Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 13 Feb 1980, p. 7

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' • * C^rood News Bears Defeat McHenry Faculty 79-57 DUNK ATTEMPT-Bad News. Jerry Muckensturm of the Chicago Bears failed at every attempt to make a dunk shot against McHenry faculty Saturday night. Muckersturm did hit some from the corners and a few layups gave him seven baskets for 14 points. STAFF PHOTO-WAYNE GAYLOHD CLOWNING AROUND-Even though it has been several years since they left the McHenry community, Ken and Bonnie Schopp are still clowning around, as evidenced by this recent photo. They hold a first place trophy won as clowns in a parade in Phoenix, Arlx. It was the big Gompers holiday parade, one of the largest held in Phoenix, and marked the beginning of the parade season. The Schopps now reside at 3031M 81st street, Scottsdale, Arls., 85251. WriO KNOWS 1. W iat docs an otologist do? 2. What is an ibis? 3. When was Illinois ad­ mitted to the Union? 4. Why is Indiana known as "The Crossroads of America"? 5. Who was the 3rd U.S. president? 6. What is a jinrikisha? 7. Define benison. 8. What is the capital of Pakistan? 9. Where were the 1972 Winter Olympic Games held? 10.When was the Boy S c o u t o r g a n i z a t i o n founded? Answers To Who KMWS 1. A specialist dealing with the ear and its dis­ orders. 2. A wading bird related to the heron. 3. 1818. 4. It was directly in the path of the movement to the West during the 1800's. 5. Thomas Jefferson. 6. A two-wheeled cart used as a public vehicle in Japan and China. 7. A blessing; bene­ diction. 8. Islamabad. Sapporo. Japan. lO.February 8. 1910. * * * * Best recent definition of a politician: one who observes the nation's gradual disintegration and occasionally contrib­ utes to its eventual col­ lapse. New Illinois Hay Directory For Farmers Farmers and livestock producers needing ad­ ditional supplies of hay and straw to tide livestock through the cold winter months will find the new Illinois Hay directory helpful. The new 1980 hay directory lists names, addresses, and phone numbers of more than 100 Illinois farmers offering hay and straw for sale. In addition the directory lists types of hay available, bale weights, and ap­ proximate volumes of hay offered by individual far­ mers. Free copies of the direc­ tory are available by writing Illinois Hay Directory,' Illinois Department of Agriculture, Division of Marketing, Emmerson Building, State Fairgrounds, Springfield, 111. 62706. * * • • Someone has sug­ gested that the outer garments of patriotism often cover the underwear of self-interest. J "fAX '• PreparatiM f Make Sure You Pay The | Lowest Legal Tax (815)395-4410 Pmri A. Schwf I • 4410 w'eK," ̂ McHenry, Illinois The Good News Bears defeated the McHenry faculty Saturday night by the score of 79 to 57. It was the main event of the Booster Club's Fund Raising attraction for the year. The faculty started out and matched the Bears point for point, in fact grabbed a quick five point lead in the early minutes, before Dennis Lick and Bob Avellini began to use (heir height and weight to muscle in for some baskets and take a 21 to 16 first quarter lead. L i n e b a c k e r J e r r y Muckensturm got into the act in the second period, and the lefthander began to hit from th£ corner to keep the Bears in the lead. Muckensturm was matched basket for basket by Ken Mueller a freshman coach at MCHS. With Ken Ludwig shifting his lineup every few minutes, the Bears con­ tinued to score with Lick using his 6*4" and 268 lbs. to great advantage over the smaller faculty. In the final period the faculty came to life, and with the Bears taking it easy, the faculty outscored the Bears 14 to 13 going down to a 79 to 57 defeat. Bob Avellini must have felt as if he was in Soldiers Field. When announced a chorus of boo's were heard throughout the gym. However, the 6'2" quar­ terback from maryland is a pretty good athlete, and from his 14 baskets, maybe the Chicago Bulls should give him • a tryout. Jim Osborne the 6'3" 245 lb. tackle really enjoyed the game. At one lime he was matched up against 5'2" Kim Hitchcock the frosh- soph coach of the girls' basketball team. The "big guy" and Coach Ken Ludwig were carrying on a conversation throughout the game, and Jim was all smiles throughout the evening. Jerry Muckensturm, the big linebacker, moves with speed. The southpaw really hit from the corners. When Dennis Lick came charging PAGE 7 - PLAINDEALER - WEDNESDAY., FKBRUARY 13.19H0 Odds Win Alumni Classic 63 - 54 A fourth quarter spurt led by Roger Ludwig and Steve Kasperzyk enabled the Odd years to pull away and defeat the Evens 63 to 54 in the Annual Alumni game held at West Campus on Saturday night. For thr^e quarters the former Warriors had a nip and tuck game that thrilled the large crown on hand, as some of their former favorites tried to play with the old "gusto". However it was quite evident that "father time" is beginning to take its toll. There were signs of baldness, bulges around the middle, and the feet not moving as in the past. Bob Miller from the Class of "61" was the old man on the floor, followed by Paul Morenz '62. The Even years were led by Dave Miller and Dave Lawson each with 9 pts. It was nice to see the former Warriors in action, and I'm sure the large crowd on hand enjoyed the game. A tip of the fedora to all who participated in a worthy cause for the Warrior Booster Club. LINEUP ODD YEARS fg ft tp Gary Shell 3 0 6 MikeJanik r 1 0 2 Rog Ludwig 4 8 16 Mark Bentz. 3 l 7 Ken Ludwig 0 2 2 Twig Miller 10; 2 Myron Bentz 0 0 o Bob Miller q o o TimZeller 4 3 U Steve Kasperzyk 6 0 12 Brtb Hurckes 0 0 0 R a n d y S c h i l l e r O i l Brian MiJler 2 0 4 MarkCamasta 0 0 0 Totals: 24 15 63 EVEN YEARS fg ft tp Bob Mauch l o 2 Don Prazak 3 0 6 Ron Miller 0 1 1 Gary Fairchild 1 0 2 Don Harris 4 0 8 Dave Miller 4 19 Dave Lawson .4 1 9 Tom Hurckes 0 2 2 DougSchmitt 0 0 0 Brian Lund 2 0 4 John Smith 2 0 4 Paul Morenz 3 1 7 Totals: 24 6 54 GOING UP--Bear quarterback. Bob Avellini, prepares to take a shot over the reach of a McHenry teacher. His target, the basket, dropped most of his shots (passes) through the hoop for two pointers as Avellini lead everyone with 29 points to pace the Bears to a 79-57 victory. STAFF PHOTO-WAYNE GAYLORD down the floor, everyone even his own teammates got out of the way. The Ivy Leaguer Dan Jiggetts grips a basketball as if it were a golf ball. N o r t h e r n I l l i n o i s University had a representative in Jerry Meyers. The former Huskie didn't socre, but got his share of rebounds. Gary Campbell went through the motions. It seemed he was the only one that didn't enjoy himself. It was fun night, kids were lined up after the game to get autographs, and the Booster Club had another successful night. GOOD NEWS BEARS fg ft tp Lick 7 3 17 Avellini 14 1 29 Campbell 2 15 Jiggetts 3 4 10 Osborne 2 0 4 Meyers 0 0 0 Muckensturm 7 0 14 Totals: 35 9 79 MCHSFACULTY fg ft tp Hester 2 2 6 Nitz 3 17 Goering 2 0 4 Janik Hitchcock Doran Trembly Wolter Wilson Schmitt Luckett Sytsma Mueller Glawe Gray Ludwig Schlender Totals: 2 0 5 2 2 2 2 2 8 15 0 0 0 0 26 5 57 Bears 21 22 23 13 79 Faculty 16 14 13 14 57 FOOTBALL * * * By Pete Fritchie WASHINGTON. D. C. -- Post-Superbowl speculation centers on the question whether the Pittsburgh Steelers are the best pro foot­ ball in the history of the game. A good case can be made that they are. They are the only team to have won four Superbowls. There are doubters be­ cause Terry Bradshaw is probably not the best quar­ terback in the game's his­ tory. Bradshaw is one of the best. Yet even in the recent victory over L.A., he threw the ball straight into enemy hands three times. The case for the,Steelers is based on the fact that thev have so many great players on both offense and defense. Because of this, it's very hard to look back over pro Warriors Spear Gators 77-57 At Crystal Lake By Dick Rabbitt A 13 to 3 third quarter advantage enabled the McHenry Warriors to soundly defeat the Crystal Lake South "Gators" 77 to 57 Friday night at Gator Alley. Up to that time the Gators had the best of the match between the two Fox Valley rivals. The win left the Warriors tied with Crown and the Gators for second place in the conference, each with a 7 and 3 record. Dundee remains in first place with a 9 and 1 record. The master "Ken Ludwig" gave the pupil "Gary Collins" a lesson in defense in the second half Friday night. The Gators known for their fine defensive play could not cope with the "Running Warriors" and when they were not running up and down Gator Alley, they put on a tenacious defense that held the Gators to 16 shots in the final half, 6 of then coming in the final minutes when Ludwig had cleared the bench. Both teams traded baskets early in the opening period, until the 2:00 mark, when Anderson of the Gators made two layups to give the Gators a 21 to 17 lead. Midway in the second period with the Warriors trailing by 1, 27 to 26, the Gators ran off 8 unanswered points, and Warrior fans felt that the roof had collasped. Tony Sroka and Jim Johnson got the Warriors back on the track and narrowed the margin to a 39 to 36 half time deficit. Defense Takes Over After Waylor's basket gave the Gators a 41 to 36 lead, the Warrior defense took over. Using a full court press and boxing out An­ derson, the 6'6" Gator center, the Warriors forced the Gators into numerous turnovers, while they themselves began to hit the hoop. Sroka and Greve started things off with a bakset apiece, and then Barry Anderson rewarded with a starting berth, because of his fine play the past several weeks, didn't let his coach down, hit a three pointer and the Warriors had the lead, which they kept the rest of the evening. Jensen and Zeller ended the scoring for the period, and the Warriors led 49 to 42. The Warrior defense held the Gator of­ fense scoreless for almost six minutes during the period. With the large Warrior delegation on their feet cheering them on, the Warriors started the final eight minutes with a flourish. Bob Greve had the hot hand in the early stages, and the young junior when left open, hit the bullseye time and time again. Len Jensen's 15 footer at the 3:00 mark gave the Warriors a 20 pt. lead 66 to 46, Anderson and Zeller followed suit and at the 2:00 the Warriors led 69 to 48, and Coach Ludwig cleared the pines for the evening, and the rest is history. It was Ludwig's first win over a Collins coached crew in four attempts. The defense the Warriors displayed in the second half, frustrated the Gators into numerous turnovers. The Gators managed only 10 shots in the first 14 minutes of the half getting 2 baskets After Ludwig cleared the bench the Gators got six more shots and 2 baskets, a remarkable compliment to the Warrior defense. Although the defense must get a lot of credit, let's not forget the offense. The Warriors forced the Gators into run and shoot baskeball, something Collins doesn't like, and as a result the fast breaking Warriors were off and running time and time again. Mr. "Hustle" Barry An­ derson led all scorers with 18 points. Friday night the Warriors host the ever improving Woodstock Blue Streaks, who won their first conference game Friday defeating Cary Grove 73 to 57. McHenry vs. Crystal lake South McHenrv fg ft tP Waylor Zeller l 2 4 D'Angelo Anderson 7 4 18 Christiansen Johnson 4 3 11 Neustedter Sroka 7 1 15 Anderson Jensen 6 0 12 Salerno Greve 4 3 11 Bryniarski 1 0 2 Totals: Costigan 0 4 4 Totals: 30 17 77 Mel! ( L.S. football history and find a team their equal. John Stallworth, who made two incredible catches Jan. 20. and Lynn Swan, may be as good as any two receivers ever. The defensive line, Joe Green and all, backed by Jack Lambert, may be as good as any. The running game and the offen­ sive line may not be quite up to other team strengths, though good. Thus, the team as a whole might well be the best evej\ Keep Trying A man, having hurt hts forehead., was advised to rub it with brandy. A Jew days later, he was asked if the remedy was working "I can't tell yet," he replied, "I can never seem to get the glass higher than my mouth. " Not Enough A soldier, telling his mother of a terrible battle with bullets flying all around, was ad monished: "Son, why didn't you get behind a tree?" "Tree, " he replied, "there weren't even enough trees for the officers'" Crystal Lake South fg ft tp 6 3 15 3 5 11 2 0 4 1 1 3 7 2 16 .i 2 8 22 13 57 17 I'M:! 2K 77 21 18 3 15 ~u iTntTTirnrr-irmrTif" rT"* TREAT YOUR SWEETHEART ON VALENTINES DAY! THURSDAY EVENINGS COMPLETE DINNERS Steak (t Crab Legs . s695 Chicken Kiev s425 Lobster Special s7,s FRIDAY'S COMPLETE DINNERS FRESH FISH SPECIAL! White Fish your Choice Red Snapper Walleyed Pike SAVE BIG •WITH OUR! Your garments receive the same high quality drycleaning - only the price is lower. ACT NOW! • S495 LUNCHEON SPECIALS DAILY Green SEND PAY FOR 3 ONLY 2 GARMENTS GARMENTS GET 1 free: / 4. GET 2 SEND IP GARMENTS, PAY FOR "If GET A CLEANED FREE SEND 9 GARMENTS, PAY FOR 6f GET 3 CLEANED FREE (Least expensive garment in order is the free one All suits considered as one garment ) GOOD FEBRUARY 13-MARCH 1 4400 W. Rte. 120 McHenry Illinois 385-1944 CLEANERS DAILY 7-6, SATURDAY 8-5:30 Conveniently Located in McHenry Market Place

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