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Volume 03 • Number 44
883 Main Street, Antioch, IL •
DELIVERY (262) 728-3411
147 E. Main Street, Twin Lakes, WI 53185 • Published By Southern Lakes Newspapers, LLC
847-603-1196
198451
Wednesday, MaRCH 25, 2015
10 a.m. - 2:00 p.m .
Police team up on drug bust Men were allegedly selling crack cocaine
Urban farmers
JUDE KAIDER Hi-Liter
Don Zienty (left) and wife Lynn learn a few of the finer points of honey and beeswax soap from “Keeper of the Bees,” Peter Poli, at the Antioch Public Library District, 757 N. Main St. on Saturday. Poli, owner of Humdinger Honey Works, held a discussion on “Urban Farming” and getting back to the land in one’s own back yard. Subjects included the basics of square foot gardening, bee keeping, chicken keeping, and composting, among others.
Two Fox Lake men have been charged with multiple felonies after they were arrested March 18 with $2,000 worth of crack cocaine. Members of the Antioch, Fox Lake and Lake Villa Police departments executed a narcotics search warrant at 7 a.m. on a residence at 92 Maude Avenue in Fox Lake following an extensive investigation. Xavier Thomas, 24, and Jordyn Anderson, 21, were arrested and transported to Lake County Bond Court where both were remanded to the Lake County Jail on $100,000 bond and given a return court date of April 18 at 1:30 p.m. Police allege evidence recovered from the residence included 34 individually wrapped plastic bags of crack cocaine ready for sale with a combined weight of 19.6 grams, 20 pills of a schedule 2 prescription of Norco, one pill of a schedule 4 prescription of alprazolam, along with $3,341 in cash, which was confiscated under the Illinois asset and forfeiture laws. The street value of the crack cocaine is $2,000, according to police. Thomas was charged with unlawful possession with the intent to deliver, a Class X felony; unlawful possession of a
controlled substance, a Class 1 felony; and unlawful possession of a controlled substance, a Class 4 felony. Anderson was charged with unlawful possession with the intent to deliver, a Class X felony; unlawful possession of a controlled substance, a Class 1 felony; and unlawful possession of a controlled substance, a Class 4 felony. A Class X felony is punishable by 6 to 30 years in a state penitentiary and/or a fine of up to $25,000, upon conviction. A Class 1 felony is punishable by 4 to 15 years in a state penitentiary and/or a fine of up to $25,000, upon conviction. A Class 4 felony is punishable by 1 to 3 years in a state penitentiary and/or a fine of up to $25,000, upon conviction. The police chiefs of the three agencies released the following statement: “This enforcement action was made possible by positive working relationships with our neighboring communities and police agencies. Our police departments gather and share intelligence information regularly and are committed in getting the message out that our communities are actively combating illegal drug activity. “The devastating effects of drug abuse know no borders. We are committed to providing safe environments for our residents and are more effective when we work together.”
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HI-LITER • WEDNESDAY, MARCH 25, 2015 • 2
Kenosha to celebrate Orson Welles Month-long series of events to honor 100th birthday of native son
The City of Kenosha will commemorate the Carthage College and the University of Wiscon100th birthday of the late Orson Welles this year sin-Parkside. with a month-long series of events. For more information, including dates, locaBorn in 1915 in Kenosha, actor, writer, di- tions, and tickets visit www.citizenwelles.org or rector, and producer Welles on Facebook: Citizen Welles dramatically altered the mediSociety of Kenosha. Tickets ums of theatre, radio, and film. will be available at the door for One hundred years later, his all events requiring tickets. influence is still felt around the Here is a list of the planned world and many consider him events: to be the best director who ever • May 1-27 – Welles Trivlived, according to the event oria Crawl. Discover historical ganizers. facts and Kenosha connections Although his time here was with Orson Welles while visshort, Kenosha is proud of the iting downtown businesses. accomplishments and influParticipants get a punch card ence in the arts of its native son. stamped at participating locaKenosha Mayor Keith Bostions. The more places visitman will kick off the celebraed, the more raffle tickets are tion on May 6 at the Carthage awarded for the Welles Trivia College Union Theatre, with a Crawl drawing on May 27 at Orson Welles birthday party and evening that Public Craft Brewing. will feature short tributes to Welles’ radio and To add to the fun, historical re-enactors, infilm work, his ancestry in Kenosha, and a special cluding Brett Houdek and Vittoria DuMez preview of the upcoming book, “Young Orson,” from Actor’s Craft, will be visiting downtown by the author Patrick McGilligan. Kenosha businesses as Welles and his ancestors Planned events in the month-long celebration throughout the month. include performances, Kenosha • May 6 – Kick Off Celebration. Kenosha Public Library discussions, musical works in- Mayor Keith Bosman. Alderman Jan spired by Orson Welles, and family-friendly Michalski, Kenosha historian Jean Hoffman, and events such as a puppet show. members of the Citizen Welles Society of KenoThe festivities will end with The Orson sha will present tributes in the form of Welles’ Welles 100th Anniversary Memorial Walk at film and radio highlights, with one from as far Green Ridge Cemetery in Kenosha, where the away as Spain from director Manuel Munguia. public is invited to come and “meet” Orson’s Patrick McGilligan, author of the upcoming ancestors in the form of re-enactors dressed in “Young Orson: The Years of Luck and Genius period clothing. on the Path to Citizen Kane,” will speak with a Many of the programs are free or require a special emphasis on the research he uncovered nominal fee thanks to the generosity of our un- on Welles’ early days in Kenosha. According to derwriters, the Kenosha Community Foundation advance publicity for the book, “In this magisteand the City of Kenosha along with sponsors rial biography, Patrick McGilligan brings young
Orson into focus as never before. He chronicles Welles’s early life growing up in Wisconsin and Illinois as the son of an alcoholic industrialist and a radical suffragist and classical musician, and the magical early years of his career, including his marriage and affairs, his influential friendships, and his artistic collaborations.” A reception immediately follows at 6:30 p.m. at Carthage College, Union Theatre, 2001 Alford Dr., Kenosha. • May 7 – Welles & FDR: On The Campaign Trail, written and directed by Citizen Welles Society of Kenosha Chairwoman Nita Hunter, this is a staged reading and multimedia show featuring the campaign speeches Welles gave on behalf of Franklin Roosevelt during the campaign of 1944. It is a glimpse into the political life of Orson Welles. Using text from speeches from the Welles archives at the Lilly Library of Indiana University, this play stars Alderman Jan Michalski in the role of Orson Welles and Gary Stamm, who has performed at the FDR Library in Hyde Park, NY, as FDR, with a special appearance by Jessica Michna of First Impressions as Eleanor Roosevelt. Private performance for Friends of the Kenosha Public Museums at 6:30 p.m. at the Kenosha Public Museum, 5500 1st Ave., Kenosha. For information about joining, visit http:// www.kenosha.org/wp-museum. • May 8 – Public Craft Brewing Company will officially release its Orson Welles inspired creation, and some of Welles’ “ancestors” just might show up for the release. Scheduled from 3:30 to 9 p.m. at Public Craft Brewing, 716 58th St., Kenosha. • May 9 – Downtown Kenosha Second Saturday Featuring “War Of The Worlds.” Inspired by the frenzy that the 1938 War of the Worlds broadcast created, Chalk Attack!, sponsored by Artisan Craftsmen Establishment and
Expose Kenosha, invites the public to color downtown walkways with aliens, monsters and the like. Chalk provided. 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. At 2 p.m. there will be a “War Of The Worlds,” full cast theatrical staging of the original Mercury Theatre script by RG Productions of Kenosha. A. Brad Schwartz, author of “Broadcast Hysteria: Orson Welles’s War of the Worlds and the Art of Fake News,” will introduce the show and host a talkback afterward. Copies of his book will be available for sale, courtesy of Andrea’s Hometown Shop. Children are invited to join the Kenosha Public Library in the activity room of the Kenosha Public Museum at 1 p.m. for a reading of the book “The Aliens are Coming” (which is about the radio production of War of the Worlds). Puppet sketches will be presented beginning at 6 p.m. The Puppet Underground taps into Welles’ passion for puppetry with puppet sketches of some of Welles’ most famous works. At Fusion, 5014 7th Ave., Kenosha. • May 13 – Me & Orson Welles. Explore Robert Kaplow’s lighthearted novel, “Me and Orson Welles,” and view Richard Linklater’s film of the same name, following a young man’s experiences at a Mercury Theatre production directed by Orson Welles. Book loans available by calling (262) 564-6137. The free event begins at 5:30 p.m. at Kenosha Public Library, Southwest, 7979 38th Ave., Kenosha. • May 14: Music Of The Mind. Voices Verses, a multi-media performance ensemble led by Citizen Welles Society members Karel and Julia Suchy, presents an evening of both composed and improvised interdisciplinary works, along with audience discussion and sharing of ideas, inspired by the inventive spirit of Orson Welles. This event is in conjunction
See WELLES CELEBRATION, Page 8
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$ ) 3 0 , ! 9 ! $ 3 # , ! 3 3 ) & ) % $ 3 &! 8
HONDA 400 EX 4 WHEELER Great condition and perfect for recreation. 847-276-0314
Automobiles 1987 OLDSMOBILE TORONADO V6 FWD. Car show beauty. New factory wheels, new tires. $2500. 847-987-7669 2000 LINCOLN Navigator, 120k miles, black w/gray leather interior, new tires, headlights. Very nice condition. Call for details 262-989-4112 2001 Ford Taurus Wagon Auto, V6 Great condition .$2500 OBO 262-994-3721 2005 TOYOTA SOLARA SLE loaded, very good condition $6,200 Call 262-758-1644. 2006 JEEP LIBERTY 4X4, auto, 150k mi., new tires, brakes, exc. cond., $5,500 firm, 262-818-3658 2007 FORD FREESTYLE one owner vehicle, 90,546 miles. DVD Entertainment system- Call 262878-2726. 2008 CHEVY IMPALA LS 77k, new tires & brakes. Grey, good condition. $8600. 262-903-1923 2014 DODGE AVENGER 4 cyl. 5,500mi. $14,500. 262-492-7553. Leave message.
Automobiles Wanted CARS/TRUCKS WANTED! Top $$$$$ PAID! Running or Not, All Years, Makes, Models. Free Towing! We’re Local! 7 Days/Week. Call Toll Free: 1-888-416-2330 CASH FOR CARS: All Cars/ Trucks Wanted. Running or Not! Top Dollar Paid. We Come To You! Any Make/Model. Call For Instant Offer: 1-800-8645960 CASH FOR CARS: Any Make, Model or Year. We Pay MORE! Running or Not Sell your Car or Truck TODAY Free Towing! Instant Offer: 1-888-420-3805 (MCN)
DONATE YOUR CAR TRUCK OR BOAT TO HERITAGE FOR THE BLIND. Free 3 Day Vacation, Tax Deductible, Free Towing, All Paperwork Taken Care Of. 1-800283-0205 (MCN)
2007 CASE 580M loader backhoe, 4 wheel drive 1500 hours heated cab, valved $42,000 262497-6176
2009 HARLEY DAVIDSON ULTRA CLASSIC Black, ABS, excellent condition, 61,200k, $11,900 262-945-3259.
BACKHOE/LOADER John Deere 310, 2004, 3,436hrs. A/C, GET CASH TODAY for any car/ valved, $39,900. 262-497-6176 truck. I will buy your car today. Any Condition. Call 1-800-864- CASE 1070 DEISEL TRACTOR w/cab power shift, good rubber 5796 or www.carbuyguy.com $5,000 Call 262-248-3752. WANTED - FREE AUTO For Disabled Veteran! Please call 262492-1956.
2012 HARLEY DAVIDSON Heritage Softtail w/engine guard, sec. system, Pearl White, exc. cond,only 2,000 miles. Asking $16,000. 262-374-0941 or 262763-9042.
Motorcycles
1999 HD ELECTRA GLIDE CLASSIC 75k, carborated, extras. Rush mufflers. Very good 1989 SEA RAY 18 ft motor boat condition. Asking $7000 OBO. w/135 HP O/B w/ Trailer-very Call 262-763-9403. good cond., AM/FM CD plyr w/ new spkrs, incl: skis, tubes, 1999 HD FLSTC 33k, screaming ropes, life vests, misc: $3,500. eagle upgrades, lots of power, Located in Powers Lake. Ques- asking $8,500, 414-460-5979 tions call Bill 847-338-8580. 2000 HONDA GOLDWING new 24’ MAXUM. 1994, 350 Mercruis- tires, 50k, candy apple red, exer. Kitchen, bdrms, trailer. Trade cellent condition $7200 262-9031923. in? $9,900 847-395-2669
Boats
BAYLINER BASS & SKI 18 ft fiberglass 125 HP Force engine, Power tilt, Dual live wells, PTSv 24v Tracking Trolling Motor with integrated Pinpoint TR320 Sonar Imaging display, 262-495-4192, $2,900.
2003 HONDA GOLDWING 17K, Durango Red, $13000, 262-8434015 2006 HARLEY ROAD KING Classic. LIKE NEW. Must Sell! 2200 miles. $13500 OBO 262878-4638
2006 SOFTTAIL STANDARD, 600 miles. New Bars, Bags, Pipes, Mirrors, Tank Panel. Se2008 DUTCH PARK, PARK curity System. 200 rear tire. MODEL. 2 bdrm, vaulted ceil- $12,500/OBO. Call after 5:30PM. ings, vinyl siding, central A/C, 23’ 262-767-1904 Awning. Comes w/huge deck, shed, golf cart, deck swing. 11’ 2006 YAMAHA CLASSIC 1100 octagon screen rm. Lawn mow- cc, low miles excellent condition. er & much more! Beautiful land- $4995. 815-338-1696. scaping on quiet dead end road. In Standrock Campgrounds, 2 miles North of WI Dells. $39,500, includes paid lot rent for 2015. Call for pics and details. 262-7455736
Campers and RVs
28’ TRAVEL TRAILER 4 Winds Express, no slides, sleeps 8, under storage, includes: 2 flat screen tvs, dishes, pots, pans, bedding, silverware, winter cover & hitch. Resealed roof seams 2014, new microwave, tires and batteries $7,000 firm Call 608931-0529 or 262-724-7164. Pictures on Craiglist.
Farm Machinery
Bob Vanderwerff owner
174551
262-539-2931 800-228-1312
39809 60th St., Burlington, WI 53105 Hwy. 50 & P in Slades Corners
2008 MUSTANG one owner, customized red, white & blue, 23,800 mi., excellent condition, $15,000, asking price OBO, call after 5 pm 262-763-8666
1948 CHEVY 1-1/2 ton, in pieces, includes engine & trans. Best offer 262-989-4112
1994 STIGERS TRAILER heavy duty 10,000lb, 16’ with fold up ramps & small bobtail, $2600, adjustable pental hitch 262-8894386, 312-750-0040
1959 OLDS SUPER 88 4 dr. original, rare factory stick shift, runs for restoration. $3200. 847-7408327
1995 DODGE DAKOTA 85k mi. 3.9 V6. Prem. sound, tool box, new fuel & water pumps. $2250. 815-289-1139.
1960 METROPOLITAN Convertible been in storage 35yrs. $3,500 call for details 815-5474946. 1965 T BIRD Black/red interior. New tires/exhaust/battery etc. $6,000. 262-895-3448.
2000 CHEVY S10 4x4 Ext. cab, 4.3, new brakes, 103K mi., runs gd., $3,200. 262-206-7636 2002 FORD F150 V8 Ext. Cab, 4 WD, a/c, cloth, bedlined, automatic.167k. $4,000. 262-4976176
29’ w/slide out. Like new. $28,000. 262-607-8280 or 847-454-7724. 2003
TRAIL
KING,
electric
brakes, 23860 gvw, $7000. 262497-6176 2006 20 FT. tandem axle trailer, 9,000 lbs. cap. flat bed w/ramps, $1800, 262-989-4112 TRAILER SALE: 6’x12’ v-nose ramp $2,750.00 or $87.00 a month; Dump trailers 14’ 14,000# $161.00 a month; Car hauler 20’ $73.00 a month; 140 trailers instock. CLOSE-OUT on HI-DECK GOOSENECK 24k trailers! 515972-4554 www.FortDodgeTrailerWorld.com. (MCN)
Vans, Mini Vans 1999 OLDSMOBILE SILHOUETTE V6, 123K, ($3,800 value) $2,300 O.B.O. 414-313-0937. 2001 DODGE GRAND CARAVAN good runner, little rust, 180k, $1,500 Call 262-862-6630.
2000 CADILLAC ELDORADO ESC 8 cyl., auto., air, power all, moonroof, leather, low miles. #24749C Was $7,995 ....................BUDGET PRICED $4,995 2006 CHEVROLET MALIBU LT 6 cyl., auto., air, power all. #P1833A Was $8,995 ................... BUDGET PRICED $6,995 2008 DODGE AVENGER SE 4 cyl., auto., air, power all.
Select games available. See salesperson for details.
#15241A Was $8,995 .................... BUDGET PRICED $6,995
2006 DODGE STRATUS SXT 4 cyl., auto., air, power all. #24441A Was $8,995 ................... BUDGET PRICED $6,995 2007 FORD MUSTANG CONVERTIBLE 6 cyl., auto., air,
BUDGET PRICED $3,995
Radiators • Alternators • Exhausts • Brake Shoes • Heater Cores Rotors • Gas Tanks • Starters • Monroe Brake Pads • Air Conditioners
1989 TRANS AM Red, new engine, less than 5000 miles, asking $3800, 414-659-0680
Trucks & Trailers
WITH PURCHASE OF ANY VEHICLE YOU WILL RECEIVE A GAS GRILL* PLUS 2 BREWERS LOGE INFIELD SEATS * *Grill may not be exactly as shown.
4 cyl., air, power all. #15267A Was $5,995
AUTO SUPPLY
Sports/Classic Cars
1987 OLDSMOBILE TORONADO Beautiful carshow beauty. Original new wheels, tires. $2500. 847-395-2669
5th Wheel, Key Stone Cougar,
INCLUDES LIFETIME CAR WASHES!! • Everything Priced BELOW Kelly Blue Book
2005 CHEVROLET COBALT LT
Also Tires & Batteries for LAWN MOWERS • FARM INDUSTRIAL • BOBCAT • TRUCK & TRAILER
WANTED: VINTAGE OR JUNKER MOTORCYCLES Running or not, Title or not. Cash Paid. 262527-0208
1983 OLDS CUTLASS supreme brougham 4-dr. Beautiful body, chrome, interior. Engine wearing out. $2800 262-325-3541.
2003 DODGE RAM TRUCK Tandem Diesel Ext. Cab. 127k, w/ ‘03
EVERYTHING PRICED U NDER $7,995!
2007 CASE 580M loader backhoe, 4 wheel drive 1500 hours heated cab, valved $42,000 262497-6176
Complete Line of
CASH PAID for Antique Harley Davidson motorcycles and related parts from 1900 thru 1970. Any condition including rough or incomplete. Will pay top price and pick up anywhere. Phone 309645-4623 (MCN)
1969 BUICK ELECTRA 225 CONVERTIBLE originial owner 46yrs, p/w, p/s, AC, 5 new tires, 83K, always garaged, $22,900 OBO Call 815-334-8847.
power all.
2002 CHEVROLET 2005 DODGE GRAND #25168A Was $9,995 ................... BUDGET PRICED $7,995 TRAIL BLAZER LS CARAVAN SXT 2001 CHEVROLET TAHOE 4X4 8 cyl., auto., air, power all, Great 4x4 6 cyl., auto., air, 6 cyl., auto., air, power power all. #25244C shape! Like new! #24852A Was $9,995.. BUDGET PRICED $7,995 all, only 94,000 miles Was $7,995
BUDGET PRICED $5,995
#P1826A Was $8,995
BUDGET PRICED $6,995
2005 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX GTP 6 cyl., auto., air, power all, leather. #15185B Was $9,995... BUDGET PRICED $7,995
MILLER MOTORS 75 A FAMILY TRADITION FOR
Years!
1196 Milwaukee Ave., Burlington, WI • (262) 763-2466 or (855) 223-7699 • www.millermotorsales.com
198833
ATVs/Golf Carts 1998 HYNDIA GOLF CART 4 passenger, roof, $900 Call 262331-3082.
Find a great deal on your next car using classifieds. Whether it’s a new or used car you’re looking for, classifieds are your single source for auto deals, at the dealership or in your very own neighborhood.
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HI-LITER • WEDNESDAY, MARCH 25, 2015 • 6
Letter to the editor Make your voice heard on Antioch ambulance referendum The following letter is my personal opinion and is in no way meant to reflect the position of Antioch Township or my position as an elected official. Public bodies or elected officials cannot use their public office to influence the decision of the voting public as it relates to a public question on the April 7 ballot. As a 30-year resident of Antioch, let me say this community needs to have reliable Ambulance service. Nobody wants their property taxes to go up and, in my opinion, it’s was an unfortunate series of events that brought us to having to make this difficult decision. After thoughtful contemplation, I have come to the conclusion that this is not the issue to take a stand on. The question facing voters on April 7 is whether they are willing to pay an additional $82 per $100,000 of assessed valuation on their annual property tax bill for the purpose of providing reliable ambulance service. I hate having to pay this additional tax but may the alternative be even worse? The most important thing to me is the well being of my family and the protection of my property. It occurred to me that in 2015 we are on the verge of an economic recovery and although I may disagree with certain events regarding this issue, if we are to attract new investment into our community and support property values I have decided to vote yes on the ambulance funding question. I love this community and respect everyone’s choice to vote how they want on this important issue so let me just say that no matter how you feel about it, please go to the polls and make your voice heard by voting! Peter Grant, Antioch
Discover the
State recommends funding for highway project in area Project would extend Route 53 into Lake County A committee convened by the Illinois Tollway voted March 12 on recommendations to fund the extension of Illinois Route 53 north into Lake County and to support tollway-led work to keep the project moving forward. With a vote of 21-2, the project’s Finance Committee approved a package of funding recommendations that are projected to generate between $745 million to $993 million toward the Illinois Route 53/120 Project. The recommendations also request that the Illinois Tollway move forward with the next engineering and environmental studies required to advance the project. These studies would include a comprehensive examination of the roadway alignment, access points, design, project impacts and mitigation issues well before construction. The recommendations would help close the funding gap created from the difference between the project’s
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for eventual implementation along the entire Tollway system. • Restructuring tolls along the Tri-State Tollway (I-94) in Lake County to raise revenue, improve tolling equity and mitigate and minimize diversion onto local roads. This could be accomplished by adding a new mainline toll plaza and/or tolling existing I-94 access points that are not currently tolled. “Planning for the extension of Illinois Route 53 has been stalled for years due to various funding challenges and a lack of consensus,” said Lake County Board Chair Aaron Lawlor. “Today’s vote of approval represents a major step forward in order to make the project a reality and address a critical transportation need in Lake County.” “These recommendations in combination with the project’s land use work will enable us to advance a truly innovative transportation solution for central Lake County,” said BRAC Co-chair George Ranney. “This is a project that protects community and environmental concerns while creating a ‘modern parkway’ envisioned for the region by local and regional leaders.” In 2012, the Illinois Route 53/120 Blue Ribbon Advisory Council (BRAC), made up of local elected officials, transportation and planning agencies and a diverse group of environmental, civic, business and labor representatives, reached a regional
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Even if Lake County residents are hospitalized at election time, they will still be able to vote, according to Lake County Clerk Carla Wyckoff. Registered voters who are admitted to a hospital, nursing home or rehabilitation center within 14 days before the April 7 Consolidated Election may qualify for personal delivery of a ballot, subject to statutory conditions. The voter must complete a request form titled Application for Ballot for Qualified Voter Admitted to a Hospital, Nursing Home or Rehabilitation Center. The voter’s physician is required to complete the accompanying Affidavit of Attending Physician. Forms are available by contacting the County Clerk’s Election Department at Vot-
ingByMail@lakecountyil.gov or (847) 3772314. Web visitors may also download the Hospitalized Voter Form by visiting www. LakeCountyClerk.info and clicking on the Forms tab under Resources. All required forms must be completed and returned to the Lake County Clerk’s office prior to the voter’s Certificate of Application and ballot being issued. For more information on County Clerk services and election news, visit www.LakeCountyClerk.info, follow at twitter.com/ LakeCountyClerk, join the page at facebook. com/CountyClerk or subscribe to the e-newsletter at www.LakeCountyClerk.info by clicking on the envelope icon or call (847) 377-2400.
Early voting in force for April consolidated election
Specializing in custom cuts. Contact Ray in the Meat Department at
Early voting for the April 7 Consolidated Election in Lake County began on March 23 and ends Saturday, April 4. Early voting is available Monday to Friday from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. and Saturday from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Visit www.LakeVoterPower.info to confirm registration at your current address, see a sample ballot and find your early and Election Day voting site. Per state law, early voters are required to present val-
CALL: 262-537-2993 • TEXT: 262-215-1330 • EMAIL: Meatrafflehqbb@gmail.com
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consensus recommending the Illinois Tollway move the project forward as a 21st century “modern boulevard” with design and environmental requirements that will protect the natural environment while preserving the character of Lake County. The Illinois Tollway, Lake County and the Chicago Metropolitan Agency for Planning have been partnering on the current phase of analysis to examine the feasibility of the project with respect to financing and land use for the proposed new roadway. “The Illinois Tollway appreciates the time and effort volunteered by these community leaders who remain committed to building the Illinois Route 53/120 Project,” said Illinois Tollway Executive Director Kristi Lafleur. “Their recommendations will be critical in helping our Board review this project to determine if and how the agency should proceed.” The funding recommendations are outlined in a report that will be presented to the Illinois Tollway Board of Directors for consideration. The Tollway Board will review the report and decide if and how the agency should proceed. To view the committee’s report and other documents related to the BRAC’s previous work, visit to the “Construction/Planning” section of www.illinoistollway.com and select “Community Outreach.”
Hospitalized voters may cast ballots
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cost – estimated at $2.35 billion to $2.65 billion in 2020 dollars – and toll revenue generated from the project. The Illinois Route 53/120 Project is proposed to be a 21st century urban highway in central Lake County – a modern boulevard with a small footprint to protect the natural environment and preserve the character of the area while addressing the need for congestion relief and greater connectivity, according to transportation officials. Because tolling the roadway itself is expected to generate only $250 million to $330 million in bonding capacity, the committee sought additional ways to fund the project through a variety of local sources and innovative revenue streams. Key elements of the committee’s recommendations include: • Leveraging a portion of the increase in adjacent, new non-residential land values to financially support the protection and restoration of natural resources in the corridor via an Environmental Restoration and Stewardship Fund. • Adding Lake County to the state’s current 4-cent-pergallon county motor fuel tax and committing 50 percent of revenues to the Illinois Route 53/120 Project (the other 50 percent would be committed to other transportation priorities in Lake County). • Indexing and congestion pricing of tolls along Illinois Route 53/120 as a pilot
id government-issued photo identification which includes an Illinois driver’s license, Illinois Secretary of State identification card, government employee identification or passport. Identification with an address different from registration record requires additional verification set forth under 10 ILCS 5/17-10. For more information on County Clerk services and election news, visit www. LakeCountyClerk.info, follow at twitter.com/LakeCountyClerk, join the page at facebook.com/CountyClerk or subscribe to the e-newsletter at LakeCountyClerk.info by clicking on the envelope icon or call (847) 377-2400.
HI-LITER • WEDNESDAY, MARCH 25, 2015 • 7
What it takes to be a ‘Miss’ Pageant Director Jenifer Dosch (right) explains the application process to entrant Mirandi McCormick, 12, with current Junior Miss Antioch Lindsey Lubicz, 12, and Mirandi’s mother, Cheryl, looking on during the Miss Antioch Informational Meeting held at the Parks and Recreation Department headquarters on Saturday. Dosch, a former Miss Antioch, explained rules and scheduling of events leading up to the pageant to the candidates on hand. Applicants for the 2015 Miss, Junior Miss, and Little Miss Antioch titles have until May 1 to enter this year’s competition, which will be held on June 20 at the Antioch Community High School auditorium. For more information, contact the Parks and Recreation Department at (847) 395-2160.
College news McHenry County College (MCC): The following local area students were named to MCC’s dean’s list and President’s list for the fall 2014 semester.
Dean’s list: Harvard: Caleb Blankenbaker, Michael Erickson, Jessica Fuentes, Brenda Garcia, Mark Handeland, Alexander Kick, Karissa Lovergine, Michael Mackenzie, Briseidy Mendez, Angel Mohaupt, Paulette Ortiz, Jennifer Stowe, Jorge Torres, Patricia Vargas, Austin Warren, Dylan Witt Hebron: Baylee Anderson, Alex Arthur, Aaron Cossiboon, Carissa Stauss Island Lake: Marco Arreguin, Lauren Delke, Nicolas Ohms, Taran Poytress, Alejandra Reyes, Russell Tabaka Johnsburg: Michelle Dezetter, Anne Donald, Colin Ellison, Sean Freberg, James Keclik, Rebecka Turpel Lakemoor: Anthony Oswald McHenry: Arielle Arslani, Andrew Bentz, Dakota Burke, Jacob Burr, Taylor Cassidy, Nain Castilla, Cailynn Clinge, Keeley Collins, Dawn Marie Council, Mason Deja, Samantha Didriksen, Zachery Didriksen, Nicole Farina, Stephanie Faulkner, Shannon Flannigan, Jonathan Fuit, Katherine Gibson,
Evan Groves, Ryan Jesky, Joseph Kapple, Matthew Kinzie, Francesca Lane, Michael Lewyckyj, Alex Lisitza, Timothy Michelsen, Taylar Miller, Angela Munts, Chance Naber, Ryan Nickels, Sharon Nystrom, Michael Frank Oswald, Wyatt Peisert, Samuel Podraza, Volodymyr Pokha, Patrick Quinn, Justin Rodriguez, Rachel Rudny, Bradley Schubert, Wayne Schwander, Elizabeth Schwartz, Alexander Schwebke, Stephaine Shepit, Brandon Skees, Gino Smith, Mary Stafiej, John Strupp, Emily Wagner, Zachary Walat, Nicole Wyatt, Keith Zdeb Richmond: Nicole Hendrickson, Courtney Kaminscky, Marie Kulis, Michael Mortell, Ellyn Turco Spring Grove: Adam Grazier, Jennifer Kanzler, Miranda Miller, Steven Sanborn, Morgan Thomas, Trace Vonbruenchenhein Union: Cali Teer
JUDE KAIDER Hi-Liter
terson, Andrew Raasch, Karl Riewe, Kathryn Rife, Zachary Saran, Isaih Solis, Patience Sprow, Oscar Valadez, Michael Vest, Kassie Wallner, Rachel Anderson, Elizabeth Gonzalez, Jose Juarez, Leah Nolan, Sharon Schuler, Taylor West Hebron: Araceli Aguilar, Jim Kanter, Joshua Lyons, Jessica Wilson Johnsburg: James Bonni, Amanda Cherwin, Kacie Cioccio, Tanya Connerty, Kimberly Culotta, Cynthia Dworshak, John Eyers, Jacob Gasior, Christopher Thomas Geier, Jared Marek, Blythe Mathews, Jason Memmen, Gina Rubino, Jennifer Irene
Trempala, Maggie Lynne Whiting Lakemoor: Sean Caselli McHenry: Gunnar Anderson, Johnny Baird, Elizabeth Brennan, Tyler Bubser, Krystal Caha, Jon-Luc Cayabyab, Jasara Clow, Michael Conkling, Kristen Covelli, Kayla Csech, Matthew Dalton, Arthur Dargan, Michelle Djus, Kelly Ference, Jazmynn Flathau, Krystal Ann Forbes, Evelyn Guarneros, Joshua Hansen, Riley Hunt, Wanda Jablonski, Olivia Johnson, Zdenek Kilian, Susan Kolodziej, Carrie Lins, Mario Lopez, Jonathan Martin, Larissa Mersch, Kelly Margaret Meyer, Markus Miku-
Here’s your chance to streamline government
Lake County recently submitted its ideas to the state task force charged with streamlining local governments, which included a list of mandates that could save Lake County more than $2 million annually. Now, residents can submit their ideas on ways to consolidate, streamline or eliminate duplicative governmental bodies, school districts and taxing authorities, and ideas on ways to replace, revise, or repeal unfunded mandates placed on local governments and school districts. Submit your comments online at www.illinois.gov. The ideas will be compiled and reported to the Local Government Consolidation and Unfunded Mandates Task Force, and a summary of public comments will be included in the task force’s final report to the governor and General Assembly.
las, Kelsey Mowery, Allison Nicholls, Mitchell Noworolnik, Kyle O’Connell, Shelby Page, Amanda Paul, Kerri Pease, Kathleen Peterson, Nicole Pinhiero, Jeremy Porter, Bess Quint, Andrew Quiring, Sara Rasmussen, Alyssa Reibel, Katelyn Rowlett, Joshua Sample, Natascha Schenk, Jacquelyn Schmidt, Amanda Schultz, Alexandra Schwander, James Shanahan, Emily Shepley, Gabrielle Sherman, Nora Sherman, Ryan Skinner, Raquel Smith, Kaylea Sarah Sroka, Ryan Swank, Christina Szpak, Sara Telesz, Wanita Ullrich, Corey Umbarger, Andrew Unrath, Salena Veloz, Angela Vilchis, Michael Wa-
caser, Valerie Wargo, Kelly Watson, Carla Welsh, Cody Wightman, Stephen Wimmer, Julie Winsett Richmond: Andrea Fox, Ryne Heron, Marnie Knouse, Michael Kulis, Stephanie Pedley, Nicole Pekovitch, Miranda Perkins, Kyle Sandrik, Pooja Trivedi Ringwood: Ann Ray Spring Grove: Lisa Barth, Delaney Danson, Boston Delaney, Alana Fuentes, Amanda Hagen, Daniel Heasley, Brandon Kinsella, Joseph Olbie, Hanna Passarella, Corie Sembach, Keith Smith, Shauna Willis Union: Alison Bush, Jake Reich, Shannon Shefcik
President’s honor list: Antioch: Jesse Calabrese, Theresa Taylor Harvard: Arely Barbosa, Christopher Bevins, Erika Esquivel, Brittany Nichole Finke, Erik Finke, Grace Gaffney, Elizabeth Goad, Kimberly Heck, Eduardo Juarez, Megan Korczak, Jeannine Lawler, Kelly Miller-Elliott, Brianna Pasillas, Jessica Pat-
Easter basket program to benefit kids in need In conjunction with the Open Arms Mission and PLAN Food Pantry, The Lindenhurst Early Childhood Center has collected items for its students to make spring Easter baskets for children in residential, foster and hospital care. The center’s goal is for children in need to have a basket on Easter morning. The LECC children will participate in hand assembling the baskets on Tuesday, March 31, from 9:30 to 11 a.m. at 309 Granada Blvd. in Lindenhurst. Volunteers will distribute the baskets during that week to 20 locations including: The Department of Children and Family Services (Foster Care Division), Kid’s Hope, Allendale, Lake County Housing Authority, the Lake Villa/ Avon/PLAN Food Pantries, PADS and the John Stroger County Hospital and Mt. Sinai Hospital. Last year, as a team, LECC was successful in distributing over 400 baskets to more than 20 locations. LECC will have completed over 5,000 baskets in its 12th year of this initiative. Sponsors include: Pack Rat, Uline, Dollar General,
Bear Magic and The 100% Foundation. LECC’s goal is to put a smile on 400 children’s faces who may not receive a gift on Easter morning. For more information, call (847) 727-3885.
Interns sought by Circuit Clerk’s Office Ten full-time, paid summer internships will be available within the Lake County Circuit Clerk’s Office. The program provides an opportunity for students to experience working in public service and government while learning about the services the Circuit Clerk’s Office provides to the community. Interns must be enrolled full time in an accredited college or university, demonstrate strong written and verbal communication skills and be able to work in a fast-paced environment. Applications are available at the circuit clerk’s website at www.lakecountyil.gov/ CircuitClerk/Pages/Internship-Opportunities.aspx.
SUBMITTED PHOTO Hi-Liter
Booths showcasing local businesses and entertainment – like this stiltwalker – will be on hand at Lindenhurst-Lake Villa Chamber of Commerce SpringFest Expo at Lakes Community High School on Saturday and Sunday.
SpringFest Expo is this weekend The Lindenhurst-Lake Villa Chamber of Commerce will host its 12th Annual SpringFest Expo at Lakes Community High School, 1000 Eagle Way, Lake Villa, on Saturday and Sunday. The Expo runs from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Saturday and 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Sunday. The Expo is open to the public and admission is free. “The Lindenhurst-Lake Villa Chamber of Commerce SpringFest Expo is … a perfect place to spend a Saturday or Sunday,” said Connie Meadie, Executive Director of the Lindenhurst-Lake Villa Chamber of Commerce. “The response we’ve received has been so positive. Business people love to showcase their business and we love to provide them with the venue. We’re expecting at
least 3,000 people over the course of the weekend.” Attendees will be able to visit new displays and register to win prizes at different booths. Meteorologist and photographer Mike Caplan will make an appearance at the show on Saturday from noon to 1 p.m. in the Money Mailer booth. The “Kids’Zone” will be open all weekend and kids can meet Cha Cha from the RainForest Café, The Princess Cabaret, and Jason Kollum, stiltwalker. Kids will also be able to enjoy Busy Brains Interactive Children’s Museum, and the Bounce House and mechanical bull from Bella’s Bouncies. Lindenhurst Early Childhood Learning Center will be sponsoring a special arts and crafts table, and Ms.
Kate’s Tot Spot will have games for children. There will be raffles, prizes and all kinds of fun. Get more information on home improvement, landscaping, health and fitness and more. As in years past, the Lake Villa Township Lions Club will hold their Pancake Breakfast on Sunday, March 30, at SpringFest from 8 a.m. to noon. Food and refreshments will be available for purchase on Saturday in the cafeteria. Lakes Community High School is located just east of the intersection of Grass Lake Road and Deep Lake Road in Lake Villa. Contact the Lake Villa Chamber of Commerce at (847) 356-8446 or via email at llvchamber@sbcglobal.net.
The time is now to help
HI-LITER • WEDNESDAY, MARCH 25, 2015 • 8
Volunteers help woman with breast cancer, homeless man This week I would like to once again highlight the volunteer efforts behind the scenes at The Time Is Now to Help. Our volunteers play a key role in our efforts to alleviate the pains of poverty. We could not accomplish all we do without their hard work and compassion. Here are two examples of what they accomplished this past month:
By
SAL DIMICELI Columnist
letter arrived. I immediately called two of The Time Is Now to Help’s trusted volunteers to do a home check and assessment for me. I called the friend who wrote the letter, and Dear W.C., she agreed to meet the I am very worried about volunteers at the woman’s a friend of mine. She is apartment. Several hours fighting for her life due to breast cancer. She has been later the volunteers called to give me their opinion of the very sick while undergoing situation. chemotherapy. She is being After speaking with the evicted next week because woman who was struggling she has been unable to pay through her cancer her rent for the last two treatments and seeing with months. Can you help her with her rent so she does not their own eyes the lack of daily necessities, food become homeless? insecurity and eviction notices from the landlord, Dear readers, they were convinced The I was just leaving to Time Is Now to Help should go out of town when this
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with National Composer Night Out. Set to begin at 7 p.m. at Fusion, 5014 7th Ave., Kenosha. Admission is $5 • May 15 – CITIZEN KANE. At its 1941 premiere, provide assistance. The the New York Times reported volunteers were eager to that this film “comes close to share their ideas to make being the most sensational film this woman’s life somewhat ever made in Hollywood.â€? It easier while undergoing her regularly tops the American remaining treatments. One Film Institute’s most influential of the volunteers is a breast movies of all time. Sponsored cancer survivor, so she knew by the UW-Parkside College of firsthand the difficulties this Arts & Humanities with a talkwoman was going through. back given by professor Jay She gave her much-needed McRoy. Set for 7 p.m. at UWadvice on what foods to Parkside Student Center Cineeat and lifestyle changes to ma, 900 Wood Rd., Kenosha. make. The other volunteer Admission is $5. already had a list ready for • May 21: Doodles & the grocery store. They also Drawings. Join Welles’ scholar gave me the phone number and host Vincent Longo as he of the landlord so I could shares images of Orson Welles’ call and halt the eviction drawings and doodles, found proceedings. in the margins of his business When I called the papers, scripts, telegrams and landlord they seemed to private sketches to family and not believe this woman friends. Longo sheds light and was truly going through helps audiences to understand cancer treatments. I finally the aesthetic vision of his proconvinced them this woman ductions. Scheduled for 7 p.m. would be receiving our at Fusion, 5014 7th Ave., Kenoassistance with rent for the sha. next few months until she • May 24: The Magnifiwas well enough to return to cent Ambersons film screening and discussion with noted See TIN, Page 9 film historian and Welles scholar, Joseph McBride. McBride has written three books on Welles and plays a film critic in Welles’s 1970-76 film, “The Other Side of the Wind,â€? which is now being completed. Personals
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(Continued from page 2)
Plans for the Magnificent Ambersons discussion include showing the entire 88-minute film and a discussion of the changes made from Welles’s original version. At 2 p.m. at the Woman’s Club of Kenosha, 6028 8th Ave., Kenosha. Admission is $5. The Woman’s Club of Kenosha is in historic Library Park nearby the Welles’ birth home and the site of many historical homes related to Welles early life in Kenosha. • May 27 – Orson Welles Trivia Night. Think you know a lot about Welles and his films? Join the Kenosha Public Library and the Citizen Welles Society of Kenosha at Trivia Night and sample a Welles-inspired brew. Prizes from the Welles Trivia Crawl will be awarded. Set for 7 p.m. at Public Craft Brewing, 716 58th St., Kenosha. • May 30-31 – Orson Welles 100th Anniversary Memorial Walk. This cemetery walk, co-produced by Jean Hoffmann, Green Ridge Cemetery and director Vittoria DuMez, will allow visitors to meet Welles’ ancestors through the performances of six actors dressed in period clothing, including Brett Houdek as Orson. Green Ridge Cemetery is the final resting place of Welles’ mother, father, maternal grandparents, paternal grandmother, a great-grandfather and great-grandmother and a grand aunt. Participants should wear
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LEgAL NOTicE NOTICE TAMI STEPHENS UNIT C73: All contents of your unit, furniture & mattress set, are subject to a posessor lien held by Spring Grove Storage in the state of IL. Unless all of the above charges owed are paid within 14 days of this notice, including all of the fees and charges that have been assessed,your goods will be sold at public auction. This Auction will be held at: Spring Grove Storage P.O. Box 217 Spring Grove, IL 60081 On Friday April 10, 2015 at 3:00 p.m. To prevent this auction, please call the manager at 675-1055 or stop in with cash or certified funds.
gARAgE SALES Moving Sale 9221 393RD AVE. POWERS LAKE Sat/Sun 3/28-29, 9-3. Just west of P & Z. 1989 18 ft. Sea Ray motor boat, furniture dining room set, antiques, home decor, yard equip. and tools. Questions 847-380-0090.
Rummage/Garage Sales INDOOR FLEA MARKET Jefferson County Fair Activity Building. Mar.29, 7am-2pm. FREE admission/parking. Old/new collectibles. Space info: 262-679-2293.
PET EQUINE DIRE Union Grove Garage Sales
enbacker. Prairie State, D’Angelico, Stromberg and Gibson Mandolins/Banjos. 1-800-401-0440
walking shoes and be prepared to cross uneven ground. From 1-4 p.m. at Green Ridge Cemetery, 6604 7th Ave., Kenosha. Admission is $5. • Aliens In The Outfield. Join the Kenosha Kingfish for an evening of Orson Wellesthemed baseball in historical Simmons Field, built in 1920 and refurbished in the summer of 2014. For more information on the date and promotions for the event, visit http:// northwoodsleague.com/kenosha-kingfish/
(Published in Hi-Liter / Richmond • Spring Grove • Johnsburg Report March 25 & April 1, 2015 WNAXLP - 199055)
reading! Entertainment purposes
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• Welles celebration
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Sunday - March 29
• Time is now
Since this assistance, the homeless man is now able to afford monthly rent in a small apartment. We provided him with first month’s rent and security deposit to help him even further in his efforts to live safe, secure and independently. God bless our volunteers who were part of this assistance. If it were not for our volunteers, this man and his dog would still be wandering the cold streets alone and forgotten. There are so many ways The Time Is Now to Helps volunteers change the lives of the poverty stricken in our communities. They drive the sick, elderly and handicapped to doctor’s appointments, therapies and treatments. They deliver food to the home bound. They pick up and drop off cars for service. They also assess emergency situations. For so many years, I did all the tasks of The Time is Now to Help myself. I did not reach out to others and tell them about the charity work I founded. Now so many more of our fellow Americans are brought our
life-changing assistance thanks to our caring and sharing volunteers. I am so grateful for the changes they have brought to our organization and the caring and sharing heart they give to our recipients. Please remember every penny you donate at this time will be matched by the Barnabas $55,000 matching grant. This is a wonderful gift to help those in desperate need, especially during the harsh winter months. The children, the handicapped, the elderly, those that cannot fend for themselves, those living in desperate need will be crying happy tears of relief thanks to all of you and The Time Is Now to Help working together to provide poverty relief to those most in need in our communities. Thank you and God bless you.
fellow creations need our compassion. Together we make a big difference. Make checks payable to The Time Is Now to Help, P.O. Box 1, Lake Geneva, WI 53147. The Time Is Now to Help is a federally recognized 501(c)3 charitable organization licensed in Wisconsin and Illinois. You will receive a tax-deductible, itemized thank-you receipt showing how your donation provided assistance for the poverty stricken.
Dahlstrom, Mary Ann Kopp, R. Steven Werner, Richard and Christine Costa, Marlee Carlson, Karin Collamore, Margaret Guidarelli, Debra Guzman, Jennifer Cernech, Sherri Loback, Jean Lois, Ronald and Robin Bender, William Davit, Mike and Sharon Schuchardt, Jamie Gwaltney, Edward Paredes, Oval and Jane Volbrecht, Lloyd Cornue, Woodland Conservancy, John Race, Karen Anderson, Gerald and Joyce Byers, Sid and Patty Johnson, Sally Rogers, Beth and Jody Rendall, William and Dorothy Tookey, W.C. Family Resource Center/ Food Pantry volunteers, and all the God loving volunteers of all our caring pantries, all of you who support The Time Is Now to Help donation boxes, and the businesses that allow our donation boxes. Anyone who would like a Time Is Now donation box in your business, please call (262) 249-7000.
A very special thank you: Fox Charities, Dick and Jean Honeyager, Richard H. Driehaus, Paul Ziegler, Kunes Country Ford-Lincoln Delavan, The Pentair Foundation, The Petco Foundation, Lake Geneva Petco, Dean and Shirley Taylor, Martin Group, John Stensland and Family, The Home Depot Foundation, Health and happiness, Paper Dolls, Elkhorn God bless everyone, W.C./ Chemical and Packaging, Sal Corcoran Landscaping and Construction, Indigo Yoga, Honoraries: Barbara Please help: There The Swanson and Monticello Giovannoni in honor of are many coming to us Family St. Nick Fund, Pauline Malsch’s birthday in desperation. Our good Gregory Swanson, Alex and Les and Pauline
Malsch’s anniversary. Charles and Barbara Taylor in honor of Joyce Dougherty. Memorials: William and Pauline Mangold in memory of Richard Chase. Carla Matz in memory of Harry Bublitz and Heidi Danner. Barbara Johnson Welkos in memory of Jean Amos. Barbara Giovannoni in memory of Harry. W.C. Food Pantry update: The W.C. Food Pantry is moved to its new location at 205 E. Commerce St., Elkhorn. This is in the old Aurora Clinic building off of Highway 67 just east of Interstate 43. The phone number at the new location is (262) 723-4488. Furniture donations: Please contact Love Inc. for all your furniture, clothing and household item donations. Call (262) 7632743 or (262) 763-6226 to schedule pick-up. Please visit: www. timeisnowtohelp.org.
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Place your classified ad in the Hi-Liter and it will also appear on our websites. myracinecounty.com • mywalworthcounty.com mykenoshacounty.com • (262) 728-3411
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work. The landlord agreed to let her remain in the apartment and even reduced the overdue amount to help this woman. After the help given by these volunteers, and several others joined in as well, the woman was able to complete her cancer treatments without the stress of a pending eviction and food insecurity. The volunteers took turns dropping off food and driving her to several doctors’ appointments. Another volunteer cleaned up her apartment and did her laundry when she did not have the energy. How wonderful are our volunteers? We think they are outstanding and so does this woman who is doing well with fighting her cancer. She is not homeless or hungry thanks to all of you. The woman kept professing to the volunteers that due to The Time Is Now to Help’s assistance we together have removed her stress of becoming homeless, allowing her to concentrate on her healing. The volunteers reported the woman’s energy level and positive outlook had greatly improved ever since we provided our caring assistance. I received a phone call from one of our volunteers concerned about a homeless man and his dog. I was still out of town, so I asked one of our male volunteers to check on the situation. The volunteer called me back several hours later after he finally located the man. The volunteer handed the homeless man one of The Time Is Now to Help’s business cards and told him about our mission of removing the pains of poverty. The homeless man asked the volunteer some questions about our organization. The volunteer asked if there was any way we could be of help. The volunteer told me how the man began to cry telling him how he had not been able to find a job after the closure of the business where he had worked for more than 20 years. His unemployment had run out as he told him how no one wanted to hire a man who was 60 years old. He was too young for Social Security and too old for most businesses to want to invest time in training. The man had some health problems that made his employability even harder. The first thing our volunteers did was make sure he got to a warm, clean motel that would accept his dog. They then provided several clean sets of clothing, toiletries and some hot food. These were all shopped for and delivered by our volunteers. After some further assessment, confirming his previous employment and job history, one of our volunteers even knew of a job that he would be qualified for. The homeless man went from cold, hungry and unemployed to knowing that someone actually cared about him and his dog. Our volunteers did not avert their eyes and look the other way, they represented The Time Is Now to Help in a way we all should be proud of, with a heart for caring and sharing for our fellow creations.
HI-LITER • WEDNESDAY, MARCH 25, 2015 • 9 (Continued from page 8)
Life
HI-LITER • WEDNESDAY, MARCH 25, 2015 • 10
Style HI-LITER
Author digs for real story of Penwern Frank Lloyd Wright designed four-building estate on Delavan Lake’s south shore By Vicky Wedig
Jones graduated from high school in southern Illinois in 1877, he went to eaders today might chuckle at work for $6 a week as a stock clerk the so-called news that graced for Adams & Westlake. the pages of newspapers at the Adams & Westlake was a turn of the century. company in what is now the River The columns detailed who was North neighborhood of Chicago that calling upon whom, when lake made everything from bicycles to residents were in town and even when brass beds, Hertzberg said. But its they would be away. biggest business was hardware for It’s not fare one commonly railroad cars - lanterns, door handles finds on news pages today. But and the like. Pullman, the company photojournalist and author Mark that made sleeper coaches, was a big Hertzberg, who has poured over page customer of Adams & Westlake. after page of microfilm of 100-yearJones started out as a stock clerk old issues of the Delavan Enterprise – making the equivalent of $138 a and the Delavan Republican, said week today, and within 15 years was that kind of news – what he called a managing director of the company, “chicken-dinner news” – was Hertzberg said. By 1901, Jones was invaluable in his research for his latest secretary of the company, and he book. retired as vice president in 1908 at the Hertzberg, of Racine, is writing age of 50. a yet-untitled book – his fourth “Quite a career,” Hertzberg said. involving the architecture of Frank Lloyd Wright – about Penwern, Escape from Chicago a Delavan estate designed by the Jones was among Chicago famous architect. businessmen looking to escape the Penwern owners Sue and John stagnant city during the hot months. Major commissioned Hertzberg to “Chicago was a terrible place write the book and expressed their to be in the summer at the turn of desire to learn as much about its the century,” Hertzberg said. The original owner, Fred B. Jones, as heat – coupled with the lack of air possible. conditioning, the use of coal to cook, “The Majors’ primary interest is the stench of thousands of horses in that I learn as much as possible and the streets and Jones’ corpulence – get as complete a story as possible,” made for unpleasant conditions. Hertzberg said. That fall, Hertzberg said, Jones Hertzberg began his research in acquired the property where Penwern June 2013 and along the way has sits – along the south shore of dispelled erroneous information Delavan Lake on 10 acres with previously disseminated and 600 feet of shore line – in nine or continues to learn new things about 10 acquisitions, most of them from Jones and the estate. Henry Wallis. A tidbit Hertzberg learned a few Wright connection weeks ago – by perusing Pittsfield, Henry H. Wallis was a Chicago Ill., newspapers from the 1870s man who married a Delavan woman, at the library there – is that after EDITOR
R
Minnie Shulz, Hertzberg said. He operated a hardware business in Chicago but in 1887 opened a real estate office in Chicago to sell property on the south shore of Delavan Lake in his wife’s hometown. “To a large extent, it you were going to buy property on the south shore, you bought it from Henry H. Wallis,” Hertzberg said. Wallis’ clients were businessmen like Jones looking for a getaway from Chicago. “They were among the summer cottage clients,” Hertzberg said. “These so-called cottages are large enough to be homes in and of themselves.” Wallis, he said, was friends with Frank Lloyd Wright and is the probable connection to the Wrightdesigned structures on Delavan Lake. Wright designs Wright designed five homes on Delavan Lake – all on South Shore Drive – between 1900 and 1905. “I think it’s incredibly unique to have five houses on a lake designed by a world-renowned architect,” said Penwern owner Sue Major, of Rancho Santa Fe, Calif., near San Diego. “It still amazes me how few people in the area know that.” Major said she and her husband, John Major, also were unaware of the Wright-designed houses during their
search for a summer home in the area when they were living in Barrington Hills, Ill. Wright also designed the original Delavan Lake Yacht Club in 1904, but the building was demolished in 1916, Hertzberg said. Another home on South Shore Drive called the Wallis Gate House has a plaque on it that says Wright remodeled it, but Hertzberg has found no documentation of that. Myths In his research, Hertzberg is taking care not to build on previously reported inaccuracies. It has been written that Wallis, who also had a home at 3301 South Shore Drive, never lived in his Wright house because of the death of his only child. In fact, Wallis’ daughter was born in 1903 and died in 1927, according to an article by Hertzberg. Hertzberg is also trying to track down the meaning of the name Penwern as Wright intended it. “It has been written that it’s Gaelic for great house,” Hertzberg said. However, the word is either Welsh or Cornish and does not mean “great house,” he said. One of the meanings for the word is the head of a grove of alder trees, which might have been native to the area. Another possible tie is Wright’s heritage. Wright’s mother was Welsh,
Wright homes on Delavan Lake Five homes on the south shore of Delavan Lake were designed by Frank Lloyd Wright. The homes’ original owners, locations and years of construction are: • Henry H. Wallis, 3407 South Shore Drive, 1900; • Fred B. Jones, 3335 South Shore Drive, 1900; • Charles and Mary Ross, 3211 South Shore Drive, 1902; • Carrie and George Spencer, the Ross’ daughter and son-in-law, 3209 South Shore Drive, 1902; and • Arthur P. Johnson, 3455 South Shore Drive, 1905. Source: Article by Mark Hertzberg for At the Lake magazine in fall 2014
HI-LITER • WEDNESDAY, MARCH 25, 2015 • 11
The living room of Penwern is seen as it was when Chicago businessman Fred B. Jones vacationed at the South Shore Drive estate from 1900 to 1933.
The dining room of Penwern is seen in the early 1900s when Chicago businessman Fred B. Jones commissioned its construction on South Shore Drive.
PHOTO COURTESY OF JOHN HIME Hi-Liter
PHOTO COURTESY OF JOHN HIME Hi-Liter
MARK HERTZBERG Hi-Liter
The living room in the main house at Penwern, a four-building estate designed by Frank Lloyd Wright, is seen as it looks today.
Stewards of Penwern
SUBMITTED PHOTO Hi-Liter
Source: penwern.com
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was not in perfect shape when they bought it.” The Majors based their renovations on Wright’s original design and purchased the gate lodge when it became available. The lodge had been separated from the rest of the estate and owned by Terry Canty, the daughter of Burr and Peg Robbins, until 2001, according to the Penwern website. Major said her favorite thing about Penwern is the open feeling upon entering the property. “I love, as you’re coming in, the feel of the countryside around the lake,” she said. Major said she also loves the garden, and the view of the lake that is unobstructed by the boathouse. “The alignment was thought through in such detail that (a) person sitting on the porch and looking out over the lake would have an unobstructed view of the opposite shore,” Hertzberg wrote on the Penwern website. “Had the boathouse been just one foot higher, that view would have been disrupted. That it was done in a time before computers showcases Wright’s genius.” The Majors – John, an investor, and Sue, who operates an executive search firm – still spend summers at their Delavan Lake home. Sue Major said those summers are getting longer now that their children are grown. She said her hope for Hertzberg’s book is to get an understanding of the person who built the house – understand what his thoughts were, how he met Frank Lloyd Wright and why the house was designed the way it was. “I really like the design of the house and how it fits on the property,” she said. While Hertzberg has learned many interesting things about Jones, the original question of how he met Wright hasn’t been cracked, Major said.
Ross Robbins – 1980 to 1989 Ross Robbins was the son of Burr and Peg Robbins. John O’Shea – 1989 to 1994 O’Shea owned the property except the Gate Lodge, which was owned by Terry Canty, Burr and Peg Robbins’ daughter, from 1980 to 2001. Sue and John Major – 1994 to present The Majors also bought the Gate Lodge in 2001 and used Wright’s plans to rebuilt the boathouse from 2002 to 2005.
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and his mother’s uncle lived in a cottage named Penwern in Wales, Hertzberg said. The estate The 10-acre Penwern estate has four buildings that Wright designed – the main house, designed in 1900; a boat house, also thought to be designed in 1900; and a gate house and a barn, both of which date to 1903, Hertzberg said. He said the Delavan Enterprise chronicled construction of the barn and gate lodge in 1903. The boathouse burned in 1978 – an apparent arson, Hertzberg said. “Apparently people know who did it, but the individual was never charged,” Hertzberg said. The boathouse lay in ruins when current owners Sue and John Major bought the estate in 1994, he said. The Majors used Wright’s plans to rebuild the boathouse in 2002 and have won preservation awards for their work on the property, according to Wright in Wisconsin – a Frank Lloyd Wright historian group. Sue Major said the couple had great friends who introduced them to Delavan Lake during their search for a summer spot within an hour or two of their Barrington Hills, Ill., home. She said the couple were looking for a home on the lake when their children were small and saw an array of homes on the lake including Penwern, which was called Robbinswood at the time. Hertzberg said Burr and Peg Robbins, who owned the home from 1938 to 1980 after Jones’ death in 1933, renamed the home. Major said the home fit the Majors’ fondness for antiques, older things and renovation. “Our home in Barrington Hills was a renovation as well,” she said. “We learned about Frank Lloyd Wright, and we felt we could renovate.” “They rescued the house,” Hertzberg said. “The house
Penwern owners since the Frank Lloyd Wright-designed estate was built on South Shore Drive beginning in 1900 are: Fred B. Jones – 1900 to 1933 The property could not be sold for five years after Jones’ death in 1933 while his will was contested. Burr and Peg (Margaret) Robbins – 1938 to 1980 The Robbins renamed Penwern “Robbinswood.” The boathouse was destroyed in an arson fire in September 1978.
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The public library in Pittsfield, Ill., where the original owner of Penwern, Fred B. Jones, grew, up, provided this portrait of the Chicago businessman.
MARK HERTZBERG Hi-Liter
The dining room of Penwern is seen as it is today under the stewardship of Sue and John Major.
HI-LITER • WEDNESDAY, MARCH 25, 2015 • 12
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Police team up on drug bust Men were allegedly selling crack cocaine
Urban farmers
JUDE KAIDER Hi-Liter
Don Zienty (left) and wife Lynn learn a few of the finer points of honey and beeswax soap from “Keeper of the Bees,” Peter Poli, at the Antioch Public Library District, 757 N. Main St. on Saturday. Poli, owner of Humdinger Honey Works, held a discussion on “Urban Farming” and getting back to the land in one’s own back yard. Subjects included the basics of square foot gardening, bee keeping, chicken keeping, and composting, among others.
Two Fox Lake men have been charged with multiple felonies after they were arrested March 18 with $2,000 worth of crack cocaine. Members of the Antioch, Fox Lake and Lake Villa Police departments executed a narcotics search warrant at 7 a.m. on a residence at 92 Maude Avenue in Fox Lake following an extensive investigation. Xavier Thomas, 24, and Jordyn Anderson, 21, were arrested and transported to Lake County Bond Court where both were remanded to the Lake County Jail on $100,000 bond and given a return court date of April 18 at 1:30 p.m. Police allege evidence recovered from the residence included 34 individually wrapped plastic bags of crack cocaine ready for sale with a combined weight of 19.6 grams, 20 pills of a schedule 2 prescription of Norco, one pill of a schedule 4 prescription of alprazolam, along with $3,341 in cash, which was confiscated under the Illinois asset and forfeiture laws. The street value of the crack cocaine is $2,000, according to police. Thomas was charged with unlawful possession with the intent to deliver, a Class X felony; unlawful possession of a
controlled substance, a Class 1 felony; and unlawful possession of a controlled substance, a Class 4 felony. Anderson was charged with unlawful possession with the intent to deliver, a Class X felony; unlawful possession of a controlled substance, a Class 1 felony; and unlawful possession of a controlled substance, a Class 4 felony. A Class X felony is punishable by 6 to 30 years in a state penitentiary and/or a fine of up to $25,000, upon conviction. A Class 1 felony is punishable by 4 to 15 years in a state penitentiary and/or a fine of up to $25,000, upon conviction. A Class 4 felony is punishable by 1 to 3 years in a state penitentiary and/or a fine of up to $25,000, upon conviction. The police chiefs of the three agencies released the following statement: “This enforcement action was made possible by positive working relationships with our neighboring communities and police agencies. Our police departments gather and share intelligence information regularly and are committed in getting the message out that our communities are actively combating illegal drug activity. “The devastating effects of drug abuse know no borders. We are committed to providing safe environments for our residents and are more effective when we work together.”
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HI-LITER • WEDNESDAY, MARCH 25, 2015 • 6
CLC theater presents one-act comedies A trio of comedic one-act plays by three popular playwrights will be presented by the College of Lake County Theatre Department April 10 to 12 and 16 to 18 as part of Play On!, the 2015 Theatre Student Showcase. The plays are “Mary Just Broke Up with This Guy” by Garth Wingfield, “Soap Opera” by David Ives and “Wanda’s Visit” by Christopher Durang. The productions are student run, with CLC students working as actors, directors, stage managers, designers and technicians under the direction of faculty and staff mentors. The shows will be presented April 10, 11, 16, 17, 18 at 7:30 p.m. and April 12 at 2 p.m. in the Studio Theatre at the James Lumber Center for the Performing Arts at the CLC Grayslake campus. The plays contain adult language and subject matter. “This is our fifth year presenting “Play On,” and we are incredibly proud of our students’ dedication, achievement and artistry,” said Craig Rich, co-chair of the Theatre department. “‘Play On’ allows them the opportunity to develop the skills they are
Discover the
learning in their classes, collaborate within a production team and realize their overall artistic vision. This invaluable theatre training prepares our students to transfer to fouryear theatre programs and helps them succeed as future theatre professionals.” “Mary Just Broke Up with This Guy” tells the story of Mary, who just broke up with a guy she’d been seeing for six years and experiences the ups and downs of dating. Variety called the play “Brilliant. A hilarious excursion into the dating dilemmas of a needy but oh-so-choosy newcomer to the dating scene.” Student director Moisés Diaz (Waukegan) is a sophomore theatre major who is also costume designer for “Wanda’s Visit.” He was assistant director for CLC’s “The Miser,” on wardrobe crew for “Crimes of the Heart” and played Mr. Blossom in “Doctor Doolittle.” Riccarda Eickenberg (Long Grove) plays Mary and Trevor Herden (Wadsworth) plays Mary’s Dates. “Soap Opera” concerns a washing-machine repairman who falls in love with a picture-perfect washer and then has to tell his girlfriend Mabel.
But is the washer two-timing him with a dryer? “The play is humorous and serious at the same time,” according to an essay by Gwendolyn Contos. “While depicting a ridiculous situation which is unlikely to happen, Ives touches upon a number of important issues such as romantic relationships, imperfection of human beings and essence of human existence.” The play is being directed by Kyle Perry (Round Lake), a theatre performance major. He was assistant director for CLC’s “Crimes of the Heart,” played Bjorn in “Snow White and the Seven Fairy Godmothers” for the Round Lake Area Park District and was part of the ensemble for CLC’s “Young Frankenstein.” The cast includes North Homeward (Gurnee) as Repairman, Jack Kelly (Lake Villa) as Loudspeaker Voice/ Friend, John Stergiou (Gurnee) as Maitre d,’ Emily Schneider (Lindenhurst) as Mother/Mabel, Jennifer Nelson (Lindenhurst) as The Machine and Alex Levin (Lake Forest) as Madman. “Wanda’s Visit” features the saga of Jim and Marsha, a bored and unhappy couple
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who have been married 13 years. When Wanda, Jim’s old girlfriend, shows up for a visit and they all go out for dinner, hilarity ensues as a waiter tries to cope with the confused threesome on his first day on the job. Director Jazmine Tamayo (Antioch) is a theatre major whose recent CLC Theatre roles include Elise in “The Miser,” Sasha/Ensemble in “Young Frankenstein” and Gretchen in “1-900-DESPERATE.” The cast features Phil Bartnicki (Wauconda) as Jim, Amanda Platt (Round Lake) as Marsha, Amanda
Barth (Trevor, Wisc.) as Wanda, Jack Kelly (Lake Villa) as Waiter, Alex Levin (Lake Forest) as Man 1 and Trevor Herden (Wadsworth) as Man 2. Playwright Christopher Durang won on a Tony Award for best play in 2013 for “Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike” and was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in Drama in 2006 for “Miss Witherspoon.” Tickets: Regular: $9; CLC/Senior/Teen/JLC Subscribers: $7 (does not include $2 JLC facility fee). Other fees may apply to Internet purchases. A special
buy one, get one free ticket offer is available for the April 10 and 16 performances. The box office is open Monday through Friday, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. and 90 minutes prior to each performance. Call (847) 543-2300 or visit www.clcillinois.edu/tickets. Groups of six or more people are eligible for discounted ticket prices. Call group sales at (847) 543-2431 or email JLCgroupsales@clcillinois.edu for more information. To request sign language interpreting, contact the box office two to three weeks in advance.
The Second City touring ensemble to perform Chicago’s famous comedy troupe, The Second City, will serve up comedic twists on today’s local headlines and present some of the best sketches from the past at 8 p.m. on April 10, at the James Lumber Center for the Performing Arts at the College of Lake County in Grayslake. “The Second City Hits Home” cast includes Ali Barthwell, Kelsey Kinney, John Sabine, Jasbir Singh, Jamison Webb and Casey Whitaker. Other troupe members are Jake Allen Miller (stage manager), Vinnie Pillarella (musical director) and Anneliese Toft (director). Ali Barthwell is a Chicagoland native and a Wellesley College alumna. She completed The Second City Training Center House Ensemble program and the Annoyance Training Center program. She is a member of Sweet Tease and Under the Gun Theater. Kelsey Kinney, a Cleveland native, has been performing improv and sketch comedy since 2007. In Chicago, she has performed at iO Theater, ComedySportz Chicago and The Playground Theater. John Sabine of Dallas, Texas, graduated from Santa Clara University and has studied at the Second City Training Center and iO. In Chicago he has performed with The Late 90’s, Rotten, The Second City Does Dallas and What the Tour Guide Didn’t Tell You. Jasbir Singh is a graduate of the Second City improv, writing, acting and conservatory programs. He has performed with the Second City House Ensemble Outreach program, iO, The Annoyance Theater, and with his sketch
group Warm Milk. Jamison Webb of Fort Myers, Fla., is a graduate of the University of Florida, where he performed sketch and improv with Theatre Strike Force. He performs at iO with Gold Star and at the Upstairs Gallery with Rotten. Casey Whitaker of Beavercreek, Ohio, is a University of Kentucky graduate who trained at The Second City and iO Chicago. She performs improv, solo sketch and stand up at The Playground, Paper Machete and Zanies Chicago. Anneliese Toft (director) has directed sketch shows in venues all over Chicago including the Annoyance Theater, Theater Wit, Stage 773, The Public House Theatre, Upstairs Gallery, Cornservatory and iO. She is a graduate of the Second City Directing Program, worked as assistant to the director for Jeff-nominated Second City ETC revue, “A Clown Car Named Desire” and directs for The Second City aboard Norwegian Cruise Lines. Tickets: Regular tickets: $35/32/28; Senior/ Staff/Alumni: $34/31/27; CLC Student/Teen: $15; and Children: $12. A $2 per ticket JLC facility fee will be added at the time of purchase. Other fees may apply to Internet purchases. CLC student tickets are not available for online purchase. Teen and children tickets must be purchased with adult priced tickets. For more information or to order tickets, visit http://www.clcillinois.edu/tickets or call (847) 543-2300 (option 5). The Box Office is open Monday through Friday, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. and 90 minutes before performances.
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fore the April 7 Consolidated Election may qualify for personal delivery of a ballot, subject to statutory conditions. The voter must complete a request form titled AppliRestaurant Specials cation for Ballot for Qualified Voter Admitted to a JOHN MORREL THICK BACON . 30 LB CASE $1.79 lb Hospital, Nursing Home or JIMMY DEAN CHEDDAR WURST........ 2/6LB $1.79 lb Rehabilitation Center. The SIMMONS GRILLED CHICKEN STRIPS ........... $2.89 lb voter’s physician is required JULIAN HAM STRIPS (FROZEN)....... 6/32 oz $2.89 lb SLICED SHARP WHITE CHEDDAR CHEESE....... $2.79 lb to complete the accompanyBRIAR STREET TURKEY BREAST 2 PC FROZEN $1.29 lb SLICED BABY SWISS.................................$2.79 lb ing Affidavit of Attending AMERICAN CHOICE BOLOGNA .........2 PC $1.19 lb SLICED SMOKED CHEDDAR..........................$2.79 lb Physician. Lake County recently submitted its ideas to the state WILD CAUGHT HADDOCK FILET...... 3/15LB $1.29 lb CHIPOTLE SLICED CHEDDAR ......................$3.95 lb Forms are available task force charged with streamlining local governments, 10LB CASE OF MOZZ STICKS........................$15.00 by contacting the County which included a list of mandates that could save Lake Clerk’s Election Department Deli Specials County more than $2 million annually. at VotingByMail@lakecounin custom cuts. Contact in the Meat Department at Now, residents can submit their ideas Ray on ways GARLIC BASIL CHICKEN SLICED ................... 99¢ lb Specializing tyil.gov or (847) 377-2314. to consolidate, streamline or eliminate duplicative CHIPOTLE PINEAPPLE CHICKEN SALAD ........... 99¢ lb Web visitors may also downgovernmental bodies, school districts and taxing CAJUN SMOKED CHICKEN SLICED................ 99¢ lb load the Hospitalized Voter authorities, and ideas on ways to replace, revise, or FRIED TURKEY BREAST SLICED ................... $3.99 lb Form by visiting www.Lakerepeal unfunded mandates placed on local governments OVEN ROASTED TURKEY BREAST ................ $2.99 lb CountyClerk.info and clickand school districts. Submit your comments online at SUMMER SALAD .................................. $2.49 lb ing on the Forms tab under www.illinois.gov. SLICED BOLOGNA................................ $1.59 lb Resources. The ideas will be compiled and reported to the Local SLICED PEPPERED ITALIAN STYLE HAM ......... $2.49 lb 3/25/15 - 3/31/15 All required forms must Government Consolidation and Unfunded Mandates Limit: 12 Jars BACON ENCRUSTED SLICED ROAST BEEF ...... $4.99 lb Retail: $9.95 be completed and returned Task Force, and a summary of public comments will be BACON ENCRUSTED HAM & TURKEY LOAF .... $3.49 lb to the Lake County Clerk’s included in the task force’s final report to the governor Specializing in custom cuts. office prior to the voter’s and General Assembly. MEAT RAFFLE HEADQUARTERS Contact Ray in the Meat Department at Certificate of Application and ballot being issued. CALL: 262-537-2993 • TEXT: 262-215-1330 • EMAIL: Meatrafflehqbb@gmail.com For more information on “And now I will show you County Clerk services and MONDAY TUESDAY BARGAIN WEDNESDAY SENIOR The Most Excellent Way”... election news, visit www. The Christian Solutions for Addictions: JESUS! ONLY! BUCKS! DISCOUNT DAY! LakeCountyClerk.info, folwww.tmewiw.com For every $100 purchase For ever $100 purchase Discount for private 1 Corinthians 12:31 NIV low at twitter.com/Lakewe will give you $10 in you will recieve $10 parties only. CountyClerk, join the page ?NEED HELP? Mad Money to spend Bargain Bucks to spend Excludes Businesses. at facebook.com/Countyanother day. another day. Clerk or subscribe to the Limit 5 per day. Cannot be Limit 5 per day. Cannot be e-newsletter at www.Lakecombined with other offers. combined with other offers. CountyClerk.info by click198025 ing on the envelope icon or CHECKS • ATM AVAILABLE WE ACCEPT THEthe SNAP AND We Accept SNAPCARD CARD and Checks ACCEPTED Accepted • ATM Available call (847) 377-2400. WEWe RESERVE THE RIGHT MANUFACTURERS reserve the right to limitTO LIMIT ManufacturersCOUPONS Coupons www.BestBargainsInc.com www.BestBargainsInc.com WHOLE BONE IN HAM (20-25LB)................. $1.59 lb FRESH 85% LEAN GROUND BEEF ................. $2.99 lb FRESH POLISH SAUSAGE........................... $3.29 lb FRESH BONLESS SKINLESS CHICKEN BREAST.... $1.99 lb CHOICE PORTERHOUSE STEAKS.................. $7.49 lb CHOICE T-BONE STEAKS .......................... $6.99 lb CHOICE BONE NEW YORK STRIP ................. $6.49 lb
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HI-LITER • WEDNESDAY, MARCH 25, 2015 • 7
State recommends funding for highway project in area Project would extend Route 53 into Lake County A committee convened by the Illinois Tollway voted March 12 on recommendations to fund the extension of Illinois Route 53 north into Lake County and to support tollway-led work to keep the project moving forward. With a vote of 21-2, the project’s Finance Committee approved a package of funding recommendations that are projected to generate between $745 million to $993 million toward the Illinois Route 53/120 Project. The recommendations also request that the Illinois Tollway move forward with the next engineering and environmental studies required to advance the project. These studies would include a comprehensive examination of the roadway alignment, access points, design, project impacts and mitigation issues well before construction. The recommendations would help close the funding gap created from the difference between the project’s cost – estimated at $2.35 billion to $2.65 billion in 2020 dollars – and toll revenue generated from the project. The Illinois Route 53/120 Project is proposed to be a 21st century urban highway in central Lake County – a modern boulevard with a small footprint to protect the natural environment and preserve the character of the area while addressing the need for congestion relief and greater connectivity, according to transportation officials.
Because tolling the roadway itself is expected to generate only $250 million to $330 million in bonding capacity, the committee sought additional ways to fund the project through a variety of local sources and innovative revenue streams. Key elements of the committee’s recommendations include: • Leveraging a portion of the increase in adjacent, new non-residential land values to financially support the protection and restoration of natural resources in the corridor via an Environmental Restoration and Stewardship Fund. • Adding Lake County to the state’s current 4-cent-pergallon county motor fuel tax and committing 50 percent of revenues to the Illinois Route 53/120 Project (the other 50 percent would be committed to other transportation priorities in Lake County). • Indexing and congestion pricing of tolls along Illinois Route 53/120 as a pilot for eventual implementation along the entire Tollway system. • Restructuring tolls along the Tri-State Tollway (I-94) in Lake County to raise revenue, improve tolling equity and mitigate and minimize diversion onto local roads. This could be accomplished by adding a new mainline toll plaza and/or tolling existing I-94 access points that are not currently tolled. “Planning for the extension of Illinois Route 53 has been stalled for years due to
various funding challenges and a lack of consensus,” said Lake County Board Chair Aaron Lawlor. “Today’s vote of approval represents a major step forward in order to make the project a reality and address a critical transportation need in Lake County.” “These recommendations in combination with the project’s land use work will enable us to advance a truly innovative transportation solution for central Lake County,” said BRAC Co-chair George Ranney. “This is a project that protects community and environmental concerns while creating a ‘modern parkway’ envisioned for the region by local and regional leaders.” In 2012, the Illinois Route 53/120 Blue Ribbon Advisory Council (BRAC), made up of local elected officials, transportation and planning agencies and a diverse group of environmental, civic, business and labor representatives, reached a regional consensus recommending the Illinois Tollway move the project forward as a 21st century “modern boulevard” with design and environmental requirements that will protect the natural environment while preserving the character
of Lake County. The Illinois Tollway, Lake County and the Chicago Metropolitan Agency for Planning have been partnering on the current phase of analysis to examine the feasibility of the project with respect to financing and land use for the proposed new roadway. “The Illinois Tollway appreciates the time and effort volunteered by these community leaders who remain committed to building the Illinois Route 53/120 Project,” said Illinois Tollway Executive Director Kristi Lafleur. “Their recommendations will be critical in helping our Board review this project to determine if and how the agency should proceed.” The funding recommendations are outlined in a report that will be presented to the Illinois Tollway Board of Directors for consideration. The Tollway Board will review the report and decide if and how the agency should proceed. To view the committee’s report and other documents related to the BRAC’s previous work, visit to the “Construction/Planning” section of www.illinoistollway.com and select “Community Outreach.”
Easter basket program to benefit kids in need In conjunction with the Open Arms Mission and PLAN Food Pantry, The Lindenhurst Early Childhood Center has collected items for its students to make spring Easter baskets for children in residential, foster and hospital care. The center’s goal is for children in need to have a basket on Easter morning. The LECC children will participate in hand assembling the baskets on Tuesday, March 31, from 9:30 to 11 a.m. at 309 Granada Blvd. in Lindenhurst. Volunteers will distribute the baskets during that week to 20 locations including: The Department of Children and Family Services (Foster Care Division), Kid’s Hope, Allendale, Lake County Housing Authority, the Lake Villa/Avon/PLAN Food Pantries, PADS and the John Stroger County Hospital and Mt. Sinai Hospital. Last year, as a team, LECC was successful in distributing over 400 baskets to more than 20 locations. LECC will have completed over 5,000 baskets in its 12th year of this initiative. Sponsors include: Pack Rat, Uline, Dollar General, Bear Magic and The 100% Foundation. LECC’s goal is to put a smile on 400 children’s faces who may not receive a gift on Easter morning. For more information, call (847) 727-3885.
Lindenhurst hosts Easter egg hunt An old-fashioned Easter egg hunt is scheduled for Saturday, March 28, at Forest View Park, 513 Forest View Dr., Lindenhurst. There will be designated hunting areas for children age 2 and under with parent starting at 10 a.m. followed by ages 3, 4, 5 and 6 separately and ages 7 and 8 grouped together. Eggs will be filled with prize tickets or candy. The Easter bunny will be on hand for visits and photos. The event is free.
Early voting in force for April election Early voting for the April 7 Consolidated Election in Lake County began on March 23 and ends Saturday, April 4. Early voting is available Monday to Friday from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. and Saturday from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Visit www.LakeVoterPower.info to confirm registration at your current address, see a sample ballot and find your early and Election Day voting site. Per state law, early voters are required to present valid government-issued photo identification which includes an Illinois driver’s license, Il-
Interns sought by Circuit Clerk’s Office Ten full-time, paid summer
internships will be available within the Lake County Circuit Clerk’s Office. The program provides an opportunity for students to experience working in public service and government while learning about the services the Circuit Clerk’s Office provides to the community. Interns must be enrolled full time in an accredited college or university, demonstrate strong written and verbal communication skills and be able to work in a fast-paced environment. Applications are available at the circuit clerk’s website at www.lakecountyil.gov/ CircuitClerk/Pages/Internship-Opportunities.aspx.
linois Secretary of State identification card, government employee identification or passport. Identification with an address different from registration record requires additional verification set forth under 10 ILCS 5/17-10. For more information on County Clerk services and election news, visit www. LakeCountyClerk.info, follow at twitter.com/LakeCountyClerk, join the page at facebook.com/CountyClerk or subscribe to the e-newsletter at LakeCountyClerk.info by clicking on the envelope icon or call (847) 377-2400.
Free auditioning workshop offered PM&L Theatre, Antioch, will host a free auditioning workshop on Saturday, April 18, from 10 a.m. to noon. The workshop will be led by PM&L members Jason Clark (Artistic Director at Bowen Park Theatre) and Rebecca Zellar (former artistic director/founder of The GreyZelda Theatre Group). Contact Rebecca at (773) 610-9249 or r_zellar06@yahoo.com for further information and to sign up.
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Booths showcasing local businesses and entertainment – like this stiltwalker – will be on hand at Lindenhurst-Lake Villa Chamber of Commerce SpringFest Expo at Lakes Community High School on Saturday and Sunday.
SpringFest Expo is this weekend The Lindenhurst-Lake Villa Chamber of Commerce will host its 12th Annual SpringFest Expo at Lakes Community High School, 1000 Eagle Way, Lake Villa, on Saturday and Sunday. The Expo runs from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Saturday and 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Sunday. The Expo is open to the public and admission is free. “The Lindenhurst-Lake Villa Chamber of Commerce SpringFest Expo is … a perfect place to spend a Saturday or Sunday,” said Connie Meadie, Executive Director of the Lindenhurst-Lake Villa Chamber of Commerce. “The response we’ve received has been so positive. Business people love to showcase their business and we love to provide them with the venue. We’re expecting at
least 3,000 people over the course of the weekend.” Attendees will be able to visit new displays and register to win prizes at different booths. Meteorologist and photographer Mike Caplan will make an appearance at the show on Saturday from noon to 1 p.m. in the Money Mailer booth. The “Kids’Zone” will be open all weekend and kids can meet Cha Cha from the RainForest Café, The Princess Cabaret, and Jason Kollum, stiltwalker. Kids will also be able to enjoy Busy Brains Interactive Children’s Museum, and the Bounce House and mechanical bull from Bella’s Bouncies. Lindenhurst Early Childhood Learning Center will be sponsoring a special arts and crafts table, and Ms.
Kate’s Tot Spot will have games for children. There will be raffles, prizes and all kinds of fun. Get more information on home improvement, landscaping, health and fitness and more. As in years past, the Lake Villa Township Lions Club will hold their Pancake Breakfast on Sunday, March 30, at SpringFest from 8 a.m. to noon. Food and refreshments will be available for purchase on Saturday in the cafeteria. Lakes Community High School is located just east of the intersection of Grass Lake Road and Deep Lake Road in Lake Villa. Contact the Lake Villa Chamber of Commerce at (847) 356-8446 or via email at llvchamber@sbcglobal.net.
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Volume 10 • Number 16
198451
Wednesday, MaRCH 25, 2015
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Pace Bus offers new route for morning commuters Pace Bus Service is providing a new route for service from Richmond to the Fox Lake Metra Station. The new route 809 began March 9 and takes commuters to the train station twice in the morning and provides return trips twice each evening. The bus picks up passengers weekday mornings at Highway 12 and South Street at 5:33 and 6:23 a.m. and drops them at the Fox Lake station in time to catch the 6:08 and 6:53 a.m. Metra
Train departures. In the evening, the bus picks up passengers from the 6:04 and 6:55 p.m. train arrivals and returns them to Richmond at 6:32 and 7:26 p.m., respectively. The timetables are available online at PaceBus.com or by calling Pace customer relations at (847) 364-7223 and selecting option 3. For additional information on the service, contact the RTA Travel Information Service at (312) 836-7000.
Easter egg hunt set for Saturday
Urban farmers
JUDE KAIDER Hi-Liter
Don Zienty (left) and wife Lynn learn a few of the finer points of honey and beeswax soap from “Keeper of the Bees,” Peter Poli, at the Antioch Public Library District, 757 N. Main St. on Saturday. Poli, owner of Humdinger Honey Works, held a discussion on “Urban Farming” and getting back to the land in one’s own back yard. Subjects included the basics of square foot gardening, bee keeping, chicken keeping, and composting, among others.
Spring Grove, Richmond and Burton have teamed up to host a community Easter egg hunt on Saturday at Thelen Park, 8400 Winn Road Spring Grove. The event begins at 2 p.m. There is no fee, but participants are encouraged to bring a non-perishable food item to support the local food pantry. There will be more than 3,000 eggs with two special eggs per age group. Those who find a special egg will win a basket filled with toys and candy. All children must be ac-
companied by an adult throughout the event. To guarantee there are enough eggs for everyone, only 10 eggs per child. Children will be grouped by age. All age groups will go at the same time. Parents and guardians with more than one child will need to provided adult supervision for each one. In case of inclement weather or other conditions, the egg hunt will be moved to the Richmond-Burton High School gym, 8311 Highway 12, Richmond.
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Gardenfest 2015 is set for April 11 Area residents have a chance to learn about new garden trends, plants and techniques at the 2015 McHenry County Gardenfest, a daylong series of garden-related seminars and workshops. Gardenfest 2015 will be held from 7:30 a.m. to 3:45 p.m. on April 11 at McHenry County College, 8900 U.S. Route 14, Crystal Lake. Gardenfest is an annual educational event co-sponsored by MCC and the University of Illinois Extension McHenry County Master Gardeners. A total of 19 presenters, including industry experts, UI Extension educators, Master Gardeners and MCC instructors, will cover a myriad of garden-related topics. In addition, exhibitors will be selling books, seeds, garden ornaments, tools and more all day. Door prizes will also be available to attendees. The keynote speaker will be author and nurseryman Roy Diblik, co-owner of Northwind Perennial Farms in Burlington, Wis. Diblik is the author of “The Know Maintenance Perennial Garden” (Timber Press, 2014) and is best known as the plantsman behind the Lurie
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Garden at Millennium Park in Chicago. He will discuss his concept of self-sustaining plant communities — plants that naturally grow well in harmony and require little maintenance, once established. Other Gardenfest topics will include attracting pollinators, adding flea market finds to the garden, small space gardening, conifers, creating hypertufa containers, hardscapes, composing a garden journal, hydroponics, growing rhododendrons and azaleas, tropical plants, succulents, vegetable gardening, identifying weeds and much more. Gardenfest boasts 23 seminars and workshops offered in four segments; each segment lasts one hour and 15 minutes. Lunch is served midday in the MCC cafeteria. Cost is $40 for general admission and $25 for MCC horticulture students. Lunch is included in the fee. Registration forms can be downloaded at www.mchenry. edu/gardenfest. Forms can be faxed to (815) 479-7775. For more information about Gardenfest 2014, call (815) 4797570 or e-mail conferencecenter@mchenry.edu.
Members of Trinity Church, Genoa City, Wis., gather with the quilt they signed and sent to missionaries in Kenya. The church raised more than $3,700 and was able to provide 107 kits of mosquito nets, blankets and mattresses for children in Kenya. Trinity Church is at the corner of Highway 12 and Pell Lake Drive, at W775 Geranium Road.
State recommends funding for highway project in area Project would extend Route 53 into Lake County A committee convened by the Illinois Tollway voted March 12 on recommendations to fund the extension of Illinois Route 53 north into Lake County and to support tollway-led work to keep the
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project moving forward. With a vote of 21-2, the project’s Finance Committee approved a package of funding recommendations that are projected to generate between $745 million to $993 million toward the Illinois Route 53/120 Project. The recommendations also request that the Illinois Tollway move forward with the next engineering and environmental studies required to advance the project. These studies would include a comprehensive examination of the roadway alignment, access points, design, project impacts and mitigation issues well before construction. The recommendations would help close the funding gap created from the difference between the project’s cost – estimated at $2.35 billion to $2.65 billion in 2020 dollars – and toll revenue generated from the project. The Illinois Route 53/120 Project is proposed to be a 21st century urban highway in central Lake County – a modern boulevard with a small footprint to protect the natural environment and preserve the character of the area while addressing the need for congestion relief and greater connectivity, according to transportation officials. Because tolling the roadway itself is expected to generate only $250 million to $330 million in bonding capacity, the committee sought additional ways to fund the project through a variety of local sources and innovative revenue streams. Key elements of the committee’s recommendations include: • Leveraging a portion of the increase in in custom adjacent, cuts. new Specializing non-residential land values to
financially support the protection and restoration of natural resources in the corridor via an Environmental Restoration and Stewardship Fund. • Adding Lake County to the state’s current 4-cent-pergallon county motor fuel tax and committing 50 percent of revenues to the Illinois Route 53/120 Project (the other 50 percent would be committed to other transportation priorities in Lake County). • Indexing and congestion pricing of tolls along Illinois Route 53/120 as a pilot for eventual implementation along the entire Tollway system. • Restructuring tolls along the Tri-State Tollway (I-94) in Lake County to raise revenue, improve tolling equity and mitigate and minimize diversion onto local roads. This could be accomplished by adding a new mainline toll plaza and/or tolling existing I-94 access points that are not currently tolled. “Planning for the extension of Illinois Route 53 has been stalled for years due to various funding challenges and a lack of consensus,” said Lake County Board Chair Aaron Lawlor. “Today’s vote of approval represents a major step forward in order to make the project a reality and address a critical transportation need in Lake County.” “These recommendations in combination with the project’s land use work will enable us to advance a truly innovative transportation solution for central Lake County,” said BRAC Co-chair George Ranney. “This is a project that protects community and environmental concerns while creating a ‘modern parkway’ envisioned for the region by Ray local inand Contact theregional Meat leaders.”
Take a walk on the wild side Local residents are invited to discover the natural wonders of McHenry County from 8:15 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 9. McHenry County abounds with natural wonders, includ-
ing springs, fens, creeks and eskers, many of which are located on private property. McHenry County College and The Land Conservancy of McHenry County will host an exclusive tour of several
CALL: 262-537-2993 • TEXT: 262-215-1330 • EMAIL: Meatrafflehqbb@gmail.com
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MONDAY ONLY!
In 2012, the Illinois Route 53/120 Blue Ribbon Advisory Council (BRAC), made up of local elected officials, transportation and planning agencies and a diverse group of environmental, civic, business and labor representatives, reached a regional consensus recommending the Illinois Tollway move the project forward as a 21st century “modern boulevard” with design and environmental requirements that will protect the natural environment while preserving the character of Lake County. The Illinois Tollway, Lake County and the Chicago Metropolitan Agency for Planning have been partnering on the current phase of analysis to examine the feasibility of the project with respect to financing and land use for the proposed new roadway. “The Illinois Tollway appreciates the time and effort volunteered by these community leaders who remain committed to building the Illinois Route 53/120 Project,” said Illinois Tollway Executive Director Kristi Lafleur. “Their recommendations will be critical in helping our Board review this project to determine if and how the agency should proceed.” The funding recommendations are outlined in a report that will be presented to the Illinois Tollway Board of Directors for consideration. The Tollway Board will review the report and decide if and how the agency should proceed. To view the committee’s report and other documents related to the BRAC’s previous work, visit to the “Construction/Planning” section of www.illinoistollway.com and Department at select “Community Outreach.”
private properties, where the landowners care for some of these resources. An ability to hike across uneven hilly terrain is required. The cost is $59 and lunch is provided. This trip will leave from McHenry County College commons area in Building B. To register, call the MCC Registration Office at (815) 455-8588 or register online at www.mchenry.edu/myMCC and select “Register for Workforce and Community Development Classes.” For more information, contact Claudia Terrones at (815) (815) 455-8782 or email her at cterrones@mchenry.edu.
HI-LITER • WEDNESDAY, MARCH 25, 2015 • 7
911 supervisors earn national certifications McHenry County Sheriff’s Office Communications Division supervisors Bud Hicks and Brian Knop received their Emergency Number Professional certifications with the National Emergency Number Association. This certification shows they are knowledgeable and committed to advancing the 911 service for McHenry
County residents. According to Sheriff’s officials, the certification process equipped Hicks and Knop with a broad base of knowledge in 911 infrastructure, 911 center operations, and 911 legislation that will aid them in their daily duties serving the citizens of McHenry County Hicks serves as the Com-
munication Division Supervisor, overseeing the day-to-day operations and staffing of the Communications Division. The Sheriff’s Office Communications Division dispatches for and receives all emergency calls for eight police departments and four fire departments in addition to the Sheriff’s Office’s emergency and non-emergency calls for
service. Knop is the Communications IT Manager, overseeing all the technology for the division and he oversees the department’s 120 mobile data computers. The National Emergency Number Association is the professional network for 911 services and its goal is to foster technological ad-
County works to raise College news McHenry County College Evan Groves, Ryan Jesky, (MCC): The following local Joseph Kapple, Matthew awareness of TB area students were named to Kinzie, Francesca Lane, Mi-
The McHenry County Department of Health is working to raise awareness of the disease tuberculosis in conjunction with World TB Day as designated by the World Health Organization. Although great strides have been made to control and cure TB, people still get sick and die from this disease in this country. In 2014, McHenry County had five cases of active tuberculosis and 57 people were identified with latent TB. McHenry County Department of Health is active in conducting outbreak investigations, surveillance of TB cases, providing skin test clinics, treatment for active and latent cases of TB, and outreach to those populations at high risk for developing TB. The department’s TB Clinic, located in Building B on the Government Center campus (2200 N. Seminary, Woodstock), provides chest x-rays, diagnostic studies, laboratory services and medication at no charge to any resident or anyone employed in McHenry County. “Directly observed treatment” is provided to active cases to assure patients take their medication at the dose and frequency prescribed for cure and to prevent the development of multi-drug resistant TB, which continues to grow as an international threat. A small fee is charged for tuberculin skin testing. A presentation was given to the McHenry County Board of Health in January to provide an update on TB. Go online at www.mcdh.info and select the Nursing, Tuberculosis tab in the toolbar to view the presentation. For more information on TB, call MCDH’s Communicable Disease Program at (815) 334-4500. The national Centers for Disease Control and Prevention states this year’s World TB Day theme is “Find TB. Treat TB – Working Together to Eliminate TB” to highlight that TB is still a life-threatening problem in the U.S, despite the declining number of TB cases. The CDC further states that “anyone can get TB and current efforts to find and treat latent TB infection and TB disease are not sufficient. Misdiagnosis of TB still exists and health care professionals often do not think TB”.
MCC’s dean’s list and Pres- chael Lewyckyj, Alex Lisitza, ident’s list for the fall 2014 Timothy Michelsen, Taylar semester. Miller, Angela Munts, Chance Naber, Ryan Nickels, Sharon Dean’s list: Nystrom, Michael Frank OsHarvard: Caleb Blan- wald, Wyatt Peisert, Samuel kenbaker, Michael Erick- Podraza, Volodymyr Pokha, son, Jessica Fuentes, Brenda Patrick Quinn, Justin RodriGarcia, Mark Handeland, guez, Rachel Rudny, Bradley Alexander Kick, Karissa Lov- Schubert, Wayne Schwander, ergine, Michael Mackenzie, Elizabeth Schwartz, AlexBriseidy Mendez, Angel Mo- ander Schwebke, Stephaine haupt, Paulette Ortiz, Jennifer Shepit, Brandon Skees, Gino Stowe, Jorge Torres, Patricia Smith, Mary Stafiej, John Vargas, Austin Warren, Dylan Strupp, Emily Wagner, ZachWitt ary Walat, Nicole Wyatt, Hebron: Baylee Anderson, Keith Zdeb Alex Arthur, Aaron CossiRichmond: Nicole Henboon, Carissa Stauss drickson, Courtney KaminIsland Lake: Marco Arre- scky, Marie Kulis, Michael guin, Lauren Delke, Nicolas Mortell, Ellyn Turco Ohms, Taran Poytress, AleSpring Grove: Adam Grajandra Reyes, Russell Tabaka zier, Jennifer Kanzler, MiranJohnsburg: Michelle da Miller, Steven Sanborn, Dezetter, Anne Donald, Colin Morgan Thomas, Trace VonEllison, Sean Freberg, James bruenchenhein Keclik, Rebecka Turpel Union: Cali Teer Lakemoor: Anthony Oswald President’s honor list: McHenry: Arielle ArAntioch: Jesse Calabrese, slani, Andrew Bentz, Dakota Theresa Taylor Burke, Jacob Burr, Taylor Harvard: Arely Barbosa, Cassidy, Nain Castilla, Cai- Christopher Bevins, Erika Eslynn Clinge, Keeley Collins, quivel, Brittany Nichole FinDawn Marie Council, Mason ke, Erik Finke, Grace GaffDeja, Samantha Didriksen, ney, Elizabeth Goad, KimZachery Didriksen, Nicole berly Heck, Eduardo Juarez, Farina, Stephanie Faulkner, Megan Korczak, Jeannine Shannon Flannigan, Jona- Lawler, Kelly Miller-Elliott, than Fuit, Katherine Gibson, Brianna Pasillas, Jessica Pat-
vancement, availability and implementation of a universal emergency telephone number system. In recent months, Hicks has participated in legislative education both locally and nationally regarding the 911 industry and participated most recently in the McHenry County Emergency Telephone System Board
implementation of the Emergency Medical Dispatching system. Knop serves on the McHenry County ETSB Technical Committee and has been instrumental in guiding the technologies being used by first responders while striving to keep the Sheriff’s Office on the cutting edge of technologies.
terson, Andrew Raasch, Karl Riewe, Kathryn Rife, Zachary Saran, Isaih Solis, Patience Sprow, Oscar Valadez, Michael Vest, Kassie Wallner, Rachel Anderson, Elizabeth Gonzalez, Jose Juarez, Leah Nolan, Sharon Schuler, Taylor West Hebron: Araceli Aguilar, Jim Kanter, Joshua Lyons, Jessica Wilson Johnsburg: James Bonni, Amanda Cherwin, Kacie Cioccio, Tanya Connerty, Kimberly Culotta, Cynthia Dworshak, John Eyers, Jacob Gasior, Christopher Thomas Geier, Jared Marek, Blythe Mathews, Jason Memmen, Gina Rubino, Jennifer Irene Trempala, Maggie Lynne Whiting Lakemoor: Sean Caselli McHenry: Gunnar Anderson, Johnny Baird, Elizabeth Brennan, Tyler Bubser, Krystal Caha, Jon-Luc Cayabyab, Jasara Clow, Michael Conkling, Kristen Covelli, Kayla Csech, Matthew Dalton, Arthur Dargan, Michelle Djus, Kelly Ference, Jazmynn Flathau, Krystal Ann Forbes, Evelyn Guarneros, Joshua Hansen, Riley Hunt, Wanda Jablonski, Olivia Johnson, Zdenek Kilian, Susan Kolodziej, Carrie Lins, Mario Lopez, Jonathan Martin, Larissa Mersch, Kelly Margaret Meyer, Markus Mikulas, Kelsey Mowery,
Allison Nicholls, Mitchell Noworolnik, Kyle O’Connell, Shelby Page, Amanda Paul, Kerri Pease, Kathleen Peterson, Nicole Pinhiero, Jeremy Porter, Bess Quint, Andrew Quiring, Sara Rasmussen, Alyssa Reibel, Katelyn Rowlett, Joshua Sample, Natascha Schenk, Jacquelyn Schmidt, Amanda Schultz, Alexandra Schwander, James Shanahan, Emily Shepley, Gabrielle Sherman, Nora Sherman, Ryan Skinner, Raquel Smith, Kaylea Sarah Sroka, Ryan Swank, Christina Szpak, Sara Telesz, Wanita Ullrich, Corey Umbarger, Andrew Unrath, Salena Veloz, Angela Vilchis, Michael Wacaser, Valerie Wargo, Kelly Watson, Carla Welsh, Cody Wightman, Stephen Wimmer, Julie Winsett Richmond: Andrea Fox, Ryne Heron, Marnie Knouse, Michael Kulis, Stephanie Pedley, Nicole Pekovitch, Miranda Perkins, Kyle Sandrik, Pooja Trivedi Ringwood: Ann Ray Spring Grove: Lisa Barth, Delaney Danson, Boston Delaney, Alana Fuentes, Amanda Hagen, Daniel Heasley, Brandon Kinsella, Joseph Olbie, Hanna Passarella, Corie Sembach, Keith Smith, Shauna Willis Union: Alison Bush, Jake Reich, Shannon Shefcik
Explorer pancake breakfast is Sunday The annual Spring Grove Fire Explorer pancake breakfast will Sunday from 8 a.m. to noon, at the Spring Grove Fire Department, 8214 Richardson Road. The cost is $6 for adults and $4 for children. The breakfast is a chance for the community to support future firefighters as they earn funds to attend the Explorer Fire School at the University of Illinois in June. Along with basic firefighting skills, the Explorers learn the value of teamwork and leadership.
Spring Grove police report
• On March 1, a 41-year-old female from Kenosha, Wis., was charged with driving under the influence and speeding. • On March 9, a 23-year-old female from Twin Lakes, Wis., was charged with driving under the influence, unlawful possession of drug paraphernalia, operating uninsured motor vehicle, speeding 70 in 55 mph-zone, improper lane usage and DUI-BAC over 0.08. • On March 11, a 19-yearold male from Spring Grove was charged with driving with suspended license, expired registration and speeding in a school zone. • On March 11, a 25-yearold male from Spring Grove was charged with driving with suspended license and no insurance.
Legos in memory of Chase
SUBMITTED PHOTO Hi-Liter
Johnsburg School students Landon Johnson (from left), Kimmy Jablonski, Sadie Turner and Jackson Rittorno display Legos collected at the school as part of a campaign to provide activities for patients at Children’s Memorial Hospital. The drive was in memory of classmate Chase Freund, a second-grader who last his battle to cancer this year.