McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 12 Dec 1979, p. 18

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ive Concert Kantorei member Todd Brunning receives his robe from Mrs. Christine Beem prior to a concert. The boys' choir will perform at St. Mary's church, McHenry, at 4 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 16. The internationally ac­ claimed Kantorei, "The Singing Boys of Rockford," will perform in concert Sunday, Dec. 16, at St. Mary's church, McHenry, at 4 p.m. The Kantorei is composed of boys aged 10 to 18 from the greater Rockford area. They have been praised by musicians and general audiences for their out­ standing musicianship and stage presence. By using older boys whose voices have changed, the Kantorei can sing a wider variety of music utilizing the range of voices to sing up to eight-part harmony. It has gained a reputation as an outstanding per­ forming choir known for its interpretation of a variety of both sacred and secular literature from the Renaissance: to con­ temporary, including an- tiphonally performed madrigals, modern and folk music/ In its fifteenth year, the Kantorei has traveled ex­ tensively throughout the United States, Scandanavia and Great Britain. The choir is under the direction of David Bur- meister, who is also choral director at Rockford's Auburn high school. He is in his second season as choir director, having succeeded Linden Lundstrom who founded the Kantorei in 1964. Each boy trains three hours with the choir, two hours with the full choir and one hour of sectional practice. The boys memorize the music and must pass a test on each song for each concert or for a tour. A choir school offers preliminary training for boys in the first through fourth grades, preparing them to enter the main choir. Tickets may be obtained in advance from Fred and Connie Schmidt, Jim and Rita Thennes, Fr. Bob Balog, or at the door. School Personnel In Energy Training McHenry Elementary School District 15 recently had building principals A1 Boeldt, Jim LaShelle, John Nilles, Ed Sobotkiewicz, Oscar Sola and Don Toole, and head custodians, Gerry Becker, Frank Fontana, Gerard Justen, Carmi Lon)bardi, Ed May and Vern Reinboldt, in attendance for an Energy Auditor Training session conducted by the Illinois Institute of Natural Resources. The institute, in cooperation with the Illinois Office of Education, has initiated a statewide program of energy con­ servation^ in schools. One of the main goals of the program is to reduce energy consumption and dollar expenditures for energy by improving the energy ef­ ficiency of present school buildings. The Institutional Buildings Grant program, part of the National Energy act, will yield federal grants to assist Illinois schools with their energy conservation programs. The federal regulations governing this program call for an energy audit of institutional buildings before a state can participate in the grant program. SPECIAL OFFER TO • ORGANIZATIONS • CHURCH GROUPS • BUSINESSES • CLUBS • SORORITIES • MANUFACTURERS anyone planning ADULT OR CHILDREN CHRISTMAS PARTIES OBTAIN EXTRA SAVINGS mi /« TAX EXEMPT DISCOUNTS Com. into Horn*by'» ond ask for »h. mano^r. Ha will p.r tonally giv» you a dool ond holp you »•!•«* ond ordor your gilt*. Don » forgot to bring your »toto »ol«» to* o.omption numbor if your organiiotion hat on#. [EDUCATIONAL m College Honors John Allen Winner In Forensics % When the Illinois State university Forensics team won high honors in both debate and individual events at the recent Bradley university Forensics tour­ nament in Peoria, a McHenry student was among the winners. ISU captured first place in individual events sweep­ stakes and third place in debate sweepstakes, com­ peting in a field of 35 colleges Monitor Retailers' Use Of Food Stamps Farm Bureau Impact Farm Bureau received top ranking among farm groups for its impact on national farm policy in a poll of congressional staff mem­ bers by Successful Farming magazine. "Farm Bureau," the article in the October issue of the farm publication said, "still reigns as the single most influential farm organization by a wide margin. Eight out of every ten staffers surveyed named Farm Bureau as one of the five most prominent farm lobby groups." 440«W III McttCMV •II «« COUNTITUMR* WMOSTMK HORNSBYS f a m i l y c e n t e r s -m •AUV Only 46 out of more than 6,980 Illinois retailers currently authorized to redeem food stamps have been found guilty of misusing the program during the fiscal year 1979 according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA). According to Monroe Woods, USDA midwest and universities from 10 states. John Allen of 5902 Valley View road, McHenry, won fifth place with his partner in the Duo Interpretation class. He won fourth place in Novice Dramatic In­ terpretation. regional administrator for the Food and Nutrition Service (FNS), this figure indicates a majority of Illinois retailers are generally abiding by, the regulations of the federally funded program designed to provide low income or needy families, the elderly, and the disabled with additional assistance to purchase food for a well-balanced diet. USDA monitors a retailer's use of the food stamp program by periodic checks designed to insure that the retailer is abiding by the federal* regulations. Another effective method of checking a retailer's actions comes from reports from private citizens who believe they have seen, an illegal food stamp transaction. Woods indicates that the most frequent violation is the acceptance of food stamps for the purchase of ineligible items. These ineligible items most frequently include paper products, cigarettes, household cleaning products, and alcoholic beverages. Once a retailer has been investigated and found guilty of violating the program regulations, he is subject to a disqualification from accepting food stamps for a period ranging from 30 days to 3 years. In cases where the disqualification of a food store would result in the complete absence of an authorized food store in any area and the violation oc­ curred after Jan. 1, 1979, a fine may be imposed rather than a disqualification. PAGE 19 - PLAINDEALER - WEDNESDAY. DECEMBER It. 1»7» "All My Sons" Opens Jan. 18 The McHenry high school Drama club will be presenting its winter play, Arthur Miller's "All My Sons", in West campus auditorium Jan. 18 and 19 at 8 p.m. and Sunday, Jan. 20 at 2 p.m. There will be a special senior citizens' performance the evening of Jan. i7. Arthur Miller won the Theatre guild national award in 1937. He wrote "All My Sons" in 1947 and won the Drama Critics' award after a long run on Broadway. Some of his other plays are "Death of a Salesman" which won the Pulitzer prize in 1949, "The Crucible" in 1952, "A View from the Bridge" in 1955, "Incident at Vickey" in 1964. v His aim is "to present man as the creature of society, and at the same time as its creator." Zero Dressing Combine one-half cup to­ mato juice, one tablespoon lemon juice or vinegar, one tablespoon minced onion and J^a_dash of pepper in a jar. ^Shake until well-blended. The result is an almost zero-calorie dressing you can store in the refrigerator and use when nec­ essary. Great Holiday Sale Sale Ends Dec. 15,1979 Batteries included. Save *35 TR discriminator treasure finder. 99 97 Regularly 134.99 With adjustable dis­ criminator mode to eliminate signals from foil, cans. Tuning and volume controls. Red Baron 299 y J Pump, serve. --s Save 50% Pump 'N' Serve 2-qt vacuum bottle Regularly 14.99 Has double-wall liner to keep liquids hot/ cold for many hours. Re­ movable, easy-clean top. Super handy. Save *3 Buy 10 bags or more, use our blower free. Easy-to-apply Mono-therm® insulation. 40-lb bag covers 50 gross sq.ft. 5" deep for R-19. Use 38 our rent-free blower. O Reg. 11.99 bag. Save *40 aluminum icnw-dnvt. 1/3-hp garage door opener, control. %* aluminum-screw drive. Instant reverse. Auto­ matic light. UL listed. flUi -hp dif. contr )l?t tMJt Vi-hp dual lock $199 459 Regularly 199.99 Bench shown with arm curl/weight pulley, bicycle attachments. Save *60 Weight bench, attachments for this winter's shape-up. separately. All-steel bench supports up to 700-lbs. Arm curl/weight pulley attachment helps strength­ en upper body. Bicycle attachment builds and tones calves and thighs. Padded leg lift. 154-pound (70 kilo) weights, barbells. 12 discs that interlock to prevent OA 97 spinning, plastic-coated to help *yy protect * .cars. Instructions incl. Regularly 49 99 Sporty men's, women's warm-up suits. Soft, triple-knit acrylic fabric. Collar converts to turtleneck. full-length jacket zipper. S-XL. All other suits 25% off. 1649 Regularly 32.99 Partially assembled. Save *50 Our best 10" radial arm saw by DeWalt0 Develops 2Vi-max hp. Cuts m /\ qq 3" deep, crosscuts 14W, Regularly 399.95 rips 241 Vie". Enclosed motor. Model 35210 Unassembled. Save *20 3V2-hp snowthrower .. . shovel-free winter. Winterized 4- cycle engine is self-propelled. Clears 24" path. Reg. 3S9.95 Model 35255 unassembled. Save *40 Wards self-propelled S-hp snowthrower. Briggs and Strat- . >wvqq ton* 4-cycle A/U engine. With __ power reverse. R«f• 449.95 Temp probe lets you cook to pre­ set internal temp. Gourmet control lets you defrost, roait, bake, more. "Delay Start" lets you set oven to cook later in day. *70 off. Touch-control microwave with memory. 42988 Regularly 499.99 Stores cook stages for 1-time use or entire pro grams for later recall. 8049 Save *70 Easy-to-use, fast, efficient microwave. Memory shifts cooking functions or remembers e n t i r e c y c l e a u t o m a t i c a l l y , m m m Regularly 449.99 O7Q88 4 J i «kr« Wairds, your Christmas store. CHRISTMAS HOWS: . thru Fri. 10a.iii.to9p.m. Sat 9:30 a.nt.-9 p.m. San. 11 a.m.-6 p.m. Lake tac •» n« ids n oral was ntgnmy Uf Pfcoaa 815459-3120 FREE PARKING

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