Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 22 Jan 1971, p. 6

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PAGE 6-PLAINDEALER-FRIDAY, JANUARY 92, 1971 • 1 fm i Sophs Lose First Game Of The Season • X WHO'S WINNING? It's obvious a McHenry wrestler is on the bottom by the expressions portrayed by the Warrior cheerleaders. The smileless cheerleaders are L-R, Mary O'Brien, Kim Street, Gina Anderson and Diane Klapperich. Who won? North Chicago. Tonight the Warriors take on Crystal Lake at West Campus. " PLAINDEALER PHOTO by Bill Blankenhorn After running their consecu­ tive winning streak to fourteen straight games against North Chicago on Friday, the young Warriors met defeat for the first time during the <1970-71 season when they were beaten by Barrington on Saturday night at Buckner gym. McHenry had to put on a four­ th quarter rally against North Chicago as they outscored the Warhawks 14-7 in the final per­ iod to register a 47-41 victory. This was a close battle through­ out and neither team enjoyed more than a three point lead at any time until the Warriors opened up an eight point advan­ tage in the final minute of play. Rog Ludwig led all scorers as he popped in 18 points while Randy Mauch got 11 and Bob Habich had 9 markers. In the Barrington game, the Freshmen Cagers, Defeat North Chicago, Barrington Betty O'Brien Is Qutfen Of Queens With 640 Series Water Levels To Be The freshmen .basketball team had a great offensive day as they scored 76 points irt an easy 76-42 win over the War- hawks of North Chicago. Scor­ ing well in every quarter, the Warriors really opened it 15) with a 24-3 advantage in the fourth period for an easy vic­ tory. Roger Wanta was outstanding on the Warriors press as well as scoring 17 points, second to Steve Himpleman's 18, while Ed Choate dominated the boards as he pulled down 18 rebounds. Against Barrington the War­ riors shot an excellent 46% from the field while scoring in doub­ le figures in every quarter for an easy 65-31 victory. McHen­ ry had four players in double figures in scoring with Wanta pacing the attack with 16 while Pecker had 13, and Camasta and Cajthamal had 10 points each. For the third time within 6 weeks, the Ten Pin Queen's league record for high series has been broken. Betty O'Brien bowled a whopping 640 series. She compiled gajres of 205,257 and 178 for som&#ancy bowling. In the 257 game she rolled 8 strikes in a row and had only 2 open frames, in the 3 games. Congratulations', Betty. All to­ gether Monday night there were seven - 200 games rolled and Don's Amusements team bowled 2483 scratch. Great bowling and great fun. Dolores Gerstein, 182-204- 183-569; Mary Ann Lynn, 222- 180-159-561; Nancy Kadisak, 134-190-211-535; Joyce Lexow, 211-132^180-523; Virginia Ohl- er, 197-150-146-493; Kathy Mullen, 161-145-173-479; Mar- cy Goss, 166-159-146-471; Chris Kern, 176-171-122-469; Dorothy Koleno, 179-153-137- 469; Emmi Damians, 146-149- 166-461; Mae Steege, 145-153- 162-460; Ceil Serritella, 160- 179-115-454; Roni Romkowske, 155-130-167-452; Emmie Pix- ler, 146-154-125-425; Kathy O'Brien, 129-138-118-385. Rails: Jean Kattner, 3-7-10; Janet Devine, 3-7-10; Kathy O'Brien, 5-7; Lorre Letzter, 2-7. Adjusted In Region EARL WALSH So I Hear SPORTS EDIT0RJ We came away from the meet­ ing feeling grateful to a few who serve so rhany in the promotion of business growth in our com­ munity. Dear Mr. Walsh, i \Vell--might as well report this one in--a surprise birth­ day party for Petie Schaefer last Thursday night in his home. (Thanks to Louise who kept it a surprise from him). He was "39!?". Guests seemed to be the " West Side McHenry Gang". Gifts and cards were everyone's "own thing" to Petie. Ask him! My better half and I managed to make .the a»ene. I was getting over some unknown flu -- but wouldn't miss that night to wish one of the most respected and enlightening guys -- the happiest birthday ever! Louise went all out, refreshments were delicious. One can only say, a wonderful evening, with won­ derful friends They had veryx The Walshes interesting pictures of McHen- minoHt ry. Pete s store and Alex Jus- ten provided some also. I was lost -- these pictures were taken long before I was born, but--bet Barb Gilpin would re­ member -- (Oh boy!) Anyway, had a great time last Thurs­ day night. And many others who attended helped set this gath­ ering up, too. HEY-HEY Petie and Louise! Notice the "Hey- Hey" slogan, Mrs. Walsh. Sincerely, take care, Judy Smith McHenry needs a Chamber of Commerce and the Chamber of Commerce needs support. By nature a Chamber of Com­ merce is not a social organ­ ization, but it helps you make the green stuff which allows socializing. Water levels will be adjusted this year in the Chian-O-Lakes region to benefit fish and water­ fowl in northern Illinois. William Cellini, director of the Illinois Department of Pub­ lic Works and Buildings, said the division of waterways will raise water levels in the Fox river and Chain-O-Lakes in mid-March, a month earlier than usual. Barring an early freeze, he said the division will postpone lowering the water level until early December. This is nor­ mally accomplished each year in early November when the Mc­ Henry County lock and dam gates are opened and the level is lowered „ 1.5 to 1.6 feet, Cellini said. The plan is part of Gov. Richard B. Ogilvie's program to upgrade conservation and recreational facilities within the state, Cellini said. Cellini said the plan was for­ mulated at a meeting last month of members of the division of waterways and the Illinois De­ partment of Conservation. ' Members of the division of waterways contend that raising the water level in the spring will provide a holding basin for spring flood waters and mini­ mize dock damage due to ice formation. According to representatives from the conservation depart­ ment, the earlier rise in March will provide more spawning habitat for northern pike. Keep­ ing the water level higher will tend to keep waterfowl in the area longer and protect fish. These added benefits will not detract from earlier flood con­ trol and property damage pre­ cautions, Cellini added. Lake Region Sports Car Club Plans Ice Races Dear Judy: It just shows how generous we Sox fans are. Imagine giv­ ing all this space to a life long Sox fan who turns to those Cubs! We should have turned your re­ port over to the Society Editor. S.I.H. ere among the group attending the Chamber of Commerce din­ ner at the Y.F.W. Wednesday night. . On Saturday and Sunday, Jan. 30 and 31, the Lake Region Sports Car club of McHenry, will sponsor its 11th annual Ice Race event, ICE RACES '71, at the Thunderbird Lake Hunt­ ing and Fishing club near Crys­ tal Lake. The races aire one of a very few ice events for cars held in northern Illinois, andthe only event offering wheel-to- wheel ice competition in the northern Illinois/southern Wis­ consin area. The ice races have grown from a small, "club" event in­ to one of the most popular ice events of winter, having at­ tracted up to 100 entrants from five surrounding states. The or­ ganization, control and work needed to put on the races have relegated many Lake Region members to workers, giving WOODSTOCK 338 0032 FRIDAY 7:00 AND 9:15 SATURDAY " 2:30 -- 7:00 AND 9:15 SUNDAY2:30-4:35-7:00 & 9:15 REG. ADMISSION OKI (g@[L(5)[^=^D®[S ©(SIDHI1K] Featuring... WOtSTtslID ACTION fILLID WILD LIU ADVtNTUHt FILM fOH THt fMTIItf FAMILY Jaguar * Crocodil* Flfht Otant Mult D»«r WE SERVE FRESH BREWED COFFEE FOR 9c OUR BALCONY NOW OPEN ON FRI.& SAT. NIGHTS North Chicago Defeats Wrestling Warriors *The defending Illinois high school state cnampion North Chicago wrestlers invaded Buckrter Gym Friday night and proceeded to show fans why they are traditionally strong in the grappling sport. They defeated our Warriors 32-11 as they won eight matches and tied one for the victory. The Warriors gained de­ cisions from Jeff Kasprzyk (105), Dave Johnston (132) and heavyweight Tom Fry while ^ssophomore Ray Rivera (126) fought to a 5-5 draw. Mike Del- McHenry, 111. 3H5-0144 STARTS FRIDAY JAN. 22 m eo lost a tough 1-0 decision as Mike Ellis got an escape in the second period for the only points of the match. WARRIOR RESULTS (Listing weight, match and score) 98, Johnson (NC) Pinned Bar- ger (M) 2:32; 104, Kasprzyk (M) Dec. Davis (NC) 5-4; 112, Parker (NC) Dec. Buss (M) 8-0; 119, Pasiewicz (N'C) Dec. Murgatroyd (M) 11-0; 126, Ri­ vera (M) and Crane (NC) Draw 5-5; 132, Johnston (M) Dec. Ihrig (NC) 8-2; 138, Clinkscales (NC) Dec. Anderson (M) 13-0; 145, Ellis (NC) Dec. Deleo (M) 1-0; 155, Hurley (NC) Pinhed Erb (M) 4:29; 167 Miller (NC) Pinned Weingart (M) 1:10; 185, Krause (NC) Dec. Heise (M) 12-3; Hwt. Fry (M) Dec. Zal- aznik (NC) 3-1. MEAN/ ' YOU'RE REALLY UPSET BECAUSE Your sou likes L TO NWKE HWDPieS? , IF YOU I THINK I'M UNHAPPv SHOULD SEE His WIPE Featuring VICTOR JORY Fri. 7&9 Sat-Sun. 1:30 7-9 Mon.-Thur* 7:30 Only ALL SHOWINGS Adults ^1.50 Children .75 HDNOKOM TAILOR RON ALLEN Has now returned to Crystal Lake for 4 days January 21, 22, 23, & 24 SPRING SUITS AT DISCOUNT PRICES Tropical Wool Suit NOW $56.00 English Mohair Suit NOW $44.00 Silk-Wool Suit NOW $58.00 Italian Silk Sport Coat - NOW $42.00 For appointment, call Mr. ft Allen at: (815)459-6130 MARTINET!I'S MOTEL 6313 N.W. Hwy. MONA CUSTOM TAILORS P. O. Box 89--Lake Zurich, Hlinois 60047 Warriors jumped out to a quick 7-1 advantage but saw the lead disappear by the end of the first quarter and it was a nip and tuck affair to the end. With the Bronebs taking a four point lead late In the game, the Warriors were forced to go all out pressure whibh result­ ed in the visitors getting sev­ eral free throw attempts and pulled out to a 53-45 victory. Once again it was Rog Ludwig leading the offensive attack with 19 tallies followed by Tom Knaack with 10 points. BOX SCORE Warriors, 47 - No. Chicago, 41 WARRIORS FG FT PF TP Ludwig .7-' "4" - 2 18 Mauch 4 3 1 11 Bentz 3 0 4 6 Knaack 0 1 0 1 Habich 3 3 2 9 Cunat 1 0 3 2 Doran 0 *0 0 0 18 11 12 47 McHenry - Shooting % 18 for 44 equals 41% Opponents 18 for 43 equals 42% McHenry - Rebounds, 31 Op­ ponents, 31 McHenry Turnovers, 7 Oppon­ ents, 13 Warriors, 45 - Barrington, 53 WARRIORS • Ludwig U 7 5 19 Mauch J 3 0 4 6 Bentz 2 0 3 4 Knaack 5 0 1 10 Habich 3 0 3 6 Cunat 0 0 0 0 Truckenbrod 0 0 0 0 Doran 0 0 0 0 19 7 16 45 McHenry - Shooting % 19 for 39 equals 49% Opponents 19 for 35 equals 54% McHenry - Rebounds, 24 Op­ ponents, 27 McHenry Turnovers, 9 Oppon­ ents, 10 THE WARRIORS DOWN 14-6 as Jerry Miller gets off a shot midway into the second quarter. Heineman, No. 12, of Barring­ ton fails in h^ attempt to block Miller's shot, but the Broncos did not fail as a team as they led throughout the game and at the finish it was Barrington 65 and McHenry 52. PLAINDEALER PHOTO Scots Fall To Lake County And Morton J The basketball team from McHenry County College failed to snap their current losing streak this past week as they lost a conference game to Lake County 109 to 91 and then bowed to Morton 97 to 78. Against the powerful Lake County five, currently the un­ defeated leader in the Skyway Conference, the Scots refused to quit even though they fell behind by 14 points by the half. The local cagers rallied behind the hot shooting of Mike Weingart and Jim Mulvenna to close the gap to 6 points in the middle of thfe final stanza. Joe Walls and Company were not to be de­ nied however and crushed all thoughts of an upset with a fi­ nal flurry of baskets to pull away for the final spread. On Saturday afternoon Mor­ ton of Cicero who had crushed McHenry 100 to 64 just 3 weeks them the best seat in the house. Most of the workers, however, find time to "run the ice". The two days of events include time trials for all cars on Sat., Jan. 30, and wheel-to- wheel ice races on Sun., Jan. 31. Not all cars are required to race. The club, realizing that many drivers may want to find out how fast their car can go on ice, will award trophies to the fastest non-racing drivers in the time trials. The racers will, of course, also compete for trophies. Time trials for all cars will begin at 9 a.m. on Saturday. These time trials will be utfed to determine the grid positions for the first set of two races on Sunday. The first race on Sunday will start at approximately 9:30 a.m. Notth Suburban Standings ^he rugged North Suburban conference found all the leading teams defeated at least once last week and pushed four teams into the lead tied with 4-2 rec­ ords. Going into the last week of the first round, at least six teams are in contention for the title. GAMES LAST FRIDAY Barrington, 65 - Woodstock, 41 Crystal Lake, 65 - Zion Benton, 64 Libertyville, 53 - Dundee, 50 North Chicago, 70-McHenry, 48 GAMES LAST SATURDAY Barrington, 65 - McHenry, 52 North Chicago, 62-Libertyville, 58 Woodstock, 59 - Crystal Lake, 56 Zion Benton, 101 - Dundee, 65 CONFERENCE STANDINGS Crystal Lake 4 Libertyville 4 Barrington 4 Zion Benton 4 McHenry 3 North Chicago 3 Woodstock 2 Dundee 0 GAMES THIS FRIDAY McHenry at Crystal Lake North Chicago at Barrington Zion Benton at Libertyville Woodstock at Dundee ago came to Cary to give the Scots another -lesson. This time the McHenry lads were not awed by the strength of their larger opponents and fought them as far as they could. Mc­ Henry trailed by only 6 points with 10 minutes remaining in the contest when fouls took their toll. Tom Thomas fouled out at this point and was followed to the bench very shortly by Tom Shaw and then Gerry Burke. The reserves failed to stop a fi­ nal Morton surge. Mike Weingart did a tremendous job as he pulled in 20 rebounds for the Scots, a season high for the team. This week Friday night. Jan. 22, the McHenry cagers will top off their final exam week with a contest at Elgin College. El­ gin is currently in third place in the conference. Skyway Conference Standings Lake County 6-0 Wubonsee * 5-1 Elgin 4-2 Triton 3-3 McHenry 1-5 Harper 0-6 McHENRY COUNTY COLLEGE BASEBALL * * •*" BY PETE FRITCHIE ? Washington, D.C.-- An early look at this year's Major League season indicates the Ameri'can League will provide better com­ petitive fare in 1971 than last year. The National League should provide good races again -- and usually does. The National in 1970 cap­ tured most of the interest late in the season with a genuine race in its eastern division, won finally by Pittsburgh. Cin­ cinnati wjll not.likely run away from western division clubs again this year, though the Reds may well repeat for their young pitching this season will be stronger, injuries having plagued the staff the last half of the season. In the American League the biggest difference is likely to be seen in the tough, eastern division. The Yankees are pos­ sible contenders (Ralph Houk was manager of the year for his work last season). Detroit is certain to be better, with Billy Martin at the helm and two good pitchers picked up from Wash­ ington for Denny McLain. Boston may be tough-the Red Sox moved up to third last year. And Washington will be more interesting this season v^th McLain, Curt Flood. Even Cleveland will likely be better, so this division should produce better baseball, though the Orioles are favorites, and have improved their pitching, which didn't seem to need it. The western division in the American needs a few more years to develop power., More than half its teams are rela­ tively new; playoff results in 1969 and 1968 left this division winner without a single win. FG FT P Tot. Thomas, T 5 0 1 10 Weingart 11 7 3 29 Burke 6 3 4 15 Shaw 3 0 0 6 Schafer 1 1 2 3 Mulvenna 10 8 1 28 Totals 36 19 14 91 COLLEGE OF LAKE COUNTY FG FT P. Tot. Walls 14 0 3 28 Idstein 5 0 3 10 Desormey 10 3 2 21 Hudson 8 5 2 21 Tangorra 1 0 1 2 Johnson 6. 2 1 14 Piatt ( 2 0 4 4 Holland 3 1 1 7 Prorok 0 0 2 0 Totals 49 1 19 109 1st Half McHenry 45 Lake 59 2nd Half 46 50 Total 91 109 Sport Quiz Question.' What golfer has the best stroke per-round average in the past 10 years? For the answer to your Insurance Questions see or call Herb or Bob At.. Stoffel & Reihansperger( JnsuranJJ/ACHENTJjj 3438 W. Elm St.-McHenry Ph, 385-0300 Answer: ' #"0 / H4iM PU009S sdm jauj|Dd p|ouiy 'ZV'Ql J° 96DJ9AD uo 1^41m jadsp^ X | j i g McHENRY COUNTY COLLEGE FG FT P Tot Thomas 2 2 Weingart 10 2 Burke 2 4 Shaw 9 0 Schafer 3 4 Mulvenna 5 1 Miller I 1 Bielski Totals U 24 78 i MORTON FG FT P Tot Huth 5 6 3 16 01 sen 3 1 .3 7 Moravecek 5 9 2 19 Hoover 6 5 2 - 17 Mazur 8 2 2 18 Cummings 0 0 0 0 Ofenlock 1 0 0 2 Lindwall 2 0 3 4 Keefe 4 0 1 8 Sidlauskas 1 0 0 2 Klemenicc 0 0 1 0 Smith 2 0 0 4 Totals 37 23 17 9T McHenry 40 38 78 Morton 48 49 97 t

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