McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 14 Feb 1975, p. 8

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i'AGE 8 - PLAINDEALER-FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1975 MAMMA MTU ANNUAL "NEW HORIZONS IN ART" Plans have been made for the .a75 New Horizons in Art. an xhibit of paintings, sculpture. FAMILY ENTERTAINMENT PROGRAM Starts Fri. Feb 14 for 1 Week at 7 20 Only The Life and Times of ^1 ^ GRIZZLY ADAMS M The true story of a man exiled in the wilderness and how he learns to survive Featuring DAN HAGGFRTY as JAMES ADAMS Sunday Matinee. February 16th At 2 P M (SIJARATF WX.RAMS SffAJUTt Tl< KITS FOR FACM) HARVARD J ' l i \ \ ) I H S run I ±24 HOI R ISrORM\HO\ H\OlS ' • "»/</ V4< 44 1 Nfw COMFORT ItLE CONTROLLED Jf ADULT ENTERTAINMENT PROGRAM Starts Fn Feb 14 for i Week, at 9 00 Nightly1 Double Feature SPECIAL plus BONUS * LOVE HABSTS; WORLDWIDE plus co-feature At A Sweet Young Age Etpiitil Adult Program! Mostly Couples! graphics and photography by Illinois artists. The exhibit will open at the Mid-Continental Plaza Bldg., 55 E. Monroe St., Chicago. It will open May 2nd and run through June 6th. Mr. Frederick P. Walk\y is the juror who will select entries for the exhibit. Mr. Walkey is the executive director of the DeCordova Museum, a museum of 20th Century paintings, sculpture, prints and drawings located in Lincoln, Mass. All artists twenty-one years or older, who are residents of Illinois are eligible to enter New Horizons. There will be a $1,000 best of show award as well as cash awards and several purchase prizes. Details on entry fee, procedure, and specific requirements may be obtained from the North Shore Art League, 620 Lincoln Av., Winnetka, or phone 446-2870. The exhibit at Mid- r i i i i i i i i i i American Legion Post 491 -RINGW00D ROAD, McHENRY- FISH FRY EVERY FRIDAY (5:00-9:00 P.M.) • PERCH-ALL YOU CAN EAT • OTHER MENU AVAILABLE • OPEN TO THE PUBLIC ENTERTAINMENT IN-THE LOUNGE Fri. & Sat. 2 Beers and A Coke l. uccid dim n i/une i i I I i i I I i I i I P Mchenry McHENRr 385 0144 , FRI.-SAT.-SUN. 7:00-9:15 WKDYS. 7:30 THE AUDIENCES DON'T JUST SEE IT- They talk to it! They cheer It! They roar with K! They love it! PARAMOUNT PICTURES PRESENTS AN ALBERT S. RUDDY PRODUCTION || STARRING BURT REYNOLDS, * "THE LONGEST YARD MINU EDDIE ALBERT 9f CO-STARRING r 1 EDLAUTER MIKE CONRAD Saturday-Sunday Matinee - 1:00 & 3:00 P.M. "A BOY NAMED Matinee Only All Seats 50* CHARLIE BROWN" SH0WPIACE1 RTES. 14 & 31 / 455-1005 Fri.-Wkdvs. 7:15-9:30 S &S 4:30-7:15-9:30 Mel Brook's "YGUNG FRANKENSTEIN" Sat. & Sun. Matinee 1-3 p.m. "A BOY NAMED CHARLIE BROWN" E SHOW PI AC 13 WILLIAMS ST. / DOWNTOWN SHOWPLACE 2 RTtS. 14 & 31 / 455-1005 Fri.-Wkdys. 7:00 & 9:00 S & S 1:00-3:00-5:00-7:00-9:00 UFi llffED or THE YEAR! WAUDUNEYmmmuciiom nv? iv ni yjj[ D] lechnftcolof' G < •EXCLUSIVE- FRI.-WKDYS. 7:00 Admission : 9:15 S&S 12:30-2:45-5:00-7:15-9:30 Adults $3.00 Children $1.25 You'll FEEL it; as well as see it in SENSURROUNS An Event... i 0 [fit 101 Continental Plaza is courtesy of Tishman Midwest, Inc., a subsidiary of Tishman Realty Construction Co., Inc. NORWEGIAN X-CSKI CHAMP TO ENTER AMERICAN-BIRKEBEINER ATTELEMARK CABLE (WIS.) FEB. 4--A 23- year-old cross-country skier from Hemes Norway, Dag Anmarkrud, winner of the 1974 Norwegian-Birkebeiner citizen's cross-country Ski race, will be arriving in this coun­ try Feb. 18 to take part in the American-Birkebeiner III at Telemark, a citizen's cross­ country ski race to be held Feb. 22 between Hayward, Wis., and the Telemark Ski Area near Cable, Wis. The American race, spon­ sored by Telemark, is pat­ terned after the Norwegian race that has been run annually between the villages of Lillehammer and Rena in that country since 1932. This year, for the first time, the American-Birkebeiner has been extended to 55 kilometers, the exact distance of its Nor­ wegian counterpart. Anmarkrud, who will be arriving at the Twin Cities InternationalAirport in Min­ neapolis 6n SAS Feb. 18, 'completed" last year's Nor­ wegian-Birkebeiner in a time of 3:22.42 to claim the cham­ pionship. His entry in the American race is part of a Birkebeiner exchange program set up this year by Telemark owner Tony Wise who will also send winners of the American-Birkebeiner competition and touring divisions to Norway to compete in the 1975 Norwegian- Birkebeiner on March 46. The two winning skiers will Receive an all expense paid week in Norway including^*eund trip airfare, lodging; meals and race entry fee. WEEKLY FASHION SHOW A Weekly luncheon fashion show is providing patrons of Vareses's Smorgasbord & Pub on the corner of Green and Elms Sts. with something pleasing to look at as well as bringing them up to date on the latest in women's fashions. Varese's is cooperating with the Casual Shoppe, located on Green St., and presents their show on each Thursday from 12 noon to 1:00 P.M. Lynn Lund is coordinating the fashions for the Casual Shoppe and local models working with her are JoAnn Hutchinson, Karen Pepping, Sue Henderson and Lori Wilhelm. It's a great way to relax and enjoy Varese's fine food. PARADE OF OUTDOORS Always one of the more popular features of the gigantic Chicago Sportsmen's and Vacation Show, the 36th annual edition of the Tom Durant- produced Parade of Outdoors Champions stage and water presentation in the center arena of the International Amphitheatre Feb. 28 thru March 9 will be the most en­ tertaining ever. Durant, who is also managing director of the world's largest and most complete sports show of which the Parade is an integral part, TOUR CHICAGO BY„TRAIN A time journey to 1848 or a visit to 1975 Chicago are among the many short-travel ad­ ventures offered at special group rates by the employee- owned Chicago and North Western Transportation Company. The "time-trip" is a short talk by a qualified railroad lecturer, employing large visual aids, which tells of early railroading in Chicago and the "Pioneer" steam locomotive which pulled the first train in the nation's railroad center. The lectures, presented in a railroad coach in North Western's downtown terminal, are being offered for the first time inl 1975 to groups of up to 50 taking advantage of the special rates on trips from anywhere on the C&NW. the short walk tours include many interesting sights near North Western Station, such as: First National Bank, the Main Post Office, City Hall and Civic Center, the Quaker Oats Test Kitchens, Sears' Tower, or downtown Chicago's famous works of art by .Picasso, Chagall, and Calder. Bus tours can be arranged by the C&NW with Keeshin Charter Service, Inc., or the Chicago Transit Authority. PERFORMING ARTS "Signature," the new music department of Performing Arts Community Theatre, will present twelve local artists in concert at Martinetti's Restaurant at 6:30 p.m., Sunday, February 23. The program has been designed for wide audience appeal and musical selections are from the familar works of Henri Mancini and Burt Bacharach- "Days of Wine and Roses", "Moon R i v e r , " ' ' C h a r a d e , ' ' "Promises, Promises," "Close to You," "What the World Needs Now is Love," "Rain­ drops Keep Falling on My Head," and others not so familar. The vocalists, performing both as soloists and in groups will be Roberta Caliger, Kathy Gilpin, Dan Malone, Colleen O'Keefe, John O'Keefe, Cathy O'Laughlin, Bonnisue Rohrer, Linda Schuldt, and Virginia Zymonas. Helen Bird will perform at the piano and ac­ companists are Linda Mc- Clung, Carol Vandenboom, and Charlene Kazimier. Most of the soloists have appeared before local audiences and are well known for both talent and showmanship. The concert will be presented to patrons seated at tables with cash bar and restaurant ser­ vices available before and after the concert, which should be over by 8:00 p.m. Tickets may be obtained by writing PACT- TICKETS, P.O. Box 153, Crystal Lake, 111. 60014. Payment should be included. This concert is the first of several planned by "Signature," and is under the direction of Frank Koczan. Future concerts will present music from classical through folk-rock. Performers, in­ strumentalists, keyboard artists, and singers, who would like to audition for future presentations should contact Mr. Koczan. takes personal pride in putting together this gala en­ tertainment. He selects champions of outdoors com­ petitions and the top thrill acts of the circus world and com­ bines them into an ex­ travaganza that delights the entire family. Hours are noon to 11 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays and 1 to 11 weekdays with the exception of opening day on Friday, Feb. 28, when gates open at 6 p.m. Parade of OutdoorsChampions will be presented at 8 o'clock on opening night and daily thereafter at 2 and 8 p.m. Ample parking is provided in the Amphitheatre's lighted and policed lots. Mr. K is back in the kitchen making up some special lunches everyday. . . .Select from our delicious sandwiches & pizza too!! -ALS0- 1 FRE DRAFT BE® With Lunch - Mon. thru Sat . is • 't ..... • • Open Everyday At 11 AX MR. K't PIZZA & LOUNGE 4720 W. Rte. 120 Groups are met by a bus at North Western's downtown station, then transported to interesting attractions, such as Adler Planetarium, the Art Institute, the Chicago Fire Department Academy, Chicago P o l i c e D e p a r t m e n t Headquarters, Chicago Sun- Times and Daily News Building, Chicago Tribune Tower, Field Museum of Natural History, John Hancock Center, Prudential Building Observatory, and the Shedd Aquarium. Longer train-bus tours are available to the Museum of Science and Indsutry or the Lincoln Park Zoo. Sightseeing tours can also be worked out in cooperation with Gray Line. Once warmer weather arrives in April, groups can enjoy a boat ride on the historic Chicago River, and even out through the locks into Lake ivfichigan. The sight­ seeing boats dock at Madison Street and the river, almost adjacent to North Western Station. A unique feature of the train-boat tours is that 'the groups do not have to cross a single Chicago street. AMATEURS- PROFESSIONALS NON - ARTISTS The Libertyville Arts Club welcomes you and extends an invitation to become a mem­ ber. Our membership consists of professionals and amateurs, as well as non-artists who are interested in supporting the arts in our area through a community Arts Center. The Art Center's home is the beautiful Adler House in Adler Park Originally a pre-Civil War farmhouse, it was redesigned and enlarged in 1916 by architect David Adler and his wife, Katherine, a writer and artist. The rambling, twenty room mansion was their home for the remaining years of their lives. Now owned by the Village of Libertyville, the Center is maintained by the Arts Club. The Arts Club was founded in 1949 by the Herb Ruuds, Fred Penney, and twenty-two others for the purpose of encouraging and aiding local artists. Its scope has broadened to include artists from the entire area and those who are not active in an art field but wish to increase their understanding of the arts. Among the activities sponsored by the Arts Club are live model sketch sessions, open studio days, classes in various media for all ages, exhibits, workshops, demonstrations by established artists, social gatherings, and a monthly newsletter. Write to Liber­ tyville Arts Club, 1700 N. Milwaukee Avenue, Liber­ tyville, Illinois 60048 for further information. Burt Reynolds, Part Rebel, Comes To Peace With Himself House Warming Poor neighbor. He tip-toed in on New Year's Eve with all his paycheck money missing. The lovely lady of the house wondered where it all went. "I bought something for the house," he in­ toned. "What did you buy for the house that costs $130," she won­ dered aloud. "Ten rounds of drinks," was his bold reply. The sweat on Burt Reynolds'brow is real. So is the dirt that has been scratched across his face. His foot­ ball shirt, MEAN MACHINE em­ blazoned across its back in bold red letters, is in keeping with the mus­ cular swagger as he walks across the field, a football firmly in hand. Burt Reynolds is in prison, an unlikely place to find filmdom's bonafide superstar whose path from television actor to Cosmopolitan centerfold boy to big screen dyna­ mo has been a long time coming. "The Longest Yard," which' Reynolds is filming for producer Albert S. Ruddy ("The Godfather") and director Robert Aldrich ("The Dirty Dozen") is a role that strikes right on target with Reynolds' own life. He portrays an ex-pro gridiron hero who gets busted on a grand larceny charge and is thrown behind bars where a sadistic warden wages a brutal game of life and death with him. The climactic football game between prisoners and guards is an ironic parallel to Reynolds' destiny. Between takes on locations at Geor­ gia State Prison, he remembers the days when he was an All-Florida and All-Southern Conference foot­ ball player whose athletic career was squashed after a near-fatal auto­ mobile accident. A long period of depression fol­ lowed the accident while Burt clung to his hope. He quit Florida State College to give himself a chance to re-evaluate his aims. At Palm Junior College an English teacher encour­ aged him to find something else to occupy his time, suggesting partici­ pation in the dramatic program at the school. By 1958 he had won the Florida Drama Award which car­ ried a scholarship to the Hyde Park Playhouse in New York. The roles in television came swiftly, including a lead in the "Riverboat" series. "I quit that because I was being drained," Burt says now. By 1963 he felt he was ready to tackle the continuing role of Quint Asper in "Gunsmoke." "That was one of the best periods of my life," he recalls. After that came "Hawk" and "Dan August," two dynamic series that had to fight bad times- lots and were bounced by bad rat­ ings despite their critical and audi­ ence acceptance. Reynolds had to make the tough transition from television star to movie actor and dazzled the cynics with a blistering performance in "Deliverance." Combined with an intuitive instinct for creating his own image, Reynolds -- tongue in cheek and forearm over groin- popped up as Cosmopolitan's first centerfold. Today Reynolds has the high- power kind of success that had eluded him for years. "I ran from a lot of things in my life," he admits. "It was something inside of me that I can't explain. I know I've been a rebel who ran from anything that lost its significance for me." What particularly sent the blood pressures rising was Reynolds' in­ sistence to always do-his own stunts, as he did fo'r'ilie gridiron sequences for "The Longest Yard." Even on television, where stand-ins were always ready to step in, Reynolds refused to let anyone else take the risks. "Some people have tried to attrib­ ute my wanting to do all my own stunts as a death wish," Reynolds adds. "There's no deep psychologi­ cal reason for me wanting to do them. It's not a death wish at all. I do the stunts because I enjoy doing them." Before "The Longest Yard," Reynolds completed four films in a period of 14 months--"The Man Who Loved Cat Dancing," "White Lightning," "Shamus" and "Fuzz." That's a lot of drawing power. "I like to do movies," he says. "It's easier than television. For a series you have 14 pages of dialogue a day anS endless hours of rehearsal and shooting. Movies are more relaxing. There's less pressure for time." Whatever the pressures o( his work, Reynolds has always managed to take a bemused third person look at himself. Off-camera he lets^the tough image melt, revealing a buoy­ ant wit that has given more than a few highlights to the latenight guest star and guest host chores he has done in the past few years. "I know I could be difficult if I wanted to be," Reynolds analyzes. "It wouldn't solve anything trying to impress someone else about ^how important you think you are.' "I bummed around for a long time not really knowing what I wanted to do or what I needed to do," Reynolds smiles. "There have been many times when I have felt completely clobbered." He shakes his head. "What do you do? Go crawl in a hole? You just have to keep going . . . bsjieving in vourself." Policeman Lew Slade (GEORGE KENNEDY) and Stewart Graff (CHARLTON HESTON) drill their way through a cement wall with a jackhammer to rescue earthquake victims trapped in the basement of a building in Universal's "Earthquake," a large-scale drama with an all-star cast produced and directed by Mark Robson. Written as a screenplay by George Fox and Mario Puzo, the Mark Robson-Filmakers Group produc­ tion was filmed in Technicolor and Panavision, with Jennings Lang as executive producer. THE FABULOUS Presents The Famous BELLY DANCER EXTRADORDINAIRE FRIDAY & SATURDAY, FEB. 14th & 15th SHOWTIME 9:30 & 11:00 You've Seen Her On TV - Now See Her At FENNESSEYS WED. IS -- LADIES NIGHT All Mixed Drinks Reduced x" 'Jfrii.l Burt Reynolds stars as an ex- football player who must organize a team behind prison walls in Paramount Pictures' "The Longest Yard." The Albert S. Ruddy Pro- duction, directed by Robert Aldrich, is the dramatic tale of a brutal game of life and death in­ side the walls of a prison waged by a sadistic warden (Eddie Albert). It was filmed on location inside a maximum security prison from a screenplay by Tracy KeenanWynn based on a story by Albert S. Ruddy. Also co-starring Ed Lauter, the film was produced by Albert S. Ruddy. In Technicolor. SNUG HARBOR , 801 N. River Rd McH. ^ WILL RE-OPEN FOR BUSINESS monday; FEB. 17 SNUG HARBOR BOAT CLUB 385-2761 BERMUDA! Every Saturday, Starting May 10 IDORfc 7-Day "Linger Longer" Quality Cruises from New York to Bermuda Ship is hotel 4 days on Front St., Hamilton An enchanting new way to enjoy a Ber­ muda week! Home Lines' new star, the 25,300-ton DORIC, has been acclaimed for her quality cruise features. 2 outdoor pools plus indoor pool with sauna ... 3 nightclubs and a host of other elegant pub­ lic rooms ... all cabins with private bath­ rooms . . . all double cabins have 2 lower beds. Lively, intimate atmosphere, great food, varied activities . . . and the re­ nowned service of Home Lines all-Italian personnel. Panamanian Registry. Spring Cruises . . . S375 to $895 May 10 to June 14 Summer Cruises . . . $415 to $985 June 21 to Aug. 23 Autumn Cruises . . . $355 to $845 Aug. 30 to Nov. 8 Rates per person, double occupancy Reserve the DORIC with Us! CHraLn- Q-JlcStzi Ox 'roust <SEXULCZ 3405 W. ELM ST. McHENRY, ILL. 60050 PHONE 385-7500 (Area Code 815) CHICAGO PHONE: 631-5231 *4m i& "ANNUAL FUN NITE" MARCH 1st at the VFW HALL 3002 W. RTE. 120 McHENRY ILL. STARTS 7:00 pm Til ? AUCTION-REFRESHMENTS- DANCING FEATURING "BOB and the BLUE TONES" DONATION '5.00 PER PERSON -TICKETS MAY HE PURCHASE!) AT THE DOOR- D0RKIES RESTAURANT 4218 W. r ?i LOOK KIDS SAVE "DORKIE DOLLARS" ALL TASTES. FOR FREE GIFTS Free Dollars Given To Children 2 to 12 Years Of Age When Accompanied With An Adult. 800 Rollins Rd. Ingleside 587-699P Fireside Inn Rte. 31 & Ringwood Rd. Ringwood, III. Serving Lunches Daily FROM 11 a.m. til 2 p.m. Friday Fish Fry FROM 5p.m. til 10 p.m. OPEN DAILY & SUNDAYS AT 8 a.m. CLOSED TUESDAYS i I

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