McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 30 Jun 1976, p. 14

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J HELP WANTED HELP WANTED . PHYSICIAN - ASSISTANT WANTED!: <> For a General and Vas- {, < > cular Surgeon. Opening new (> < > practice In McHenry on <> < f Rte. 120. Will need to as* {> i \ gist in major and minor <, (> surgeries. Previous ex- > > <, perience in similar work , < , desirable. Contact DR. BASU SAHA 4 > :: 344-isM :: {> Between 9 A.M. & 5 P.M., k 6-30/7-Z Conditioned 3854)940 6-25-TF-1-2 AVON Flexible hours mean even you can sell for excellent earnings. Over ^8? Call todafy: Mrs. Bauer . (815) 385-5385 6-2/6-30 sHi CUSTODIAN WANTED Full time position, East Campus High School For interview call Mr. Roy Homo HEAD CUSTODIAN 385-1145 Between 7 A.M. & 3 P.M. 6-30/7-2 HELP WANTED HOUSEKEEPER, Uve-ln, 3 people, 3 dogs must love both. (? Waterfall house in Johnsburg. Recent references required. 6 days $100 per week. 815-385- 6662 6-25-TF-1-2 NURSES AIDE OR orderly, 18 yrs. or older, 8 am to 4 pm, 3 or 4 day week, no experi­ ence necessary, will train. Call 815-385-0461 Pistakee Bay Home. 6-30/7-2 Sub Contractors, remodeling crews, must be experienced and insured. 385-8180. Evenings 385-5145 5-15-TF Mature and reliable woman to live in and care for 3 girls. For 2 weeks while housekeeper is on vacation. Starting July 12 Phone 675-2763 or 728-0236 6-25/7-2 SALESPERSON [For full time position in • hosiery, shoes and related J departments. 5 day week, i Prefer some retail exper­ ience. Apply at Once BEN FRANlOlIN 1250 N. Green Mc Henry, II. 6-30/7-2 WAITRESSES KITCHEN HELP Part time Grill Person Apply in Person TOP DECK (formerly Club Alabi) Wednesday and Thursday Between 11:00 - 5:00 1232 N. Green St - McHENRY- -6-30 PARTS MAN FIIU TIME Experience desired, but not necessary. Paid Holidays, plus benefits. Call for Appointment 815-338-4620 MARK'S CYCLE SALES 6-30/7-2 RECEPTIONIST- ASSISTANT Well Groomed. Some typing and bookkeeping MARINO'S 815-385-7771 6-30/7-2 HELP WANTED JANITOR • Full Time 2 years or more experience preferred. 4:00 P.M. to Midnight Full fringe benefit program. Call for interview. 815J38ri89Q 8:00 AM. - 4:30 P.M. Monday Through Friday Morton Norwich Products, Inc. Research Center Woodstock, II. An .equal opportunity employer M/F 6-30/7-2 \ NURSING ASSISTANTS We have an excellent opportunity for an individual to work in our Nursing Department* Experience is de­ sirable, but not necessary. Excellent fringe benefits and competitive salary. Apply personnel McHenry Medical Group 1209 iW Green St. McHenry, n. 6-30/7-2 SECRETARY TO HIGH SCHOOL PRINCIPAL An excellent opportunity exists for an ambitious appli­ cant with secretarial skills and training. Experience is desired but not necessary. Typing skills required and shorthand is preferred. Position involves a variety of duties and responsibilities. • - Good starting salary - Excellent medical and life insurance provided - Paid vacation Apply in person or by telephone to: Mrs. Brown McHENRY HIGH SCHOOL WEST CAMPUS 4724 West Crystal Lake Road McHenry, IL. 60050 (385-7077) 6-23/6-30 TOOLROOM FOREMAN Brake Parts Company A leading area manufacturer is currently recruiting for an individual with demon­ strated leadership qualities in the supervision of TOOL MAKERS AND TOOL GRINDERS This individual should be familiar with: / Tool Making and MacHnlng Technology, including the operation of standard tool room equipment. Fabrication of Jigs, Fixtures, Cutting Tools and Special machinery. „ Grinding of Cutting Tools such as Step Drills, Reamers and Form Tools. ; / \ Also helpful would be: / ' Background in' the fabrication of DIES for rubber molding. _ / Familiarity with NC machining techniques. Salary commensurate with ability plus full range of company benefits. Come in or call personnel Dept. 815-385-7000 BRAKE PARTS CQMPANV 1600 N. Industrial Drwe McHEHRY, ILL. An equal opportunity employer m/f 6.30/7.2 FEMALE OFFICE HELP WANTED Full time position Must be good with figures Contact Sheri Blue CHROMA CORP. 815-385-8100 EXPERIENCED DINNER WAITRESSES Apply in person Indian Manor Restauranfand Lounge 217 N. Front St. (S. Rte. 31) McHenry, 6-30/7-2 S e e e e e e e Excellent starting pay and e J fringe benefits. * : CHROMA : J CORPORATION J • Herbert & Scotland Roads e J McHenry, n. * • 6-30/7-2 J RFAL ESTATE EXTRUDER OPERATOR Day or Night Shift Desirable lot 100 x 120 in Kent Acres. 385-7502 or 385-5902 5-28-TF Lot for sale by owner, In Dutch Creek Woodlands. (Johnsburg) 385-0992 6-30/7-2 New 3 bedroom Lakeland Park 1% bath ranch. Country style kitchen, attached 2 car gar­ age, choose your carpetandtile colors. $33,900. 312-852-5686 6-25/7-2 Safer Foundation Graduate It wasn't beyond him to rent a sleek limousine, hire in at­ tractive blond accomplice, then posing as a chauffeur, rip-off some of the city's most affluent mansions. On other occasions, hand­ some and articulate Joseph McAfee, a product of the Chicago ghettos .uSbuld pose as a businessman, salesman, be l l hop , r epa i rman , deliveryman. You name it, he wore it. The money rolled in. And, its flow was sufficient to take him out of the black ghetto, where he grew up "fighting and scratching to stay alive" in a family of nineteen children. His popularity rivaled Leroy Brown's, so to speak. A New Life But all that is in the past. Today McAfee, a newly or- , dained minister at 35, earns his living by helping rehabilitate ex-offenders by finding them jobs, and, with a pleasant tinge of irony, by lecturing on how private citizens can prevent the big "rip-off." McAfee has written a little gem of a manual on the subject, which he distributes with the OK of his employer, the SAFER foundation, a non-profit cor­ poration founded in 1972 by a group of Chicago business and ^professional people to rehabilitate ex-offenders., McAfee's work with Operation DARE, now a division of SAFER, began in 1970. "The work I do at SAFER has added a lot of meaning to my life, says McAfee, "but even more importantly SAFER has made Chicago the country's top city in criminal rehabilitation. Men come here hardened or broken by prison life. By the time we counsel them and place them in meaningful jobs, their lives are back together." To date the foundation has placed 3,770 people in such jobs with a recidivism (return to crime or prison) rate sub­ stantially below the national rate of 30-75 percent. Con­ sidering that it takes an average of $12,000 annually to maintain a person in prison, this has resulted in a de facto tax savings for the state of Illinois in the millions of dollars. In his manual, McAfee says, "I have spent a considerable part of my life planning and scheming on how to relieve average citizens of their worldly goods. I have hurt you and I have harmed myself even more...my former life style now allows me to feel com­ pletely at ease in providing these timely tips to help you keep what is yours." Prison A Cage It takes no special genius to commit a crime, he says, "all House for Sale by owner, con­ tract or cash. 3 bedrm. alum­ inum ranch and detached garage with 100* concrete drive. Newly remodeled. 2 block walk to Griswold Lake. UNDER $30,000 For more information. Call 385-6837 6-16-TF-1-2 WANT ADS FOR RAPID I WHISPERING. OAKS RANCH CONDOMINIUM • Fully decorated, 2 bed- | • rooms,2baths,stove,hood, | J ref., dishwasher, garbage • J disp., air conditioner, wa- ! I sher & dryer, all drapes. * I Garage with storage. I I I /No Brokers 815-344-1997 . F after 4 p.m. T-SF' WONDER LAKE BT OWNER Perfect for outdoor living, ig. fam. rm. w/fireplace & beamed ceiling, patio drs. to Ig. deck built around trees, H acre wooded lot, 3 brs., dble. closets, utility area, pan­ try, 2& car gar. plus 1 car gar. Lake R^hts 815-653-9753 $-25/7-2 'NEAR COUNTRY I | Alum, sided 2 bdr. BY OWNER CLUBi home with 3 lotsyTMany trees. City sewer, 30 x 30 gar­ age. Quiet Area. Low Taxes $34,500.00. Appointment Only 385-4301 No Brokers. 6-9/6-30 FOR SALE BY OWNER 2 Story Cape Cod. 4 bedrooms, 8 rooms, baths, fully carpeted on Fox River. Large wooded lot. $59,760.00 344-1632 * 385-6566 344-0748 6-2-TF k R E S u L T S Of Crime you need is a bit of desperation and stupidity, coupled with the gullibility of an uninformed public. The words. 'It can t happen to me.' are, un fortunately, some people's biggest misconception " McAfee feels he picked himself out of a life of crime by his bootstraps when he saw the harm it could do him and society. "Prison had nothing to do with it," he explains "When you're treated like an animal in a cage, you act like one when you get out It was damn hard, but I searched my own soul and made my own decision " He sees the SAFER program as a "fantastic break for ex offenders, which deserves the support of every business, every person and every organization in this city and state Helping the ex-offender is cheaper and more productive than merely making more new prisons." Handy Tips In his book he makes both practical and some very though t -p rovok ing ob ­ servations Some examples: "--It's hardly possible that prostitution-the world's oldest profession-will be eradicated. Those weak enough to be en­ ticed shouldn't take along all t he i r money . Ve ry o f t en prostitution is drug related and an ostensibly well-heeled . customer easily may become the victim of robbery. "--If you should ever be held up. DO NOT PLAY HERO An armed robber is desperate. He wants money so don't scare him into taking your life. "--It's better to give in to a rapist with a gun because psychologically he is very much a po t en t i a l k i l l e r However, the best defesnse against rape, particularly in a public area near other people, is to scream, fight, run "--A well lighted home is one of the biggest deterrents to b r eak - in s _ P ro fe s s iona l s always take the •easy" hits, on ly ama teu r s t ake un ­ necessary chances " When on vacation have a neighbor give your home that lived in look by picking up your newspaper, mowing your lawn, etc Put a timer on your lights YOUR LAWN. ETC Put a timer on your lights " Always lock your car and don't leave valuable items in it where they can be seen. " Bu rg l a r a l a rms , s a f e ty - locks, peep holes and other i t ems a r e indeed g r ea t deterrents. " -Office buildings can curb elevator robberies by having the cars stop on all floors " When boa rd ing pub l i c t r anspo r t a t i on ( subways . L - trains, busses), do not flash your money. Have your fare in hand or use tokens " McAfee concludes that "it has been statistically proven tha t mos t homic ides a r e committed by someone you know very well. NOT BY A STRANGER! The secret be kind, and avoid arguments " In an a rmed robbe ry , g ive up your worldly goods. Your life may depend on it. You can always earn more money-if you are alive Remember: Being aware is the best deterrent to crime " Hats Off Mrs Richards asked the local photographer for an enlargement of a photograph of her dearly departed husband "1 don't like this awful straw hat he has on. do you think you can remove it?" she requested "Did your hus­ band part his hair on the left or right side?" w^s the photog rapher's professional question i don ' t r emember , bu t you can see for yourself when you take off the hat." replied the bereaved widow PAGE IS • PLAINDEALER-WEDNESDAY. JUNE It. I fit SENIOR CITIZEN'S CORNER* HtlPFUl I0(AS FOR SUCCESSFUL RCTN^MCNT ltf*w Days . Medicare will help pay for your renewable tike your • hospital care in a hospital for up to » days in each benefit period Since days in each benefit period But you only haw It reserve days m what happens if you have a long J****" lifetime, you can decide illness and twve to stay in the yourself when you want to use hospital for nwre than 90 days' them Aftir you have been in the Medicare s hospital insurance in hospitaw 90 days you can use all dudes an extra tt hospital days ® reserve days at one time if vou vou can use if this ever happens have to stay m the hospital that these extra days are called kmg You don't have to use your reserve days You are respon reserve days right away if you sibie for no more than S&2 00 a don't want to If you don't want to day for each reserve day vou use use your reserve days, you must Hospital insurance pays the rest tell the hospital ahead of time--in of the costs for covered services writing Otherwise, the extra for each reserve day Once you days you need to be in the u>e a reserve day you never get hospital will be taken from your; it back Reserve days are no! reserve days automatically R ARE BLOOD TYPE ..Mrs. Carol Mrtloud h«lds her eight-week-old son, Emerson, in Auckland, New Zealand Hospital as thry await arrival of a pint oI the world's rarest blood types, RH-Null-t. which Is being shipped from Japaa. The baby needs the blood for a transfusion to fight a rare anti body called "Aatl-L.Wthat te making him progressively anemic. Working Mother Seeks Child Leave (by Joy Johnson and Barbara Wickell) The period immediately after the last child has left home is always stressful for those remaining. If a mother is not married, she may find herself, isolated in the house and feel depressed and lonely, and-or make excessive demands upon her children to stay tied to her. If she is married, this period markedly influences the marital relationship. David Linn, judge of the divorce division, circuit court, Cook County (Illinois), reports that this period is "the second most critical time in terms of the survival of the marriage." Many marriages, particularly those which have revolved around the children, fail apart when the children are no longer around to keep them together. * All mothers have a responsibility during this period to find a new identity for themselves, apart from parenting functions. If they have devoted thier fives to parenting, this may be the time when women can find new fulfillment by outside employment. If she has worked for many years, she still needs to readjust to the "empty nest" to which she returns each night. Much of a mother's ability to adjust comfortably to this period depends upon the life style developed by her parting children. If she agrees with, and feels proud of the life they have chosen for themselves, she will probably be more able to adjust to their departure. If, on the other hand, their lives are in conflict with her values, she may blame herself and feel a failure to them. If she was working while they were growing up, she may feel guilty and fear that she did not give them what they needed as children If she stayed home, she win be resentful at giving up so much, and gaining so little. In either instance, the mother at this time must leave the past and open up new avenues of satisfaction This might bea good time for some of the things she never had time for while the children were growing up. If there Is more money available, the working mother who always had to rush home may now have time to do what she wants after work. The mother who works must avoid the trap of feeling reaponaible for the rearing of her grandchildren. Being a grandparent can be richly rewarding, rather than a burden, if there are other thincs in life which are satisfying. Aa one mother put it to vividly, "for the first year after ray son married, I spent my time feeling sorry for myself, and trying to get Mm to respond to tm. Then I went out and got a job and my whole life became full of exciting opportuniUte," (Pfof. Joy Johnson snd Prof. Barbara Wicked are faculty member of the Jane Addams School of Social Work at the University of Illinois at Chicago Circle campus Both are working mothers.) ••••••••••••••I PET COLUMN GIVE AWAY 4 kittens - litter trsined, 8 weeks old. 2 male, 2 female assorted colors 815-728-0238 6-30 I. 3 months old HlabHshepherd female puppy 653-9978 DISCOVER THE RICHES OF OUR MUSK. j jyx w HfjT FLEETWOOD MAC hOidM weaw#s.i Down Arrtm Cncadn Stwt a Lm I Boy I 1 -> QUEEN A Night At The Opera UNOA RONSTAOT Prisoner rtOsguse EAGLES The* Grealeet Hrts 1971 S75 IWCSTCMS LED ZEPPELIN PRESENCE Average White Band Cf \ biQ*H, lAJaAMesi ZleJzt/ia Atlantic DAILY 9 -9 SUNDAY 4400 W. Rte. 120 McHenry Illinois 3 97 c 4? 7

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