Lakeland Park & Lakeland Shores Carol Cominsky 385-7246 Santa Visits Woman's Club The Lakeland Park Woman's club will be having their annual Christmas party Thursday, Dec. 11 at Snug Harbor beginning at 7 p.m. This will be in place of the regular monthly meeting. Santa will arrive to pass out grab bag gifts to everyone present and there will be an extra little sur prize that I swore not to divulge. MORE BABY BOYS Mr. and Mrs. Edward Crago became parents of their third son Nov. 9. Steven Michael made his ap pearance at Memorial hospital for McHenry county, Woodstock weighing 9 lbs., 7 oz. he was welcomed home by 4-year-old Duane and 15-month-old David. Mr. and Mrs. George Tripp of McHenry are the maternal grandparents. Paternal grandmother is Mrs. Margaret Crago of McHenry. Mrs. Clara Lightfoot of Dover, Tenn., and Mrs. Janie Radatz of Port Huron, Mich., are his great- grandmothers. Mr. and Mrs. Randall Freund are proud to an nounce the birth of a son Nov. 17. Joseph Randall was born in Memorial hospital for McHenry county, Woodstock, weighing 8 lbs., 4 oz., and measured 21 inches long. Maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Charles Pintozzi of Arlington Heights. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence J. Freund of McHenry are the paternal grandparents. Great grandmothers are Mrs. Mary Iacullo of Wheeling, 111., and Mrs. Millie Pintozzi of McHenry. BIRTHDAY GIRL Mark and Linda Serpes' daughter Erin turned 4- years-old Nov. 30. A party . was held for her Sunday, Nov. 23. Her talented mother * baked a cake and decorated ? it to look like a lady bug. Grandparents Ray and Eunice Kalnicky and uncles- f Steve and Bobby and aunts Laurie and LeAnn were there, as were her grandma Julia Serpe with uncle Larry and aunts Roseann and Lisa. Erin received lots of nice presents and enjoyed being the center of attention for the day. TWO PARTIES * When Natalie Krak turned 15 years old Nov. 30 she was feted to two parties. The first one took place on Thanksgiving day, when , grandpa Krak and aunt < Carol came for dinner with her and her parents Tom and Elke and sister Rochelle. The second big day took place Saturday, Nov. 29, when aunt Diane and uncle Wally came over. Neighbors Mr. and Mrs. Dobbins, Mr. Conrad and Mike and Jane with their children Jennifer and Paul also came over to enjoy some cake and ice cream. Natalie's girlfriend Cindy was there too and her boyfriend Jamie, who came with a rose for Elke and one for the birthday girl. HAPPY BIRTHDAY MR. BLUE My favorite guy, Joel Cominsky, celebrated another birthday Thursday, Dec. 4. After serving him his favorite dinner daughters Lisa and Jami presented him with his gifts and then pampered him for the rest of the evening. Mike had to work that day but was able to enjoy some cake that was served Saturday, Dec. 6. John and Joyce Cserep and Cathy, John, Annette, Scott and Joey Koscher were there too, to sing the birthday song and wish Joel many happy returns. It was John and Joyce's 35th anniversary Dec. 8, so there was cause for a double celebration. THANKSGIVING CELEBRATIONS Mary and Lester Dobbins «pent the holiday with aughter Ellyn and son- in-law Bill Iddings, at their new home in Fox River Valley Gardens. Todd, Mary Lynn and Jimmy enjoyed showing their grandparents around the house they had moved into the day before. Bill is a carpenter and has been very busy building this home since they arrived a few months ago from Florida. John and Sharon Gacek took their children Jay, Antoinette and Bobby to Chicago to grandma Anne Bielawski's home for their big feast. Everyone went over to grandparents Robert and Irene DeSilva's house that evening to visit. Aunt Donna was there with her fiance Danny Gillespie; along with Stan and Helen Wrona, Aysia and Marty, Dawn and Daniella Muscar- ello, Dennis and Bernice Kurowski, uncles Smitty, Richard and Hank and great-grandmother An toinette Mydlowski. Another turkey dinner was fixed on Sunday at the Gacek home. John took his children and their friends Evan and Debbie to the show in the afternoon while Sharon was busy in the kitchen. When they returned home everyone sat down to turkey and all the trimmings. The Cominsky family had a nice little family dinner that day that was madeeven more pleasurable when all the kids surprised us by cleaning the mess in the kitchen I made preparing the dinner. Friends Sherry and Elroy Flicek came by later to make a very enjoyable evening of good talk and lots of laughter. BELATED WISHES We do dislike missing writing a column sometimes because that means we miss sending good wishes to many people. We hope Clarence Hearle had a fine birthday Dec. 3. We know Joel Cominsky did Dec. 4. The fourth was the bir thday of Jim Kopsell; and Jim and Barbara Emery had an anniversary the same day. Robert Hughes and Mrs. Willie Meyers added another year Dec. 6. John and Joyce Cserep celebrated their 35th. an niversary Dec. 8 and Eva Steinsdoerfer turned 10 years old that day. Joyce Braun heard the birthday song Dec. 9. COMMING EVENTS Christopher Dean Walsh will be 9 years old Dec. 10 and he shares his day with David Wickenkamp and David Bremer. Keith John Fardella turns 9 on Dec. 11 and Michael Johnson and The McHenry Plaindealer Newspaper Available At The Following Locations: •WHITE HEN PANTRY •J ft L CAS •MAYS DRUG •LAKEVIEW I •BELL LIQUORS *SUNNYSIDE FOOD •McHENRY WALGREEN • JOHNSBURG FOOD MART •BOLGER'S DRUG STORE • ADAMS GROCERY •BEN FRANtfllN •OSCO DRUGS •JEWEL •HORNSBY'S •HERMES t CO. •LIQUOR MART •VILLAGE MART •J ft R STORE •MeHCMKY HOSflTAL •LITTLE STORE •FRED ft IRENE'S TAP •McHENRY QUICK MART •SUNRISE GROCERY •STEINY TAP •MCCULLOMILAKE GROC. •FOOD MART •BITS ft PIECES •NORTHWEST TRAIN Frank LaRocca add another year the same day. On Dec. 12, Joey Koscher will be 1 year old and Karen Aldrich will be ? Debbie Michaels, "Robyn Kerry Mercure and Daniel Parisi all turn 13 years old on the 13th. Bridgit Lean will turn 11 thfe same day. Nicole Marie Ketron and Candice Beth Rode both turn 10 years old Dec. 14, and they share their day with Christopher Creutz and Donna Jean Lasko. Joann Blucinski will hear the birth day song Dec. 16. Thomas Albert Hunter and Mark Dowell will be 9 years old and Amy Lynn Bassett becomes a teenager on the 16th. School Boord Members Recommend Self-Evaluation SECTION 2 • PAGE 7 - PLAINDEALER • WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER It. 1M0 Phone 312-566-1972 Daniel M. Pierce (D) 32nd MO Roger Willaims Ave. Highland Park, III., 60035 Phone 312-433-2551 EMPLOYMENT SURVEY Local representatives of the Bureau of the Census will conduct a survey of em ployment in this area during the work week of Dec. 15-19, 1980, Stanley D. Moore, director of the bureau's regional office in Chicago, has announced. The survey is conducted for the U.S. Department of Labor in a scientifically designed sample of approximately 84,000 households throughout the United States. Em ployment and unem ployment statistics based on results of this survey are used to provide a continuing measure of the economic health of the nation. School board members who depend solely on the ballot box to tell them how good a job they are doing have reached a low point; the boards that don't require their administrators to evaluate teachers just aren't doing their job. Taxpayers want to know what they're getting for their money from the public schools and an important way of telling them is by evaluating the faculty, administration, and the board itself. That was the message from two panel discussions held recently during the annual conference of the Illinois Association of school Boards (IASB) in Chicago. Evaluation begins with the board itself, IASB consultant John H. Hinck told the delegates. "There is some idea that board members are evaluated at the polls," Hinck said. "If a board gets to that point, it has certainly reached a low point." Reelection isn't necessarily a vote of confidence, given public apathy about board elections, he said, and defeat at the polls, as an assessment of performance, comes too late to do any good. "Boards can avoid that ultimate evaluation if they evaluate themselves first," Hinck said. He outlined a plan developed by IASB and used by a number of Illinois school districts, which allows boards to evaluate themselves in terms of«. policy-making, com munication with the public, evaluation of personnel and other areas. "Taxpayers won't regain their faith in the schools unless we make people accountable for their ac tions," Hinck said, urging boards to publicize their evaluation efforts. It's also up to the board to let the community know its teachers are doing their jobs, Suzanne W. Humphrey, client services specialist for the School Management foundation of Illinois, said during a panel discussion on teacher evaluation Sunday. "Although it's an ad ministrative process, it's up to the board to set policy calling for thorough teacher evaluation. "By setting the policy, the board lays the groundwork for demonstrating that teachers are doing a good job and provides, if necessary, a valid basis for dismissal. A board policy also lets the staff and community alike know that the board intends for the district to be accountable to the public," Ms. Humphrey said. The IASB conference was held in conjunction with the state associations of school administrators and school business officials. The conference consisted of panel discussions of nearly 50 school problems, as well as major addresses bjr State School Superintendent Donald G. Gill and A. Graham Down, executive director of the Council for Basic Education. IASB is a voluntary association of more than 900 school boards, created to help boards solve problems and improve performance. tmcy ought* nam* TMtt legislators State Senators Jack Schaffer <K> • 33rd. 56 N. Williams St Crystal Lake, 111., 60014 Phone 455-0309 Springfield Phone 217-782-6525 Karl Berning <R> - 32nd 625 Deerfield Road Deerfield, III., 60015 Phone 312-945-3200 Stale Representatives Thomas J. Ilanahan <D> 4801 W. Route 120 McHenry, III., 60050 Phone 385-3427 Springfield Phone 217-782-6476 Calvin L. Skinner, Jr., «R) *3rd P O Box 108 Crystal Lake. Ill,, 60014 Phone 459-6050 Springfield Phone 217-782-8000 Donald E. Deuster <R>- 32nd 510 N. Uke St. Mundelein, III., 60060 Betty Lou Reed <R> 32nd 927 Holly Court Deerfield. Ill, sonis U.S. Senator* Charles H. Percy <R> 230 S. Dearborn Room 3859 Chicago, III , 60604 Phone 312-353-4952 Adlai E. Stevenson (P> 230 S Dearborn Rimm :NW) Chicago. Ill . 60604 Phone 312-353-5420 U.S. Congress mrn John B Anderson <R> 301 W Slate St Rockford. Ill . 61101 Phone 815-962-8807 Robert McClory <R) 326 N Genesee St Waukegan. III.. MORS Phone :N2-33fi 4!V>4 Founded Early San Marino, the world's old est republic, is named after Marinus, a stonecutter who founded the 23-square-mile na tion in northeastern Italy in A.D. 301. Having A Party?--Call Us! • 10 DELICIOUS MEAT ft CHEESE PARTY TRAYS • FRESH FRUIT TRAYS • FRESH SALADS • DESSERT TRAYS • FRESH BAKERY ROLLS • COMPLETE DELICATESSEN AND OF COURSE OUR SPECIALTY: 2,3,4,5, and 6 foot SANDWICHES StiUOfiMLAill ITALIAN U-BOAT Jt»J VIRGINIA SI Hi.- IJ CiytiulLoKv II Al I KOM AKMANt I lib <»1J) 455-4110 SALE KRAKUS POLISH HAM ONLY v2.98 per lb. Fox Valley Meats °nth& BEEF SIDES U.S.0A CHOICE, x NO f CHARGE FOR CUTTING AND WRAPPING / LB. »®§f- CM'̂ -h-ase VourBee- 300 LBS. U.S.D.A. CHOICE VARIETY EXAMPLE Loin, Rib and Round - 225 lbs. Baaf •1.13 PER POUND Plus 80 lb. Bonus - No Charge TOTAL $254.25 • Porterhouse Steaks •? Bone Steaks 200 LBS. UADA. CHOICE SPECIAL EXAMPLE Loin and Round • 140 lb® Bait •1.16 PER POUND Plua 60 lb. 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