McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 18 Oct 1967, p. 4

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A, SEC. 1 - PLAINDEALER - OCT. 18, 1967 Varsity Cross Country Team 'D&II*. STANDING L to R: Don Voight, Tom Fuchs, Co-Capt. Gary Bockman, Greg Borter, Co- Capt. Tony Wagner, and Bob Steffan. KNEELING L to R: Smith, Mgr. Jack Flint. Dennis Roby, Mark SO I HEAR By Earl Walsh We would like to say a word of praise for those responsible for McHenry High's new publication of "The Warrior*'.Articles are well written and the whole paper shines with good taste. Such efforts reflect favorably on our school. Waterloo; Southern Cal had too much speed for Notre Dame to handle and Northwestern took a shellacking from Rice. The World Series is past history, but our National League tormentors will put us through the slow death torture through the long winter months. T&ere was just too much Gibson for the Red Sox, but none can say those Red Sox didirt give it the old college try until they ran out of gas or put of pitchers for the final game. Afterthought on the World Series. After being a top star for many years, Elston Howard couldn't hit the low curve on the outside corner. TNT BOWLING LEAGUE TOMASELLO'& M. Smith 182-180-529; L.A. Smith 177-189-513; M. Freund 181-493; J. Parfrey 194-487; E. Myers 176-472; P. Karls 182-468; C. May 457; J. Kennebeck 453; M. Wiggerman 178- 452; E. Schaefer 452; M. Huff 177-449; M. Wakitsch 449; J. Dillon 179-448; P. Bittermann 446; M. Hettermann 177-441; B. Hiller 176; J. Dillon 4-9 Rail. And none can deny that those Cardinals have a well balanced ball team. When you have a Brock and a Flood at the top of the batting order and follow with power boys, you have something going for you. It's all over, but 'twas a good series packed with major league play. The roof fell in on our Warrior football team at Barrington. Now, let's bounce tq? and beat Dundee Friday night in the Homecoming game. Even the good ones meet their \McHENRY WcHENRY, ILL NOW SHOWING! MNtffi Of 5 ACADEMY AWARDS JfC»»O DLT UOixRi Weekdays 7:30 p.m. A dm. Child 75c Adults 81.50 The old story of the city slickers selling the Brooklyn Bridge to the country boys came to mind when we heard about our MCHS upper classmen selling elevator tickets to the freshman this year. Ever notice that even the big time entertainers on TV don't know what to do with their hands when they stand on stage? So they put them in their pockets. Sew -up their pockets and the poor guys would go nuts. Thinking over the great stars of college football always brings us back to the days of "Red" Grange at the U. of I. We saw Grange in the first game he played for Coach Zupke. It was in his sophomore year and Zupke held him out until the gam? was well along, then turned him loose. Another "Red" (Winkel) saw the "Galloping Ghost" in his greatest day against Michigan in 1924. Grange took the opening kickoff on his 5-yard line and streaked 95 yards for a touchdown. It is a matter of sports history that he scored three more times before the game was 12 minutes old on runs of 67, 55 and 45 yards. "Red" (Grange, not Winkel) then was taken out, but returned later in the game to throw a touchdown pass and scoot around end for his fifth TD. He was a^great one. USE THE CLASSIFIED MCHENRY RECREAtlON WEDNESDAY NITE MIXED A1 Stowel 195; Marge Stowel 145; Tom Cusak 142; Dot Cusak 176; Lucy Kleinhans 151; Wilma Aylward 169; Len Thennes 192-555; Jack Slaughter 206; Beity O'Brien 187; Don Humann 192-547; John Zimny 166; Chuck Kopp 236-548; Ann Szyplebaum 149; Jim McNally 226-561; Lee Bujak 161; Ray Bujak, Jr. 217-549; Cliff Kiehl 164; Ray Morrison 174-172- 501; Wilma Crane 169; El wood Crane 174; Sis Wallwin 177; Cliff Wallwin 203-204-583; Jack Slaughter 6-7-10 (pick up). Tar's Hear State Chairman The McHenry County Teen Age Republicans had their first kick-off meeting Oct. 10. Officers were introduced. Don Yde, chairman of the State Young Republicans, gave the TARs many good ideas on what they could do in politics. It was voted and passed to receive the national newspaper, Target. Fund raising, membership, social, program, and publicity committees were chosen. Any interested TARs are invited to come to the next meeting. HOLE - IN - ONE Walter Harris of 1110 W. N.E. Shore Drive, McHenry recently sank a hole-in-one on the 15th hole at the Cary Country Club. If it happens once in a lifetime, it is a great thrill for a golfer^ G^ Lam Young Man: Are you interested in a career in retailing? Due to the expansion of our Men's Clothing Department, we need a young, aggressive individual capable of working with the public. We will give you all of the necessary training and start you with a good salary plus full company benefits. Apply in person between 3 and 5 p.m. to Mr. Mann, Men's Department manager. NO PHONE CALLS MONTGOMERY WARD & Co. 110 South Johnson Woodstock, Illinois Warrior Harriers Have Most Successful Week Warriors Trounced 37-0 By Harrington Broncos By Bert Hagemann Well, last Saturday the bubble burst. The undefeated skein of the Warriors was ended in convincing manner by an extremely strong team from Barrington. The bubble was not only broken, it was destroyed by an awesome display of Bronco offensive fire power and a Scrooge like defense. The Warriors in contrast, looked anything like a ball club which had confidently marched to four straight squeaker wins in a row. The game opened up with McHenry getting the kick-off and marching down to the Bronco 42 yard line, where a fumble turned the ball over to the big Red. Barrington reciprocated by promptly giving it back on the next play on a similar miscue. Here was break no. 1 which the Warriors didn't capitalize on, as their drive stalled and died on the Bronco 25. However, the Broncos immediately marched downfield, and although the McHenry defense put up a magnificent stand inside their five, Robey went in for a touchdown on a one yard run at 3:57 of the first quarter. Willett, their left-footed soccer type kicker, made the first of five consecutive conversion attempts good. After the Warrior drive stalled on their own 48, the Warriors punted and break no. 2 occurred. Brian Clay was crunched by Mark Domoto as he dropped back to pass, and the Warriors had possession on the Bronco 22. Again the feeble McHenry offense couldn't move the ball effectively, and this drive stalled and the ball went over to Barrington on downs.. With time running out after a punt exchange, Clay moved his ball club in for the second score of the game with a short touchdown pass to Watson with three minutes remaining in the quarter. Barrington threatened once again.with a field goal attempt going wide at the end of the? first half. So the half ended with the Warriors on the short side of a 14-0 score, but still in the ball game. The second half proved to be a disaster a^the numbed Warrior fans watched an incredible offensive show under warm sunny skies.. Led by Clay, who ran and passed from a variety of formations, the Broncs tallied three more times on a 23 yard run by Peters, Clay's second touchdown pass, this time to Smith, and finally Hembry, a fine reserve quarterback, passed to Smith for the final Bronco t.d. of the afternoon. The scoring was completed late in the game, on a safety, andthe final, dismal score was Barrington, 37, McHenry, 0. For the first time this season, the orange and black defense went flat. The Barrington backfield zephyrs repeatedly slashed and pranced around and through what at times seemed to be a befuddled Warrior defense. The Warrior vulnerability to a decent passing attack was shown as the Broncos threw repeatedly ' in the second half, and much of their 350 yards in offense was gained in the air. The Warrior ground attack looked a little better this week, as Chuck Reilly managed to gain 77 yards in 10 attempts. John Todd gained 28 yards to help the attack, but the Warrior passing efforts were shoddy as the quarterback, Tim Martin was rushed unmercifully by the likes of Guy Murdock, a fine lineman. Most aerial efforts were overthrown, or nearly intercepted, as the inept Warrior offense sputtered and failed on many occasion. Failure to capitalize on two early breaks in the ball game hurt the Warriors badly, and Barrington went on to play almost a mistakeless three quarters. This week at Homecoming 1967 version, McHenry will have to bounce back to remain in the thick of the title scramble. Blind Builders May Now ^ Hunt Geese Springfield, ill., Oct. 11 -- Waterfowlers who built blinds on public hunting areas managed by the Illinois Department of Conservation may hunt geese from them starting at sunrise, October 16. Check stations will not be in operation until October 28, the first day of duck season. Hunters must occupy their blinds a half hour before the legal shooting time. The goose seasons opens at sunrise, October 16) and ends at sunset, December 6, except in Alexander, Union, Jackson and Williamson Counties. Inthe four southern counties, season dates are from November 13 to December 24, inclusive, or until a quota of 20,000 geese is bagged. In that event, the season will be closed by order of William T. Lodge, director of the Department of Conservation. The daily limit is five geese but not more than two Canada geese may be killed. The possession limit is five geese but may be included. Geese may not be shipped, transported, or carried by any common carrier, express service, or hunter other than the person who killed them. - Only geese may be taken until October 28, the first day of duck season. By Bert Hagemann On a cold, gloomy 10th of October, the thinclads of McHenry put on one of their finest performances of the season as they defeated Lake Zurich, 21- 36, and Round Lake 18-38. The Warriors evidently liked the Lake Zurich course as Tony Wagner came in first with a 10:44 time. He was followed by Brad Pictor in 3rd, Mark Smith in 4th, Dennis Roby in 6th, and Tom Fuchs in 8th. The Warriors bettered their season record to 5-6 with this convincing win as names like Pictor and Smith appeared near the top for the first time this season. Co-captain Cary Bockman, although he didn't score, served the purpose of pusher for the top five finishers as the varsity followed another sterling performance by the underclassmen. The sophomores had perfect scores of 15-50 against both opponents. The order of finish was Hampton, Davis, Stark, Weiss, Meyer, Smith, and Bradley in the first 7 positions. The underclassman upped their season mark to 9 won and 3 losses. Hamptons' excellent time of 11:02 was better than many varsity times, and squad members Ed Brut and Tom Brittain are starting to move up among the higher finishers. On the 12th of October at North Chicago, the thinclad varsity stumbled to a 23-34 defeat at the hands of a potent Warhawk squad. Wagner garnered at 2nd for McHenry, followed by Pictor in 5th, Smith 6th, Roby 10th, and Fuchs llth. The season record for the varsity slipped to 5-7 as North Chicago had just too much finishing push for the Warriors. However, all was not gloomy on this cool day on the lakefront. Once again, the sophomores rolled to a perfect score as the order of finish read Hampton, Weiss, Davis, Meyer, andStark, with Smith and Brut being pushers in 7th and 8th respectively. The little Warriors managed this convincing win with Schubert, who is nursing a sprained ankle as they rantfieir victory total for the seas^into double figures with 10 wiris and 3 defeats. Results of the cbunty meet will appear in Thursday's edition. HHI Conference Standings: 1. Libertyville 2. McHenry 3. Barrington 4. North Chicago 5. Woodstock 6. Dundee 7. Crystal Lake 8. Zion Benton W L T BUNDLE OF BRAWN .Seen through a microscope, fuscle tissue is a bundle of lifers, each one no larger in ameter than a fine human hair.- Yet these slender threads are capable of supporting a thousand times their own weight. Durable as they are, muscles are subject to a host of disorders, ranging from simple charley-horse3 to crippling and often fatal diseases. Muscular I)ystrophy Associations of America advises that any muscle weakness of prolonged duration, especially in children, should be reported to a physician. MCHENRY HIGH FALL SPORTS SCHEDULE MMK L 0 000 000 000 MM HHI ] Z. ' A * * * L&MERICA NEEDS YOUR HELP-JOIN IN THE 1967 "SHARE IN FREEDOM" ' CAMRAI6N BY JOINING THE STAR-SPANGLED FREEDOM PLAN-BUY US. SAVINGS BONDS AND NEW FREEDOM MARES THROUGH PAYROLL GAVINGS WHERE VOU WORK OR BOND-AMONTH WHERE YOU BANK EXPERTS DISCUSS SCHOOL LEARNING DIFFICULTIES Willard Footlik, director of the Reading Research foundation of Chicago, will speak about learning techniques for children with learning problems at the Timbers restaurant in Woodstock on Monday, Oct. 23, at 8 p.m. Mr. Footlik and his coworker, Mrs. Janice Schnobrich, pioneers in special exercises and reading practices for children, recently demonstrated some of their techniques to a nation-wide audience on the Huntley-Brinkley News Report. Both Mr. Footlik and Mrs. Schnobrich will be present at a reception and buffet dinner preceding the address in order to discuss the questions of parents and teachers. They will be the guests of the Illinois Council for Exceptional Children and the McHenry County Association for Childhood Education. The latter organization annually sponsors five lectures and discussion forums on topics relating to the development and welfare of children ages two to twelve. All interested persons are cordially invited to attend. They need not be members of the sponsoring organizations. There will be no admission charge for Mr. Footlik's speech. For additional information and reservations for the 7 p.m. buffet. Mrs. Arthur Webber, 285-2268, Mrs. F.A. Stam, Crystal Lake, or Fred Rozum, Woodstock, should be contacted. City youth as well as farm teen-agers enjoy 4-H photography projects. The new program has more than 70,000 youth learning step-by-step techniques of good picture taking. IME0WNERS. SAVE88SS Can Dennis Conway 'package 3315 W. Elm St. policy Phone 385-7111 State Farm Fire t Casualty Company J Fri. Oct. 20 Sat. Oct. 21 Mou Oct. 23 Tues, Oct 24 Sat. Oct. 28 Sat. Oct. 28 . Mou Oct 30 Sat. Nov. 4 Football Var.-Soph. Dundee Home Football Fresh A. & B. Dundee There C-Country Var. Conference meet at Crystal I^ake Football J.V. Dundee There C-Country Var. Invitational meet at Libertyville Football Var.-Soph. Zion-Ben. There Football Fresh A. & B. Zion-Ben. Home C-Country Var. District meet Football J.V. Zion-Ben. Football Fresh A. & B. Libertyvl. Football Var.-Soph. Libertyvl. 6:00 9:00 9:00 4:30 CldUOZOfi] BUSINt .Mm S LUNCH 12 noon fro 2 p.m. FINE FOODS - COURTEOUS SERVICE I Mile North of Wauconda on Old Route 12 PhorYe J A 6-2929 IR FILTEI! • Cfeaage te {Fresh Fwmm Patera tizzi ffer Qfc Enjoy resre aamife, and heating oconomy aSS saoson long with new filters. Treote^ loctaria-fifhtmi besscMoropbeno. sizes l-inui thick. Full size range availabte.2401 each LOOM: *• (? N« 04* Hin for your gas tank Reg 65$ Value SALE PRICE 22{ •ach limit 5 per customer Fast - Action Clean - l our Drain* • NO MIXING • NO ODOR Ots - Reg $1.19 Iciei r EJ)IRM0 HARDWARE STORES ar are 1327 Riverside Drive, McHenry 385-2040 These prices effective thru Mon0„ Oct 23 Electric Heater Automatic instant heat plus fan-forced warmth! Automatic thermostat. Positive "off." 1320 watts. 2405/37H25 tSU€i TOASTER Deluxe, eeiup-lGtofy aitomatie toSw. Set for light, dart; or Inbetwesn toost Trim, rraWfernfy styled in chrcrao. Block handles eat) f@@t. 0301/34911 12JI 2-slice Toaster, O302/34SSS. 7JI T "L"

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