McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 18 Apr 1973, p. 16

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PAGE 16-PLAINDEALER-WEDNESDAY, ARPIL 18, 1973 RECOGNIZE ACHIEVEMENT -- Richard C. Fuhler, left, assistant dean of instruction at McHenry County college, gives certificates to Charlene Bruhl of Fox River Grove, center, and Patrick Morehead of Crystal Lake as winners in the college's Student Achievement Recognition program. The program was sponsored for the fourth successive year by Continental bank, Chicago. The two winners won $100 cash awards and went on to the district competition. The winners are those students -- a man and a woman -- who have best demonstrated noteworthy achievement toward their career goals and leadership qualities through participation in campus and community activities. Goodwill Truck Visits City, Wonder Lake Goodwill Industries is unlike other agencies collecting discards, because it is devoted entirely to the service of physically handicapped men and women, according to Mrs. Nick (Agnes) Adams, local Goodwill representative, Mrs. Adams announced that the Goodwill truck will be in McHenry Friday, April 27, to collect repairable clothing and other housewares to be used in the sheltered workshop. In general, the contributors understand that Goodwill is prohibited by the fire marshals from collecting newspapers, combustibles and other items which might be a hazard to the h a n d i c a p p e d t r a i n e e s . However, many people do not realize that such things as welders, blow torches and hazardous equipment is prohibited in the average Goodwill workshop. Goodwill Industries can't use HERE'S TO PARENTS - • WE SALUTE YOU For those middle years... When you tried to be ob­ jective about report cards - taking them seriously as a guide to your child's progress, but not pushing the panic button if he didn't get straight > A's. When you leveled with his teacher in parent-teacher conferences by trying to convey your own very special un­ derstandings of what your child ^as like at home, and listen carefully to the teacher's discussion of what he was like at school. When you respected your child's need to have a quiet place to concentrate on his homework, helped him set the rules for getting it done (by the following: Hot water heaters, deepfreezers, refrigerators, washing machines, stoves, pianos, springs, overstuffed furniture, plumbing fixtures, doors, windows, screens, bottles, large, rusted metal and broken wood furniture, iron, lumber and scrap metal. Call Mrs. Adams for pickup service. The Goodwill truck will be in Wonder Lake Friday, April 27. Call Mrs. Adams for pickup. him, not you), and took up any questions or complaints about homework policy with his school or teacher rather than with the neighbors or the newspaper. When, despite the fact that you were never very keen about some subject (math, say, or English), you tried not to convey this attitude to your child, and instead helped him to see how skills in the subject could assist him in other studies and in his out-of-school life as well. When you encouraged his scientific curiosity by letting him be a collector of rocks, insects, leaves, shells. Or when you went into "outer space" with him via the telescope, or "underseas" at the aquarium. But most of all when you taught him to develop a scientific attitude about everyday events by exploring broad general statements with inquiries like How do you know that's true? or Where did you get those statistics? When you helped him judge each person as an individual rather than as a member of a particular race, creed, culture, or color by curbing you own unthinking remarks or actions toward people who are "dif­ ferent". When you showed him the Two Recycling Drives Planned Crystal Lake area residents will have still another chance to "vote" Saturday, April 21 -- this time for the environment. The monthly recycling drives, sponsored by the McHenry County Defenders and Explorer Post 127 will be held in Crystal Lake this coming Saturday as they are on the third Saturday of every month. Glass bottles and jars of all types and tin cans will be collected by the Explorer Scouts at the Crystal Lake Plaza from 9 a.m. to l p.m. Bundle newspapers, magazines and corrugated board will be collected by the Defenders at the Crystal Lake high school faculty parking lot from 9 a.m. until the truck is full. The Defenders will be able to make a limited number of pickups in the Crystal Lake area during the week. This service is designed mainly to importance of keeping up with current events by being a faith­ ful follower of newscasts on TV and radio, an inveterate reader of newspapers and newsmagazines, and a willing discusser of controversial issues. When you encouraged him to take part in informal neigh­ borhood sports of all kinds - swimming, bicycling, baseball, skating - and showed him that enjoying the sport and feeling fit were far more important than being a star performer. 1 I m ft:: m m &:•: m w*.V. %%W C-Xv m m 1 w 1 II I 1 m 1 m m m || I P m M £:*» || m 5$ M &•: i Jewel does more than you'd expect. Stock Up For The Holiday At Jewel! NEW STORE HOURS: Monday Thru Friday 8 A.M. till 11 PM. Saturday 8 AM. fil 9 P.M. * Sunday 9 A.M. till 7 P.M. ^ jW Thur.-Fri.-Sat. > FRESH MEAT AVAILABLE' TIL 9 EVERY NITE 3718 W. Elm St. McHenry, III. GOV'T. INSPECTED - FULLY COOKED WATER ADDED - SMOKED HAM Shank Portion gov. " ' B u t t P o r t i o n 7 TO 9 LB SIZ^^^ c 7 TO 9 LB. SIZE VJ T \NSP - COOKtD GOVT wJalRAODID Whole SmokedHanw 73 U.S.D.A. GRADE "A" - POPULAR BRANDS 16 TO 19 IB SIZE Tom Turkeys , ^ w ^ GRADE POPULAR BRANDS 8 TO 22 LB. SIZE PER LB. Turkeys USOA CHOICE U.S.D.A. CHOICE - BEEF U.S.D.A. GRADE "A" - CHEF CUT SELF BASTING "turkeys 55 Rib Steaks •29 Tom Turkeys c OTO 13 LB SIZE U S D A OKAO uc r 18 TO 22 LB. SIZE junior Turkeys 69e 6 TO v LB SIZE LB. ALL GREEN JEWEL GRADE "A Asparagus S.55 I* 1 Citrus Fruits For Healthy Snacks. FLORIDA Valencia Oranges r j AN EASTER TREAT! Sweet Potatoes CCHICAGO STORES LB IV DOZ --:osrR,OR WITH THIS COUPON AND $3.00 PURCHASE White Grapefruit 1 0 9 8 ' CHICAGO STORES LB^c REG. PRICE 59 DELICIOUS Roast Beef Round OA REG O W $149 2 LB HEAT 'N EAT Ocean pa# Perch LB 5V lb AVAILABLE ONIY IN JEWEL STORES WITH CHEfS KITCH GOOD THRU SAT , APR. 21. 1973 SAVE 20' ON A CARTON OF ONE DOZEN JEWEL-GRADE "A" Large Eggs WITH THIS COUPON AND A $3 00 PURCHASE PRICE WITHOUT COUPON 59c CASH-SAVING COUPON V2 LB. REGULAR OR DIET CHERRY VALLEY CHERRY VALLEY FROZEN JEWEL HEAVY DUTY Aluminum Foil Grapefruit Juice 46 OZ. CAN 44c REG. 49c GRAPtFW JUICE Orange Juice 12 OZ. CAN 25 FT. ROLL REG. 8/99c PLUS DEP REG. 44 REG. 49e p| | T rXv rXv r.w M f.V.* M £?:• i'Sv •Xvl Iv.v J.'.VI m 11 wl Ky> i Wi m Xvl W aid elderly persons who wish to participate in recycling but find it difficult to get out. For pickups, phone 459-7124. The Defenders and McHenry American Field Service students will also sponsor' a paper drive in McHenry at the Market Place shopping center on Rt 120 the following Saturday, April 28, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. For additional in­ formation, call the Defenders representative at 385-8512. Glass containers and tin cans will also be collected on the twenty-eighth in McHenry by the West Shore Beach Sub- division association at the same time and place as the paper drive. Proper preparation of recyclable materials at home makes the job of the volunteers at the recycling center much easier. Here are some hints on what to save and how to bring it. 1. Newspapers must be tied securely with heavy string or baling twine in bundles no more than 10" high. Make sure that no magazines or plastic bags are mixed in. 2. Magazines and junk mail may be combined but must be tied very securely or placed in Strong bags or boxes. 3. Corrugated board (but not cardboard such as cereal boxes) may be tied in small bundles but not mixed with anything else. 4. Premium papers may be brought if tied securely in small bundles 8-10" high. These would include only printed material, mimeographed or ditto sheets, notebook paper, stationery - all high-quality paper - but not photostatic or Xerox paper. 5. Tin cans which are all-steel with a tin coating (vegetable or petfood cans) are the only ones being collected now. These must be clean and flattened with lids inside. Paper labels must be removed. 6. All-aluminum beer cans should be flattened and saved at home. These are new in the area but are very valuable and a method to recycle these will be set up soon. In the meantime start saving them. All- aluminum cans will not cling to a magnet. 7. All types of glass con­ tainers including pickle jars, baby food jars, throw-away beverage bottles, etc. can be recycled. They must be clean, separated by color (clear, brown, green) and the metal rings found around the necks of some pop and wine bottles must be removed. Paper labels do not have to be removed but the occasional metal label should be taken off. Anderson Hails Triple Education Victory In House Congressman John B. An­ derson (R-Ill.) has hailed House action on an urgent $1.4 billion supplemental ap­ propriations bill as "a triple victory for education in America." Anderson was referring to the fact that the bill contains $468 million in veterans' education readjustment benefits, $872 million to fund higher education student financial assistance programs, and Anderson's own amend­ ment to restore $1.8 million for the National Industrial Equipment Reserve (NIER) which loans machine tools to schools for vocational training purposes. "What we have done today," Anderson said, "should be good news to veterans, other college students, and educational planners across the country who were anxious about the future status of these important programs. And I think it should be pointed out that this sup­ plemental request was made by the Administration and is in conformity with the fiscal 1973 spending ceiling we are at­ tempting to maintain." Anderson said he had begun work on restoring funds for the NIER program last December when he was notified by schools in his 16th Illinois district that their loan applications for vocational training machinery had been frozen. He discovered that because of a bookkeeping dispute between the Ad­ ministration and the Congress, NIER had received no fiscal 1973 funds, and the General Services administration was forced on Dec. 31, 1972, to close down its two main storage facilities and freeze new school loan applications. At present, some 400 schools in forty-four states have over 8,000 pieces of NIER machinery on loan valued at $40 million. In January, Anderson signed on eighty-six House members to cosponsor his bill to reactivate the NIER program. Today he offered his bill as an amend­ ment to the supplemental appropriations bill, and it was adopted on a voice vote. Anderson noted that the NIER amendment was especially urgent because some $46 million in machinery was in danger of rusting in storage due to lack of dehumidification and maintenance. He told his colleagues that the "tools for schools" program saves the government up to $3.8 million a year because the schools provide free storage and maintenance of the machinery which the government would otherwise have to pay the tab for. The supplemental ap­ propriations bill as amended now goes to the Senate. WMIVEKl "To every thing there is a season, and a time to every purpose under the heaven." 1. Who made the above state­ ment. 2. Whose son was he"> 3. What was the theme of the book from which it was taken? 4. Where may this statement be found' "i:E sa^sBisapoa •ssauidduq jBpuBisqns 'IB8J ureiqovtBiu UBUI MOH '£ • p i A B a J O U O S a i j x ' Z •UOUIOJOS SBM SJBJOMOS isow *1 FOR A BRIGHTER, . . . JOYFUL EASTER EASTER LIUES Fresh, fragrant Easter Lilies wrapped in glistening foil TULIP PLANTS Foil wrapped in plastic pots Red and a rainbow of colors HYACINTH PLANT Beautiful, fresh and fragrant 5" foil wrapped pots n9 And *2 7 And Up 76 •2" HORNSBYS f a m i l y centers 400 West Route 120 McHenry Daily 9-9 Sunday 9-6

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