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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 2 Mar 1973, p. 13

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lys reward the good! penalize the bad! And , pF VJORiP Woafc. y | ASSOCIATION FRESHMEN CHEERLEADERS and these gals cheered the Freshmen wrestling team to a fine season. They are 1-r Debbie Justen, Karen Day and Cindy Gildemeister. (STAFF PHOTO-WAYNE GAYLORD) Team Captain Bob Weingart, 177 pounds, of McHenry. Placed fourth in his classification in the Illinois Invitational Wrestling Meet. He took first in the Illinois Junior College State Championship Meet (regional qualifying). Bob will participate in the National Junior College Wrestling Tournament in Worthington, Minnesota. The meet begins on Feb. 28. Bob also placed second in the Skyway College Conference. McHENRYCOUNTY COLLEGE WRESTLERS Three McHenry County College wrestlers have qualified for the National Junior College Wrestling Tournament in Worthington, Minnesota. The tournament begins Feb. 28. Bob Weingart, 177-pounder from McHenry, placed first in the Illinois Junior College State Championship Meet (regional qualifying) Feb. 17, at Harper College in Palatine. Chris Nolan, 134 pounds, of McHenry, placed third in the same meet; Dave Krepel, 191 pounds, from Cary, also placed third. Chris Nolan, McHenry, 134 pounds. Chris placed third in the Illinois Junior College State Championship Meet (regional qualifying). He qualified for the National Junior College Wrestling Tournament in Worthington, Minnesota beginning Feb. 28. County College Plans Ski Trip HARVARD HOSPITAL Raymond Newell and Lor­ raine Wenk, Wonder Lake, were patients in Harvard hospital. The Ski Club of McHenry County College is sponsoring a ski trip to Brighton, Utah. The trip is scheduled for April 14-21. The trip includes round-trip air fare, seven nights lodging with breakfasts, seven days of ski-lift tickets, and tran­ sportation from the Salt Lake City airport to the ski area at Brighton. MEMORIAL HOSPITAL WOODSTOCK Patients admitted to Memorial hospital, Woodstock, included Lydia Gabel, Kirk McComb, Baby Robert Mat- chen, Paul Petersen, Kathryn Crago, Wonder Lake; Bernard McWhimmie, Ronald Miller, Margaret Barth, McHenry. McHENRY HOSPITAL Admittances to McHenry hospital included James Wautelet, Wonder Lake; Bernice Caponi, Martin Bauries, Sr., Marion Moser, Anna Thelen, John Baird, Doreen Patterson, John Hamen, Kathleen Fleming, Joseph Finiello, Rita Zimny, McHenry ; Mary Andres, Rich­ mond. I Spring Special Spring ALIGNMENT Special INCLUDES: CHECKING COMPLETE FRONT END SYS­ TEM *Aligning Front Wheels *Adjusting Torsion Bars *Balancing Front Wheels 2495 $ 1 050 ... . Value ^ iiHUNNYSIDE DODGE OPEN Daily 9-9 Saturday 96 Sunday 10 5 4810 W. ROUTE 120 815/385-7220 : McHENRY mm I TOBY SCOTT Toby Scott is Assistant football and Freshman "B" basketball coach at McHenry. He and his wife, Sharon, have a daughter Sherri Anne *18 months. His home town is Georgetown, Illinois. Toby has a Bachelor's Degree from Eastern Illinois University. While at Eastern he played football all four years, and was named to the All- Conference team his senior year. He has coached one year at Georgetown. As line coach the varsity were 9 and 0, and his sophomore team had a record of 6 and 2. This is Toby's fifth year in McHenry, and the big fellow teaches Industrial Arts at East Campus. Lonnie's parents possess a high I.Q. and college degrees but haven't studied the proper rules for handling kiddies. Good parents often need to be studiously hardhearted! There is a straight pathway between the high chair and the electric chair in prison, so bend the twig properly! Order the "Rating Scales" below to learn the rules of the game. By - George W. Crane, Ph. D., M.D. CASE L-552: Lonnie B., aged 8, is a spoiled brat. His parents are college graduates and live in a swanky residential suburb. But they have failed to apply the basic rules of child psychology to their son so he is already a potential "hippie." Recently, for example, Lonnie was in a play group where a baseball game was launched. When Lonnie came up to bat, he swung at the first three pitches, so the umpire called him, "Out." But Lonnie angrily protested, for he said: "Daddy always gives me six strikes! And that shows his daddy's error, for daddy is now an accessory to Lonnie's failure to harmonize with his own age group. Parents are supposed to teach their kiddies the laws of Dave Krepel, 191 pounds, Cary. Dave won first place in the Skyway College Conference and third in the Illinois Junior College State Championship Meet (regional qualifying). He will participate in the National Junior College Wrestling Tournament in Worthington, Minnesota beginning Feb. 28. THE$3MlU_l0/vl PLAV£R-O>ACH FOR. 7HFJPTS IS A SUPERSTAR WHO DRA\NS CQOWS ON AMP OFF THE ICF- INGAHAPAANP UN HEP SVKTBS. HE SPENT f5 YEARS /NTflEMATlONAL-HoCKEy UtAJGUE . &UT STRUCK |T RICH |M the IVH*. - e<wy WORKEP -jo PUBLICIZE THE W-H.A. ANP <2«eWERATB£ /MTEJE5T f=OR PAyiNe SPECTATORS. the game of life, including the rules for various sports. And baseball rules limit you to three strikes! Parents, tell your kiddies that "LIFE" doesn't make any special allowances for anybody, regardless of color, creed or which side of the tracks you live on. Lonnie's father and mother should have taken a few lessons from the animal trainers at the circus, for the latter employ the proper psychology And their inexorable law for training seals, dogs and other 4- legged creatures is this: Always never permit an exception to occur." Alas, many inconsistent parents may punish a child today and then let him get away with similar misbehavior tomorrow, possibly because guests are present. "Dr. Crnae," some doting mammas have exclaimed, "I just can't bear to spank my child for when the big tears roll down his cheeks, I feel terrible." Mothers, it is far better to shed your tears while he is in the high chair than to weep 20 years later as he trudges the somber prison corridor to the electric chair! Adults with high I.Q. and college degrees may often be ignorant of the laws for baseball or bowling, etc. But if they plan to enter those sports, they realize they should first study the rules thereof. Same goes for child rearing! You don't inherit om­ niscience in dealing with kiddies, so PLEASE learn how to hande them properly. Here are a few laws: (1) Be consistent. Don't punish today and then ignore the same naughtiness tomorrow-. (2) Since pain is the quickest deterrent of naughty behavior in youngsters, flick your child with a snap of your finger when he is doing wrong. And do it as close to the time of the wrong act as possible so he will link pain with the misdeed instead of with you. Thus, don't withhold punish­ ment till daddy gets home at night, for the child then may not associate the pain with his naughty deed! (3) Calmly teach him the rules of the game of life, as well as of sports, and then hold him to them. But don't expect adult comprehension in a toddler. Adapt your approach to his limited mental age. (4) Praise him for his good deeds so your parent-child relationship is not always a negative or ego-deflating ex­ perience for him. (5) Get him into Sunday School fast so other dedicated adults can help teach him the moral rules for social conduct. There is room on the trip for 20 skiers, and while students are given first option, the trip will be open to the public. Interested skiers should contact Andrew DeCraene, Ski Club adviser, at the college (459-6800). NewVbrk City. Halfabuck by Long Distance. Not to mention Norfolk, Atlantic City, Cheyenne and Trenton. Each for just half a buck plus tax. For three minutes. When you dial the number yourself anytime Saturday and on Sunday until 5 p.m. So if you want to travel cheaply--go Long Distance. It's cheaper than you think. Long Distance. A little bit of money still goes a long way. Illinois Befl Dial-direct discounts do not apply to calls to Alaska and Hawaii or to Operator-assisted calls such as com, credit card, collect, person-to- person, hotel-guest calls, or calls charged to another number In areas where direct-dialing facilities are not available, the discounts do apply to Operator-assisted station-to-station calls that elsewhere could be dialed direct • Here's country kitchen fare that the whole family will love. Good, old-fash'oned flavor fried bologna, potatoes and onions served kitchen style right out of the skillet. This simple recipe should not only bring back memories of your own childhood, when fried potatoes were a special treat, but is the answer for one of those Sunday night suppers when you need a quick recipe for a hot meal. Long remembered, strictly for its use in sandwiches, bologna offers unlimited other uses for hors d'oeuvres, casseroles and a variety of dishes. Bologna generally sparks the little ones' ap­ petites, too, because it's always a treat for children -- even when it's disguised in a nutritious, one-skillet meal such as this one. Peter Eckrich and Sons, Inc., a well-known meat processor, suggests you try this recipe the next time you have a hungry family ready for supper and you're looking for a meal that's quick and easy. COUNTRY KITCHEN SKILLET 34 lb. Eckrich bologna, sliced 1 cup sliced onion 4 cups thinly sliced raw potatoes 2 tblsp. chopped green pepper •4 cup fat 1 tsp. salt '/i tsp. pepper 2 tblsp. chopped pimiento Saute bologna in 1 tblsp. fat until lightly browned. Remove and set aside. Add remaining fat, onion, green pepper and po­ tato to skillet. Cook slowly until potato is tender, about 25 min­ utes. As potato browns, carefully turn with a spatula adding salt and pepper. Sprinkle with pimiento, top with bologna, cover and heat through. Makes 4 servings. JOBS FOR POW'S The Labor Department an­ nounced it is putting "high­ est priority" on finding jobs or providing job training for returning prisoners-of-war. MEW BUDGET President Nixon present­ ed Congress with a budget Send for my 200-point "Tests for Good Parents" enclosing a long stamped, return envelope, plus 20 cents. Then memorize those laws of proper parental behavior! with a l ist of more than one hundred cutbacks or -termi­ nations of Government pro­ grams. The 1974 budget of $268.7-bill ion begins July 1. PRESIDENT'S RIGHT The Justice Department told Congress recently that to strip the President of full power to impound funds would reduce him from chief executive to chief clerk. To make a success of old age, one must start young. Introducing the FHgkflaire Trash Compactor Model TC-1 It reduces normal household trash to about one quarter i ts original volume For safety, it won't operate unti l you insert the locking key Features push button controls and a gl ide-out drawer It 's normal counter-height and only 15" wide so you can put it where it 's needed, even build it in under a counter with an accessory conversion kit (available at extra charge) And it plugs right in to ordinary household current Choice of decorator colors, accented by a wood tone control panel and color- coordinated*vinyl-clad top. No Exfra Charge For Colois '199 LEE & RAY ELECTRIC 1005 N. Front St. McHenry Ph. 385-01 52 T)lte ZVoWiy, C linic PAGE 13-PLAINDEALER-FRIDAY, MARCH 2, 1973 Country Kilvhen Skillet MEET YOUR COACHES By Dick Rabbitt t

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