THE McHENRY PLAINDEALEH Thursday, Octobar 4. 1962 ^ &LHJZ. Wa&A/t. -- ATTENTION -- Contributors are again requested to turn in all sports copy to Earl R. Walsh, Sports Editor, at 3429 West Elm Street. Omission of items may result when this procedure is not followed. Your cooperation will be appreciated. SO I HEAR... It is Tuesday night and we are all Worn out from watching the Giants lose to the Dodgers in that long second game of the play-off. McHENRY WARRIORS AND LIBERTYVILLE FIGHT TO FINISH IN 20-20 TIE; COACH HARGIS TAKES TEAM TO CRYSTAL LAKE SATURDAY MIGHTY MARION SUBDUES HIGHLY RATED NOTRE DAME We will be going to press before the third and deciding game comes to a joyous finish for one team and a sad ending for the other. American Legion Baseball Dinner The McHenry American Legion Post has invited their baseball boys to a dinner next Monday evening. October 8 (7 p.m. > at the Legion Hall. Better save your appetities.. boys. They feed you real good down there. We saw some thrilling football over the weekend. On Friday night, the Warriors and visiting Libertyville played their hearts out to a 20-20 tie. We think the Warriors should have won that one, but those By (iene Brooks McHenry and Libertyville big IFS do not count on the j fought to a 20-20 score! scoreboard. Libertyville scored on the last^j^y in the first half as thru*' ticked away. McHenry was within this much of putting over the winner on the last play of the game. McHenry had it won on the third J closing seconds of 1 he game Last Friday night was perfect football weather in McHenry and many local fans watched a football game that was highlighted by fumbles and interceptea passes. McHenry had a good chance of winning the game during the kick after touchdown, but a penalty put them back five yards for a second try that went wild. but just couldn't come up with the score. In the opening moments of the game, Libertyville fumbled and Jim Ambrose recovered and made one of the most exciting runs of the year. After running the ball for 40 yards, he was tackled close to the Cross-Coun+ry Triangular Meet goal where he watched thej\A/ Q |k A ii ball roll into the end-zone. •• Oil Dy IVIC lie 11 Ty Lucky for us, Lloyd Smith was there to recover for Mc- Henry's second score. Fanagain kicked the extra point. Right after this, Libertyville again scored, tying the game at 14 all. The McHenry team made a smart call when they decided to punt during the last quarter of the game. Even though The game was so hot that , and ran the ball over for a tjiey were jn Libertyville ter- Coach Dean Hargis had to j score from 15 yards out. Tim i rjtory, the. McHenry boys take off his coat. That short j Fan* kicked for the extra j kicked and put the ball right sleeved shirt looked mighty j point. Libertyville then started I next to the Libertyville goal cool to us less rugged individuals. On Sunday afternoon we saw a real upset. Marian Central really out-played the Notre Dame of Niles team in a 14-6 victory. The N.D. team was rated "fifth in f'e state before that upset. its first offensive drive and line. When Libertyville found moved the ball to our 20 yard , they couldn't move the ball line where they again had to J ^ey had to kick from the give the ball up because ot a j enfj zone vvhich resulted in fumble. After recovering. Mr- McHenry getting the ball first Henry almost came up with , and ten on lhe Libertyville another score. Quarterback j 35 After moving the ball well, John Rourke threw a couple Teddy Freund ran 10 yards of beautiful passes which could for the score- It was too bad have resulted in touchdowns -- 1)Ut our extra point was nu i however, both passes were j good as a result of a M(._ N.D. had, some giants in | dropped a nek as a result we | Henry penalty. The last score that line and many spectators ' had to give the ball over to j game came on a 24-yard thought they would wear the ' Libertyville: It was during the Marian boys down in the last half. closing minutes of the half when Libertyville started making long gains on end-runs and connecting on some . good pass "play we have seen as ! passes. Finally, on the last j the score at a tie. Bowman passed to Riley, who i play of the half they ran the Ted Freund and Phil Schmitt Marian pulled the fanciest runs by Libertyville. With the score 20-20, McHenry had to stop the extra point. Showing great desire, Ron Kreutzer blocked the extra point and tipped - the ball a-la -basketball to Crowley. • N. D. cam» to McHenry County with a record of 13 straight .wins, only . tp learn why the Marian boys are called Hurricanes. Daily Pinups »All that glitters is,not gold; little is--gained, much more is ball over from the three yard line. With the half ending the score was 7-7. Schmitt And Smith The second half started with McHenry kicking and recovering a fumble on the Libertyville 33. After failing to capitalize on this, McHenry scored the second time it had the ball during the second half. With third down and long yardage, Schmitt took the ball Never be" stingy with your ! make tomorrow's deeds that smiles, they can be stretched for miles and miles. much easier, Adam set a precedent when he let a slick, chick uproot his you. garden. If you don't run after happiness it's apt to catch up with Chiseling in traffic never caryes milestones. Doing your best today will The film of childhood can't be run thru for a second showing. ANONYMOUS WARRIOR OF THE WEEK WAYNE LATIMER LLOYD SMITH mm. did most of the ball carrying io the Warriors with Freund carrying 24 times for 119 yards ••veraging 4.5 yards. Schmitt carried 15 times. Next week the Warriors will try to spoil Crystal Lake's homecoming. Lacking scoring punch, Crystal Lake could be McHenry's first conference victim. Let's all go out and give •them our support. ENROLLS IN SCHOOL Virginia M. Taylor, who entered the junior class of Penn Hall Junior college and preparatory school in Chambersburg, Pa., this fall, is the* daughter of Mrs. Lillian Taylor of 5107 W. Parkview, Mc- Cullom Lake. Travelling to Ela-V e r n on Tuesday afternoon for a triangular meet with Wauconda and the host school, both the Varsity and Soph teams came through with victories. The varsity won with a score of 25 points, Ela-Vernon second with 32 points, and Wauconda third with 83 points. Roland Koerper kept his record perfect -by finishing first in 8:33, Ron Sluga was second, Dave Dimon, sixth, Rick Brown, seventh, and Bruce Peck, ninth. Other McHenry runners and their order of finish were Cliff Harris, tenth, Gary Snell, eleventh, Mike Stueben, twelfth,, and Denny Banker, twentieth. The Frosh-Soph in winning, their meet scored 30 points,^ Ela-Vernon 32 points, and Wauconda 76 points. Olscewski again finished first in 9:56, Turner, second, Lichty, fourth, Whiting, tenth, Anderson, thirteenth, Ruzicka, fourteenth,; Zeiger, fifteenth, Harch, sixt e e n t h , T o m l i n s o n , t w e n t y - second, Major, twenty-third, and Bostler, twenty-fifth. LOSE TO LIBERTYVILLE The McHenry Cross-Country team had its string of three victories broken Thursday by a strong Wildcat team. The varsity runners were beaten by a score of 24 to 33, and in the defeat Captain Koerper lost Mighty Marian, the - little known and lightly-regarded football team from the country, for the second week in a row showed the big city boys how the game is played. Once-proud Notre Dame of Niles invaded the Hurricanes' territory last weekend and went limping but believing a cruel victim of a superb Hurricane line and a beautifully executed flea circus play. Ed Crowley, a standout on defense, was equally brilliant on offense as he flashed to a pair of touchdowns in this 14-6 Marian victory over the team which was rated fifth in the state. And I^otre Dame perhaps earned this high ranking because it displayed a strong line, a pair of speedy halfbacks and a powerful fullback. But Coach Tom Parsley and his assistants, Angelo Dabiero and Matt Pontar, had prepared the Hurricanes for this supreme effort in brilliant fashion and on this day last weekend Marian earned its right to receive statewide attention for its gridiron prowess. This week Parsley and his staff must guard against overconfidence and a letdown. The foe will be St. Patrick of Chicago, lop-sided victim of Notre Dame a week , ago. But Parsley said St. Pat's has a rugged, tough ball club and deserves considerable respect. Against Notre Dame Marian stalled the vaunted Niles' ofhis first race of the year to Calhoun of Libertyville, % who set a new course record of 9:21. Koerper finished second and Sluga third. Libertyville won the race by placing fourth, fifth, sixth and seventh, forcing the next three McHenry runners to finish in the eighth, ninth and tenth places. The Frosh-Soph team lost their race 24 to 33. Olscewski marked up his fourth straight victory. However, his winning time of 10:44 was the best time he has turned in up to the present date. The next race for the Warriors will be against Elgin on the local course Tuesday, Oct. 2. On Thursday, Oct. 4, the squad will travel to Crystal Lake to meet the tough Tiger runners. RESERVATIONS AND TICKETS FOR Airlines -- Steamships Cruises -- Tours Railroad -- Bus Hotels -- U Drive Cars At No Extra Charge Your Authorized Fully Approved & Accredited Travel Agent CHAIN-O-LAKES TRAVEL SERVICE 3917 W. Main St., McHenry Phone 385-5251 JOE BLENNER Halfback from McHenry fense by snaring the ball carriers before they could get started. They intercepted four passes, three by Crowley. A number of factors made Marian's dream of upsetting the respected foe become a reality. During the week coaches installed several key plays, built around using both quarterbacks, Wally Bowman and Bill Riley, In the backfield. Riley became a "lonesome end," and the value of this move became obvious in the second quarter. Marian had pushed the Dons into a hole and a bad pass from center prevented a good kick. The ball ended on the six-yard line, and Marian pounded at the Dons' door. Crowley fumbled to the twoyard line, Trownsell falling on the loose ball for a fouryard gain. On third down Murphy moved to the one-yard line. On fourth down Murphy took a shovel pass and crashed to the one-foot line. After' th?j Pons. had. n)$de a first down and puntecl to their own 40-yard line, Marian used its lonesome end to move 60 yards and score. Corso and Murphy made good gains. Crowley fumbled the slippery ball momentarily, then swung right and gained 14 yards to the 16-yard line. fiii£. punting again in this game, rushed to the 16-yard line. Bowman passed to Riley to the one-yard line and Crowley plunged over on the second try. Another faciur was Chuck Thillman's successful play against Francisco, the Dons' all-state guard of a year ago 4} On the next play came the i who was moved to the backclimax. Bowman passed to Riley at his wide end post. Riley didn't catch the ball, instead batting it deftly to a fastrunning Crowley who caught the ball in stride and sped goalward untouched. The only defender with Riley had closed in, leaving a hole outside Riley. Leahy kicked the first of two extra points. On the Dons' first pjay from scrimmage after the score, Ron Reckamp intercepted a pass and ran it back to the 38-yard line. Bowman gained nine and Murphy, who averaged 41 yards with His JOHN CORSO Halfback from McHenry WHEN IT'S GOOD FOOD IT'S TIME TO STEP OUT AND The Main Deck of Fox Lake -- FRIDAY SPECIAL -- FRESH LAKE PERCH $1.25 Includes Clam Chowder, Potatoes, Cole Slaw, Rolls -- SUNDAY SPECIAL -- COUNTRY STYLE CHICKEN $1.50 Includes Potatoes, Cole Slaw, Soup, Rolls ALL SPECIALS -- ALL YOU CAN EAT Bowling Parties, Banquqets, etc. Reservations Welcomed Air Conditioned Member American Express Itte. 59 at Grand Ave. (Route 132) JU. 7-7122 Florence & Bernard Haviland & Sons Music Nightly field. He was assigned to shadow the formidable fullback. Summarized' Parsley, "We hit hard against Schurz and hit even harder against the Dons. Fm-proud of this fine team effort." Open Weekdays 6:45 Sat. and Sun. 2:15 Phone 338-0032 NOW thru SAT. Double Feature 'TALES OF TERROR' and 'JOURNEY TO SEVENTH PLANET"! Both in Color STARTS SUNDAY "TRAPEZE" starring Burt Lancaster -- Tony Curtis Gina Lollobrigida and "THE VIKINGS" * starring Kirk Douglas - Tony Curtis ^OUTDOOR GRAYSLAKE RT120 & z OPEN WEEKENDS FRI. - SUN., OCT. 5 - 7 Double Laff Show »jaw 00S A (^nimounf PiCtur* plus co-hit! • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • a • Paramount Presents '• i JERPy' I V1EVWC !• .as.**..-' Also - Late Show Bonus Feature Friday & Saturday Wayne is 5'9" tall, weighs 229 lbs. and is a returning letterman playing his „ •"4th year of football and is a senior. He played - an outstanding game last "Friday night making many fine tackles. Wayr.c is probably one of the .most dependable men on the squad. He plays guard on defense. Wayne was the wrestling c(.n- -ference champion in the hvywt. division last year. SUPPORT YOUR TEAM nNext Game - McHenry at Crystal Lake, Oct. 6, 12 p.m. Presented as a community service by NYE DRUGS Your FRIENDLY Walgreen Agency 1325 N. Riverside Dr. l'lione 395-4126 Lloyd is 5'10" tall, weighs 153 lbs. and is a senior playing his 3rd year of football. He played quarterback as a freshman and sophomore and did not compete during his Junior year. Lloyd reported for practice at the beginning of this year and worked his way up to one of the top men as an offensive end. McHENRY THEATRE N. Gr. Ph. EV 5- THURS., FRI. & SAT. Oct. 4, 5 & 6 JULES VERNE'S "FIVE WEEKS IN A BALLON" < Cinemascope & Technicolor) One show Thurs., 8 p.m. 2 Shows Fri. & Sat., 7-9 p.m. SPECIAL MATINEE SUNDAY Oct. 7, 3-5 p.m. "ABBOTT & COSTELLO MEET CAPTAIN KIDD" Plus 5 Cartoons SUN., MON. & TUES. Oct. 7, 8 & 9 Sunday at 5 - 7 - 9 Mon. & Tues. at 8 p.m. "THE INTERNS" MICHAEL CALLAN CLIFF ROBERTSON IMPERIAL 1963 A M E R I C A ' S M O S T C A R E F U L L Y B U I L T C A R IMPERIAL CROWN FOUR-DOOR WED. ONLY -- OCT. 10 The McHenry County Mental Health Center presents an outstanding feature: "THE MARK" ROD STEIGER STUART WHITMAN All proceeds used for benefit of McHenry County patients. This is a very worthy causehelp support it. Tickets available at Mental Health Center and also at theatre. One Show - 8 p.m. Adm. $1.00 NEXT WEEK 'JUDGEMENT AT NURENBURG" To everyone who plans to buy an Imperial\ Cadillac or Lincoln this year If you'd like the best perspective on what your next luxury car can offer, begin with a drive in the new Imperial -- first luxury car haxnng its power-train warranted* for five years or HifiOO miles. Your Imperial dealer is ready to furnish one of his new models for your comparison. You'll find Imperial is designed for spaciousness and luxury on the grand scale. Imperial's town-car look is deliberately ' M P E R I A L -- A restrained -- and timeless. But its famous roadability is evidence of very timely advances in high-performance power and the largest automatic-adjusting brake system in any American luxury car. After you've tested and inspected and compared, we'd like your personal judgment of our major premise: that Imperial's differences afford important motoring qualities not found in either Cadillac or Lincoln. Q U A L I T Y P R O D U C T c H R Y So accept our friendly challenge, please. We're confident that driving an Imperial will influence your ideas about what a luxury car should be and should do. • Your authorized Imperial Dealer's Warranty against defects in material and workmanship on 196) cars has hern expanded to include parts replacement or repair lor J years or 50,000 miles, whichever comes first, on lhe engine block, head and internal parts; transmission case and •internal parts; torque converter, drive shaft, universal joints (excluding dust covers), rear axle and differential, and rear wheel bearings, provided the vehicle has been serviced at reasonable interval according to the Chrysler Certified Cmr Care schedules, factory approved remanufactored parts may be used for replacement. S L I R C O R P O R A T I O N A. S. BLAKE MOTORS, Inc. • 2508 W. Route 120 %