Burke Badenhop and RHP Marco Estrada on one-year contracts. NEW YORK METS — Agreed to terms with C Landon Powell on a minor league contract. PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES — Agreed to terms with LHP Antonio Bastardo on a one-year contract. PITTSBURGH PIRATES — Agreed to terms with 1B Garrett Jones and 1B Gaby Sanchez on one-year contractsm. ST. LOUIS CARDINALS — Agreed to terms with RHP Mitchell Boggs and RHP Edward Mujica on one-year contracts. SAN DIEGO PADRES — Agreed to terms with RHP Edinson Volquez, LHP Joe Thatcher, C John Baker and INF Everth Cabrera on one-year contracts. SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS — Agreed to terms with C Buster Posey, OF Hunter Pence, OF Gregor Blanco and LHP Jose Mijares on one-year contracts. WASHINGTON NATIONALS — Agreed to terms with LHP Ross Detwiler, SS Ian Desmond, RHP Drew Storen, OF Roger Bernadina and RHP Tyler Clippard on one-year contracts and RHP Craig Stammen on a two-year contract. BASKETBALL National Basketball Association MIAMI HEAT — Reassigned C Dexter Pittman to Sioux Falls (NBADL). PHOENIX SUNS — Announced the team has agreed to mutually part ways with coach Alvin Gentry. FOOTBALL National Football League BEARS — Named Matt Cavanaugh quarterbacks coach and Skip Peete running backs coach. ARIZONA CARDINALS — Named Bruce Arians coach. ATLANTA FALCONS — Promoted

Fredricksen, a senior for the D-III Warhawks, is No. 5 in the D3Wrestle.com poll and No. 7 in the National Wrestling Coaches Association rankings. The Woodstock grad is 21-4 this season with four wins by pin. He is one of three Whitewater wrestlers with at least 20 wins. Fredricksen went 2-1 at the Cliff Keen National Duals last weekend in Springfield. Whitewater is ranked 10th this week in the NWCA team poll. Freshman Tom Gerszewski (Crystal Lake South) is 18-4 at 149 pounds and has five pins for the Warhawks. Fellow freshman Corey Meyer (Cary-Grove) is 12-7 with two pins at 133 pounds. Preseason standout: Jacobs grad Ben Albano, a junior outfielder at D-II Lewis University in Romeoville., was named Tuesday to the Midwest Region Preseason All-America Team by Collegiate Baseball Newspaper. Last season, Albano led the Great Lakes Valley Conference with 11 home runs while pacing Lewis with a .354 batting average, five triples and a .641 slugging percentage. He was a first-team allconference honoree last season and earned second-team recognition on the American Baseball Coaches Association and Daktronics AllMidwest Region squads. “Ben had an outstanding sophomore year,” Lewis coach Tim McDonough told LewisFlyers.com. “He is someone that people are going to take notice of, conferenceand regionwide.” The Flyers open the season March 3 with a spring trip to Florida. • Barry Bottino writes a weekly column and a blog about local college athletes for the Northwest Herald. Write to him at BarryOnCampus@hotmail.com, check out his On Campus blog at McHenryCountySports.com and follow him @BarryOnCampus on Twitter.

basketball

Steve Sabo to director of college scouting and Shepley Heard to regional scout. CAROLINA PANTHERS — Promoted Mike Shula to offensive coordinator, Richard Rodgers to special teams coordinator and Ricky Proehl to wide receivers coach. CLEVELAND BROWNS — Named Michael Lombardi vice president of player personnel and Ray Horton defensive coordinator. NEW YORK JETS — Named John Idzik general manager and Marty Mornhinweg offensive coordinator. SAN DIEGO CHARGERS — Retained defensive coordinator John Pagano, defensive line coach Don Johnson, linebackers coach Joe Barry and assistant linebackers coach Greg Williams. SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS — Released PK Billy Cundiff. HOCKEY National Hockey League ANAHEIM DUCKS — Assigned F Dan Sexton to Norfolk (AHL). BUFFALO SABRES — Placed F Nathan Gerbe and F Cody McCormick on injured reserve. Assigned F Kevin Porter, F Nick Tarnasky and D Adam Pardy to Rochester (AHL). CALGARY FLAMES — Signed C Steve Begin to a one-year, two-way contract. DETROIT RED WINGS — Reassigned D Brian Lashoff to Grand Rapids (AHL). FLORIDA PANTHERS — Signed RW Alex Kovalev to a one-year contract. LOS ANGELES KINGS — Signed general manager Dean Lombardi, coach Darryl Sutter and president of business operations Luc Robitaille to multiyear contract extensions. MINNESOTA WILD — Reassigned F Jake Dowell, F Nick Palmieri and F Stephane Veilleux to Houston (AHL). MONTREAL CANADIENS — Returned F Michael Bournival, F Gabriel Dumont, F Patrick Holland, F Louis Leblanc, D Mike Commodore, D Frederic St-Denis and D Jarred Tinordi to Hamilton (AHL). NEW JERSEY DEVILS — Assigned C Adam Henrique, LW Mattias Tedenby, RW Harri Pesonen and LW Tim Sestito to Albany (AHL). Waived RW Bobby Butler. NEW YORK ISLANDERS — Suspended D Lubomir Visnovsky for failing to report to the team. PHOENIX COYOTES — Assigned F Nick Johnson, F Rob Klinkhammer and D Michael Stone to Portland (AHL). ST. LOUIS BLUES — Agreed to terms with D Wade Redden on a one-year contract. SAN JOSE SHARKS — Signed F James Sheppard and D Nick Petrecki to one-year contracts. TAMPA BAY LIGHTNING — Reassigned F Mike Angelidis, F J.T. Wyman and F Kyle Wilson to Syracuse (AHL). TORONTO MAPLE LEAFS — Assigned F Matt Frattin and F Tim Connolly to Toronto (AHL). Returned D Mogan Rielly to Moose Jaw (WHL). WASHINGTON CAPITALS — Recalled D Tom Poti from Hershey (AHL). WINNIPEG JETS — Claimed F James Wright off waivers from Florida. Reassigned F Maxime Macenauer, F Spencer Machacek and D Derek Meech to St. John’s (AHL). Major League Soccer COLORADO RAPIDS — Signed M Dillon Serna to a homegrown contract. DALLAS STARS — Assigned G Richard Bachman and D Jamie Oleksiak to Texas (AHL).

colleges DAYTON — Named Matt Affolder women’s volleyball coach. DELAWARE — Named Dave Brock football coach. FLORIDA — Suspended OL Jessamen Dunker. Announced DE Kendric Johnson, WR Stephen Alli and OL Tommy Jordan are no longer on the football team. GARDNER-WEBB — Announced the resignation of football coach Ron Dickerson Jr. KANSAS — Reassigned special teams coordinator Clint Bowen to linebackers coach. MANHATTAN — Named Pat Slevin men’s and women’s cross country coach and men’s and women’s assistant track and field coach. PURDUE — Named Greg Hudson defensive coordinator, Jon Heacock cornerbacks coach, Marcus Freeman linebackers coach, Jafar Williams running backs coach, Jim Bollman offensive line coach, Kevin Sherman receivers coach, Tommy Cook supervisor of football operations and Doug Davis strength and conditioning coach. SOUTHERN CAL — Named Clancy Pendergast defensive coordinator. VIRGINIA TECH — Named Scot Loeffler offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach, Jeff Grimes offensive line coach and Aaron Moorehead wide receivers coach. Reassigned offensive coordinator Bryan Stinespring to recruiting coordinator in addition to his duties as tight ends coach.

nba EASTERN CONFERENCE Central Division W L Pct 25 16 .610 23 15 .605 20 18 .526 14 25 .359 10 31 .244 Atlantic Division W L Pct New York 25 13 .658 Brooklyn 24 16 .600 Boston 20 19 .513 Philadelphia 17 23 .425 Toronto 14 26 .350 Southeast Division W L Pct Miami 26 12 .684 Atlanta 22 17 .564 Orlando 14 25 .359 Charlotte 10 29 .256 Washington 8 29 .216 WESTERN CONFERENCE Southwest Division W L Pct San Antonio 31 11 .738 Memphis 25 13 .658 Houston 21 20 .512 Dallas 17 23 .425 New Orleans 13 26 .333 Northwest Division W L Pct Oklahoma City 31 8 .795 Denver 24 18 .571 Utah 21 19 .525 Portland 20 19 .513 Minnesota 16 20 .444 Pacific Division W L Pct L.A. Clippers 31 9 .775 Golden State 23 15 .605 L.A. Lakers 17 22 .436 Sacramento 15 25 .375 Phoenix 13 28 .317

Indiana Bulls Milwaukee Detroit Cleveland

GB — ½ 3½ 10 15 GB — 2 5½ 9 12 GB — 4½ 12½ 16½ 17½ GB — 4 9½ 13 16½ GB — 8½ 10½ 11 13½ GB — 7 13½ 16 18½

Friday’s Games Bulls 100, Boston 99, OT Philadelphia 108, Toronto 101, OT Indiana 105, Houston 95 Charlotte 106, Orlando 100 Brooklyn 94, Atlanta 89 Memphis 85, Sacramento 69 San Antonio 95, Golden State 88 Washington 112, Denver 108 Oklahoma City at Dallas (n) Today’s Games Memphis at Bulls, 7 p.m. San Antonio at Atlanta, 6 p.m. Sacramento at Charlotte, 6 p.m. Houston at Minnesota, 7 p.m. Golden State at New Orleans, 7 p.m. Cleveland at Utah, 8 p.m. Milwaukee at Portland, 9 p.m. Washington at L.A. Clippers, 9:30 p.m.

BUllS 100, CelTICS 99 (oT) CHICAGO (100) Deng 1-6 0-0 3, Boozer 8-17 3-6 19, Noah 6-11 2-4 14, Hinrich 3-4 1-2 8, Hamilton 7-15 5-6 20, Gibson 1-3 0-0 2, Belinelli 3-7 4-4 10, Robinson 3-7 4-6 11, Butler 4-5 4-4 13, Teague 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 36-75 23-32 100. BOSTON (99) Pierce 5-17 3-4 13, Bass 4-6 2-2 10, Garnett 5-16 6-10 16, Rondo 12-21 6-9 30, Barbosa 2-6 0-0 5, Lee 3-8 0-0 7, Sullinger 3-8 1-1 7, Green 1-4 0-0 2, Terry 3-5 2-2 9, Collins 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 38-91 20-28 99. Chicago Boston

23 22 23 20 12 —100 19 20 23 26 11 — 99

3-Point Goals–Chicago 5-15 (Hamilton 1-2, Hinrich 1-2, Butler 1-2, Deng 1-3, Robinson 1-4, Belinelli 0-2), Boston 3-14 (Barbosa 1-2, Lee 1-2, Terry 1-2, Sullinger 0-1, Green 0-1, Pierce 0-3, Garnett 0-3). Fouled Out–Hinrich, Sullinger, Rondo. Rebounds–Chicago 54 (Boozer 20), Boston 55 (Sullinger 15). Assists–Chicago 21 (Hinrich 5), Boston 15 (Rondo 7).

NCAA Football East-West Shrine Game At St. Petersburg, Fla. FAVORITE Pts O/U UNDERDOG East 2½ (41½) West NFL Playoffs Sunday FAVORITE Pts O/U UNDERDOG San Francisco 4 (49) at Atlanta at New England 8 (51½) Baltimore NCAA Basketball FAVORITE LINE UNDERDOG at North Carolina 5 Maryland at Pittsburgh 11 UConn at DePaul 3 St. John’s at Towson 2 James Madison at Memphis 11 Harvard at Penn St. 2½ Nebraska at Temple 11½ St. Bonaventure at South Carolina 3 Vanderbilt at Mississippi 9 Arkansas Iowa St. 10½ at TCU at Oklahoma St. 19 Texas Tech at Florida 13 Missouri at Virginia Tech 6 Wake Forest at Delaware 4½ Northeastern at Xavier 2 La Salle Kansas 7½ at Texas at Purdue 3½ West Virginia at William & Mary Pk Drexel at Tulane 9 Tulsa at Bradley 9 Missouri St. at Green Bay 10½ Cleveland St. at E. Michigan Pk Miami (Ohio) Arizona 6 at Arizona St. Columbia 3½ at Cornell at Wichita St. 3 Creighton at UCLA 5½ Oregon Boise St. 2½ at Air Force at Tennessee 12½ Mississippi St. at UTEP 9½ SMU at Louisville 7½ Syracuse at Providence 4 Villanova at Kansas St. 5½ Oklahoma at UMass 5½ George Washington at Virginia 5 Florida St. at San Francisco 8 Loyola Marymount at Stanford 6½ California Saint Joseph’s 12 at Penn at George Mason 17 Hofstra at Cincinnati 7 Marquette at Richmond 2½ Charlotte at Southern Miss. 12½ UAB Georgetown 2½ at South Florida at Alabama 6 Texas A&M UCF 2 at Houston at Ohio 14 Toledo at Michigan St. Pk Ohio St. at W. Kentucky 8 UALR at Middle Tenn. 17½ La.-Lafayette at Detroit 10½ Ill.-Chicago at Denver 9 Utah St. at UC Santa Barbara 2½ Cal Poly VCU 12 at Duquesne-x at Marshall 3 East Carolina at Old Dominion 1 Georgia St. at Brown 1½ Yale at Buffalo 5 Bowling Green at Cent. Michigan 5 Ball St. Akron 2 at Kent St. at Colorado St. 3 UNLV at FAU 3 North Texas at Wyoming 1 San Diego St. at FIU 9½ Troy

at Indiana St. 3 Evansville at Saint Louis 17 Rhode Island Youngstown St. 4 at Milwaukee at Valparaiso 8½ Wright St. at Texas-Arlington 2 Idaho Wisconsin 1 at Iowa at Notre Dame 13 Rutgers at Southern Cal 4½ Oregon St. W. Michigan 3 at N. Illinois at Georgia 1½ LSU at Arkansas St. 15½ La.-Monroe at UTSA 5 Texas St. at Louisiana Tech 12½ Seattle at New Mexico St. 11½ San Jose St. Gonzaga 3 at Butler at BYU 15 San Diego Kentucky 9 at Auburn at Cal St.-Fullerton 4 Long Beach St. Santa Clara 7 at Pepperdine Saint Mary’s (Cal) 11 at Portland at Fresno St. 3½ Nevada at Washington St. 1½ Colorado UC Irvine 8 at UC Riverside at CS Northridge Pk Pacific at Washington 10½ Utah at Hawaii 5½ UC Davis at Canisius 14 Siena at Niagara 8 Manhattan S. Dakota St. 11 at IUPUI at North Dakota 3½ Portland St. at Jacksonville St. 1 E. Kentucky at Oakland 11½ South Dakota at Georgia Southern 12½ The Citadel at Elon 4½ Wofford at Chattanooga 1½ W. Carolina at Davidson 10 Coll. of Charleston Morehead St. 5 at UT-Martin at Marist 2½ St. Peter’s at IPFW 8 Mo.-Kansas City at Belmont 15 Tennessee St. at SE Missouri 5 Tennessee Tech Appalachian St. 1 at Samford N. Dakota St. 4 at W. Illinois at Murray St. 17 SIU-Edwardsville at Austin Peay 4 E. Illinois at N. Colorado 6 E. Washington at Idaho St. 1½ N. Arizona at Weber St. 16 Sacramento St. at Montana 15 Montana St. x-at Consol Energy Center FAVORITE at Bulls San Antonio Sacramento at New Orleans Houston at Utah at Portland at L.A. Clippers FAVORITE at Los Angeles Pittsburgh at Winnipeg at Boston at Montreal New Jersey at Tampa Bay at Florida at St. Louis at Nashville at Dallas at Minnesota at Vancouver

FIVe-DAY PlANNeR teaM

NBA LINE 3½ 3½ 2 4 4½ 8 3½ 12½

UNDERDOG Memphis at Atlanta at Charlotte Golden State at Minnesota Cleveland Milwaukee Washington

NHL LINE UNDERDOG LINE -130 Blackhawks +110 -120 at Philadelphia +100 -130 Ottawa +110 -125 N.Y. Rangers +105 -140 Toronto +120 -125 at N.Y. Islanders +105 -110 Washington -110 -135 Carolina +115 -140 Detroit +120 -180 Columbus +160 -130 Phoenix +110 -145 Colorado +125 -180 Anaheim +160

todaY

sundaY

MondaY

tuesdaY

wednesdaY

l.A. lAKeRS 8:30 p.m. TNT AM-1000

MeMPHIS 7 p.m. WGN AM-1000 at los Angeles 2 p.m. NBC AM-720

DeTRoIT 7 p.m. CSN AM-1000

at Phoenix 9 p.m. NBCSN, CSN AM-720

ST. loUIS 7:30 p.m. CSN AM-720 at Peoria 10 a.m.

HoUSToN 7 p.m. WCUU

oN TAP ToDAY TV/Radio

2 p.m.: Akron at Kent State, ESPNU 3 p.m.: Oregon at UCLA, CBS 3 p.m.: Syracuse at Louisville, ESPN 3 p.m.: Creighton at Wichita St., ESPN2 4 p.m.: Hofstra at George Mason, NBCSN 4 p.m.: St. Joseph’s at Pennsylvania, ESPNU 5 p.m.: Ohio St. at Michigan St., ESPN 6 p.m.: UNLV at Colorado St., NBCSN 6 p.m.: Marquette at Cincinnati, ESPNU 7 p.m.: Wisconsin at Iowa, BTN 7 p.m.: Evansville at Indiana State, CSN 7 p.m.: Rutgers at Notre Dame, AM-890 8 p.m.: Gonzaga at Butler, ESPN 8 p.m.: Kentucky at Auburn, ESPNU 10 p.m.: Utah at Washington, ESPNU

AUTo RACINg

1 a.m.: Dakar Rally, stage 14, La Serena to Santiago, Chile, NBCSN (delayed tape)

BoXINg

8 p.m.: Middleweights, Elvin Ayala (26-5-1) vs. Curtis Stevens (21-4-1); light heavyweights, Gabriel Campillo (21-4-1) vs. Sergey Kovalev (19-0-1), NBCSN 8:45 p.m.: Champion Roman Martinez (26-1-1) vs. Juan Carlos Burgos (30-1-0), for WBO junior lightweight title; champion Gennady Golovkin (24-0-0) vs. Gabriel Rosado (21-5-0), for WBA middleweight title; champion Orlando Salido (39-11-2) vs. Mikey Garcia (30-0-0), for WBO featherweight title, HBO

NBA BASKeTBAll

College FooTBAll

7 p.m.: Memphis at Bulls, WGN, AM-1000

3 p.m.: East-West Shrine Game, NFLN

NHl HoCKeY

golF

2 p.m.: PGA Tour, Humana Challenge, third round, Golf Ch. 6:30 p.m.: Champions Tour, Mitsubishi Electric Championship, second round, Golf Ch. 3 a.m.: European PGA Tour, Abu Dhabi Championship, final round, Golf Ch.

MeN’S College BASKeTBAll

10 a.m.: Virginia Military at Coastal Carolina, ESPNU 11 a.m.: Maryland at North Carolina, ESPN 11 a.m.: UConn at Pittsburgh, ESPN2 11 a.m.: Connecticut at Pittsburgh, CSN 11 a.m.: St. John’s at DePaul, AM-670 Noon: Nebraska at Penn State, ESPNU 1 p.m.: West Virginia at Purdue, CBS 1 p.m.: Missouri at Florida, ESPN 1 p.m.: Texas Tech at Oklahoma St., ESPN2 1 p.m.: Cleveland State at Wisconsin Green Bay, CSN 2 p.m.: Columbia at Cornell, NBCSN

2 p.m.: Blackhawks at Los Angeles, NBC, AM-720

AHl HoCKeY

7 p.m.: Houston at Wolves, WCUU

SoCCeR

8:55 a.m.: Premier League, Fulham at Manchester City, ESPN2

TeNNIS

6 a.m.: Australian Open, third round, ESPN2 (same-day tape) 8 p.m.: Australian Open, fourth round, ESPN2 2 a.m.: Australian Open, fourth round, ESPN2

WoMeN’S College BASKeTBAll

4 p.m.: Southern Illinois at Illinois State, CSN

WoMeN’S College gYMNASTICS 3 p.m.: Illinois at Michigan, BTN

football

PrePs girls basketball

0, Sanborn 0 0-0 0. Totals 23 0-2 53. Rockford Christian 3 10 13 10 – 36 Richmond-Burton 12 19 11 11 – 53

WooDSToCK NoRTH 61 joHNSBURg 48 JOHNSBURG (48) Chase 1 6-8 8, Nusser 1 0-0 2, Poczkalski 1 2-3 4, Landazzi 7 3-4 18, Toussaint 2 0-2 4, Szramek 1 0-0 2, DiTusa 1 6-8 8, Kopystynsky 1 0-1 2. Totals: 15 16-26 48. WOODSTOCK NORTH (61) Braun 0 2-2 2, S. Ahr 4 5-8 14, Zieman 1 5-6 7, Jones 4 0-0 11, Everly 1 0-0 2, Abbate 0 2-2 2, Chamberlain 2 0-0 5, Darling 1 0-0 2, Parlogean 3 5-6 11, Conley 1 0-0 3, Ortiz 0 1-2 1, H. Ahr 0 1-2 1. Totals: 17 21-28 61. Johnsburg 9 13 2 24 – 48 Woodstock North 16 15 15 15 – 61 Three-point goals: Johnsburg 2 (Landazzi 2), Woodstock North 6 (Jones 3, S. Ahr, Chamberlain, Conley). Total fouls: Johnsburg 17, Woodstock North 24. Fouled out: H. Ahr.

Cl CeNTRAl 53, WooDSToCK 48 CRYSTAL LAKE CENTRAL (53) Youel 3 7-13 13, Schmitt 5 7-8 18, Dalman 0 1-2 1, Ellman 6 1-2 13, Dowell 0 1-4 1, Lerum 2 1-2 5, Wozniak 1 0-0 2. Totals: 17 18-31 53. WOODSTOCK (48) Pautrat 1 2-2 4, Haulotte 1 0-0 2, Ludwig 7 0-0 18, Jacobs 2 2-3 6, Brand 3 8-10 14, Davis 1 2-2 4. Totals: 15 14-17 48. CL Central Woodstock

10 19 11 13 – 53 15 6 9 18 – 48

Three-point goals: Crystal Lake Central 1 (Schmitt), Woodstock 4 (Ludwig 4). Total fouls: Crystal Lake Central 18, Woodstock 24.

MCHeNRY 58, DUNDee-CRoWN 55 MCHENRY (58) D’Angelo 3 2-2 9, Taylor 2 2-4 6, Rosgo 6 2-3 17, Matteson 0 2-2 2, Snedeker 5 1-3 11, Avonts 1 6-12 8, Lay 2 1-2 5. Totals: 19 16-28 58. DUNDEE-CROWN (55) Bartelt 4 0-1 10, Lococo 1 1-2 4, Barker 4 0-0 9, Cavallaro 2 2-2 6, Magsamen 0 2-2 2, Baker 1 0-2 2, Laboy 6 0-0 12, Michalski 3 4-5 10. Totals: 21 9-14 55. McHenry Dundee-Crown

betting odds glantz-culver line

Saturday, January 19, 2013 • Page C7

5 18 13 22 – 58 10 10 11 24 – 55

Three-points goals: McHenry 4 (Rosgo 3, D’Angelo), Dundee-Crown 4 (Bartelt 2, Lococo, Barker). Total fouls: McHenry 15, Dundee-Crown 20. Fouled out: Magsamen, Michalski.

Three-point goals: Rockford Christian 4 (Dachman 4), Richmond-Burton 7 (C. Vlasak 3, Kaska 2, Pittser 2). Total fouls: Rockford Christian 12, RichmondBurton 20.

wrestling MCHeNRY 69, WooDSToCK 6 106: B. Sikula (McH) by fft. 113: Dug (McH) p. Powers, 2:52 120: M. Sikula (McH) by fft. 126: Infelise (McH) by fft. 132: Ostdick (McH) d. T. Rodriguez by tech. fall, 16-0 138: Herber (McH) dec. Zange, 7-4 145: Patchett (McH) p. Sundberg, 3:13 152: Lardy (McH) d. G. Rodriguez by tech. fall, 18-3 160: Pait (McH) d. Hafer by tech. fall, 16-1 170: Plourde (W) p. Roewer, 1:39 182: Britt (McH) dec. Johnson, 5-2 195: Grannemann (McH) by fft. 220: L. Hernandez (McH) by fft. 285: A. Hernandez (McH) by fft.

HARVARD 73, MARIAN CeNTRAl 4 106: Luis (H) p. Kurca, :28 113: Struck (H) by fft. 120: Pena (H) maj. dec. McGuire, 11-3 126: Shelton (H) p. Olson, 1:52 132: Peterson (H) p. Herff, 1:22 138: Remke (MC) maj. dec. Reilly, 15-1 145: Rickert (H) by fft. 152: Heck (H) p. Carlson, 1:31 160: Wheeler (H) dec. Virzi, 5-3 170: Mejia (H) by fft. 182: Tapia (H) p. Hinsch, 2:12 195: Martin (H) by fft. 220: Popoca (H) p. Dineen, 6:00 285: Espain (H) by fft.

HARVARD 43, Cl CeNTRAl 23 106: Luis (H) p. Pukas, :23 113: Struck (H) p. Fiala, 4:48 120: Pena (H) dec. Zietler, 2-0 126: Shelton (H) dec. Peterson. 3-2 132: Peterson (H) dec. Lundelius, 3-2 138: Kramer (H) dec. Parlberg, 3-2 145: Fugiel (CLC) p. Rudd, :21 152: Heck (H) maj. dec. Mura, 10-0 160: Zelasco (CLC) p. Wheeler, 1:47 170: Marsden (CLC) p. Mejia, :12 182: Pfaff (CLC) p. Tapia, 3:36 195: Martin (H) dec. Ellman, 5-2 220: Popoca (H) d. Stone, 4:10 285: Freimund (H) p. McKnight, 4:56

schedule

CARY-gRoVe 48, Cl SoUTH 36 CARY-GROVE (48) Leisten 3-0-1-6, Barker 0-1-2-1, Kendeigh 0-0-2-0, Nicholson 5-4-4-14, Jakubicek 5-3-3-13, Glaysher 1-2-2-4, Lee 1-0-0-2, Smith 2-0-0-6, Clemment 1-0-0-2. Totals: 18-10-17-48. CRYSTAL LAKE SOUTH (36) Nolan 2-4-4-8, Rasmussen 3-2-2-10, Mickow 3-3-4-9, Del Vecchio 1-1-2-3, Madoni 3-0-0-6. Totals: 12-10-12-36. Cary-Grove CL South

12 9 10 17 - 48 5 10 1 20 - 36

Three-point goals: Cary-Grove 2 (Smith 2), CL South 2 (Rasmussen 2). Total fouls: Cary-Grove 14, CL South 16.

boYs basketball RICHMoND-BURToN 53 RoCKFoRD CHRISTIAN 36 ROCKFORD CHRISTIAN (36) Dachman 5 2-2 16, Williams 2 1-3 5, Mabie 1 0-2 2, Johnson 1 0-0 2, Gould 0 2-2 2, Bubnack 3 3-4 9. Totals 12 6-13 36. RICHMOND-BURTON (53) M. Vlasak 0 0-0 0, Rygiel 1 0-0 2, Wells 3 0-2 6, Kaufman 4 0-0 8, C. Vlasak 4 0-0 11, Kaska 7 0-0 16, Pittser 4 0-0 10, Hansel 0 0-0 0, Galla 0 0-0 0, Liston 0 0-0

ToDAY

Boys basketball: Harvard at Martin Luther King Tournament, 9:20 a.m.; Marian Central at Lake Zurich Tournament, 10 a.m.; Grayslake North at Hampshire, 2:30 p.m.; Woodstock North at Woodstock, McHenry at Crystal Lake South, DundeeCrown at Huntley, Johnsburg at Grayslake Central, 7 p.m; Richmond-Burton at Antioch, 7:30 p.m.; Jacobs at Rockton Hononegah Tournament, Marengo at Moline Tournament, TBA. Girls basketball: Hersey at CaryGrove, 2 p.m.; Marian Central at Aurora Central Catholic, 2:30 p.m.; Huntley at Hoffman Estates, Marengo at Woodstock North, 2:30 p.m.; Alden-Hebron at Orangeville, 7:30 p.m. Wrestling: CL South at Oak Park River Forest Invitational, 8 a.m.; Richmond-Burton at Warren, 9 a.m.; Prairie Ridge Quad; McHenry at Lake Forest Quad; CL Central at Grant Quad; Johnsburg, Huntley at Antioch Duals; Belvidere North at Woodstock North, 9 a.m.; Cary-Grove Triangular, Dundee-Crown at Antioch Duals, 9 a.m.; Marian Central at Warren, 9 a.m. Boys swimming: Dundee-Crown at Hersey Invite, 9 a.m.; Huntley, Cary-Grove at Buffalo Grove Invitational, 11 a.m.; McHenry at Woodstock Co-op Invitational, 11 a.m. Gymnastics: Prairie Ridge at Niles West Invitational, 1 p.m.

hockeY nhl Today’s Games Blackhawks at Los Angeles, 2 p.m. Pittsburgh at Philadelphia, 2 p.m. Ottawa at Winnipeg, 2 p.m. N.Y. Rangers at Boston, 6 p.m. Toronto at Montreal, 6 p.m. New Jersey at N.Y. Islanders, 6 p.m. Washington at Tampa Bay, 6 p.m. Carolina at Florida, 6:30 p.m. Detroit at St. Louis, 7 p.m. Columbus at Nashville, 7 p.m. Phoenix at Dallas, 7 p.m. Colorado at Minnesota, 8 p.m. Anaheim at Vancouver, 9 p.m. Sunday’s Games Blackhawks at Phoenix, 9 p.m. Philadelphia at Buffalo, 11:30 a.m. San Jose at Calgary, 5 p.m. Pittsburgh at N.Y. Rangers, 6 p.m. Dallas at Minnesota, 7 p.m. Edmonton at Vancouver, 8 p.m.

ahl Friday’s Games Texas 6, Wolves 4 Lake Erie 3, Hershey 2 Springfield 4, Connecticut 2

Albany 4, Adirondack 3 Portland 3, Providence 2, SO Binghamton 4, Toronto 2 Rochester 4, Syracuse 1 Norfolk 3, St. John’s 2, SO Manchester 3, Worcester 1 San Antonio 4, Oklahoma City 2 Rockford 3, Peoria 1 Today’s Games Houston at Wolves, 7 p.m. Providence at Manchester, 6 p.m. Binghamton at Bridgeport, 6 p.m. Connecticut at Portland, 6 p.m. Albany at Springfield, 6 p.m. Adirondack at Worcester, 6 p.m. Toronto at Hamilton, 6 p.m. St. John’s at Norfolk, 6:15 p.m. Lake Erie at Syracuse, 6:30 p.m. San Antonio at Oklahoma City, 7 p.m. Grand Rapids at Rockford, 7:05 p.m. Texas at Peoria, 7:35 p.m. Milwaukee at Abbotsford, 9 p.m. Sunday’s Games Portland at Manchester, 2 p.m. Springfield at Bridgeport, 2 p.m. Connecticut at Providence, 2:05 p.m. Adirondack at Albany, 3 p.m. W-B/Scranton at Hershey, 4 p.m. Norfolk at Charlotte, 4 p.m. Houston at Peoria, 5:05 p.m. Milwaukee at Abbotsford, 6 p.m.

nfl PlaYoffs Wild-card Playoffs Saturday, Jan. 5 Houston 19, Cincinnati 13 Green Bay 24, Minnesota 10 Sunday, Jan. 6 Baltimore 24, Indianapolis 9 Seattle 24, Washington 14 Divisional Playoffs Saturday, Jan. 12 Baltimore 38, Denver 35, 2OT San Francisco 45, Green Bay 31 Sunday, Jan. 13 Atlanta 30, Seattle 28 New England 41, Houston 28 Conference Championships Sunday San Francisco at Atlanta, 2 p.m. (FOX) Baltimore at New England, 5:30 p.m. (CBS) Pro Bowl Sunday, Jan. 27 At Honolulu AFC vs. NFC, 6 p.m. (NBC) Super Bowl Sunday, Feb. 3 At New Orleans AFC champion vs. NFC champion, 5 p.m. (CBS)

INjURY RePoRT OUT - Definitely will not play DNP - Did not practice LIMITED - Limited participation in practice FULL - Full participation in practice SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS at ATLANTA FALCONS — 49ERS: PROBABLE: G Alex Boone (knee), LB NaVorro Bowman (shoulder), CB Tarell Brown (shoulder), TE Garrett Celek (foot), CB Chris Culliver (knee), S Dashon Goldson (shin), LB Tavares Gooden (knee), RB Frank Gore (knee), LB Clark Haggans (shoulder), G Mike Iupati (shoulder), RB Bruce Miller (shoulder), LB Aldon Smith (shoulder), DT Justin Smith (elbow, triceps), LB Patrick Willis (shoulder). FALCONS: QUESTIONABLE: DE John Abraham (ankle), DT Jonathan Babineaux (shoulder). PROBABLE: S William Moore (hand), LB Stephen Nicholas (foot), CB Christopher Owens (hamstring). BALTIMORE RAVENS at NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS — RAVENS: OUT: CB Asa Jackson (thigh). QUESTIONABLE: LB Dannell Ellerbe (ankle, back), RB Vonta Leach (knee, ankle), RB Bernard Pierce (knee), WR David Reed (thigh). PROBABLE: RB Anthony Allen (head), WR Anquan Boldin (shoulder), CB Chykie Brown (shoulder), NT Terrence Cody (ankle), G Gino Gradkowski (head), DE Arthur Jones (thigh, knee), LB Ray Lewis (triceps), LB Albert McClellan (shoulder), DE Pernell McPhee (thigh), DT Haloti Ngata (knee), S Bernard Pollard (chest), S Ed Reed (shoulder), CB Jimmy Smith (abdomen), WR Torrey Smith (back), LB Terrell Suggs (Achilles, biceps), G Marshal Yanda (shoulder). PATRIOTS: PROBABLE: CB Marquice Cole (finger), DE Chandler Jones (ankle), G Nick McDonald (shoulder), DE Trevor Scott (knee), RB Danny Woodhead (thumb).

golf Pga tour HUMANA CHAlleNge La Quinta, Calif. Purse: $5.6 million p-PGA West, Arnold Palmer Private Course (6,950 yards, par 72) n-PGA West, Jack Nicklaus Private Course (6,951 yards, par 72) q-La Quinta Country Club (7,060 yards, par 72) Second Round Leaders Roberto Castro 63n-67p—130 -14 James Hahn 63p-67q—130 -14 Darron Stiles 66p-65q—131 -13 Scott Stallings 66p-65q—131 -13 Richard H. Lee 66n-65p—131 -13 Lee Williams 67q-65n—132 -12 Jason Kokrak 63q-69n—132 -12 Zach Johnson 66p-66q—132 -12 David Lingmerth 68q-64n—132 -12 Kevin Stadler 66q-66n—132 -12 Charles Howell III 67q-65n—132 -12 Charley Hoffman 65n-67p—132 -12 Greg Chalmers 64n-68p—132 -12 Aaron Baddeley 64p-68q—132 -12 Daniel Summerhays 65n-68p—133 -11 Stewart Cink 66q-67n—133 -11 Ricky Barnes 65q-68n—133 -11 Robert Garrigus 66p-67q—133 -11 Russell Henley 64n-69p—133 -11 Brian Gay 67q-66n—133 -11 Bud Cauley 70n-63p—133 -11 William McGirt 68p-66q—134 -10 Carl Pettersson 68n-66p—134 -10 Matt Kuchar 70q-64n—134 -10 Kevin Streelman 69n-65p—134 -10 Michael Bradley 65n-69p—134 -10 Brad Fritsch 69q-65n—134 -10 Bo Van Pelt 66n-68p—134 -10 Ryan Palmer 65p-69q—134 -10 Doug LaBelle II 64n-70p—134 -10 Bryce Molder 66p-68q—134 -10 Erik Compton 67q-67n—134 -10 Boo Weekley 68q-67n—135 -9 Colt Knost 68q-67n—135 -9 Geoff Ogilvy 70q-65n—135 -9 John Rollins 70p-65q—135 -9 Chris Stroud 69p-66q—135 -9 Billy Horschel 67n-68p—135 -9 Nicholas Thompson 69q-66n—135 -9 Tom Gillis 69p-66q—135 -9 Brandt Snedeker 67q-68n—135 -9 Stephen Ames 67p-68q—135 -9


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

Page C8 • Saturday, January 19, 2013

LOTS OF CARS, LOTS OF BANKS, LOTS OF MONEY. . . TO LEND! CLCJD

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2002 Ford Taurus SES Std

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2008 Chrysler PT Cruiser Touring

2007 Ford Focus SE

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2011 Ford Fusion SE

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2009 Nissan Rogue SL

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2010 Dodge Avenger R/T

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2007 Mazda CX-7 Touring AWD

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2009 Jeep® Patriot Unlimited

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2007 Chrysler 300C

2007 Chevrolet Tahoe LT 4x4

2008 Jeep® Commander Ltd 4x4

2012 Dodge Charger SE

2012 Jeep® Liberty Spt 4x4

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2012 Dodge Charger SE

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2011 Mini Cooper Countrymen 4x4

2011 Honda Odyssey Touring

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2009 Jeep® Wrangler X

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2011 Jeep Wrangler Spt 4x4 ®

2007 Chrysler 300C SRT8

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2012 Chrysler Town & Country

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2010 Dodge Challenger

24,998

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2012 Dodge Ram 1500 Laramie

2011 Chevrolet Avalanche LTZ 4x4

2010 Jeep® Grand Cherokee SRT8 AWD

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2008 GMC Acadia SLT 4x4

38,998

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page E3

Hearthstone to manage Centegra unit

THE MaRkETS 53.68 13,649.70

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THE STOCkS

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Abbott Labs AGL Resources Allstate Apple

AptarGroup

AT&T Bank of Montreal Baxter CME Group Coca-Cola Comcast Covidien Dean Foods Dow Chemical Exelon Exxon Facebook Ford General Motors Google Hillshire IBM JPMorganChase Kohl’s Kraft Foods Group Live Nation McDonald’s Microsoft Modine Moto Solutions OfficeMax Pepsi Pulte Homes Safeway Sears Holdings Snap-On Southwest Air. Supervalu Target United Contint. Wal-Mart Walgreen Waste Mgmt. Wintrust Fincl.

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32.74 41.16 43.21 500.00 52.33 33.44 63.78 67.05 55.50 37.70 40.26 61.00 18.37 33.80 30.37 90.80 29.66 14.11 29.28 704.51 30.01 194.47 46.46 43.83 47.05 10.01 92.26 27.25 8.54 59.01 11.07 72.48 20.49 18.64 46.66 81.04 11.26 3.57 61.53 24.79 69.20 39.21 35.25 37.40

-0.04 +0.16 +0.12 -2.68 +0.29 +0.24 +0.03 -0.14 +0.02 +0.19 +0.31 +0.72 -0.01 -0.01 +0.31 +0.60 -0.48 -0.11 -0.21 -6.81 -0.10 +0.82 +0.02 +0.38 +0.13 -0.05 +0.50 unch -0.17 +0.97 +0.45 +0.05 +0.12 +0.58 +1.05 +0.15 -0.14 +0.02 +0.07 -0.97 +0.35 -0.15 -0.02 -0.83

COMMOdITIES Metal

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Gold Silver Copper

1685.10 -5.70 31.88 +0.07 3.6755 +0.0135

Grain (cents per bushel) Close

Corn Soybeans Oats Wheat

727.50 1429.25 355.50 791.25

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Live cattle Feeder cattle Lean hogs

129.90 146.175 88.075

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+3.00 -1.00 +0.50 +10.00

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-0.975 +0.325 unch

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Business

SECTION E

Saturday, January 19, 2013 Northwest Herald

AP file

Gluten-free frozen pizza is just one of hundreds of items at Gluten Free Trading Co. in Milwaukee.

Restaurants vulnerable to food allergy lawsuits

Gluten-free settlement could serve as precedent By MARY CLARE JALONICK The Associated Press

WASHINGTON – People with severe food allergies have a new tool in their attempt to find menus that fit their diet: federal disabilities law. And that could leave schools, restaurants and anyplace else that serves food more vulnerable to legal challenges over food sensitivities. A settlement stemming from a lack of gluten-free foods available to students at a Massachusetts university could serve as a precedent for people with other allergies or conditions, including peanut sensitivities or diabetes. Institutions and businesses subject to the Americans With Disabilities Act could be open to lawsuits if they fail to honor requests for accommodations by people with food allergies. Colleges and universities are especially vulnerable because they know their students and often require them to eat on campus, Eve Hill of the Justice Department’s civil rights division says. But a restaurant also could be liable if it blatantly ignored a customer’s request for certain foods and caused that person to become ill, though that case might be harder to argue if the customer had just walked in off the street, Hill says. The settlement with Lesley University, reached last month but drawing little attention, will require the Cambridge, Mass., institution to serve gluten-free foods and make other accommodations for students who have celiac disease. At least one student complained to the federal government after the school would not exempt the student from a meal plan even though the student couldn’t eat the food. “All colleges should heed this settlement and take steps to make accommodations,” says Alice Bast,

at a glance NEW TOOL: People with severe food allergies can now tap federal disabilities litigation, leaving schools, restaurants and anyplace else that serves food more vulnerable to legal challenges over food sensitivities. WHO IT COVERS: Institutions and businesses subject to the Americans With Disabilities Act could be open to lawsuits if they fail to honor requests by people with food allergies. THE PRECEDENT: A settlement last month stemming from a lack of gluten-free foods available to students at a Massachusetts university could serve as a precedent for people with other allergies or conditions, including peanut sensitivities or diabetes. president and founder of the National Foundation for Celiac Awareness. “To our community this is definitely a precedent.” People who suffer from celiac disease don’t absorb nutrients well and can get sick from the gluten found in wheat, rye and barley. The illness, which affects around 2 million Americans, causes abdominal pain, bloating and diarrhea, and people who have it can suffer weight loss, fatigue, rashes and other problems. Celiac is a diagnosed illness that is more severe than gluten sensitivity, which some people self-diagnose. Ten years ago, most people had never heard of celiac disease. But awareness has exploded in recent years, for reasons that aren’t entirely clear. Some researchers say it was under-diagnosed, others say it’s because people eat more processed wheat products like pastas and baked goods than in past decades, and those items use types of wheat that have a higher

gluten content. Gluten-free diets have expanded beyond those with celiac disease. Millions of people are buying gluten-free foods because they say they make them feel better, even if they don’t have a wheat allergy. Americans were expected to spend $7 billion on glutenfree foods last year. With so many people suddenly concerned with gluten content, colleges and universities have had to make accommodations. Some will allow students to be exempted from meal plans, while others will work with students individually. They may need to do even more now as the federal government is watching. “These kids don’t want to be isolated,” Bast says. “Part of the college experience is being social. If you can’t even eat in the school cafeteria then you are missing out on a big part of college life.” Under the Justice Department agreement, Lesley University says it will not only provide gluten-free options in its dining hall but also allow students to pre-order, provide a dedicated space for storage and preparation to avoid cross-contamination, train staff about food allergies and pay a $50,000 cash settlement to the affected students. “We are not saying what the general meal plan has to serve or not,” Hill says. “We are saying that when a college has a mandatory meal plan they have to be prepared to make reasonable modifications to that meal plan to accommodate students with disabilities.” The agreement says that food allergies may constitute a disability under the Americans With Disabilities Act, if they are severe enough.

See FOOD, page E2

WOODSTOCK – Hearthstone Communities and Centegra Health System have formed a partnership to provide patient care services. Hearthstone Communities in Woodstock has begun managing the 30-bed subacute rehabilitation unit at Centegra Specialty HospitalWoodstock, 527 W. South St. The facility has been renamed Hearthstone at Centegra. Hearthstone has been a Woodstock senior living provider for more than 120 years. Don Babbitt will be the leader of the unit for Hearthstone. He has nearly 20 years of clinical management experience and earned degrees in administrative medicine and health care administration from the University of Wisconsin. “Health-care reform and technological advancements are changing the delivery of health care,” said Michael S. Eesley, chief executive officer of Centegra Health System. “We are always looking at the needs of the communities we serve, analyzing the best ways to provide area residents with the access to care they need, all the while being mindful of the future of health care. Centegra and Hearthstone share the values of genuine respect, passionate care and integrity and have both served the needs of the community for many years.” Terry Egan, president and chief executive officer of Hearthstone Communities, said, “Hearthstone has served the older adults and children of McHenry County for more than 120 years. Centegra has been an outstanding supporter of our services for many of those years so this is a natural partnership.” Hearthstone at Centegra will provide sub-acute care, a level of nursing care often required for patients who need a more intense level of skilled nursing care after a medical or surgical hospital visit. These patients are frequently medically fragile and may require special services including physical rehabilitation after joint replacement surgery, intravenous medications and tube feedings. Hearthstone Communities includes not-for-profit, faith-based charitable organizations devoted to serving children and seniors. The Hearthstone Senior Living Community and the Hearthstone Early Learning Center are located on a 15-acre campus near routes 47 and 120 in Woodstock. For more information on Hearthstone Communities, visit www.hearthstonewoodstock.org or call 815-338-2110.

Jobless rates fall in less than half of U.S. states The Associated Press

WASHINGTON – Unemployment rates fell in less than half of U.S. states last month, as steady but slow hiring is making only gradual improvement in the job market. The Labor Department said Friday that rates fell in 22 states in December and rose in 16. They were unchanged in 12. The department’s monthly report also shows that steady hiring nationwide in the past two years has lowered the unemployment rate in many parts of the country. The rate is now below 7 percent in 25 states. And some of the states hardest hit in the recession have seen solid gains. llinois’ unemployment rate held steady at 8.7 percent in December. Preliminary data released by the Illinois Department of Employment Security show there are 576,000 Illinois residents out of work. The rate doesn’t reflect unemployed people who’ve quit looking for work. IDES Director Jay Rowell says the state’s longterm trend is “moderate growth punctuated by monthly up-and-down movement in the unemployment rate and the number of people working.” Rowell says the positive trend is threatened by

continuing deliberations in Washington on the debt ceiling and the fiscal cliff. December’s seasonally adjusted rate is 1 percentage point lower than December 2011. Illinois has added 167,000 private sector jobs since January 2010. That’s when job growth started returning following almost two years of consecutive monthly declines. Nevada’s unemployment rate, the highest in the nation, plummeted 0.6 percentage points last month to 10.2 percent. Rhode Island’s rate, also 10.2 percent, fell from 10.4 percent in November. A year ago, Nevada reported an unemployment rate of 13 percent. Its 2.8 percentage point drop in 2012 was the biggest in the nation. Much of that decline stems from a smaller labor force. Many of those in Nevada who were out of work have given up looking for jobs or have left the state. People are only counted as unemployed if they are actively looking for work. Nevada’s workforce fell nearly 2 percent last year. But some of the unemployed have found jobs. In the past year, the state has gained nearly 20,000 jobs. California has the third-highest unemployment rate, at 9.8 percent, the same as the previous month but down from 11.2 percent a year ago.

Nationwide, the rate remained at 7.8 percent in December. Employers added 155,000 jobs last month, nearly matching the average of 153,000 in 2012 and 2011. That’s just enough to slowly reduce the unemployment rate, which declined 0.7 percentage points nationwide last year. Employers added jobs in 27 states, the department said, while they cut jobs in 23 states. The job totals come from a survey of employers, while the unemployment rate is calculated from a separate survey of households. New York and New Jersey reported the biggest job gains last month, likely reflecting a bounce back from Superstorm Sandy, which caused job losses in both states in November. New York gained nearly 9,000 construction jobs, while New Jersey added 4,200. That’s nearly half the 30,000 construction jobs created last month nationwide, the biggest increase in 15 months. Still, New Jersey now has the nation’s fourthhighest unemployment rate, at 9.6 percent. That’s down slightly from the previous month but a halfpoint higher than a year ago. North Dakota reported the nation’s lowest unemployment rate, at 3.2 percent. Nebraska had the second-lowest rate, at 3.7 percent, followed by South Dakota at 4.4 percent.


BUSINESS

Page E2 • Saturday, January 19, 2013

Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

Harvard’s dinner a ‘Winter Wonder-Luau’

8IN BRIEF

Venture investments declined in 2012

NEW YORK – A new study shows that funding for business startups declined in 2012, the first time that’s happened in three years, as venture capitalists spent less money on fewer deals. Capital-intense sectors like clean technology and life sciences were among the hardest hit, according to the MoneyTree study released Friday. It was conducted by PriceWaterHouseCoopers and the National Venture Capital Association. In all of 2012 startup investments fell 10 percent to $26.52 billion from $29.46 billion. There were 3,698 deals completed, down 6 percent from 3,937 in 2011. Venture investments also declined 13 percent in the final quarter of the year, to $6.4 billion from $7.38 billion a year earlier, though the number of deals was the same in both quarters at 968.

Honda issues recall due to airbag problem

TORRANCE, Calif. – Honda says it’s recalling 748,000 Pilot and Odyssey vehicles because of a possible problem with their driver’s-side airbags. Honda says that the airbags may have been assembled without some of the rivets needed to secure their cover. That could keep them from deploying properly in the event of a crash and increase the possibility of injury. No crashes or injuries have been reported related to the issue. The affected Pilot SUVs were made for the 2009 through 2013 model years, while the Odyssey minivans in question were made for the 2011 through 2013 model years. Honda will notify affected owners by mail starting in mid-February. The automaker says owners should take their vehicles to a dealer as soon as they receive notification.

– From wire services

The Harvard Chamber of Commerce & Industry will host its annual dinner/silent auction “Winter Wonder-Luau” Feb. 2 at the Starline Building. This annual event gives us the opportunity to thank our members in and around the community for their outstanding services. This year we will recognize members who have joined our chamber this year, reached a milestone anniversary, contributed to the economic growth, renovated their businesses, provided numerous and consistent employment opportunities, outstanding community service and participated and sponsored many events. Starline Factory will be hon-

chAmber NEwS Crystal Musgrove

were donated.

ored as the Business of the Year at the dinner. Last year’s winner, Harvard Chevy-Buick-GMC, will present the award. The silent auction and cash bar starts at 5 p.m. with a Hawaiianthemed buffet dinner at 6:30 p.m. Music by X-Treme Entertainment will follow. Don’t miss this night of fun, music, dancing and great items to bid on and meet your new board of directors. Thanks to businesses for the silent auction items that

*** Harvard Chamber welcomes our newest members: Salvation Army Golden Diners, Exemplar Financial Network, Hooves to Heal, Sherman’s Catering, and New York Life Insurance. Special thanks to our renewed members: St Joseph’s Catholic Church, Sunset Senior Apartments, Dick’s Repair, McHenry County Liv-

Federal Reserve underestimated scope of financial crisis in 2007 The Associated Press

soft landing,” she said. Chairman Ben Bernanke noted that housing was “very weak” and manufacturing was slowing. “But expect for those sectors, there is a good bit of momentum in the economy,” he said. Bernanke did acknowledge that there was “an unusual amount of uncertainty” surrounding the Fed’s economic forecasts. “In the aggregate data, there is yet no clear sign of a spillover from housing,” Bernanke said in summing up the views of the committee. By December, the economy had plunged into the recession, which would last until June 2009. Five years later, the economy has yet to fully recover. The Fed did take action in 2007, although investors seemed to think it waited too long. Markets were disappointed when the Fed refused to cut interest rate cuts at its Aug. 7 meeting. After the meeting, the Fed issued a statement declaring that the threats to growth had only “increased somewhat.” At the meeting, various Fed officials signaled their belief that the biggest threat facing the economy was inflation — not slower growth, the transcripts show. Days later, BNP Paribas, France’s largest bank, announced that it was suspend-

WASHINGTON – Federal Reserve officials in 2007 underestimated the scope of the approaching financial crisis and how it would tip the U.S. economy into the worst recession since the Great Depression, transcripts of the Fed’s policy meetings that year show. The meetings occurred as the country was on the brink of the worst financial crisis since the 1930s. As the year went on, Fed officials shifted their focus away from the risk of inflation as they slowly began to recognize the severity of the crisis. During 2007, the Fed began to cut interest rates and took extraordinary steps to ease credit and shore up confidence in the banking system. Throughout the year, the housing crisis deepened. Banks and hedge funds that had invested big in subprime mortgages were left with worthless assets as foreclosures rose. The damage reached the top echelons of Wall Street. At the Fed’s Oct. 30 policy meeting, Janet Yellen, thenpresident of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, said the economy faced increased risks. But she hardly predicted anything dire. “I think the most likely outcome is that the economy will move forward toward a

ing Magazine, Harvard Savings Bank, Chiro One, The Harvard State Bank, Adams Collision, Stephen Haugh, Aero Industries, St. Paul Lutheran Church, Thomas Beestra Real Estate, Ben’s Christmas Tree Farm, Custom Window Accents, C & J Mechanical, All World, McHenry County Sheriff, Mercy South, and Harvard Retirement Home. For any upcoming events or information about becoming a chamber member. call 815-943-4404 or email info@harvcc.net.

*** Save the date for our coming events: Business Home Showcase & Garage Sale on April 6 at Crosby Elementary, Cubs vs. Brewers bus trip on April 19, and Tri-County Pro Rodeo on July 26-27.

ing withdrawals from three investment funds, a move that jolted financial markets around the world. On Aug. 10, the Fed held the first of three emergency conference calls to discuss the emerging crisis. The committee announced that it would pump billions of dollars into financial markets to try and calm turmoil on Wall Street and ease the tightening of credit. One week later, the Fed called an emergency meeting to cut the discount rate on loans to banks. Then in September, the Fed cut its key short-term interest rate for the first time since June 25, 2003. The Fed would cut the rate two more times in 2007 as the financial crisis worsened. Still, the transcripts showed the central bank struggled through the year to develop a clear sense of how serious the unfolding crisis could be and what harm it might do to the U.S. economy. At the Fed’s final meeting of that year in December, the central bank’s staff presented an economic forecast for 2008 that proved to be overly optimistic. And despite concerns about the lending market and the quality of loans –particularly in real estate — Bernanke predicted that no major bank would fail.

• Crystal Musgrove is executive director of the Harvard Chamber of Commerce. She can be reached at 815943-4404.

• FOOD

Continued from page E1 The definition was made possible under 2009 amendments to the disability law that allowed for episodic impairments that substantially limit activity. “By preventing people from eating, they are really preventing them from accessing their educational program,” Hill says of the school and its students. Mary Pat Lohse, the chief of staff and senior adviser to Lesley University’s president, says the school has been working with the Justice Department for more than three years to address students’ complaints. She says the school has already implemented most parts of the settlement and will continue to update policies to serve students who need gluten-free foods. “The settlement agreement provides a positive road map for other colleges and universities to follow,” Lohse says. Joan Rector McGlockton of the National Restaurant Association says that restaurants have taken notice of an increasing demand for gluten free options, “drawing attention to the importance of providing these options as well as the preparation methods involved in serving these options.” The group has a training program for restaurants so they will know what to do when food allergy issues arise. Some say the Justice Department decision goes too

far. Hans von Spakovsky, a fellow at the conservative Heritage Foundation who worked in the civil rights division of the Justice Department under President George W. Bush, says food allergies shouldn’t apply under the disability act. He adds that the costs could be substantial when schools are already battling backlash from high tuition costs. “I certainly encourage colleges and universities to work with students on this issue, but the fact that this is a federal case and the Justice Department is going to be deciding what kind of meals could be served in a dining hall is just absurd,” he says.

Whether the government is involved or not, schools and other food service establishments are likely to hear from those who want more glutenfree foods. Dhanu Thiyagarajan, a sophomore at the University of Pittsburgh, says she decided to speak up when she arrived at school and lost weight because there were too few gluten-free options available. Like Lesley University, the University of Pittsburgh requires that on-campus students participate in a meal plan. Thiyagarajan eventually moved off campus so she could cook her own food, but not before starting an organization of students who suffer from wheat allergies like hers. She says she is now working with food service at the school and they have made a lot of progress, though not enough for her to move back on campus.

BRIDGE ACROSS 1 Java application? 12 E-mails a dupe 15 Swearing-in figure 16 Onetime giant in decking 17 Raphael, e.g. 18 It may have no stars 19 Film producer Fayed

Crossword

34 Guitar-spinning group

35 City of a quarter million founded on a ranch site 37 ___ fit

57 Singer who founded Righteous Babe Records 58 Victor over H.H.H. 59 It competed with Mail Boxes Etc.

38 Shred 39 Prefix with Germanic

Edited by Will Shortz 1

1 Origin of the word “cheetah” 2 F-, for one

41 Peak periods

4 It blew in 1707

39

5 Ottoman dignitary

29 Prepares to be discharged 31 It goes over the tongue

53 Bit of ancient art 56 ___ polar (animal del Ártico)

I N D O O R P O O L

S T A R S T R U C K

D E F T

E V A H

M A C E

W H E E S H A I L E R

T H E B B E A T S A M U R E S O T S R Y U E S M T O P G A N E O U N D T T Y S E S O N G O R E A L E D R O

I G S H L E M A E L A L P R I K A T T N C L E O K Y P S P F L E S E E D H A R E I S R I A I T Y V E R

O N I N

R I T T

T A O S

S T R I P M A L L S

A L I C I A K E Y S

M C M A N S I O N S

30 Facial site 31 Its central deity is Amaterasu 32 Claims 33 Like sports cars, briefly

30

41

43

48

44 49

45

50

46

47

51 54

55

Puzzle by WILL NEDIGER

34 Full of energy

13 Home of Pomona 35 Eastern energy College 36 1980s Argentine 14 Settle president Alfonsín 21 Big squares

28 One may be taken in faith

29 34

40 42

59

27 Nose-burning

14

36

58

26 Wii, for one

13

38

53

24 Mobile

12

25 28

33

57

23 Overgrown, say

24

32

52

12 Charge storer

11

21

27

56

11 Common cooler

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE S T A N D A S I D E

23

8 Storied slacker 10 Move with a bobbing motion

10

18

7 Makeup of some kits 9 Routing abbr.

52 Greetings

9

35

44 Web site crasher?

27 Gran Paradiso, e.g.

8

20

31

22 Ruling group

51 Composer Siegmeister

7

26

37

48 Specifically

6

16

22

3 Secures

6 Real fan

5

19

42 Piña colada topping?

23 Heads across the 45 M quarter pond

4

17

20 Birthplace of the phonograph

26 Cold front?

3

15

DOWN

40 Three-sided carrier

25 Standing by

2

No. 0000

40 Hydrocarbon in gasoline 43 1-Across may be added to it

44 Neighbor of McGuire A.F.B.

50 Turn over

45 Can

51 Actor McGregor

46 A third of quince 47 Toy snappers 48 Dweller in the hall Bilskirnir 49 Like a 6-Down

54 N.Y.C.’s ___ Bridge 55 Talent agent Emanuel

For answers, call 1-900-285-5656, $1.49 a minute; or, with a credit card, 1-800-814-5554. Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sunday crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. AT&T users: Text NYTX to 386 to download puzzles, or visit nytimes.com/mobilexword for more information. Online subscriptions: Today’s puzzle and more than 2,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Share tips: nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/learning/xwords.

To subscribe to the Northwest Herald, call (815) 459-8118.

By PHILLIP ALDER Newspaper Enterprise Association

Carl Jung said, “Your vision will become clear only when you can look into your own heart. Who looks outside, dreams; who looks inside, awakes.” At the bridge table, though, the opposite applies. If you worry only about your 13 cards, your partner will be dreaming of getting a new “third opponent.” This deal requires vision. How should South play in six hearts after West leads the diamond jack? North’s Jacoby two-notrump response showed four-plus hearts and gameforcing values. South starts with 11 top tricks: two spades, six hearts, two diamonds and one club. Probably his immediate reaction is to hope that the club finesse is working. Then he might think about eliminating diamonds and spades before trying to duck a club to West for an endplay. However, declarer can do better. He should win the first trick with his diamond king, draw two rounds of trumps, play three rounds of spades (ruffing the last in his hand), return to dummy

with a diamond, and call for the last spade. Here, when East discards, South throws a club. West takes the trick but is endplayed. If he leads a club, it is into declarer’s ace-queen. Or if he does something else, South ruffs in the dummy and sluffs his club queen. If, though, East follows to the fourth spade, declarer ruffs, crosses to dummy with a trump, and ducks a club, hoping West will win the trick. But if East takes it and leads another club, South is forced to take the finesse.

Contact Phillip Alder at pdabridge@prodigy.net.


CLASSIFIED

Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

Saturday, January 19, 2013 • Page E3

Jobs | Real Estate | Legals | Vehicles | Stuff

REAL ESTATE SALES

ACCOUNTS PAYABLE

FT Mon.- Fri. position needed for construction company located in Barrington. Excellent Benefit package includes Health insurance, vacation pay and potential profit sharing/bonus. Must have 3 years experience. Apply by emailing resume to:

hr@4idi.com

Auto

FORD SALES - Full time

Must have clean driving record. Aggressive dealer, Huge inventory, Excellent income. Only two openings. Call Jose or Mike:

Bull Valley Ford Woodstock 815-338-6680

Automotive IMMEDIATE OPENINGS FOR THE FOLLOWING POSITIONS: -Experienced Detail PersonsGM Certified Technicians Sales People (will train the right person) Service Advisor/Writer Please Apply in Person only: Harvard Chevrolet Buick GMC 333 S Division Street Harvard, IL. 60033 Full-time with benefit package for the energetic, self motivated person. DRIVER'S ED INSTRUCTORS/ TEACHERS PT/FT for Northwest Suburbs, Certified Instructors needed, but will train. ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ OFFICE/CLERICAL POSITION PT/FT for Crystal Lake.

HVAC Company looking for... SHEETMETAL INSTALLERS, SERVICE TECHS & GENERAL OFFICE HELP. Please email resumes to: erin@3dmechanical.com

Legal Secretary

needed for busy family law firm practicing in Kane and McHenry Counties. Preferred candidate will have a minimum of 2 years experience in family law. Immediate full time position with competitive salary. Please send resume including salary requirements to: Attn: Legal Secretary c/o Classified, PO Box 250 Crystal Lake, IL. 60039-0250

Sales Administration

Antioch based consumer goods company seeks a person to do both Sales Administration and Customer Service. Ideal candidate will have excellent phone skills, a solid working knowledge of Microsoft Office and a well organized self starter. Experience is highly valued for this full time position, full benefit package. Send resume to: khp.resume@ kayhomeproducts.com

SPECIALS ON 1BR

Includes W/D & Fitness Center 815/363-0322 cunatinc.com

ALGONQUIN - 2 BEDROOM Quiet and clean building with storage, laundry and parking. $800/mo. 847-401-3242

SALESPERSON

Immediate opening for a $100,000 year Income Potential Position Seeking an outside Heating & Air Conditioning Salesperson. No experience required, no telemarketing or multi-level selling. Will train the right person, must be an excellent communicator and money motivated. Send your resume to: Jon Davis The Jon Davis Companies, Inc. 8050 Jetstar Drive, Suite #175, Irving, TX 75063 C (214) 929-0655 O (866) 388-8051 F (866) 332-5920 www.thejdcinc.com

MCHENRY QUIET BUILDING

1 bedroom, heat and water incl. $675/mo, security deposit req. NO PETS. 815-382-6418

Algonquin – STUDIO +1BR Balcony w/ large windows, modern, steps to Main St. $725/$695+util., 847-387-0245

Social Services

SHELTER CASE MANAGER FT position for D.V. Shelter, SunThurs, 3pm-11pm. Benefits, bilingual preferred. Fax resume 815-338-8110

Crystal Lake Downtown XL 2BR Feels like A House, formal DR. Encl porch, $875 + util, no dogs. Agent Owned 815-814-3348

With utilities, laundry, balcony. No dogs. Agent owned. 815-814-3348

FOX RIVER GROVE 1BR New carpet. Across from the train station. $600/mo+dep & electricity. 224-622-1859 or 847-516-8437

Quad, Inc.

810 Progressive Lane South Beloit, IL 61080

PRESCHOOL TEACHER

Send your Help Wanted Advertising 24/7 to:

Call: 847-854-1418 or send resume to: sunshine.elc@sbcglobal.net

DCFS qualified.

DON'T NEED IT? SELL IT FAST! Northwest Classified Call 800-589-8237 or www.nwherald.com

PROGRAM MANAGER Pioneer Center for Human Services is seeking a strong candidate to join our Leadership Team as a Program Manager. The Program Manager of Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities Day Programs is responsible for the coordination of work related services, staff supervision, programmatic direction and follow up activities of services provided in Pioneer Center's Day Programs. Bachelor Degree in Human Service field required. Must have 5 plus years of progressive supervisory experience. QIDP Certification required. Apply on-line: www.pioneercenter.org Fax: 815-344-3815 or Email resume with cover letter to: nhenry@pioneercenter.org EEOC employer

Front Desk

Part Time 3-11 shift. Weekdays and Weekends. Apply in person at Front Desk

Hampton Inn

1555 S. Rte. 31 McHenry, IL.

Personal Assistant - PT

Nights and Weekends For Female with SCI. Woodstock Area 815-338-6254

No phone calls please

Please visit www.allendale4kids.org to download application and send with a copy of your resume to:

ALLENDALE ASSOCIATION

Attn: HR Dept, P.O. Box 1088 Lake Villa, IL 60046 Phone: 847-356-2351 Fax: 847-356-0290 AA/EEO www.allendale4kids.org

GREAT OPPORTUNITY

Service Adviser

Due to the tremendous sales success of our Toyota line, and the growth of our dealership, we are expanding our award winning service team. If you are a Service Adviser professional, this is a rare opportunity to join the area’s largest automotive group. We offer excellent compensation and outstanding company benefits. If you possess the following traits, we would like to hear from you: � ��������� ������������� ������ � ������ �������� � �������� �������� � ���� ��������� � ������ ���� ����� � ���� ���� ������ � ����� ������� ���� ������ For a confidential interview, please contact. . . Mark Cerasa, Service Director

�������� ������ � ����� 4100 N. Perryville Rd, Loves Park, IL 61111

815-397-8995

1 & 2 Bedroom

Affordable Apts. Garage Included

815-334-9380 www.cunat.com

Woodstock - 1BR On Quiet,

Private Wooded Location. Heat, water, trash incl, W/D, cats with deposit, $725. 815-482-1600

SPECIAL

2BR - $715/mo Elevator Building 815-334-9380 www.cunat.com

WOODSTOCK COMMONS Spacious 1, 2, & 3BR Apts Starting at $780

Call for an Appointment to See Your New Home Today! 815-337-9600

Woodstock Modern Loft Apts HUNTLEY STUDIO

1BR & 2BR ~ Historic Rogers Hall. $700-$825/mo. 815-482-4909

First floor, laundry on premise. Gas heat included, no pets. $625mo + sec. 847-669-3691

WOODSTOCK SENIOR APTS

ISLAND LAKE 2 BEDROOM

1 Bedroom Only, $780 Ranch Style Home with Private Entrance and Porch

Island Lake Luxury Apt.

* To qualify, income has to be under $31,000 - $35,000 for two people Call for Appt to View Your New Home! 815-206-4000

Quiet building, no pets. $825 + security. 847-526-4435

$150 Sign On Bonus 62 or Better

JOHNSBURG/MCHENRY

CAREGIVER NEEDED Live in or worker. For appt. call: 815-597-3803

Large 1Bedroom. Next to WalMart. Patios/Balconies. 735 sq ft. Lndry in building. Starting at $695/month 847-202-4550 www.landmarkmminc.com

MARENGO - 2 BR

POLISH LADY will clean your home/office. FREE ESTIMATES! Great Ref. 224-858-4515

MAILBOX POSTS

Installed, Insured 815-653-7095 www.mailboxpostman.com Become a State Licensed REAL ESTATE HOME INSPECTOR Learn how at our FREE Open House 1pm Sat. Jan. 26th 700 N. Lake St, Mundelein, IL. 847-322-9467 www.LearnInspections.com State Licensing Class Begins 2/22

CARPET INSTALLED Repaired and Re-Stretched 815-219-2823

CAT ~ SIAMESE

Female, Bluepoint, answers to “Monkey”. Lost Jan 14 on Thompson Rd in Bull Valley. Monkey has been sick, please call if found. REWARD! 815-477-7387

Puggle Rat Terrier Mix

Male, black, tan and white, about 20 lbs. Lost near intersection of Rt 176 & 31 in Crystal Lake on Thursday evening, Jan 17. REWARD! 630-723-1362

1 bath, stove, refrig, attached 1 car garage, laundry hook-up. 815-568-6107 Marengo Large 1 & 2 BR most utilities included Broker Owner $650 & UP 815-347-1712 Marengo Newly Remodeled 3BR Large eat-in-kitchen, $780/mo + garage & utilities. No dogs. Agent Owned. 815-814-3348

BREAKING NEWS available 24/7 at NWHerald.com

Woodstock, 2 BR apartment, 2nd floor of home. Separate entrances, reserved parking. Located on Dean St close to square. $735/mo + Sec. dep, utilities. No pets. Agent owned. 847-494-1097 Woodstock: 2BR duplex, 1 BA, all appliances, W/D, A/C, 1 car garage $885 + sec., nice neighborhood. 815-482-6616 Woodstock: 2BR, 2nd flr, next to town, all util incl. W/D, $890/mo.+sec., 815-715-8736

MARENGO ~ 2BR, 1BA

C/A, fresh paint, lndry, 1 car gar. Walking distance to town. No pets. $750/mo+sec. 815-568-7347 or 815-482-5942

McHenry $199 Move-In Special Large 1BR, from $699. 2BR, 1.5BA from $799. Appl, carpet and laundry. 815-385-2181

McHenry -Large 1BR some utilities include $700 and up Broker Owned 815-347-1712

Algonquin Great East Side Location! Newly Decorated

3BR, 2.5BA, jacuzzi in master bath, hardwood floors, fireplace, fully equipped kitchen, W/D, deck overlooking large grassy area. 2 car garage, $1650/mo incl lawn maintenance. No smoking/pets. 847-658-7975

LINE AD DEADLINE: Tues-Fri: 3pm day prior, Sat: 2pm Fri, Sun-Mon: 5pm Fri PHONE: 815-455-4800 ONLINE: www.nwherald.com/classified

Wonder Lake: 2/3 BR, new paint & carpet, hardwood floors $790-$975/month Broker Owned 815-347-1712 Woodstock Area BIG!! Newly Renovated in the Country 5BR 2 full bath, all new appliances. W/D, huge country kitchen, garage. 815-482-0171

Crystal Lake 4BR On Fox River Boat dock and deck, 200 ft of waterfront, 1.5 acre, 2BA, C/A. $1395/mo. 708-296-4476

Barn & Green House For Rent Woodstock $850/mo. 815-715-8736

MCHENRY/RINGWOOD Office & Warehouse w/14'OH Doors.1800sf $750/mo. 3600sf $1650/mo Zoned I-1/B-3. 815-482-7084

HEBRON: Very nice 1BR. New paint throughout, new LR rug. Hardwood floors. Full basement, W/D. Garage, asphalt drive. No pets or smoking. $750/mo+sec incl water & sewer. 815-690-5653

Huntley. 2BR, 2BA. 1 car attchd garage. W/D. New floors. Full bsmnt. No pets. Great location. $950/mo+sec. 1 yr lease. Avail now. 815-861-6459

JOHNSBURG 2BR, 1BA RANCH

Hrdwd floors, a/c, 1 car gar, crawl space, W/D hook-up, no pets. $950/mo + sec. 847-497-9781

JOHNSBURG – 4BR, 2.5BA Ranch Full finished family rm in bsmnt. 2 car attchd garage. Avail for long term lease. $1345/mo. Land Management Properties. 815-678-4771 Johnsburg. Ranch on a fenced double lot with 3BR, 1BA on crawl space w/1.5 car attchd gar & shed. $1045/mo. Land Management Properties 815-678-4771 MARENGO 4BR, 1BA, 2000SF 5-7 acres, newly remodeled, totally private farmette.1000 sq ft wrap-around deck, heated garage. 2 story building,1300 sq ft heated. $1500/mo. 312-607-6406

McHenry Patriot Estates 1BR, 1.5BA, $1100. Age Restrictions May Apply. Free Health Club Membership. Pet Friendly. 815-363-5919 or 815-363-0322

Prairie Grove. 3BR. Wooded lot. See thru frplc. Huge decks. Incl all appls. C/A. $2000/mo. 847-854-6740 after 5pm Wauconda. Newly decorated. Adult community. No pets. Units from $645-$795/mo+sec. 847-526-5000 Leave Message. WONDER LAKE 3 BR, 1 bath, new paint & carpet, hardwood floors, washer/dryer, all kitchen appliances. $995/mo plus security. 815-245-6168

PUBLIC NOTICE STATE OF ILLINOIS IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE 22ND JUDICIAL CIRCUIT McHENRY COUNTY, ILLINOIS

LBUS-2005-C5 RANDALL ROAD, LLC, an Illinois limited liability company, Plaintiff, vs.

Crystal Lake Hurry Last One Left Clean Office Suite. 400 SF. Incl. all utils + High Speed DSL. $525/mo. 815-790-0240

Crystal Lake – Must sell. $745K. 5 Virginia Rd. 12000 SF. (2) Offices. Both 2 story w/bsmnts, gar & balconies. Ed J: 941-505-1155

Crystal Lake. 3BR deluxe ranch. Hardwood flrs, fenced yard. Extra parking. Near Canterbury School. $1335/mo. 815-354-5526

Crystal Lake/Burton Bridge

(Published in the Northwest Herald January 12, 19, 26, 2013)

HARVARD Large home, house privileges, close to train. $400/mo, includes utilities. Call 847-404-7930

Crystal Lake Charming Vintage Coach House - Can be Artist Quarters. Large 2 Story Space! 1 bedroom with den, great yard. $825 + all utilities. No dogs. Agent Owned 815-814-3348

2 bedroom, 1 bath, W/D, A/C. Pets OK with deposit, $1150/mo + security. 815-459-4807

Attorney: Benjamin B. Folsom Foley & Lardner LLP 321 N. Clark St., Ste 2800 Chicago, Illinois 60654 Ph: (312) 832-4500 Fax: (312) 832-4700

Sharon, WI. 84 acres crop land. 1/2 mi E of Sharon on Hwy 67. Accepting offers until 1/31/13. 608-655-3347

Sharon, WI. 13 acres w/2 acres of walnut woods. 1/2 mi E of Sharon on Hwy 67. Accepting offers until 1/31/13. 608-655-3347

PUBLIC NOTICE STATE OF ILLINOIS IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE 22ND JUDICIAL CIRCUIT McHENRY COUNTY, ILLINOIS LBUS-2005-C5 RANDALL ROAD, LLC, an Illinois limited liability company, Plaintiff, vs. LITH SHOPPING CENTER, LLC, a foreign limited liability company; RANDALL ACORN OWNERS ASSOCIATION, an Illinois not-for-profit corporation; UNKNOWN OWNERS and NON-RECORD CLAIMANTS, Defendants. Case No. 12 CH 233 NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S FORECLOSURE SALE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale herein entered, the Sheriff of McHenry County, Woodstock, Illinois, or his deputy, will on Thursday the 14th day of February, 2013, at the hour of 10:00 A.M. at the McHenry County Courthouse, Room 262, 2200 N. Seminary Avenue, Woodstock, Illinois sell at public auction to the highest and best bidder, the following described premises and real estate in said judgment mentioned, situated in McHenry County, Illinois: Permanent Index Numbers 19-29-151017, 19-29-151-020 & 19-29010-031. This property is commonly known as 101 & 293 North Randall Road, Lake in the Hills, Illinois 60156 and is improved with a commercial shopping center and parking. Terms of sale: This real estate is being sold in an “As Is Condition” for cash or certified funds and the successful bidder is required to deposit 10% of the bid amount at the time of sale with the McHenry County Sheriff and the balance is to be paid by noon the following Tuesday after the sale. For information regarding this real estate, interested parties may contact: Benjamin B. Folsom, Foley & Lardne LLP, 321 No h Cl k

DEKALB

LITH SHOPPING CENTER, LLC, a foreign limited liability company; RANDALL ACORN OWNERS ASSOCIATION, an Illinois not-for-profit corporation; UNKNOWN OWNERS and NON-RECORD CLAIMANTS, Defendants.

Case No. 12 CH 233 NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S FORECLOSURE SALE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale herein entered, the Sheriff of McHenry County, Woodstock, Illinois, or his deputy, will on Thursday the 14th day of February, 2013, at the hour of 10:00 A.M. at the McHenry County Courthouse, Room 262, 2200 N. Seminary Avenue, Woodstock, Illinois sell at public auction to the highest and best bidder, property legally described as follows:

Parcel 1: Lot 2 in the Centre at the Lake in the Hills, being a subdivision of part of the West half of the Northwest quarter of Section 29, Township 43 North, Range 8 East of the Third Principal Meridian, according to the plat thereof recorded November 8, 1996 as Document No. 96R57546, in McHenry County, Illinois. Also

Parcel 2: Lot 1 in the Centre at the Lake in the Hills, being a subdivision of part of the West half of the Northwest quarter of Section 29, Township 43 North, Range 8 East of the Third Principal Meridian, according to the plat thereof recorded November 8, 1996 as Document No. 96R57546, in McHenry County, Illinois excepting therefrom that part conveyed to County of McHenry by Warranty Deed recorded February 17, 2000 as Document No. 2000R0008642.

Parcel 3: Lots 3 and 4 in Lake in the Hills Entertainment Park, being a subdivision of part of the West ½ of the Northwest ¼ of Section 29, Township 43 North, Range 8, according to the plat thereof recorded June 28, 1996 as Document Number 96R33436, in McHenry County, Illinois.

Parcel 4: Easement for the benefit of Parcels 1, 2, and 3 for ingress and egress as created by driveway easement agreement recorded November 25, 1997 as Document No. 97R58445 over and upon the Entertainment Park Easement Parcel as depicted on the plat of the subdivision of Lake in the Hills Entertainment Park recorded June 28, 1996 as Document No. 96R33436 and over and upon the Centre Easement Parcel as depicted on the plat of the subdivision of the Centre at Lake in the Hills, recorded November 8, 1996 as Document No. 96R57546. Permanent Index Numbers: 19-29-151-017;19-29-151-020; & 19-29-101-031.

This property is commonly known as 101 & 293 North Randall Road, Lake in the Hills, Illinois 60156 and is improved with a commercial shopping center and parking. Terms of sale: This real estate is being sold in an “As is Condition“ for cash or certified funds and the successful bidder is required to deposit 10% of the bid amount at the time of sale with the McHenry County Sheriff and the balance is to be paid by noon the following Tuesday after the sale. For information regarding this real estate, interested parties may contact: Benjamin B. Folsom, Foley & Lardner LLP, 321 North Clark Street, Suite 2800, Chicago, Illinois 60654, (312) 832-4500. Dated: January 10, 2013

Benjamin B. Folsom Foley & Lardner LLP 321 N. Clark St., Ste 2800 Chicago, Illinois 60654 Ph: (312) 832-4500 Fax: (312) 832-4700

MCHENRY APARTMENT FOR RENT McHenry 2BR & 2BA $800/mo.+ sec dep 847-235-0051 No Pets

WE'VE GOT IT!

2 bedroom with garage. Pets OK, available immediately. 815-459-4144 ~ Lv Msg

KEITH NYGREN Sheriff of McHenry County

HEBRON 2BR CONDO

All appl, patio, private entrance. $900 - $750, garage available. 815-455-8310

Northwest Classified 800-589-8237 www.NWHerald.com

Wonder Lake/East Side

Dated: January 8, 2013

KEITH NYGREN Sheriff of McHenry County

New Carpet, New Furnace. 1 Car Gar. W/D. No Pets. Addl. Parking. $950 + Dep. 847-338-1430

$705/mo. 815-363-1208 or 815-353-1203

Wonder Lake Waterfront 3BR

2BA, D/W, W/D hook-up. $1090/mo, pets OK, avail NOW! 773-510-3117 ~ 773-510-3643

njam om, y Lardner LLP, 321 North Clark Street, Suite 2800, Chicago, Illinois 60654, (312) 832-4500.

CRYSTAL LAKE - 2 BR, 2 BA

MCHENRY 2 BEDROOM

❤Ceremonies of the Heart❤ Rev Anne 847-431-4014 Weddings, Blessings, Memorials, Christenings

847-899-2933

Crystal Lake 3BR, 1.5BA Colonial Newly painted. FR, DR, large deck, 2 car garage. $1400/mo. 815-581-0034

McHenry 3BR, 1.5BA Split Level Fireplace, all appl, W/D, 2 car garage, pets OK, $1400/mo + sec. 847-421-1633

stove, refrigerator, large LR, $650 815-560-7115 or 815-568-7060

Wonder Lake 3BR, 1BA Lovely Lake view, lrg yrd, hrdwd flrs in BR. Lots of storage. $875/mo + sec + background chk. 815-814-2007

Crystal Lake

3BR, 1.5BA brick ranch.

2 car attached heated garage. 2/3 acre lot on quiet street. Close to lake with private beach rights and Crystal Lake Schools. All appliances incl. C/A, baseboard heat. Dogs negotiable. $1350/mo. Avail 3/1.

Marengo, Newer 3BR, 2.5BR, 2 car gar., $1050/month Broker Owned 815-347-1712

MARENGO 2 BEDROOM

100% Satisfaction Guar!

1.5 bath, appl, W/D, basement. 1 car garage, $1250/mo + sec. 815-354-4575

$200 off 1st Month Rent!

Spacious 2BR, 2BA, D/W, W/D, C/A. Approx 1000 sq ft. REDUCED RATE! $800/MO. 847-526-9228

REGISTERED NURSES

❍ ❍

Limited Time Only! * To qualify, income has to be under $33,000 for 1 person or under $38,000 for 2 people

CNA's

APPLY IN PERSON TODAY: Fair Oaks Healthcare Center 471 W. Terra Cotta Crystal Lake, IL

Woodstock 2/3BR $790-$975/month Broker Owned 815-347-1712

Sign on BONUS!

Healthcare LOOKING FOR Compassionate & Caring...

Housekeeping FT

SILVERCREEK

Located off Rt. 14 in Woodstock

PT Nights and weekends. Crystal Lake location. Fax resume: 815-788-7262 or email: rrah2007@gmail.com

Nursing

The Allendale Association, a Child Welfare, Mental Health and Special Education facility, has Full Time, 3 pm to 11 pm positions for REGISTERED NURSES. Our nurses administer basic health care to high end emotionally disturbed / behavior-disordered children, ages 8-18. RN's must be licensed in Illinois or Wisconsin. Must possess valid driver's license and per DCFS regulations, must be 21 years of age. Instructor's Certification in CPR and First Aid preferred, but not required. Competitive salary, excellent benefits and education assistance.

HARVARD Autumn Glen Spacious 2 bdrm Apts avail Free extra storage Free heat!! Pets welcome! Rents from: $733* 1st month free ~or~ Free 55” flat screen TV CALL TODAY! 815-943-6700 www.gallinacos.com M-F: 10am-6pm Sat: By Appt (*includes special)

RECEPTIONISTS

Shifts Available: 2nd & 3rd Shifts PT/FT Weekends Day Shift and PRN ★★★★★★★★★★★

WOODSTOCK

Autumnwood Apt.

Hospitality

VERY NICE! 2BA, W/D, 1 car gar. Pets welcome, Section 8 OK. $925/mo + sec. 815-814-1278

Crystal Lake 3BR Ranch

W. Dundee: near mall, Spacious 1 & 2 BR, heat, gas, water, NO PETS, heated garage available 847-836-6335 or 815-861-3900

WOODSTOCK

BARTENDERS - Flex. Hours Must be available Days, Nights and Weekends. Woodstock Moose Please call: 815-338-0126

McHenry. 2-3BR, 2-3BA, 2 car gar, appls. Lots of space. Lease / Purchase. $1150-$1250/mo. Avail now. 815-385-5525

WOODSTOCK 3 BEDROOM

Crystal Lake. 1BR. Quiet neighborhood. Walkout lower level, wooded lot, patio. W/D incl. $850/mo incl all utils. 847-854-6740 after 5pm

FOX LAKE ~ LARGE STUDIO

815-568-6924 ~ 815-568-5307

1.5 Bath, A/C, Stove, Refrigerator, Garage, No Pets. Broker Owned. 847-683-7944 HURRY!!

CRYSTAL LAKE 2BR

No smoking/pets, $800 + security. 815-893-0059 Lv Msg

Cable/TV furnished. Security deposit + 1st month rent.

WOODSTOCK 2BR CONDO

HEAT INCLUDED. Near bike bath. $700/mo. Senior Discount, $50. 815-382-7667

Custom Injection Molding Co. est. 1972 looking for: Experienced Plastic Injection Molding SUPERVISOR for shifts 4pm-midnight and midnight-8am. -Min. 5 yrs. HANDS-ON exp. in Inj. Molding -Must be able to troubleshoot molding machines, electricity, hydraulics, electronics -Must be familiar with a wide variety of plastic resins -Must have good communication and people skills -Must be able to work weekends on occasion -Computer experience preferred, but will teach -Drug screen and Physical required. This secure position offers salary commensurate w/experience-ability. Benefits inc. a/c facility, FDA environment, paid vac. Medical plus life, AFLAC and Dental plan available. Send resume/qualifications to:

Marengo 2BR, 2BA TH

Prairie Grove/Cobblestone Woods 3BR, 2.5BA TH. $1250 + utilities. Fireplace, 2 car attached garage. 815-378-6208

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

CAPRON/HARVARD 2BR, 1BA

Plastics

Please Call: 815-444-7700 or email: drive@nwdrive.com

Email: helpwanted@ shawsuburban.com Fax: 815-477-8898

McHenry - Route 31 IRISH PRAIRIE APTS

Licensing class begins Jan 29 in Crystal Lake. Call Gail, Coldwell Banker Honig-Bell 815-459-9300

Lake In The Hills ~ 1BR Condo W/D in unit, new carpeting and clean! All electric, 2nd floor with deck. $790/mo, no pets/smoking. Call Pat 224-465-6097 Lakemoor. Large 2nd floor condo. $1400/mo+utils. 2BR, 2BA, 2 car garage. All appls, fireplace. 708-209-5240 Have a photo you'd like to share? Upload it to our online photo album at NWHerald.com/MyPhotos

Attorney:

Immaculate 4,280 sq ft Office / Warehouse.

(Published in the Northwest Herald January 12, 19, 26, 2013)

Air conditioned office area and bathrooms Great location near airport & tollway in DeKalb.

STATE OF ILLINOIS IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE TWENTY-SECOND JUDICIAL CIRCUIT McHENRY COUNTY IN PROBATE

815-754-5831

PUBLIC NOTICE

EMAIL: classified@shawsuburban.com, helpwanted@shawsuburban.com FAX: 815-477-8898


CLASSIFIED

Page E4• Saturday, January 19, 2013

Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com Bring in this ad for $5.00 off your first purchase of $25 or more

• Natural Pet Foods & Supplies • In Home Pet Sitting • Dog Training • Doggy Daycare • Overnight Boarding 1 year old male SharPei/Shepherd mix He was relinquished when his guardian didn't have enough time for him. He is hoping to find a fun family to play with him. What a great dog.

ROCKY

BUD

7 month old male Black DLH He was found with his 3 siblings in a yard at 2 months old without a mother. His sister Chick is still waiting for a home too.

BUTTONS

2 year old female Jack Russell mix She came from a kill shelter pregnant. She is a sweet girl that only wants to be loved and cherished by someone. Could it be you?

PUPPIES

Border Collie/ Cattle Dog Puppies These Pups and their Mom came up from a Kill Shelter when they were just two days old. They just had their six week vet visit We are now taking adoption applications as they will be ready for their forever homes.

PUPPIES

www.assisi.org • Email: info@assisi.org

815-455-9411

5 year old Male DSH Tuxedo cat Adoption fee 20.00. Jaleel has been with us a long while and is looking for a lap to call his own. He is independent but loves attention when he is ready.

JALEEL

ROCKY

1 and a half year old Male Pit Mix Rocky is a wonderful, friendly, playfull boy. He could use some training as he still has some puppy traits!

YOUR NATURAL SOURCE FOR PET FOOD & MORE! ���� �������� ���� ���� � � ������ ������ �� �����

Proud Sponsor of Pet of the Week Check us out on NWHerald.com!! �������������������

���� ������������

815-338-4400

Saturday, January 19th at Petsmart in Crystal Lake from 11:00am - 2pm. There will be a Special adoption price of $75.00 for each black cat adopted on Saturday. Did you know that black matches everything and thatholding a black cat makes you look slimmer.

�������� ����

Located next to the Spring Grove Post Office.

Helping Paws Animal Shelter 2500 HARDING LANE, WOODSTOCK, 60098

BLACK CATS

Border Collie/ Cattle Dog Puppies 6 Males and 2 Females that were born on December 1, 2012. See more pictures on our Assisi Animal Foundation Facebook page. For an application or additional questions please call the shelter.

See us the 2nd Sunday of each month at Crystal Lake Petco

3 year old DSH female White and Orange Holly is all about the love! She is affectionate and sweet!

HOLLY

Clippers Mobile Grooming Dogs & Cats $45 (815) 219-2604 Special Full Service Grooming At Your Doorstep

GIDGET

Rottweiler Mix Adult Gidget is a very pretty Rottweiler mix. She came in as a stray and is a little overweight, but with a home and backyard to run around in she will slim down nicely.

815-459-6222 • mcac.petfinder.com

Tri Color Doxi/Beagle Mix 1 year old male Teddy is a 1yr old, handsome little man! He is good with other dogs and seems to do well around cats too. Only weighs about 15lbs. Come meet this sweet boy!

MICKEY

Black & White BAMBI 4 months old male He loves all toys and playing and wrestling with his brother and sister. He gives little kisses and, sometimes, forgets to put his tongue all the way back in his mouth! He has perfect litter box habits.

A Heart For Animals PUPPIES

Shepherd/Lab/? Blends 3 BEAUTIFUL, SWEET puppies will be ready for adoption 1/15

MINNIE

Sweet Minnie’s only problem is that her family had a leather couch they didn’t want her near. She’s very, very loving.

Tri Color 1.5 year old Male These two are very bonded and we would prefer to adopt them together, but will adopt them separately. We are offering an adoption special for the pair. They are so sweet.

CHARLIE

short hair black and white neutered one year old male cat Charlie is an active and playful.. No young children. See Charlie at the McHenry Petsmart.

CARTER

neutered short hair black 5 month old male kitten Carter is super social & affectionate. Loves other animals and people, the ideal kitten. See Carter at the Algonquin Petsmart.

815-385-0005

www.aheartforanimals.org BUSSE Prince is a great guy who was rescued in the nick of time from a kill shelter. Come visit him at our Pet Adoption Center in Crystal Lake.

Black/White Senior Male This wonderful boy was found emaciated & wandering in Marengo. He was nursed back to health & awaits his forever home!

On Angels’ Wings Pet Rescue Crystal Lake

www.OnAngelsWingsinc.org • 224-688-9739

LUCY

Black Kelpie/ Shepherd mix Adult Female Sweet girl is crate trained, housebroken, & knows 'sit'. She prefers people to other animals & is happy being active OR lazy!

A.S.A.P., Marengo www.ASAP-USA.org 815-568-2921

spayed 1-2 year old short hair all black female cat She is outgoing, talkative and very playful. See Suzie at the McHenry Petsmart.

SUZIE

Animal Outreach Society www.animaloutreachsociety.org

847-868-2432 PRINCE

Catahoula Leopard Dog/Plott Hound Young Buddy is about one year old and great with everybody he meets. He has very long legs, is a quiet boy and very mindful. Buddy is a quick learner and once shown what is expected will be your perfect family pet.

BUDDY

815-728-1462

M,T,Th,F 10:30-4:30; W 10:30-6:30; Sat 10-2:30

& TRISTAN

Black/Grey - Babies We have some beautiful kittens, male and female. Very affectionate and loving kittens. Come see them at the Petco in McHenry this Saturday from 11:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.

KITTENS

P.O. Box 58 • Ringwood, IL 60072 e-mail: pincare@earthlink.net

McHenry County Department of Health Animal Control Division 100 N. Virginia St. • Crystal Lake, IL 60014 Adoption Hours:

TEDDY

ALGONQUIN - 1435 W. Algonquin Rd (847) 658-7738 GILBERTS - 133 E. Higgins Road (847) 836-7738 www.fourlegspets.com

See our cats daily at the Petsmarts in McHenry and Algonquin

M.T.

Brown Tiger Male Good Samaritan found M.T. wandering around; we soon realized he is blind. This friendly boy is looking for a special family!

Meet some of our kitties daily at Pet Vet in Huntley (8-6 M-F, 8-12 Sat)

Advertise your business here for $25.00 per week or $80.00 w/4 week run. Call Asma at 815-526-4459

Golf Rd. (Rt. 58) • Hoffman Estates, IL

800/935-5909

www.motorwerks.com

ANDERSON BMW

360 N. Rte. 31 • Crystal Lake, IL

888/682-4485

www.andersoncars.com

BILL JACOBS BMW

1564 W. Ogden Ave. • Naperville, IL

800/731-5824

AVENUE CHEVROLET

1075 W. Golf Rd. Hoffman Estates, IL

www.avenuechevrolet.com

SPRING HILL FORD

www.infinitihoffman.com

MARTIN CHEVROLET

888/600-8053

866/233-4837

KNAUZ BMW

www.martin-chevy.com

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

815/459-4000

RAY CHEVROLET

39 N. Rte. 12 • Fox Lake, IL

866/561-8676

www.raychevrolet.com

RAYMOND CHEVROLET

118 Route 173 • Antioch, IL

2145 S. Eastwood Dr. • Woodstock, IL

815/338-2780

www.reichertautos.com

Route 31, between Crystal Lake & McHenry

888/794-5502

www.garylangauto.com

REICHERT BUICK

2145 S. Eastwood Dr. • Woodstock, IL

815/338-2780

www.reichertautos.com

AUTO GROUP - GARY LANG CADILLAC Route 31, between Crystal Lake & McHenry

MOTOR WERKS CADILLAC

200 N. Cook St. • Barrington, IL

800/935-5923

www.motorwerks.com

800/628-6087

www.antiochfivestar.com

CRYSTAL LAKE CHRYSLER JEEP DODGE 5404 S. Rt. 31 • Crystal Lake, IL

888/800-6100 www.clcjd.com

FENZEL MOTOR SALES

206 S. State Street • Hampshire, IL

Route 31, between Crystal Lake & McHenry

888/794-5502

www.garylangauto.com

AL PIEMONTE CHEVROLET

770 Dundee Ave. (Rt. 25) • Dundee, IL

800/628-6087

www.TomPeckFord.com

ZIMMERMAN FORD

2525 E. Main Street • St. Charles, IL

630/584-1800

www.zimmermanford.com

105 Rt. 173• Antioch, IL

Route 31, between Crystal Lake & McHenry

888/794-5502

MOTOR WERKS HONDA

Barrington & Dundee Rds. Barrington, IL

800/935-5913

www.motorwerks.com

O’HARE HONDA

River Rd & Oakton, • Des Plaines, IL

888/538-4492

ELGIN HYUNDAI 847/888-8222

881 E. Chicago St. • Elgin, IL

www.elginhyundai.com

KNAUZ HYUNDAI

ANTIOCH CHRYSLER DODGE JEEP 105 Rt. 173 Antioch, IL

800/628-6087

www.antiochfivestar.com

5404 S. Rt. 31 • Crystal Lake, IL

888/800-6100 www.clcjd.com

SUNNYSIDE COMPANY CHRYSLER DODGE Route 120 • McHenry, IL

CRYSTAL LAKE CHRYSLER JEEP DODGE 5404 S. Rt. 31 • Crystal Lake, IL

BULL VALLEY FORD/ MERCURY

www.clcjd.com

800/407-0223

888/800-6100

AUTO GROUP GARY LANG KIA

1107 S Rt. 31 between Crystal Lake and McHenry

www.garylangauto.com

ARLINGTON KIA IN PALATINE

1400 E. Dundee Rd., Palatine, IL

847/202-3900

www.arlingtonkia.com

RAYMOND KIA

119 Route 173 • Antioch, IL

224/603-8611

300 East Ogden Ave. • Hinsdale, IL

888/204-0042

www.billjacobs.com

LAND ROVER LAKE BLUFF

375 Skokie Valley Hwy • Lake Bluff, IL

847/604-8100

www.knauzhyundai.com

1051 W. Higgins • Hoffman Estates, IL

847/234-2800

O’HARE HYUNDAI

River Rd & Oakton, • Des Plaines, IL

LAND ROVER HOFFMAN ESTATES www.billjacobs.com

ROSEN HYUNDAI

BUSS FORD LINCOLN MERCURY

866/469-0114

815/385-2000

www.rosenrosenrosen.com

111 S. Rte 31 • McHenry, IL

ANDERSON MAZDA

1460 S. Eastwood Dr. • Woodstock, IL

800/407-0223

www.bullvalleyford.com

Barrington & Dundee Rds. Barrington, IL

800/935-5913

www.motorwerks.com

AUTO GROUP GARY LANG SUBARU

Route 31, between Crystal Lake & McHenry

888/794-5502

www.garylangauto.com

815/385-2000

RAY SUZUKI

23 N. Route 12 • Fox Lake

BILL JACOBS MINI

1564 W. Ogden Ave. • Naperville, IL

888/446-8743 847/587-3300

www.raysuzuki.com

800/295-0166

www.billjacobs.com

KNAUZ MINI

409A Skokie Valley Hwy • Lake Bluff, IL

847/604-5050

www.Knauz-mini.com

ELGIN TOYOTA 1200 E. Chicago St. Elgin, IL

847/741-2100

www.elgintoyota.com

AUTO GROUP GARY LANG MITSUBISHI Route 31, between Crystal Lake & McHenry

1035 S. Rt. 31, One Mile South of Rt. 14 Crystal Lake, IL

815/459-7100 or 847/658-9050

www.paulytoyota.com

888/794-5502

www.garylangauto.com

ANDERSON VOLKSWAGEN

LIBERTYVILLE MITSUBISHI

360 N. Rt. 31 • Crystal Lake, IL

847/816-6660

www.andersoncars.com

1119 S. Milwaukee Ave.• Libertyville, IL

www.libertyvillemitsubishi.com

888/682-4485

BILL JACOBS VOLKSWAGEN 2211 Aurora Avenue • Naperville, IL

800/720-7036

MOTOR WERKS PORCHE

www.billjacobs.com

Barrington & Dundee Rds., Barrington, IL

www.oharehyundai.com

771 S. Randall Rd. • Algonquin, IL

1035 S. Rt. 31, One Mile South of Rt. 14 Crystal Lake, IL

815/459-7100 or 847/658-9050

111 S. Rte 31 • McHenry, IL

800/731-5760

888/553-9036

CALL FOR THE LOWEST PRICES IN CHICAGOLAND

PAULY SCION

PAULY TOYOTA

www.knauzlandrover.com

MOTOR WERKS INFINITI BULL VALLEY FORD/ MERCURY

BUSS FORD LINCOLN MERCURY

www.raymondkia.com

775 Rockland Road Routes 41 & 176 in the Knauz Autopark • Lake Bluff, IL Experience the best…Since 1934

www.sunnysidecompany.com

www.piemontegroup.com

1460 S. Eastwood Dr. • Woodstock, IL

866/480-9527

815/385-7220

847/426-2000

www.Knauzcontinentalauto.com

800/935-5393

www.antiochfivestar.com

BILL JACOBS LAND ROVER HINSDALE

SUNNYSIDE COMPANY CHRYSLER DODGE www.sunnysidecompany.com

409 Skokie Valley Hwy • Lake Bluff, IL

www.oharehonda.com

815/385-7220

Route 120 • McHenry, IL

KNAUZ CONTINENTAL AUTOS

www.bullvalleyford.com

AUTO GROUP - GARY LANG GMC

847/683-2424

CRYSTAL LAKE CHRYSLER JEEP DODGE AUTO GROUP - GARY LANG CHEVROLET

847/669-6060

13900 Auto Mall Dr. • Huntley, IL

ANTIOCH CHRYSLER DODGE JEEP

888/794-5502

www.garylangauto.com

TOM PECK FORD

847/234-1700

www.garylangauto.com

105 Rt. 173 • Antioch, IL

AUTO GROUP - GARY LANG BUICK

www.motorwerks.com

ANTIOCH CHRYSLER DODGE JEEP

www.raymondchevrolet.com

REICHERT CHEVROLET

200 N. Cook Street • Barrington, IL

877/226-5099

www.st-charles.mercedesdealer.com

www.springhillford.com

MOTOR WERKS SAAB

MERCEDES-BENZ OF ST. CHARLES

225 N. Randall Road • St. Charles, IL

888/280-6844

800 Dundee Ave. • East Dundee, IL

847/395-3600

800/935-5909

www.motorwerks.com

INFINITI OF HOFFMAN ESTATES

www.bussford.com

5220 W. Northwest Highway Crystal Lake, IL

847/604-5000

111 S. Rte 31 • McHenry, IL

815/385-2000

www.billjacobs.com 407 Skokie Valley Hwy. • Lake Bluff, IL

BUSS FORD

1998 W. McKee at Randall Road Batavia, IL

360 N. Rt. 31 • Crystal Lake, IL

888/682-4485

www.andersoncars.com

BIGGERS MAZDA

1320 East Chicago Street The Mazda Machine on Rt. 19, Elgin, IL

847/628-6000

800/935-5913

www.motorwerks.com

MOTOR WERKS CERTIFIED OUTLET Late Model Luxury Pre-Owned Vehicles

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 In the Matter of the Estate of EUGENIA LEGO, Deceased Case No. 12 PR 354 CLAIM NOTICE Notice is given of the death of EUGENIA LEGO of CARY, IL Letters of Office were issued on 12/20/2012 to Representative PAMELA LEGO, 720 SAVANNAH LN, CRYSTAL LAKE, IL 601144575 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. 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 (Published in the Northwest Herald January 5, 12 & 19, 2013)

PUBLIC NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE

NOTICE OF INTENT TO DISPOSE OF ABANDONED AND UNCLAIMED PROPERTY. 8405 S ROUTE 31 CORP DBA ROUTE 31 24 HOUR SELF STORAGE, 8405 ROUTE 31, CARY, IL 60013 WILL BE SOLD ON JANUARY 27, 2013 AT 10:30 AM THE FOLLOWING PROPERTY: UNIT A114 PROPERTY OF CUZ CUISINE

UNIT D205 PROPERTY OF TIM KERR UNIT D211 PROPERTY OF JEFFERY BRAUER UNIT D216 PROPERTY OF DIANE MADSEN UNIT D217 PROPERTY OF CHRISTOPHER WOLF (Published in the Northwest Herald on January 12 & January 19, 2013).

PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned intends to sell the personal property described below to enforce a lien imposed on said property under the Illinois Self-Service Storage Facility Act 95. The undersigned will sell at public sale by competitive bidding on February 9th (Please check in at 4114 IL Rt. 176 by no later than 9:10) at 9:20 a.m. on the premises where said property has been stored and which is located at Liberty Self Storage, 4114 IL Rt. 176 and immediately after that sale we will hold another sale at Liberty Self Storage West, 4507 Ray St., Crystal Lake, IL, County of McHenry, State of Illinois, the following: Chris Liebeck Unit #77 10 x 30 Lisa DeCesare Unit #E-28 5 x 10 Peter Narrish Unit #G-34, 35, & 36 all 5 x 10 Sheri Knowles Unit # G-33 5 x 10 Kody Kit Unit #C-7 10 x 20 Liberty Self Storage Unit #D-27 10 x 20 Crystal Hollaway Unit #L-40 10 x 10 Purchases must be paid for at the time of purchase in cash only. All purchased items sold as is where is and must be removed at the time of sale. Sale subject to cancellation in the event of settlement between owner and obligated party. (Published in the Northwest Herald January 19, 26, 2013)

UNIT A115 PROPERTY OF CUZ CUISINE UNIT C111 PROPERTY OF DAVE GALLAGHER UNIT C113 PROPERTY OF G23 DEVELOPEMENT UNIT C218 PROPERTY OF MARK SLIWINSKI

Call to advertise 800-589-8237 Don't See What You're Looking For Today? Check Back Tomorrow! Never The Same Paper Twice! Northwest Classified 800-589-8237 www.nwherald.com

The Illinois Classified Advertising Network (ICAN) provides advertising of a national appeal. To advertise in this section, please call ICAN directly at 217-241-1700. We recommend discretion when responding. Please refer questions & comments directly to ICAN.

READER NOTICE:

As a service to you -- our valued readers -- we offer the following information. This newspaper will never knowingly accept any advertisement that is illegal or considered fraudulent. If you have questions or doubts about any ads on these pages, we advise that before responding or sending money ahead of time, you check with the local Attorney General's Consumer Fraud Line and/or the Better Business Bureau. They may have records or documented complaints that will serve to caution you about doing business with these advertisers. Also be advised that some phone numbers published in these ads may require an extra charge. In all cases of questionable value, such as promises or guaranteed income from work-at-home programs, money to loan, etc., if it sounds too good to be true -- it may in fact be exactly that. Again, contact the local and/or national agency that may be able to provide you with some background on these companies. This newspaper cannot be held responsible for any negative consequences that occur as a result of you doing business with these advertisers.

1994 Lincoln Continental. Decent work car. Needs minor exhaust work. 150K mi. $1400 OBO. Cash only. 847-922-9849 61K miles, no rust. Inside and outside excellent! Great tires, etc. $4,850/obo 815-790-6077

1999 Lincoln Continental 60041 $2300 OBO 170K runs good, clean, well maintained 847-217-4651

2002 Chevy Cavalier

2 door coupe, 1 owner, auto. Sunroof, great heat, gas saver! Warranty available, $3,450/obo. 815-344-9440 2003 Ford Focus 60012 $3900 New tires, struts. Reliable Car. 815-351-7727

2005 Dodge Neon ES

Auto, 1 owner, looks and runs great! Warranty available. $3,750/obo. 815-344-9440 2005 Hyundai Accent Silver 4 door, automatic, power window and lock, ac, 71,000 miles, great cond. $5,200. obo 815-477-4265 2007 Toyota Solara 60012 $10300 71k Pearl White Excellent condition8154798116

2001 Jeep Grand Cherokee. Gold. Mint condition. Loaded. Leather, Sun Roof, etc. 130K mi. $4000 firm. 815-354-0198

1966 CHEVY C20 ¾ TON

Engine 283 V8 Granny's in the Tranny! $4500. 815-509-0966 - Call after 6pm

1998 Dodge Ram 3500 4x4. V10 Must sell. Nice shape! $5500 FIRM 815-560-1760 2003 Chevy Silverado 1500 4x4

121K miles, leather seats. New tires, trailer hitch. All the bells and whistles for that year! Not much to look at but a great runner! $1000/obo. 815-385-5145 ~ 815-344-1188 Follow Northwest Herald on Twitter @nwherald

✦ Tuckpointing ✦ Chimney Repair/Caps ✦ Brick & Stone

Fully Insured Free Estimates

Owner Is Always On Job Site! 847-525-9920

www.dkquality.com

Imperial Drywall & Remodeling

GMs Owner's Manuals

'70's to '90's. Mint collectibles. 5 for $25. 815-459-7485 Tire. Goodyear Viva. 215/70/R15. Brand New $30 815-245-7930 8 to 8

Tires - 4 - Dunlop A/T

Size P245/70R16 Good Trend $240 815-338-8253 Truck Hood – Chevy – Fits 73 to 80 $50. 815-219-3882

A-1 AUTO

www.HuskieWire.com

★★ ★★ ★★★ ★★ ★★

I BUY CARS, TRUCKS, VANS & SUVs 1990 & Newer

1990 Polaris Indy 500. 2700 mi. Reverse. Good condition. $800. 847-639-3687 Snowmobile Trailer. Triton. Aluminum Cap. 3 place. Tilt bed. Excellent condition. $1200. 847-639-3687

Will BUY UR USED

Pictures increase attention to your ad!

The Northwest Herald reaches 137,000 adult readers in print every week, and 259,000 unique visitors on NWHerald.com every month.

Will pay extra for Honda, Toyota & Nissan

CAR, TRUCK, SUV,

MOST CASH WILL BEAT ANY QUOTE GIVEN!! $400 - $2000 NO TITLE...... NO PROBLEM 815-575-5153

Call to advertise in the At Your Service directory.

or

★★ ★★ ★★★ ★★ ★★

WANTED: OLD CARS & TRUCKS FOR

We are At Your Service!

Heated cabin, cleated track, stereo, reverse, $13,000/firm/both. 815-558-6924

Will beat anyone's price by $300.

815-814-1224

All NIU Sports... All The Time

Snowmobiles Trail Roamers (2) NEW

815-814-1964 Be sure to include a photo of your pet, home, auto or merchandise.

Call to advertise 800-589-8237 Or place your ad online nwherald.com/placeanad

In the Northwest Herald classified everyday and on PlanitNorthwest Local Business Directory 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.

planitnorthwest.com/business

800-589-8237

classified@shawsuburban.com

$CASH$

We pay and can Tow it away!

Call us today: 815-338-2800

ROUTE 14 AUTO PARTS

McHenryCountySports.com is McHenry County Sports

Share It With Everyone by Placing a HAPPY AD!

Goose Neck Implement Trailer 14,000 lb. 25 ft. New wiring, brakes, break-away. Exc shape. $3000/FIRM. 815-560-1760 Utility Trailer. 7'x16' Electric brakes. Dual axel. 12” sides. Little use. $1950. 815-943-7790

You Want It? We've Got It!

2000 Ford Windstar SE

1 owner, loaded, remote starter. Backup sensors, dual heat & a/c. Looks & runs great! Warranty avail. $2,850/obo. 815-344-9440

Northwest Herald Classified 800-589-8237 www.nwherald.com

Eddie's Tree Service

OTTO'S FIREWOOD

SEASONED FIREWOOD

Mixed Oak, Maple Cherry $105

Also Available Oak Cherry Hickory Birch

✦ Home Repair ✦ Hang, Tape & Repair ✦ Framing & Insulation ✦ Basement Finishing ✦ Our Specialty: Electrical & Plumbing Repairs

(4) Tires & Wheel for Ford Explorer 22570R 15” w/90% tread, flotted aluminum, $325 815-315-3047

Having a Birthday, Anniversary, Graduation or Event Coming Up? Excellent condition! Short bed reg cab, good runner, Line-X bed liner. $7000/obo 815-388-4293

Face Cord of Mixed - $90

D. K. QUALITY TUCKPOINTING & MASONRY

1 owner, 7 passenger, front rear heat and a/c, warranty avail. $3,850/obo. 815-344-9440

1996 Buick LeSabre

1997 GMC Sierra 1500. 4x4, Ext Cab, Short Bed, New exhaust. Good brakes & tires. A/C. Excellent cond. $4500. 815-568-1989

1994 Chrysler Town & Country

2005 KIA Sedona LX

Saturday, January 19, 2013 • Page E5

Classified has GREAT VARIETY!

800-589-8237

SEASONED 4x8 FC

FREE DELIVERY 815-943-6103

Pick Up or Delivered

4617 S. Route 47 Woodstock, Il

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815-735-0779

Jim Verhaeghe

Strictly Bathrooms, Inc.

SEASONED FIREWOOD

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$125/FC $100/FC

✦ Complete Bathroom Remodeling

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847-334-5740 847-334-5730

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www. strictlybathroomsinc.com

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in the back of Classified and on PlanitNorthwest.com/business for a list of Local Professionals.

Call the automated phone profiling system or use our convenient online form today so our professionals can get started matching you with employers that are hiring - NOW!

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RECRUIT LOCAL! Target your recruitment message close to home or reach our entire area. For more information, call 800-589-8237 or email: helpwanted@ shawsuburban.com


Page E6• Saturday, January 19, 2013

CLASSIFIED

Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

Start finding better today. Visit NWHerald.com/jobs or call 1-800-589-8237


CLASSIFIED

Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

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HOROSCOPE

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CROSSWORD

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SUDOKU

Saturday, January 19, 2013 • Page E7

TODAY - Favors you do for others in the year ahead are likely to be paid back quite promptly and in great measure. If you try your best to be one of the good guys, you’ll end up being a huge winner in life. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -- Your associates might be inclined to hold back some good ideas if they sense you aren’t likely to appreciate them. Don’t be a know-it-all. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) -- A matter you’ve been anxious to finalize can be concluded, but not necessarily to the satisfaction of everyone involved. Some might feel there is still a leak in the bucket. PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) -- In order for you to negotiate an important matter, some kind of compromise might have to be reached. If you take action, it won’t happen. ARIES (March 21-April 19) -- Two strong factors could affect your chances of success: One is a strong motivation for victory, and the other is a sense of adventure. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) -- At times, it seems like nothing ever changes. Those who are usually supportive of you will remain so, while those who tend to oppose you will be antagonistic once again. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) -- Your chances for success look pretty good, provided that what needs to be done is finished quickly and with a nominal amount of effort. If more is required, you might not hold up. CANCER (June 21-July 22) -- If you handle business matters well, chance will play a very small role in how your affairs play out. Be methodical and avoid taking foolish risks. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -- Provided you operate along traditional lines, the probabilities of generating favorable returns are pretty good. Should you be inclined to test out something new, everything becomes iffy. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -- In order to maintain good relationships with others today, you must be willing to give them the same freedom to operate independently as you want for yourself. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) -- Unexpected changes will work out to your ultimate advantage, provided you are flexible enough to accept them. Resist any urge to adjust events and control things. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) -- Because you’ll automatically instill harmony and a spirit of cooperation, you’ll be a welcome addition to any group. Good things happen when everyone gets along. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) -- You’ll have a great opportunity to accomplish much more than you originally anticipated, mostly because your industriousness will be challenged, and will rise to the occasion.

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CBS 2 News at (:35) Criminal Minds A series of (:35) CSI: Miami “In the Wind” Eric (:35) Cold Case CBS 2 News at CBS Evening Entertainment Tonight (N) ’ (CC) NCIS “Phoenix” The team investi- Hawaii Five-0 “Lekio” The death of a 48 Hours (N) ’ (CC) 10PM (N) (CC) murders in Atlanta. (CC) (DVS) News (N) (CC) gates a Marine’s murder. ’ talk-radio host. ’ (CC) Delko returns. ’ (CC) “Forensics” ’ (:32) 24/7: NBC 5 Chicago NBC Nightly Deception Edward comes under Chicago Fire “Mon Amour” Two Law & Order: Special Victims Unit NBC 5 Chicago (:29) Saturday Night Live Host Jennifer Lawrence; (12:02) 1st Access Hollywood (N) ’ (CC) % WMAQ News at 5:00 News at 10:00 The Lumineers perform. (N) ’ (CC) Secrets of the News (N) (CC) Look ’ suspicion. ’ (CC) (DVS) teens are trapped in a vehicle. ’ “Dreams Deferred” ’ Windy City 190 North Weekend ABC7 ABC World Paid Program Wheel of Private Practice Genetically design20/20 ’ (CC) Movie: ››› “Blades of Glory” (2007, Comedy) Will Ferrell, Jon Heder, ABC7 News ’ (CC) _ WLS Weekend Fortune (CC) News ’ (CC) News ing babies. ’ (CC) Will Arnett. Rival male skaters compete as a pair. ’ (CC) Living Healthy Chicago’s Best Two and a Half Bulls Eye (N) ’ NBA Basketball: Memphis Grizzlies at Chicago Bulls. From the United Center in Chicago. WGN News at 30 Rock “The Two and a Half Movie: ›› “Charlotte Gray” (2001) Cate Blanchett, Billy Crudup. A ) WGN Chicago (CC) Nine (N) (CC) Ones” ’ (CC) Men ’ (CC) Scotswoman goes under cover as a courier in WWII France. (Live) (CC) Men ’ (CC) (N) ’ (Live) (CC) ’ (CC) Rick Steves’ This Old House Ask This Old McLaughlin As Time Goes Keeping Up Doc Martin “Do Not Disturb” Pauline (8:50) Death in Paradise A voodoo Masterpiece Classic The fate of Movie: ›››› “Platoon” (1986, War) Tom Berenger, Willem Dafoe. A + WTTW Europe (CC) By (CC) Appearances decides to confront Martin. ’ priestess’ reading. (N) soldier embarks on a yearlong tour of duty in Vietnam. House ’ (CC) Group (N) ’ (CC) Downton Abbey. ’ (CC) Bonsai People -- The Vision of Afropop:The Ultimate Cultural Global Spirit Karen Armstrong; Garrow’s Law A man is accused of The Café “Out Lead Balloon Independent Lens “Donor Unknown” JoEllen Marsh Autoline ’ (CC) Antiques Roadshow “Orlando, 4 WYCC Florida” Rare photo. (CC) With the Old” “5000 Pounds” searches for her father. ’ (CC) MuhammadYunus ’ (CC) Exchange ’ (CC) Robert Thurman. ’ (CC) rape. ’ (CC) Pro Wrestling WI MMA Today Cheaters (N) ’ (CC) Unsealed: Alien Unsealed: ConAre We There That ’70s Show Futurama ’ Family Guy ’ Movie: ›› “The Human Stain” (2003, Drama) Anthony Hopkins, Nicole Ring of Honor Wrestling (CC) 8 WCGV Yet? Report (CC) (CC) Kidman. A professor with a secret causes a racial controversy. Files ’ (CC) spiracy Files ’ ’ (CC) American Dad American Dad Cheaters (N) ’ (CC) American Dad American Dad Family Guy ’ American Dad Futurama ’ That ’70s Show That ’70s Show Seinfeld “The Family Guy ’ Futurama ’ Futurama ’ Futurama ’ : WCIU “100 A.D.” “Garage Sale” Money” (CC) (CC) (CC) (CC) (CC) (CC) (CC) ’ (CC) ’ (CC) ’ (CC) ’ (CC) ’ (CC) Love-Raymond The Office ’ Cops (N) (CC) Cops (CC) Fox Chicago News The Following Cops ’ (CC) Cops ’ (CC) Paid Program MasterChef “Winner Chosen” Kitchen Nightmares ’ (PA) @ WFLD TMZ (N) ’ (CC) Garden Smart Antiques Antiques Roadshow “Corpus Riding Rails in China ’ (Part 1 Movie: ›››› “Top Hat” (1935, Musical) Fred Astaire, Ginger Rogers. A A Ripple of Hope Robert Kennedy’s College Hockey: Miami (Ohio) at Wisconsin. (N Same-day Tape) D WMVT Roadshow April 4, 1968, speech. (CC) Christi” Vintage flash art. (CC) of 2) (CC) woman mistakes the identity of a dancer romancing her. ’ (CC) House “The Right Stuff” (CC) Psych “Rob-A-Bye Baby” (CC) Psych “Bounty Hunters!” (CC) House “Human Error” ’ (CC) House “Alone” ’ (CC) Psych ’ (CC) Psych ’ (CC) F WCPX House “The Jerk” ’ (CC) Paid Program Two/Half Men Big Bang News Big Bang The Following Bones ’ (CC) Cops (N) (CC) Cops (CC) MasterChef “Winner Chosen” Kitchen Nightmares ’ (PA) Law & Order ’ G WQRF How I Met Crime Stoppers Hollyscoop (N) EP Daily (N) ’ EP Daily (N) ’ Bones Remains emit a green glow. Bones A competitive eater turns up Burn Notice “Comrades” Michael Burn Notice Fiona and Sam protect The Closer “The Other Woman” The Closer “Borderline” Brenda R WPWR Case Files helps a Russian woman. (CC) a lawyer. (CC) Brenda must testify. (CC) loses her driving privileges. (CC) (CC) (CC) ’ (CC) ’ (CC) dead. ’ (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 Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage: NY Storage: NY Storage: NY Storage: NY Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars (A&E) Barter Kings (CC) CSI: Miami (4:30) Movie ›› “Predator 2” (1990, Science Fiction) Danny Glover. Movie ›› “Hulk” (2003, Fantasy) Eric Bana, Jennifer Connelly, Sam Elliott. Premiere. Scientist Bruce Banner Movie ››› “Predator” (1987, Action) Arnold Schwarzenegger, Carl Weathers, Jesse (AMC) Police officers lock horns with a bloodthirsty alien.‘R’ (CC) transforms into a powerful brute.‘PG-13’ Ventura. A team is stalked by an intergalactic trophy hunter.‘R’ (CC) “Crowned” ’ Pit Boss “Racetrack Rescue” (N) Pit Bulls and Parolees (N) ’ (ANPL) To Be Announced Too Cute! ’ (CC) Too Cute! ’ (CC) Pit Boss “Racetrack Rescue” ’ Pit Bulls and Parolees ’ Too Cute! ’ (CC) The Situation Room Memo to the President Piers Morgan Tonight Piers Morgan Tonight Memo to the President Piers Morgan Tonight CNN Newsroom CNN Newsroom (N) (CNN) Amy Schumer (COM) (3:00) Sex Drive Movie: ››› “Get Him to the Greek” (2010, Comedy) Jonah Hill, Russell Brand. (CC) Movie: ››› “Wedding Crashers” (2005, Comedy) Owen Wilson, Vince Vaughn. (CC) Movie: › “Joe Dirt” (2001) David Spade, Dennis Miller. (CC) Women’s College Basketball Football Weekly TBA To Be Announced TBA SportsNet Cent SportsNet Cent Fight Sports SportsNet Cent TBA (CSN) Moonshiners “Troubled Waters” Moonshiners “Adios, Mr. Still” ’ Moonshiners ’ (CC) Moonshiners “Troubled Waters” (DISC) Bering Sea Gold ’ (CC) Moonshiners ’ (CC) Moonshiners “Adios, Mr. Still” ’ Moonshiners ’ (CC) (:15) Phineas Dog With a Blog Austin & Ally ’ Jessie ’ (CC) Shake It Up! ’ Shake It Up! Good Luck Good Luck Shake It Up! ’ Good Luck Movie ›› “Beverly Hills Chihuahua” (2008) Piper (:40) Movie “Beverly Hills Chihuahua 2” (2011, (DISN) Charlie (CC) and Ferb (CC) ’ (CC) “Judge It Up” (CC) (CC) (CC) Charlie ’ Charlie ’ Comedy) Voices of Odette Yustman. ’ ‘G’ (CC) Perabo. A pampered pooch gets lost in Mexico. ’ (3:20) Movie: (:20) Movie: ›› “Spaceballs” (1987, Comedy) Mel Movie: ›› “Stargate” (1994) Kurt Russell, James Spader. An artifact (:05) Movie: ›› “Van Helsing” (2004, Fantasy) Hugh Jackman, Kate Beckinsale, Richard (:20) Movie: ›› “Below” (2002, Suspense) Matthew (ENC) “Innerspace” Brooks, John Candy, Rick Moranis. ’ (CC) found in Egypt is the doorway to another world. ’ (CC) Roxburgh. A monster-hunter battles creatures in Transylvania. ’ (CC) Davis, Bruce Greenwood. ’ (CC) College GameDay (N) (CC) College Basketball: Gonzaga at Butler. (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC) SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC) SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC) (ESPN) College Basketball: Ohio State at Michigan State. (N) (Live) 2013 Australian Open Tennis: Round of 16. From Melbourne, Australia. (N) (Live) (CC) (ESPN2) College Football: NFLPA Bowl: American vs. National. From Carson, Calif. (N) (Live) Fresh Prince (FAM) Movie: ››› “Aladdin” (1992, Fantasy) Voices of Scott Weinger. Movie: ›››› “Cinderella” (1950) Premiere. (:45) Movie: ››› “Alice in Wonderland” (1951, Fantasy) Ed Wynn Movie: ›› “Legend of the Guardians:The Owls of Ga’Hoole” America’s News Headquarters FOX Report (N) Journal Editorial FOX News Justice With Judge Jeanine Huckabee (N) Justice With Judge Jeanine (N) Geraldo at Large ’ (CC) (FNC) Geraldo at Large ’ (CC) Restaurant: Impossible Restaurant: Impossible Restaurant: Impossible Restaurant: Impossible Iron Chef America Restaurant: Impossible Restaurant: Impossible (FOOD) Rachael vs. Guy Cook-Off Two/Half Men Movie: ›› “Iron Man 2” (2010, Action) Robert Downey Jr., Gwyneth Paltrow. Anger Anger Totally Biased Archer Totally Biased UFC on FX 7: Belfort vs. Bisping (N) (Live) Legit “Pilot” (FX) The Golden (4:00) Movie: › “Uncorked” (2010) Movie:“A Taste of Romance” (2011) Teri Polo, Bailee Madison. A grudge Movie:“The Sweeter Side of Life” (2013) Kathryn Morris. Premiere. A Movie:“The Sweeter Side of Life” (2013) Kathryn Morris, James Best. A The Golden (HALL) between neighboring restaurateurs turns to love. (CC) jilted woman takes a job at her father’s bakery. (CC) jilted woman takes a job at her father’s bakery. (CC) Julie Benz. (CC) Girls ’ (CC) Girls ’ (CC) House Hunters Hunters Int’l House Hunters Hunters Int’l House Hunters Hunters Int’l House Hunters Renovation (CC) Love It or List It (CC) Love It or List It “Gallagher” Love It or List It “Gallagher” (HGTV) House Hunters Hunters Int’l Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars (:31) Pawn Stars (:02) Pawn Stars (:32) Pawn Stars (:01) Pawn Stars (:31) Pawn Stars Pawn Stars (:31) Pawn Stars (HIST) Pawn Stars Beyond the Headlines: Prosecut- (:01) Double (:31) Double (:02) Movie:“Prosecuting Casey Anthony” (2013) Rob Lowe. Casey Movie:“Taken Back: Finding Haley” (2012, Suspense) Moira Kelly, Movie:“Prosecuting Casey Anthony” (2013) Rob Lowe. Premiere. (LIFE) David Cubitt. A woman finds her abducted daughter. (CC) ing Casey Anthony (N) (CC) Divas (CC) Divas (CC) Anthony stands trial in the murder of her 2-year-old daughter. Casey Anthony stands trial in the murder of her 2-year-old daughter. Caught on Camera Lockup: Santa Rosa Lockup: Santa Rosa Lockup Lockup Lockup Lockup (MSNBC) Caught on Camera “Invasion!” (MTV) True Life ’ True Life ’ True Life ’ BUCKWILD ’ BUCKWILD ’ Washington Heights ’ Movie: ›› “Get Rich or Die Tryin’” (2005, Crime Drama) ’ George Lopez George Lopez (NICK) (4:30) Movie:“Best Player” (2011) Victorious ’ Victorious ’ Victorious (N) Marvin Marvin Supah Ninjas Supah Ninjas The Nanny ’ The Nanny ’ Friends (CC) (:33) Friends ’ (:06) Friends “The Last One” ’ (:09) Movie: ››› “First Blood” (1982) Sylvester Stallone, Richard (:15) Movie: ›› “Rambo: First Blood Part II” (1985, Action) Sylvester Stallone, Richard (:20) Movie: ›› “Rambo III” (1988, Action) Sylvester Stallone, Richard Crenna, Marc de (11:52) The Joe Schmo Show “The (SPIKE) Bounty Begins” ’ (CC) Crenna. A Vietnam vet is hounded by a brutal small-town sheriff. ’ Crenna, Julia Nickson. Ex-Green Beret goes on Vietnam mission. ’ Jonge. Loner Rambo rescues mentor from Soviets in Afghanistan. ’ Movie:“Tasmanian Devils” (2013, Suspense) Danica McKellar, Apolo Ohno, Kenneth Mitchell. Premiere. Monstrous Tasmanian devils terrorize a Movie:“Chupacabra: Dark Seas” (4:00) Movie: ›› “Sand Serpents” Movie: ›› “Ice Road Terror” (2011, Science Fiction) Brea Grant, Ty (SYFY) group of sky divers. (2005, Horror) Giancarlo Esposito. (2009) Jason Gedrick. Olsson. A prehistoric creature pursues two truckers in Alaska. (4:00) Movie: ››› “Quo Vadis” (1951) Robert Taylor, Deborah Kerr. A Movie: ››› “Lolita” (1962, Comedy-Drama) James Mason, Shelley Winters, Sue Lyon. A (:45) Movie: ››› “The Big Knife” (1955) Jack Palance, Ida Lupino. A (:45) Movie: ›› “The Chapman Report” (1962, (TCM) Roman officer is persecuted for loving a Christian. (CC) middle-aged professor becomes smitten with a 12-year-old. (CC) (DVS) Hollywood mogul bullies a star to renew his studio contract. (CC) Drama) Efrem Zimbalist Jr., Jane Fonda. Untold Stories of the E.R. (CC) Untold Stories of the E.R. (CC) Dr. G: Caylee Anthony Case (TLC) Hoarding: Buried Alive ’ (CC) Untold Stories of the E.R. (CC) Untold Stories of the E.R. (CC) Untold Stories of the E.R. (CC) Dr. G: Caylee Anthony Case “Terminator 3: Machines” (:45) The Island (TNT) Movie: ›› “Terminator Salvation” (2009, Science Fiction) Christian Bale. (CC) (DVS) Movie: ›› “The Book of Eli” (2010) Denzel Washington, Gary Oldman. (CC) (DVS) Movie: › “Jonah Hex” (2010, Action) Josh Brolin. Cosby Show Cosby Show Cosby Show Cosby Show Cosby Show Cosby Show Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond King of Queens King of Queens King of Queens King of Queens Hap. Divorced (TVL) House “House vs. God” House takes NCIS “Requiem” A friend of Gibbs’ NCIS “Collateral Damage” Gibbs NCIS “Borderland” Investigating a NCIS “Patriot Down” Gibbs investi- NCIS “Rule Fifty-One” A Mexican Movie: ›› “Crank” (2006, Action) Jason Statham, Amy Smart. A (USA) on a teenage faith healer. second-guesses himself. (CC) drug cartel seeks revenge. (CC) poisoned man scurries to find an antidote within the hour. (CC) daughter. ’ (CC) Marine’s murder. ’ (CC) gates a colleague’s murder. ’ Making Right Making Mr. Right ’ Best Week Ever Black Ink Crew ’ Best Week Ever Champs of Cute (VH1) Black Ink Crew “Oh S...” ’ Love & Hip Hop ’ Mob Wives “Bad Boys” ’ (CC) Making Mr. Right ’ Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Cougar Town King of the Nerds Wedding Band Our Family Wedding Band (N) (WTBS) King of Queens Family Guy ’ Family Guy ’ Family Guy ’ Big Bang 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 (:45) Boxing: Mikey Garcia vs. Orlando Salido, Featherweights. Mikey Garcia takes on Orlando Salido in a 12- (:35) Movie › “This Means War” (2012, Action) Movie ››› “Rise of the Planet of the Apes” (2011) James Franco. A Movie › “This Means War” (2012, Action) Reese (HBO) medical experiment results in a superintelligent chimp. (CC) Reese Witherspoon, Chris Pine. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) Witherspoon, Chris Pine. Premiere. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) round featherweight title bout from New York. (N) ’ (Live) (CC) (:10) Banshee “The Rave” Lucas (12:05) Movie “Sexy Assassins” (4:30) Movie ›› “Varsity Blues” (:15) Movie ›› “Tower Heist” (2011) Ben Stiller. Condo employees plot Banshee “The Rave” Lucas orches- Movie ›› “Fast Five” (2011, Action) Vin Diesel. Dom Toretto and (MAX) trates a raid on a rave. (CC) (1999) James Van Der Beek.‘R’ orchestrates a raid on a rave. ’ (2012) Justine Joli. ’ ‘NR’ (CC) company ramp up the action in Brazil. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) revenge against a Wall Street swindler. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) Untold History- 60 Minutes Sports (6:50) Movie ›› “Real Steel” (2011, Action) Hugh Jackman. A boxing Movie ››› “Our Idiot Brother” (2011, Comedy) Paul Movie ››› “50/50” (2011, Comedy-Drama) Joseph (12:15) Shameless “El Gran Canon” (SHOW) United ’ (CC) promoter and his son build a robot fighter. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) Rudd, Elizabeth Banks. ’ ‘R’ (CC) Gordon-Levitt, Seth Rogen. ’ ‘R’ (CC) “The Howling: (4:15) Movie ›› “Leaves of Movie ››› “Serenity” (2005, Science Fiction) Nathan Fillion, Gina Tor- Movie ›› “BloodRayne:The Third Reich” (2010, Movie “The Howling: Reborn” (2011, Horror) Lindsey (:05) Movie ›› “BloodRayne:The Third Reich” (TMC) Reborn” (2011) Grass” (2009) Edward Norton.‘R’ res. A spaceship crew gets caught in a deadly conflict.‘PG-13’ Shaw, Landon Liboiron. ’ ‘R’ (CC) (2010, Action) Natassia Malthe. ’ ‘NR’ (CC) Action) Natassia Malthe. Premiere. ’ ‘NR’ (CC) ^ WBBM 5:00PM (CC)


CLASSIFIED

Page E8• Saturday, January 19, 2013

Northwest HeraldSaturday, / NWHerald.com January 19, 2013

“Charlie on Vacation” Photo by: Marja

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

Duck Decoys, Ice Fishing Decoys and Shore Birds $50-$350. 847-287-0968

Electric Train - Thomas Kinkade Christmas Express, metal, 20 pcs. NEVER USED, $350. 815-385-1026

Football Rookie Cards

Art of Democracy Scholarship ★★ Contest ★★ National 1st Prize $10,000 Local Prize $500.00 ★★★★★★★★★

Qualifications for Entry into Contest

Tebow, $20, P. Manning $25, B. Sanders $30. And many more! 815-338-4829

Hand Mirrors

2 brass, 1 plastic very old and nice 3/$50. 815-459-7485

Irish Linen Eyelet Tablecloth

and 10 Napkins, white, 110Lx80W, $50. 815-459-3822 LIONEL ALLEGHANY ELECTRIC TRAIN SET "featuring the mighty sound of steam". Model # M61199. Good played with condition. Works, missing crew, 2 additional cars + add'l track. Asking $175.00 OBO 815-482-4531 Ask for Patty

Matchbox Cars (5)

Have to live in or go to McHenry County High School

Models of Yesteryear, made in England in 1970, $150. 630-232-1080 Mercury Dimes – 60 Different – Nice Starter Set In Book $350 obo 847-426-9303

Student Age 14 - 18 Deadline April 2, 2013

Mirror – Large Trifold – Carved Wood Frame $100 815-382-5375

★★★★★★★★★

Sponsored by McHenry Ladies Auxiliary VFW Post # 4600 Contact 815-344-8965 www.ladiesauxvfw.org

Christmas Tree 4ft very nice, full artificial no lights w/stand 815-578-4557 Christmas Tree. Pre-lit. 9 ft. 3 pcs. 815-236-3947

HOSPITAL BED

Almost new with pad. 815-344-5453 Shelves: 2 grey metal. Perfect for garage or basement. You pick up 815-444-9585 Arctic Parka – Flight Type – Style #N3B – Fur Hood – X-Large $35 815-568-8743 8 - 10AM BRIDAL GOWN & VEIL - White beaded strapless top,w/slip,bra, beaded tiara and veil. Size 2-4 New w/ tags. Garment bag & storage box. Must see. Cost $1200, asking price $400. 815-385-1110

Clothing $5 a Bag, Plus Sizes

$30. For All McHenry, Lakeland Park. 815-385-8631 COMMUNION DRESS - beautiful with gorgeous bead work, white, size XL, NEW with tags, never worn. $55. 815-477-9023.

FUR COAT ~ MINK, SZ MED

Excellent condition! $800/obo Silver Fox Jacket, Excellent cond! $600/obo. 815-893-6822 Jacket – Leather – Men's L/T Black (Brand New) ($380 retail) $40 815-568-8036 Mink Jacket. Ladies' Size Sm/Med. $75. 815-455-3555

MINK WRAPS (3)

$35/ea. 815-455-3555

Silver Fox Fur Ladies' Wrap. $90

815-455-3555

WAHL APPLIANCE Reconditioned Appliances Lakemoor 815-385-1872 DRYER ~ ELECTRIC

Kenmore, 4-5 years old. Good condition! $125/obo. 815-322-2254 Power Juicer – Jack LaLanne's – Like New – Only Used Twice – All Items & Manual $40. 224-587-5091 9am-9pm Washer & Dryer-Kenmore white Washer. Whirlpool white gas dryer. Great Cond. $225 ea. Or both for $400. You haul. 815-455-5928 Washer & Dryer. Kenmore. 80 Series. Gas dryer. $100/both. 847-658-4720 WASHER & GAS DRYER. Kenmore 90 Series. $100 for both. 14 yrs. old. 815-923-2138

Washer/Dryer Bases

White wood, bases for front load washers & dryers, 29”x29”x12”. $70/ea. 815-398-9648 Water Cooler. Culligan. Hot and cold faucets. Nice white exterior, with cabinet underneath for cups. Works great. $50. (815)388-2828

Baseball Cards

2008 Topps Heritage, over 600 cards. Asking $50. 815-338-4829

Baseball Cards

2012 Topps Hobby Set & Updated Set, both for $80. 815-338-4829

Picture of Blue Angels

over Niagra Falls, 1967, signed by 7 pilots, $145. 815-578-0212 Radio – Old Floor Model Am-Fm Philco – Not Working - $55 815-356-7879

Sugar & Creamer Pickard

Salt & Pepper, gold floral, $135. 815-459-3822 USMC NCO Sword and wooden Display Shield. $350 815-385-1732

Village Canisters (15) Lenox 1992, Fine Porcelain, Beautiful. 815-385-1026 $350/all.

CRIB ~ 3-IN-ONE

Light wood, mattress incl, converts to toddler/full size bed. $50. 815-307-8149 DIAPERS ~ 100% COTTON New in package, flat 27”x27”. $8/dozen, pre-fold, 14”x20”. $9/dozen. 630-721-0068 Fisher Price swing n glider. Swings,glides, music,six setting,seat reclines with tray, battery or outlet power. Light blue, light green color. Great condition. $50.00 cash. 815-444-7565 High Chair. Graco. $25 847-680-1301 Pack & Play. Graco. $25 847-680-1301 WINTER JACKET - Carters Girls 3-in1 - Size 5/6, super cute navy with colorful polka dots. Inner fleece jacket comes out for wear alone. NEW, never worn $25. 815-477-9023

BIKE - Girls 20 in. Schwinn Stardust, hot pink, basket, streamers, ready to ride, excellent shape, $85, 815-477-9023 Ceiling Tiles – Certainteed – 2'x2' 192sq.ft – New In Box – 40 ft. out of box – 2' Tees – Wall Angles – Main T's. $200obo 815-334-1614 AM Certainteed unfaced insulation batts [R-11] 3 1/2" x 24" x 96" 16 pcs per bundle. 6 bundles. $20 per bundle. 815-382-7187

Framing Nailer

Neumatic, Bostitch with 10 cases of 8D sheating nails. $280/obo or possible trade. 708-363-2004

Insulating Blankets (80)

For covering concrete, 6'x25' $20/ea. 847-514-4989

Wall Hung Toilets – Koehler 3 – 70's – Green – Tan – Lt.Yellow $75 obo 847-426-5995

File Cabinet- Beige Like new. No key. $15.00 815-363-8559 SALON SHAMPOO CHAIR very good condition, asking $50. Call 815-482-4531 ask for Patty STORE DISPLAY SHELVING UNIT Handcrafted, white washed wood, rustic appearance, five deep shelves to display merchandise, cottage, french country, heavy duty, excellent condition, many uses, versatile piece. $95. 815-477-9023

BARREL - Old fashioned candy barrel for store display, versatile for household container, attractive rustic appearance, wooden bound with steel rims. New. $40. 815-477-9023

Antenna Receiver

Apex with remote for local stations. $45. 815-236-9646

Basketball Cards Rookie Cards

Apple iPod Nano. 8GB. Box & all cords. Silver. Loaded w/over 200 Songs $90 OBO. 815-245-7930 8am-8pm

Batman & Robin Little Book The Cheetah Caper 1969 Mint Was 49cents Now $35 815-385-0404 Daytime

Receiver - Sherwood

Bryant, James, Bosh, $15/ea. And many more! 815-338-4829

Classic cream colored vintage Wedgewood Edme queensware. Includes serving pieces-some with rams head, coffee and tea pot, creamer and sugar, dinner and bread and butter plates, teacups and plates, etc. $150 negotiable. Email for complete list and pics rickicarol3@gmail.com Confederate Soldier Framed Prints Set of 3 – 15x21By Wiliam Ludwell Sheppard 1903 Exc. Cond. $300 815-363-9619

Dairy Queen Posters - Vintage

28x22 and 11x14 from1970 & 1980, colorful $10/each, great for framing 815-385-1026

$75 815-578-0212

Surround Sound System – Phillips Dolby – Works Great - $80 Sun.-Fri. Before 9pm Sat. Before 7pm TV – Stereo – 20” Sanyo w/remote Works great/Excellent Color $15 815-568-8036

AB LOUNGE 2

Good Condition, $30/obo. McHenry area. 815-344-3511 Treadmill – Pro-Form 530 Heart Rate Control – Must Pick Up $100 847-800-6954 After 5pm McHenryCountySports.com is McHenry County Sports

1954 IH 300 TRACTOR

Use as is or restore. $3000/obo. Implements (Bhog, Scraper) extra. 815-236-2256 IT'S DRY & CLEAN Oak, Maple, Cherry Mix $90 Face 2 for $170 delivered 815-385-3071

Bar - 6 ft, Pulaski

Solid oak, mirrored front, $350/obo $Bar Stools (3) Pulaski - Solid Oak - Swivel w/Brass Foot Rails ($200ea,new) Asking $150. 815-568-8036

BEAUTIFUL ROCKING CHAIR

Perfect for nursery. Excellent condition! $100. 815-546-1037 BOOKCASES - Set of 3, 30W x 15D x 77H, classic style, well made, very sturdy, walnut finish, trim molding at top with arched design, bottom doors offer add'l enclosed storage. $250. 815-477-9023 Captains bed frame with four drawers and middle cabinet underneath and bookcase headboard. Golden oak color wood. $200 cash only. 815-444-7565. Can send pics. Mattress not included

CHAIR

Red, leather, $75. 239-961-2498

Chairs - Set of 6

Solid oak, double press back, Exc cond, orig $80 per chair, $250 for set. 815-895-4659

COCKTAIL TABLE

Base pewter, top marble border with glass inlay. New $1800, sell for $125. 815-363-2026 Coffee Table. Lexington. 3 drawers. $50 847-680-1301 COMPUTER DESK - Compact and/or retractable side desk, pull out keyboard tray. Like New! See photo online. $50/obo 847-606-6022 (mike) Computer desk with hutch, lots of shelves & storage, $250 Call 815-444-9550 CORNER COMPUTER DESK CORNER COMPUTER DESK, LIGHT GRAY, WITH SLIDE OUT TRAY FOR KEYBOARD, 2 DRAWERS 30" TALL LEFT SIDE 29" TALL RIGHT SIDE EACH SECTION 60" IN LENGTH 847-658-3264

Desk ~ Wood

Contemporary, 3 pieces. Excellent condition, $35. 815-899-1701 Dining Room Chairs (6). Oak. 2 with arms. Beige cushion seats. $120/all. 847-802-4949 DINING SET - 9 piece- China Hutch, Buffet, Table (40"x 60" thru 96") w/ 6 chairs, 3 leaves and padded tops. Good condition, See photo online. $400/obo 847-606-6022 (mike) ENTERTAINMENT CENTER, OAK w/ 27” Sony TV. Great for family or kids room. $300. 815-356-0883 Foyer Table – American Drew 54x34x17 w/2 Middle Drawers & Doors – Solid Wood – Exc. Cond. $275.Firm /$1,000.New 815-455-1258 5PM FURNITURE - 3 Soft Pine Furniture Pieces. Needs refinishing. Includes Coffee Table with drawer, Sofa table with drawer and end table with drawer. Can email pics. $40 obo Call 815-363-8559 GRANGE FRENCH DRESSER I am selling a Grange French made 8 drawer dresser in very good condition. This dresser retails for well over $1,000 brand new! I am asking $400 -OBO! (847) 487-3607 Ask for Rich Hutch: Brown Maple, 2 Doors, 1 Drawer. Like new. $80 815-385-3858

Kitchen Table - Retro Coca-Cola colors, 5' oval with removal leaf. Black top with chrome trim + 4 red sparkle chairs, $280/obo. 815-344-1357 Kitchen Table. Butcher Block Maple finish. 4 Bow Back Chairs. $75. 847-804-2999 Leather coat: fitted, hooded, waist length, medium, Marono $8/OBO 630-346-2476 Mattress Set – Full/Double – Like New – Verlo - Pillow Top – High Quality $200obo 815-236-2339 Oak Computer Armoire Desk, with doors, file drawer, lots of storage. $325. 815-356-0883 Plant stand - 6 ft X 17" X 12". Bamboo shaped iron frame. Yellow. 5 glass shelves. $60. turquoisesilver@hotmail.com. Island Lake. Queen Bed Maple Headboard. Incl Linens. $150. 847-680-1301 Round table: Solid oak 48" with four chairs. Two of the four are captains chairs. Has two leafs that extend the table to 68" $200.00 call 847-658-4015 SET OF BEDROOM FURNITURE LONG DRESSER( 9 DRAWERS) TALL DRESSER ( 4 DRAWERS AND 4 EXTRA COMPARTMENTS), HEADBOARD & MIRROR- $300 call TERI 847/658-3264 TABLE & CHAIRS SET - Great for a country cottage kitchen appeal. Perfect for that first apartment, college dorm or your cute vintage space! Sturdy, well made, excellent condition. $195. 815-477-9023 Table – African War Drum – Cowhide – Made n Kenya $50obo 815-568-8036

TWIN LOFT BED - CHILD'S

Light wood, great condition! $90 815-575-3414 Vintage Encyclopaedia Britannica bookcase. Good, solid condition. Finish not perfect, $50. turquoisesilver@hotmail.com. Island Lake WE Smithe Ent Center/hutch $350 OBO 847-515-8083

Ceiling Fan: multi colored, great for kid's room, $30

Huge lot of Christmas Decorations, some new. Blow cast Santa, 30 in. Penguin, 5 foot wooden Gas light, 3 wreaths, 400 lights, Stocking holders, stockings, placemats, garland, tree stands and more! $100 for ALL . 815-363-8559 ICE CRUSHER Portable Electric Use on counter for drinks or fancy food. Works good, $15. 815-455-3555 Partylite mirrored 5 candle infinity candle holder. Like New! $40.00 815-363-8559 Work Gloves – 120 Pair – New – White – Adult Size – Washable $40. 815-991-5149

Automatic Welding Wire, 30 lb. copper spool, 1/16", AWS A5.l8 E70S 1B, heat: 661C275, made by Raco, USA. (new/old). $80. 847-487-1650

Sealed Beam Movie Light - Keystone - For Super 8 Movie Camera Model 333 In Box$10.obo 847-658-7093 L.I.T.H. 9am-8pm

Steel Cabinet

KITTENS (5) 12 WEEKS FREE TO GOOD HOME 12 weeks old, good with pets and people. 815-382-4796 or 815-861-0430

TOILET ~ GERBER White, 1.6GPF. $15. 847-802-4949

VERTICALS

OSO 2 year old male Siberian Husky/Shepherd mix. Attractive, athletic guy that enjoys playing and walking in the snow. Looking for a person to enjoy quiet evenings too. Take a chance! www.helpingpaws.net 815-338-4400

PUPPIES

Acoustic Guitar

FIRE PIT

On legs with slate tile border. Never used. Only $55. 815-578-0212 HEART GRAPEVINE WREATH - Embellished with roses and wispy stems. Simplistic and lovely. $15. 815 477-9023. Rubbermaid Tractor Cart in good condition. Great for moving stuff in the yard. Attaches to riding mower or ATV. $80.00 815-363-8559 WICKER CHAIRS SET - Lime Green, sturdy construction, durable, classic, very cute shabby chic! $195. 815-477-9023

HAY FOR SALE

First Crop Grassy, 1000 Bales. Third Crop Mixed Hay, 500 bales. Delivery available. 920-650-5916

2 pairs of crutches like new. $10.00 815-363-8559 Base for Adjustable Queen Size Bed Remote Control Incl. FREE 815-459-0187 Bicycle - MOTOmed. Stationary computerized bike. Attaches to wheelchair. Asking $1000. Brand new! 847-997-7109 Wheelchair -Cardiac style - Rehab custom made,allows mobility. Full tilt. Gel Seat. Individual cones. Will take Best Offer. 847-997-7109

Baker Burn Out Oven & Stand for jewelry Honeywell, DCP100, Digital controller, programmer. $300 847-476-6771

BEDSPREAD ~ NEW, FULL 54x78”, rich, dark gold floral, $90. 815-459-3822 Beer Mirrors Framed (3 Old) Dribeck's Light – Coors Heineken Holland $45. 815-385-0404 Daytime Boots: Size 11 Redwing/Sorel Winter Pac Safety Boots, Omega & CSA certified $45 Like New 815-344-7993

CUTLERY SET

Gourmet Traditions, drawer style. Wood block, never used, $50. 815-546-1037 Cutting & Embossing Machine SIZZIX Black &Pink Big Shot w/Cutting Pads & Multi Use Board Ex. Cond. $40. 815-991-5149

Pool Table – Regulation Size – Slate Base – Like New $399 708-525-2570

CASH ONLY

Petland

6126 Northwest Hwy (Next to Jewel, Rt 14 & Main 815-455-5479 AKC Basset Hound Puppies $500 Free Delivery to Fox Lake, Jan 26th. www.bentleybassets.com (810) 441-6848

CHARLIE 2 1/2 year old female Dilute Calico DSH. I realize that life is not about what I want to do, but instead who I want to be. I'm looking to find the perfect match for me. Let's see what happens. www.helpingpaws.net 815-338-4400 German Shepherd Pups. AKC. German & CH. American lines. Black & red. Excellent temperament. $400. 847-487-1420

SADIE 5 month old female Gray Tabby & White DSH. I know it's a miracle to find true friends and if you get to spend your days and evenings doing whatever it is you like to do. I believe it can happen for me. www.helpingpaws.net 815-338-4400

ARIENS SINGLE STAGE SNOW BLOWER - 3hp, 22" wide Runs great. Pull cord needs to be replaced but blower can still be started with the current one. Asking $225 OBO. Call with any questions to 815-482-9443, ask for Mark. Snowblower – Ariens – Walk Behind $45 847-381-6684

Snowblower/Lawn Boy 320E 3HP, runs good, $50.

www.HuskieWire.com

All NIU Sports... All The Time

815-508-1114

WE'VE GOT IT!

Northwest Classified 800-589-8237 www.NWHerald.com

Friday & Saturday 6501 Rowland Huntley 9am - 3pm Numbers at 8:30am Cash, Visa & MasterCard Audio & Electronics Crystal Radio, Signal Generators, Wave Generators, Tube Testing, Vector Monitors, Phone Line Tester, Oscilloscopes, Probes, Vacuum Tubes (Hundreds),

Early Haeger, Transferware, Vintage Kitchen And More.

Breweriana, Vintage Kitchen And Much More. Furnishings Danish Modern Lamps, Dining Sets, Floor Lamps, Table Lamps, Bedroom Sets, Work Benches, Cabinets And Much More. Miscellaneous

Polaroid J66 Land Camera w/Case $20.obo 847-658-7093 L.I.T.H. 9am-8pm

Jewelry, Lionel Train Sets, Cigarette Maker, Sewing,

Snap-On Torq Meter

Torque Wrench, $100 815-477-0310 Get Bears news on Twitter by following @bears_insider

.

www.estatesales.net

Disney Princess Light Up Vanity. $30 815-382-2455

Ingleside

DOLL HOUSE

Newly built wrap around porch, 6 rooms, $100. 847-854-7980

RC Helicopters (2)

Fly indoors or out, includes radio and chargers, $125/obo. 815-245-0717 Sled for Child -w/seat – Wood Red Cover $20. 815-385-0404 Daytime T Maxx Nitro Radio Control 4WD truck, $140 815-245-9269

Estate Sale

34057 N. Fischer Dr.

Fri & Sat. Jan. 18-19 9 - 4

Don't miss this great sale. Furniture, collectibles, snow blowers, household items. See pictures and list at www.AgapeEstateSales.com

Marengo

Friday & Saturday Jan 18-19 8am – 5pm

Lionel & American Flyer Trains

19508 W. Coral

815-353-7668

Lladro's, Hummels, Precious Moments, Dept 56, & Hallmark Ornaments.

Lots of Antiques & Collectibles, 7510 Kubota Tractor, Many Unique Items!

Paying Cash 847-542-5713

CASH ONLY

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

WONDER LAKE - ESTATE SALE 5312 Hilltop Dr. Furniture, Tools, Collectibles and more waiting for you. Thursday, Friday and Saturday 9am - 4pm

Winchester Pre '64 Rifles and Shot guns, Belgium Brownings and Old Colts. FFL license. 815-338-4731

ECKEL'S MCHENRY FLEA MARKET

3705 W. ELM SAT & SUN 8-5 Spaces Start As Low As $12 815-363-FLEA (3532)

Crystal Lake

Bull Valley

1505 Marshland Way

ESTATE SALE Everything Goes!!

FRI 1/18 - SAT 1/19 9a-4p 853 Barlina Rd. Having a Birthday, Anniversary, Graduation or Event Coming Up? Share It With Everyone by Placing a HAPPY AD!

FISHING & HUNTING ★★ SALE ★★ Fri. & Sat. 9am-4pm

Duck Decoys, Ice Fishing Decoys, Shore Birds, Fishing Equipment, Sporting Art, Snow Shoes, Skis, Elk Antlers, Lots of Misc. Rustic Items. Restored Antique Canoe. 847-287-0968

Send your Help Wanted Advertising 24/7 to: Email: helpwanted@ shawsuburban.com Fax: 815-477-8898

Depression, Crystal, Pressed, Carnival, Bottles,

John Deere Mower, Hundreds Of Vintage Tools,

6HP, 2300 PSI, $165.00

Lots of Farm Related Items! Windfall Antiques

Crystal & Glassware

Polaroid Automatic 104 Land Camera w/Case & Manual $15.obo 847-658-7093 L.I.T.H. 9am-8pm

POWER WASHER

(2) John Deere Garden Tractors with snowplow, 40's Dining Room Set, Mission Oak Desk, 4 Pc 40's Bedroom Set, Oak Highboy with Mirror, Cedar Chest, Harvard Memorabilia, Vintage Bikes & Games, Toys, Jewelry, Linens, Glassware, Books, Tools 1994 Buick Park Ave.

Chip Testers, Gauges, Cameras, CB Radios, Antennas Up To 40 , Projectors And Most Manuals,

GREETING CARDS

$5/each. 815-4701-1172

American Girl Bath Tub. $25 815-382-2455 Child's Game Table Pool, tennis & shuffleboard. $25. 815-943-7757

Signal Tracers, Pattern Generators, Transistor Testers,

Fine China, Royal Copely, United Airlines,

Playstation 2 Games (10)

Tent – 2 Person – Mountain Academy Broadway – Waterproof Bottom $20. 815-385-0404 Daytime

Just South of Streit Rd.

Civil War Items, Military Souvenirs, Old Hunting & Fishing Items. 815-338-4731

With Aloe Organic, case of 1000. $65 815-578-0212

Movie Screen for Home Movies Focal 40x40 Lenticolor $25.obo 847-658-7093 L.I.T.H. 9am-8pm

Red Baseball Helmet with face guard size 6.5-7.5 in good condition $15.00 815-363-8559 T-Baill Helmet-Girls Pink Size 61/46 7/8 by Rawlings. Good condition. $10.00 815-363-8559

ANTIQUE & Modern Guns

Porcelain & Pottery

Movie Projector – Gaf Anscovision 666 – Dual 8mm/Super 8mm – Automatic Load $35.obo 847-658-7093 L.I.T.H. 9am-8pm

#'s at 8:30 3803 RT. 23

Pool Table/Game Table. 7 ft. Very good cond. $60 OBO. 815-759-0307 after 5pm

All puppies come with * Health Warranty * Free Vet Visit * Free Training DVD * Financing Available

GLOVES ~ LATEX

Movie Camera – GAF Colt 94 w/case & Manual $30.obo 847-658-7093 L.I.T.H. 9am-8pm

HARVARD

Golf Clubs & Bag - Full set, Top Flite irons 1-9, PW, SW, putter, driver, Cobra Fairway woods 3-5, balls & tees $175. 815-459-5369

815-219-3535 ~ McHenry THEY WON'T LAST LONG!

And Much More!

Box of 200, $50. 815-477-2772 Luggage Set Top Brand and cond. American Tourister. Not canvas sides, 2 pieces 7x24”, 7x20”, $35. 815-455-3555 M&M CANDY DISPENSERS-5 total: Wild Thing, Fire truck, sofa, horn, statue of liberty, All great condition, never used. $35. 815-356-0883

Down Hill Skis – Dynastar – Ladies Good Quality/Like New – Reichie Boots Size 8 $99ea or $199both 815-814-1803 Everything You Need For Ice Fishing - Will Sell ALL for $400. 815-701-4302

HUGE WINTER SALE 1614 Whippoorwill Dr. * Something for the whole family:Toys,Clothes,Electronics,Tools, Appliances,Furniture,New Tires Etc. All VERY Affordable. Don't miss out! Saturday 19th & Sunday 20th 10:00 am - 6:00 pm

FRI & SAT JAN 18 & 19 9AM - 3PM

Garage Door Opener

For single door, disassemble, $150 239-961-2498

CONCEALED CARRY CLASS IL residents. Country Inn, Crystal Lk. Jan 27th or Mar 24th 9am-1:30pm. $80/pers Register@608-577-1917

SWEET & ADORABLE

ALL BLACK, Great Family Pet $375 Taking Deposits Now Ready To Go Home 1/26/13 Showing Eve & Weekends

¾HP, Capacitor motor, 10.0 AMPS, $160/obo. 815-363-1431 Chain Saw XL12 Homelite. 16” new chain, runs strong, $80. 815-347-1745

Neumatic, Bostitch with 10 cases of 8D sheating nails. $280/obo or possible trade. 708-363-2004 Table Saw – Brand: State 7 ¼ Blade - Old School Floor Model 28”x22 ½” Table Top $150 815-459-4070 Wood Project Duplicator $65. 815-861-8155

Inflatable Pool - Intex Easy Set

Golf Clubs – Tommy Armour – Titanium Oversized Irons – Complete Set – Model Ti/100 $75. 815-334-8611 Ice skates – Aerflyte - White – Ladies Size 10 - $20. 815-385-0404 Daytime

Mix of pure bred Black Lab & pure bred Golden Retriever

Record Albums – 250 Plus Life Time Collection American thru Zepplin $75 815-568-8036

1960 Craftsman Table Saw

Framing Nailer

Just In Time for Valentine's Day!

With pick up, great for Blues/Folk/ C/W custom hard case, very nice. $150/obo. 815-575-2458

Adorable Puppies

CRYSTAL LAKE

12x36 round, filter pump, ladder. Used 1 season. Excellent condition! $50. 847-476-6771

21X36x27, 2 doors, lexan top. Very nice, $60. 815-459-7485

White, perceptions, sheers over vertical slats, 2 windows. 9'Wx84”L & 10'10”Wx84”. rods included, $250. 847-337-1686 VHS Movie Collection (195) PreRecorded – Mystery/Action/Thrillers $65.815-568-8036 World Book Encyclopedias, 1991. Great shape. $15 Call Christine at 815-459-0259

FREE HOT Tub Shell. 62x70x30 You Haul. Could use snowmobile sled or equiv. to haul. Located In McHenry. 815-363-8559

Fishing, Sears Motorcycle Helmets, Advertising, Vintage Christmas, Harley Davidson, Vises And Much, Much More! See Photos at http://www.ctnorthern.com This is a CARING TRANSITIONS Sale

Northwest Herald Classified 800-589-8237 www.nwherald.com

Protect your farm’s future with

CROP INSURANCE

Have peace of mind insuring your crop and protecting your revenue. Call for a quote and choose a level of coverage you can afford. Contact Tom Woellert at

Woellert

Insurance Agency, Inc.

2409 Westward • Spring Grove, IL 60081

815-675-1007


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