Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 23 Apr 1976, p. 7

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PUiK ? • PLAINDEALER-FRIDAY. A PHIL 23. mi On The SMelius toy Died IMMI The athletic activities at McHenry High are getting back into full swing after the Easter break. Coach Gary Gray's netters continued on their winning ways Monday when they defeated Mundelein to remain undefeated in North Suburban play. Saturday they host a eight team fro6h-soph invitational meet to be held here at McHenry West Campus. Any boy who has competed at the varsity level even for one match is ineligible to play in this meet. According to Coach Gray three lower classmen of the Warriors will not participate Saturday because of previous play on the varsity level. Sounds like a good idea, at least more boys will be able to participate in a tournament and gain valuable experience. Wally Scott's thinclads are still having their troubles in duals and triangular meets. Lack of depth in some events is the main cause. They sure get their share of first places, but it is the seconds, thirds and fourths that win these kind of meets. In the triangular Monday at Crystal Lake they won three of the four relays, which is a good sign. In past years this always was the downfall, getting four boys to run consistently in relays. Their clocking of 3:31 in the mile relay was really outstanding considering the weather. The frosh-sophs easily won the Panther Relays last Saturday held at Geneva. If they continue on their winning ways, the Warriors will be heard from later in the year when the county and conference meets will be held here at McHenry. The Warrior baseball team played excellent games last Saturday and split with Mundelein. Both games by the score of 2 to 1, with the first game going to the Warriors in eight innings. - Tuesday a couple of errors at the wrong time opened the gate for Barrington to go on and win a 7 to 4 victory. Next month the Warriors will ho6t the District baseball meet. It is an automatic decision by the I.H.S.A. to have the tournament at McHenry every year. McCracken Field is probably the best field in the state of Illinois when weather conditions prevail as rain, wind and cold. Earle Cooper, with able assistance by Vic Santi and B.J. Swantz, have the field in perfect condition for every home game. Visiting coaches rave about the fine condition of the playing field, and Elgin Larkin always schedules their game with the Warriors at the Warrior field. Woodstock opens tourney play against Hebron on May 6th. On May 8th in the first game the Warriors play Richmond-Burton, and in the second game Marian jg Central plays the winner of the Woodstock-Hebron game. Then on Monday, May 10th the two winners play for the right to play in the Elgin sectional. Major league scouts are flocking to North Suburban diamonds this spring to keep their eyes on three prospects. In talking with a scout the other night he :§ informs me that the three hottest prospects in the league, :jj and getting all the attention are: Mike Lindal senior left S handed pitcher and outfielder of the Libertyville Wildcats, iiij •:•: Leo George a senior catcher and hard hitter from :ji: §: Barrington. George has had several tape measure home ji£ runs this season already. Last but not least is our own Tommy Ludwig a third baseman and pitcher. Tommy has ':x had several long clouts this season, but his fine play at the j:j: hot corner has earned him more than one look by several ?: scouts. j-j: As of now Lindal is headed for Missouri, George has j-j: signed a tender at Southern Methodist, and Tom is still :§ undecided where he wants to attend sdiool. And all the time many fans thought this was just a S football and basketball conference. The North Suburgan iji; •:•: will hold its own with a lot of conferences regardless of size and facilities. j§ Camp Duncan Swimmers Capture State, Area And Midwest Titles $ Camp Duncan swimmers have been making names for themselves in recent events. Winning midwest titles, defeating 17 area YMCA teams, taking second place in state championships are all a part of a busy schedule for boys and girls. When the team went to Waukesha, one of their op­ ponents was the son of Tom and Judy McMahon. Judy is the former Judy Freund of McHenry. Tom was a fine athlete at MCHS. McHenry County To Send 20 Swimmers To Special Olympics The Northeastern Regional Swimming Special Olympics are scheduled to be held at Marmion Military Academy, Butterfield road, Aurora, on Friday, April 23from 9a.m. to 3 p.m. Twelve participants from Pioneer Center in Crystal Lake ""fl In England, peeler today is slang for a policeman, but in the 16th century it was slang for a thief. GIRLS BADMINTON-Coach Karen Leichtle, left, gives instructions to a few of the girls of the MCHS girls Badminton team. Kneeling left - right are Jane Liptrot, Mary Goetschei, Kathy Rogers and Sudha Paraman. Standing are Annette Hanson, Dianna Unger and Sue Meyer. The next home meet is against North Chicago on Wednesday. April 28. The home meets are played in the upper gym at West Campus and begin at 4:30 p.m. (STAFF PHOTO-WAYNE GAYLORD > Window On Future The American Revolution McHenry Swimmers Erik, Bengston, cadet, parents are Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Bengston. Victor, Mark and Monique Bentancourt, parents are Mr. and Mrs. Elias Betancourt. Laura and John Clewis, parents are Mr. and Mrs. Don Clewis. Pat and Anne Murray, parents are Mr. and Mrs. Jim Murray (oldest son on MCHS swim team). have entered the Special Olympics as well as eight persons from SEDOM center in Woodstock. A total of 225 en­ trants from the nine county area of the Norhteastern Regional will participate in the swimming events. RELIGION AND THE REVOLUTION by Jon Butler The religion of the Pilgrims always receives its due in history. But was the religion of the patriots a cause of the American Revolution? The subject often is overlooked despite the fact that a combination of religious and political discontent fired c o n s i d e r a b l e p u b l i c imagination against England before 1776. The major religious issue to disturb colonists concerned efforts to establish a colonial bishop for the Church of England. Although other Protestants had established their own distinctive forms of church government in the colonies, Anglicans had not. Only in the southern colonies did they enjoy even limited support from government, and there colonial legislatures gave power to vestries of well-to-do laymen, not to bishops. Yet after 1760 when Anglicans began to demand a bishop to manage American church affairs, protests against the plan reinforced the political complaints against England and reached near-hysterical levels. "No Lords spiritual or temporal," cried New Englanders. Bishops would bring in church courts. They would demand tax monies. Indeed, hadn't Anglicans secretly built a "palace" near Boston from which their first bishop would indict non-Anglicans for heresy and force colonial office­ holders to join the King's church? Worse, after 1774 weren't Anglicans also supporting Catholicism? In the Quebec act passed in that year. Parliament allowed Catholics in Canada to practice their religion. Colonial Protestant leaders, already agitated by the bishop con­ troversy. now accused Parliament of approving what a New York writer, Robert Livingston, called "all the history, all the superstition of the Church of Rome ", But the bigotry often laid with the patriot side and reveals unpleasant features of the Revolution. Many Americans looked more to the usefulness of their accusations than to the truth of them. They overlooked the fact that in New England, Congregationalists long taxed non-members to support their churches. They failed to note that Parliament never approved Canada's Catholicism but only recognized the religious preferences of French settlers there Fortunately perhaps, many American Catholics and Anglicans transcended these slurs and supported the Revolution anyway. Later Americans often unhappily continued in (heir forefathers' steps. The first amendment to the Federal Constitution guaranteeing religious liberty did not originally apply to the states and many of them wrote laws f a v o r i n g P r o t e s t a n t congregations or requiring public officials to behove in a distinctly Protestant God. Later, when Irish im migrants arrived in America. Protestants again used the law to maintain their customary superiority. They made it difficult for Catholic bishops to own local church property, demanded that only the King James Bible, not the Douay translations, be read in the public schools, and burned the Ursiline convent in Boston None of these events would have surprised one American revolutionary. In 1771 Richard Bland of Virginia warned about the dangers of religious con troversy. "For let me tell you." he wrote, "a religious dispute is the most fierce and destructive of all others to the peace and happiness of government " No one listened, and before 1776 religious controversy clearly advanced the patriot cause But it left an ambivalent and dangerous legacy for a society increasingly characterized by expansion in the number and variety of its religious groups and preferences (Jon Butler is a specialist in colonial American history at the University of Illinois, Chicago Circle.) Choir Will Appear In City DR. FREDERICK TELSCHOW When the Valparaiso university Schola Cantorum visits McHenry for two ap­ pearances Sunday, April 25. the singers will be directed by Dr. Frederick Telschow WELL DRILLING & WATER PUMPS UIE'RE BURSTinC e BT THE SERRIS! 7 •rap HCREMPV CDvwrt Vfell tfVMP ] W (,r\ McHENRY COUNTY WELL & PUMP CO. SO. . . .In The Future We Will Be Located 154 Mi. No. of McHenry on Rt. 31 » %, p -- ion IM lleCUUOM LAKE ROAD.-MtHENRY A good radial doesnt have to leave your wallet flat. $4638 Buy Phillips fjfi glass-k-1 ted Radial II. 2 polyester c ord ra- -dial body plies plus 2 fil>erglass belt plies. Gas-saving radial construction. 30.000 mile life. Plus F E T and S*le» Tax Size: GR-78-15 All the radial you need, for less than you expect. Galaxy Car Wash ^WlUF$> irm 4713 W. RTE. 120 McHENRY, ILL Codes BAB-Basebal) McHENRY COMMUNITY HIGH SCHOOL 197t SPRING SPORTS SCHEDULE Bad-Badminton F Freehman Ten-Tennis SB-Softball F-S-Froah-Soph Tr-Track V-Varsity • Two Busses • one to leave GTr-Girb Track S-Sophomore from fetch school Bus leaves Date Sport -aferr--• Tr Squads Opponent Place Time East Wet Fri-Apr23 Sport -aferr--• Tr F ZionLiberty viUe Libertyvl. there 4:S0 3:00 Ten F-S-V Warren Libertyvl. there 4:00 2:45 SB V Graysiake there 4:30 3:00 2:45 Sat Apr 24 Tr V • Fox Valley Belays Beta via 11:38 3:00 8:30 Ten F-S McHenry Tm here 10:80 8:30 SB V Lake Forest here 18:80 Man-Apr 26 Tr F-S-V Lake Zurich Antloch 4 38 « 3:00 • 3:80 Antloch 4 38 « 3:00 • 3:80 Ten F-S-V Lake Forest here 4:30 SB V Dundee here 4:38 Tues-Apr 27 BAB V Crown here 4:38 Wed-Apr 28 BAB F-S Crown there 4:30 3:00 Wed-Apr 28 Ten F-S-V Crystal Lake there 4:30 3:00 3:15 Bad V North Chicago here 4:30 r " ' _ , j Thurs Apr29 SB V Mundelein there 4:30 3:15 3:00 _ , j Thurs Apr29 BAB V-S Marian here 4:30 4:30 Fri-Apr30 GTr V Barrington 4 North Chicaen here 4:30 4:30 - Fri-Apr30 Tr V McHenry Belays here 4:30 Set-May 1 SB V Woodstock -here 4:30 10 30 Set-May 1 BAB V North Chicago there 4:30 10 30 9:00 BAB F-S North Chicago here 10:30 • , - • GTr V Lit. Forest Invit. there 10:30 Man-May S Ten F-S-V Dundee there 4:30 3:00 Bad V Lake Foreet here 4:30 GTr V Crystal LkZion Zion 4:30 3:00 ^:45 Tue-May 4 SB V Libertyville there 4:30 3:00 2 45 Tue-May 4 BAB V Crystal Lake here 4:30 Wed May S BAB F-S Crystal Lake there 4:30 3:00 Wed May S Ten F-S-V North Chicago there 4:30 2:45 Bad V Barrington here 4:30 Thurs-May 6 SB V Zion here 4:30 Thurs-May 6 BAB V IHSA District here 4:80 Tr F-S-V Mundelein here 4:30 Fri-May 7 Ten North Chicago Fri-May 7 Ten F-S-V Cary Grave here 4:08 Sat-May 8 BAB V IHSA District here 18:88 Tr V Woodstock Relays there 12:30 11:15 GTr V NSC Barrington * Man-May 10 SB V Barrington here 10:00 Man-May 10 BAB V IHSA District here 4:00 • Ten F-S-V Barrington here 4:30 Bad V Dundee there 4:30 2:45 3:08 SB V IHSA District Wed-May 12 Bad V Zion there 4:30 3:00 2:45 GTr .* v Cary Grove- Woodstock home 4:30 Thurs-May is BAB BAB V F-S Dundee Dundee there here 4:30 4:30 S O U Fri-May 14 Tr V . NSC here Fri-May 14 Ten • V NSC Libertyvl. Sat-May IS BAB V Libertyville here 10:30 BAB F-S ' Libertyville there 10:30 8:00 BAB V IHSA Regional . Ten •V NSC Libertyvl. GTr V IHSA District Libertyvl. Man-May 17 BAB Ten V F-S-V IHSA Regional Wauconda home . 4:30 Bad V North Chicago there 4:30 3:88 2:45 SB V North Chicago there 4:30 3:80 2:45 SB . V IHSA Regional Tues-May 18 BAB V Barrington here 4:30 BAB F-S Barrington Mundelein Invit. there 4:30 3:80 Tr F Barrington Mundelein Invit. there 4:30 3:00 Wed-May 19 Bad V Dundee here 4:30 •-- -- Wed-May 19 SB V Crown here 4:30 Thurs-May 20 BAB V Zion . there 4:30 2:45 BAB F-S Zion here 4:30 Fri-May 21 Tr V IHSA District Fri-May 21 GTr V IHSA State The moving force behind the group, Dr. Telschow is chairman of the Music department at the Indiana university and holds the Doctor of Musical Arts degree in Church Music from the Eastman School of Music. Dr.-Telschow has been director of Music in Lutheran high schools in Nebraska and Missouri, where he also served as choir master and organist in addition to his administrative and directing duties. The choir will sing selections at the 10:30 morning service at Zion Lutheran church, 4206 W Waukegan road, and will present its regular program at 3 in the afternoon in the church "Service Tip of the Week" The single moat Important part of your car is the brake system. Brakes should be replaced or checked every 35,000 to 45.000 miles depending on driving habits. A grinding sound, when braking, is often times an early Indication of worn brakes. If you hear this sound or feel that your brakes are not "Gra­ bbing" properly, contact a mechanic. Brakes are s good investment. T0RKELS0N LINCOLN-MERCURY W. Rte. 120, McHenry, 344-1200 JIM JANICEK SALES WITH A roito Save $40' Ilavent you done without a loni long . > 'enoygh? ̂ That's the cost of Key-Lectric* Start -- yours FREE on the Toro model 20673 and 21711. SAVE $85 on an Easy-Empty Crass Catcher. Based on a comparison of promotional and regular season manufacturer's suggested retail price on Model 21711 and Model 20673 for FAIR TRADL states only, while supplies last. 'Two trademark*. ' Toro now offer? this spacious grass catcher at $85 off the regular price with everv pur­ chase of a rr.ir bagging T(no rider Supplies arc limited, so see us today. l(!omparing ;>rom'/tional -*jth r* ifular \ea*on tnanufa< turer\ retail price for rider rtxxlrU m I 4 *oi<J with mtfher Mulel "'('W '>H'-r onlv *hile [>art><. ipa'mK <)e.«ler%' Vrivr«it<>ri»"> ot prom<j(>< >nal model* !a-.t hair Trade States only Geo. P. Freund, Inc. 4102 W. Crystal Lake Rd., McHenry 385-0420

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