Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 26 Feb 1971, p. 6

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»*%•»• o-n miinucmilcktkiuaY,^htBKUARY 26, 1971 L DOUBLE COVERAGE as a North Chicago War- hawk and a McHenry Warrior become team­ mates against the referee who seems to have control of the ball. The referee did not make a basket, he did not have control of the ball. It only appears that he does. This unique situ­ ation is the result of the camera's shutter being activated during a loose ball in the Warrior loss against the Warhawks. PLAINDEALER PHOTO McHenry Area Jaycees Will Sponsor Wrestling March 12 At West Campus The McHenry Area Jaycees announced this week that they will conduct a W restling Tour­ nament on March 12, 6:30 p.m. at West campus. According to Wrestling Coach, Bill Huchinson, the pro­ gram is for all boys in fifth through eighth grades within school district 156. The tourn­ ament will be the last part of the Jaycee Wrestling program. Coach Hutchinson will hold a series of practices and teach­ ing clinics to school the boys on the basic requirements for becoming a high school wrest­ ler. The practices are scheduled as follows: Johnsburg Jr. High Hosts F.V.C. Tourney Johnsburg Junior high school is the host team for the first Fox Valley Conference basket­ ball tournament to be held at McHenry Community high school East campus. The newly formed grade school confer­ ence will hold its tourney on March 25, 26, and 27. Har­ rison of Wonder Lake and Johnsburg are the two local teams represented. Other teams include Big Hollow of Ingleside, Fox River Grove, and Countryside of Barrington. tvVAWlM T Johnsburg will open the tour­ nament as the fourth seeded team against fifth seeded Big Hollow for a play-off berth in the semi-final round. This game will be played at Johnsburg. The winner will advance to the semi-final round to meet Har­ rison the second seeded team. Semi-final and final round games will all be held at Mc­ Henry* s East campus gym be­ ginning Friday night at 6:30 p.m. The second semi-final game will begin- at 8. Tickets for the tournament may be pur­ chased at the gymnasium. Doors will open at 6 both nights. McHenry,111. :iH5-0144 Starts FrL Feb. 26 , P U R R - F E C T L Y t n W O N D E R F U L " ' ' F U N i WAIT DISNEY UasnGas I All NEW CARTOON FEATURE < TECHNICOLOR" 1970 Wait Tisney Productions AND WALT OISNEY productions' UlnKr the Orphan IlillKl, Etephsuit Fri. 7 & 9 Sat. 1:30-7-9 SUNDAY 2-4-6-8 Mon.-Thurs. 7:30 Only -All Shows- Adults $1.50 Children SI.00 (Coming Next "Rio Lobo") T.N.T. LADIES Thurs. Nite Tomasello's High Games: L. LaBay - 175; E. Sandell - 174; C. May - 198; E. Mangold - 175; F. Krab- benhoft - 170; M. Smith - 171; M. Debrecht - 186; I. Stilling - 172; H. Thelen - 178. High Series: L. LaBay - 474; Z. Malochleb - 465; C. May- 499; F. Krabbenhoft - 452; M. Smith - 472; M. Debrecht - 512; I. Stilling - 477; H. Thel­ en - 454. Converted - N. Frett - 2-7. Honorable Mention - E.M. -92! CD of A BOWLING Tues., Feb. 23, 7:00 Nancy Krcmar 472; Pat Rue- melin 181-475; Bonnie Seger- mark 475; Marion Donnelly 502; Mary Nowak 170-463; Georgine D*Isa 195-548; Carolyn Oetjen 451; Dorothy Koleno 504; Cathy Boro 510. SPLITS: Mary Lous Stine 3- 10; Barb Hansen 5-6-10; Fran Zank 5-6-10; Loyola Amberg 5-7. 5th - 6th grades - March 2, 4, 9 and 11. 7th - 8th grades - March 3, 5, 8 and 10. All practices will be con­ ducted at the West campus wrestling room and will be su­ pervised by Coach Hutchinson and his staff. Entry blanks will be available through your school principal or gym teacher. The public is cordially in­ vited to attend the Jaycee Wrestling Tournament on March 12 at 6:30 p.m. in the West campus wrestling room. Trophies and ribbons will be presented in all age and grade groups. All boys interested should make sure to pick up your entry blank and you must have your parents fill out the ques­ tionnaire and affix their sig- nat'T# before you will be al­ lowed to participate in either the clinics or tournament. For further information call Jay­ cee, Dennis Welter 385-0571. Wrestlers Regional March 2 The fighting Warriors will oppose the Cary Grove district winner in quest of the regional title at Elgin Lark in on Tues­ day, March 2 at 8:30 p.m. Tickets will be on sale at both East and West campuses through Tuesday noon. All seats are reserved. SHE ASKED Trie POCTOR. IFSHF COULD MAVE CHlLDRErJ?y MO, SHE AS*£P THE LANDLORD Soph Cagers Down Barrington And North Chicago, Now 22-1 by Bill Blankenhorn The sophomore Warriors en­ joyed a successful weekend as they dropped Barrington 52-49 and North Chicago 54-43. The dual victories gave the War­ riors a 22 and 1 record on the season. It was sweet revenge for Mc­ Henry in the Barrington con­ test as it was the Broncos that handed the Warriors their only loss of the season after they had won 14 straight games from the start of the season. For three quarters it looked as if the Broncos were going to claim another victory as they led throughout from the opening basket. The Warriors trailed 15-5 in the middle of the first period and were still trailing 28-23 at the half. McHenry fought back to within two points at 38-36 going into the final period. With three minutes to go in the contest, the Warriors pulled to within one point and Mark Bentz hit a basket to give McHenry the lead. After an exchange of baskets, Rog Lud- wig sank a pair of free throws to give the Warriors a three point lead and they were able to hold on for the victory. Bentz and Ludwig paced the offensive attack as they scored 21 and 20 points respectively as the Warriors shot 50 per­ cent from the field on an 18 for 36 performance. McHenry also enjoyed a 36 to 22 rebounding advantage. The North Chicago contest saw the McHenry defense hold the Warhawks at bay while the offense was sputtering as the Warriors took a 20-12 half- time lead. But an aggressive zone press brought the victors alive offensively as they out- scored their opponents 18-7 to take a 38-19 lead. The War­ hawks scored 24 points in the final period, but by that time the game was out of reach as the Warriors won ' their eighth straight game. 5 10 1 20 2 0 3 4 8 5 3 21 2 1 2 5 1 0 4 2 0 0 2 0 18 16 15 52 Had a note from Lou and Bert Welker from way down in the great state of Texas. The note says: This is the place for '•our White Sox" to do spring training --- in 80 - 90 degree temperature every day. It's been real nice up here all winter, Lou and Bert. Oh--- a little snow, a little ice, a little cold, a little rain. Aside from that it has been real nice. EARL WALSH So I Hear SPORTS EDITOR- Hutchinson is cooperating in teaching the boys and getting tram ready. See separate story on sports page. The JAYCEES are showing a lot of life in their plans to help a good McHenry become a better McHenry. They have the youth, enthusiasm and manpow­ er to get the job done. Score by Quarters: McHenry 12 11 13 16-52 Barrington 18 11 9 11-49 McHenry - Shooting % 18 for 36 equals 50% Opponents 19 for 38 equals 50% McHenry - Rebounds 36 Oppon­ ents 22 McHenry - Turnovers 14 Op­ ponents 13 ^ Score: Warriors - 54, No. Chi­ cago - 43. WARRIORS Ludwig 5 1 . 0 11 Mauch 3 0 16 Bentz 8 5 3 21 Knaack 3 2 18 Habich 2 0 4 4 Cunat 2 0 14 Truckenbrod 0 0 10 Miller 0 0 10 Tonyan 0 0 10 23 8 13 54 As a small boy it was our dream to some day become a railroad engineer, sitting high in that cab and tootin' the whis­ tle. Today we watch those truck drivers swing those big semi-' trailers around and back them into spaces like threading a needle. Just dreaming. Too late! Our up and coming JAYCEES are planning a wrestling tourn­ ament for grade schoolers at West Campus, March 12. Coach NO SKI --- Last week we ran a story on the planned Snowlight Festival at Fox Trails. Then, the rains came. We were invited to a press party, but will have to wait until next season. The ski slopes are not fit for the event. Reading the news, it looks like this to us: Mayor Daley rides again! White Sox one big happy fam­ ily. Conservation Dept. Makes 205 Arrests There were 205 arrests in January by law enforcement of­ ficers of the Illinois Depart­ ment of Conservation, accord­ ing to Bill Miller, chief of the law enforcement division. * Game violators led the list with 177 violations, Miller said. There were 17 fish violations, two boating violations, four per­ sons ticketed in state parks and five arrests for forestry in­ fractions. Uncased guns accounted for 43 of the game violations, and 28 hunters were arrested for failure to have a valid license. Most of the fish violations were for polluting water and having snowmobiles on ice, Mil­ ler said. There was one unregistered boat ticketed, and one boat own­ er was cited for an unapproved fire extinguisher. Park code violators were ap­ prehended for hunting in state parks and driving in restricted areas. The five forestry violations were for buying timber without a permit. "Every time we have a con­ servation violation," Miller said, "the violator is hurting everyone else. The conserva­ tion violator steals from ev­ eryone." Fines collected in January totaled $19,181. Game vio­ lations accounted for $17,830; fish, $405; boat code violations, $371; park infractions, $275; and forestry violations, $300. The money collected will be placed in department funds for use in future projects, Miller IT'S NEW . . . This unusual looking parachute is the Uni­ ted Kingdom Expandable, Op­ tional Reusable Parachute, known as the UNICROSS. It is being tested at Ft. Bragg to determine if it has potential for use by the U.S. Army. said. He reminded citizens that Ill­ inois fishing and hunting licen­ ses expired Jan. 31. Freshmen Bsat Broncos And North Chicago For the second straight night McHenry shot 50 percent from the floor as they connected on" 23 of 47 attempts. Mark Bentz again scored 21 points to lead all, scorers while Rog Ludwig added 11 markers. But it was the defense that deserves cred­ it for the victory as they com­ pletely shut-off the North Chicago attack and controlled the defensive board against their much taller opponents. The Warriors will close out their season tonight at Buck- ner gym when they take on Crystal Lake at 6:45. Score: Warriors - 52, Barring- ' ton - 49 WARRIORS FG FT PF TP Ludwig Mauch Bentz Knaack Habich Cunat Score By Quarters: McHenry 10 10 18 16-54 North Chicago 8 4 7 24-43 McHenry - Shooting % 23 for 46 equals 50% Opponents 18 for 47 equals 38% McHenry - Rebounds 32 Oppon­ ents 27 McHenry - Turnovers 19 Op­ ponents 22 Get with the cats who know where it's at ... for fun, music and adventure! future personnel inc. /Jte AKAWtl to tfOUl fob frux6le*H COVENTRY PROFESSION BUILDING 457 COVENTRY LANF CRYSTAL LAKE ILLINOIS 459 9010 Sport Quiz Question i Who's record did break when he got his 27th Bobby Hull hat trick ? For the answer to your Insurance Questions see or call Herb or Bob At.. - Stoffel & Reihanspergery ̂Insurance /AGENT J 3438 W. Elm St.-McHenry Ph. 385-0300 Answer: SIKVtS YOU FIRST pjeipiH OaipoH) aoj-mew 1 WOODSTOCK 338 0032 FRIDAY 7:00 AND 9:30 P.M. SATURDAY AND SUNDAY PROGRAMS START AT 1:30 - 4:00 - 6:25 AND 8:55 PROGRAM INCLUDES PREVIEWS,CARTOON&2FEATURES ACTUAL START OF FEATURE IS2:34-5:02 7:30 AND 10:00 REG.ADM. ADULTS $1.50;STUDENTS$1.25;CHILD 75c It's a Feline Frolic Purr-fect in every way! WALT DISNEY productions' THE A W O N D E R F U L N E W C A R T O O N F E A T U R E ' TECHNICOLOR" -SiMO "JOE" PREVIOUSLY SET TO START FRIDAY HAS BEEN RESET TO PLAY AT A LATER DATE* . . . by Bill Blankenhorn The freshmen cagers added two more victories to their total as they routed Barring­ ton 74-49 and then out-lasted North Chicago 61-55. The freshmen now own a 15-2 sea­ son record. The Warriors doubled the score on Barrington the first half as they took a 44-22 ad­ vantage at the intermission in a game in which they were never seriously threatened. Nine dif­ ferent players figured in the scoring for McHenry, led by Ben Himpelmann with 24. Ed Choate and Roger Wanta were also in double figures as they added 14 and 10 points respec­ tively. McHenry had to come from behind in the North Chicago game as they trailed 26-22 at the half. But the Warriors rip­ ped the nets for 39 points the second half to pull out the vic­ tory. Himpelmann again led the offense as he scored 27 points followed by Kerry Decker with 13 while Wanta added 10 points. McHenry hit on 57 percent of their shots from the field on a 25 for 44 performance. The young Warriors will close-out their regular season campaign at Crystal Lake to­ morrow morning. North Suburban Conference Goes Down To Wire by Bill Blankenhorn The balanced N.S. Conference basketball championship will have to wait this, the final night, to decide who will be crowned number one. Two important games will be on tap that will determine the winner. There still exists the possibility of a co-champion as North Chicago, Barrin^on and Libertyville share the lead with 9-4 records while Zion Benton trails with 8-5 and no possibility of gaining a share of the crown. However, Zion could be the determining fac­ tor in which team wins the lea­ gue as they host Libertyville while Barrington travels to North Chicago. The victor in the latter contest will do no worse than share the champ­ ionship. STANDINGS North Chicago 9 4 Barrington 9 4 Libertyville 9 4 Zion Benton 8 5 McHenry 7 6 Crystal Lake 6 7 Woodstock 4 9 Dundee 0 13 Games this Week (Friday) Barrington at North Chicago Libertyville at Zion Benton Crystal Lake at McHenry Dundee at Woodstock Games Last Week (Friday) Zion Benton 75 Dundee 62 North Chicago 49 Liberty­ ville 47 OT Barrington 47 McHenry 44 Woodstock 60 Crystal Lake 49 (Saturday) Barrington 59 Woodstock 52 Zion Benton 79 Crystal Lake 69 Libertyville 100 Dundee 79 North Chicago 51 McHenry 44 McHenry County Bowling Tourney Is Rolling Along The opening weekend of the thirty-first MCBA Annual Tournament found forty teams of a total entry of 144 teams, bowling at Wayne's City lanes, Woodstock, 111. The tournament opened with Gus Perrson, 93 years old, rolling the first ball. Gus got six pins on the first ball and then promptly picked up his spare. Perrson's average last year in the Churchmen's lea­ gue was 101 for 99 games. His present average for 60 games is 105, A little later Gus was selected as "Joe Bowler" of McHenry County for the year 1971. TEAM LEADERS Woodhenry Wood. 3078 Yellow Cab McH. 3047 Burmeister's Devils Wood. 3046 Chateau Tap Wood. 3042 Shannon's C. Lake 3019 Red Mill Tavern Wood. 3018 Serv-All-Tool Wood. 2970 McHenry WHAT A TOY . . . Most lit­ tle girls seem to find playing with dolls most satisfying, but Maria Isabel Varges, 2 Vt, of Mexico City, is an exception. Here, she plays with "Baby," her six-foot snake. The only trouble he's caused the Varges family is he bit Maria's sister, her mother said. Registration of boys for the coming season will take place at the V.F.W. on the following dates: March 6-1 p.m. to 4 p.m. March 13-1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Your birth date must be be­ tween Aug. 1, 1958 and July 31, 1963. Birth certificates will be required. HARVARD THEATRE liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiininnii L. • £ 21-23 N. AYER STREET HARVARD, ILLINOIS 815-943-4451 A Beautiful, New, Comfortable Motion Picture Theatre Catering to the Varied Tastes of ALL Types of Audiences. " TAMI LY ̂ TE^^ENTTR~GFA^ ̂ *" At 6:45 PM Daily- 3PM Matinee Sundays Features Start Fri. Feb. 26th One of John Wayne's Best Performances "RIO LOBO" Starring: JOHN "DUKE" WAYNE Family entertainment & adult entertainment pro­ grams are separate programs and require separate admissions., ADULT ENTERTAINMENT PROGRAM At 9:00 Daily (ALSO 10:30 PM Fri. £ Saturday) Adults Only! -Rated XX v* S. "Mono Lisa yy Tales" P S THANK YOU FOR YOUR PATRONAGE ADMISSION PRICES REDUCED!!! 'V I. /

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