Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 24 Aug 1973, p. 7

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EEOC Releases Forms For Local Government PAGE 7 - PLAINDEALEK - FRIDAY. AUGUST 24, I»7:i LEGION INSTALLATION - Legionnaires shown above participated in the recent installation of officers for the American Legion's McHenry County council, held at Wonder Lake. Front row, from left, Wilbur Haak, new council finance officer; Joe Lewis, senior vice-commander; Clarence Hammond, new county commander; Clyde Huntington, junior vice-commander; and Charles Fresch, adjutant; back row, Lou Rossberg, new sergeant-at-arms; Donald Brockrogge, installing officer; George Kanaly, installing chaplain; and Alvin "Andy" Anderson, installing sergeant-at- arms. First meeting for the new officers will be at Fox River Grove Thursday, Aug. 23. McHenry Shores Mrs. Rose Lillegard (Business) 385-8500 Last Opportunity To Register For Bowling League This is your last opportunity to join the bowling league. This league was originally started for the women of the village in order that each might have the opportunity to meet each other. The response is slow and this will be the last notice given. If the response is not greater than we have had, we will have to cancel it. While you're thinking about it, call WHO KNOWS! 1. When was the first atom­ ic bomb dropped? 2. Former President Her­ bert Hoover was born on what day in August? 3. Of what historical signi­ ficance is August 14, 1945? 4. What is Narcolepsy? 5. What are the first six names selected for 1974 hurricanes originating in the Atlantic Ocean or Caribbean? 6. Where and when were electric traffic signals first used*? 7. When were the first street letter boxes set up in New York City9 8. Define bumptious. 9. Name the capital of Ken­ tucky. 10.Name the three colors in Ireland's flag. Answers To Who Knows •paj puB a^ii|M 'uaaJO'OI •}J0J5iUT?JJ -6 •pJBMJOJ JO paqiaouoo Aiq^aaiSBSia *8 '8S8I 'Z 1sn9nv 'L •t-161 'S jsnSny 'oiqo 'puBpAajo -g -ubjj pus aA3 'aiqqaa •antui^O 'aqouBia 'BUUV "S •qons 01 aAto -npuoo }ou saouT??suino -jp japun daajsB n^j jCouapua? b JO ssauidaais 't •sai] -IV 01 pajapuajjns UEdEf •£ •t>L8I '01 isn§nv 'Z •Qfr6I '9 isnany "I "Who's got the camera!" Left in a rest room - or restaurant? Fortun­ ately, a Homeowner or Tenant Policy covers the loss or theft of cameras and other personal belong­ ings. We have camera in­ surance at STOFFEL & REIHANSPERGER INSUR­ ANCE AGENCY STOFFEL and REIHANSPERGER INSURANCE AGENCY HERB REIHANSPERGER^-^. BOB MORTEIL (,- 3438 W. ELM 385 0300 McHENRY, IU. now. Mrs. Lillegard is taking the calls to start with and after the league is formed there will be elections for officers. Place your call now 385-4517. DITCHING BEGUN The ditching has begun and manholes and piping are being laid. Other than the rental of the backhoe all labor is volunteered. If you would like to see the job completed sooner, I would suggest that if the men are working near your home you offer a hand to help out. The correction of water flow in one area benefits all homes in the area, so please don't feel it's not helping you. It was so good to see the women sup­ plying cold drinks to the workers. I'm sure that the men appreciated your consideration very much. The main objection is to install the manholes and piping at present. When this phase is completed then the final leveling and seeding will take place. WATER TOWER The water tower is cm its way up. What a sight to watch day by day to see it erected high into the sky. We've waited a long time and soon it will be completed. It is asked that all parents instruct their children to remain off the premises during and after construction. GARAGE SALE By the time you read this column the garage sale and bake sale will be one day over and two days to go. The types of items vary from bicycles to new hand made items. Why not take a walk over and see the lovely items. There are no clothes. All items are clean and useable. NEED NEWS We need news and the sur­ vival of this column depends on you the reader. THE LAW SERVES YOU Among other things, autumn means the college students are returning to campus. Some years ago this might have meant that college deans would have their hands full with freshmen hazing, but not today, thanks to the Illinois Legislature. Tlje Illinois State Bar association reports that whatever other troubles may crop up on campuses this fall, hazing should not be one of them. It is a misdemeanor for students to hold up other students to ridicule through hazing-mocking them to amuse themselves. The law provides that if anyone engages in the practice and it results in an injury to the student who is the object of the The Equal Employment Opportunity commission is mailing out the new em­ ployment data reporting form to state and local government agencies. The form-State and Local Government Report EEO-4- must be completed by Oct. 31 by all state and local jurisdictions with 100 or more employees. A random sampling of jurisdictions with fifteen to ninety-nine employees will also be required to file the report. Other jurisdictions with fifteen or more employees will be required to maintain records of the information required on the form. The report covers em­ ployment by minority group, sex, occupation and salary range. Each jurisdiction will be required to provide em­ ployment information on up to fifteen governmental functions. States must file separate sets of reports for all Standard Metropolitan Statistical Areas (SMSA). Employees working outside an SMSA will be combined into statewide reports. E E O - 4 r e p o r t i n g requirements do not cover school districts. The EEOC said that some state and local governments and school districts may have received the Employer' Report EEO-1 in July. EEOC said that government bodies and school districts should ignore the EEO-1 form and wait until they receive the appropriate form. EEOC now has four reporting forms to collect information from those covered by federal legislation to eliminate job discrimination. EEO-1 is for employers; EEO-2, for ap­ prenticeship programs; and EEO-3, for labor unions. The Commission uses the forms to assure a uniform national data base on em­ ployment patterns. This in­ formation is analyzed to determine if there are discrimination trends within industries or individual em­ ployers and to follow changes in employment patterns over a period of time. While aggregate data from the reports can be published by the EEOC, the Commission is prohibited by law from disclosing any specific in­ formation. Finding Security In Retirement Retiring from a job after an active working career does not mean retreating from life. "This one fact is fast becoming a highly significant consideration for developers of retirement com­ munities," declares Robert W. Gaber, president of Conco Mort­ gage Company, San Francisco. "Life styles of retired Ameri­ cans have changed greatly in just the last few years -- and will con­ tinue to change even more so in the future. The result is an ever- burgeoning spectrum of housing to meet the wide range of retire­ ment needs," Gaber emphasizes. There are presently more than 20 million Americans 65 years of age and older. This age group, economists agree, is expected to increase rapidly in the coming years, he adds. "It is also a fact that an in­ creasing number of Americans are retiring before they reach the once traditional age 65 mark. The younger retirees are showing their own individual preferences in housing." "Older Americans today have no desire to be isolated from nor­ mal, active lives simply because they have retired. More and more are seeking communities where there are residents of all age groups -- plus a wide variety of housing styles and facilities," Ga­ ber notes. "Swimming pools, golf courses, tennis courts, exercise rooms and the like are musts amcng active, older adults, as well as with the younger residents," Gaber ob­ serves. Thought For Food Herbed Cheese Lasagna Cook 9 curly lasagna noodles as package directs; drain, set aside. Rehydrate 2 tablespoons instant minced onion in 2 table­ spoons water for 10 minutes. In a medium saucepan hfeat 3 table­ spoons butter or margarine. Add onion and saute 2 minutes. Add 1 can (15 oz.) tomato sauce, 2 table­ spoons parsley flakes, 1 teaspoA oregano leaves, % teaspoon salt, Vi teaspoon garlic powder and V« teaspoon ground black pepper. Bring to boiling point. Reduce heat; cover and simmer for 10 derision, it can mean a penalty of up to six months in jail and a $500 fine. The law barring hazing is intended to bring order and decorum to the college campus. * S**U Bhn ̂ d L°tS In ,tJ)lNGS ODD LOTS 0°DSIZE WINDOW SCREWS ooo size STORM SASH PAINT SUPER DURABLE HOUSE PAINT *HITE . 2 EI(L tcoo Several ODD LOTS •Jim! Pattern s PRE-FINISHED LUAN ODD SIZE WOOD WINDOW BLINDS ODD LOTS ASPHALT SHINGLES "EC0RAT0R FLAT LATEX tnteri°r Paint 1 mimim mi i.mi I /1 f ALEXANDER LUMBER FREE DELIVERY! 909 North Front McHenry, Illinois 385-1424 UJott & inic minutes. Combine 1 pound cream­ ed cottage and 1 cup shredded mild Cheddar cheese; set aside. Arrange 3 of the noodles in the bottom of a greased 10 x 6 x 2- inch baking dish. Spread with half of the cheese mixture. Top with Vh of the tomato sauce. Place 3 more noodles over the sauce; top with 8 ounces mozzarella cheese, sliced, and % of the to­ mato sauce. Cover with layers of the remaining 3 noodles, sauce and cheese mixture. Cover with foil, and bake in a preheated moder­ ate oven (375°F.) for 40 minutes or until hot Mix % cup soft bread crumbs with 2 tablespoons melted butter or margarine and 2 tablespoons parsley flakes. Slice one large tomato. Sprinkle bread crumb mixture over tomato slices. Uncover casserole. Arrange to­ mato slices on lasagna. Bake un­ covered for 5 minutes longer or until tomatoes are hot. Yields 8 portions. Carl is a clever pastor, for he cites the example below about Eutychus. St. Paul can be excused in this case for putting one member of his congregation to sleep. But modern pastors in their 30- minute sermons should be able to fascinate everybody, unless it is a sepile great grandparent! The boolclet below shows how! By George W. Crane, Ph. D., M.D. CASE K-584: Carl Z., aged 38, is a clergyman. "Dr. Crane," he began, "I notice that you criticize us preachers for putting people to sleep with our stodgy sermons. "But didn't St. Paul do the same thing? "The Bible tells us that Paul killed one of the young men in his audience by his long ser­ monizing! "So why should you be so severe on us modern pastors?" Paul didn't put the usual parishioner to sleep, for he was a superb orator, watching his audience like a hawk. Thus, he maintained close eye-contact with his listeners. And he utilized psychological devices to capture attention, as when he addressed the Greeks at Mars Hill, by starting his sermon with their inscription to an unknown god. But Carl's clever example does show that even topnotch orators may occasionally find a lone sleeper in the congregation. Paul attended a dinner party and then gave the banquet address, for he was saying farewell forever to his friends at Ephesus. The Bible says (Acts 20:7): ". . . Paul preached unto them, ready to depart on the morrow; and continued his speech until midnight. "And there sat in a window a certain young man named Eutychus, being fallen into a deep sleep: and as Paul was long preaching, he sunk down with sleep, and fell from the third loft, and was taken up dead." Then Paul went down and with God's help revived Eutychus, after which Paul had a midnight snack "and talked a long while, even till break of day . ." Obviously, even a topnotch orator may occasionally find somebody snoring in his audience. For heavy outdoor work and facing cold winds in winter, may predispose some weary listeners to sleep, despite the most exciting television show or the best sermonizer in America. Furthermore, Paul's first sermon lasted from dinner till midnight, which must have been close to 4 hours, so Eutychus may not have been able to hold his eyes open that long. But you modern clerics, who should limit your sermons to a mere 20 to 30 minutes, ought to be able to keep most people wide awake. It you can't, you are not using Christ's famous • parable- ' formula, wherein \t>u advance your serious text with actual cases, told in story fashion, a la the tale of the Good Samaritan. And will you c lerics please focus on th^ children more often Most of you can't hold even the teen-agers! Remember, if you can't maintain an attentive youthful audience, then your oldsters are probably wool gathering meanwhile. So quit preaching to the old folks and focus on youth That's doubly true of you pastors of churches in college towns, for most of you try to focus on the Ph. D. professors but ignore the college youth who should be your major target. So sent for my booklet ' ' P u b l i c P l a t f o r m Psychology," enclosing a long stamped, return envelope, plus 20 cents. Forget your seminary homiletics and learn how to fascinate an audience, as Dr. Peale does, or Oral Roberts, Billy Graham, Bishop Sheen, Rabbi Samuel M. Silver et al. (Always write to Dr. Crane in care of this newspaper, en­ closing a long stamped, ad­ dressed envelope and 20 cents to cover typing and printing costs when you send for one of his booklets.) 11 ut 11 -i mm u AUGUST SIILE of GREAT HOME APPLIANCES from.. @ Westinghouse VALUE UTOMATIC ICE MAKER When you buy a WastlnghouM Stdc-by-Sid* Refrigerator NOW! No more trays to fill, spill or empty--fills, freezes and dispenses cubes automatically! Regular price $50--yours tree when you buy now' jgSL 288 lb Capaci ty F 'h i i Sect ion' Comp»«t»iy f roal- f rM REG. $559.95 *529 95 SPECIAL VALUE on this Wasting house Refrigerator. 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