McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 26 Apr 1972, p. 7

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aoooooooooaoooooo Coming Events APRIL 27, 28,29 & 30 "Of Thee I Sing" - West Campus Players - West Campus - 8 p.m. APRIL 27 McHenry Garden Club - Mrs. Charles Wagner Home, 1205 S. Broadway, McHenry Shores -1 p.m. Edgebrook School P.T.O. Meeting - 8 p.m. - Edgebrook Multi-Purpose Room. APRIL 29 St. Margaret Chapter of NAIM - Meet For Cards, Home Of Mrs. Olivia Bauer, 3614 W. Grand Avenue - 7:30 p.m. APRIL 30 C D.A. Joyce Kilmer Court -- Communion Sunday -- St. Patrick's Church, Followed By Breakfast ~ 9:45 a.m. MAY 1 & 2 Rummage Sale - Sponsored by V.F.W. For Cancer Fund -- V.F.W. Hall -- 9:30 to 4 p.m. MAY 1 McHenry Senior Citizens Club - Executive Committee Meeting -- Landmark School --1 p.m. Pi Alpha Chapter - Beta Sigma Phi Sorority - Crystal Craze Rush Party -- Home of Mrs. Frank Mazzone, Jr. - 8 p.m. MAY 2,3,4 Illinois Federation of Women's Club 77th Annual Meeting - Sherman House - If Interested Call 385-7842. MAY 2 Hiawatha Gem and Mineral Society ~ McHenry High School West Campus - Dining Room - 7:30 p.m. MAY 3 McHenry Grams - Regular Meeting - City Hall - 12:30 p.m. - New Members & Guests Welcome. MAY 4 Lakeland Park Women's Gub Meeting -- Community House - Installation Of Officers - 12:30 p.m. MAY 6-7 McHenry Choral club An­ nual Spring Program - West Campus Auditorium - 8:15 p.m. - McHenry Viscounts, Sponsors. First Annual Commerce and Industry Exposition Parkland Junior High School, Ringwood Road and Rt. 120 - McHenry - Noon to 8 p.m. May 6, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. May 7 - Sponsored by McHenry Chamber of Commerce. MAY 7 Annual Meeting - McHenry County Historical Society - Union School, Main Street, Union - 2 p.m. MAY 8 McHenry Senior Citizens Club Meeting - East Campus Cafeteria - 7:30 p.m. - Book Review. MAY 9 McHenry Town & Country Newcomers Gub - Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran Church - Guest Speakers, Mayor Donald Doherty and Walter Dean - 8 p.m. MAY 10 McHenry Senior Citizens Club Bowling Banquet - The Timbers, Woodstock - 5:30 p.m. McHenry Woman's Club Spring Luncheon - McHenry Country Club - For Reser­ vations Call 385-7348. MAY 12 ^ McHenry Senior Citizens Club Bus-Concert Trip - Franklin MacCormack Memorial Concert Auditorium Theatre, Chicago. MAY 13 "Old Fashion Beer Garden Dance " - Sponsored By St. Patrick's Ladies Guild -- V.F.W. Hall -- 9 p.m. The Friendship Club Pot- Luck Dinner and Meeting - Dining Room, First United Methodist Church -- 8 p.m. May 15 Pi Alpha Chapter - Beta Sigma Phi Sorority Preferential Tea -8p.m. Home of Mrs. William Haddick. Church Women United ORNAMENTAL IRON Railings-Columns- Custom Fabricating Welding & Structural Frozen Pipe Thawing STEEL SALES ADAMS BROS. (Next to Gem Cleaners) Lake Region Observance of May Fellowship Day -- 12:30 Luncheon -- St. Thomas Church, Crystal Lake. MAY 17 Luncheon - Sponsored By St. Patrick's Ladie^ Guild -- Church Hall - By Reservations Only - 12:30 p.m. MAY 18,19,20 Home and Hearth Unit Of The McHenry County Ex­ tension Service - Garage Sale - 1716 W. Lakewood Ave., McHenry - Proceeds Benefit Of McHenry Rescue Squad. MAY 20 Valley View PTO - Fun Fair - -10 a.m. to2p.m. - Valley View School, 6515 W. Rt. 120 Hospital Note* McHENRY HOSPITAL Patients admitted to McHenry hospital included Janice Rae Ballowe, Louise Uhlir, Helga Dettlow, Sheila Grant, Orville Lucier, Mary Mecko, John Ersig, Raymond Grier, George Thompson, Richard Spears, Sophie Ross, Esther Ruth, James Franklin, Daniel Miller, Erna Meyer, Ella Gapinski, Judith Bohl, Jennifer Hiller, Philip Kent, Grace Palis, McHenry; Frank Hudson, Fred Shenmeyer, Spring Grove; Darlene Steinsdorfer, Island Lake; Bob Baumgarten, Leonard Crago, Albert Hoen, Wonder Lake. MEMORIAL HOSPITAL WOODSTOCK Admittances to Memorial hospital, Woodstock, included Helen Bolton, Karen Peterson, Master William Nickels, Gary Baseley, Gary Meehan, Mit­ chell Pretacznik, Jr., John Jones, McHenry; Sharon Wyatt, Master William Jaskowiak, Wonder Lake HARVARD HOSPITAL Mrs. Anton Andrzcjewski was a recent patient in Harvard hospital. SICK NOTES Dennis Wegener, who was seriously injured in an auto accident this winter, has been moved from Illinois Research hospital to the Research Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago, 401 E. Ohio street, Chicago. Dennis would be happy to hear from his friends. New Arrivals McHENRY HOSPITAL Mr. and Mrs. George Landon became parents of a son April 24. A daughter was born April 21 to Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Marshall. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Jessup announce the birth of a daughter April 23. MEMORIAL HOSPITAL WOODSTOCK Mr. and Mrs. Michael Matio are parents of a son April 19. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Segerstrom became parents of a son April 22. Mr. and Mrs. Ronald L. Steinsdoerfer of 4316 West Prairie avenue, McHenry, announce the birth of a son, Ronald Lee, Jr., April 13, weighing 7 lbs., 9 ozs. The baby has one sister, Eva Marie, lVfe years to welcome him home. Mrs. Steinsdoerfer is the for­ mer Barbara Bukovsky of Wonder Lake. Proud grand­ parents are Mr. and Mrs. Mike Bukovsky of Wonder Lake, Mrs. Jeannine Current and George Steinsdoerfer of McHenry. Great-grandparents are Max Altschuler, Chicago, and Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Pockett of McHenry. W McCLORY REPORTS From Washington J£he only truly objective sources of information available to nations behind the Iron Curtain are those of Radio Deaths PETER M. HELLIOS Peter M. Hellios of 4602 Spruce lane, McHenry, was pronounced dead on arrival at McHenry hospital Friday, April 21. He was 45 years old. Mr. Hellios was born in Chicago April 24, 1926. He had resided locally for the past twelve years. The deceased was a heavy equipment operator for various contractors. Mr. Hellios was a certified race horse trainer and breeder. He served at the time of his death as a Democratic precinct committeeman. Affiliations included Local 150, I.U.O.E. Survivors are his wife, Patricia, nee Burns, to whom he was married Jan. 28, 1947, in Joliet; three sons, Peter M. Jr., of Wonder Lake, Daniel and Robert at home, one grand­ daughter; his mother, Angeline Pappas Hellios;and one sister, Mrs. Santa Long of Chicago He was preceded in death by his father, Michael, and a brother, Daniel Services were conducted at 1 o'clock Monday from the Peter M. Justen & Son funeral home. Burial was in Woodland cemetery. Godschall Baby Baptised Sunday In Lake Villa Geoffrey William Godshall, first child of Mr. and Mrs. William J. Godshall, 2915 Stilling boulevard, McHenry, was christened in a baptismal service Sunday, April 23, at Good Shepherd Lutheran church, Lake Villa. The Rev. John H. Rische presided at the service. Sponsors for Geoffrey were his aunt, Gina Anderson, and his uncle, William Y. Anderson, Jr. Eighteen friends and relatives attended the church rite and later a dinner at the home of Mr. and Mrs. William Y. Anderson, Sr., the maternal grandparents. The baby was born Nov. 29, 1971. Residential-Commercial • Blacktopping * Sealing • Repairs Free Estimates 1-338-4739 JACKSON Woodstock, Illinois ASPHALT-PAVING * PANELING LUS --• THE FREE BEE He's here to help you beautify your bath • and save you money 1 NOW UNTIL MAY Ith 1 SPECIAL OFFER TRI DOOR "DEVILLE" TUB ENCLOSURE Sculptured Panels Tr,Door Clear in Decorator Colors Brings you the first Bug you'll WELCOME in your Bathroom R e g $ 4 9 9 9 N O W «4p V ulptun tl pjru In in linltjn\ Mhn (.«>KKn lopj/ or Mow < .fvin In l>«»nr design opin> vMilc j||tiu\lor vompkli- j jv u xs t«» Kilh tub pcrK i t loi luthin^.* v htldrcn raw Reg $42 50 (Not Sho*nI Tu Door "l>cvilli " modi-1 vk ith ilcjr sculptured panels Re* S 39 <)<> NOW nn* 3006 W. Rte. 120 Phone: 385-0783 -FREE- FREE TOWEL BAR ASSEMBLIES WITH YOUR PURCHASE COMPLIMENTS OF OF » TUB ENCLOSURE The fREE BEES Don't Forget to Visit Our Display at the McHenry [Commerce & Industrial Exposition May 6 & 7. ANELINCr LUS- tree Europe and Radio Liberty. Broadcasts from these stations -- located in Britain, Germany, Spain and other Western European countries - are reported to have audiences in the Soviet Union, Czechoslovakia, Romania and other Eastern European countries numbering more than thirty-one million listeners. Unlike the Voice of America, Radio Free Europe and Radio Liberty are regarded by those residing in the Communist- controlled nations as the only news services which do not push an official government point erf view. Following the disclosure that CIA funds were providing substantial support for Radio Free Europe and Radio Liberty, the chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations committee, Senator J. William Fulbright of Arkansas, has attempted to exercise his full authority to cut off the funds erf these Western free-world radio stations after June 30, 1972. The efficacy of Radio Free Europe and Radio Liberty is attested by tourists from the Iron Curtain countries who have been interviewed as part- of ah audience-research project, as well as by students, foreign correspondents and diplomats who work or study in the capitals of these nations. Russian-speaking journalists stationed in Moscow and other Soviet Bloc countries report that, contrary to Senator Fulbright's claims, these two stations are no longer regarded as "propaganda stations" for the overthrow of the Com­ munist regime in the manner of the early Cold War years. The local "listeners" depend upon these broadcasts, not only for' the news of the outside world, but to find out what is going on in th^ir own countries. Alexander Solzhenitsyn, Nobel Prize winner and Russia's greatest living writer, recently stated in his interview with the Moscow correspondents of The Washington Post and The New York Times that he relied implicitly on Radio Liberty for local news. President Nixon has ex­ pressed his full support for these two voices of freedom which have been operating since 1950. Recently, the President declared: "I am deeply concerned at the im­ minent prospect that Radio Free Europe and Radio Liberty may be compelled to shut down." He added that: "In this country, we have always set great store by freedom of communication. It is therefore only natural that the American press and the American people, eas represented by the over­ whelming majority of the Congress should have ex­ pressed strong backing for Radio Free Europe and Radio Ijber5'." PAGE 7-PLAINDEALER-WEDNESDAY, APRIL 26, 1972 Menard. The Law Serves You 27 Prisoners on "Death Row" Await Supreme Court Ruling The fate of 27 prisoners at Stateville Penitentiary, Joliet, D1., may be decided in the near future. According to the Illinois State Bar Association, the 27 are all the prisoners now on "death row" in Illinois. They are among the over 600 men and 7 women in the United States who presently await execution for their crimes by the electric chair, gas chamber or gallows, an all-time record high. Standing between these persons and death, however, are a number of cases which have been taken before the U.S. Supreme Court and which question in one way or another, the constitutionality of the death penalty The key question is: does capital punishment violate the Eighth Amendment to the Constitution which prohibits "cruel and unusual punishment." , Until the issue is resolved, executions have come to a halt in those states which still permit the death penalty. Fifteen states have abolished or limit death as a form of criminal punishment and, no state has carried out an execution for nearly five years In Illinois, it has been even longer. What the U.S. Supreme Court will decide is one of the legal questions of the hour. If it agrees tha t the death penalty is indeed a "cruel and unusual punishment", that would in effect seal the doom of capital punishment in this country. On the other hand, it could decide that the death penalty is con­ stitutional for certain types of murder, say premeditated murder, for certain types of rape and other crimes. Or, it could even postpone a con­ stitutional ruling pending further study of the issue, in­ cluding the effectiveness of the death penalty as a deterrent to crime and its consistency with the correctional process Historically, capital punish­ ment existed when the Eighth Amendment was adopted as part of the Bill of Rights in 1791. At the time. "cruel and unusual punishment" generally meant the rack, the thumbscrew, drawing and quartering and burning alive Now. those who would do away with it, claim the evolving standards of our society places the death penalty in the same category. In Illinois, there has not been an execution since Jessie Welch, alias Joseph Dukes, died in the electric chair at Cook county jail on Aug. 24, 1962. At Stateville-which now houses all persons facing the death penalty in Illinois- the last person to be executed was Herman Frederick Weber of Peoria county in 1949. And at the state penitentiarv at no one has been executed since Angelo Giancola d St. Clair county--back in 1938. Even if the Supreme court upholds the death penalty as being constitutional, it is unlikely there will be any rush to carry out executions. There are possibilities of court action on other grounds, of com­ mutations of the death penalties by governors and even the prospect that more states will join the ranks of those who have prohibited the supreme penalty by legislative ac ti on In Illinois, a bill was in­ troduced in the General Assembly in 1967 which would have repealed the death penalty for a trial period of six years. Perhaps the murder of eight nurses in their dormitory at South Chicago Community hospital in Chicago, spoiled the chances of that measure. In any case, the bill failed to pass Richard Speck, who was convicted cf the murders, is among those who wait on death row in Illinois? However, the U.S. Supreme court already has postponed Speck's fate. On grounds that the prosecution was too eager to get a jury- favorable to the death penalty and used its pre-emptory challenge to prospective jurors too freely, the court has or dered that Speck must be "re sentenced "-and that hasn't happened yet. B i g P o r t Sonic 33.000 foreign cars u month enter the port of Hait i more, making i t the world's lead inc auto importer I ndor 8r'f Of the 2.000 known species of lads hugs, only about 150 are found in the United States GOODYEAR THIS WEEK'S SERVICE OFFERS! SNAP BACK' STEEL AGAINST POLYSTEEL Here's the Custom Power Cushion Polysteel tire you've seen on TV, matched against dozens of vicious hardened-steel drill bits and the Goodyear Polysteel tire won! CUSTOM POWER CUSHIOIS TIRE PROFESSIONAL HME-DF •29881 Add $2 for air-cond. cars. O 6 cyl U S into - ^ * add $4 for 8 cyl < > > Includes a l l labor and ( ^ these parts: • New ( ^ spark plugs , condens­ er , points H e r e ' s s t e e l c o r d b e l t s t r e n g t h w i t h p o l y e s t e r c o r d s m o o t h n e s s , i n a g r e a t l o n g - w e a r i n g t i r e . G o o d y e a r b u i l d s i t w i t h t w o b e l t s o f s t e e l c o r d f o r l o n g - l a s t i n g r e s i s t a n c e t o i m p a c t a n d p e n e t r a ­ t i o n . ( Y o u w o u l d n ' t r u n o v e r s t e e l d r i l l b i t s t h e w a y w e d i d h e r e -- b u t t h e d e m o n s t r a t i o n i l l u s t r a t e s h o w t o u g h t h e s t e e l b e l t s r e a l l y a r e T h e n G o o d y e a r m a k e s t h e l o n g m i l e a g e e a s y t o t a k e , w i t h a f l e x i b l e p o l y e s t e r c o r d b o d y t o s o a k u p t h e s h o c k s . T h e b r u t e s t r e n g t h o f s t e e l . T h e r o a d - s o f t e n i n g s m o o t h n e s s o f p o l y e s t e r . B o t h i n t h i s s u p e r b n e w t i r e . Hurry . . . Trade Today--start riding on Polysteel tires. Check Whitewall Tubeless Size Replaces Price With Trade In Plus Fed. Ex. Tax Check A78 13 - $47.95 $1 86 your B78-14 6 45-14 $49.95 $2 05 your C78 14 6 95-14 $51.95 $2 15 size E78-14 7 35-14 $55.95 $2 32 size F78-14 7 75-14 $57.95 $2 54 check G78 14 8 25-14 $59 95 $2 69 check H78-14 8.55-14 $63.9S $2.74 your F78 15 7.75-15 $58.95 $2 62 your G78 15 8.25-15 $60.95 $2 80 price H78-15 8.55-15 $64.95 $3 47 price J78 15 8 85-15 $68.95 $3 23 L78-15 9 15-15 $74.95 $3 56 3 WAYS TO CHARGE • Our Own Customer Credit Plan • Master Charge • BankAmericard Any U S car plus parts if needed GOODpYEAR THE ONLY MAKER OF POLYSTEEL TIRES 907 N. Front St. _ . McHenry, III. Won Sat 8-5:30 815 385 5511 Till 9:00 Sunday 10-2 OUR LOWEST PRICED TIRE 4-PLY NYLON CORD , "All Weather IV " Tires 17* •Clean sidewall design, radial 6 50 x 13 on shoulder blackball *y°ur test tire buy tubeless plus in its price range! $1.75 Fed. Ex. Tax and old tire plus $2.12 to $2.29 Fed. Ex. Tax (depending on size) and old tire ONE LOW a M BLACKWALL TUBELESS PRICE Any of these larger sizes - 7.75 x 15 7.75x14 8,25 x 14 GOODYEAR' eicept disc brakes forei|n cars <2995 I n c l u d e s l u l l i n s p e c t i o n , f l u i d , c l c n n r e - p a i k f r o n t b e ' a r i n n s It needed Wheel Cyls $7 50 ea drums turned *3 ea . front grease seals $4 50 pr . return sprin|s 50C ea PROFESSIONAL UIBEAHD MARKET PLACK McHENRY 4400 W. Rte. 120 815-385-7300 Open Daily 8:30a.m.-6:00p.m. Friday 'til 9:00p.m Saturday 8:30-4:00 GOOD^IAR • • • • • • •

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