PG.6, - PLAIN DEALER - WED.. OCT. 16, 1968 North Chicago Warhawi Second Half Surge Spoils arriors Homecoming 27-18 ¥ WW By Bert Hagemann For one half last Friday night, the huge assemblage at McCracken field thought they saw a ma- . jor upset in the making. The scrappy, underdog Warriors of McHenry went off the home turf at halftime, ahead of the Warhawk power machine, 12-0. However, the roof caved induring the third quarter, and the orange and black wound up on the short endofthe 27-18 score. The first quarter was a scoreless one, as North Chicago controlled the ball for almost the whole period. Although their ground game was working very well, the tenacious McHenry defense held when they had to, and Earl Walsh SO I HEAR started playing ten thumbs, and the Warhawks counted their Homecoming at old McHenry High brought out a lot of spirit. We thought the crowd yelled a little louder. Hie Warriors led the North Chicago Warhakws 12-0 at the end of the first half. But, the last half was a nightmare for the home crowd. Sports Editor a coiqrie of barbers named Joe and Bob will no longer bet with his dad -- on anything. Saw Ken Laurence at the game Friday night -- on crutches. Broke a bone in his right leg in practice. That's a blow for Ken and a blow to the NIU football team. Don Reinboldt threw a coiqrie of long bombs for the scores in the first half. Then North Chicago dropped back to defend against the shotgun formation in the second half. Make no mistake. North Chicago has a good football team. The biggest little man we have seen is Dennis Parker, listed at 135 pounds. That boy can carry the mail. We are thankful for Tom Bolger for getting us straight on the picture we recently ran of Frank Cuda. What we wrote about Frank was correct, but we didn't know this particular picture was taken after he had won the Junior Club Championship at McHenry Country club. So -- now you know and so do we. Parker's running mate was Tom Belski at 180 pounds and power to spare. Those two ground out a lot of yards. Read Bert's story on the game. He had his "Hey! Hey" moments. Let the devil not tempt us to say anything to those National League fans now that the World Series is over. Would you believe? Bob Blake bet on the American League. <9- Our boys really looked like a greatly improved football team. Tilings just happened as the report of the game will show. /Trust you read that sympathy card Bob Justen ran for the White Sox fans. His son tells us KATHLEEN BOLGER ON ALL-SCHOOL HOCKEY TEAM Miss Kathleen Bolger, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Bolger of Allen avenue, McHenry, was the only freshman at Northern Illinois university, DeKalb. to have been selected for the all-school field hockey te.am this fall. The honor was even more noteworthy in view of the fact that the entire^ 1967-68 team returned for the new year. Miss Bolger, a 1968 MCHS graduate, was selected also as freshman representative from the physical education department to the dean's council. The hockey team includes on its fall schedule trips to Michigan, Western university and Northwestern. Northern lllini Bowmen News Northern Hlini Bowmen will meet at 8 p.m. McHenry Legion on Thursday, Oct. 17. The public is invited. The bowhunting stories will be many and varied. Latest successful big game bowhunter is Oscar Sommer claiming a large doe at 30 yards. Shooting from a tree, near Necedah, Wis., Oscar's arrow hit a rib, centered through the heart and out the other side and into the ground. Another success story will be of 15 year old, Beth Houser's button buck. Then there are the rest of the hunters who claim enjoyment of the woods, excitement of the hunt and the oh-so near misses! THE TALL STATE Illinois has 1,200 industrial research and development laboratories. the second quarter saw the Warriors finally start to generate a drive. As usual, the orange and black struck through the air, with Don Reinboldt launching a 31 yard scoring maneuver to split end Mike Janik. A little later in the quarter, the same twosome duplicated their scoring effort with a 28 yard scoring pass, and the stunned Warhawks trooped off the field at half down by two touchdowns. After receiving the kick-off in the third quarter, the Warriors layii haw! first t.d. on a 2 yard run by Parker after a Warrior fumble deep in their own territory. On the ensuing kickoff, McHenry fumbled again, and an alert Warhawk lineman picked up the loose ball and sauntered 25 yards into paydirt. The crowd was further stunned as the huge fullback from the lakefront school counted on a 35 yard sweep eight minutes into the half to make it North Chicago 20 and McHenry 12. The Warriors tried to scrap back, but pass interceptions and an inept running attack kept us on the defensive, and North Chicago counted a final score on a three yard pass from Harmon to Michna in the fourth stanza. McHenry picked up a consolation score as the gun went off when; Ken Wahl scooped up a fumbled punt attempt and loped 27 yards into the end zone. .The story of this game can be told by looking at the statistics. The crunching Warhawk ground game, behind the bull like rushes of Belski and the darting scampers of Parker, ground out 225 yards. Their infantry rushes were' aided by an 8 for 12 effort via the airlines by Harmon and \ defense which thoroughly^ smothered the Warrior ground attempts. With Jerry Freund being covered tightly, the Warrior plan of using Janik worked well for awhile, but the old offensive collapse bugaboo, which has plagued our efforts ail season, gave North Chicago the chances they fteeded to forge the victory. This Friday we have to entertain the bruising Broncos and their fine quarterback, Hembry. After an initial loss to North Chicago, the big red of Barrington have smothered all opposi-, tion, and their size, speed and depth will certainly provide the McHenry squad with a real challenge. Certainly an upset can be pulled off, it all depends on how well the orange and black can rebound from a very upsetting loss on homecoming night. Hope you can make the game, it should be very interesting evening. Standings: W L T 1. Crystal Lake 4 0 2. Barrington 3 1 3. Dundee 3 1 4. North Chicago 2 11 5. Zion Benton 12 1 6. Libertyville 1 3 7. McHenry 1 3 8. Woodstock 0 4 COAST GUARD NEWS According to the latest U.S. Coast Guard statistics, capsizings and falls overboard are the leading causes of boating deaths. The study shows decreases in all categories cover by the report - fatalities, injuries, number of accidents and property damage. The report said capsizings accounted for nearly 50 percent of all fatali^ ties, while falls overboard caused some 26pep^ent. Collisions fire and explosions, striking by boat or propeller, capsizings and groundings, in that order, were the leading causes of personal injuries. Fires, explosions, collisions , sinkings, groundings and capsizings respectively were the leading contributors to property damage. Both accidents and fatalities are highest in the month of July and the hours from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. are the most dangerous. Operator fault (no proper lookout, carelessness and recklessness, overloading and improper lane usage, disregard of rules of the road, etc.) caused more than half of 5,274 accidents recorded last year. The Coast Guard reports that 188 accidents were the fault of the machinery, 66 fault of hull and 46 fault of other equipment. The Coast Guard reported it responded to 42,225 calls for help last year, assisting 126,- 796 persons and saving 3,028 lives in the process. Warrior fens had a very enjoyable first half as Tom Janik, qJaJtfr^ack *° PLAn^J^LER^HOTo"^ white helmet, catches his 2nd perfect aerial from Warrior 12-0 in favor of McHenry. PLAINPEALER PHOTO SPORTS NAME WINNERS IN JULIUS GOFFO MEMORIAL TOURNEY Harold Michels of McHenry won first place and Floyd Johnson, also of McHenry, was runner- up in the Julius Goffo Memorial Golf tournament held Oct. 6 at the Chapel Hill Coun- *try club. Goffo, who died last year, was part owner of that club. Isabelle Stilling of McHenry won the women's division of the tourney. Homecoming Activ Weekend For Marl; ;ies TENNIS INSTRUCTION Registration for tennis instruction will be held Oct. 22- 23, 7 to 9 p.m. at the new high school, West campus, McHenry, Registration will be held in the main office and four sessions will be offered, two each evening, on Tuesdays and Thursdays; Sessions will start pet. 29 and last 10 weeks. A change will be made for the lessons. IN KENTUCKY . .. Fess Parker, TV's Daniel Bo,one, has announced plans for a $15 m i l l i o n - plus family-type amusement center in Boone County, Kentucky. Frosh-Sotls With Great Future JlSMf *»•*•" 7 !2S!U •jYBisTjs* ks«VsVaV*t yt, m '.i'jTi, iC'Xwwk The Marian Hurricanes look forward to homecoming activities this weekend although as many as six regulars may be missing because of injuries. Coach Tom Parker's small squad has been depleted to 21 athletes, but the iron men have maintained their good spirits and are confident as th$r prepare for Driscoll of Addisson in a 2 p.m. Saturday afternoon contest. Several activities are planned in conjunction with homecoming, starting with a pep ralley and bonfire Friday evening at the school. The first game between sophomore teams will start at 12 noon Saturday, the McHenry Viscounts will provide colorful entertainment between games, and the homecoming" floats will be on view for judging also. During halftime of the varsity game, the homecoming queen will be crowned, chosen from a court of ten queen candidates; Gail McCormack and Janet Weber, McHenry; Karen Kelly, Ella Pratt, Celeste Gosser, Eileen Desmond and JoAnn Reeb, Woodstock; Cathy Orso, Crystal Lake; Joy Hettermann, Johnsburg; and Barb Cummings, of Spring Grove, Both football teams - Marian and Driscoll-come to this game seeking their first victory of the 1968 season. Parker has this sick bay list of injured players. Bill Feffer is out for the sea- PHEASANT COUNT IN STATE DECREASING Aided by rural letter carriers, the Natural History Survey, Urbana, has completed a census of pheasants throughout the state. The reports indicate a 45 percent decrease in last five years. The census is taken every five years to observe the changes in distribution and abundance of Illinois pheasants. Hie whole ^east-central range, considered the state's prime range for more than 30 years, has less than half the pheasant population it had five years ago. Only Logan and Moultrie counties had more pheasants this year than in 1963. -fhere^a-biqdifference in auto, home, and business insurance! The most significant difference is the personal, continuing service we'll give you! CALL ON OCR CONTINUING, PERSONAL son with a head injury received a few games ago. Rick Jakubowksi has missed three games with an arm injury and is on the "doubtful" list. So are Chuck Leucht and Randy Jackson, both slowed with head injuries. Steve Freundisoutfor Freshme This Saturday morning we watched what we call the Freshmen Fightin' Warriors. The big score was McHenry 10 and North Chicago 0. McHenry scored in the first quarter and North Chicago could not get by the 30 yard marker. The second quarter the teams moved back and forth with North Chicago with their best chance of scoring when time ran out for the half. The third quarter was a repeat of the second. In the fourth quarter McHenry Was on its way to a touchdown, when they fumbled on the six inch line and N.C. recovered. N.C. then had a half a yard to go on fourth down and they fumbled with McHenry recovering and in three plays scoring, making it 12 and the extra point. Then, the score was 13-0. With two minutes left, McHenry scored on a long run and no point, making the final score 19-0. Next week at Barrington, A rugged team to beat, this game is at 9:00 a.m. T H E • World i Of Pharmacy at least three games with a knee injury, while Tom Clark, halfback, is suffering from a leg injury. Figuring out a probably lineup with all the injured men sidelined, Parker has prepared this tentative alignment: As ends - Mark Peasley and Scott Bourbon, with Jakubowski playing also at split end if available; tackles - Burke Romkowske and Rich Saunders;the guards - John Pitzen and John Lakowski; center - Kent Cooney; quarterback - Dan Lambert and Tom Gausden; and Running backs - Chuck Bauer, Pete Merkel and Craig Ludford. Big challenge this week, Parker says, is to help the reserves who have not seen much action get in condition for plenty of contact in the upcoming homecoming affair. In Marian's nine seasons, the Hurricanes have won at least one game - last year they won two. In 1959, opening season, they won a lone game with mostly fresljmen and sophomores playing a varsity schedule. They captured the final game of the season that year! Driscoll, St. Edward's, Holy Cross and Carmel remain on the Hurricane's card, so success will be sweet this weekend if a victory can be achieved with a small but gritty squad. Donald Doherty R.Ph. Kneeling left to right: Leo Thompson, Dave Koerber, John Terry McGibbon. Hendricks, John Seaton, Keith Hutchinson, and Mike Blake. Coach Don S ... Standing: Coach Don Seaton, Mike Moran, Burt France, Dave to another highly successful season for his Harrier Fohlman, Chuck Claypool, Eric Weiss, Ray Cook, John Oeffling. Missing: MyronRadloff.ChetRogers, Fred Frantz, and Coach Don Seaton has reason to smile as he looks forward squad at McHenry high. The Frosh-Soph boy s have been legging it over the course in great style. INSURANCE SERVICE! •AUTO DHOME ^ •BUSINESS. Stoffe S . Reihansperger V 385-0300 J ON GUARD . . . Sentry dogs are vital partners in security teams guarding against sabotage at U.S. Air Force Aerospace Defense Command installations. The Air Force recruits more than 4,000 dogs annually for all armed forces and approximately 2,700 of these dogs complete an eight-week training course ana assume alert duties. MAKE YOL I R O W N -- > TV TEST Clay Grainger of "The V i r g i n i a n . ' Lee J. Cobb John Mclntire Doug McClure The Rev lorn Winter of "Peyton Place". John Anderson Robert Hogan Dave Ward 3 Star of "Five Finger Exercise " Betty Furness Rosalind Russell Dorothy Lamour 4. Star of 1938 movie. "Anthony Adverse." Richard Widmark David Niven Frederick March 5. Artemus Gordon of "Wild, Wild West." Richard Crenna Richard Carlson Ross Martin I :J3A9 A|pjoi| l :J8AA8|A aai|(8ujos £ - ' j a i p i o / * juanb -3i) p 'iJddxa g :3HODS UflJOW ||9ssny ud6Oh 3J! | u pW SM3MSNV T. 22 thru ICE FOLLIES Special Guest Star Robert Schultz, R.Ph- GERIATRICS. . .is the medical specialty which concerns itself with the care and treatment of the aged. It is the fastest growing, and should be, for this segment of our population is greater than ever before. Science keeps us alive longer and most everyone can expect to live to a ripe old age, providing, of course, that he does not get foolish. The problems of the senior citizen are many and the Geriatrician is looking for the answers. Soon we will not only live longer, but retain some of our youth as we grow older. A no problem area for the elder is our prescription service. Whatever your doctor prescribes he will find in the adequate stocks of BOLGER'S DRUG STORE. . .1259 N. Green. We specialize in filling prescriptions -- all prescriptions - age is not a factor. Come see usvif you can . . .if not, call 385-4500 for prompt delivery. Gas, Light, Telephone bills paid here. . .Money Orders... Revlon. . .Max Factor. . .Coty .. .English Leather.. .Shulton.. Sat Nites Only Main Floor Front Mezzanine ., Mezz (Rear rows) FIRST BALCONY . SECOND BALCONY $6.00 ...-....$5.00 $4.50 $3.50 $3.00 All other Shows Main Floor .....$5.00; Mezzanine $4.001 Balconies ....$2.75' Bargain Matinee . .Sat., Oct 26,2 p.m. Main floor and Mezz $3.00- Balconies (unreserved) .$1.75; Peggy Fleming Olympic & World Champion MAIL Please Enclose Stamped,-Self-Addressed Envelope for Return of Tickets. Send No Cashl* CHICAGO STADIUM, 1800 MADISON, CHICAGO, ILL. E0612 ! Enclosed is (Check • Money Order •) Totaling $ seats at $ _ each _in payment for^ Name. (Please Print) Address. (Please Print) City and ZIP Number • lues. Oct. 22, 8:30 p,m. §Wed. Oct. 23, 7:30 p.m. Thurs. Oct. 24, 7:30 p.m. • Sun Fri. Oct. 25, 7:30 p.m. • Tues g Sat. Oct. 26, 2:00 p.m. • Wed .Phone- Sat. Oct. 26, 8:30 p.m. 1st Choice Sun. Oct. 27,12:00 noon Sun. Oct. 27, 4:00 p.m. Oct. 27, 8:00 p.m. Oct. 29, 7:30 p.m. _ Oct. 30, 7:30 p.m. • Sun. Thurs. Oct. 31, 7:30 p.m. Nov. 2, 2:00 p.nw Nov. 2, 8:30 p.m. Nov. 3, 12:00 nooi| Nov. 3, 4:00 p.m. Nov. 3, 8:00 p.m. .2nd Choice. _3rd Choice. Use this convenient Mail Order Blank--or get Tickets at the Stadium Box Offices 1800 W. Madison or 130 North La Salle CS CHICAGO STADIUM STADIUM BOX OFFICE 1836 W. MADISON LOOP BOX OFFICE 130 N. LA SALLE