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Ina Pinkney ‘Breakfast Queen’ to share success story in LITH / INSIDE

N W H e r a l d .co m

‘READY FOR A CHANGE’

LOCAL NEWS

For Maness U.S., Ill. memorials honor late McHenry County deputy / A4 SPORTS

Thrilling win Huntley baseball gets run in ninth to edge Jacobs / B2

McHenry County Democrats hope this will be their year / 3 TODAY’S WEATHER

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LOW

81 60

High pressure will draw mild southwest winds across the area under partly to mostly sunny skies. A disturbance from the west will trigger a night shower or storm. Complete forecast on page A5


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Sunday, April 24, 2016

2

HERALD HERALD Raging along Bull Valley Road NORTHWEST NORTHWEST

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Bull Valley Road is becoming the bane of my existence. I’ve been driving it a couple of times a week for a while now between Woodstock and McHenry, and it’s been pure torture. And I’ve written about the condition of Bull Valley Road – rough and rumble for long stretches of poorly patched potholes – to police speed traps snaring anyone who is going over the limit on a road that changes speed as often as some people change their mind. But nine times out of 10, it’s someone driving with extreme caution – that is to say, driving well under the posted speed limit. And, invariably, I get behind that driver. I don’t get it. I pull onto Bull Valley Road where it intersects with Country Club Road where the speed limit is 45 mph, and I will be behind someone going 35 mph all the way to McHenry. It’s not that many miles – 4.6 miles through Bull Valley proper, to be exact – but it seems to take an eternity when the guy in front of me refuses to go faster than 35 mph the entire length of the road to Draper Road in McHenry. I’m not a particularly aggressive driver, so I keep my distance, but I’m grumbling the whole time. What I really want to do is pull up on their bumpers and lay on the horn to scare them into speeding up. But better judgment gets the best of me, and I trail well behind. It would be just my luck for the driver to suddenly hit the brakes, and I would rear-end him, and I would get the ticket, and I don’t want that. While I’m not an aggressive driver, it doesn’t mean I don’t have aggressive thoughts, and that bothers me. I should have better control of my emotions, kind of like Mr. Spock in “Star Trek.” I know enough from driving relatively short distances that you’re not going to gain that much time over the slower driver on McHenry County’s traffic-clogged roads. You can’t pass on Bull Valley Road through Bull Valley between Woodstock and McHenry, so you can’t test out that theory there. But before road construction descended upon Route 14 between Woodstock and Crystal Lake, opportunities to pass slow-moving vehicles were abundant. While getting ahead of the slow poke felt good, it wouldn’t be too long before you got behind another one or a long line of traffic, and by the time you reached the stoplight at Route 14 and Route 176 in Crystal Lake, the car you passed a few miles back would be on your tail. What did you gain other than the satisfaction of passing someone and giving you the opportunity

VIEWS Dick Peterson to drive the speed limit and then some? For a little while. So, it’s probably just as well to breathe deep and stay behind the slow poke, knowing that passing, in the end, isn’t going to make that much of a difference. And it’s probably safer not to pass on our busy highways. It’s when you’re traveling long distances that passing makes a difference, putting miles between you and the car you left behind. What is it about Bull Valley Road and slow drivers? Are they that afraid of speed traps or unaware of the clearly posted speed limit signs that they simply choose the slowest speed possible and amble along their merry way? What is it about me that can’t tolerate a slow driver for all of 4.6 miles? It’s only going to be the difference of a few minutes, yet it seems like an eternity. I need to practice patience. And I’m actually prepared for irritating drivers by factoring in enough time when I leave for my appointments to arrive on time even if I get caught behind a slow one. I mean, what can it add? Five minutes at the most? The other evening I found myself having to go to Alden for a quick trip, about 11 miles from Woodstock. Easy enough. Once you get outside Woodstock, the speed limit is 55 mph on Charles Road and Alden Road, and that means I can possibly rev it up to 63-64 mph to make good time. It wasn’t too bad on the way there, but on the way back, I got caught behind a gold and brown conversion van – you know who you are – driving 35 mph for four to five miles, and the driver built up a line of 10 cars behind him in parade. Grr. Nine times out of 10 might be an exaggeration for the number of times I get behind slow pokes on Bull Valley Road. It might be closer to five times out of 10, but when you’re behind that slow-moving vehicle, the number suddenly doubles to almost all the time. I’m teetering on road rage, but I control myself, telling myself I’ve left enough time for this, and it’s not that bad. It’s only a few miles. I can take it. Really. Just relax. This, too, shall pass. Even if I can’t.

• Dick Peterson, who lives in Woodstock, is a mental health advocate. He is a freelance writer and a former Northwest Herald Opinion Page editor. He can be contacted at dickpeterson76@gmail.com.

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Great that businesses are offering internships, but I don’t think it is the job of COC or ECDC to get involved. How many levels of government do we need to oversee internships? Is it part of their missions? Are taxpayers paying for new Chamber employees to monitor these programs/ interns? Or is nepotism going to create jobs in the future? Kelly Liebmann on both McHenry County companies and students seeing benefits from internships We should go with eliminating the executive branch followed by the legislative branch, that sounds like a good start. Ray Flavin on state Rep. David McSweeney’s bill proposing to eliminate the office of the lieutenant governor passing through the Illinois House on Friday.

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ON THE COVER Democratic candidates Lynn Gray (left), for recorder of deeds, and Melissa Coyne, for state Senate District 32, leave a Crystal Lake store Thursday. The two were asking residents attending Spring Ladies Night Out to sign petitions to have their names on the ballot in November. See story page 3. Photo by Sarah Nader – snader@shawmedia.com

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A CLOSER LOOK

3 Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Sunday, April 24, 2016 Sarah Nader – snader@shawmedia.com

Lynn Gray (right) of Marengo, a Democratic Party candidate for McHenry County recorder, waits as Colleen Sullivan of Lake in the Hills signs a petition Thursday in Crystal Lake to put Gray’s name on the ballot in November.

‘GOING TO BE A PRETTY GOOD YEAR’ McHenry County Democratic Party hopeful about local November wins

KEVIN P. CRAVER kcraver@shawmedia.com Same as the Chicago Cubs, the Democratic Party of McHenry County is thinking that this is going to be their year. A presidential race that has fractured the Republican Party, along with some votes and decisions at the County Board level, has party Chairman Michael Bissett optimistic that a number of the party’s local candidates will get into county office come November in a reliable Republican stronghold. “I think this is going to be a pretty good year for us. I think, obviously, the national election will have an impact on that, but there have been a number of pretty crazy things locally. I think voters have been paying attention to things going on, and are ready for a change. I really do,” Bissett said. The 2006 rout that handed Democrats control of Congress also resulted in the election of the first Democratic member of the County Board since 1976, and county voters in 2008, another bad year

for the GOP, added two more. But that three-seat minority became two with the tea party-fueled GOP rout in 2010, and was eliminated completely with the 2014 midterm that likewise was very good for Republicans. Bissett sees opportunities to not only get his party back on the County Board, but also into countywide office. The party ran candidates in the March 15 primary in all but one of the County Board’s six districts. It is now slating additional board candidates and gathering signatures to add candidates to run for countywide office. Andrew Breen and Robert Rosenberg, both of McHenry, were chosen for McHenry County Board District 4, and Andrew Georgi of Hebron was chosen to run in District 6. In other races, Democrats tapped Lynn Gray of Marengo for McHenry County recorder, James Harrison of Johnsburg for state’s attorney and Melissa Coyne of Fox Lake for Illinois Senate District 32.

See DEMOCRATS, page A8


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Sunday, April 24, 2016

4

LOCAL NEWS

Have a news tip?

Memorials set to honor McHenry County deputy

LOCAL DEATHS OBITUARIES ON PAGES 26-27

Alvig Dagny Carlson 91, formerly of Marengo Lionel T. DeGrand 83, Marengo Mary Jane Felt Inverness

By JORDYN REILAND jreiland@shawmedia.com

William P. Fenwick Jr. 88, McHenry Joann L. Lewis 65, McHenry Donald G. Smith 84, Burlington, Wis.

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The National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial in Washington, D.C., honors more than 20,000 U.S. officers who have died in the line of duty. McHenry County Sheriff’s Deputy Dwight Maness soon will be one of them. Maness’ name will be etched onto the memorial in the nation’s capital, and he also will be recognized and honored posthumously in May in Springfield for the State Police Memorial Ceremony. McHenry County Sheriff’s Office administration staff, supervisors and his peers plan to attend both ceremonies, Deputy Aimee Knopp said. McHenry County Sheriff’s Deputy Jen Garafol, who worked the midnight shift with Maness, said knowing his name will be on the memorial wall helps keep his legacy around forever. “Fifty years from now we may not be here, but our future generations can also go and honor our co-worker’s sacrifice,” she said in a statement. “It’s a reminder of who Dwight was and the sacrifice he made.” Maness and partner Deputy Khalia Satkiewicz responded in October 2014 to a reported domestic incident at the Holiday Hills home of Scott B. Peters, 53, who fired more than a dozen rounds at the two officers. The

HUNTLEY

Huntley High to end traditional class rank-system By ALLISON GOODRICH

47-year-old’s femur was shattered and a vein in his leg was severed in the shooting. After 15 surgeries he never regained the ability to walk. Maness spent nearly a year recovering before he developed a blood clot in his lungs and died suddenly during a physical therapy appointment in August 2015. Satkiewicz was also injured but has since returned to work at the sheriff’s office. Peters was convicted of several charges including attempted murder of police officers and sentenced to 135 years in prison. Maness’ death was declared a homicide and the state’s attorney’s office declined to seek murder charges against Peters. Garafol said she knew the job would always get done when Maness was on the scene. “Dwight always had your back,” she said. Holiday Hills Police Chief Tony Colatori organized a fundraiser to raise money to help family members of Maness to attend the memorial events. The May 1 event, hosted at 3-D Bowl in Island Lake, includes bowling, raffles and a silent auction. Tickets are $20 for adults and $10 for children, with those age 4 and younger free. “We appreciate what the county does for us,” Colatori said. “They protect our citizens when we’re not there.”

• Reporter Caitlin Swieca contributed to this report.

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HUNTLEY – Huntley High School will shift to the Latin honor system to recognize student excellence after the Huntley Community School District 158 board recently voted in favor of it. Moving away from the tradition class-rank system, which district officials said forces competition between students to rank in the top 10 percent, will retain a high standard but make the system less arbitrary, Chief Academic Officer Erika Schlicter previously said. A memo for board members said, “Class rank was a very prominent component in the college admissions process. However, many colleges and universities are moving away from using class rank and considering a more holistic approach to admissions.” The new system, which would start with the incoming class of 2020, will mean an increase in post-secondary opportunities for students, force colleges and universities to take a holistic look at students, relieve student stress about a system that’s out of their control, eliminate the competitive designation of valedictorian and salutatorian, allow students to choose classes more freely, and allow the school to recognize all students, not just the top students, according to a district memo. The new Latin honor system would recognize students with a GPA between 3.75 and 4.249 as cum laude, those between 4.25 and 4.499 as magna cum laude and those with a 4.5 or above as summa cum laude. The District 158 board’s unanimous decision comes months after Crystal Lake-based Community High School District 155 nixed class rank. According to District 158 documents, nearly 50 other suburban schools have made the move, too.

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WEATHER

5

High pressure will draw mild southwest winds across the area under partly to mostly sunny skies with temperatures near 80 F. A disturbance will approach from the west triggering a shower or storm at night. Early on Monday, a shower or storm will cross the area. Temperatures will fall to the 50s and 60s Tuesday through the weekend with several chances for rain.

TODAY

81 60

Partly sunny, warm, rain at night

MONDAY

77 47

Cloudy with a shower or storm early

56 42

Much cooler and partly sunny

Harvard

77/58

Rockford

81/60

DeKalb

78/60

71/56

81/60

Sandwich

Rock Falls

78/61

78/61

Arlington Heights

77/61

77/60

76/59

Dixon

Waukegan

Elgin

Hampshire

Oak Park

76/61

St. Charles

AIR QUALITY TODAY

78/60

Chicago

Orland Park 77/61 Hammond Joliet

78/62

77/60

77/60

Gary

75/60

Ottawa

78/62

Prs

Chg

Station

Fld

Prs

Montgomery............ 13......11.77 ......+0.02 New Munster, WI ..... 10........7.44 ........none Nippersink Lake ....... --........4.05 .......-0.04 Waukesha ................. 6........3.24 .......-0.12

WEATHER HISTORY

SUN AND MOON

On April 24, 1908, a series of tornadoes moving from Louisiana to Alabama took more than 300 lives and leveled many communities.

Source: National Allergy Bureau

Partly sunny and seasonable

67 46

Mostly sunny and mild

NATIONAL CITIES City

Atlanta Baltimore Boston Buffalo Charlotte Chicago Dallas Denver Houston Kansas City Las Vegas Los Angeles Louisville Miami Minneapolis New Orleans New York City Seattle Wash., DC

Today Hi Lo W

80 68 54 59 78 77 79 67 78 80 80 74 81 86 68 83 64 56 70

61 46 44 44 56 60 66 39 65 62 59 55 61 72 49 65 49 43 52

s s s pc s pc pc pc c t pc pc s pc r pc s sh s

Monday Hi Lo W

81 82 62 65 82 76 86 70 84 79 68 70 84 83 56 83 75 58 83

62 60 45 41 60 46 69 39 69 58 52 53 67 70 41 69 59 44 66

pc pc pc r s t pc pc pc c pc pc pc sh r pc pc pc s

Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.

Chg

Algonquin .................. 3........1.79 ........none Burlington, WI .......... 11........7.34 .......-0.10 Fox Lake .................. --........4.08 ......+0.01 McHenry.................... 4........1.93 ........none

POLLEN COUNT

61 43

NATIONAL WEATHER

FOX RIVER STAGES Fld

SATURDAY

Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.

Kankakee

76/59

0-50 Good, 51-100 Moderate, 101-150, Unhealthy for sensitive groups, 151-200 Unhealthy 201-300 Very Unhealthy, 301-500 Hazardous Forecasts and graphics, except WFLD forecasts, provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2016

72/58

Aurora

La Salle

Station

Main offender ................. particulates

Evanston

77/60

81/60

Fld: flood stage. Prs: stage in feet at 7 a.m Saturday. Chg: change in previous 24 hours.

8 a 10 a Noon 2 p 4p 6p The higher the AccuWeather.com UV Index™ number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection. 0-2 Low; 3-5 Moderate; 6-7 High; 8-10 Very High; 11+ Extreme.

Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.

72/57

Crystal Lake

79/60

59 46

Kenosha

76/59

77/59

FRIDAY

Mostly cloudy, breezy, Cloudy with a chance of rain rain and storms

McHenry

Belvidere 75/59

Freeport

THURSDAY

58 46

75/58

Statistics through 4 p.m. yesterday

UV INDEX

WEDNESDAY

Lake Geneva

ALMANAC TEMPERATURES High ............................................ 60° Low ............................................ 38° Normal high ................................ 62° Normal low ................................. 41° Record high ................... 88° in 1960 Record low .................... 25° in 1873 Peak wind ...................... E at 10 mph PRECIPITATION 24 hours through 4 p.m. yest. .... 0.00” Month to date .......................... 1.18” Normal month to date .............. 2.55” Year to date ............................. 6.59” Normal year to date ................. 8.65”

TUESDAY

Today Monday 5:58 a.m. 5:57 a.m. 7:45 p.m. 7:46 p.m. 10:08 p.m. 11:01 p.m. 7:38 a.m. 8:18 a.m.

MOON PHASES Last

New

Apr 29

May 6

First

Full

May 13 May 21

How early is too early for word that tornadoes may come? By SETH BORENSTEIN and KELLY P. KISSEL The Associated Press NORMAN, Okla. – Meteorologists are finding something much tougher to forecast than a stormy atmosphere: the human mind. Forecasters at the federal Storm Prediction Center see a high chance of severe storms, with possible killer tornadoes, Tuesday in Oklahoma, Kansas and Texas. Federal Emergency Management Agency chief Craig Fugate said the early heads-up helps disaster officials prepare. But what about you: Do you really need to worry – or even know

about it – this far in advance? For all of their advances in the physical sciences, forecasters have yet to determine when advance warnings are most effective and how urgent their messages should be. They worry about the “cry wolf” syndrome, in which people may tune them out, and about people over-reacting, especially with tornadoes. People have left much safer buildings and headed into their cars to flee, but cars are the last place you want to be in a tornado. And it’s not just tornadoes. Forecasters still are trying to understand why several people in Houston ignored the

mantra “turn around, don’t drown” and died after driving onto flooded streets last week. After mastering physics, meteorologists must now master psychology. With people, “things change all the time. That makes studying humans infinitely harder than studying physical processes,” said Kim Klockow, a visiting scientist at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s headquarters. “We are leaps and bounds ahead in physics.” Klockow has studied both meteorology and human behavior, and he was hired to help the federal government

find the right mix of social and physical sciences in its warnings. There’s a test Tuesday. In guidance distributed Thursday to emergency managers and local forecasters, the Storm Prediction Center used the term “severe weather outbreak possible” – the earliest it ever has used that language ahead of potential severe weather, SPC spokeswoman Keli Pirtle said. Six days out, forecasters were 30 percent sure that severe storms will develop Tuesday in an area stretching roughly from Dallas to Wichita, Kansas, including much of Oklahoma.

Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Sunday, April 24, 2016

SEVEN-DAY FORECAST FOR MCHENRY COUNTY


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Sunday, April 24, 2016

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Northwest Herald Web Poll Question Log on to www.NWHerald.com and vote on today’s poll question:

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NORTHWEST HERALD | Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Sunday, April 24, 2016


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Sunday, April 24, 2016

| CLOSER LOOK

8

• DEMOCRATS

Continued from page A3 Bissett said he anticipates something of a boost if Donald Trump or a similarly unpopular candidate wins the Republican nomination for president. He likewise pointed to the energy brought to the Democratic table by candidate Bernie Sanders – while front-runner Hillary Clinton won Illinois last month, Sanders carried McHenry County’s Democratic voters with 60 percent of the vote. “I don’t think it will help dramatically, but depending on who [Republicans] nominate, and what kind of campaign they run, it’s apt to getting a lot of moderate Republicans to take a look at what we offer locally,” Bissett said. However, the McHenry County Republican Party the Democrats have faced since 2014 is a new breed with new and very politically aggressive leadership. The new leadership team, headed by Chairwoman Sandra Salgado, has prioritized the election and appointing of precinct committeemen dedicated to knocking on doors and getting out the vote. While the county Democratic Party is looking to add seats, the Republicans are focusing not only on preventing that from happening, but also on wresting the 63rd Illinois House District away from longtime Democratic

incumbent Jack Franks. The Marengo legislator and McHenry Township Supervisor Mary Mahady are the two elected Democratic representatives in the county, not counting party members holding nonpartisan offices. “I appreciate [county Democrats’] vigor, but I’m very confident that the Republican Party is stronger than it was in 2014, and they’re not going to find any weak links in our chain … everyone is on the same page moving forward in this election,” Salgado said. And while the Democrats can point to Trump or controversial votes by GOP legislators in Washington and other state legislatures, county Republicans can point to the Illinois General Assembly – which has House and Senate Democratic supermajorities – and the financial mess that the state faces. It’s a connection that Bissett and his fellow county Democrats have fought for years to disavow, repeatedly stressing that the party is independent of any Springfield or Chicago political machine. He said the party’s focus always has been, and will be this election year, on McHenry County. “It’s going to be up to us to go out and talk to voters. We want to talk to people at the door and find out what their concerns are. I think we do a better job of that than our competition. I think we always have,” Bissett said.

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      

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


Log on to www.NWHerald.com and vote on today’s poll question:

What position should the Bears draft in the first round?

Saturday’s results as of 11 p.m.:

Did you work as a summer intern? Yes

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Photos provided

Cary man raises $5,450 for Turning Point as he runs Boston Marathon By KATIE DAHLSTROM

Buy or Refi...

kdahlstrom@shawmedia.com CARY – Before he ran the Boston Marathon, Jeff Farmer took a black permanent marker to his arms. On his left forearm, he wrote his daughters’ names: Addie and Kenzie. On the right, he wrote the name of McHenry County’s only comprehensive domestic violence shelter: Turning Point. “I can’t tell you how many times I looked down at my arms to get me through,” Farmer said. “My main goal was to finish.” He did. Cary resident Farmer finished the Boston Marathon in 5 hours, 38 minutes and 48 seconds, coming in as runner No. 26,014 to cross the finish line of the grueling course Monday. Beyond completing his first marathon, Farmer was able to raise $5,450 to donate to Turning Point. About 30,000 people participated in the marathon. Of those, 24,000 had to run a previous marathon to qualify. Farmer was one of 6,000 who entered to run for charity, as a VIP guest or a few other exceptions. He chose to run for Turning Point because he has a special connection to the agency. His mother, Jane Farmer,

Nancy Howley

Farmer shows his marked-up arm, with the names of his daughters and a message of inspiration – “You can do everything you put your heart in!” – to help him run the Boston Marathon on Monday.

Jeff Farmer shows his medal for running the Boston Marathon on Monday. is Turning Point’s executive director. But more than that, he believes in the agency’s mission to help women, children and men who are survivors of do-

mestic violence. His initial goal was to raise $5,000 to support various agency needs. He beat that goal the weekend before the race. Although Farmer is holding off on making a decision to run another marathon, he has no regrets about taking on the hills and heat along the 26.2mile course. He described it as a party the entire way, especially in the last quarter-mile stretch when the crowd and his family erupted in cheers. “It was like I was scoring the final touchdown of the Super Bowl,” Farmer said. “It was an amazing experience.”

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Jeff Farmer (left) of Cary runs the Boston Marathon on Monday. Farmer raised $5,450 for Turning Point, McHenry County’s only comprehensive domestic violence shelter, which is run by his mother, Jane Farmer.

9

LOCAL NEWS | Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

Northwest Herald Web Poll Question


House OKs Tryon bill that increases access to fruits and vegetables NORTHWEST HERALD SPRINGFIELD – Illinoisans who rely on public assistance programs may soon be able to use their benefits to gain better access to fresh fruits and vegetables at farmers markets throughout Illinois, state Rep. Mike Tryon announced in a news release. HB 6027, sponsored State Rep. by Tryon, R-Crystal Mike Tryon Lake, would allow Illinois to participate in the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Nutrition Incentive Program, and would enable low-income citizens to use their SNAP benefits or LINK cards at farmers markets for the purchase of fresh fruits and vegetables, Tryon said in the release. The legislation passed the House on Friday. It now advances to the Sen-

ate, which is expected to consider it in May. “Today we have 500 farmers markets in Illinois, but only 68 of them accept LINK cards,” Tryon said. “The provisions of my bill will allow public assistance benefits to be used all over the state at farmers markets, and incentivize lower income citizens to purchase healthy foods.” If approved and signed into law, the legislation also would allow Illinois to take advantage of $100 million in federal funds that have been earmarked for healthy foods programs, Tryon said. “In some parts of the state, people’s access to fresh fruits and vegetables is limited,” Tryon said. “My hope is that this legislation will prompt more farmers markets to open throughout Illinois so that more and more people can have better access to healthier food choices.”

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Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Sunday, April 24, 2016

| LOCAL NEWS

12 MARENGO

Incident at treatment plant prompts review By HANNAH PROKOP hprokop@shawmedia.com

MARENGO – A recent incident at the Marengo wastewater treatment plant has prompted the city to address what Marengo Mayor Donald Lockhart called “chain of command issues.” Marengo City Administrator Gary Boden said the incident was blown out of proportion on social media, and brought up concerns about who had what information at what time. “Generally, the problem was far less severe as what [it was] characterized as, and the question is, ‘How did that information get out?’ ” Boden said. The problems started April 6 when Erik Evertsen, wastewater treatment plant foreman, discovered a mixer in the plant had come off the wall wand and was hanging by the cord, Director of Public Works Howard Moser said in a memo to the city. Moser said Evertsen notified him of the problem and called the contractor

“Generally, the problem was far less severe as what [it was] characterized as, and the question is, ‘How did that information get out?’ ” Gary Boden Marengo city administrator

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LOCAL NEWS | Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

incident April 11, he said. Another problem was noted on April 12, Moser said, and results from the testing of the composite sampler were not good. Since then, though, the system has appeared to be in good condition, he said. A letter from Karen Katamay, environmental engineer with the IEPA, included in the packet for the Marengo City Council’s consideration Monday states that the problems experienced were not uncommon and Evertsen responded well to the incident. Katamay also said in the letter, dated April 18, that the facility is in compliance. Boden said that through information the city has received through social media and verbally, rumors were spread about the plant. Lockhart has asked for an independent third party, arranged through the city attorney, to determine “just exactly what was said to who and when and

Welcome Dr. Bonnie L. Bremer, May 2016

CVS

Continued from page A12

perhaps why,” according to a letter from Lockhart to the city council. He also asked the council to review a draft of a resolution at Monday’s meeting that clearly defines the lines of communication that should be followed in the city. The resolution will be voted on after Donald the fact-finding process Lockhart is complete. “In light of the fact that an incident at the treatment plant went unreported to the public works director, the assistant administrator, the administrator Gary Boden or my office, I believe it is critical that we, as elected officials, declare how incidents, no matter how serious, should be reported,” Lockhart said in a statement. The next Marengo City Council meeting is 7 p.m. Monday at Marengo City Hall, 132 E. Prairie St.

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Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Sunday, April 24, 2016

| LOCAL NEWS

14 McHENRY COUNTY

Zoning board considers renewing permits

Property owner wants to continue gravel business By HANNAH PROKOP hprokop@shawmedia.com WOODSTOCK — Owners of a 204acre property located about a mile south of Kishwaukee Valley Road and South Rose Farm Road in Seneca Township are applying to renew the property’s conditional use permit to allow the continued operation of a gravel excavation and processing business on the property. They’re also asking for a renewal of a conditional use permit to allow concrete recycling and a concrete readymix plant on a 5-acre portion of the property, which is causing some concern for residents in the surrounding the area. Steve Gavers is an operator of the facility, run by Valley Aggregates LLC, and appeared at the hearing as an agent of his mother, Sally Gavers, according to the transcript. The McHenry County Zoning Board

of Appeals is expected to make a decision on its recommendation at 1:30 p.m. May 12 at the McHenry County Administration building, 667 Ware Road, Woodstock. Kim Kolner, senior planner with the county, said after the board makes its recommendation, it will typically go before the McHenry County Board for final consideration at its next meeting. The first conditional use permit was issued for the site in 1985, according to a staff report for the zoning board of appeals. Another was issued for concrete recycling and a ready mix in 1993, and both of the conditional use permits were renewed in 1995 and most recently in 2005, the report stated. “There’s no change” to the property, Gavers said after the second hearing Wednesday. At an April 7 McHenry County Zoning Board of Appeals meeting, attended by about 20 members of the public, Gavers testified about the detailed extraction and reclamation process that happens on the property, according to a meeting transcript. Gavers said the business receives

concrete and processes and recycles it on site. During peak time, there can be 15 to 20 trucks going through the property per day, he said. The recycling operation occurs in the middle of the property, Gavers said. There is also a mixer near the recycling operation that hasn’t been put into operation yet because of the huge economic downturn, Gavers said. If the recycling operation was put into operation, Gavers said it wouldn’t increase truck traffic because work would be being done in house. He also confirmed the business did not have any active violations from the county’s planning and development department and health department. Donald Palmer, professional engineering consultant with Baxter and Woodman, has worked with the Gavers for 20 years, he said at the second hearing Wednesday. Palmer described the operations of the plant and fielded questions from the board before the public was allowed to ask comments and ask questions. About 10 people were in the audience at Wednesday’s hearing, and they asked questions regarding their con-

cerns on how the property’s operations will affect noise in the area, the environment and property values. One resident who attended the meeting, Norb Ziemer, owns a property that borders the Gavers’ property. “As neighbors and members of the community there, we hope to see a continuation of the present conditions, the use of surround lands as agricultural lands, and we are concerned to not see an increased level of truck traffic,” Ziemer said. Ziemer, and another neighbor, Ben Widoff, said their concern is not as much with the property the way it is run now, but what would happen if another owner took over. Some worried that an owner could expand the property to farmland on the property east of Rose Farm Road and south of South Street Road, but Gavers maintained the land would not be excavated. Kolner said typically conditional use permits stick with the land and not the owner, which is why neighbors want to make sure their concerns are taken into consideration for the conditional permit.

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HUNTLEY

By CAITLIN SWIECA cswieca@shawmedia.com

funding because his business was hurt by the streetscape construction that took over downtown last year, hindering his ability to save money. “For the whole year last year, I lost a lot of money because of construction,” Galanis, who estimated his losses at $60,000, said. “I was saving to do the work. Now, if we want it finished to do the job right, I need more money, which I don’t have.” When asked, he said business had improved since construction ended. Village trustees agreed they wanted to help Galanis make improvements but were concerned about setting a precedent with the extra funding. “We’ve had other people apply to the program, and they’ve spent a lot more than we’ve given them,” Trustee Harry Leopold said. “I would not find it sufficient justification to change our program at this time.” Most trustees echoed that sentiment, though Trustee Niko Kanakaris

• Sunday, April 24, 2016

HUNTLEY – Village Inn owner Bill Galanis will go back to the drawing board with his exterior renovation plans after village trustees balked at his funding request that exceeded the village’s guidelines. Galanis presented plans for $76,092.80 worth of renovations to the outside of the restaurant at 11713 E. Main St., which included installing a stone base, increasing the height of the front wall by 4 feet, installing six faux windows and replacing the siding on the building, among other improvements. The owner initially requested $50,000 in funding through the village’s Facade Improvement Assistance Program. While staff said the project qualified for the program, its guidelines dictate only half the project, or $38,046.40, could be funded over a twoyear period. Galanis said he asked for the extra

LOCAL NEWS | Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

Trustees balk at request from Village Inn owner

See HUNTLEY, page A16

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Eventually, the board asked Galanis and his planners to consider scaling back the project so he could afford it within the guidelines of the program. “I think you should try to revise it and come back with something that is affordable for you and acceptable to us,” Leopold said.

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16


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NORTHWEST HERALD | Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

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Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Sunday, April 24, 2016

| NORTHWEST HERALD

Notice of Names of Persons Appearing to be the Owners of Unclaimed Property

MC HENRY COUNTY 1 17 2011 Horif A Finishing Touch Pa Po Box 1079 Aa Sewer Water Excavating Corp 1309 Borden St 2 Abelkis Mariecharlotte 9 Muirfield Ct Adams Carstar Collision Center 11550 Kreutzer Rd Adams Collision 592 Darlington Ln Apt 7 Adams Roy 7502 Cuneo Drive Adams Taylor R 430 Dacy St Aguilar Isidro 393 Ridge Ave Albert Jeff A 1622 Beach Rd Algonquin Investment Company 4014 Northwest Highway Algonquin Mobil Mart Inc 609 S Main St Algonquin Orthodontics 1227 S Main St All Green Lawn Care 306 N Kent Rd All Star Towing 10715 Wolf Dr Allen Alice B 215 Meadow Ln Allen Jessica C 215 Meadow Ln Alvarado Sara 504 4th St Americas Auto Body 334 Emerald Ln Americas Servicing Co 7604 Pheasant Rd Andrade Cirila 266 Plymouth Ln Andres M 3911 Grove Avenue Aptargroup Inc 475 W Terra Cotta Ave Ste E Argent Mortgage Co Llc Ariston Divinia Jovita M 460 Mira St Armon Dale D Po Box 302 13703 Route 173 Arthur M Krause Trust 2318 W Justen Road Assisi Animal Foundation Po Box 143 Assured Quality Enterprises 1034 Keppler Dr Audrey E Krause Trust 2318 W Jesten Road Ayala Tomasa 132 W Woodstock St Babneau Alberta 9620 St Albin Po Box 525 Ball Roger J 1502 Pebble Ln Ballot Patricia 339 Cary Point Drive Bartlett Kitty C 8921 Pine Ave Bartman Harold 1414 Holian Drive Batjes William 748 Pairie Vw Apt 3c Bay View Beach Property Owners Assoc 1318 Beach St Behning Lucas R 610 Glenbrook Rd Belvidere Auto Body 871 Cambridge Ln Benbennick Erik T 1980 Cloverdale Benbennick Thomas M 1980 Cloverdale Benjamin Jason P 1925 Cary Rd Benner Nicholas 6301 Robert Rd SM-CL0335696

Hebron Huntley Mchenry Lake In The Hills Huntley Crystal Lake Spring Grove Woodstock Crystal Lake Mchenry Crystal Lake Algonquin Algonquin Mchenry Huntley Oakwood Hills Oakwood Hills Harvard Algonquin Wonder Lake Crystal Lake Mchenry Woodstock Null Crystal Lake Hebron Mchenry Crystal Lake Marengo Mchenry Crystal Lake Hebron Crystal Lake Cary Wonder Lake Spring Grove Woodstock Crystal Lake Crystal Lake Crystal Lake Algonquin Algonquin Algonquin Cary

Berg Anna L 1406 Hillside Ln Bernardi Cartage Inc Po Box 764 Bernhardt Brock J 396 Douglas Ave Bernhardt Jakob T 396 Douglas Ave Berrier Tammy D 3613 Cornell Ct Bevz Vasyl 4304 W Shamrock Ln Apt 2a Bickel Daniel 800 Oak Manor Dr Birr Amanda 10628 Great Plaines Drive Black Diamond Plumbing & Mech Inc 748 Tek Dr Bohun Joseph 3021 Geneava Rd Bojdo Jozef 38142 N 6th Ave Boltz David J 10825 Shenandoah Ct Book Vine For Children 3980 Albany St Bosco Rosemarie 1104 Heavens Gate Bourgeois Melissa M 5922 Beachway St Bowden Jeff P 1453 Bridgedale Rd Brabec Kimberly 2370 Stanton Cir Brady Hj 605 Devonshire Ct Unit D Brandwein Edw 11436 Russell Dr Brenner Laurie 54 Margaret Terrace Breskovich Joseph H 1432 Park Ridge Drive Briceno Alonso 330 N Il Route 31 Brighter Ideas Homebuilder Inc Po Box 325 Brockway Robert 1804 Deerhaven Drive Brooks David D 608 Ridgeland Avenue Brooks David L Ii 118 N Rose Farm Rd Brooks Nancy L 608 Ridgeland Avenue Brooks Teresa S 118 N Rose Farm Rd Brown Kevin E 3041 Baldwin Ln Brown Tyler K 3041 Baldwin Ln Brubaker Lee B 1325 Spring Hill Dr Bruzgo Diane K 8504 Burton Rd Bryans Douglas 3695 Tamarack Circle Bryant Starla J 516 Rand Dr Buck Addison C 545 Stony Hill Ln Buck Dennis 3503 Coachlite Road Buck Jamie C 545 Stony Hill Ln Buck Quinnlyn G 545 Stony Hill Ln Buehrer Elsie 8002 Blivin St 182 Bull Valley Holdings 2612 Oak Ridge Rd Bunting Christine 4813 W Bonner Dr Burke James J 321 Carl Sands Dr Burke Tatum Bering 10801 Michigan Dr Butler Gertrude W

Mchenry Woodstock Crystal Lake Crystal Lake Mchenry Mchenry Marengo Huntley Crystal Lake Lake In The Hills Spring Grove Huntley Mchenry Lake In The Hills Cary Crystal Lake Lake In The Hills Mchenry Huntley Cary Crystal Lake Crystal Lake Hebron Crystal Lake Woodstock Woodstock Woodstock Woodstock Lake In The Hills Lake In The Hills Algonquin Wonder Lake Crystal Lake Mchenry Crystal Lake Crystal Lake Crystal Lake Crystal Lake Spring Grove Crystal Lake Mchenry Cary Spring Grove Null

Butler Sharon A 5218 W Beach Ave C And H Counseling Solutions 800 Mchenry Ave Callahan Ronald 4403 Mapleleaf Dr Camacho Baldo Sanchez 698 Mchenry Apt B Campbell Michael 7507 Redwood St Campion Curran Dunlop 8600 Us Hwy 14 Ste 201 Cardinal Recovery Group 10565 Longfield Dr Carlson Harold E Jr 14037 Verband Path Carpenter Faon 582 Darlington Ln 5 Carter Jack W 1583 Autumncrest Dr Casassa Lisa 1373 Lochlomond Dr Cassata Paul A 12009 S Rt 47 Castromoreno Ashley 361 Dartmoor Dr Certifibre Llc 2615 Three Oaks Rd Chapman Robert Charles 400 Sossulk Drive Charter One Chase Home Finance Llc 609 Sara Ln Chavez Jose Luis 607 Jefferson Street Chemtool Inc 8200 Ridgefield Road Chevron Roofing Inc Po Box 687 Chung Mai T 151 Annandale Dr Chupin Blanca 4137 W Dickens Ciromike Inc Cjm Construction Group Inc 2022 S Route 31 Ste F Colatorti Antonio 221 S Main St Collins Robert 1564 Skyridge Dr Unit 2 Collision Decision 100 Detroit Street Colon Jose A Cruz 50 Gates Conerty Janet 1959 Joseph St Conley Jeremey 537 Central Parkway Rd Apt 211 Contreras Estevan 120 West Brink St Apt 4 Contreras Jose 120 West Brink St Apt 4 Conway Leona 302 W Oriole Trail Cordoba Enriqu 11062 Preston Pkwy Coss Troy 374 Hickory Dr Crabill Derek D 1843 Woodside Dr Craserhodes Tiffany L 3511 Bunker Hill Dr Cronk Maria T 2690 Melbourne Ln Crystal Lake Honda 210 North Route 31 Custodia Maria 94 Ridge Ave Czuba David 110 S Walkup Ave Daloia John Jr 1381 Westbourne Pkwy Dalton Victoria 5019 Pistakee Dr Daniel Restorations Inc 5201 W Orchard Drive

Mchenry Crystal Lake Mchenry Woodstock Crystal Lake Crystal Lake Huntley Huntley Crystal Lake Crystal Lake Crystal Lake Huntley Crystal Lake Cary Algonquin Null Marengo Woodstock Crystal Lake Mchenry Lake In The Hills Mchenry Null Mchenry Algonquin Crystal Lake Cary Crystal Lake Woodstock Woodstock Harvard Harvard Mchenry Huntley Crystal Lake Woodstock Algonquin Lake In The Hills Crystal Lake Crystal Lake Crystal Lake Algonquin Mchenry Mchenry


19 Mchenry Mchenry Harvard Mchenry Lake In The Hills Cary Cary Huntley Huntley Woodstock Lake In The Hills Cary Mchenry Lake In The Hills Huntley Algonquin Johnsburg Algonquin Huntley Mchenry Huntley Crystal Lake Johnsburg Crystal Lake Algonquin Wonder Lake Wonder Lake Spring Grove Crystal Lake Woodstock Woodstock Cary Richmond Ringwood Mchenry Lake In The Hills Lake In The Hills Algonquin Lake In The Hills Crystal Lake Lake In The Hills Marengo Harvard Mchenry Huntley Woodstock Woodstock Woodstock Marengo Harvard Cary Woodstock Marengo Woodstock Woodstock Crystal Lake Harvard Crystal Lake Algonquin Crystal Lake Harvard

Franks Troy 730 S Mchenry Ave Apt 2 Freund Diana 5316 Oak Park Rd Frisbie & Lohmeyer Inc 301 N Madison St Froehlich & Coyle Inc Po Box 7607 Fron Janice D 12107 Hideaway Dr Fron Kenneth J 12107 Hideaway Dr Fuchs Celeste 801 Oak Grove Rd Fuchs Fredrick 801 Oak Grove Rd G&L Sunset Properties Po Box 69 Grove Galvez Amy 10615 Elizabeth Ave Garcia Aaron 192 Elmhurst St 103 Garcia Claudio Grove Garcia Roberto Mora 2027 Stone Lake Rd Apt 109 Garciacastilla Arcelia 206 E Washington St Garciacastilla Arcelia 206 E Washinton St Apt 1 Garland Lillian 1911 North Rogers Ave Garrett Matthew F 7202 Salem Road Garven Dave 12172 S Route 47 Suite 101 Garven David 10785 Wing Pointe Dr Garven David 163 Village Creek Dr Gaskill Dena 42 Honeysuckle Ln Gaskill John 42 Honeysuckle Ln Gates David 32 Petrick Ln Global Innovation Group Inc 377 Sterling Circle Globe Inc Or Jd Kirchberg 4117 Church Hill Ln Gloria R Neumayer Somers Trust 512 James Court Gniewotta Randall P 7 51530 Range Road 264 Goehrke Robert C 10306 Brighton Ln Goetz Daniel 1000 Three Oaks Rd Goldman Janet M 1512 Yellowhead Ct Gonzalez Evalia 31587 N Borre Dr Gonzaleznieto Miguel 25 Faringdon Dr Granite Guys Inc 446 Porter Ave Greco Vincent R 82 Caroline St Gren Carl 719 Wiltshire Ct Gren Karl 719 Wiltshire Ct Grinnell Jeffery R 9178 Falcon Greens Dr Lakewood Grinnell Susan M 9178 Falcon Greens Dr Lakewood Griswold Donna Grytza Jennifer A 9792 Sheldon Rd Guerra Adrian 418 Scott St Gurke Dale 23017 Grange Rd Gurke Mary 23017 Grange Rd Guth Brian 441 Candlewood H And H Auto Inc 2309 N Ringwood Rd Hacker Dolores 337 W Oriole Trl Hafeez Rana F 3040 Dominion Lane Haider Huma S 10821 Wheatlands Way Haider Shazad A 10821 Wheatlands Way Hale Matthew W 13201 Paris Rd Hall Daniel 1020 Gaslight Dr Hall Virginia L 840 N Seminary Ave Hampton Kaneishia 231 Prairie St Apt D Hams Nathaniel S 233 Mark Ct Hanley Michael Hanley Pamela Hardshine Technology Inc Po Box 550

Crystal Lake Oakwood Hills Woodstock Algonquin Huntley Huntley Johnsburg Johnsburg Fox River Huntley Crystal Lake Fox River Woodstock Woodstock Harvard Mchenry Wonder Lake Huntley Huntley Lake In The Hills Crystal Lake Crystal Lake Crystal Lake Cary Crystal Lake Algonquin Spring Grove Huntley Cary Woodstock Mchenry Crystal Lake Crystal Lake Crystal Lake Crystal Lake Crystal Lake Village Of Village Of Null Huntley Algonquin Marengo Marengo Algonquin Mchenry Cary Lakemoor Huntley Huntley Woodstock Algonquin Woodstock Crystal Lake Woodstock Null Null Huntley

Haro Jose 621 N Belmont Ave Hartenberger Gerald F 764 Dover Ct Harvey Curtis 740 Normandy Lane Hasecke Erika R 13001 Pennsylvania Ave Hauck Theresa Dr 4310 W Crystal Lake Rd Ste B Hecht John 10186 Compton Dr Hecht Michele M 10186 Compton Dr Hecht Richard K 10186 Compton Dr Henderson Kathleen R 1249 Mitchell St Henkemeyer Heidi 1208 Sycamore St Hennig Aubrey M 513 N Kensington Hennig Christina 513 N Kensington Hensen Richard I 606 4th Ave Herbert Mary Jean 308 Waterford Ct Hernandez Domingo 196 Woodstock St Herron Jonathan B 10901 Partridge Trl Hespeler Martin E 575 Red Cypress Dr Heyes Justin 3611 Hilltop Drive Highland Shores Property Owners Po Box 277 Hight Robert 10607 Phillip Dr Hilton Keegan J Hinklin Erin 5522 Chancery Way Hinson John 1073 Barlina Road Hoffman Carolyn E 612 W Lincoln Rd Holderman Carol L 3006 Mourine Holifield Daric 139 E Todd Ave Hollander Lisa 4813 Claire Street Hollenback William Po Box 44 Home State Mortgage Group 40 Grant St Homes By Huffman Inc 3210 W Hunter Path Hopkins Natalie A 4321 Whitehall Lane Hopp David 8516 Hill Rd Hopp Kenneth 1008 Ascot Dr Horlbeck Anne V 13665 Whittingham Ln Horlbeck Charles I 13665 Whittingham Ln Howk Kathryn A 3103 Bull Valley Rd Howk Michael 3103 Bull Valley Rd Hsbc Huang Chien Y 12262 Donahue Dr Huber David 240 Lake Avenue Hucksteadt Beverly 461 W Judd St Huckstorf John F 6917 Maple St Huckstorf Ralph E 6917 Maple St Huddleston Scott 1249 Mitchell St Hughes Holly Anne 6306 Scott Ln Hughes Megan Anne 6306 Scott Ln Humphreys Roberta Po Box 44 Huntington Evelyn I 9715 Hunters Ln Illinois Elite 10908 N Main St Illinois Spine Institute 3416 W Elm St Ingalls Jerome L Insight Investigations Llc Po Box 631 Insurance Specialists Inc 212 W Main Street Suite 1 Iverson Brenda L 1301 Ardmore St J Man Investment Group Llc 400 Fieldcrest Dr Ja Frate Inc 401k Po Box 497 Jacobs Billy 1618 W Hillside Jacobsen N 1223 Sagebrush Trl Jagels Frank O Iii 3518 Raycraft Rd Jaques Robert C 2136 Coachlight Ln Jarosz Jamie 1685 Carlemont Dr Apt B

Crystal Lake Crystal Lake Lake In The Hills Huntley Mchenry Huntley Huntley Huntley Woodstock Lake In The Hills Mchenry Mchenry Marengo Mchenry Crystal Lake Richmond Cary Wonder Lake Wonder Lake Huntley Null Lake In The Hills Crystal Lake Mchenry Mchenry Woodstock Crystal Lake Mchenry Crystal Lake Mchenry Algonquin Marengo Crystal Lake Huntley Huntley Mchenry Mchenry Null Huntley Woodstock Woodstock Marengo Marengo Woodstock Crystal Lake Crystal Lake Mchenry Spring Grove Richmond Mchenry Null Marengo Cary Cary Algonquin Crystal Lake Crystal Lake Cary Woodstock Spring Grove Crystal Lake

• Sunday, April 24, 2016

Dans Auto Body 1117 Front Royal Ct Dans Auto Body 125 W Valley View Dr Davidson Ginny L 21615 Streit Rd Davila Isaly 721 N Mill St Apt 2a Davis Cedric 14 Danbury Ct Depinto Katherine M 616 Knollwood Dr Depinto Michael 616 Knollwood Dr Desai Ankur 12225 Hadley Dr Desai Shailaja 12225 Hadley Dr Devries Tammy 2103 Willow Brook Dr Apt 2b Diamond Marketing Consultants Inc 3316 Sonoma Circle Diane Louise Billing Trust 622 Aberdeen Road Didriksen Richard 5117 Westwood Dr Dietz Paul 5507 Chancery Way Dill W W 14533 Burgundy Way Dimoda Development Llc 2413 W Algonquin Rd No 432 Dittmer Cynthia 3914 Hamlin Rd Dls Po Box 7426 Dog Training Solutions 9175 Buckingham Ct Dolata Mary Beth 3416 W Elm St Domino Joe 9672 Bennington Dorantes Apolinar 430 Westwood Ct Apt B Dotson Barry 2105 Johnsburg Rd 2 Douglass Daniel 90 Pauline Ave Dukesmaluga Margaret 205 La Fox River Dr Duncan Helen 8015 Widoff Dr Duncan Helen Est 8015 Widoff Dr Duncan Irene 1245 Main St Rd Durant Ricky 592 Darlington Ln Apt 7 Durr Trina 531 Central Parkway Rd Apt 305 Dwyer Patrick A Jr 2710 S Country Club Rd Eisele Mia 99 South Wulff St Elite Insurance Group Llc Po Box 488 Elite Insurance Group Llc Po Box 489 Elkes Joel Dr 3324 Rocky Beach Rd Endler David J 16 Grant St Endler Sally L 16 Grant St Epstein Brad L 10 Rose Hill Ct Essick Kathryn I 987 Mesa Dr Fairhead Scott S 668 Concord Dr Falcon Services Inc 1521 Imhoff Dr Unit D Farm Service & Supplies Po Box 147 Fernandezmendoza Silbano 519 Shadow Dr Fernando Luna 502 Mchenry Ave Apt 309 First Loan Mortgage Ltd 11510 East Main St Fisher Rita J 1010 Greenwood Cir Fitch Laura J 1948 Tappan St Fitch Ronald E 1948 Tappan St Flores Hipolito 317 5 S State St Flores Sofia 19886 Mc Guire Road Florik Trust 402 Cove Dr Flying Goose Farm Limited Partnership 14605 West South St Follett Asia 520 E Prairie Ford Clara M 1817 Cherry Valley Rd Ford William H 1817 Cherry Valley Rd Forsea Maria 580 Somerset Ln Apt 6 Foss Troy 410 W Blaine St Fox Valley Animal Hospital 6115 Northwest Hwy Fox Valley Financial Llc 777 E Algonquin Rd Fox Valley Internal Medicine 650 Dakota St Suite A Franklin Thomas S 18318 Rte 173

NORTHWEST HERALD | Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

MC HENRY COUNTY


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Sunday, April 24, 2016

| NORTHWEST HERALD

20 MC HENRY COUNTY Jas Jck Inc 1520 S Carlemont Dr G Jason Chez Revocable Trust 3310 Banford Circle Jepsen Erica R 6188 Kilkenny Drive Jevorutsky Ma 5714 Fox Lake Rd Jfm Enterprises Inc 360 S Division Street Jimarz Victoria 4016 Lillina St Jjpn Inc 7401 Spring Grove Rd John A Raber Associates 4134 W Crystal Lake Road Johnson Curtis Gregory 8412 Abbott Lane Johnson Fredda 141 Mchenry Ave Johnson Jacquelyn K 775 B E Irving Park Rd Johnson Kevin M 9 Tenneyson Ct Johnson Tricia A 1121 Greenwood Circle Joosten Timothy R 604 E Grant Hwy Apt 4a Joseph Peter S 7420 Mohawk Dr Julian Linda 5019 Pistakee Dr Jz Services Inc 1065 W Algonquin Rd Ste A Kahlon Gautan 28812 Bakers Dr Kalas Arron 649 Silver Creek Rd Kap Roofing 93 Bershire Drive Kasperczyk Krzysztof 8504 Burton Rd Kawalkowski Patricia Margaret 1210 Yosemite Pkwy Keevil Cherie E 335 Illinois Street Kellner Ann M Kennedy Janice E 1203 Berwyn St Kenneth J Fron Living Trust 12107 Hideaway Dr Kiefer Gina M 303 E Oak St Kinney M Po Box 368 711 W Brown St Kirchberg J D 4117 Church Hill Ln Kitaku Kitaku Kleopfer Bernard M 8516 Shady Ln Kleopfer Elizabeth M 8516 Shady Ln Kling Harold T 12335 D Knutson Virginia H 130 Sunnyside Ave Koch John 10905 Huron Dr Koester Leroy G 4501 W Crystal Lake Rd Koh Junyoung 1586 Millbrook Dr Kolberg Jamie 516 Rand Dr Kolton Sharon 13659 Winterberry Ln Konieczny Jonathon T 11156 Hanover Ave Konieczny Tamara L 11156 Hanover Ave Koppen Lyle C 11902 Morris Dr Kostecki Frances Po Box 263 Grove Kowalke Phyllis 11206 Bellflower Ln Kozel Gaye 1817 W Ringwood Rd Kozel Mary C 1817 W Ringwood Rd Kozysa Peter M 26 Echo Hill Kraeplin Thomas J 5421 W Sherman Dr Kramer Elizabeth 221115 Grenadier D Krause Arthur M 2318 W Justen Road Krause Arthur M Sr 2318 W Justen Road Krause Audrey E 2318 S Justen Rd Kreisel Michael R Po Box 7214 Kropp Barbara 394 Spruce Lane Kropp Barbara A 950 Sheffield Ct Kropp Elener 394 Spruce Lane Kropp Richard 394 Spruce Lane Kruse John J 722 Wiltshire Kruse Kathy 3105 Larkspur Rd Kruse Kathy 722 Wiltshire Kueking David R 425 Sunset Dr Kueking Wendy 425 Sunset Dr Kuiper William J 5922 Beachway St Kuljanin Zelmir 620 Pokagon Dr Kum Na Y 1586 Millbrook Dr Kyralys Llc 13 Royal Oak Ct Lafontaine Kathy 748 Hickman Lafontaine Kyle 748 Hickman Lamberty Karilyn 10409 Evendale Rd Lapp David L 678 Regent Dr

Crystal Lake Lake In The Hills Crystal Lake Mchenry Harvard Mchenry Spring Grove Mchenry Cary Crystal Lake Crystal Lake Lake In The Hills Woodstock Marengo Wonder Lake Mchenry Lake In The Hills Lakemoor Woodstock Crystal Lake Wonder Lake Algonquin Crystal Lake Null Spring Grove Huntley Lake In The Hills Harvard Crystal Lake Hebron Wonder Lake Wonder Lake Huntley Crystal Lake Spring Grove Mchenry Algonquin Mchenry Huntley Huntley Huntley Marengo Fox River Huntley Mchenry Mchenry Lake In The Hills Mchenry Marengo Mchenry Mchenry Mchenry Algonquin Crystal Lake Crystal Lake Crystal Lake Crystal Lake Crystal Lake Crystal Lake Crystal Lake Marengo Marengo Cary Algonquin Algonquin Lake In The Hills Woodstock Woodstock Huntley Crystal Lake

Lapp Jackie L 678 Regent Dr Larry Patricia 1081 Greenwood Cr Larson Susan Z 180 Evergreen Pky Latos Stan N 1401 Seneca Ct Laudicina Anthony 663 Devonshire Laurent Patricia 12106 Tuliptree Ln Lawyers Insurance Agency Inc Po Box 1929 Learning Tree Preschool Of Crystal Lake 485 Woodstock St Lebbos Awad 128 Harvest Gate Lebbos Marie 128 Harvest Gate Leja Anita M Lekich Carla 17801 Altenburg Rd Lemcke Peter 413 S Emerald Dr Lengerman Dane W 9701 Longfield Drive Lenzini Michael 7 Brindlewood Ct Leon Adriana M 906 Cynthia Ln Lewandowski Margaret P 1938 N Orleans St Apt C Lines Robert 280 E Terra Cotta Ave Lines Robert E 280 E Terra Cotta Ave Linjanen Franz A 312 N Thornwood Dr Linjanen Nikki 312 N Thornwood Dr Lloyd Helenann 1718 Lehman Ave Lopez Alberto 135 N Ford St Lorenzo Jeffrey 1220 Yosemite Pkwy Loucks David 962 Coventry Ln Low Ins Po Box 1045 Luckeelkes Sally 3324 Rocky Beach Rd Luna Guadalupe 4709 William St Lunsford Gertrude Lunsford William Machen Sophia Day 3 Bunker Hill Ct Machen Stephen 3 Bunker Hill Ct Macintosh Scott 57 Victoria St Macintyre Naomi A Est 5320 Burma Rd Mago Mark F 244 Crystal St Mahan Robert B 1167 Greenwood Cir Makowski Damien 7504 Birch St Mallas Mohamed 4137 W Dickens Maloolmem Denise A 5716 Woodland Dr Maluga Brian 205 La Fox River Dr Mangler Cynthia 700 Providence Ln Mansfield Gerri 470 Winslow Way Mantel Gwendolyn 711 Elsinoor Ln Mantel Raymond A 711 Elsinoor Ln Manusos Charles J Po Box 308 Manusos Morgan J Po Box 308 Marchand Alfons 1430 Walnut Dr Marie Sierra 5234 Greenshire Cir Marion Schreck Revocable Trust 703 W Washington Market Financial Group Ltd 240 Commerce Dr Markgraff Catherine M 4511 Harts Rd Mars Joanne E 503 Willow St Marshall Joseph Michael 2709 Crystal Lake Rd Marshall Ryan James 2709 Crystal Lake Rd Martin J Carolan Tr 8507 Richmond Rd Martinez Lynette M 2413 N Marquardt Ln Martinez Valente 4812 Bonner Dr Marx Transport Inc 116 Fox Street Massaro Daniel E 9793 Compton Dr Master Spa Of Wi 8601 A Pyott Road Masterson Kevin J 1224 Westport Rdg Mater Gloria 1095 Pingree Rd Ste 214 Matson Dale 6009 Lakeview Dr May Diana 7118 Seminole Drive May Lawrence W 632 634 St Johns Road May Steven 7118 Seminole Drive Mayber Kenneth 695 Coverntry Lane Mazurek Tyler F 5204 Fountain Lane Mccray Alvin 4555 Mackinac St Mcgrath Matthew J 740 St Andrews Ln Apt 1

Crystal Lake Woodstock Crystal Lake Woodstock Crystal Lake Huntley Cary Crystal Lake Lake In The Hills Lake In The Hills Null Harvard Mchenry Huntley Algonquin Lake In The Hills Mchenry Crystal Lake Crystal Lake Mchenry Mchenry Algonquin Marengo Algonquin Crystal Lake Mchenry Mchenry Johnsburg Mchenry Mchenry Algonquin Algonquin Richmond Marengo Cary Woodstock Crystal Lake Mchenry Mchenry Algonquin Crystal Lake Lake In The Hills Crystal Lake Crystal Lake Mchenry Mchenry Woodstock Lake In The Hills Harvard Crystal Lake Ringwood Algonquin Cary Cary Wonder Lake Mchenry Mchenry Cary Huntley Lake In The Hills Crystal Lake Crystal Lake Cary Wonder Lake Woodstock Wonder Lake Crystal Lake Mchenry Lake In The Hills Crystal Lake

Mcgregor Scott 10820 Bull Valley Road Mchenry County Imports Inc 210 North Route 31 Mckinney Elizabeth A 507 Scott St Mckinney Ronald J 507 Scott St Mcneil Margaret 1301 Jefferson St Mcomber Kelly 527 Cary Woods Cir Meade Tricia A 113 Shawnee Lane Meade Tyson T 113 Shawnee Lane Melich Marsha R 206 N Fleming Rd Mercado Everardo 713 W Brink St Mercado Everardo Po Box 324 Mercado Ortiz 713 W Brink St Mercado Rene 400 W Blaine St Merchant Larry 830 Bristol Merrigan Sandra C 5721 George St Metro Mechanical Inc 360 Memorial Dr Ste 140 Meyers Joann A Est 513 Springcreek Ln Michael R Minerva Trust 5311 W Malibu Ct Mielcarek Andrzej W 10934 Madison Way Mikalunas Krista Regina 9 Muirfield Ct Miller Kelly A 1976 Concord Dr Miller Raymond C Jr Po Box 407 Miller Ryan 5805 Mccauley Mills Marian B 1208 Jasper Dr Millstream Ests Inc Po Box 1144 Moe Pension Fund Monk Rebecca Monsen Florence M 1209 Appaloosa Trail Montero Hugo 1295 Merrimack Ct Montrose Keith 2508 S Kinilworth Ave Morales Crystal 206 E Washington St Moralesgarcia Juan E 206 E Washinton St Apt 1 Morita Jun Morries Brooklyn Park Bodyworks 2512 Huemann Dr Morris Elizabeth L 107 S River Rd Mortgage Insurance Agency Ltd 1125 Mitchell Court Mueller Joseph E 1117 Front Royal Ct Mundt Ann 9016 Shady Ln Murphy Deborah S 4480 Heron Dr Murphy Dillen P 4480 Heron Dr Murphy Kimberly Ann 1911 North Rogers Ave Murrin Thomas 26 Starr Drive Musat Sorin 1705 Thorneapple Ln My Fathers World Preschool 932 S Mchenry Ave National Youth Athlete Development 237 Ash St Nehls Freda M Nehls Randy Nehls Ronald V New Castle Services Inc 1915 N Seminary Ave Nguyen Tuyet 151 Annandale Dr Ocampos Jose 11405 Rte 14 Ocampos Martha G 11405 Rte 14 Odean Cynthia L 81 S Williams Street Apt 133 Oker Annette 2512 Huemann Dr Olson Jennifer 1206 Maple Street Olson Robert A 1335 New Haven Dr Olvera Mario Sanchez 2031 Stone Lake Rd 116 Omega Industries Inc 9180 Trinity Dr Optical Engines Inc 5412 S Il Route 31 Ste 4 Other World Computing Div New Concpts 1004 Courtaulds Drive Otlewis Jack E Po Box 572 Overton Mary D 4908 Dartmoor Pacchini Insurance Agency 45 N Virginia St Paez Filadelfio 830 Kingston Pagsanjan Kate 4382 Princeton Ln Palmer Leon Palmer W M Parikh Mahesh Md 690 Route 31 Parkin Alan 1000 Three Oaks Rd Parlier Robert E 1505 Appalloosa Trail

Woodstock Crystal Lake Algonquin Algonquin Lake In The Hills Cary Harvard Harvard Woodstock Harvard Harvard Harvard Harvard Algonquin Richmond Crystal Lake Woodstock Mchenry Huntley Lake In The Hills Mchenry Marengo Woodstock Mchenry Huntley Null Huntley Mchenry Crystal Lake Mchenry Woodstock Harvard Hebron Mchenry Fox River Grove Crystal Lake Mchenry Wonder Lake Lake In The Hills Lake In The Hills Mchenry Algonquin Algonquin Crystal Lake Crystal Lake Woodstock Woodstock Woodstock Woodstock Lake In The Hills Harvard Harvard Crystal Lake Mchenry Lake In The Hills Cary Woodstock Lake In The Hills Crystal Lake Woodstock Crystal Lake Mchenry Crystal Lake Crystal Lake Lake In The Hills Harvard Harvard Crystal Lake Cary Mchenry


21 Harvard Cary Crystal Lake Crystal Lake Algonquin Algonquin Algonquin Mchenry Spring Grove Cary Wonder Lake Mchenry Woodstock Mchenry Mchenry Mchenry Mchenry Lake In The Hills Crystal Lake Johnsburg Woodstock Algonquin Spring Grove Algonquin Mchenry Prairie Grove Cary Johnsburg Fox River Grove Huntley Algonquin Algonquin Mchenry Marengo Harvard Lakemoor Crystal Lake Richmond Woodstock Huntley Huntley Huntley Mchenry Huntley Cary Cary Wonder Lake Fox River Grove Spring Grove Mchenry Harvard Harvard Oakwood Hills Lake In The Hills Mchenry Crystal Lake Wonder Lake Wonder Lake Lake In The Hills Lake In The Hills Mchenry

Rocks Bar And Grill 394 W Virginia St Rodriguez Candido R 266 Plymouth Ln Rodriguez Leonardo 266 Plymouth Ln Rodriguez Sandra L 1295 Merrimack Ct Rodriguez Valentino 12 Fenview Ct Rogman Christopher J 114 College St Romanowski Adam 1180 Ridgewood Cir Romerocamuzano Efrain 799 Coventry Ln Romerogonzalez Alma Rosa 519 Shadow Dr Roscher Robert 28967 W Sunset Drive Rose Donald E 5905 Willow Ct Rose Herbert E Po Box 333 Rose Tracie L 5905 Willow Ct Rose Wyatt Mercer 5905 Willow Ct Rosemin Emily 3711 Waukegan Road Apt 3 Ross Joseph R Ross Ruth A Rudnicki Beth Po Box 1045 Rueff Jerry M 235 Deer Run Ruiz Apolonio 425 Amber Wood Ct Rusch Thomas E 8755 Country Shire Lane Rusch Thomas J 8755 Country Shire Lane Ryan Laura 3 Rosslare Ct Salas Mateo 871 Cambridge Ln Salim M Syed 5353 Lansbury Circle Samuelson Sharon 5410 Wainwright Dr Sanchez Jose 2309 N Ringwood Rd Apt Unit Santiagoortega Felix 3804 Mill St Santos Antonio 393 Ridge Ave Sass Richard R 12284 Quail Ridge Drive Savino Dominick 1028 Draper Rd Schmidt Thomas L 28496 Highview Rd Schmutzler Mark H 4181 Bunker Hill Drive Schmutzler Sandra L 4181 Bunker Hill Drive Schneider Steve 23812 Il Route 173 Schremp Christopher 1546 Dogwood Dr Schremp Kylie E 1546 Dogwood Dr Schulz Adeline 5210 N Pleasant View Dr Schumann Maggye 511 Winder Mill Schuster Danny T 1406 Otter Trl Schwarz Joseph E 2110 Lincoln Ave Schwarz Margaret R 2110 Lincoln Ave Schwegel Joan 4609 W Crystal Lake Rd Apt 275 Scott Michelle L 17815 Depot St Shages Beverly J 5704 Mckenzie Dr Shages William V Iii 5704 Mckenzie Dr Shallenbarger Blake R 931 Tara Court Shapiro Sarah M 172 Hilltop Dr Shelton George B 2903 N Wooded Lane Sherman Imports Llc Po Box Sieck Andrew Siesennop Thomas 1677 Stockton Ln Simmons John 4716 E Upland Dr Simon Anne M 125 Courtney Lane Slaughter Ellie 438 Doe Ln Smith David 113 Bluff Rd Smith Gail A 5416 Greenview Rd Smith Helen 113 Bluff Rd Smith Nancy H 840 N Seminary Ave Snapon Industrial Po Box 9004 Snell Matthew W 2 Ash Drive Oakwood Hills

Crystal Lake Crystal Lake Crystal Lake Crystal Lake Oakwood Hills Crystal Lake Lake In The Hills Crystal Lake Harvard Lakemoor Crystal Lake Crystal Lake Crystal Lake Crystal Lake Mchenry Null Null Mchenry Crystal Lake Algonquin Spring Grove Spring Grove Cary Crystal Lake Lake In The Hills Wonder Lake Mchenry Mchenry Crystal Lake Huntley Mchenry Mchenry Algonquin Algonquin Harvard Crystal Lake Crystal Lake Mchenry Lake In The Hills Cary Fox River Grove Fox River Grove Mchenry Union Lake In The Hills Lake In The Hills Woodstock Algonquin Mchenry Mchenry Null Crystal Lake Crystal Lake Cary Mchenry Trout Valley Cary Trout Valley Woodstock Crystal Lake Cary

Snitchler Samantha 725 Oak Hollow Court Sonday Diane 2050 South Eastwood Drive Sorensen Hanna 2039 Concord Dr Soskin David 2500 Behan Sova Joe 1360 Cunat Ct Apt 2c Sova Ronald A 2919 N River Rd Sparkle Cleaner 1307 Washington St Sriram Manjula 925 Alexandra Blvd Staley A E Iii 2919 Walnut Manor Ct Stallworth Ronnie L 210 Ridge Ln Staron Violetta 14 Margate Ct Staveteig Ervin 1414 W Lincoln Rd Stebli Joseph 18108 Garden Valley Rd Stephenson Wi 1408 Woodland Pkwy Steven R Verr Aty 4911 W Flanders Rd Stoner Keith 5118 Hickory Lane Strey William 215 Hawthorne Rd Strieter Nancy 7037 Liam Ln Stuart Rachel A 10455 Casselberry S Stuart Richard 521 Green View Dr Summit Custom Carpentry 11331 Greenway Drive Susanke Laura L 7211 Seminole Swichtenberg Jeanne 12343 Rolling Meadows Ln Tafolla Benjamin H 1313 Clay St Taggart Andre 38141 N Lee Ave Tanga Fine Lingerie Inc 195 Aberdeen Dr Taylor Donald Po Box 525 9620 St Albin Taylor James G 500 W Wegner Rd Temore Louis Jr 5234 Greenshire Cir Thinnes Richard Ii 113 N Crystal Beach Ave Thomas F Liston Trust 4904 Hickory Way Thomas J Popovich Pc Law Office3416 W Elm St Thompason Emily N 632 Arthur Dr Thompson Jennifer N 632 Arthur Dr Timber Construction Ltd 454 Timber Dr Tomal Holly A Tomasino Kyle A 1381 Westbourne Pkwy Tomaszewski May Anna 1406 Hillside Ln Transport 10715 Wolf Dr Trant Daniel F 4200 Thomas Dr Trebonsky Mazy A Po Box 302 13703 Route 173 Tures Elizabeth A 529 Eagle Street Turner Kay 2316 Colby Pt Rd Ultimate Filters 3712 Fawn Ln Ungvarsky Ann 4812 Daniel Dr United M Corp 820 E Terra Cotta Urban Roger G Po Box 2157 Urdal Arvid 10934 Concord Lane Usbg Trans Inc 640 Majestic Dr Vanacker Ronald L 15618 Harmony Rd Vandoorn Joseph D 3610 Great Hill Rd Vandoorn Dean 3610 Great Hill Rd Varner Jaymee T 715 Northfield Ave 9 Vasilakis Angelo 1901 Anthony Ln Vasilakis Veronica 1901 Anthony Ln Veareining Gavin Rober 303 E Oak St Vega Laura 2742 Laureta Play Velasquez Bradley 1192 Fieldstone Dr Velmers Eric Est 8019 Maplewood Villanueva Jd 365b South Pack Ave Villareal Isaia 2630 Cadbury Cir

Crystal Lake Woodstock Mchenry Crystal Lake Lake In The Hills Algonquin Lake In The Hills Crystal Lake Crystal Lake Lake In The Hills Lake In The Hills Mchenry Marengo Spring Grove Mchenry Mchenry Lake In The Hills Mchenry Huntley Algonquin Huntley Wonder Lake Huntley Woodstock Spring Grove Algonquin Hebron Mchenry Lake In The Hills Crystal Lake Johnsburg Mchenry Cary Cary Harvard Null Algonquin Mchenry Huntley Woodstock Hebron Crystal Lake Mchenry Wonder Lake Crystal Lake Crystal Lake Crystal Lake Huntley Algonquin Huntley Crystal Lake Crystal Lake Harvard Mchenry Mchenry Lake In The Hills Hebron Crystal Lake Wonder Lake Harvard Lake In The Hills

• Sunday, April 24, 2016

Pasieka Stanley 504 Timber Dr Past Dorothy H 26 Pine Cir Pautz Barbara 950 Sheffield Ct Pautz Denise 950 Sheffield Ct Payne Lucile G 1300 Charles Ave Payne Thomas M 1300 Charles Ave Payton Natasha G 3511 Bunker Hill Dr Pearson Linda L 1817 W Oakleaf Dr Pendletonburke Julie E 10801 Michigan Dr Pennington Chuck O Jr 213 Lakewood Perez Fermin Jr 3408 Hilltop Dr Perez Joellyn L 5311 W Malibu Ct Perez Luis 136 W Melody St Perry Richard H 1816 N Riverside Dr Pesmenski Nancy 1938 N Orleans St Apt C Pesz Andrew M 4812 Roberts Rd Pesz Gertrude R 4812 Roberts Rd Petropulos Nancy 3521 Sandstone Phillips Rebecca 1395 Skyridge Dr Apt E Piche Sharon 2403 W Fairview Pierce Daniel J 410 Dane St Pierce David 1505 Charles Ave Pistakee Interiors Inc 7801 Industrial Drive Suite E Platinum Collateral Services Po Box 7506 Polizzi Allison 1722 Pine St Porter Jeffrey Practical Communications 2615 Three Oaks Rd Ste 1b Pratt Richard J 1300 Old Bay Rd Prb Inc 1050 E Northwest Hwy Precin Mary A 12156 Tuliptree Ln Preston Lois 9502 Route 31 Preston Marian E 503 Willow St Prf Enterprises Inc 7706 Burr Oak Dr Probst Margaret 840 Cayuga Trail Proper Wayne 107 W Diggins St Prybil Annie M 545 Autumn Blvd Apt 203 Quinney Jacklyn 621 N Belmont Ave Raffauf Kim 5441 Morning Dove Circle Rahn Henry E 840 N Seminary Ave Raidart Gloria T 12181 Tuliptree Ln Rajagopalan Priya 12366 Bartelt Lane Rajagopalan Ramesh 12366 Bartelt Lane Rebman Robert 812 N Green St Reid James F 12906 Rock Spring Ln Reina Josephine 125 Courtney Lane Reina Leo J 125 Courtney Lane Reinert James Po Box 0698 Residental Mgmt Resources 9617 E Witchie Dr 0 Ribar Brothers 37810 N Lake Vista Terrace Richard H Perry Liv Trust 1816 N Riverside Dr Richardson Clarence Richardson Geneva Rick Albert 12 Meadow Ln Rios Urbano 5349 Lansbury Cir Rische Christopher 2208 Manor Ln Rivera Lazaro M 528 Nunda Trl Rizzi James 7604 Pheasant Rd Rizzi Susan 7604 Pheasant Rd Rizzo Natalia A 3368 Worthington Lane Rizzo Nicole N 3368 Worthington Lane Rock Christine 355 Herbert Rd

NORTHWEST HERALD | Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

MC HENRY COUNTY


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Sunday, April 24, 2016

| NORTHWEST HERALD

22 MC HENRY COUNTY Villareal Valerie 2630 Cadbury Cir Villareal Yn Jr 2630 Cadbury Cir Villegas Ernesto 278 Diane Ct Vo Tuyet Nt 660 White Pine Cir Vonallmen Logan 1510 W Cobblestone Ct Voutiritsas John W Wade Dill Revoc Living Trust 14533 Burgundy Way Wade Joel 4181 Whitehall Lane Wagner Joel 830 West Vista Wahl Marion 7307 Maxon Road Wajda Max J 329 Dean St Walker Martin D 27738 Groveland Ave Walmart 1205 S Route 31 Ward George L 803 Hale St Ward Valavra 803 Hale St Warner Keith 104 Hickory Nut Grove Ln Weeks Trystan 125 W Valley View Dr Weidner Albert V 2920 Northside Ave Wenzel David 965 N Brighton Cir Unit 101 Wenzel Margaret 965 N Brighton Cir Unit 101

Lake In The Hills Lake In The Hills Woodstock Lake In The Hills Johnsburg Null Huntley Algonquin Algonquin Harvard Woodstock Spring Grove Crystal Lake Marengo Marengo Cary Mchenry Mchenry Crystal Lake Crystal Lake

Werfelmann Andrew 1105 Applewood Ln Wetterman Verna 7509 Hillside Rd White Lucille M 1104 Heavens Gate Whiting James 717 12 Washington St Whitney Christine L 407 Opatrny Dr Wienke Robert J 604 Stewart Ave Wilczewski Gr 12 Meadow Ln Wilczewski Ha 12 Meadow Ln Williams And Williams 55 E Crystal Lake Ave Williams Matt 5517 W Chasefield Cir Wilshire Financial Wilson Colleen M 334 Emerald Ln Wilson David F 3703 Rose Ann Ct Wilson Debra E 3703 Rose Ann Ct Wilson Kellie A 361 Oakmont Dr Wilson Morgan Kay 3703 Rose Ann Ct Winters Christine S 341 Elden Dr Winters John 341 Elden Dr Woellert Insurance Agency Inc Po Box 247 Woisetschlaeger Chi L 901 Chancery Lane

Algonquin Crystal Lake Lake In The Hills Woodstock Fox River Grove Woodstock Oakwood Hills Oakwood Hills Crystal Lake Mchenry Null Algonquin Wonder Lake Wonder Lake Cary Wonder Lake Cary Cary Spring Grove Cary

Woisetschlaeger John W 901 Chancery Lane Wolfe Britta L 757 Golden Oak Cir Wonder Lake Village Of 4444 Thompson Rd Woodson Wilbur 4211 Savoy Lane Woodstock Ballet Studio 227 E Calhoun St Woodstock Harleydavidson Worosz Debra L 5513 Fox Lake Rd Wright Tetss A 5004 County Oaks Drive Wurtz Kerry A 2712 Sterling Dr Wymer Dave 1020 Brittany Bnd Wymer Laura 1020 Brittany Bnd Young Albert L 404 Crest Dr Young Charles E 705 Oak St Young Chris 1220 Yosemite Pkwy Young Miss Diana Lea 404 Crest Dr Young Mrs Linda 404 Crest Dr Zamroziewicz Adrian 26 Echo Hill Zane Beatric Est 4608 Wil Zarinana Miguel 3715 Grandview Zorich Sharon L 812 Villa Dr

Cary Crystal Lake Wonder Lake Mchenry Woodstock Woodstock Mchenry Mchenry Mchenry Algonquin Algonquin Cary Cary Algonquin Cary Cary Lake In The Hills Harvard Gurnee Crystal Lake

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One of the McHenry County Historical Society’s priorities is the preservation of historical buildings and structures across the county. The original Hanley Brick Mill in McHenry is a good example of preservation and repurposing. Originally built in 1870 by Alexander Hanley, one of the community’s early settlers, the mill first made bricks and later added a grist mill for flour. Over time, this successful mill had six owners, was nominated for the National Register for Historic Places and was threatened with demolition because of abandonment, disuse and infestation. James Althoff eventually bought the building in 1982 and renovated if for offices. He kept most of the unique architectural and structural features – including 12-inch beams, 12-foot ceilings and a 3-foot-thick fieldstone foundation – intact, while updating electrical service and plumbing. Sadly, the water wheel that churned water from Boone Creek is gone. The historical society museum marks its 40th year with a grand opening and local craft beer tasting (age 21 and older) from 6 to 9 p.m. Friday. Thanks to the generosity of Chain O’Lakes Brewing Co. of McHenry, Crystal Lake Brewing Co., Scorched Earth Brewing Co. of Algonquin and Emmett’s Brewing Co. of West Dundee all proceeds benefit the Society. For details, visit GotHistory.org.

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23

LOCAL NEWS | Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

T I M E C A P S U L E

45 W. Crystal Lake Rd. 4520 McHenry, IL 60050 Mc (815) 385-3660 (8


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Sunday, April 24, 2016

| LOCAL NEWS

24 CARY

Senior housing plan gets OK from village By CAITLIN SWIECA cswieca@shawmedia.com

CARY – The Village Board approved a 62-unit affordable senior housing development at the southwest corner of Three Oaks Road and Feinberg Drive by a 4-3 vote Tuesday. The project from Ohio-based PIRHL, which first was presented to trustees in October, was supported by Village President Mark Kownick and Trustees Dave Chapman, Rick Dudek and Ellen McAlpine. At the suggestion of Trustee Jim Cosler, the board took two separate votes on the developer’s requests: one to add regulations specific to senior housing within the zoning code, and another to grant the project a conditional use permit. The approved plan included a community meeting space of up to 1,800 feet that the developer added at the request of the village, although trustees

Tuesday debated the merits of the community room as opposed to collecting more impact fees. PIRHL will pay $100,000 in impact fees to the village, which equates to $1,612 a unit, and raised the minimum age to live in the facility from 55 to 62. The project still will need approval for tax credits from the Illinois Housing Development Authority before moving forward. Cosler and Trustees Kim Covelli and Jeff Kraus voted against the project, with Cosler and Kraus questioning the zoning process that led to PIRHL’s passage. The project received a negative recommendation in December when requesting variances from the Board of Zoning, Planning and Appeals. In January, trustees voted to send the project back to the zoning board after the developer expressed concerns about how

See HOUSING, page A25

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the vote was handled. Zoning Board Chairman Joe Tournier resigned after being demoted in February, and an altered request from PIRHL received a positive recommendation last month. “It was pretty clear this was going to fail [in January],” Cosler said. “This was sent back to the Zoning Board so PIRHL could come in line with our ordinances. Instead, our ordinances are being proposed to change.” Kraus said he saw senior housing as a definite need in Cary, but he felt the process of addressing that need has

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McHENRY – Pioneer Center for Human Services will host its seventh annual SleepOut for Shelter on May 14 at The Church of Holy Apostles, 5211 Bull Valley Road, McHenry. Proceeds will benefit McHenry County PADS, Pioneer Center’s program for the homeless. Participants can raise money by collecting pledges to sleep outside in tents, cars and even cardboard shelters. There are three ways to get involved – register to

25

LOCAL NEWS | Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

Continued from page A24

been handled poorly dating back to the village’s development of a comprehensive plan. He objected to the fact that the village was changing its ordinances in response to a developer rather than changing its code and allowing developers to meet requirements. “I think we ought to let this fail and go back and do our homework so we do know, as a board of trustees, exactly what do we see as a vision for senior housing in our community, and then move forward from there,” Kraus said. “I find it really disappointing that I’m in this fight-or-flight mode for a subject I think we all feel strongly about and should have in the community.”


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Sunday, April 24, 2016

26

OBITUARIES ALVIG DAGNY CARLSON Born: Sept. 27, 1924 Died: Jan. 10, 2016

LIONEL DeGRAND

Born: May 23, 1932; in Escanaba, MI Died: April 22, 2016; in Woodstock, IL

MARY JANE FELT

Mary Jane Felt, nee Duris, of Inverness, passed away Alvig Dagny Carlson, our Lionel T. DeGrand, 83, of April 16, 2016. Beloved wife lovely mother, slipped away Marengo passed away April of the late Judge James peacefully at her daugh22, 2016, at JourneyCare in H. Felt; loving mother of ter’s home in Monterey, Woodstock. He was born Elizabeth Felt (Raymond CA. She spent her last year May 23, 1932, in Escanaba, S.) Wakeman, Margo Felt there enjoying the stunning MI, the son of Ruth DeGrand. and John Felt (Jordan Peavey); cherished beauty and ideal weather of On July 5, 1952, he married grandmother of Stephen James Wakeman, that area. Constance Baranski. Sophia Lily and Jack Alexandre Boningue, She is survived by her daughter, Roberta Lionel owned his own business, Country- and Griffin Henry Felt; dearest sister of Carlson; and her sons, Peter Hulthenius of side Builders, for many years. He was also a Elizabeth Ann (Robert) Kaehler and the Stockholm, Sweden, and Bill Carlson (Chris- longtime member of the Union Lions Club. late Daniel F. Duris, III; loving sister-in-law tine) of Peoria, IL; and grandchildren Jeffrey Lionel is survived by his wife, Connie; of Margaret Anne Felt; fond aunt, beloved and Julie Carlson. his children, Gail (Howard) Andrews, cousin and treasured friend of many. She was predeceased by her beloved Lionel (Wendy) DeGrand Jr., Mark (Sandra) Mary Jane was preceded in death by her husband, Roy, who died July 19, 1996. DeGrand and Roger (Vicki) DeGrand; four parents, Daniel and Mildred (nee Fitzgerald) Alvig was an elegant and remarkable grandchildren, Bethany (Danny), Kristin Duris Jr. lady who embraced her role as a wife and (Steven), Maggie, and Stephanie; one Originally from Boston, she was the mother, exuding love, kindness, accepgreat-grandchild, Madelynne; two sisters, personal secretary to Sen. Ted Kennedy and worked as a real estate agent for ReMax tance, and loyalty. Her sense of adventure Doris Stanis and Jean Koester; and many led her to marry Roy, the love of her life, six nieces and nephews. Unlimited for many years, specializing in Inverness homes. months after meeting him in her hometown He was preceded in death by his grandof Malmo, Sweden. She moved to Marengo, children, Lauren and Richie; and his siblings, A memorial visitation will be held ThursIL, in 1975, at the age of 50. Tom, Norma, Trudy, Fern and Kitty. day, April 28, 5 to 8 p.m. at Smith-Corcoran She loved travel, cooking, gardening, Visitation will be from 2 to 8 p.m. on Funeral Home, 185 E. Northwest Highway, spending time with family and friends, and Sunday, April 24, at Marengo-Union Funeral Palatine and Friday, April 29, 9:30 to 10:15 being at their summer cabin on the Upper Home, 505 E. Grant Highway, Marengo. The a.m., with memorial Mass to follow at Peninsula of Michigan. She also spent many funeral Mass will be celebrated at 10:30 10:30 a.m. at Holy Family Church, 2515 W. years as a member of a Swedish breakfast a.m. on Monday, April 25, at Sacred Heart Palatine Road, Inverness. Interment will be club. Catholic Church, 323 N. Taylor St., Marengo. Some years after Roy’s passing, she Interment will be in Sacred Heart Cemetery. ted ora c moved to Rockford, where she gained an Memorials may be made to Florence e ed ed added circle of friends with whom she Nursing Home in Marengo or to the Union daetwly R p yU N regularly gathered to eat out and play cards Lions Club. ewl N and dominoes. For information call the funeral home at Words cannot describe our sadness at her passing or the love and respect felt by her family and friends. She will be dearly missed by all. A celebration of life followed by a luncheon will be held for family and friends at the Marengo Presbyterian Church on April 30 at 11:30 a.m.

815-568-8131. Online condolences may be made at www.marengo-unionfuneralhome. com.

Rose Marie Goralka

private. In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made to the charity of your choice. Info: 847-359-8020 or visit Mary Jane’s memorial at www.smithcorcoran.com. • Continued on page A27

How to submit Send obituary information to obits@ NWHerald.com or call 815-526-4438. Notices are accepted until 3 p.m. for the next day’s edition. Obituaries also appear online at NWHerald.com/obits where you may sign the guest book, send flowers or make a memorial donation.

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• Continued from page A26

DONALD G. SMITH Born: Jan. 1, 1932 Died: April 22, 2016

Donald G. Smith, age 84, of Burlington, WI, passed away following a long illness on Friday, April 22, 2016, at his home.

He was born in Hebron, IL, on Jan. 1, 1932, a son of the late Fred and Laura (May) Smith. He was married to Margaret Neuhaus on July 10, 1951, in Whitewater, WI. He was a graduate of Hebron High School in 1952. He was a Navy veteran of Korea, being a gunners mate 3rd Class from April 1951 to March 1955. He was very patriotic and belonged to the Genoa City American Legion Post 183. He was a former member of the VFW and the Loyal Order of Moose. He was a union carpenter for 38 years, retiring in 1992, belonging to Carpenters Local 2087 of Crystal Lake, IL. He enjoyed hunting, fishing, gardening and bowling, and was an avid reader. Donald is survived by his wife, Margaret; two daughters, Sally (Scott) Miller of Woodstock, IL; Patricia Smith of Hoffman Estates, IL; a son, Steven Smith of Genoa City, WI; five grandchildren, Kristin, Eric and Patrick Miller, Natalie and Lindsay Smith; two sisters, June (Lee) Haines of Melbourne, FL, and Alice (Gordon) Johnson of Hebron, IL. He was preceded by four brothers, Albert, Gust, James and Robert L. Smith. Memorial visitation will be from 9 to 11 a.m. Wednesday, April 27, 2016, at Ehorn-Adams Funeral Home, 10011 Main St., Richmond. Funeral services will be at 11 a.m. on Wednesday, April 27, 2016, with the Rev. Andy Tyrrell officiating. Military honors will follow. In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made to the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society, 651 W. Washington Blvd., Suite 400, Chicago, IL 60661. For information, please call 815-678-7311 or visit www.ehornadams.com.

FUNERAL ARRANGEMENTS Norma C. Anderson: The visitation will be and Paul Catholic Church, 410 N. First St., from 10 a.m. until the 11 a.m. funeral service Cary. For information, call the funeral home Monday, April 25, at First United Methodist at 847-639-3817. Church, 201 W. South St., Woodstock. Burial Alvig Dagny Carlson: A celebration of life will be in Oakland Cemetery. For inforwill be at 11:30 a.m. Saturday, April 30, at mation, call Schneider-Leucht-Merwin & Presbyterian Church in Marengo. A lunCooney Funeral Home at 815-338-1710. cheon for family and friends will follow. Harold L. Arteese: The visitation will be from Virgene Ehorn-Weber: The visitation will 3 until 5 p.m. Monday, April 25, at Justen Fu- be from 9 a.m. until the 11:30 a.m. funeral neral Home & Crematory, 3700 W. Charles service Thursday, April 28, at Ehorn-Adams J. Miller Road, McHenry. The cremation rite Funeral Home, 10011 Main St., Richmond. was accorded privately. For information, Interment will be in Richmond Cemetery in call the funeral home at 815-385-2400. Richmond. Joan Joy Blust: The visitation will be from 9 Mary Jane Felt: The visitation will be a.m. until the 10 a.m. funeral Mass celebrafrom 5 to 8 p.m. Thursday, April 28, at tion Monday, April 25, in the narthex of St. Smith-Corcoran Funeral Home, 185 E. NorthMary Catholic Church, 10307 Dundee Road, west Highway, Palatine. The visitation will Huntley. Burial will be private. continue from 9:30 a.m. until the 10:30 a.m. Sharon Phillips Boxness: The visitation will memorial Mass celebration Friday, April be from 2 until 6 p.m. Sunday, April 24, at 29, at Holy Family Church, 2515 W. Palatine Kahle-Moore Funeral Home, 403 Silver Lake Road, Inverness. Interment will be private. Road, Cary. The funeral Mass will be at For information, call the funeral home at 10:30 a.m. Monday, April 25, at Sts. Peter 847-359-8020.

William P. Fenwick Jr.: The visitation will time of services at 5 p.m. at the Fox Valley be from 4 to 8 p.m. Monday, April 25, at Baptist Church 16 N. 562 Vista Lane in East Justen Funeral Home & Crematory, 3700 W. Dundee. Graveside services will be at 10 Charles J. Miller Road, McHenry. The visia.m. Monday at the Windridge Memorial tation will resume from 9 a.m. until the 10 Park Cemetery, Cary. For information, call a.m. funeral Mass on Tuesday at The Church Miller Funeral Home at 847-426-3436. of Holy Apostles, 5211 W. Bull Valley Road, Richard Shermach: The celebration of his life McHenry, IL 60050. The cremation rite will be from 2 to 6 p.m. Saturday, May 21, at will be accorded privately, with inurnment Nicolino’s Restaurant, 621 Ridgeview Drive, taking place in The Church of Holy Apostles McHenry. Cemetery. For information, call the funeral Donald G. Smith: The memorial visitation home at 815-385-2400. will be from 9 to 11 a.m. Wednesday, April Robin Franz Freeman: A memorial will be 27, at Ehorn-Adams Funeral Home, 10011 April 30. For information, call Jessi at 224Main St., Richmond. The funeral services 829-2825. will be at 11 a.m., with the Rev. Andy Tyrrell Joann L. Lewis: The celebration of her life officiating. Military honors will follow. For will be from 2 to 7 p.m. Saturday, May 7, information, call the funeral home at 815at the McHenry Moose Lodge, 3535 N. 678-731. Richmond Road, Johnsburg. For information, Asta Strom: The celebration of life will be call Querhammer & Flagg Funeral Home at from 1 to 5 p.m. Sunday, April 24, at the 815-459-1760. home of Margaret and Carl Davis. For inforJoy Belle Mueller: The visitation will be mation, call Davenport Family Funeral Home Sunday, April 24, from 3 p.m. until the at 815-459-3411.

27

• Sunday, April 24, 2016

of her parents, she was raised by George and Wilma Austin, who survive her. Joann was a 1969 graduate of Harlem High School in Loves Park. She moved to McHenry in 1971. Joann was very hard working. She worked at Prem Magnetics in Johnsburg and owned her own cleaning business. She also enjoyed camping, gardening and having a good time with friends and family. Joann loved spending time with her grandkids. She is survived by her children, Jennifer Bean and Michael “Duke” (Nanette) Lewis; her stepchildren, Patricia (Bill Turner) Britton and Michael (Renee) Hertel; her grandchildren, Andrew and Nolan, Megan and Morgan, Dawn and Cayla, and great-grandchildren; her siblings, Chuck (Nancy) Beck, Maryann (Dewey) Lashock, Kathy Beck, Suann (Robert) Kneifl, Loriann (Ken) French, Harold “Hobo” Austin and Tonya Austin; and her nieces and nephews. She was preceded in death by her companion, Mike Hertel. There will be a celebration of her life from 2 to 7 p.m. on Saturday, May 7, at the McHenry Moose Lodge, 3535 N. Richmond Road, Johnsburg. In lieu of flowers, memorials may be made to the family. Arrangements by Querhammer & Flagg Funeral Home. Online condolences may be made at www.querhammerandflagg.com.

OBITUARIES | Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

of McHenry, Bruce Fenwick of Toledo, OH, Terrence (Darlene) Fenwick of Naperville, Gale (Brigitta) Fenwick of Meridianville, AL, WILLIAM P. FENWICK JR. D. Drew Fenwick of Largo, FL, and Martin Born: March 4, 1928 Fenwick of McHenry; 19 grandchildren; 6 Died: April 20, 2016 great-grandchildren; 2 brothers, James (the William P. Fenwick Jr., age 88, of McHen- late Barbara) Fenwick and Joseph (the late ry, passed away Wednesday, April 20, 2016, Gail) Fenwick; and a sister, Claudia (the late at his home surrounded by his loving family. James) McLaren. In addition to his parents, Bill was Born March 4, 1928, in Indianapolis to preceded in death by his wife, Mary E. William P. and Shirley L. (Smith) Fenwick, Fenwick (nee McLaren) on July 21, 2007; a Bill was raised in Harvey. He and his wife son, Timmy Fenwick, at birth; and a sister, moved to McHenry in 2006 after having Shirley (the late Donald) Bermel. lived in Lansing, IL, Sturgeon Bay, WI, for Visitation will be from 4 to 8 p.m. 11 years, and New Canaan and Norwalk, Monday, April 25, 2016, at Justen Funeral CT, for five years. Bill enjoyed a 28-year Home & Crematory, 3700 W. Charles J. career with Prudential Insurance as a life Miller Road, McHenry, IL 60050. Visitation insurance agent, retiring while he lived in will resume from 9 a.m. until the 10 a.m. Sturgeon Bay. funeral Mass on Tuesday at The Church of A man of tremendous patience, kindness Holy Apostles, 5211 W. Bull Valley Road, and understanding, Bill and his wife were extensively involved in foster care through McHenry, IL 60050. The cremation rite will be accorded privately, with inurnment Catholic Charities and DCFS. Volunteer activities included serving as caregiver and taking place in The Church of Holy Apostles Cemetery. companion to the elderly, and as sponsors For those wishing to send an expression for Vietnamese refugee families in the late of condolence, his family suggests dona’70s. tions to FISH Food Pantry, P.O. Box 282, A devoted father and grandfather, he enjoyed drawing and sketching, listening to McHenry, IL 60051. For information, call the funeral home at big band music to relax, and painting tiny birdhouses. An avid photographer through- 815-385-2400, or leave the family an online condolence at www.justenfh.com. out his lifetime, he started by developing his own photos and moved into the digital age with the help of his family. He lovingly accompanied his wife on fishing and JOANN L. LEWIS camping trips after their children were Born: Nov. 19, 1950; in Rockford, IL grown, and both were active members of Died: April 20, 2016; in Woodstock, IL Master Gardeners. Throughout his lifetime, Joann L. Lewis, 65, of he was active in church memberships, most McHenry passed away April recently The Church of Holy Apostles and 20, 2016, at JourneyCare in the Knights of Columbus. Woodstock surrounded by Survivors include two daughters, Patricia loved ones. (Robert) Mirich of Cedar Lake, IN, and She was born Nov. 19, Annette (William) Ross of San Diego, CA; 1950 in Rockford to Clayton seven sons, William P. (Ruth) Fenwick III of South Holland, Thomas (Janice) Fenwick and Dorothy (Utecht) Beck. After the death


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Sunday, April 24, 2016

28

STATE Video: Chicago cop slams woman with her hands up By JASON KEYSER The Associated Press CHICAGO – Newly released dashcam video shows a Chicago police officer slamming an unarmed robbery suspect to the ground after she got out of a car with her hands up. The video was released Friday by the Chicago Police Department, whose new chief is trying to increase openness and rebuild trust after several cases of excessive force, particular against African-Americans. Two of the officers involved in the woman’s 2011 arrest have been stripped of their police powers pending a new review. The city’s police department has been under intense scrutiny over excessive force cases and is under investigation by the U.S. Justice Department. The department has promised to implement some reforms recommended by a task force set up by Mayor Rahm Emanuel. The new police chief appointed to help turn the department around, Superintendent Eddie Johnson, has begun reviewing past use-of-force investigations, including the one involving the 2011 ar-

ILLINOIS

officer who was on foot. That officer opened fire, hitting her twice in the chest. She continued to flee until other officers caught up with the car. The video shows Jacobs getting out of her car with her hands up. An officer approaches with his gun drawn and, using his free hand, grips her by the collar and slams her to the ground on her stomach. Officers then shocked her several times with stun guns because, they said, she ignored their commands to show her hands, which were pinned under her body. Jacobs told investigators the officers also used a Taser on her after she was handcuffed. She was hospitalized and treated for two gunshot wounds to the chest. The investigation by the IndepenAP photo dent Police Review Authority found Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel shakes hands with Eddie Johnson after swearing him in the officer who opened fire was justias the new Chicago police superintendent April 13 at a City Council meeting in Chicago. fied in doing so because his life was in danger. rest caught on a patrol car dashboard jail – concerning,” said a police stateThe officers taken off duty during camera. ment accompanying the release of the a new review were the one who “After reviewing video footage video and police reports. slammed her to the ground and one of from the investigation, the superinTiffani Jacobs, 34, was driving the officers who discharged his Taser. tendent found that the officers’ ac- a getaway car after her boyfriend Jacobs was convicted of armed robtions in apprehending one of the of- robbed a McDonald’s at gunpoint. bery and is serving a 12-year prison fenders – who is now serving time in During a chase, she sped toward an sentence.

to evaluate about 200 programs that work with offenders either through state prisons or in the community. The program reviews will determine how inmates’ needs match up to available services and programs, such News from across the state as how many inmates have substance abuse and mental health issues, Illinois professor to lead compared with the level of programs review of state’s inmate available to match those needs, Kroner programs said. CARBONDALE – A professor at A $1 million federal grant from the Southern Illinois University has been Department of Justice will fund the recruited by the Illinois Department of work. The remaining grant funds will Corrections to review the effectiveness be used to hire risk and needs assessof every offender program aimed at ment specialists. reducing recidivism. Risk and needs assessment tools can A team led by criminology profesbe used to determine which inmates sor Daryl Kroner will evaluate which should receive more intense services programs are effective and which fall upon their re-entry to the community short, Illinois Department of Correcwith the goal of reducing recidivism, tions spokeswoman Nicole Wilson told according to Illinois Department of the Southern Illinoisan. The departCorrections Acting Director John ment will then “make a determination” Baldwin. on how to deal with the ineffective The inmates’ recidivism risk will be programs. assessed more accurately using the The team, which includes graduate tools, and then they will be matched students assisting with the collecto programs in the community that are tion of data and other information, proven to be effective, he said. has already catalogued the system’s Kroner has been a member of Southservices and programs. Its next step is ern Illinois University’s Department

ROUNDUP

1

of Criminology and Criminal Justice since 2008. He previously worked for 20 years as a prison psychologist in Canada.

2

U of Illinois professor hits 50 years, plans to keep going

simply loves to teach.

3

Chicago pushing taxi industry for wheelchair accessibility

CHICAGO – The city of Chicago is offering financial incentives to encourage the taxi and ride-hailing industries to add CHAMPAIGN – Roy Axford has been more wheelchair-accessible vehicles to a professor at the University of Illinois their fleets. for 50 years. And he has no plans to There are 170 wheelchair-accessible stop. cabs operating in Chicago. Another 200 The 87-year-old Axford works in the will be added by 2018 under requireDepartment of Nuclear, Plasma and Ra- ments being phased in for companies diological Engineering. He was honored that own taxi medallions. Thursday. The city is hoping its incentives will Axford told The News-Gazette the speed that up and put another 100 actradition in his family is to work for a cessible vehicles on the road by the end lifetime. of this year. He continues to teach a full load of The incentives announced Friday classes. And he has a growing list of include doing away with a dispatch fee students who said he helped shape for wheelchair-accessible taxis. Among their lives. other incentives, the city is offering meScott Ramsey is one. He works at Los dallion owners a $20,000 subsidy toward the purchase of factory-built accessible Alamos National Laboratory in New vehicles. Mexico and is one of about a dozen Money for the incentives comes from a Axford students at the prestigious fund the industry pays into with fees for facility. all trips taken by nonwheelchair-accessiRamsey said without Axford, he ble vehicles. would never have gotten the job. Axford’s wife, Anne, said her husband – Wire reports


NATION&WORLD

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ILLINOIS LOTTERY

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Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., speaks during a town hall Friday at Gettysburg College in Gettysburg, Pa. Sanders trail front -runner Hillary Clinton by more than 200 pledged delegates and needs to win 73 percent of the remaining delegates and superdelegates to earn the nomination.

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NATION & WORLD BRIEFS Prince family, friends bid a loving goodbye

distance of a submarine-launched ballistic missile, which can fly at least 186 miles. MINNEAPOLIS – Some of While South Korean experts Prince’s “most beloved” family, friends and musicians celebrated said it’s unlikely that North Korea currently possesses an operationhis life in a small, private service on Saturday after his remains had al submarine that can fire multiple missiles, they acknowledge that been cremated. the North is making progress on His publicist, Yvette Noel-Schure, said in a statement that such technology. the 57-year-old music superstar’s Death toll from Ecuador family and friends gathered “in a earthquake tops 650 private, beautiful ceremony” to QUITO, Ecuador – Ecuador’s say a loving goodbye. government says the death toll The statement did not say from last week’s devastating magwhere the service was held, but nitude-7.8 earthquake has risen friends such as percussionist Sheila E. and bassist Larry Graham to 654 with another 58 people missing. were seen Saturday entering The website of the secretarPrince’s suburban Minneapolis estate, Paisley Park. Prince’s sister iat for risk management said Saturday that 113 people had been Tyka Nelson and brother-in-law Maurice Phillips also were seen on rescued alive after the quake that flattened coastal towns and more the grounds. than 25,000 people remained in shelters. The death toll from EcN. Korea: Submarine uador’s quake has surpassed that missile test successful of Peru’s 2007 temblor, making SEOUL, South Korea – North it the deadliest quake in South Korea said it has successfully America since one in Colombia test-fired a ballistic missile from a submarine and strengthened its in 1999 killed more than 1,000 people. Hundreds of aftershocks nuclear attack capabilities. Hours before the announcement, have rattled Ecuador since last South Korean military officials said week’s quake. President Rafael Correa has the North fired what appeared said the quake caused $3 billion to be a ballistic missile from a in damage and warned that the resubmarine off its eastern coast. construction effort will take years. The South’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said the projectile traveled about His administration is temporarily 19 miles Saturday evening. That’s raising taxes to fund the recovery. – Wire reports a much shorter than the typical

AP photo

Delegate math: How Tuesday could close door on Sanders to win significantly in the latest primaries, he won’t have another chance to draw closer in a big way until California votes on June 7. WASHINGTON – Hillary Clinton can’t win Clinton is on track to already have hit the enough delegates Tuesday to officially knock magic number of 2,383 by that point. Bernie Sanders out of the presidential race, A look at the paths forward for the two canbut she can erase any lingering honest doubts didates: about whether she’ll soon be the Democratic nominee. SANDERS’ HOPE: RECAPTURE MOMENTUM After her victory in New York this past After losing New York, Sanders needs to win week, Clinton has a lead over Sanders of more 73 percent of the remaining delegates and unthan 200 pledged delegates won in primaries committed superdelegates to capture the nomand caucuses. As she narrowed Sanders’ dwin- ination. dling opportunities to catch up, Clinton conThat’s not too realistic. tinued to build on her overwhelming support So his campaign is arguing that the Vermont among superdelegates – the party officials who senator can flip superdelegates at the July conare free to back any candidate they choose. vention in Philadelphia, especially if he were In the past two days, Clinton picked up 11 somehow able to overtake Clinton among more endorsements from superdelegates, ac- pledged delegates. To do so, Sanders would need cording to an Associated Press survey. to win 59 percent of those remaining. Factoring in superdelegates, Clinton’s lead stands at 1,941 to 1,191 for Sanders, according to CLINTON’S PATH: BOLSTER HER BIG LEAD the AP count. That puts her at 81 percent of the If Clinton were to win four or five states 2,383 delegates needed to win the nomination. Tuesday, as preference polling suggests, she will At stake Tuesday are 384 delegates in pri- extend her pledged delegate lead to about 300. maries in Connecticut, Delaware, Maryland, The most likely scenario: big hauls in PennPennsylvania and Rhode Island. This group of sylvania and Maryland, and modest gains in contests offers Sanders one of the last chances Delaware, Connecticut and Rhode Island. left on the election calendar to gain ground in At that point, she would need to win just 35 pledged delegates and make a broader case to percent or so of the remaining delegates from superdelegates to support him. primaries and caucuses to maintain her lead in Yet it appears Clinton could do well enough pledged delegates. In actuality, she’s been winTuesday to end the night with 90 percent of the ning 55 percent so far. delegates needed to win the nomination, leavMore significantly, doing well on Tuesday ing her just 200 or so shy. would likely cement her support among superThe Sanders campaign knows a tough battle delegates. Clinton now holds a 513-38 advantage awaits in those five states and says it will reas- among those party officials. An additional 163 sess its campaign after Tuesday. If Sanders fails superdelegates have yet to commit.

By HOPE YEN

The Associated Press

Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Sunday, April 24, 2016*

LOTTERY


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Sunday, April 24, 2016

| WORLD

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Obama, fans mark 400 years since Shakespeare died By JILL LAWLESS The Associated Press LONDON – If all the world’s a stage, William Shakespeare is its architect. The playwright died 400 years ago Saturday, but remains the world’s most famous writer, living on through endlessly reinterpreted plays and globally known characters, including the tormented prince Hamlet and the starcrossed lovers Romeo and Juliet . The long-dead Bard is one of Britain’s leading cultural ambassadors, and the anniversary of his death on April 23, 1616, is being marked across Britain with parades, church services and – of course – stage performances. After all, the play’s the thing. (That’s just one of scores of phrases Shakespeare has given the English language). President Barack Obama took a break from political talks in London to tour Shakespeare’s Globe Theatre on Saturday, listening to Hamlet’s “To be or not to be” soliloquy and admiring the open-air venue – a recreation of the theater, built in 1599, where many of the Bard’s plays were first performed. The president met a Globe troupe that has taken “Hamlet” on a two-year tour to almost 200 countries. They’ve performed Shakespeare’s tragedy on a tennis court in Kabul, Afghanistan, in

AP photo

President Barack Obama greets actors on stage after watching them perform Shakespeare’s “Hamlet” on Saturday, the 400th anniversary of the playwright’s death, at the Globe Theatre in London. a Syrian refugee camp in Jordan and at the U.N. General Assembly in New York. Dominic Dromgoole, the Globe’s artistic director, said the world tour has taught him that Shakespeare “is a great aid to communication. He’s a great way of helping people to encounter one another, and discover similarities and also discover differences.” “I think he has no agenda,” Dromgoole said. “There’s no particular drive within his work to say, this has to be worshipped or this has to be believed. He presents life, and he presents life with wit and brilliance and enchant-

ment – but it’s life. And everybody understands life.” The Globe also erected screens along the River Thames, showing short films of excerpts from all 37 of Shakespeare’s plays, filmed in the locations where they were set: “King Lear” at the White Cliffs of Dover; “The Merchant of Venice” in the canal-crossed Italian city; “Timon of Athens” in front of the Parthenon. In the playwright’s home town of Stratford-upon-Avon, the Royal Shakespeare Company mounted a stage extravaganza, televised live by the BBC. The potpourri of scenes from Shake-

speare and works he inspired – including the musicals “Kiss Me Kate” and “West Side Story” – featured performances by John Lithgow, Judi Dench, Benedict Cumberbatch, Ian McKellen – and even Prince Charles, who strode onstage during a comic sketch to settle a heated actors’ argument about the best way to recite “To be or not to be.” Earlier, the heir to the British throne laid a wreath on the writer’s grave in Stratford’s Holy Trinity church. And thousands of people – many wearing Shakespeare face masks – watched a theatrical parade through the town 100 miles northwest of London, complete with schoolchildren, strolling actors and a New Orleans jazz band. Across the country there was more – much more – taking place to celebrate a writer whose influence pops up in unexpected places. In Trafalgar Square, visitors could listen to Princes in The Tower, “a costumed electro group offering unique interpretations of early music” and named for the tragic children in “Richard III.” Tourism body Visit London promoted ShakeSpeak, a smartphone app that allows users to text like the Bard by auto-completing some of his famous phrases. Type “to be” and it fills in the rest: “or not to be, that is the question.”

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N. Korea: Will halt nuke tests if U.S. stops S. Korea drills

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fall on deaf ears. North Korea, which sees the U.S.South Korean exercises as a rehearsal for invasion, has floated similar proposals to Washington in the past but the U.S. has insisted the North give up its nuclear weapons program first before any negotiations. The result has been a stalemate between the two countries that Ri said has put the peninsula at the crossroads of a thermonuclear war. In an initial response to Ri’s remarks, a U.S. official defended the military ex-

ercises as demonstrating the U.S. commitment to its alliance with the South and said they enhance the combat readiness, flexibility and capabilities of the alliance. Sanctions, Ri said, won’t sway the North. “If they believe they can actually frustrate us with sanctions, they are totally mistaken,” he said. “The more pressure you put on to something, the more emotionally you react to stand up against it. And this is important for the American policymakers to be aware of.”

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• Sunday, April 24, 2016

NEW YORK – North Korea’s foreign minister said Saturday in an interview with The Associated Press that his country is ready to halt its nuclear tests if the United States suspends its annual military exercises with South Korea. He also defended the country’s right to maintain a nuclear deterrent and warned North Korea won’t be cowed by international sanctions. And for those waiting for the North’s regime to collapse, he had this to say: Don’t hold your breath. Foreign Minister Ri Su Yong, in his first interview with a Western news organization, held firm to Pyongyang’s longstanding position that the U.S. drove his country to develop nuclear weapons as an act of self-defense. At the same time, he suggested that suspending the military exercises with Seoul could open the door to talks and reduced tensions. “If we continue on this path of confrontation, this will lead to very catastrophic results, not only for the two countries but for the whole entire world as well,” he said, speaking in Korean through an interpreter. “It is really crucial for the United States government to withdraw its hostile policy against the DPRK and as an expression of this

stop the military exercises, war exercises, in the Korean Peninsula. Then we will respond likewise.” He used the acronym for North Korea’s official name, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea. Ri, who spoke calmly and in measured words, a contrast to the often bombastic verbiage used by the North’s media, claimed the North’s proRi Su Yong posal was “very logical.” “Stop the nuclear war exercises in the Korean Peninsula, then we should also cease our nuclear tests,” he said during the interview, conducted in the country’s diplomatic mission to the United Nations. He spoke beneath portraits of Kim Il Sung and Kim Jung Il, North Korea’s two previous leaders – the grandfather and father of current leader Kim Jong Un. If the exercises are halted “for some period, for some years,” he added, “new opportunities may arise for the two countries and for the whole entire world as well.” It is extremely rare for top North Korean officials to give interviews to foreign media, and particularly with Western news organizations. Ri’s proposal, which he said he hoped U.S. policymakers would heed, may well

Before

The Associated Press

WORLD | Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

By ERIC TALMADGE

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Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Sunday, April 24, 2016

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OPINIONS

NORTHWEST HERALD EDITORIAL BOARD:

Dan McCaleb

Kevin Lyons

Valerie Katzenstein

Jon Styf

John Sahly

OUR VIEW

Jacobson must resign John Jacobson is hurting Hebron whether he admits it or not. He owes it to the residents of Hebron to step down from his role as village president for the good of the community, and for his own well-being. Jacobson, whom voters elected in 2013 despite a pending criminal charge of possession of crack cocaine, has continued to display abhorrent personal behavior unbeffiting of elected office. But For the record he so far has refused to leave the post voters Village President John Jacobentrusted him with. son has continued to display The initial charges abhorrent personal behavior in 2013 were felonies, unbeffiting of elected office. and a felony conviction would have removed him from office. However, the McHenry County State’s Attorney’s Office treated Jacobson as they would any other first-time drug offender and allowed him to plead down. Jacobson was sentenced to probation, allowing him to remain in office. Although we warned voters about Jacobson’s charge and warily endorsed his opponent, incumbent Frank Beatty, we did not criticize State’s Attorney Lou Bianchi’s decision not to pursue a felony conviction of Jacobson. It was reasonable. Obviously, many Hebron voters had enough of Beatty, and some felt so strongly about it they voted for Jacobson with full knowledge of his pending drug charges. That was their prerogative. Not long after that plea deal, Jacobson was charged with driving under the influence in Wisconsin while still on probation for the drug charges. The McHenry County State’s Attorney’s Office declined to take further action against Jacobson’s probation, although doing so still wouldn’t have resulted in a felony conviction. Here we are again in 2016 as Jacobson faces another felony charge of unlawful possession of a controlled substance after rescue workers found him unconscious in his bathroom after allegedly using crack cocaine. Many Hebron residents now appear to have finally had enough, including the 215 residents who signed a petition demanding his resignation. That might seem a small number, but Hebron has about 1,200 residents in total and only 145 voted for Jacobson in 2013. If Jacobson refuses to resign, this time we urge Bianchi’s office to pursue a felony conviction. They’re no longer dealing with a man who just made a mistake. He obviously needs help for substance abuse, and he no longer should be Hebron’s village president.

THE FIRST

AMENDMENT

ANOTHER VIEW

A lovely plan to make our currency current The usual concern of an editorial page is government ineptitude or corruption, but it also is our occasional pleasant duty to call attention to cases of government competence – the most recent of which is Treasury Secretary Jack Lew’s proposed redesign of U.S. currency. In fact, “competent” is too weak an encomium for Lew’s elegant handling of a sensitive task – to include images of women and minorities on heretofore white-male-dominated paper money. In responding to a groundswell that began with Internet-based petition drives to replace Andrew Jackson’s image on the $20 bill with that of a woman, Lew had to navigate all the treacherous crosscurrents that characterize identity politics in 21st-century America. He initially planned to meet the demand for a woman by replacing Alexander Hamilton on the $10 bill, which was due for a redesign anyway. When that met with resistance from Hamilton’s admirers – ranging from former

Federal Reserve chairman Ben S. Bernanke to fans of the eponymous Broadway musical – Lew took their good arguments into account and pivoted to a wider, and even more inclusive, plan to modernize several bills. The hallmark of Lew’s plan is addition, not subtraction; to embroider ever more of the country’s complex history, and the characters who made it, into these most widely used of government documents – as opposed to purging them or dumbing them down. Harriet Tubman, the great leader of the Underground Railroad and hero of the Union intelligence effort during the Civil War, will take Jackson’s place on the front of the $20 bill; she becomes the first woman so honored on paper currency in more than a century, and the first African American. However, Jackson’s image will be retained in a redesigned reverse side of the bill – due recognition of his pivotal presidency and military leadership and, perhaps, a conversation-starter

about his darker side as a slaveholder and oppressor of Native Americans. Meanwhile, Abraham Lincoln and Hamilton will remain on the front of the $5 and $10 bills, respectively, whose reverse sides will feature new engravings of historic democracy-expanding events at the Lincoln Memorial and Treasury building, including specific images of their protagonists: the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.; Marian Anderson; Eleanor Roosevelt; women’s suffrage leaders. Executed appropriately, these more artistically intricate bills promise to be not only more reflective of America’s diversity but also beautiful. Not until 2020 will the final designs be ready, and it may be a couple of more years after that before bills go into circulation. No doubt the delay leaves his plan vulnerable to shifting political winds; and, of course, no plan is perfect, or immune to criticism. This one, though, is pretty close.

Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.

The Washington Post


VIEWS Cal Thomas the one experienced in the United States. As a much smaller country, Ireland’s comeback has progressed faster than in America, where real unemployment is much higher than last month’s misleading Labor Department announcement of 5 percent. The Irish economy has experienced a dramatic reversal under the leadership of Prime Minister Enda Kenny, who is struggling to form a new government after two elections denied his party a parliamentary majority from a less than thankful public that has tasted prosperity and wants more of it. Sound familiar? Emerging from a joint European Union-International Monetary Fund bailout program, Ireland’s growth rate stood at a respectable 4.8 percent in 2014, declining slightly to 3.5 percent last year, but still better than any EU country.

While much credit belongs to the political leadership that has bitten the bullet and imposed austerity on government spending programs, causing howls from the left, and to the resilient Irish people who are experienced when it comes to suffering, foreign investment also has played a major role. Much of that investment has been driven by the anti-business tax policies imposed on corporations by the U.S. government, prompting many U.S. businesses to seek tax relief overseas. According to a report last year in The Guardian newspaper, 700 U.S. companies now do business in Ireland. This has meant $277 billion of U.S. direct foreign investment in the past two decades. Ireland has gained more from American firms than Brazil, Russia, India and China combined, said the newspaper. The response from the Obama administration has not been to push for a reduction in the U.S. corporate tax rate – one of the highest in the world – in hopes of enticing the fleeing corporations back to American shores. Instead, it has imposed new tax rules

on those companies that remain in an effort to keep them at home, all but ensuring that fleeing businesses will not want to return. This apparently is working on at least two companies. The Wall Street Journal writes, “A day after the Obama administration limited the ability of U.S. companies to do international deals to lighten their tax burdens, Pfizer Inc. and Allergan PLC terminated their planned $150 billion merger and other companies around the globe raced to assess the impact of the new rules.” What has been largely good for Ireland has proved less so for American businesses. Among the many proverbs for which Ireland is known is this one: “If you buy what you don’t need, you might have to sell what you do.” Given the lessons of the recent economic recessions in the U.S. and Ireland, this proverb is worth memorizing and practicing by governments and individuals alike.

• Email Cal Thomas at tcaeditors@ tribpub.com.

IT’S YOUR WRITE Decrease County Board size

To the Editor: Years ago, state Rep. Jack Franks met with then County Board Chairman Tina Hill to explain the advantages of reducing the size of the McHenry County Board. Ms. Hill explained to Franks no one on the County Board was interested in reducing its size. Fast forward to the April 12 article in the Northwest Herald. Recently defeated County Board Chairman Joe Gottemoller has an epiphany. He suddenly realizes other counties run their boards with far fewer members and yet have hundreds of millions more dollars to manage. Gottemoller declares reducing the size of our County Board would immediately save our taxpayers $250,000 a year on salary alone. Figure in the heath benefits most County Board members are taking advantage of, and who knows the cost of that burden to us taxpayers? Don’t get me started on the fact that most of our County Board members are not eligible for the IMRF health benefits they so eagerly take advantage of. I want to thank Rep. Franks for this long-overdue idea. Let’s get it done. Better late than never. William Voce Crystal Lake

GOP like a bad dream

To the Editor: Since the political campaigns began in earnest, I’ve been having dreams or nightmares. I don’t know the difference; if it’s a nightmare, it must be about politics. A couple of my worst nightmares are: 1. Being stuck on an island with Ann Coulter and Greta Van Susteren; our only entertainment: tapes of the Rush Limbaugh show. 2. Donald Trump and Ted Cruz singing the song “Bosom Buddies” from “Mame.” 3. Cruz loses his one friend in Washington; his dog dies. I feel for the dog. 4. The NRA being honest about itself (dream). 5. My worst is that the elephants (GOP) take over the White House. They’ll ruin the floors.

Harry Wolden Huntley

Celebrate Earth Day all year

To the Editor: When Sen. Gaylord Nelson (D-Wisconsin) introduced the first Earth Day, he defined it as, “A forum to express concerns about what was happening to

HOW TO SOUND OFF We welcome original letters on public issues. Letters must include the author’s full name, home address and day and evening telephone numbers. We limit letters to 250 words and one published letter every 30 days. All letters are subject to editing for length

the land, rivers, lakes, and air.” Nelson later recalled the public’s response as “overwhelming,” “electric” and filled with “spectacular exuberance.” It was to be just the beginning. The days of 20 million demonstrators organizing themselves are behind us. Earth Day has become the single largest secular civic event in the world, and April 22 marked its 46th anniversary, celebrated by more than 1 billion people in 192 countries around the planet. But what if it was something more? This year’s worldwide celebration involved one of every seven people on the planet today. Just imagine the positive impact that could be made if our celebration, recognition and impact wasn’t just done for a day but was a way of life.

and clarity at the sole discretion of the editor. Submit letters by: • Email: letters@nwherald.com • Mail: Northwest Herald “It’s Your Write” Box 250 Crystal Lake, IL 60039-0250

A healthy Mother Earth directly leads to healthier people. That’s why, as a holistic nurse, I look for every opportunity to protect the environment and my patients. Our actions may be as simple as not drinking bottled water, planting a tree, recycling, unplugging unused electronics or using fabric grocery bags. The options for improvement are as varied as we are and will be limited only by our imaginations. As spring 2016 unfolds, let us focus on making Earth Day a year-round, planetwide celebration. It’s time we all acknowledge the vital role our environment plays in all our lives. Jeanne Browning

American Holistic Nurses Association Northern Fox River Valley Chapter co-leader, Crystal Lake

• Sunday, April 24, 2016

DUBLIN – They called it the Celtic Tiger, a period of prosperity between 1995 and 2008, during which everything in Ireland appeared to come up shamrocks. According to Wikipedia, between 1995 and 2000, the long-dormant Irish economy took off, expanding by a startling 9.4 percent. There was a building boom; roads were widened to accommodate more traffic; newly confident people started buying things they long had denied themselves, including bigger and nicer houses, which, it turns out, many could not afford. Even after 2000 when the Irish economy continued to grow at an average rate of 5.9 percent, still well above the American average, confidence in the economy remained high. By 2008, a dramatic reversal had occurred with GDP contracting by 14 percent. Unemployment levels rose to 14 percent by 2011 and 15 percent the following year. The reasons are familiar to Americans. Mostly it was a property bubble. Banks approved loans for people who could not handle big mortgages, which led to a recession, not unlike

OPINIONS | Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

The Celtic tiger lives for Ireland, U.S.

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Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Sunday, April 24, 2016

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BUSINESS

Student loan converts to scholarship Dear Dave,

I’m a senior in high school here in Arkansas, and I think I want to study business in college. I’ve gotten an unusual offer from a small, out-of-state school. It revolves around a $3,000 student loan program, where the loan converts to a scholarship if I maintain a grade point average of 3.3 or higher. Tuition at this college costs about $34,000 a year, so I was wondering what you think about the idea.

DAVE SAYS Dave Ramsey

school? I think most of us who have been walking around a while would say no. Your income will not be based on where you went to school, and it won’t necessarily even be based on your – Garrett grade point average. It will be based on your ability to take what you learned Dear Garrett, into the marketplace, kill something I’m glad you’re thinking about the future. But this is not my favorite idea, and drag it home. This has as much, if not more, to do with your initiative, because you could end up with a loan. your perseverance, character qualities In business, one of the things we and integrity as where you went to look at is return on investment. If I school. can go to one place where tuition’s One of the great jokes in America $34,000 a year, but I could go to another place that’s in-state for about $7,000, today is that where you go to school the question becomes this: Am I going matters. Some places may have better to get a five times better education – or programs in certain areas than others, but is this particular college – which is my income going to be five times greater – by going to the expensive I’m guessing isn’t a prestige school,

since you didn’t mention the name – five times better than a solid in-state school like Arkansas State or the University of Arkansas? No, it’s not. I don’t think you’re going to get a return on your investment overall in this picture, Garrett. Add to that this little student loan nuance, and the fact that they’re not giving you enough “free money” to make this a good deal, I would have to say don’t do it.

– Dave

Dear Dave,

My wife and I are following your plan, and we’re in the middle of the Baby Steps. Do we have to wait until Baby Step 7 to buy a new car?

– Alan

Dear Alan,

No, you don’t have to drive a beater until you pay off your house. My advice is to drive the minimum car you can until you get past the first three steps. Remember, Baby Step 1 is a beginner emergency fund of $1,000. Baby

Step 2 is paying off all debt except for your house, then Baby Step 3 is fully funding your emergency fund with three to six months of expenses. Once you’ve done all that, then you can move up to a nice car. I didn’t say move up to a new car. I want you to save up cash to get a really nice, barely used car. I never advise buying a brand new car unless you have a net worth of at least $1 million. At that point, you’ve got enough assets in place to where you won’t even feel the massive hit in depreciation that comes with buying a new vehicle. But until then, drive good used cars. That’s what the typical millionaire did, and I want you to model your financial behavior after people who are in the position you want to be in some day!

– Dave

• Dave Ramsey is the author of five New York Times best-selling books. Follow him on Twitter at @DaveRamsey and on the web at daveramsey.com.

Prince’s push for control set example for today’s artists “He just never wanted to be taken advantage of. Certainly, he is going to leave somewhat of a legacy, artists standing up for themselves – but not as strong as his legacy performing and playing.”

By OLGA KHARIF Bloomberg News Music legend Prince left as big a mark behind the recording industry scenes as he did on his millions of fans. The artist, who died Thursday at 57 at his home near Minneapolis, waged a relentless campaign for control over his music empire as the Internet era dawned. His crusade left a playbook for stars such as Taylor Swift and Adele, who now have the power to dictate how and where their songs get played. It cost him plenty. Spats with record labels kept the legendary performer’s music from reaching the widest possible audience. At one point, he dropped his name for an ankh-like symbol, making it tough to advertise his recordings. Whoever gains control of the full catalog, valued at $100 million or more, will have to decide whether to make the rocker’s songs available for commercial ditties, a source of revenue that Prince himself shunned. “He just never wanted to be taken advantage of,” said L. Lee Phillips, a lawyer who represented Prince for about 12 years. “Certainly, he is going to leave somewhat of a legacy, artists standing up for themselves – but not as strong as his legacy performing and

L. Lee Phillips Lawyer who represented Prince

AP file photo

Prince performs Feb. 18, 1985, at the Forum in Inglewood, Calif. Prince was found dead at his home Thursday in suburban Minneapolis. He was 57. playing.” In the 1990s, Prince broke away from his music label, Warner Bros. Records, and wrote “slave” on his cheek, because he felt he lacked artistic control. In 2007, he considered suing YouTube for not removing unauthorized postings of his songs. He also limited

availability of his works on popular streaming services, pulling songs from everywhere except Tidal. “His music probably was not as readily available to a lot of people,” said Vickie Nauman, owner of CrossBorderWorks, a Los Angeles-based entertainment and technology consul-

tant. “He probably didn’t have as many people hearing every song he ever produced. That’s a personal choice that he made. And there was certainly no shortage of fandom. Every time he had a concert, it would sell out.” After leaving Warner, Prince, who was born Prince Rogers Nelson, formed his own label, funding and recording his own work. He signed a series of one-off deals with groups including Sony Corp.’s Columbia, retaining ownership over his master recordings. In 2010, amid a painful slide in sales for the entire music industry, Prince

See PRINCE, page A37


FACES & PLACES

Leadership.’ ” The simulcast also raised $5,170 for Court Appointed Special Advocates of McHenry County, an organization that helps abused and neglected children. In 2015, Express Employment Professionals generated $3.02 billion in sales and employed 500,002 people. For information, visit www. expresspros.com/crystallakeil.

RE/MAX office opens in Hampshire

HAMPSHIRE – RE/MAX Deal Makers, the newest RE/MAX office in Kane County, has opened its doors at 113 W. Oak Knoll Drive in Hampshire. Bruce Burklow Jr., an experienced local developer and home builder is at the helm as broker/owner, assisted by his wife, Robbi. Burklow, 44, moved into the brokerage end of the real estate industry in 2012 after nearly two decades spent working in the development and home building business established by his Express Employment hosts father, Bruce Burklow Sr. national leadership event Those operations included G & B Homes Inc., CRYSTAL LAKE – Express Employment Professionals sponsored the 2016 Refresh Leadership which has built many homes in the Hampshire live simulcast for members of the McHenry and area. “Brokerage has turned out to be a great fit Kane county business community, according to for me, and I’m excited about the prospect a news release. The event, which attracted more than 10,000 of bringing a RE/MAX office to the commuattendees at 300 locations, featured executive nity where we live,” said Burklow, who was affiliated with the RE/MAX office in Marengo coach Marshall Goldsmith, TV sports analyst before deciding to purchase his own RE/MAX and 15-time NBA All-Star Shaquille O’Neal and franchise. author and career consultant Kaplan Mobray. RE/MAX Deal Makers occupies a 2,300“Marshall Goldsmith, who is also an IU grad – like me, shared how successful people become square-foot office in a 30,000- square-foot, three-building commercial complex that was even more successful based on insights from developed by the Burklow family between 2003 his book ‘What Got You Here Won’t Get You There,’ ” said Terri Greeno, Crystal Lake Express and 2008. The new office already has a staff of four agents. Employment franchisee. “Shaq, Dr. Shaquille Robbi Burklow will head the office’s adminisO’Neal, articulately provided leadership lessons trative operations, having had similar responsifrom inside the paint, and Kaplan Mobray bilities at G & B Homes. motivated the audience with ‘The 10 Ls of

Abbott AbbVie AGL Resources Allstate Alphabet American Air. Apple AptarGroup Arch Dan AT&T Bank of America Bank of Montreal Baxter Berry Plastics Boeing Caterpillar CME Group Coca-Cola Comcast Dean Foods Dow Chem. Exelon Exxon Facebook Ford General Electric General Motors Home Depot IBM ITW JPMorganChase Kellogg Kohl’s Kraft Heinz Live Nation McDonald’s Medtronic Microsoft Modine Motorola Netflix Office Depot Pepsi Pulte Homes Sears Holdings Snap-On Southwest Air. Supervalu Target Tesla Motors Twitter United Contint. Visa Wal-Mart Walgreen Waste Mgmt.

Friday close

44.08 61.42 65.08 65.74 718.77 38.21 105.68 79.68 39.62 38.07 15.11 64.83 43.32 36.22 131.05 78.32 94.20 44.54 61.10 16.67 52.61 34.09 87.53 110.56 13.61 30.76 32.18 135.66 148.50 104.66 63.97 75.28 45.46 78.10 21.77 125.50 78.99 51.78 10.57 75.56 95.90 6.20 101.98 19.05 18.12 160.65 47.25 5.40 82.33 253.75 17.23 50.74 79.11 68.72 80.14 56.39 52.09

P/E ratio

50-day avg.

200-day avg.

52-week range

15.06 19.62 22.14 13.02 30.47 3.45 11.25 25.79 13.30 16.09 11.53 12.58 24.52 58.61 17.61 22.38 25.53 26.67 18.86 - 8.55 13.42 22.74 85.51 7.40 - 5.45 24.85 11.06 20.40 10.66 43.77 13.14 - - 26.15 45.14 36.65 - 25.01 342.50 620.50 27.78 13.97 - 19.83 14.47 8.91 15.49 - - 2.61 28.47 15.04 19.51 34.18 17.78

41.48 57.7 64.98 66.47 736.89 41.00 106.65 77.53 36.86 38.62 13.61 60.35 41.12 34.34 128.41 75.44 94.04 45.66 60.56 18.05 51.02 34.66 83.8 111.3 13.22 30.86 30.98 131.7 146.78 101.47 59.95 76.0 46.21 77.62 22.15 124.47 76.18 54.23 10.30 73.81 101.51 6.52 102.074 18.20 15.99 156.6 44.35 5.58 81.96 232.9 17.05 57.34 75.71 68.18 82.09 58.01 44.97

42.07 57.00 63.61 63.03 721.89 41.65 107.35 73.47 37.35 35.51 15.08 56.82 37.92 33.47 133.79 69.51 92.57 43.35 59.17 18.34 49.4 30.4 80.56 105.11 13.49 29.77 32.27 127.03 138.43 93.12 61.71 72.19 46.34 74.74 23.55 117.11 75.56 52.93 8.85 69.46 106.18 6.174 99.85 17.89 19.31 159.95 42.91 5.91 75.77 215.1 21.6 55.53 75.62 63.54 82.39 54.56 46.85

36.00 45.45 46.36 54.12 515.18 34.10 92.00 60.73 29.86 30.97 10.99 47.54 32.18 27.79 102.10 56.36 81.87 36.56 50.00 14.56 35.11 25.09 66.55 72.00 10.44 19.37 24.62 92.17 116.9 78.79 50.07 61.13 39.23 61.42 18.77 87.5 55.54 39.72 5.39 56.40 78.89 4.83 76.48 14.61 14.05 133.09 31.36 3.94 66.46 141.05 13.91 42.17 60.00 56.30 71.50 45.86 37.96

51.74 71.60 65.85 71.30 789.87 53.47 134.54 80.32 53.31 39.72 18.48 67.01 43.59 37.59 150.59 89.62 100.87 47.13 64.99 21.17 57.10 35.95 90.09 117.59 16.10 32.05 36.88 137.00 176.3 106.19 70.61 78.10 76.55 81.20 29.68 129.8 79.31 56.85 12.83 76.83 133.27 9.40 105.77 22.10 44.72 174.52 51.34 10.98 85.81 286.65 52.54 64.95 81.73 80.93 97.3 59.99 55.79

• Sunday, April 24, 2016

LAKE IN THE HILLS – In celebration of embarking on its second decade of business, Precise Chiropractic Center is hosting an open house from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. April 30. Festivities will include office tours, complimentary chair massages, face painting and balloon animals for kids. Dr. Sebastian Fuksa opened Precise Chiropractic Center, 4581 Princeton Lane, Suite 119, Lake in the Hills, in 2006 with the mission to maximize the health for as many families as possible. The office specializes in taking care of families that are under wellness care or dealing with conditions such as scoliosis, back pain, neck pain, headaches, ear infections, leg pain, arm tingling, etc. For information, call 847-669-6888.

Photo provided

Stock

BUSINESS | Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

Precise Chiropractic Center to host anniversary celebration

35

WALL STREET WEEK IN REVIEW Daniel Breen, a 2001 graduate of Cary-Grove High School, recently released his first book, “Opening a Profitable Law Office in the New Economy.” The book includes tips and advice from Breen, who opened his first law office in Chicago the day he graduated from The John Marshall Law School in 2009. The book is available at BookLocker.com, Amazon and Barnes and Noble. Breen works at Breen Goril Law in downtown Chicago, and frequently meets with clients at the firm’s office in Cary. He received his undergraduate degree from the University of Illinois in 2005.


Huntley Construction Network hosts mixer

Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Sunday, April 24, 2016

| BUSINESS

36 Fire & Ice Smokehouse adds bar and video gaming

Photo provided

Fire & Ice Smokehouse and Creamery, 104A Railroad St., Marengo, hosted a ribbon-cutting ceremony April 16 celebrating its recently added full bar and video gaming. Pictured (from left) are Colleen Helfers of the Marengo-Union Chamber of Commerce; George Steinke; Fire & Ice owners Joe and Lolly Steinke; and Chamber Board of Directors members Randy Hauschildt and Deborah Hauschildt.

The Huntley Construction Network recently hosted a multi-chamber mixer. More than 60 people attended the networking event, which included gathering donations for Habitat for Humanity. The Huntley Construction Network meets monthly. For information, call James McConnell at 630-748-8036. Pictured (from left) are Mike Splitt of In Sync Systems; Amy Tessler and Ron Tessler of Tessler Construction; James McConnell of McConnell Law Services; Sandra Pierce of Phoenix Woodworking; and Danielle Hermann and Elle Miller of Reike Office Interiors.

Wonder Lake chamber hosts annual dinner

FOX Virtual Tours holds ribbon-cutting

Photo provided

Photo provided

Members of the Wonder Lake Chamber of Commerce Board of Directors who attended the chamber’s annual dinner March 17 at The Rusty Nail included (from left) Rick Miller of Rex Auto Body and 24/7 Towing; Mete Durum of Wonder Lake Chiropractic; Jean Wesolek, chamber secretary; Donna Sullivan, chamber director; and chamber President Jim King of Wonder Lake State Bank.

Comcast opens county’s first XFINITY Store

Photo provided

FOX Virtual Tours held a ribbon-cutting on the Crystal Lake Chamber of Commerce grounds. FOX Virtual Tours creates premium quality Google Business View virtual tours. Pictured are: Chamber of Commerce President Mary Margaret Maule, Jackie Ruiz, Helen Lundquist of Coldwell Banker Honig-Bell, FOX Virtual Tours owner Brad Lawrence, Chamber of Commerce Ambassador Jack Sebesta, Bonnie Miller, Sharon Repplinger and Deidre Martinez.

BRIEF Piershale certified as accredited estate planner Photo provided

Comcast opened its first XFINITY Store in McHenry County at 6000 Northwest Highway in Crystal Lake. City Councilman Ralph Dawson and Crystal Lake Chamber of Commerce Ambassadors joined store manager Muhunnad Alansari, store employees and several other Comcast employees to officially cut the ribbon.

CRYSTAL LAKE – John Piershale is newly certified as an accredited estate planner designee by the National Association of Estate Planners & Councils (NAEPC).

Piershale is affiliated with Piershale Financial Group, 407 E. Congress Parkway, Suite C, Crystal Lake. Piershale Financial Group helps residents planning for retirement to make smart financial decisions. Visit www.piershalefinancial. com for information.


By ANICK JESDANUN The Associated Press

• PRINCE

Continued from page A34 famously proclaimed “the Internet is over” for any musician who wants to get paid. Those words may have resonated with the managers of today’s top stars,

such as Adele. In November, the British recording artist spurned streaming services and made her new album “25” available initially only for purchase and became No. 1 for the year almost instantly. It’s a top seller in 2016, too. Taylor Swift had limited streaming of her album “1989” a year earlier. In 2014, with the copyrights to old

works about to revert back to the artist, Prince worked out a deal with Warner Music Group whereby ownership was transferred to his name, according to a person with knowledge of the matter. Under the deal, Warner operates the business in perpetuity in the U.S., with the parties sharing the proceeds, said the person, who asked

not to be identified discussing nonpublic terms. Warner still has the rights outside the U.S. Prince’s total music copyright catalog – if it were to go on sale – may be worth at least $100 million, said Derek Crownover, the entertainment-law practice leader at Dickinson Wright PLLC.

• Sunday, April 24, 2016

NEW YORK – It’s a little easier to watch baseball online this year, although no one would call it safe at home quite yet. Major League Baseball has broadcast games over the Internet since 2002, but always with one huge catch: A blackout on all local team games – both home and away. That protects the league’s lucrative TV contracts, but can be a major bummer for fans, particularly since MLB’s definition of “local” is awfully broad. To watch Cubs games live on the league’s online service, for instance, you need to be well outside the Chicago metropolitan region. Even Iowa is too close, because the state doesn’t have its own team. In Las Vegas, all five California teams and the Arizona Diamondbacks are blacked out. The league is lifting some of those MLB Advanced Media via AP restrictions this year, provided you already subscribe to a traditional cable or This image provided by MLB Advanced Media shows a screen grab of a live broadcast of a Major League Baseball game on an iPad. satellite TV package – and don’t mind Baseball is easing restrictions on watching video online, but there are still lots of hurdles for fans of hometown teams. You typically announcers who are rooting against need a cable or satellite TV subscription, and in many cases, you get only the opposing team’s announcers – and this comes after your home team. A few cable-like TV paying an extra fee for the season. packages online might offer another alternative. Here’s what the playing field gional sports networks. But neither is Even then, some teams might not be in- for the pennant. Voice assistants such as Apple’s looks like from your phone or computer comprehensive. For instance, neither cluded. offers SportsNet New York, which carthese days. Siri, Google Now, Microsoft’s Cortana ries New York Mets games. and Amazon’s Alexa can also give you GOING OLD SCHOOL Sling TV is cheaper at $20 a month, You can listen to your team’s radio scores and standings on request. Teams BASEBALL THE MLB WAY If you’re a diehard fan who wants to but it offers only Fox regional net- broadcasts online without blackout re- also post regular updates on Twitter. follow the pennant race, you’re best off works, including the Yankees’ YES Net- strictions. You need an At Bat Premium with MLB’s premium service, which work. (Be sure to sign up for the “multi- subscription, which costs $20 for the IN THE STADIUM costs $110 for the season – $20 less than stream” version, which launched as a season or $3 a month. This is included MLB’s Ballpark app for iPhones or last year – or $25 a month. If the Yan- test service this month.) Sony’s Vue of- with the full MLB TV package, but not Android phones offers stadium maps kees and the Red Sox are vying for the fers Fox and Comcast sports networks the single-team option. showing concessions, ATMs and, most A t B a t P r e m i u m a l s o o f f e r s importantly, restrooms. Some stadiums division’s top spot, the instance, Yan- as part of “core” packages that cost $35 kees fans will need the full package to or $45 a month, depending on the mar- Gameday, a graphical depiction of ev- even let you order food from the seats. root against the Red Sox. Also, for the ket. Vue requires a Sony PlayStation or ery pitch and every swing almost in real time. You see where runners are on first time, you can follow a single team an Amazon Fire TV device. If you’re already a cable customer, base, how fast each pitch is thrown and THE MINORS throughout the season for $85. There’s a separate video package Either way, you still can’t watch you might be able to sign onto your where it crosses the plate. It’s a great for minor leagues, MiLB.TV; it costs way to follow games without cloistering your hometown team unless you have local sports network with your cable a separate TV subscription – at least not password. If that doesn’t work, MLB’s yourself under headphones or blasting $50 for the season or $13 a month. Not live. Blackouts lift for on-demand video new “Follow Your Team” feature might the play-by-play at others nearby. ESPN every minor league team is available, however, and a few teams black out about 90 minutes after a game ends. do the trick when it launches later has a similar feature called Gamecast. home games just like the big leagues. this year. This gets you games for loVoice assistants vary in their covTAKE ME OUT TO THE HOME GAME cal teams, free of blackouts – but you’re SCORES AND MORE The free At Bat phone app offers no- erage of minor leagues. Siri just added You might be able to get local team stuck with feeds from the opposing tifications on score changes and play- scores and schedules for 28 minor and games by subscribing to Sony’s Play- team’s market. Following your team this way will er trades. It’s great for casual fans who international leagues, while Google Station Vue or Dish’s Sling TV. These TV-over-the-Internet services offer cost you a total of $120 for the season, just want to know results. You also can Now sends you to websites if you ask dozens of channels, including some re- and you’ll still need a cable password. set it up for rival teams in contention for updates.

BUSINESS | Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

How to watch baseball online in 2016

37


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Sunday, April 24, 2016

| BUSINESS

38

Facebook might add tip jar on posts By KAREN TURNER Special to The Washington Post

The introduction of Instant Articles led to questions about who would take revenue from ads on these articles. Right now, Facebook doesn’t make anything off the articles unless the publisher wants Facebook to handle transactions with ad companies, in which case they take 30 percent. What Facebook gets in exchange, presumably, is more user time spent on its app. But Facebook’s survey introducing the concept of monetizing posts suggests it is exploring alternatives. The survey comes on the heels of recent reports that Facebook users are no longer sharing as much personal information as they once did. As Facebook friend lists grow and the site increasingly used as a news-sharing platform, users are less inclined to share personal status updates, pictures and other original content.

Facebook might add a digital tip jar to posts, providing a revenue-generating source for users, according to a survey obtained by the Verge. The survey asked verified users if they would be interested in several options for profiting from posts, including branded content, sponsorship matchups, or sharing ad revenue from Facebook. It also offered two more promotional options: some sort of call to action, such as signing up for alerts or buying tickets, as well as a “donate to charity” option. The survey suggests that Facebook is taking steps to become a more explicit publisher platform and looking to shift its monetization model to benefit content generators. Last year, Facebook launched Instant Articles, a feature that put the social media website squarely in the • Karen Turner is a freelance jourpublishing platform space. Instant Articles allows publishers to post directly nalist covering tech for The Washinginto Facebook’s platform. ton Post.

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NORTHWEST HERALD | Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Sunday, April 24, 2016


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Sunday, April 24, 2016

| FUN & GAMES

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD 40 Expanded worldview • By Howard Barkin ACROSS 1.) Kind of chip 6.) Novelist Tillie who wrote “Tell Me a Riddle” 11.) 1950s sci-fi terror, with “the” 15.) Pro-baller-turned-commentator for N.B.A. on TNT 19.) Upper reaches 20.) Last method of death in Agatha Christie’s “And Then There Were None” 21.) Letter sign-off 22.) Modern movement inits. 23.) *1978 movie in which Kevin Bacon made his film debut 25.) Minicar, say 27.) Makeup for a “Wizard of Oz” character? 28.) Cooperate (with) 29.) Didn’t exist 30.) Sufficient, in brief 32.) *Having it made 35.) Deg. in the boardroom 38.) Fails to brake in time for, maybe 40.) “I see what you did there!” 41.) Comments from a crossword kibitzer 43.) It’s sold by the yard 44.) If all else fails 47.) Actor Morales 48.) *Progress preventer 53.) Some Vegas attractions 55.) Prophet whose name means “deliverance” 56.) Southern Italian port 57.) Lock combination? 59.) Helmeted deity 60.) Cravings 63.) Sing loudly 67.) Non-____ (modern food label) 68.) *1990s-2000s HBO hit 71.) A, in Amiens 72.) Feeling 74.) “Chilean” fish 75.) Typewriter type 76.) Family symbols 79.) Mexican sauce 80.) “Natural” way to serve a roast 81.) “Dance at Le Moulin de la Galette,” e.g. 84.) *Laos or Vietnam 88.) Start to -matic

89.) “Oh jeez, don’t look at me” 90.) Sue Grafton’s “____ for Ricochet” 91.) Result of overexposure? 94.) Where phone nos. might be stored 95.) Burst through, as a barrier 100.) Prefix meaning 118-Across 101.) *Sobriquet for ardent Boston fans 105.) Tetra- plus two 106.) Superficially repair 107.) Things always kept on hand? 109.) Quick jump in the pool 110.) Like some photography 113.) *Popular app that can view any of the places named at the ends of the answers to the starred clues 115.) Tippy-top 116.) Disturbance 117.) Bach composition 118.) See 100-Across 119.) Shock to the system 120.) “____-Team” 121.) Blackjack option 122.) “Duck Dynasty” network DOWN 1.) More likely to win a handwriting award 2.) When many start the workday 3.) Achebe who wrote “Things Fall Apart” 4.) Designer line? 5.) Like some medication 6.) Available 7.) Sarges’ superiors 8.) March composer 9.) Curves seen in sports car ads 10.) Formerly 11.) Instrument in a metalworker’s union? 12.) Soloist? 13.) Lose control at the buffet 14.) Appear 15.) Blind part 16.) Elev. 17.) Prez on a penny 18.) 15 mins. of an N.F.L. game 24.) Rich Richie 26.) Tolkien creatures

31.) Purchase at an optometrist’s 33.) Cry of pain 34.) “Vamoose!” 35.) Work well together 36.) Seasoned pork sausage, informally 37.) “No warranty” 39.) Third-largest island in Italy, after Sicily and Sardinia 42.) “____ the Beat” (1982 GoGo’s hit) 44.) Broadly smiling 45.) Gang in “Grease” with an automotive name 46.) Reggae precursor 48.) Fetches 49.) See 112-Down 50.) Deliver to, as a pickup line 51.) Agile mountain climbers 52.) Explorer’s grp. 53.) Guitar bars 54.) One way to sit by 58.) Storklike waders 60.) Dissuade 61.) La saison chaude 62.) P.I., in old slang 64.) Board displaying the alphabet 65.) Like some DVD-exclusive releases 66.) Mess with, as hair or siblings 68.) What covers parts of 80Down? 69.) Poetic shades 70.) L.A. locale 73.) Cartoon Great Dane, informally 75.) Coup d’état 77.) Cable channel whose first initial stands for its founder 78.) Drama that can go on for years 80.) See 68-Down 81.) Order in the court 82.) Cabinet dept. 83.) El ____ 85.) The year 2510 86.) Average 87.) Thirty, en français 89.) Thorough 92.) River past Orsk 93.) Meal 95.) Mogul

96.) Churned 97.) Star of Hitchcock’s “The Birds” 98.) Egressed 99.) Nymph turned into a laurel tree, in Greek myth 102.) “Calvin and Hobbes” girl 103.) Tennis situation after deuce 104.) Border county of New York or Pennsylvania 106.) “omg” or “lol,” say 108.) Phantasy Star maker 110.) Indian mausoleum opening? 111.) N.Y.S.E. debut 112.) With 49-Down, singer with the autobiography “It Wasn’t All Velvet” 113.) Guys’ dates, informally 114.) ____ Pacis (Roman monument)

ANSWERS TO LAST WEEK’S PUZZLE C L A S S I C

H A V E A G O

E T E R N A L

E R N I E

O L G E E O R S O H I C S I D A O I L T A R A B N O T A S N O R S R S N E W Y A V A T H A R D

R U P I N E G E R O S I R U N R A F R A D O E V E R S E R O R O B W A C O A N K E I A N S S T E T S B A I F E R R O R K H A R A L Y N

J A N E T R E N O

A U T O S I T A S C A

R E A C H T E M Y A R G E O W

L A M O D A E A L A N T U B C O A A L E R V E R G R A S S T T S M A T A S P E N H A N T R A E S A P P P A A I T R R U T B O R O N E A Y

P E I C O A N N G N E I S S W E R E H E R E

O D E T S V L A D

V E X

A S T L A I O C E T U S O N T N D O C A N L M I E N B E A S E R S E R K E B O C R O H O T E L I E L E P O S

R Y N E A N B A L A L A I K A

P A L L E T S

A B S E N C E

Y E S L E T S


THE PUZZLER

DOWN 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 31 33 35 38 40 42 44

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• Sunday, April 24, 2016

110 Campus building, for short 111 Develop 112 Partner in crime 115 City in Spain 117 Glove leather 118 Destructive insect 119 Pitfall 121 Agreeable 122 Sculptor’s tool 123 School in England 125 “Exodus” author 127 North Carolina native 129 Getz or Musial 132 Fed. agency 134 Plan 136 Praise 137 Makes lace 141 -- -de-sac 142 Honored with a party 144 Decaying area 146 “Star --” 148 Russell -- Crowe 149 Japanese film type 151 Of birds 153 Boundary 155 Canvas stand 157 Foe 158 Rich cake 159 Seat of a kind 160 Brilliance 161 Fragrance 162 Stage direction 163 Make expiation 164 Poor

FUN & GAMES | Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

ACROSS 1 Part of India 6 Photo finish 11 Throws 16 Sumptuous meal 21 Something thick and messy 22 Of bees 23 “Rigoletto” is one 24 Knight’s gear 25 -- Ana 26 Use up 27 Theme 28 Equine animal 29 Catchall abbr. 30 Carry 32 Seaweed 34 “Deep -- Nine” 36 Flower necklace 37 Abound 39 Pummel 41 Rag or Kewpie 43 Sell-out letters 44 Ornamental plant 45 Affirmed 48 Droplet 50 Dividing word 52 Boat’s kitchen 55 Magnani or Kournikova 57 Diagnostic aid (Hyph.) 59 Seattle neighbor 63 Lessen 64 Underhanded 66 Very wicked 68 -- Lisa 69 Actuality 70 Like sashimi 72 Type of drum 73 Work unit 74 A Gabor 75 Kelly or Krupa 76 Greek epic poet 78 Tool set 79 Wise 80 Held sway 82 Favorite - 83 White sale item 85 Modest restaurant 86 Boy 87 Tin 88 “The -- News Bears” 89 -- Aviv 90 Dark beer 93 Jargon 95 Hazard for ships 96 Infidel 100 Faithful 101 Compass pt. 102 Bolt 104 Refection 105 Simian creature 106 Sprint 107 Hematite or rust 109 Chum

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convergence 46 A letter 47 Kind of evidence (Abbr.) 49 Platform 51 Story 52 Computer-fun fan 53 On high 54 Hawaiian porch 56 City in Ohio 58 Pulled 60 Vast expanse of water 61 Mrs. Simpson 62 “Rags to riches” writer 64 Make smooth 65 A tuber 67 Money for release 69 Nosebag filler 71 Rainy 75 Pesky bug 76 Revere 77 79 81 82 84 85 87

Mechanical man River deposit Adhesive Droop Funny fellow “Let’s Make a --” Kind of union

89 Yoked animals 90 Scarecrow stuffing 91 Armistice 92 Liquid measure 93 Indigo dye 94 End 95 Career criminal 96 Big sandwich 97 Rabbits 98 Lyric poem 99 Stair post 101 Burst forth 103 Cistern 104 Temperance 107 Leave unmentioned 108 Light color 110 Paper transfer 111 Culpability 113 Baking chamber 114 Wyatt the lawman 116 Kindled 117 That girl 120 Lager variety 122 Yield by treaty 124 Put into symbols 126 Sun god 128 Go quickly 129 Disfigurements

ANSWERS TO LAST WEEK’S PUZZLE

Look for answers to this week’s puzzle in next Sunday’s edition

130 131 133 135 138 139 140 142

Old garment -- and well Breed of cattle Oklahoma city Usher’s beat Walk Like a pretzel Touched

143 Gossip 145 Glove 147 Sharp 150 Chess piece 152 Broke a fast 154 Bovine sound 156 High card


SUDOKU TRIPLES

Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Sunday, April 24, 2016

| FUN & GAMES

42

First cousins look forward to growing old as couple Dear Abby: I am a retired widower. After my wife died, my first cousin “Julia” invited me to visit her in Florida over the winter. She’s seven years my junior, divorced, lives alone and is a successful Realtor. We had a good time during the two months I was there. The next summer, I invited Julia to my home. We had a great time together, but then she had to return to Florida for business. I visited her last winter, and one evening while relaxing and watching a movie, we became intimate. It seemed so natural. After that, I moved from the guest room into hers. Julia is now contemplating retirement. We are planning for me to sell my home and move in with her. We are not thinking about marriage or commingling our funds

DEAR ABBY Jeanne Phillips and assets. Our legal documents are in order. Abby, what would you suggest we say to our children, other relatives or anyone else who inquires about our relationship? We have enjoyed each other’s company so much. We just want to grow older together. –

Kissing Cousin Dear Cousin: No announcements

are necessary. If you are asked, just smile and say you are both happy, healthy and enjoying each other’s company. Eventually, they’ll get the picture. Dear Abby: I found my birth par-

ents 18 years ago. I always knew I had an older sister. The parents who adopted me are both gone now. They were great parents. Now that I have reconnected with my birth mom and siblings, I have a large family – two sisters and two brothers. I have a great relationship with my baby sister; it’s like we’re twins. The problem is, the older sister demands to be the center of attention all the time. I have tried to understand her, but every time we get together we end up mad at each other. It’s like she thinks I’m trying to take her place in the family, which I’m not. I enjoy spending time with my baby sister, but we can’t spend much time together because she lives in another state and it’s hard for either of us to travel. When I do

get to go there, the older one makes it so unpleasant I don’t even want to go. How can I get over this or care less about her crap? Thanks. – Mid-

dle Sister In The West Dear Middle Sister: You might care less about your older sister’s “attitude” if you understand she behaves that way because she may be feeling threatened. By being nasty, she’s trying to protect her turf. That you and the younger one have bonded “like twins” makes her feel excluded. Try to resent her less, sympathize more, and make her feel included. However, if that doesn’t work, see less of her so she can’t ruin the visit. • Write Dear Abby at www. dearabby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.


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By EUGENIA LAST Newspaper Enterprise Association TODAY – An open mind and a desire to learn will be your tickets to success. Don’t wait to be slotted into a position or situation. Make your choice clear and be precise and detailed in all that you do. Children and partners will play a role in your decisions. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) – If you are fun to be with, everyone will gravitate to your side. Enjoy a little entertainment and laughter, and use your intellectual wit to persuade others to go along with your plans. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) – Discipline and hard work will lead to a better you. A makeover or

fitness program will get you in tip-top shape. Compliments and romance are heading your way. CANCER (June 21-July 22) – If you let your imagination run wild, you will come up with some interesting concepts and plans for your home or next project. A partnership will contribute to your success. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) – A change will stimulate your senses and get you headed in a direction that promises adventure and a new beginning. Share your plans with someone you love. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) – It’s best to avoid a dispute with someone trying to burden you with additional responsibilities. Anger will lead to mishaps. Focus on enjoyable things and positive people.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) – A day trip or visit to someone you don’t see often will be a perfect pick-me-up. A change of heart will lead to plans and a romantic promise. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) – Look at the fine print before you sign a contract for domestic work. If you shop around, you will save money and find alternatives to the quotes you’ve been given. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) – Listen to what others have to say, but go to the source if you want the truth. Emotions, overreaction and indulgence will lead to trouble. Focus on positive changes and self-improvement. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) – There are deals worth looking at and opportunities of an unusual nature to consider. Don’t overlook a chance to

make a loved one happy. A simple gesture will go a long way. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) – Less talk and more action will equal a happy household and a better relationship with a loved one. A personal change will give you the boost you need to start something new. PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) – Don’t be fooled by someone’s actions. Keep an open mind but a closed fist when it comes to financial matters. Spend on items of quality, not frivolous things you don’t need. ARIES (March 21-April 19) – A joint venture will give you the push you need to finish what you start. A personal change is favored and will help you make an important decision about your future.

• Sunday, April 24, 2016

SUNDAY HOROSCOPE

43

TELEVISION | Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

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(N) ’ Show Xerox Rochester International American Barn In the Loop Chicago Sinfonietta: Music for the Dalziel and Pascoe “Project Aphro- Dalziel and Pascoe Fran is pushed POV “Don’t Tell Anyone (No Le Digas a Nadie)” Advice Theater Talk ’ Beyond the Beltway 4 WYCC Stories New World dite” Car bomb. (CC) to her death. (CC) (CC) Jazz Festival ’ (CC) columnist Angy Rivera. ’ (CC) Bones “The Drama in the Queen” A Video Spotlight Bob’s Burgers Family Guy ’ Two and a Half Two and a Half Bones “The Knight on the Grid” The Ring of Honor Wrestling (CC) Movie: › “Neil Simon’s The Odd Couple II” (1998) Jack Lemmon. 8 WCGV Oscar and Felix hit the road for their children’s wedding. (CC) (CC) Men ’ (CC) Men ’ (CC) man is found dead in a well. ’ Widow’s Son serial killer. ’ ’ (CC) The King of Rules of EnRules of En2 Broke Girls ’ 2 Broke Girls ’ Mike & Molly ’ Mike & Molly ’ Are We There Are We There Cheaters Andrew’s suspicions are 2 Broke Girls ’ 2 Broke Girls ’ Seinfeld “The Seinfeld “The The King of : WCIU (CC) Queens (CC) Queens (CC) gagement ’ gagement ’ Yet? Yet? (CC) (CC) (CC) (CC) (CC) Fire” ’ (CC) Opposite” ’ correct. ’ (CC) Final Word Inside; Bears Bensinger Whacked Out Raw Travel ’ Paid Program @ WFLD Family Feud ’ Family Feud ’ Bordertown (N) The Simpsons The Simpsons Bob’s Burgers Family Guy ’ Last Man-Earth Fox News Chicago (N) ’ (CC) McLaughlin PBS NewsHour Adelante Travels With Around the Wisconsin Nature Beavers transform and Lionsrock -- Return of the King A Independent Lens “Democrats; Soft Vengeance” Zimbabwe’s democratic Front and Center “BORNS” Indie D WMVT Group (N) (CC) revive landscapes. (CC) (DVS) Weekend (N) ’ Darley ’ (CC) Corner-John Foodie wildlife reserve in South Africa. ’ constitution. (N) ’ (CC) pop singer-songwriter BORNS. ’ Leverage “The 15 Minutes Job” Leverage “The Van Gogh Job” Leverage “The Hot Potato Job” Flashpoint A prisoners release. Flashpoint “A Call to Arms” ’ Leverage ’ (CC) Flashpoint “A New Life” ’ F WCPX Leverage ’ (CC) Bergstrom Modern Family Modern Family Two/Half Men Two/Half Men TMZ (N) ’ (CC) G WQRF Two/Half Men Two/Half Men Bordertown (N) The Simpsons The Simpsons Bob’s Burgers Family Guy ’ Last Man-Earth News How I Met Your How I Met Your Modern Family Modern Family The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang Laughs (N) ’ Anger Manage- Anger Manage- Anger Manage- Anger Manage- Crazy Talk ’ Crazy Talk ’ Paid Program R WPWR Mother (CC) ment (CC) ment (CC) ment (CC) ment (CC) Theory (CC) Theory (CC) Theory (CC) Theory (CC) Mother (CC) “Patriot Games” (CC) (CC) (CC) “Integrity” ’ CABLE 5:00 5:30 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30 (12:03) Intervention: Then & Now (A&E) Intervention “Andrew” ’ (CC) Intervention “Elena” ’ (CC) Intervention “Kaeleen” ’ (CC) Intervention: Then & Now (N) ’ Intervention “Conrad” ’ (CC) (:02) The First 48 ’ (CC) (:03) Intervention “Kaeleen” ’ (:03) Fear the Walking Dead (12:05) Talking Dead Guests (4:30) Movie ››› “Twister” (1996, Action) Helen Hunt. Storm chasers (6:59) Fear the Walking Dead A Fear the Walking Dead “Ourobo- (:02) Talking Dead Guests discuss (:01) Fear the Walking Dead (AMC) survivalist family provides shelter. ros” (N) (CC) “Ouroboros.” (N) (CC) “Ouroboros” (CC) “Ouroboros” (CC) discuss “Ouroboros.” (CC) race to test a new tornado-monitoring device. ‘PG-13’ (CC) How to Catch a River Monster River Monsters: Unhooked (CC) How to Catch a River Monster (:03) River Monsters “Razorhead” (:04) Finding Bigfoot ’ (:08) River Monsters “Razorhead” (12:09) River Monsters: Unhooked (ANPL) River Monsters ’ CNN Newsroom CNN Newsroom Anthony Bourdain Parts Anthony Bourdain Parts United Shades of America Anthony Bourdain Parts Anthony Bourdain Parts United Shades of America (CNN) Jeff Dunham: All Over the Map Jeff Dunham: Unhinged Jeff Dunham: All Over the Map Jeff Dunham: Unhinged T.J. Miller: No (:18) Jeff Dunham: Controlled Chaos (CC) (:04) Jeff Dunham: Controlled Chaos (CC) (COM) Jeff Dunham The Golf Scene SportsNet Cent College Football: Notre Dame Blue-Gold Game. World Poker SportsNet Cent SportsNet Cent UFA SportsNet Cent MLB Baseball Heartland Poker Tour (CC) (CSN) Naked and Afraid: Uncensored Naked and Afraid (N) ’ (CC) (12:02) Naked and Afraid (CC) (DISC) Naked and Afraid ’ (CC) Naked and Afraid ’ (CC) Naked and Afraid ’ (CC) (:01) Naked and Afraid ’ (CC) (:01) Naked and Afraid ’ (CC) Best Friends Bunk’d “Love Is Backstage K.C. Undercover Liv and Maddie Jessie “Bye Bye Jessie “Driving Austin & Ally ’ Austin & Ally ’ K.C. Undercover K.C. Undercover K.C. Undercover Liv and Maddie Stuck in the Girl Meets World Stuck in the (DISN) Middle (CC) Middle (CC) “Brainwashed” (N) ’ (CC) Whenever ’ for the Birds” “Stand Tall” ’ “Brainwashed” ’ (CC) Bertie” ’ Miss Crazy” ’ (CC) ’ (CC) ’ (CC) ’ (CC) Sunday Night Countdown MLB Baseball: Boston Red Sox at Houston Astros. From Minute Maid Park in Houston. (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC) SportsCenter (CC) (ESPN) SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC) SportsCenter Special SportsCenter SportsCenter SportsCenter World of X Games (N) SportsCenter NBA Basketball: First Round: Teams TBA. ESPN FC (N) (ESPN2) College Softball Fox News Sunday Fox News Reporting Stossel The Greg Gutfeld Show Fox News Reporting FOX Report The Greg Gutfeld Show FOX Report (N) (FNC) Guy’s Grocery Games Cooks vs. Cons Spring Baking Championship Cutthroat Kitchen Guy’s Grocery Games (N) Spring Baking Championship (N) Cutthroat Kitchen (N) (FOOD) Spring Baking Championship Joel Osteen David Jeremiah James Robison Paid Program (FREE) (4:00) Movie: “Despicable Me” Movie: ››› “The Incredibles” (2004) Voices of Craig T. Nelson, Holly Hunter. (:45) Movie: ›››› “WALL-E” (2008, Adventure) Voices of Ben Burtt, Elissa Knight. 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(N) ’ condom at a bar. ’ away profits. ’ budget cuts. ’ (4:45) Movie: ›› “Legends of the Fall” (1994) Brad Pitt. iTV. The forces Movie: ››› “The Ghost and the Darkness” (1996) Michael Douglas. (8:55) Movie: ›››› “The Shawshank Redemption” (1994) Tim Robbins, Morgan Free- (:20) Movie: ››› “Sideways” (2004) Paul Giamatti, (STZENC) An engineer and a hunter stalk man-eating African lions. (CC) of love and war slowly destroy a Montana family. ’ (CC) man. iTV. An innocent man goes to a Maine penitentiary for life in 1947. ’ (CC) Thomas Haden Church. iTV. ’ (CC) (3:30) Movie: ›› “Deep Impact” Movie: ›› “Freddy vs. Jason” (2003, Horror) Robert Englund, Ken Movie: ›› “Jeepers Creepers” (2001, Horror) Gina Philips, Justin Long. Movie: ›› “Drive Angry” (2011, Action) Nicolas Cage, Amber Heard. A Movie: “Heebie Jeebies” (2013, (SYFY) Horror) Robert Belushi. (CC) (1998) Robert Duvall. (CC) Kirzinger. Razor-clawed Freddy battles masked killer Jason. 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(N) (Live) (CC) NBA Basketball: First Round: Teams TBA. (N) (Live) (CC) (TNT) Inside the NBA (N) ’ (Live) (CC) NBA Basketball (TVL) Reba ’ (CC) Reba ’ (CC) Reba ’ (CC) Reba ’ (CC) Reba ’ (CC) Reba ’ (CC) Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond King of Queens King of Queens King of Queens King of Queens Golden Girls Golden Girls Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Modern Family Modern Family Modern Family Modern Family Motive “The Glass House” A father (USA) “Limitations” (CC) (DVS) Criminology leads to murder. (CC) (DVS) Sexual assault by women. ’ “Pandora” ’ (CC) (DVS) Stabler goes under cover. ’ “First Days” ’ “Larry’s Wife” “Farm Strong” is murdered. (CC) (DVS) (VH1) Family Therapy With Dr. Jenn ’ Love & Hip Hop: Atlanta ’ Black Ink Crew ’ Black Ink Crew ’ Movie: ››› “8 Mile” (2002, Drama) Eminem, Kim Basinger. ’ (CC) Movie: ›› “Get Rich or Die Tryin’” (2005) ’ Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang The Detour Austin Powers (WTBS) “Talladega Nights: Ricky Bobby” Big Bang Movie: ›› “Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby” (2006) PREMIUM 5:00 5:30 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30 Game of Thrones The fate of Jon Veep “Morning Silicon Valley Last Week (4:00) Movie ››› “Breach” (2007) (5:50) Movie ›› “Jurassic World” (2015) Chris Pratt. Man-made dino- Game of Thrones The fate of Jon Silicon Valley Veep “Morning Last Week (HBO) Tonight-John Chris Cooper. ‘PG-13’ (CC) After” ’ (CC) ’ (CC) Snow is revealed. ’ (CC) ’ (CC) After” ’ (CC) Tonight-John Snow is revealed. ’ (CC) saurs go on a rampage at an island resort. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) (4:10) Movie (:40) Movie ››› “Rush Hour” (1998, Action) Jackie Chan. Mismatched (:20) Movie ››› “Neighbors” (2014, Comedy) Seth Movie ›› “Point of No Return” (1993) Bridget Fonda. A condemned (10:50) Movie “Bikini Super He- (12:15) Movie ››› “Excalibur” (MAX) “Cop Car” ‘R’ roes” (2015, Adult) ’ ‘NR’ (CC) (1981) Nicol Williamson. ‘R’ (CC) police partners seek a kidnapped girl. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) Rogen, Zac Efron, Rose Byrne. ’ ‘R’ (CC) drug addict is given a new life as a hit woman. ’ ‘R’ (CC) Movie ›› “Chappie” (2015, Science Fiction) Voice of Sharlto Copley, Dice “Ego” ’ House of Lies House of Lies Dice “Prestige” House of Lies Dice “Prestige” Dice “Prestige” House of Lies Movie ›› “Chappie” (2015, Science Fiction) Voice of Sharlto Copley, (SHOW) “Game Theory” “Holacracy” (N) (N) ’ (CC) (CC) “Holacracy” ’ ’ (CC) ’ (CC) “Holacracy” ’ Dev Patel. A robot has the ability to think and feel. ’ ‘R’ (CC) Dev Patel. A robot has the ability to think and feel. ’ ‘R’ (CC) (4:45) Movie ››› “Clouds of Sils Maria” (2014) Juliette Binoche. A Movie ›› “The Pink Panther” (2006, Comedy) Steve (:35) Movie › “The Condemned” (2007, Action) Steve Austin. Prisoners Movie ››› “Welcome to New York” (2014, Drama) Gérard Depardieu. “Lampoon’s (TMC) Cattle Call” veteran actress rehearses a play with her young assistant. ‘R’ (CC) Martin, Kevin Kline. ’ ‘PG’ (CC) fight to the death before an audience on the Web. ’ ‘R’ (CC) A powerful French politico assaults a hotel maid. ’ ‘R’ (CC)


44

Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Sunday, April 24, 2016

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SPORTS

DAILY PULLOUT SECTION Sunday, April 24, 2016 • NWHerald.com

Huntley’s Joe Boland (left) prepares to score the tying run as teammate Tyler Koss directs his slide during the fifth inning against Jacobs on Saturday in Huntley. Huntley won, 6-5, in nine innings. Mike Greene for Shaw Media

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Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Sunday, April 24, 2016

| SPORTS

2

BASEBALL: HUNTLEY 6, JACOBS 5 (9 INN.)

Raiders relish 2-day sweep Huntley wins on Konie’s RBI single in 9th By JOE STEVENSON joestevenson@shawmedia.com HUNTLEY – Huntley first baseman Noah Konie thought his hard ground ball up the middle was a game-winner, but then he remembered who was in center field for Jacobs. “I was hoping Ryan (McGran) could make it home (from second base),” Konie said. “I know (Jacobs’) Mike Addante has an absolute cannon. That’s why he’s going to NebrasNoah Konie ka.” McGran was aware what the Red Raiders were dealing with as well. “I was hoping [Konie] didn’t hit it too hard to get right to Addante,” said McGran, who had doubled with Ryan McGran two outs. “I figured it was the ninth inning, we had to try for it.” McGran raced home, sliding safely ahead of catcher Daniel Salomon’s tag to give the Raiders their first lead and a 6-5 walk-off victory Saturday in a Fox Valley Conference Valley Division baseball game. Huntley (12-7 overall, 5-3 FVC Valley) swept the Golden Eagles (12-5, 5-2) Friday and Saturday, leaving Jacobs two games behind first-place Dundee-Crown (7-0 FVC Valley). “I was looking for something to hit, and I got it on the first pitch and took advantage of it,” Konie said. “It feels amazing (to sweep). It’s indescribably amazing.” Huntley committed four errors in the first four innings and Jacobs capitalized with four unearned runs. The Raiders narrowed the gap to 5-3 in the fourth, then tied the score on Trevor Ranallo’s two-run, two-out single in the fifth. “That was a great at-bat by Trevor to go to the right side,” Raiders coach Andy Jakubowski said. “I’m very pleased at the way our guys came out the last two days. They brought their intensity, they

OUTSIDE THE BOX SCORE q UNSUNG HERO

Charlie Nugent Huntley, sr., SS

Nugent made several good plays in the field and was 2 for 3 with two RBIs. He also laid down a sacrifice bunt to put Brad Maurer in scoring position in the eighth inning.

q THE NUMBER

4

Losses during the week for Jacobs (Niles Notre Dame, Palatine and Huntley twice), which had only one loss before that.

q AND ANOTHER THING ... Jacobs leadoff man Mike Addante continued to be a tough out. Addante had hits in his first four at-bats and was finally retired when Huntley center fielder Brad Maurer made a diving catch in the eighth inning. brought their passion. We kind of lacked that at the beginning of the week. It was a great win today, they found a way to fight back.” Relievers Logan DeWulf, Cole Raines and Cameron Reed allowed one earned run over the last six innings. Reed (10) threw three scoreless innings for the win. Jacobs coach Jamie Murray went to Casey Dennison, usually a starter,

Photos by Mike Greene for Shaw Media

TOP: Huntley players celebrate after defeating Jacobs, 6-5, in nine innings Saturday in Huntley. ABOVE: Jacobs pitcher Casey Dennison prepares to throw to first base in the eighth inning after fielding a sacrifice bunt by Huntley’s Charlie Nugent (right). in the eighth inning with a runner on first. After a sacrifice bunt by Charlie Nugent, Dennison struck out the next two batters. He retired the first two batters of the ninth before McGran doubled to right-center. “My first couple at-bats, I was dipping my shoulder and having trouble making contact,” McGran said. “I just focused on going the other way and hitting it solid. I

kind of got lucky and got under it.” Murray knows any game in the FVC represents a challenge. “The Fox Valley’s as competitive a conference as there is in the state,” Murray said. “We’ve handled adversity in the past. We’ll get past this and straighten it out. Casey did a great job. They had a couple good swings on it. You have to credit their (Nos.) 4 and 5 hitters.”


FEED

T

DeFabo: I see where Mitz is coming from. Recruiting is starting earlier and earlier. It seems the days are gone of an athlete playing his senior season and then choosing a school. However, I’m not in favor of the early signing period for a couple of reasons. My biggest concern is if you add an early signing period, kids are going to feel pressured to make up their minds before they are ready. They won’t have time to hear from another couple of schools or take a couple of more visits after a strong senior campaign. Before long, the early signing period will essentially become the only signing period. I have some concerns with that. Styf: Pressure? Talk to Katrenick or Olalere Oladipo or Dalton Wagner about that. Schools want kids to commit early and they don’t hold scholarships if they don’t. Katrenick lost a couple of chances simply by waiting as long as he did, and Bowling Green had another QB commit the same week. The whole system needs change because the timeline has moved up. Allow official visits, where parents can now go on the school’s tab, too, in the spring before senior year. Allow a summer early period for those who want it, but leave the athletes an out if/when a coach gets fired or jumps ship. The NCAA opened up electronic communications, meaning limitless text messages. The pressure is only going to rise. DeFabo: It sounds like you’re asking for the NCAA to completely rethink the process. Some of what you are saying makes sense (I agree kids should be allowed to back out of the commitment

From Twitter @CoachSchremp

Tweet from last night PR past & present at NIU game @niucoachcarey @Sean_Folliard16 @BigSEvans @Jeffjenkins77 @Samson22Evans @Jacobommen52 – @CoachSchremp (Prairie Ridge football coach Chris Schremp) Follow our writers on Twitter: Joe Stevenson – @NWH_JoePrepZone Mike DeFabo – @MikeDeFabo Jon Styf – @jonstyf

Shaw Media file photo

Jacobs junior quarterback Chris Katrenick, who recently committed to attend Bowling Green, will not be able to sign with the school until February.

2

TAKE

JON STYF AND MIKE DeFABO

FACE OFF

when a coach leaves, and parents should be permitted on official visits), however, are all these changes going to happen right now? I don’t think so. You can’t just change one part of the process and leave the others the same. It’s all built around a February signing day. For example, a lot of kids rely on second-quarter grades to get into the top academic schools like Notre Dame and Northwestern. A lot of kids retake the ACT or SAT in the fall of their senior year to try to meet eligibility standards. If you change one piece of the timetable, you’re putting those kids at a competitive disadvantage. Styf: That’s why it’s an early signing period, giving the athlete the option of either one possible. What needs to be avoided is what happened to Downers Grove South offensive tackle Erik Swenson, who was Michigan’s first commit of the 2016 class only to have his scholarship go away after Jim Harbaugh took over. Luckily, Oklahoma stepped in and offered, and he ended up fine. That doesn’t happen

with everyone. The early signing period gives more accountability on both sides. Yes, a complete overhaul is in order. DeFabo: So what else needs to change to make this work? Because as I see it now, moving the signing period up only shifts more of the power into coaches’ hands. It’s so much more difficult for recruits to back out of commitments. A change would only allow coaches to have them locked up earlier. Styf: Athletes are worried the scholarship will actually be there for them, and signing guarantees that. This gives them the option to take it earlier or wait things out, if they choose. And give the players an out if the coach is gone while moving the timeline for official visits up. Why do we need to change more than that? • Write to Northwest Herald Sports

Editor Jon Styf at jstyf@shawmedia. com. Write to Northwest Herald sports writer Mike DeFabo at mdefabo@ shawmedia.com.

What to watch Texas at White Sox, 1:10 p.m., CSN The Sox, who have won four of their past five, send Mat Latos (3-0) to the mound to face the Rangers’ Derek Holland (2-0) in the series finale.

Really? Washington Nationals pitcher Tanner Roark struck out a total of 10 batters in his first three starts this season. So it was more than a little surprising when he fanned a career-high 15 in seven innings Saturday in the Nats’ 2-0 win against the Twins. Nationals manager Dusty Baker offered an explanation: “He shaved his beard off, so that had something to do with it, probably.”

From Twitter @OladipoLere

Another tweet Great visit at Michigan State! #Spartans – @OladipoLere (Huntley defensive end Olalere Oladipo, with Michigan State coach Mark Dantonio)

• Sunday, April 24, 2016

his week, after Jacobs quarterback Chris Katrenick made a verbal commitment to Bowling Green University, Golden Eagles football coach Bill Mitz commented he wishes football had an earlier signing period. He brings up a hot issue. In June, the Collegiate Commissioners Association considered adding an early signing period for football that would allow athletes to sign their National Letters of Intent in December. Currently, players must wait until February of their senior year to sign. The commissioners opted to table discussion and could vote again on the subject this June. Other dates that have been considered include a fall date, late summer or early summer. Sports editor Jon Styf and sports reporter Mike DeFabo discuss the merits of an early signing period.

3

SPORTS | Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

Is it time for prep football to add early signing period?

THE DAILY


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Sunday, April 24, 2016

| SPORTS

4 SOFTBALL: WOODSTOCK TOURNAMENT

CLS just misses tournament title By ALEX KANTECKI akantecki@shawmedia.com

WOODSTOCK – Once Crystal Lake South grabbed a one-run lead in the top of the seventh inning against South Elgin, the Gators felt like they were in a good place. South Elgin stranded eight runners in the first six innings and managed only one run off sophomore pitcher Chloe Skorija, who had just tossed a four-pitch sixth in the championship game of the Woodstock Softball Tournament on Saturday at Bates Park. “They put a ton of pressure on our pitchers,” Gators coach Scott Busam said. “They put pressure on our defense, they had runners on first and third, second and third ... it was constant.” The Storm continued to put the pressure on South in the bottom of the seventh, and, after Alexa Rogalla reached on an error to start the inning, Stacy Bellack laid down a sacrifice bunt and the Gators committed another defensive mistake. Rogalla came all the way around as the throw from catcher Hannah Corcoran got away from second baseman Skylar Olsen – who was covering first on the play – and Mariah Spivey followed with an RBI single to give South Elgin a 3-2 win over the Gators. “I would like to have been 3-0, but that experience, I hope, will help us going into next week and going into conference play,” said Busam, whose Gators beat Johnsburg, 1-0, and Conant, 9-6. “Except for that inning, we managed to limit the mistakes, and one inning is what got us today.” In the top of the seventh, Sam Burgard gave the Gators (6-8) a 2-1 lead with an RBI single to center field that scored Taylor Kassel (2 for 3, double, two runs, two steals). The hit was a big boost for the Gators and Burgard, who went 2 for 4 against South Elgin’s Geneva Pollman. “My team was behind my back, and I know they wanted me to get her in,” said Burgard, who tossed a complete-game shutout against Johnsburg in South’s first game. “I think I’m getting better, and back into the swing of things.” Christina Toniolo, a 6-foot-1 freshman, started against Conant and earned the win, while Skorija recorded a oneout save to send the Gators to the championship. Carly Chovanec finished 5 for 7 in two games with a homer, double and four RBIs, Brooke Maddox had a home

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OUTSIDE THE BOX SCORE q UNSUNG HERO

Sam Burgard Crystal Lake South, jr., P

Burgard tossed a two-hit shutout with eight strikeouts in a 1-0 win over Johnsburg in South’s first game Saturday, and came through with an RBI single in the seventh inning to give the Gators a 2-1 lead against South Elgin in the championship game.

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Gators coach Scott Busam instructed 5-foot-3 freshman Skylar Olsen to hit a home run in her first at-bat against South Elgin. “Sky, if you get it over the fence, we get one.” Olsen didn’t hit it over, but she did slap a double that rolled all the way to fence. Olsen finished 3 for 4 to lead the Gators. run and three RBIs, and Taylor Kassel had three hits, three runs and two RBI. Cailey Giuffre had a double and drove in Toniolo for South’s only run against Johnsburg, and Maddie Bush scored three runs and hit a triple against Conant. Despite dropping the championship game to Conant, Busam was able to take many positives away from South’s 2-1 day. “I think it shows us that, in a tight game and late in the game, we’ve got a shot to win every time,” Busam said. “I think, if anything, it was a confidence builder for us.” Elsewhere in the tournament, Alden-Hebron won its first game to advance in the winner’s bracket, finishing 1-2 and losing the third-place game to Conant, 12-1. Crystal Lake Central went 2-1 and won the consolation championship, while Johnsburg went 1-2 and Harvard went 0-3. Emily Cunningham drove in four runs for A-H (12-4). Savanah Frank (two homers) and Kelly Iwamoto each had seven RBIs for Crystal Lake Central (9-6). Morgan Post and Paige King both drove in three runs for Johnsburg (7-8), and Skye McEstes had four RBIs for Woodstock. Harvard’s Arely Renteria Pena collected two hits and drove in two in a loss to Woodstock.

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PREP ROUNDUP

NORTHWEST HERALD

BASEBALL Dundee-Crown 7, Crystal Lake South 3:

At Crystal Lake, Nick Musielewicz and Carson Balcer each had a pair of hits and two RBIs Saturday as the Chargers (12-5, 7-0 FVC) beat the Gators (13-3, 4-3) for the second consecutive day in a Fox Valley Conference Valley Division game. Matt Wiechmann threw a complete game for the Chargers, scattering nine hits and three walks across seven innings. He allowed three runs (two earned) while striking out two. Kyle Lang started for the Gators and took the loss after giving up five runs in five innings before turning it over to Tim Siesennop, who gave up two runs (none earned) on one hit in two innings. Griffin Bright and Michael Humphrey led the Gators, each going 2 for 4. Richmond-Burton 5, Zion-Benton 1: At Zion, Dakota Gibb gave up one hit in five innings of scoreless work on the mound to lead the Rockets (9-5) in a nonconference win. Gibb walked two and struck out one before Brady Gibson and Jake Moeller each threw an inning of relief. Mike Wojcik went 3 for 4 with two doubles, two RBIs and two runs scored for the Rockets. Jake Rosing went 2 for 4 with a double and two RBIs, and Trevor Anderson went 2 for 4 with two doubles and one RBI. Prairie Ridge 8, Grayslake Central 3: At Grayslake, Robin Kim went 2 for 4 with four RBIs and a run scored to lead the Wolves (15-5, 6-1) in an FVC Fox victory. James Mikolajczewski and Nick Schmidt also picked up a pair of hits while Luke Annen scored three times. Joey Hanley started for the Wolves and got the win after pitching 41/3 innings, allowing four hits, three runs (two earned) and striking out five. Joe

held to six hits, one apiece from Jacobs Manning, Kyle Homa, Kevin Michaelsen, Pawel Barnas, Kostecki and Schrader. Michael Kruse started and went six innings, scattering six hits and allowing one unearned run. Carter Lawler took the loss when he gave up a run in the bottom of the seventh. Alden-Hebron 0-2, Luther North 10-12: At Portage Park in Chicago, the Giants (4-13, 1-8) lost a pair of Northeastern Athletic Conference games in five innings each. The Giants were no-hit in a 10-0 loss in the first game with Jack Wagner taking the loss. In the second game, the Giants lost, 12-2, with Brad Judson taking the loss. For the Giants, James LeJeune went 2 for 2 with a run, John Judson went 1 for 2 with an RBI, Kevin Judson had an RBI, and Josh Rolnicki scored a run.

BOYS LACROSSE Jacobs 17, McHenry 6: At Fox Ridge

Park in McHenry, Matt Bertone scored six goals and assisted on another to lead Jacobs to an FVC victory over McHenry. It was the first win of the season for the Golden Eagles (1-5, 1-2 FVC) Joe Biallas and Jake Riedel each scored three goals, and Luis Czech had two goals and two assists. Jack Marquardt and Evan Schwarz each had three points with a goal and two assists apiece. Jake Hanson also scored for the Golden Eagles. Jacobs goalies Alec Rainer and Noah Large each made five saves. Bartlett 12, Cary-Grove 5: At Bartlett, the Trojans (2-6) lost a nonconference game.

BOYS WATER POLO McHenry 8, Schaumburg 5: Mike Ma-

tusek scored four goals to lead McHenry over Schaumburg at Hoffman Estates. The Warriors (11-9) also got goals from Kevin Braun, Jackson Smith, Jonah Smith and Ruslan Fowles. Goalie Adam Starus made three saves for the Warriors.

SOFTBALL McHenry 8-17, Lake Zurich 14-15: At

McHenry, Tori Boysen went 4 for 5 with two RBIs and three runs, Alex Martens went 3 for 4 with four RBIs and two runs, and Amanda Manssen went 1 for 3 with a home run and six RBIs as the Warriors (11-5) won the second game, 17-15, to split a nonconference doubleheader. Also in the second game, Ashley Dehmlow went 3 for 4 with two RBIs and three runs scored, Ravan Kosmalski went 2 for 4 with three runs, Lexi Larson went 2 for 4 with two runs, Erika Breidenbach went 2 for 4 with a run and Taelor Schmitz went 1 for 4 with an RBI. Dehmlow also started and got the win.

In the first game, Martens went 1 for 3 with a home run, three RBIs and two runs scored, Manssen went 2 for 4 with two RBIs, Boysen went 2 for 4 with an RBI and a run, Breidenbach went 3 for 4 with a run and Dehmlow went 2 for 3 with a run scored. Paige Rauhut took the loss. Richmond-Burton 13, Winnebago 2: At Winnebago, Rachel Hayden allowed two unearned runs on four hits in five innings as the Rockets (9-7) won a nonconference game. Ashley Turner went 4 for 4 with a double and two RBIs, Haylie Regnier went 3 for 4 with two doubles and three runs scored, Mary Spohr went 3 for 3 with two runs, Emma Burke went 2 for 2 with two RBIs, Riley Herrick went 1 for 3 with 2 RBIs and a run and Alex Hilton went 2 for 4 with a run and an RBI. Huntley 8, Libertyville 3: At Libertyville, Tiffany Giese went 2 for 3 with two runs and two stolen bases and pitched all seven innings to lead the Red Raiders (10-4) to a nonconference win. Giese gave up three runs (two earned) on nine hits in her seven innings. Megan Baczewsui went 2 for 3 with a home run, 3 RBIs and two runs scored while Hayley O’Mara went 1 for 3 with a home run and two RBIs. Wauconda 9, Huntley 4: At Libertyville, Sofia Tenuta went 3 for 3 with a home run and two RBIs, but the Red Raiders (10-5) lost a nonconference game. Jessica Shields and Hayley O’Mara each went 2 for 4, with Shields stealing two bases and O’ Mara driving in a run. Tiffany Giese went 2 for 4 with a run scored but took the loss, giving up nine runs (seven earned) on seven hits and seven walks in seven innings. She struck out 10. St. Charles North 4, Cary-Grove 1: At St. Charles, Anna Whitaker went 1 for 3 with an RBI but the Trojans (5-10) lost a nonconference game. Colleen Kaveney and Alyssa Gurgone each went 1 for 3 with a double and Kaveney scored the Trojans’ lone run. Brianne Prank also had a hit for the Trojans. Emma Hill started and took the loss, giving up four runs on seven hits in six innings. Belvidere 7, Woodstock North 3: At Woodstock, Paige Schnulle went 3 for 4 with a double, RBI and run scored to lead the Thunder (8-15) in a nonconference loss. Amaya Saldana went 1 for 4 with two RBIs, and Maddie Busch went 1 for 3 with a run scored. Saldana took the loss for the Thunder. Ellie Thurow pitched in relief. Larkin Slugfest Tournament: At Elgin, Dundee-Crown won two of three games

See PREP ROUNDUP, page 7

• Sunday, April 24, 2016

Cary-Grove’s boys tennis team swept all four of its duals Saturday, 5-0, to win the Mundelein Invitational, which was moved to Wheeling because of court conditions at Mundelein. The Trojans beat Zion-Benton, Nazareth Academy, Wheeling and Mundelein. The Trojans (13-1) got four singles wins apiece from Michael Ptaszek and Curt Norton. In doubles, they got a sweep of wins from the pairings of Matt Price/Quinn Gliniecki, Chris Kownick/ Nate Weber and Regan Cossey/Hayden Collier. Grayslake North Tournament: At the eight-team tournament, Huntley’s Jack Soderwall and Benjamin Cazel finished second at No. 1 doubles, Trey Coleman and Jacob Wat finished third at No. 2 doubles, and Brady Michel and Ben Saiz finished fifth at No. 3 doubles.

Perhats, Scott Nygren and Annen combined for five strikeouts in 2 2/3 scoreless innings of relief. Marian Central 6-3, Marist 1-8: At Chicago, Dan Rochotte hit a grand slam and had a double to help the Hurricanes (5-11, 2-4) win Game 1 and split an East Suburban Catholic Conference doubleheader. Also in the first game, pitcher Kolton Rominski went 3 for Kolton 4 and earned the win. Rominski He threw six innings of three-hit ball, allowing one run while striking out 11 and walking two. The Hurricanes lost the second game despite strong outings at the plate from Zach Teegan (3 for 4, two RBIs), Elias Edmondson (2 for 4, run) and Bobby Bannon (1 for 2, run). Harvard 7, Woodstock North 2: At Woodstock, Reiss Bielski pitched a complete game for the Hornets (7-6) in a nonconference win over the Thunder (6-9). Bielski allowed two unearned runs on seven hits, struck out three and walked two. Bielski also went 1 for 4 with an RBI and run scored. Johnny Peterson went 1 for 4 with an RBI and two runs scored, and Tyler Perkins went 1 for 3 with an RBI. Leadoff hitter Logan Streit went 1 for 4 with a double and a run scored. Nate Harris led the Thunder, going 3 for 4 with a double in the leadoff spot. Brandon Amann went 1 for 4 with an RBI while Jacob Goldberg also brought in a run and Cory Busse and Brennen Ward scored. Cary-Grove 7, DeKalb 2: At Cary, Nick Kirk and Tyler Pennington each drove in two runs to lead the Trojans (11-7) in a nonconference win. Quinn Celske went 2 for 4 with an RBI and two runs scored. Mark Smith, Jake Kuhl, Max Neilson and Dominic Calamari also scored for thee Trojans. Ben Dolezal got the win after pitching three innings of relief and giving up one run. Woodstock 5, Crystal Lake Central 2: At Woodstock, the Tigers (8-9, 4-5) loaded the bases in the sixth and seventh innings, but the Blue Streaks held them off to win an FVC Fox game at Emricson Park. Freddie Birr went 2 for 3 for the Tigers, and Blake Seegers was 1 for 3. Luke Tevyaw took the loss on the mound, pitching 32/3 innings before a line drive off his ankle forced him to leave the game. Grayslake North 2, Hampshire 1: At Grayslake, Noah Schrader drove in Jakob Kostecki for the Whip-Purs’ lone run in an FVC Fox loss. The Whip-Purs (9-10, 3-6 FVC) were

SPORTS | Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

C-G sweeps Mundelein boys tennis invite

5


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Sunday, April 24, 2016

| SPORTS

6 BLACKHAWKS NOTES

GM’s tactics paying off as Blackhawks tie series, 3-3 By MARK POTASH

Chicago Blackhawks left wing Andrew Ladd (16) celebrates with teammates after scoring a goal Saturday against the St. Louis Blues during the first period in Game 6 of the Stanley Cup playoff series in Chicago.

mpotash@suntimes.com Suddenly, Stan Bowman is a genius again. The Blackhawks’ general manager, lauded for making all the right moves in fortifying the Blackhawks last year for their Stanley Cup run, looked like he was crapping out this time. Andrew Ladd was making a impact, but scoreless. And Tomas Fleischmann, Dale Weise and Christian Ehrhoff were all but invisible in the postseason. But Bowman’s trade-deadline moves paid off big in Game 6, as Ladd and Weise scored huge goals in their 6-3 victory over the Blues on Saturday night at the United Center. Ladd gave the Hawks momentum early with his first goal of the postseason for a 1-0 lead just 3:47 into the game. Weise, who arrived with a history of big playoff goals, did it again – giving the Hawks a 4-3 lead to culminate a Hawks’ recovery from a 3-1 deficit. “That one feels good,” said Weise, who was a healthy scratch in Games 1, 2 and 4. “I’ve been snakebitten

AP photo

since I got here. I’ve been robbed. Goalies making empty-net saves on me. I’ve just missed chances. Not shooting the puck as much as I would have liked. That one for sure feels good. Once you get that one off your back, play seems to slow down out there a little bit for you. You’ve kind of got some more room. Hopefully I can keep that going for Game 7.” Ladd had helped create scoring opportunities and had a shot hit both posts in the Hawks’ 3-2 loss in

Game 3, but did not have a point and had a minus-2 rating in the first five games of the series. He took advantage early in Game 6 after Marcus Kruger forced a turnover by Blues defenseman Kevin Shattenkirk and fired a wrist shot from the right faceoff circle past Brian Elliott. It was Ladd’s first playoff goal since Game 6 of the Stanley Cup Final – a deflection that gave the Hawks a 3-2 lead in a 4-3 overtime victory that

clinched the Stanley Cup. “It’s always nice to contribute and put a puck in the back of the net. Even if it’s just the confidence to keep shooting,” Ladd said. “But for me I’m just focused on playing the right way and doing those little things and the rest of the stuff will come. Weise and Ladd were part of a wave of Hawks newcomers to make a contribution in a critical game. Richard Panik, acquired in a January trade with the Maple Leafs for Jeremy Morin, assisted on Trevor van Riemsdyk’s tying goal in the second period and drew a hooking call on a mini-breakaway in the third that led to Andrew Shaw’s power-play goal that gave the Hawks a 5-3 lead. With Artem Anisimov scoring in the second period, the Hawks had three goals and four assists from players who were not on the team last year. “It’s exciting. [But] we haven’t really done anything yet,” Weise said. “So we’ll enjoy this for about another 10 minutes. I know it’s a big game for us, but we haven’t done much yet. We’ve got to finish it off.”


WESTERN CONFERENCE FIRST ROUND: BLACKHAWKS 6, BLUES 3 (SERIES TIED AT 3)

VIEWS Rick Morrissey

• PREP ROUNDUP Continued from page 5 Saturday, beating Larkin, 13-3, and Oak Lawn, 2-1, in 10 innings before losing, 9-3, to Joliet West. The Chargers (11-10) collected 14 hits in the win over Larkin, led by Sydney Ruggles going 4 for 5 with a home run, five RBIs and three runs scored. Claire Weeks went 2 for 3 with a home run, three RBIs and two runs, Cady English went 2 for 4 with a run and RBI, Madie Pautz went 2 for 4 with a run scored, Andrea Conway went 1 for 3 with three runs, Megan Emerson went 1 for 3 with two RBIs, and Deanna Origer went 1 for 2 with an RBI. The 2-1 win over Oak Lawn was highlighted by Ruggles pitching all 10 innings, giving up one run on six hits and striking out 12. Jessica Sanders drove in Hannah Gestrich for the go-ahead run in

the top of the 10th. In the loss to Joliet West, Conway went 2 for 4 with a run and an RBI, Origer went 1 for 3 with two RBIs and Emerson went 1 for 3 with a run scored. Ruggles took the loss.

GIRLS SOCCER Dundee-Crown 2, Woodstock 2: At Car-

pentersville, Alyssa Moreno and Taylor Coffman scored for the Chargers (4-6-1,) who came from behind in the second half to draw in an FVC crossover match. Jordyn Albrecht scored and had an assist for Woodstock (7-5-1). Emma Dorn scored the other goal, and Autumn Overly also had an assist. Blue Streaks goalkeeper Marissa Krueger made nine saves, including stopping a penalty to keep Woodstock level. Sam Christensen and Anna Keiltyka contributed assists for Dundee-Crown and Taylor Gonio made six saves.

DeKalb Barbfest Tournament: Woodstock North (2-11) dropped both of its games Saturday to finish in sixth place. Annie Velasco scored, and Anicca Mackay-Slavin made 11 saves in a 4-1 loss to Yorkville. In their second game, the Thunder were shut out, 2-0, by Indian Creek. Daniela Miranda was named to the all-tournament team. Lakes Tournament: At Lake Villa, Richmond-Burton (5-9) was shut out in two games Saturday as they concluded play at the tournament. In their first game, the Rockets finished regulation tied, 0-0, against Mundelein and went to a penalty shootout. Both teams made their first five shots and both missed in the sixth round before the Rockets missed in the seventh round and Mundelein scored for a 1-0 win. R-B goalkeeper Bridgette Mason made six saves in regulation and one stop in the shootout. In the second game, the Rockets lost,

1-0, to tournament champion Glenbrook North.

GIRLS TRACK AND FIELD Lake Park Invitational: At Roselle,

Dundee-Crown’s Tarrah Kamp finished fourth in the discus with a throw of 107 feet, 3 inches to lead the Chargers at the 13-team meet. Paige Gieseke was the Chargers’ other top finisher, placing fifth in the triple jump at 32-111/2. The Chargers finished 13th as a team with 10 points.

BADMINTON DeKalb Invitational: Jasmine Leyva

won a consolation singles match to score the only point for McHenry at the 11team invitational. After losing her firstround match, 21-8, 21-10, Leyva won her first consolation bracket match, 21-16, 2118. She fell, 21-15, 21-18, in the next round. The Warriors finished in 11th place with one point.

• Sunday, April 24, 2016

That on-off switch, the one the Blackhawks have been known to flip at the most crucial times? On. Most definitely on. The Team That Won’t Die wouldn’t again Saturday night, even when its vital signs insisted it was a goner. The Hawks beat the Blues, 6-3, in a playoff game that went from darkness to light with a flick of a finger. How the Hawks are able to do that has been discussed ad nauseam during their stretch of three Stanley Cup titles in six seasons. Look, it’s like this: They have great players who dig deep when things are tough, and their opponents seem to say “uh-oh” when the Hawks start rolling. Not a scientific answer, but there you are. Game 7 of this first-round series is Monday night in St. Louis, featuring a Blues team that should be shifting from doubt to a crisis of confidence right about now. They had a 3-1 series lead way back on Thursday morning. On Saturday, after falling behind, 3-1, in a brutal first period, the Hawks scored five straight goals. They were dead, and then they weren’t. Just like all those other times. They are 13-4 when facing elimination in Joel Quenneville’s tenure as coach. “It comes from these guys who have been doing it for a number of years here,” the Hawks’ Andrew Desjardins said. “They pass it on to new guys and

Game. Series? “I know we have momentum,” said Quenneville, who surely wants to see a better start Monday. The game looked over halfway through the first period. The Hawks were terribly out of sync. Passes not in the right spot, the puck agonizingly out of reach. When Desjardins missed an open net about 6:30 into the period, it was a killer twice over. He took a pass from Weise just outside the goalmouth and missed by the hockey equivalent of a mile. The Blues took the puck the other way, and Scottie Upshall scored seconds later. AP photo What should have been a 2-0 BlackBlackhawks right wing Dale Weise celebrates with teammates after scoring a goal hawks lead instead was a 1-1 tie. against the St. Louis Blues during the second period in Game 6 of the first-round Stanley The Blues would score two more Cup playoff series Saturday at the United Center. times in the period, giving them three in a 4:42 span. There were many more very, very good. But if they didn’t guys who have been here for a few opportunities, too, thanks to a Hawks understand what they were up against years. It’s just like a domino effect with defense that always seemed to be playbefore that moment, they certainly did that kind of mentality, that confidence, ing catch-up with the puck. Crawford then. The floodgates were officially that whatever-you-want-to-call-it.’’ was not great when he needed to be, but open. The Hawks outshot the Blues 19-6 the people in front let him down. Blues Down 3-1, the Hawks needed some in the second period. When their goalie, players were allowed to camp out at help, a jump-start, a couple of paddles Brian Elliott, has nightmares, they look the net. You would have been forgiven worth of defibrillation. It came in the like that. form of a hooking penalty on the Blues’ for thinking they were waiting for the Less than two minutes after Van Kyle Brodziak three minutes into the release of the latest iPhone. second period. A power-play goal by Ar- Riemsdyk’s goal, Dale Wiese one-timed The Hawks looked tired, and maybe an Artemi Panarin pass to give the tem Anisimov at least gave the Hawks they were. But tired is for the offseason. Hawks a 4-3 lead. the impression they had an offense. The Hawks don’t do early offseasons. That switch? Very much flipped. When Trevor Van Riemsdyk scored So how did they get here, from that When the Blues applied intense pres- hideous first period to a 6-3 victory? a goal to tie the game 3-3 later in the period, the United Center went into full sure in the third period, Hawks goalie “It’s easy when you have a bunch bedlam mode. Decibel levels refused to Corey Crawford did a fair imitation of of guys who have been through this drop to safe levels. a brick wall. The goal that finally gave before,” Hawks forward Andrew Ladd “My ears were buzzing,” Hawks the Hawks some breathing room came said. forward Andrew Shaw said. “It was a on a power play in which they seemed special moment. We tied it up, and the more focused on burning the clock than • Rick Morrissey is a sports columcrowd loved it, and you’ve got to feed off shooting the puck. Patrick Kane found nist for the Chicago Sun-Times. He can that.” Shaw from behind the net, and Shaw be reached at rmorrissey@suntimes. Make no mistake: The Blues are slammed it home for a 5-3 lead. com.

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Hawks turn it on, the way they always do

7


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Sunday, April 24, 2016

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No-hitter protocol removes doubt By GORDON WITTENMYER gwittenmyer@suntimes.com

CINCINNATI – When it looked about the sixth inning Thursday night like Jake Arrieta’s no-hitter might be threatened more by his pitch count than by Joey Votto and Brandon Phillips combined, Cubs manager Joe Maddon was the picture of groovy in the dugout. Already this year, the Dodgers’ Ross Stripling was pulled with a no-hitter intact at the 100-pitch mark, in the eighth inning of his big-league debut, igniting more debate between the nurture-thearm and the game’s-too-soft crowds. Less than four years earlier, Mets manager Terry Collins let veteran ace Johan Santana – recently back from shoulder problems – grind through a 134-pitch, five-walk game to complete the first no-hitter in franchise history. Santana made 10 more starts that season, was hit hard in most of them, and hasn’t pitched since. Maddon? “I was a lot more comfortable standing in that corner,” he said as of watching Arrieta head into the final three innings at 85 pitches. “Because we had this conversation with all our starters. “He knew, and I knew, without having to say anything, that he was good to go.” That’s because the Cubs spelled out a no-hitter, pitch-count protocol

AP photo

Cubs pitcher Jake Arrieta walks off the field after his no-hitter against the Reds on Thursday in Cincinnati. through a series of meetings with front office staff, Maddon, coaches and eventually the starting pitchers before last season ever started. If it’s not unique in the majors, it’s close (the same front office didn’t have a protocol as specific in Boston). And it offers at least a glimpse into how this overhauled and vast fifth-year front office operates under team president Theo Epstein. “There’s not too many stones left unturned,” said pitching coach Chris Bo-

sio, who’s on his third manager since joining the organization under the new regime. “We’ve got an open line of communication with these guys. We want to make sure that any situation that comes up we’re prepared for.” Inspired in part by Arrieta’s 120-pitch workload during a no-hit bit in Boston that ended with one out in the eighth, Epstein brought general manager Jed Hoyer, Maddon and coaches together to agree on a protocol that respects the achievement as much

as the pitcher’s health. Then all five members of the rotation were brought into the process. “We kind of had it ball-parked at, going into the seventh or eighth inning, if we’re approaching 110, there’s probably a good chance they shut it down, especially early in the season when all of our goals is playing deep in October,” said Arrieta, whose count never needed a discussion during his 116-pitch no-hitter in August at Dodger Stadium. “That’s a smart thing to do,“ he said. There’s room for discretion near the end of the game. “You don’t want to be obscene,” Maddon said. “Obviously, like 130-something would really start giving me like the hives if we did something like that. The other thing was I knew Jake had an extra day coming open the backside [because of Monday’s off day], so that was comforting, too.” Arrieta, who cut down on some of his warmup pitches between innings to conserve, made it a nonissue with nine-pitch innings in both the seventh and eighth Thursday night. “It’s something that’s in place, and I think it should be in the manual,” Bosio said of the protocol. “Everybody knows about it, and when that time comes up you know you’re going to get your shot, but there’s guys that are going to be probably eight or 10 pitches away just in case.”

REDS 13, CUBS 5

Dose of reality for Lackey, Cubs By GORDON WITTENMYER gwittenmyer@suntimes.com CINCINNATI – A longtime rival baseball scout earlier this week started rattling off the merits of the 2016 Cubs, from their left-right balance, speed-power balance, starting pitching and so on. So, he was asked, barring injury, what can stop them from doing what they expect to do this year? “Well,” he said, “they’ve got to play the games.” Case in point: Game No. 18. Just when it looked like the Cubs had so thoroughly overpowered the Reds in Cincinnati this week that their fans had moved in to colonize the stadium, the beleaguered Reds rose up with four home runs in two innings Saturday night to rout the top-trending team

in baseball, 13-5. Just like that, right-hander John Lackey lost his bid for a 4-0 start, the Cubs no longer had the best record in baseball, and everyone was reminded again that winning big-league games is never as easy as the hottest teams sometimes make it look. “It’s the big leagues, man,” Lackey (3-1) said. “There’s professionals over there that get paid, too.” And this on a day Lackey’s velocity was in the mid-90s, and “nothing wrong with the stuff,” he said. He retired the first nine batters he faced and, if anything, might have benefited from going outside the strike zone at times, especially inside, especially with two strikes. “Sometimes, you can almost throw too many strikes. Maybe you make some people a little more uncomfort-

able,” said Lackey, who has two-strike counts before four of the seven hits he allowed – including the two leading off the fourth that led to the first two runs against him. “There’s ways to rectify that,” he said. In the bigger, a team that had matched its best 17-game start in 109 years and its best 11-game road start (9-2) ever isn’t sweating No. 18 of 162. “Crazy game. They got us tonight,” manager Joe Maddon said. The Cubs led, 3-2, before the Reds unloaded on Lackey and reliever Trevor Cahill for seven runs in the bottom of the sixth, including a three-run homer off by Eugenio Suarez off Lackey and another one by Adam Duvall off Cahill. And then Scott Schebler made it back-to-back homers off Cahill.

REDS 13, CUBS 5 Chicago Cincinnati ab r h bi ab r h bi Fowler cf 4 2 2 1 Cozart ss 5 2 3 0 Heywrd rf 4 1 2 1 DJssJr ss 0 0 0 0 Richrd p 0 0 0 0 Suarez 3b 4 3 3 4 Bryant lf 5 0 1 1 Votto 1b 5 1 2 2 Rizzo 1b 3 0 0 0 Phillips 2b 5 0 2 1 Szczur ph 1 0 0 0 Bruce rf 2 1 0 0 Zobrist 2b 4 0 1 1 Mesorc c 4 1 1 0 MMntr c 4 0 0 0 Duvall lf 4 1 1 3 J.Baez 3b 5 0 0 0 Scheler cf 3 1 1 1 ARussll ss 1 2 1 1 Cotham p 0 0 0 0 Lackey p 3 0 0 0 Cingrn p 0 1 0 0 Cahill p 0 0 0 0 Straily p 1 0 0 0 NRmrz p 0 0 0 0 B.Wood p 0 0 0 0 Soler ph-rf 1 0 0 0 T.Holt ph-cf 3 2 2 0 Totals 35 5 7 5 Totals 36 13 15 11 Chicago Cincinnati

010 020 200 — 5 000 207 22x — 13

E–A.Russell (2), Soler (1), Suarez (6). DP–Chicago 1, Cincinnati 1. LOB–Chicago 11, Cincinnati 3. 2B–Fowler 2 (9), Cozart (6), Phillips 2 (5). HR–A.Russell (2), Suarez (5), Votto (2), Duvall (2), Schebler (1). SB–Fowler (2), Heyward (3). IP H R ER BB SO Chicago Lackey L,3-1 52/3 7 6 6 1 5 Cahill 1/3 3 3 3 0 0 Ne.Ramirez 1 2 2 2 2 3 Richard 1 3 2 2 1 1 Cincinnati Straily 42/3 4 3 3 3 5 B.Wood W,2-0 11/3 0 0 0 2 0 Cotham 12/3 3 2 2 2 1 Cingrani 11/3 0 0 0 1 2 WP–Ne.Ramirez, Straily, Cotham. T–3:19. A–41,660 (42,319).


WHITE SOX 4, RANGERS 3 (11 INN.)

By JEFF ARNOLD For the Sun-Times

WHITE SOX NOTES

Teammates not sure what to make of Lawrie By JEFF ARNOLD For The Sun-Times CHICAGO – White Sox second baseman Brett Lawrie has added a new dimension to the clubhouse, providing a high dose of energy his teammates are still getting used to. Manager Robin Ventura recently said if Lawrie weren’t carrying his weight, he would be “a pain in the [butt] in a lot of ways.” But instead, Lawrie is hitting .286 and delivered a two-out, two-run double Friday night that prompted an enthusiastic reaction that again put his energetic personality on display. “Being honest, I’ve never had a teammate like him,” first baseman Jose Abreu said. While his teammates are trying their best to figure Lawrie out, the sixth-year infielder who again made a couple of sparkling plays Saturday against Texas, including a diving stop and aroundthe--back flip to second base, takes their reaction in stride. He admits his per-

sonality may be different, but he won’t change who he is. As far as Abreu’s assertion that speaks to Lawrie’s uniqueness, Lawrie is happy to contribute any way he can. “(It’s) me being me,” Lawrie said. “I’m not trying to do anything crazy, I’m just being me. I’m glad that’s being perceived well. It ain’t going to stop. Brett Lawrie We’re are going to keep having fun with one another.” Avila injured: Catcher Alex Avila left Saturday’s game with tightness in his right hamstring. Avila, who said he injured himself while running to second base, fears he is likely headed for the disabled list. Ventura said Avila wasn’t moving around too well after Saturday’s game and would be re-evaluated on Sunday. Avila isn’t expecting good news. “It’s very disappointing and a little frustrating,” Avila said. “I’ve been feel-

ing great physically and I was really swinging the bat well and having some good (at-bats) the last few games and it’s a little frustrating.” History-making: According to the Society For Baseball Research, the Sox’s 9-3-2-6-2-5 triple play Friday night was the first of its kind in baseball history. As it stands, the triple play was the Sox’s first since 2006, but the combination of who executed the play made it historic. “I wouldn’t imagine that combination has been used too often,” Ventura said Saturday. “…It was all over the place.” Bullish-Pen: Heading into Saturday, the Sox’s bullpen led the majors with a 1.55 ERA (8 ER/461/3 innings pitched) with 16 strikeouts this season. Even after closer David Robertson blew his first save of the season Saturday, the bullpen – led by Matt Albers – who picked up the win Saturday with a scoreless 11th inning – has performed well, giving Ventura confidence in the tight-knit group moving forward.

WHITE SOX 4, RANGERS 3 (11 INN.) Texas Chicago ab r h bi ab r h bi DShlds cf 4 0 1 0 Eaton rf 5 0 1 0 Mazara rf 5 0 1 0 Rollins ss 5 0 2 0 Beltre 3b 5 0 1 0 Abreu 1b 6 0 1 1 Fielder dh 5 0 0 0 Frazier 3b 5 1 1 1 Dsmnd lf 2 3 1 1 MeCarr lf 4 2 3 1 Morlnd 1b 5 0 0 0 Lawrie 2b 4 0 1 0 Alberto pr-1b 0 0 0 0 AvGarc dh 4 0 0 0 Andrus ss 4 0 1 2 Avila c 1 0 1 0 Odor 2b 4 0 2 0 Navarr c 1 0 1 1 Holady c 4 0 0 0 AJcksn cf 4 1 0 0 Totals 38 3 7 3 Totals 39 4 11 4 Texas Chicago

010 000 101 00 — 3 010 000 020 01 — 4

One out when winning run scored. E–Navarro (1). DP–Texas 1, Chicago 1. LOB–Texas 7, Chicago 13. 3B–Andrus (2). HR–Desmond (2), Frazier (5), Me.Cabrera (2). SB–Desmond 2 (3), Odor (3). CS–Rollins (2). SF–Andrus. IP H R ER BB SO Texas Lewis 6 6 1 1 4 3 Barnette H,3 1 0 0 0 0 1 S.Dyson BS,1-1 1 3 2 2 1 0 Wilhelmsen 1 1 0 0 0 0 Klein 1 0 0 0 0 3 N.Martinez L,0-1 1/3 1 1 1 2 0 Chicago Rodon 62/3 2 2 2 2 7 Petricka 0 1 0 0 0 0 Duke 11/3 2 0 0 0 1 Robertson BS,1-7 1 1 1 1 1 2 N.Jones 1 1 0 0 0 1 Albers W,1-0 1 0 0 0 1 0 Petricka pitched to 1 batter in the 7th. HBP–by S.Dyson (Av.Garcia), by N.Martinez (A.Jackson). T–3:57. A–20,182 (40,615).

• Sunday, April 24, 2016

CHICAGO – All day, the White Sox squandered one opportunity after another, watching chance after chance slip away. Between failing twice to capitalize with the bases loaded and David Robertson’s first blown save of the season, the Sox flirted with allowing their 12th win of the season to disappear into the brisk spring air. But the Sox somehow finished the deal thanks to a slugger who had managed two hits in his previous 35 at-bats before his at-bat in the bottom of the 11th inning. Jose Abreu slipped a game-winning RBI single through a drawn-in infield crowded with five defenders as the Sox pulled out a 4-3 win over the Texas Rangers at U.S. Cellular Field. Abreu, who was 0 for 5 entering his final at-bat, found himself at the bottom of a dog pile of teammates, finally able to celebrate playing the role of hero. Coming through with five infielders inching closer to the plate and looking to again extend the game made it even more worth it. “When you see five infielders, that’s something that motivates you,” Abreu

made the catch. Frazier could only shake his head. “Shoot, it’s one of those things,” said Frazier, who said he had gotten all of the pitch before the long fly turned into a “hope and a prayer kind of a thing.” Before Abreu’s game-winner, it had been that kind of a day for the Sox. Dioner Navarro’s RBI single in the eighth gave the Sox a 3-2 lead only to have Robertson blow the save. But even before Robertson did with the aid of a Navarro throwing error, the Sox had blown their own collection of chances to put the game away. Austin Jackson’s squeeze bunt in the eighth rolled quickly along the infield grass, giving Texas first baseman Mitch Moreland a play to throw Melky Cabrera out at the plate. With two outs, Adam Eaton followed with a single, but Jackson AP photo was thrown out trying to score. Before that, the Sox twice loaded the White Sox first baseman Jose Abreu (center) celebrates his game-winning RBI single with Melky Cabrera (left) and Adam Eaton against the Texas Rangers on Saturday at U.S. bases with the score knotted at one. On both occasions, Jackson failed to delivCellular Field. The Sox won, 4-3, in 11 innings. er. Jackson popped out with two outs in said through a translator. “Especially in home run in the eighth – drove a deep the fourth before he grounded into an inthe moment with my offense, I’m strug- fly ball to right field only to have Nomar ning-ending fielder’s choice in the sixth. Lost in the drama was an impressive gling. I saw that and thought, ‘This is my Mazara make a leaping snag with his moment.” glove extended over the yellow stripe at outing from Carlos Rodon, who held the Rangers to two hits over 61/3 innings. He The Sox almost won in walk-off fash- the top of the fence. ion in the ninth when Todd Frazier – As he rounded first base, Frazier’s was charged with two earned runs while who had tied the score with a leadoff solo eyes momentarily lit up until Mazara striking out seven and walking two.

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Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Sunday, April 24, 2016

| SPORTS

14 STANLEY CUP PLAYOFFS ROUNDUP

Penguins close out Rangers in 5 games The ASSOCIATED PRESS

PITTSBURGH – The Pittsburgh Penguins ended their postseason slump against the New York Rangers emphatically Saturday, lighting up Henrik Lundqvist in a remarkably easy 6-3 rout in Game 5 to win the series 4-1 and advance to the Eastern Conference semifinals. Rookie Bryan Rust scored twice during a four-goal burst in the second period and Matt Murray made 38 saves for the Penguins. Pittsburgh which outscored the Rangers, 14-4, over the final three games to gain a measure of revenge after New York ended the Penguins’ seasons each of the last two years. Not this time. Matt Cullen, Carl Hagelin, Conor Sheary and Phil Kessel also scored for the Penguins to end a miserable and brief postseason for Lundqvist, who stopped just 17 of 23 shots and failed to make it to the third period for the third time in the series. Anaheim 5, Nashville 2: At Anaheim, Ryan Garbutt scored the go-ahead goal in the second period for the Ducks, who beat the Nashville Predators on Saturday for the first win by a home team in their first-round series, which Ana-

AP photo

Pittsburgh Penguins goalie Matt Murray stops a shot Saturday during the first period of Game 5 against the New York Rangers in Pittsburgh heim leads, 3-2. Nashville had won the first two games in Anaheim before the Ducks tied it with two wins on the Predators’ home ice. David Perron scored the tying goal earlier in the second and assisted on Garbutt’s goal along with Ryan Getzlaf.

The Ducks added three goals in the third. Sami Vatanen scored on a breakaway, Cam Fowler had a power-play goal and Ryan Kesler added an empty-netter. Frederik Andersen stopped 27 shots for the Ducks. Game 6 is Monday in Nashville.

NBA PLAYOFFS ROUNDUP

Pacers beat Raptors, 100-83, in Game 4 to tie series The ASSOCIATED PRESS INDIANAPOLIS – George Hill and Ian Mahinmi each scored 22 points, Paul George added 19 and the Indiana Pacers beat the Toronto Raptors, 100-83, on Sunday to tie the first-round playoff series at 2-2. Game 5 in the best-of-seven series is Tuesday night in Toronto. Jonas Valanciunas led Toronto with 16 points, and Kyle Lowry and DeMarre Carroll each had 12. Indiana scored the first seven points, took control with a 3-point spree late in the first quarter and led by as much as 25 points in the first half. Toronto, which never led or tied the score, cut it to 57-42 at halftime, but couldn’t got closer than 11 in the second half. Charlotte 96, Miami 80: At Charlotte, Jeremy Lin scored 18 points, Kemba Walker had 17 and Charlotte beat Miami to snap a 12-game playoff losing streak and earn its first postseason victory in 14 years. Rookie Frank Kaminsky, who got the starting nod, scored eight of his 15 points during an 18-0 run in the third

Marvin Williams, a non-factor in the first two games, had 12 points and 14 rebounds for the Hornets. Luol Deng scored 19 points on five 3-pointers, and Dwyane Wade added 17 for Miami. Hassan Whiteside had 13 points and 18 rebounds but battled foul trouble. Oklahoma City 119, Dallas 108: At Dallas, Russell Westbrook had 25 points and 15 assists, and the Oklahoma City Thunder beat the Dallas Mavericks, 119-108, on Saturday night, taking a commanding 3-1 lead in a testy firstround series that got quite a bit testier. Enes Kanter had his second straight playoff career high with 28 points for the Thunder, who never trailed in two games in Dallas after the Mavericks evened the series with a one-point win AP photo in Oklahoma City following a 38-point Charlotte Hornets’ Jeremy Lin shoots loss in the opener. Kevin Durant scored 19 points beover Miami Heat’s Tyler Johnson Saturday during the first half of the first round play- fore he was ejected in the final minute for a flagrant foul on Dallas’ Justin Anoff game in Charlotte, N.C. derson. It was the last of several tense quarter that broke open a 53-all game. moments, and Dallas team security had The Heat lead the series, 2-1, with to make sure Durant didn’t leave the Game 4 set for Monday night. court in front of the Mavericks bench.

Ricky Barnes takes 1-stroke lead in Valero Texas Open

SAN ANTONIO – Ricky Barnes shot a 5-under 67 on Saturday to take a onestroke lead in the Valero Texas Open in a bid for his first PGA Tour victory. Winless in 221 starts with a career-best runner-up finish in the 2009 U.S. Open, the 35-year-old Barnes had an 11-under 205 total at TPC San Antonio. He closed with a bogey after a wild drive near a cactus bush on the par-5 18th. Former world No. 1 Luke Donald and three-time tour winner Charley Hoffman were two strokes back. Donald, coming off a second-place tie last week in the RBC Heritage in South Carolina, shot a 68. Hoffman missed a 7-foot birdie putt on the last hole and settled for a 70. Patrick Reed was fifth at 8 under after a 70. He was born in San Antonio. Billy Horschel (67) and three-time major winner Padraig Harrington (68) were 7 under along with Chad Collins (67), Jon Curran (71), Martin Piller (71) and Nick Taylor (66).

Earnhardt wins NASCAR Xfinity race at Richmond

RICHMOND, Va. – Dale Earnhardt Jr. dominated all day and regained the lead on a late restart to win the NASCAR Xfinity Series race at Richmond International Raceway on Saturday, earning his 24th career victory in the series and first in more than six years. The victory capped off a lucrative few days for JR Motorsports. Earnhardt said Unilever, the maker of Hellmann’s mayonnaise and a team partner since 2009, has signed on to sponsor the team’s Xfinity cars for 20 races in 2017-18. Earnhardt built a lead of more than 5 seconds as the first 125 laps were run caution-free. When a caution finally flew with 15 laps to go, he and the other 10 cars on the lead lap headed for the pits, and chaos ensued, causing the race to go nine extra laps. Earnhardt led 128 laps but was beaten off pit road by his JR Motorsports teammate Justin Allgaier, one of four drivers contending for a $100,000 bonus. But Brennan Poole, another contender for the bonus, stayed on the track on old tires, and when Earnhardt dove underneath him heading into Turn 1, Poole’s car nudged the back of Allgaier’s, sending him spinning out of the race. That opened a door for Earnhardt to get back in front and for Ty Dillon to hold on for second and claim the $100,000 bonus in overtime.

–Wire reports


FIVE-DAY PLANNER TEAM

SUNDAY

MONDAY

TUESDAY

WEDNESDAY

THURSDAY

at Cincinnati 12:10 p.m. WGN AM-670 TEXAS 1:10 p.m. CSN AM-890

at Toronto 6:07 p.m. CSN+ AM-890

MILWAUKEE 7:05 p.m. CSN AM-670

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at Toronto 6:07 p.m. WPWR AM-890

at Toronto 6:07 p.m. CSN AM-890

at Toronto 6:05 p.m. CSN AM-890

* – Playoffs

WHAT TO WATCH 2 p.m.: Champions Tour, Bass Pro Shops Legends of Golf at Big Cedar Lodge, final round, TGC 5 p.m.: LPGA Tour, Swinging Skirts Classic, final round, TGC Drag racing 3:30 p.m.: NHRA, Four-Wide Nationals, FS1 (same-day tape) Soccer 8:05 p.m.: Premier League, Arsenal at Sunderland, NBCSN 10 a.m.: FA Cup, semifinal, Watford at Crystal Palace, FS2 10:15 a.m.: Premier League, Swansea City at Leicester City, NBCSN 2:30 p.m.: MLS, Sporting Kansas City at San Jose, ESPN 6:30 p.m.: MLS, Orlando City at New York Red Bulls, FS1 College baseball Noon: Mississippi St. at LSU, ESPN2 College softball Noon: Nebraska at Minnesota, BTN 2 p.m.: Indiana at Michigan St., BTN 4 p.m.: UCLA at Arizona, 4 p.m., ESPN2 College lacrosse 6 p.m.: Ohio St. at Maryland, BTN Cycling 11 p.m.: UCI World Tour, Liège-Bastogne-Liège, NBCSN (same-day tape)

Race Sunday at Richmond International Raceway, Richmond, Va. Lap length: .75 miles (Car number in parentheses) 1. (4) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, Charter Team, 129.069 mph. 2. (22) Joey Logano, Ford, 128.694 3. (48) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 128.187 4. (19) Carl Edwards, Toyota, 128.181 5. (11) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 128.156 6. (2) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 128.011 7. (41) Kurt Busch, Chevrolet, 127.799 8. (5) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, 127.334 9. (18) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 127.298 10. (47) AJ Allmendinger, Chevrolet, 127.22 11. (3) Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, 127.208 12. (17) Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Ford, 125.517 13. (20) Matt Kenseth, Toyota, 125.307 14. (31) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 124.913 15. (42) Kyle Larson, Chevrolet, 124.861 16. (88) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 124.775 17. (6) Trevor Bayne, Ford, 124.775 18. (14) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, 124.7 19. (16) Greg Biffle, Ford, 124.527 20. (44) Brian Scott, Ford, 124.516 21. (10) Danica Patrick, Chevrolet, 124.487 22. (78) Martin Truex Jr., Toyota, 124.481 23. (24) Chase Elliott, Chevrolet, 124.464 24. (43) Aric Almirola, Ford, 124.064 25. (13) Casey Mears, Chevrolet, 123.734 26. (27) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 123.598 27. (1) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet, 123.553 28. (38) Landon Cassill, Ford, 123.125. 29. (21) Ryan Blaney, Ford, 122.566 30. (23) David Ragan, Toyota, 122.266 31. (30) Josh Wise, Chevrolet, 121.995 32. (95) Michael McDowell, Chevrolet,

121.99 33. (34) Chris Buescher, Ford, 121.891 34. (7) Regan Smith, Chevrolet, 121.496 35. (55) Reed Sorenson, Chevrolet, 121.250 36. (83) Matt DiBenedetto, Toyota, 121.131 37. (93) Ryan Ellis(i), Toyota, 120.182 38. (32) Jeffrey Earnhardt, Ford, 119.458 39. (15) Clint Bowyer, Chevrolet, 117.842 40. (46) Michael Annett, Chevrolet, 0.0

NASCAR XFINITY TOYOTACARE 250 TOP FINISHERS Saturday At Richmond International Raceway Richmond, Va. Lap length: .75 miles (Start position in parentheses) 1. (3) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 149 laps, 0 points. 2. (2) Ty Dillon, Chevrolet, 149, 39. 3. (9) Elliott Sadler, Chevrolet, 149, 38. 4. (6) Daniel Suarez, Toyota, 149, 37. 5. (10) Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, 149, 0. 6. (17) Cole Custer, Chevrolet, 149, 0. 7. (15) Brendan Gaughan, Chevrolet, 149, 34. 8. (16) Blake Koch, Chevrolet, 149, 33. 9. (8) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 149, 0. 10. (7) Brennan Poole, Chevrolet, 149, 32. 11. (18) Ryan Reed, Ford, 149, 30. 12. (19) J.J. Yeley, Toyota, 149, 29. 13. (12) Justin Marks, Chevrolet, 149, 28. 14. (25) Dakoda Armstrong, Toyota, 149, 27. 15. (13) Brandon Jones, Chevrolet, 148, 26.

INDYCAR HONDA INDY GRAND PRIX OF ALABAMA LINEUP After Saturday qualifying; race Sunday

FIRST ROUND (Best-of-7) (x-if necessary)

FIRST ROUND (Best-of-7) (x-if necessary)

Wednesday Miami 115, Charlotte 103 Cleveland 107, Detroit 90 L.A. Clippers 102, Portland 81, Clippers lead series, 2-0 Thursday Oklahoma City 131, Dallas 102 Toronto 101, Indiana 85 Houston 97, Golden State 96, Warriors leads series, 2-1 Friday Cleveland 101, Detroit 91, Cavaliers lead, series, 3-0 Boston 111, Atlanta 103, Hawks lead series, 2-1 San Antonio 96, Memphis 87, Spurs lead series, 3-0 Saturday Indiana 100, Toronto 83, series tied, 2-2 Charlotte 96, Miami 80, Miami leads series, 2-1 Oklahoma City 119, Dallas 108, Oklahoma City leads series, 3-1 L.A. Clippers at Portland (n) Sunday San Antonio at Memphis, noon Golden State at Houston, 2:30 p.m. Atlanta at Boston, 5 p.m. Cleveland at Detroit, 7:30 p.m. Monday Miami at Charlotte, 6 p.m. Dallas at Oklahoma City, 7 p.m. L.A. Clippers at Portland, 9:30 p.m. Tuesday Indiana at Toronto, TBD Boston at Atlanta, TBD x-Memphis at San Antonio, TBD x-Detroit at Cleveland, TBD Wednesday Charlotte at Miami, 7 p.m. Houston at Golden State, 8 or 9:30 p.m. x-Portland at L.A. Clippers, 8, 9 or 9:30 p.m. Thursday x-Cleveland at Detroit, TBD x-Atlanta at Boston, TBD x-San Antonio at Memphis, TBD x-Oklahoma City at Dallas, TBD Friday Toronto at Indiana, TBD x-Miami at Charlotte, TBD x-Golden State at Houston, TBD x-L.A. Clippers at Portland, TBD Saturday, April 30 x-Detroit at Cleveland, TBD x-Boston at Atlanta, TBD x-Memphis at San Antonio, TBD x-Dallas at Oklahoma City, TBD Sunday, May 1 x-Indiana at Toronto, TBD x-Charlotte at Miami, TBD x-Houston at Golden State, TBD x-Portland at L.A. Clippers, TBD

PGA TOUR

AUTO RACING NASCAR SPRINT CUP TOYOTA OWNERS 400 LINEUP

MLB NATIONAL LEAGUE

VALERO TEXAS OPEN At Barber Motorsports Park Birmingham, Ala. Lap length: 2.3 miles (Car number in parentheses) 1. (22) Simon Pagenaud, Dallara-Chevrolet, 124.089 mph. 2. (12) Will Power, Dallara-Chevrolet, 123.689. 3. (21) Josef Newgarden, Dallara-Chevrolet, 123.53. 4. (9) Scott Dixon, Dallara-Chevrolet, 123.199. 5. (11) Sebastien Bourdais, Dallara-Chevrolet, 123.038. 6. (15) Graham Rahal, Dallara-Honda, 122.415. 7. (3) Helio Castroneves, Dallara-Chevrolet, 123.558. 8. (5) James Hinchcliffe, Dallara-Honda, 123.406. 9. (10) Tony Kanaan, Dallara-Chevrolet, 123.267. 10. (83) Charlie Kimball, Dallara-Chevrolet, 123.028. 11. (8) Max Chilton, Dallara-Chevrolet, 121.634. 12. (19) Luca Filippi, Dallara-Honda, 121.114. 13. (7) Mikhail Aleshin, Dallara-Honda, 123.138. 14. (41) Jack Hawksworth, Dallara-Honda, 123.148. 15. (26) Carlos Munoz, Dallara-Honda, 123.135. 16. (14) Takuma Sato, Dallara-Honda, 123.144. 17. (18) Conor Daly, Dallara-Honda, 123.036. 18. (28) Ryan Hunter-Reay, Dallara-Honda, 122.767. 19. (27) Marco Andretti, Dallara-Honda, 122.382. 20. (98) Alexander Rossi, Dallara-Honda, 122.556. 21. (2) Juan Pablo Montoya, Dallara-Chevrolet, 122.553.

Saturday At TPC San Antonio (Oaks Course) San Antonio Purse: $6.2 million Yardage: 7,435; Par: 72 Third Round a-amateur Ricky Barnes 68-70-67—205 -11 Brendan Steele 64-70-72—206 -10 Luke Donald 69-70-68—207 -9 Charley Hoffman 66-71-70—207 -9 Patrick Reed 65-73-70—208 -8 Billy Horschel 70-72-67—209 -7 Nick Taylor 75-68-66—209 -7 Chad Collins 73-69-67—209 -7 Padraig Harrington 70-71-68—209 -7 Martin Piller 70-68-71—209 -7 Jon Curran 70-68-71—209 -7 Kevin Streelman 70-71-69—210 -6 Aaron Baddeley 74-70-66—210 -6 Ryan Palmer 68-70-72—210 -6 Mark Wilson 69-69-72—210 -6 Scott Langley 69-68-73—210 -6 Chris Kirk 71-71-69—211 -5 Luke List 71-72-68—211 -5 Bryce Molder 70-71-70—211 -5 Kevin Chappell 71-70-70—211 -5 Harold Varner III 69-72-70—211 -5 David Hearn 73-71-67—211 -5 Brandt Snedeker 70-69-72—211 -5 Stuart Appleby 67-70-74—211 -5 Abraham Ancer 73-69-70—212 -4 Rob Oppenheim 73-68-71—212 -4 Shawn Stefani 72-69-71—212 -4 Jason Gore 70-70-72—212 -4 Dicky Pride 70-72-71—213 -3 J.B. Holmes 72-70-71—213 -3 Daniel Summerhays 72-70-71—213 -3 Branden Grace 72-72-69—213 -3 William McGirt 71-70-72—213 -3 K.J. Choi 71-70-72—213 -3 Kyle Stanley 73-68-72—213 -3 Brice Garnett 73-71-69—213 -3 Spencer Levin 69-70-74—213 -3 Tim Wilkinson 73-71-69—213 -3

WESTERN CONFERENCE St. Louis 3, Blackhawks 3 Wednesday, April 13: St. Louis 1, Blackhawks 0, OT Friday, April 15: Blackhawks 3, St. Louis 2 Sunday, April 17: St. Louis 3, Blackhawks 2 Tuesday, April 19: St. Louis 4, Blackhawks 3 Thursday, April 21: Blackhawks 4, St. Louis 3, 2OT Saturday, April 23: Blackhawks 6, St. Louis 3 Monday, April 25: Blackhawks at St. Louis, 7:30 p.m. Dallas 3, Minnesota 2 Friday, April 22: Minnesota 5, Dallas 4, OT Sunday, April 24: Dallas at Minnesota, 2 p.m. x-Tuesday, April 26: Minnesota at Dallas, TBA Anaheim 3, Nashville 2 Saturday, April 23: Anaheim 5, Nashville 2 Monday, April 25: Anaheim at Nashville, 7 p.m. x-Wednesday, April 27: Nashville at Anaheim, TBA San Jose 4, Los Angeles 1 Friday, April 22: San Jose 6, Los Angeles 3 EASTERN CONFERENCE N.Y. Islanders 3, Florida 2 Friday, April 22: N.Y. Islanders 2, Florida 1, 2OT Sunday, April 24: Florida at N.Y. Islanders, 6 p.m. x-Tuesday, April 26: N.Y. Islanders at Florida, TBA Tampa Bay 4, Detroit 1 Thursday, April 21: Tampa Bay 1, Detroit 0 Washington 3, Philadelphia 2 Friday, April 22: Philadelphia 2, Washington 0 Sunday, April 24: Washington at Philadelphia, 11 a.m. x-Wednesday, April 27: Philadelphia at Washington, TBA Pittsburgh 4, N.Y. Rangers 1 Saturday, April 23: Pittsburgh 6, N.Y. Rangers 3

PREP SCHEDULE MONDAY Baseball: Wauconda at Richmond-Burton, Dundee-Crown at McHenry, Grayslake North at CaryGrove, Crystal Lake Central at Grayslake Central, Jacobs at Crystal Lake South, Hampshire at Woodstock, South Beloit at Harvard, Notre Dame at Marian Central, Prairie Ridge at Woodstock North, North Shore at Alden-Hebron, 4:30 p.m. Softball: Crystal Lake South at McHenry, Alden-Hebron at Faith Christian, Huntley at Cary-Grove, Crystal Lake Central at Hampshire, Harvard at South Beloit, Jacobs at DeKalb, Winnebago at Marian Central, Prairie Ridge at Woodstock North, 4:30 p.m. Girls Soccer: Johnsburg at Richmond-Burton, 4:30 p.m. Boys Track and Field: Richmond-Burton, North Boone at Burlington Central, Huntley, McHenry at Crystal Lake South, Dundee-Crown, Prairie Ridge, Cary-Grove at Crystal Lake Central, Hampshire, Jacobs at Grayslake North, Woodstock, Woodstock North at Grayslake Central, 4:30 p.m. Girls Track and Field: Woodstock North, Huntley, Crystal Lake Central at Prairie Ridge, 4:15 p.m.; McHenry, Grayslake North at Dundee-Crown, Cary-Grove, Grayslake Central at Jacobs, Crystal Lake South, Hampshire at Woodstock, 4:30 p.m. Boys Tennis: Cary-Grove at Woodstock, Marengo at Elgin Academy, Marian Central at St. Edward, 4:30 p.m.; Huntley at IMSA, 4:45 p.m.

Central Division W L Pct GB Cubs 13 5 .722 — St. Louis 9 8 .529 3½ Cincinnati 9 9 .500 4 Pittsburgh 9 9 .500 4 Milwaukee 7 11 .389 6 East Division W L Pct GB Washington 13 4 .765 — New York 9 7 .563 3½ Philadelphia 9 9 .500 4½ Miami 5 11 .313 7½ Atlanta 4 13 .235 9 West Division W L Pct GB Los Angeles 11 7 .611 — Colorado 9 8 .529 1½ Arizona 10 9 .526 1½ San Francisco 9 10 .474 2½ San Diego 7 11 .389 4 Saturday’s Results Cincinnati 13, Cubs 5 Washington 2, Minnesota 0 N.Y. Mets 8, Atlanta 2 Philadelphia 10, Milwaukee 6 L.A. Dodgers 4, Colorado 1 Arizona 7, Pittsburgh 1 St. Louis 11, San Diego 2 San Francisco 7, Miami 2 Sunday’s Games Cubs (Hammel 2-0) at Cincinnati (Simon 0-1), 1:10 p.m. Minnesota (Duffey 0-0) at Washington (Strasburg 3-0), 1:35 p.m. N.Y. Mets (deGrom 1-0) at Atlanta (Blair 0-0), 1:35 p.m. Philadelphia (Eickhoff 1-2) at Milwaukee (W.Peralta 0-3), 2:10 p.m. Miami (Conley 0-1) at San Francisco (M. Cain 0-2), 4:05 p.m. L.A. Dodgers (A.Wood 1-2) at Colorado (Lyles 1-1), 4:10 p.m. Pittsburgh (Liriano 1-1) at Arizona (Ray 1-0), 4:10 p.m. St. Louis (Leake 0-2) at San Diego (Rea 1-1), 4:40 p.m. Monday’s Games Boston at Atlanta, 6:10 p.m. Cincinnati at N.Y. Mets, 6:10 p.m. Pittsburgh at Colorado, 7:40 p.m. St. Louis at Arizona, 8:40 p.m. Miami at L.A. Dodgers, 9:10 p.m. San Diego at San Francisco, 9:15 p.m.

AMERICAN LEAGUE

Central Division W L Pct GB White Sox 12 6 .667 — Kansas City 11 6 .647 ½ Cleveland 8 7 .533 2½ Detroit 8 8 .500 3 Minnesota 5 13 .278 7 East Division W L Pct GB Baltimore 11 5 .688 — Toronto 9 10 .474 3½ Boston 8 9 .471 3½ New York 7 9 .438 4 Tampa Bay 7 10 .412 4½ West Division W L Pct GB Oakland 10 8 .556 — Texas 10 8 .556 — Seattle 8 9 .471 1½ Los Angeles 8 10 .444 2 Houston 6 12 .333 4 Saturday’s Results White Sox 4, Texas 3, 11 innings Washington 2, Minnesota 0 N.Y. Yankees 3, Tampa Bay 2 Toronto 9, Oakland 3 Cleveland 10, Detroit 1 Houston 8, Boston 3 Baltimore 8, Kansas City 3 L.A. Angels 4, Seattle 2 Sunday’s Games Texas (Holland 2-0) at White Sox (Latos 3-0), 1:10 p.m. Tampa Bay (Smyly 0-2) at N.Y. Yankees (Pineda 1-1), 12:05 p.m. Oakland (Surkamp 0-1) at Toronto (Hutchison 0-0), 12:07 p.m. Cleveland (Carrasco 2-0) at Detroit (Greene 1-1), 12:10 p.m. Minnesota (Duffey 0-0) at Washington (Strasburg 3-0), 12:35 p.m. Baltimore (M.Wright 1-1) at Kansas City (Ventura 1-0), 1:15 p.m. Seattle (Miley 0-2) at L.A. Angels (Shoemaker 1-2), 2:35 p.m. Boston (Owens 0-0) at Houston (Feldman 0-2), 7:05 p.m. Saturday’s Games White Sox at Toronto, 6:07 p.m. Baltimore at Tampa Bay, 6:10 p.m. Boston at Atlanta, 6:10 p.m. Oakland at Detroit, 6:10 p.m. N.Y. Yankees at Texas, 7:05 p.m. Cleveland at Minnesota, 7:10 p.m. Kansas City at L.A. Angels, 9:05 p.m. Houston at Seattle, 9:10 p.m.

15

• Sunday, April 24, 2016

Pro baseball Noon: Cubs at Cincinnati, WGN 1 p.m.: Texas at White Sox, CSN Noon: Cleveland at Detroit or Tampa Bay at N.Y. Yankees, MLB 7 p.m.: Boston at Houston, ESPN NBA playoffs Noon: San Antonio at Memphis, Game 4, ABC 2:30 p.m.: Golden State at Houston, Game 4, ABC 5 p.m.: Atlanta at Boston, Game 4, TNT 7:30 p.m.: Cleveland at Detroit, Game 4, TNT Stanley Cup playoffs 11 a.m.: Teams TBA, Game 6, NBC (if necessary) 2 p.m.: Teams TBA, Game 6, NBC (if necessary) 6:30 p.m.: Teams TBA, Game 6, NBCSN (if necessary) Auto racing Noon: NASCAR, Sprint Cup Series, Toyota Owners 400, FOX 1 p.m.: IndyCar, Legacy Indy Lights Series, NBCSN (same-day tape) 2:30 p.m.: Indy Car Series, Hondy Indy Grand Prix of Alabama, NBCSN Golf 5 p.m.: European PGA Tour, Shenzhen International, final round, TGC (same-day tape) Noon: PGA Tour, Valero Texas Open, final round, TGC 2 p.m.: PGA Tour, Valero Texas Open, final round, CBS

NHL PLAYOFF GLANCE

SPORTS | Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

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Retired as the Breakfast Queen of Chicago, chef relishes the opportunity to share her story in Lake in the Hills


NWHerald.com • Sunday, April 24, 2016

| Style |

2

TheWholeNineYards T.R. Kerth Style is published each Sunday by Shaw Media, P.O. Box 250, Crystal Lake, IL 60039-0250. Periodicals and postage paid at Crystal Lake, IL 60014.

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ON THE COVER Ina Pinkney, “The Breakfast Queen of Chicago.” Photo provided by SAMAiMAGING

Questions? Email trkerth@yahoo.com

Look! Up in your hair! It’s Nit Chick! My granddaughter Johannah is literally a nitpicker. I know, you probably think that’s a horrible statement to make about your own granddaughter. After all, look up “nitpicker” in the dictionary and you’ll be told it refers to a fussy faultfinder who criticizes something or someone in a petty way. And what loving grandfather could ever call his darling granddaughter a name like that? But I stand by my statement: My granddaughter Johannah is literally a nitpicker. You may even have other objections to my statement. While we’re on the subject of nitpicking, you may have winced at my use of the word “literally.” After all, how many times have we all heard people say something like, “I’m so hungry I could literally eat a horse,” a meal that on a literal level would take months to finish – if they’d let you sit at a table for that long at the International House of Ponies. But still, I say: My granddaughter Johannah is literally a nitpicker. Having graduated early from high school, she now is hard at work earning money to go to college in the fall, and she does it … picking nits. And these aren’t figurative nits she’s picking. No, my granddaughter Johannah is literally a nitpicker, working for a company called Nit Free Noggins, a Chicago-area firm with three locations that specializes in a “100 percent proven and guaranteed” one-time process that finds and kills head lice and their eggs (nits) without using pesticides or other chemicals. The “one-and-done” treatment, as I understand it, involves trained technicians such as Johannah employing a hands-on, five-step process – one step of which amounts to nitpicking. Literally. And she loves being a nitpicker – although if you ask her what she is, she’ll tell you, “I’m a lice removal technician.” Potato-potahto.

Now, not to nitpick, but if you had asked me a few weeks ago to name the last job on Earth I thought Johannah would be willing to do – let alone to love – it would have been shepherding lice and their icky eggs out of somebody else’s noggin. After all, Johannah is a girly-girl by any measurement. She spent most of her childhood from grammar school through high school as a cheerleader on elite squads, reveling in all the pritzypritzyness you would expect a die-hard cheerleader to love. And if you poll the cheerleading community for their opinion of bloodsucking parasites haunting a hairdo, you’ll find their official position is: “Ewwwww!!!” Still, my granddaughter Johannah goes to work every day and picks nits off of other people’s heads, and by all reports she does it ewww-lessly. She picks nits for individuals. She picks nits for whole families of as many as six or seven members. Sometimes she is sent to a school “hair fair” (which is a lipstick-on-a-pig way of saying “parasite check”) where kids have their noggins noodled by her nimble fingers and sharp, clear eyesight. And if she finds any of those kids have walked in with their heads lice-lush and nit-rich, they don’t stay that way. They may have left the house that morning with a passel of pate-pets, but in no time they’ll be lice-less and nit-negative. More than anything, she loves that the job lets her work with people on a personal level, calming their fears, relieving their itch-agony and reassuring them the future won’t be as creepycrawly as the present is. It’s sort of like working at a hair salon specializing in vermin slaughter – a merger between Vidal Sassoon and Orkin. Sassorkin, the tabloids probably would call it. She says she’s not afraid the lice will jump to her head because – well, for one thing, lice don’t jump. After all, they’re not fleas. Fleas are the kangaroos of the

insect world, but lice? They’re more like the tortoises of the insect world, but a lot smaller and less shell-y. And while fleas can take credit for the Black Death that killed a third of all humans during the 1300s, when it comes to causing global apocalypse, head lice are just … well, they’re just lousy at it. Let’s just call them scalp-sucking underachievers and leave it at that. And anyway, Johannah says even if she did end up a bit lousy after a day of laboring at the nit-mines, she’d just self-negate those nits, using the same technique she uses on her clients. No biggie. But still, as her loving grandfather, I have to worry. I mean, this is the 21st century, right? And who can say a 21st century louse is as harmless as long-gone lice have been through the ages? For example, what if she got bit by a radioactive louse? Would she morph into Louse-Lass? Or maybe Nit-Chick? Sure, she’d look great in a cape and a spandex body suit doing all those flips and cartwheels other superheroes love to do all the time. Heck, she’s been flipping and spinning across the living room floor since she was a preschooler. But it wouldn’t stop there, would it? I mean, look at Spiderman. In addition to all his spandex-straining acrobatics, he also could “do whatever a spider can” after he got bit. And what grandfather wants to see his nuclear nit-bitten granddaughter acquire all the powers of a louse? Which, come to think of it, simply would mean she would have the power to get in your head and drive you crazy. And – at the risk of sounding like nitpickers – her brothers Evan and Quentin would say, “Yeah, that sounds about right.”

• Tom “T. R.” Kerth is a Sun City resident and retired English teacher from Park Ridge. He is the author of the book “Revenge of the Sardines.” He can be reached at trkerth@yahoo.com.

EnvironmentTip Thank you to friends of Earth and EDMC

Take a breath of fresh air, and receive it as a thank you gift from our Earth. The Environmental Defenders of McHenry County wants to thank all of the organizations

and individuals in our community that contribute to a healthy environment. What we do here in our own backyards ripples out into the world. With every small action, each conversation, the policies, the

art, the gardens, the community groups, the nonprofits, the governments, the schools, the churches, all the advocates for good clean healthy soil, water and air, you are building value each and every day, and it is important work.

But today, just after Earth Day, take a moment to be grateful for earth’s resources and say thank you to yourself for doing good and caring.

Source: Environmental Defenders of McHenry County


To earn Girl Scout Silver Award, teens organize free shopping day for their peers By VALERIE KATZENSTEIN

DREAM CLOSET

vkatzenstein@shawmedia.com Girl Scouts Virginia Randles of Oakwood Hills and Chloe Haegele of Cary already have won a bronze; now they are going for the silver. In November, the 14-year-old members of Girl Scout Troop 701 knew they had to think big to achieve the highest award possible for cadettes. The Silver Award challenges girls to create a sustainable community service project. “First we had to start with the brainstorming process,” Randles said. According to www.girlscouts. org, cadettes are encouraged to explore their interests and resources, and then assess what their communities’ needs are. Randles and Haegele didn’t have to look far to find a group to help – their peers. “We kind of noticed in our community there’s some girls that have an outfit that they buy and spend lots of money on, and they wear it once. And there’s other girls who dream of having a really nice outfit, but they can’t afford it,” Randles said. The Dream Closet idea was created. Randles and Haegele spent the next several months hanging fliers and soliciting donations of gently used clothing, shoes, accessories, phone cases and bedroom decor from local stores and residents. Savers in Crystal Lake donated thousands of items, said Pattie Haegele, Chloe’s mother, and other thrift stores also have made large donations. Randles and Haegele also picked up donations from local residents who had seen their flier and wanted to help. Donation boxes were placed in Oakwood Village Hall and at Immanuel Lutheran School in Crystal Lake, where Chloe Haegele is an eighth-grader. Chloe Haegele was on a class field trip to Washington,

WHEN: 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. or until supplies last April 30 WHERE: The Pointe Outreach Center, 5650 Route 14, Crystal Lake COST & INFO: Girls ages 8 to 18 will be able to shop gently used items donated from area businesses and residents for free. Students from Regency Beauty Institute also will be offering free hairstyling and manicures. For information or to donate, call 224-241-6206 or email dreamcloset2016@gmail.com.

Photo provided

Virginia Randles of Oakwood Hills and Chloe Haegele of Cary, both 14, created the Dream Closet, which will let tween and teen girls find updates for their wardrobes and rooms for free by shopping gently used items donated from area businesses and residents. Completing the project will earn them the Girl Scout Silver Award. D.C., at press time and unavailable for comment. All of those donations will come together to create a shopping day for girls ages 8 to 18 from at 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., or until supplies last, April 30 at The Pointe Outreach Center, 5650 Route 14, Crystal Lake. Teens and tweens will be able to select items for free to create their own dream closet. Students from Regency Beauty Institute also will be on hand to offer free hairstyling and manicures to the shoppers. “We’re hoping for a boutique style,” Randles said. Area Girl Scout troops, friends and community volunteers will help set up the store and assist shoppers the day of the event. Donations still are being accepted for the Dream Closet, and pickups can be arranged by contacting Randles and Haegele at dreamcloset2016@gmail.com or

224-241-6206. In addition to coordinating all of the donations, Randles and Chloe Haegele gave presentations to area youth groups such as those at Willow Creek Community Church in Crystal Lake, which donated the sales space, and other Girl Scout troops to ask them to donate and invite them to shop the Dream Closet. They also reached out to area restaurants to donate food for the volunteers. “They had to come up with everything on their own,” said Patti Haegele, who said her main contribution was as chauffeur so the girls could collect all of their donations. “They’ve really had to reach out of their comfort zones and reach out to the community.” Randles and Haegele earned their Bronze Award two years ago through a community service

project with their troop. This project, Randles said, was much more involved. The Silver Award requires at least 50 hours of work. Have they hit their goal yet? “Oh gosh, we’re way over 50,” Randles said with a laugh. “I think I’m probably around 70. It’s taken a lot more work and has gotten a lot more bigger than we expected. … It’s a good thing, but it does cause a lot of stress and is overwhelming with how much stuff there is.” Sustainability is a key part of the Silver Award project. After the event April 30, Randles and Haegele hope to pass on the Dream Closet, with area Girl Scout troops perhaps rotating hosting it each year, so the project can live on in the community. Their goal is to create a fun environment every year for teenagers to find the clothes of their dreams without having to worry about the price tag. “Any girl that shows up the day of the event will be able to come in, no questions asked,” Patti Haegele said. “Our girls don’t know if there’s going to be a line of 50 people or 500 people, but everyone will be able to come in and be welcomed.”

“Our girls don’t know if there’s going to be a line of 50 people or 500 people, but everyone will be able to come in and be welcomed.” – Pattie Haegele, mother of Chloe Haegele, co-creator of the Dream Closet

| Style | Sunday, April 24, 2016 • NWHerald.com

Dream come true

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​A parting kiss to a Beautiful One Over Christmas vacation in eighth grade, I got my first Sony Walkman. One of the first cassettes I played was “Purple Rain.” I didn’t get that tape for Christmas. I had to “borrow” it from my mom. From my mom! That was Prince. I listened to that soundtrack dozens and dozens of times over my winter break – all the way from Sheboygan, Wisconsin, to Chicago and back during a trip downtown with my parents one weekend. In the backseat of my Dad’s Buick, with my headphones on, I listened – I’m sure to my slightly cringing mother. Although she loved “Let’s Go Crazy,” she did not approve of some of the other tracks on that tape, one in particular. You know the one (it was like secretly reading the “Deenie” of the Judy Blume books, except the words were seeping into my ears instead of my eyes.) I listened and listened and listened as that tape traveled between my Walkman and my 1980s boom box the following spring and summer. And, like all of us who grew up in the MTV generation, I watched and watched and watched. My sister, Kelly, and I and my middle school friends knew every frame of Prince’s videos. We watched him strike his curious poses. That style, that sound, that voice, that guitar, that motorcycle! He was purple and paisley and dangerous and vulnerable and wonderful. Those memories came flooding back to me Dec. 31, 1999, as my then-fiancée, Kevin, and I celebrated at the Navy Pier fireworks, where it seemed the

Prevent Broken Jewelry Panic. Shock. Dread.

CHASING LYONS Maria Lyons whole city – the whole world – was invited to a party hosted by Prince. They came flooding back again in 2004 when Kevin and I, along with my sister-in-law, Colleen and her friend, Kristen, saw Prince perform at Allstate Arena. Baby Jackson kicked along in my belly. I was wishing Prince would play “Raspberry Beret.” I do appreciate Prince’s older stuff, but I always will love me some “Raspberry Beret”! But it was his acoustic version of “Little Red Corvette” that got me. Just Prince and a guitar and that voice singing and playing for all of us who were lucky enough to be in his presence. Last night, I was among the millions on YouTube trying to find those videos we loved so much, so I could show them to Jackson. As tough as it was to find those original videos, it was tougher to explain the phenomenon of Prince to my son. How do you describe the first time you see a rockstar as an artist? I tried to find contemporary comparisons for my post-millennial but went to sleep without answers. I just wanted to curl up on my couch and spend hours in front the MTV that mesmerized me as a 13-year-old. I think we just have to play the music. And

Photo provided

The “Purple Rain” cassette played on repeat for columnist Maria Lyons in eighth grade. listen. And watch. And appreciate. And keep our eyes and our ears and our minds searching for The Beautiful Ones to come next.

• Maria Lyons is mom to Jackson, 11, and Mallory, 7. Follow her as she chases her Lyons at NWHerald.com/features/chasinglyons or @chasinglyons on Instagram and Twitter, or share your parenting experiences with her at chasing2lyons@gmail.com.

Open Mother’s Day May 8 11:30am-8pm Mom’s Main Course Free with One Entrée One Mom per Table

Gem Talk

®

Feelings that wash over you if you suddenly look down at your once dazzling engagement ring, only to see that the prongs are holding nothing but By Karly Bulinski air. You frantically search the surrounding area only to come up empty handed. Sadly, it is gone forever and now, in addition to being in a pit of despair you’ve got a costly situation on your hands. But alas, all of this heartache can be prevented with a few simple steps and a keen eye. I’ve always preached about having your jewelry checked and cleaned at least every six months by your professional jeweler, but sometimes an impromptu visit may be necessary. Keep an eye on your jewelry and if you start to see any of these warning signs that your jewelry is about to break, bring it in right away. Loose Stones • Too-short prongs – If you notice one of your prongs is shorter than the others or the top of it has narrowed a bit, your stone may be at risk. • Missing or bent prongs – If you can see that there is one or more prongs missing or if there is a prong that is so bent that you can see it with your naked eye, take the ring off immediately and get it in to your jeweler ASAP. • Shifted stones – If you notice that your center stone is not sitting in it’s mounting properly or if the stone wiggles or spins it’s time to bring it in for a check-up. Bracelet, Earrings & Necklaces • Damaged clasps – If your clasp doesn’t close properly, takes some finagling to get it open or closed or clearly has worn down metal, it’s time for a repair. It may look secure from the outside, but it’s only a matter of time until that clasp snaps and down goes your bracelet or necklace. • Earring posts – If your earring posts are broken or bent you could be at risk of losing your studs. Don’t wear them until you get them fixed or you will risk sporting only one earring. While I’m not saying you’ll never run into a mishap with your jewelry (although hopefully you won’t), prevention is key to keeping your jewelry safe and wearable for the generations to come.

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NWHerald.com • Sunday, April 24, 2016

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LITERARY EVENTS

fo A P r l M ace us ic

BOOKS ARE FUN BOOK AND GIFT FAIR, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. April 25, McHenry County College, 8900 Route 14, Crystal Lake. Hosted by McHenry County College Chapter of American Association for Women in Community Colleges (AAWCC). Proceeds benefit scholarships for MCC students. Free Information: 815-479-7829. POETRY NIGHT, 8 to 9:30 p.m. April 25, Raue Center for the Arts, 26 N. Williams St., Crystal Lake. Poet and puppeteer Phil C. Denofrio, poet in residence for Raue Center for the Arts, hosts poetry nights the fourth Monday of every other month that will include various poets from in the Chicago area featuring their own contemporary verses. Free. Information: 815-356-9010, marketing@rauecenter.org or www.rauecenter.org. POETRY: IMAGINE, WRITE AND WIN AWARDS CEREMONY, 7 to 8:30 p.m. April 26, Crystal Lake Public Library, 126 W. Paddock St., Crystal Lake. Stew Cohen will emcee the awards ceremony for Crystal Lake Public Library’s Poetry: Imagine, Write and Win competition. He will announce the winners and present awards. Poetry contest winners will read their poems. Free. Information: 815-459-1687. “DYLAN THE VILLAIN” STORYTIME, 10 a.m. April 27, Barnes & Noble, 5380 Route 14, Crystal Lake. This hilarious, rip-roaring storytime features “Dylan The Villain” by K.G. Campbell. After, stay for an activity. Free. Information: 815-344-0824 or crm2959@ bn.com. SPRING BOOK BUZZ, 7 p.m. April 27, Wauconda Area Library, 800 N. Main St., Wauconda. Representatives from Random House will share the inside scoop on upcoming “must reads” for spring and summer. There will be giveaways and door prizes. Free. Information: 847-526-6225, tsuda@wauclib. org or http://wauclib.evanced.info/signup/ eventdetails.aspx?eventId=6244&lib=0. LITERARY BOOK CLUB: “A SUDDEN LIGHT” BY GARTH STEIN, 7 p.m. April 28, Woodstock Public Library, 414 W. Judd St., Woodstock. The book club meets on the fourth Thursday of every month. Books and

reading guides are available at the circulation desk. Information: https://il.evanced.info/ woodstock/lib/eventsignup.asp?ID=3982. FRIENDS OF THE CRYSTAL LAKE USED BOOK SALE MEMBERS-ONLY PRESALE, 4:30 to 8 p.m. April 29, Crystal Lake Plaza, 6500 Route 14 No. 15, Crystal Lake. Be the first to browse our donated collections, including fiction, nonfiction, coffee-table and children’s hardback and paperback books, DVDs and CDs. Proceeds support the library. Become a member at the door or at www. focll.com/membership.html. Refreshments will be served. Information: raneestrawn@ sbcglobal.net or www.focll.com. NOOK CLASS, 7 p.m. April 29, Barnes & Noble Crystal Lake, 5380 Route 14, Crystal Lake. Whether you are a seasoned NOOK enthusiast or just curious, a variety of events are designed to teach, entertain and inspire. Free. Information: 815-344-0824 or crm2959@bn.com. FRIENDS OF THE CRYSTAL LAKE LIBRARY USED BOOK SALE, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. April 30, Crystal Lake Plaza, 6500 Route 14 No. 15, Crystal Lake. Proceeds will support the needs of the Crystal Lake Public Library. Free. Information: raneestrawn@sbcglobal.net or www.focll.com.

“NIGHT AT THE STADIUM” STORYTIME, 11 a.m. April 30, Barnes & Noble, 5380 Route 14, Crystal Lake. A baseball stadium comes to life in this magical picture book written by Phil Bildner and illustrated by Tom Booth from the publishing imprint of legendary sports icon and role model Derek Jeter. Free. Information: 815-344-0824, crm2959@ bn.com or http://stores.barnesandnoble. com/store/2959.

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| Style | Sunday, April 24, 2016 • NWHerald.com

To have an event listed in this calendar, fill out the form at PlanitNorthwest.com.


NWHerald.com • Sunday, April 24, 2016

| Style |

6 HOME & GARDEN EVENTS

SPRING A/C SALE

To have an event listed in this calendar, fill out the form at PlanitNorthwest.com. “WHAT’S IT WORTH? AN ANTIQUE APPRAISAL EVENT,” 1:30 to 4 p.m. April 24, Johnsburg Public Library, 3000 N. Johnsburg Road, Johnsburg. Antiques expert Mark Moran will provide informal appraisals on your antiques and collectibles. One item per person. Excluded items: weapons, fine jewelry, coins and paper money. By appointment only. Free. Information: 815-344-0077 or www. johnsburglibrary.org. WILD FOR WILDFLOWERS, 10 to 11 a.m. April 27, Johnsburg Public Library, 3000 N. Johnsburg Road, Johnsburg. For ages 3 to 5 with caregiver. Listen to the award-winning story “Miss Rumphius” by Barbara Cooney, work on a wildflower craft, then go outside to plant seeds that will grow into colorful blooms for years to come. Registration required. Free. Information: 815-344-0077, jschoen@johnsburglibrary.org or http://johnsburglibrary.org/ event. SPRING TRANSFORMATION FOR INSIDE YOUR HOME WORKSHOP, 6:30 p.m. April 28, Blooms & Rooms, 1245 N. Green St., McHenry. Learn easy, affordable decorating tips to energize and transform your home for spring. Offered by the McHenry County College Continuing Education Department. Cost: $29. Course code: NHGS57001. Information: 815-455-8588. COMMUNITY SHRED EVENT, 10 a.m. to noon April 30, McHenry Public Library, McHenry. Bring up to four boxes/bags of personal documents to have shred by a commercial service in the parking lot. Funded by the Friends of the McHenry Public Library. Free. Information: 815-385-0036 or mplref@ mchenrylibrary.org. WPPC NATIVE PLANT SALE, noon to 3 p.m. May 1, McHenry County College, 8900 Route 14, Crystal Lake. The Wildflower Preservation and Propagation Committee will have more than 150 species to choose from, including organic heirloom garden vegetables and native trees and shrubs. Cash or check only. Free. Information: thewppc@hotmail.com or www.thewppc.org. CARE & FEEDING YOUR HERB GARDEN, 7 to 8:30 p.m. May 4, Cary Area Public Library, 1606 Three Oaks Road, Cary. This basic look at how to garden with herbs includes everything a startup gardener should know. Registration is required. Free. Information: 847-639-4210, almamaj@caryarealibrary.info or www. caryarealibrary.info. ALGONQUIN GARDEN CLUB ANNUAL PLANT SALE, 8 a.m. to noon May 7, Algonquin Town Shopping Center, 1310 E. Algonquin Road, Algonquin. The sale will include more than 800 perennials from members’ gardens, colorful hanging baskets, tomato plants and many woodland plants. Proceeds will be used for scholarships and other civic projects. Free. Information: 847-658-4641. BOY SCOUT TROOP 455 MULCH FUNDRAISER SALE, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. May 7, Johnsburg Community Club, 2315 W. Church St.,

DAY BEFORE MOTHER’S DAY PIE AND FLOWER SALE WHEN: 8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. May 7 WHERE: St. Joseph Church, 10519 Main St., Richmond COST & INFO: St. Joseph Church Altar & Rosary-CCW ninth annual Day Before Mother’s Day Sale. The sale will run until all pies are sold. Selection may include apple, rhubarb, peach and blueberry pies, as well as hanging baskets, patio planters, geraniums and wildflowers. Free. Information: 815-678-7421, stjosephchurch@gmail. com or www.stjosephrichmondil. weconnect.com. Johnsburg. Offering premium bagged mulch in dark walnut, red, dark brown and non-dyed natural. Cost: $4 a 2-cubic-foot bag; $1 a bag Boy Scout installation. Information: 815-3821621 or western.gary@gmail.com. BULL VALLEY GARDEN CLUB PLANT SALE, 8 a.m. to noon May 7, Old Courthouse Lawn, 101 N. Johnson St., Woodstock. Members will sell herbs, native wildflowers and unusual perennials and grasses from their lawns and woods. Intrinsic Perennial Gardens will be selling a full range of professionally grown plants. Proceeds go toward civic projects and scholarships for students studying horticulture at McHenry County College. Free. Information: 815 354-3842. GARDEN PLANT SALE & HANDS ON HISTORY FOR KIDS, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. May 7, Colonel Palmer House, 660 E. Terra Cotta Road, Crystal Lake. Plants from Garden Gate Club and Green Twig Garden Club members’ gardens. At 11 a.m., kids will start their own gardens by planting seeds that can be transplanted in their home gardens. Registration required by May 5. Free. Information: 815-477-5873 or www.crystallakeparks.org/vw-systems/calendar/sys-cal-details.asp?id=4568. HOOVED ANIMAL HUMANE SOCIETY PLANT SALE, 10 a.m. May 7, Hooved Animal Humane Society, 10804 McConnell Road, Woodstock. A wide selection of beautiful plants will be available for sale. A portion of the proceeds will benefit the animals. Information: 815-337-5563 or www.hahs.org.

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StraightTalk

Questions? Visit northwestcommunitycounseling.com

Rick Atwater

Growing up and learning to fill hole in the soul from these situations manage to grow and adapt, few are left untouched. Some go to chemical dependency, and some are affected emotionally, but almost all have what some call “a hole in the soul,” an emptiness that can’t be filled from the outside. Dale was sent to his first rehab for drugs as an alternative to jail by age 19. The only friends he had were fellow offenders, drug dealers and other kids whose primary interest was themselves and getting high. Dale didn’t trust anyone and thought that was normal. He had been in survival mode since he could remember and knew no other way. He did, however, have moments of loneliness and vague desires to live a better life. Dale wasn’t really a bad kid. He had become addicted to drugs and alcohol and locked in a struggle with his disease, which had swallowed his thinking, his emotions and now his body. He relapsed within months of his discharge from rehab and, over time, became so deeply despondent that a failed overdose attempt landed him in rehab again. This time, he listened. This time, he wanted out of all the old ways and was willing to face the hopelessness and access the help available. It took the first six months of sobriety and forcing himself to go to Alcoholics

Anonymous meetings until one day he realized he had made a real friend. Everyone in his groups knew his name and welcomed him. Everyone in his groups supported his sobriety, and some even called him and invited him for coffee. He was invited to join a wanderers group (a group that meets in members’ homes), and half a dozen of his new friends helped him move out of his old, dumpy apartment into his new one. Dale started, at age 27, to learn about trust, friendship and helping

$

others. He learned by watching others in the program be trusting, helpful and good friends. By letting people in, he learned how to give of himself, and this went a long way to filling the “hole in the soul.”

• Rick Atwater is a licensed clinical professional counselor. He hosts the weekly radio show Straight Stuff on Addictions at recoveryinternetradio. com. He can reached by email at rickatwater@northwestcommunitycounseling.com.

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“Dale” was a loner. His alcoholic dad often called Dale names, many of which aren’t printable here. The mildest were loser, worthless mooch and airhead. Dale didn’t bring his classmates home to play and often sat by himself at lunch. The other kids thought Dale was stuck up or just weird. In fact, Dale was scared and ashamed. Dale wanted friends, but the only kids who were willing to spend time with him and the only kids he felt comfortable with were kids like him – kids who were hurting, afraid or ashamed. They were called “the bad kids,” The bad kids, now including Dale, had no place to go with their uncomfortable feelings, and many of them “acted out” which simply means got into trouble, were defiant, used alcohol or drugs or all of the above. By eighth grade, Dale was in the “all of the above” category. He consistently was in trouble with law enforcement for petty offenses and had been suspended for fighting at school. He only came home when his dad was at work or after he passed out at night. This was the environment in which Dale learned about friendship, trust, helping others, handling emotions and the other necessities of growing into a healthy adult. Even though many kids

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| Style | Sunday, April 24, 2016 • NWHerald.com

7


Breakfast royalty

NWHerald.com • Sunday, April 24, 2016

| Style |

8

Notable chef Ina Pinkney to share success story By LINDSAY WEBER

T

Foolproof Pancakes

editorial@nwherald.com

wo years and four months ago. Ina Pinkney never will forget the day she closed the doors or her beloved namesake restaurant, Ina’s – not out of necessity, but it was time. The date does not haunt her. It’s merely a gentle reminder of new experiences to come. “December 31, 2013. That was the last night I locked the door,” Pinkney said. “At the time, if you asked me what I would be doing in two years and four months, I would have had no idea.” Pinkney found her flare for food later in life than most, but once she found it, she charged forward at full speed. “Here’s the interesting part about my life. I baked my first cake when I was 37, opened my first restaurant at 48 and retired at 71,” Pinkney said. “Now is really the first time I get to tell my story. I’ve always been a brand, and now I’m just a regular person. In my restaurant, I was always focused on the guest experience. There was never room at the table for my story. I finally get to share how I went from a polio survivor to ‘Breakfast Queen’ and the path along the way.” Pinkney will serve up her personal success story at the 36th annual Spring Luncheon for the Arts in McHenry County. Presented by the Woodstock Fine Arts Association, the luncheon will be at 11 a.m. April 29 at Boulder Ridge Country Club in Lake in the Hills. Reservations no longer are being accepted. A notable chef, restaurateur and subject of the documentary “Breakfast at Ina’s,” Pinkney will speak about how she grew from a child in Brooklyn living in a kosher home to breakfast royalty, dubbing herself the Breakfast Queen of Chicago. “I gave the name to myself. When I opened Ina’s, I changed the landscape completely of what breakfast was,” Pinkney said. “I ate breakfast out every day on the way to the bakery I owned, and it was always horrible. It became a big decision every day. I realized every day I play with

1 cup (4 ounces) all-purpose flour ¾ cup buttermilk ¼ cup whole milk 1 teaspoon sugar ½ teaspoon baking soda ½ teaspoon salt 1 egg, large 2 teaspoons butter (unsalted), melted Combine all of the ingredients just until moistened. There will be lumps (that’s a good thing). Heat a pan or griddle on high heat and brush with oil to leave a thin film. Lower heat to medium. Pour ¼ cup of batter onto the pan or griddle and wait for bubbles to appear. Turn carefully and cook for a few more minutes. Serve immediately with pure maple syrup.

Recipe provided by Ina Pinkney’s website, www.breakfastqueen.com.

Photo provided

Dubbed the Breakfast Queen of Chicago, Ina Pinkney will share her personal success story April 29 at Boulder Ridge Country Club in Lake in the Hills as part of the 36th annual Spring Luncheon for the Arts in McHenry County. butter, flour, sugar and eggs – the main ingredients to most breakfast dishes. In my head, I already knew how to do this. I had no idea how to open and run a restaurant, but, after eating out so much, I knew exactly what I wanted you to experience. So I built a restaurant backward, basically, for you, the customer.” Chicago is full of establishments that serve breakfast. Some do it poorly, and some do it well. Ina said she was able to make the distinction of what “worked.” “I decided that I loved hotel dining rooms more than diners,”

Pinkney said. “The clanging of the dishes, butter coming wrapped in foil, the noise. I decided to go in between niches and make a fine dining breakfast restaurant that was thoughtful, with high-quality service and food. And I knocked it out of the park.” Though the restaurant is closed, some of Ina’s recipes still are alive and well in the Chicago area. Pinkney’s “Ina’s Heavenly Hots,” one of the dishes that put Ina’s on the map, is on loan to the menu at Miss Ricky’s in the Virgin Hotel in

downtown Chicago. “We took what you might consider food and brought it to a new level. I pioneered fresh food and big flavor, not a lot of grease,” Pinkney said. “I put high-quality coffee on the table when coffee wasn’t a big deal yet. We imported it from Seattle because they were ahead of the game. We cared a great deal about what you ate and drank. We didn’t do Styrofoam to-go containers; we did paper. We started the smoking ban. We used pasteurized eggs. We always set the pace. We never followed it.” As for the future, Pinkney said she looks forward to whatever it may bring. “I have no idea what next year brings, and I’m very open to it. That’s the magic of this time of life. It’s very cool to be me right now. I don’t miss the business. I miss the people, but they always come out to see me,” Pinkney said. “Life is like baking a cake. It’s raw for a really long time. It’s perfectly baked for a short time. It’s over-baked forever. I always look for the time it’s perfectly baked and go right for it.”


Author Spotlight

| Style | Sunday, April 24, 2016 • NWHerald.com

9

PETER ATTERBERG Hometown: Huntley Latest Book: “Dragon Heart” Publisher: Amazon Release Date: Nov. 10, 2015

Where did the idea come from?

When I was 9 years old, I wanted to be Indiana Jones. That childhood desired caused me to create my own action hero as a kid. The character started out as someone simply named “Dragon Heart.” As I grew older, he transformed from an imaginary hero in my head to a detailed, living and breathing character in stories.

Where can we find your new book? Barnes and Noble in Crystal Lake or Amazon.com What’s it about?

Left for dead by his own government, Danny Richmond struggles to hang onto the man he once was. The world is on the verge of an all-out war due to political unrest caused by the treacherous Xing Terrorist Empire. Torn by his morals, Danny must decide whether to embrace a life of prosperity or sacrifice it all for the lives of the innocent once again. His desire to save the world is matched only by his longing to finally hold Vanessa Rodes in his arms. Not only is she his longtime best friend and CIA counterpart, she is his unclaimed soul mate.

What genre is your book, and why were you drawn to it?

Action and Romance is the genre. I was drawn to it because I think those two genres together can create a really interesting story. It leaves the door open for deep character development while keeping the reader hooked with explosive action scenes.

Who is the intended audience?

Eighteen- to 34-year-olds would be the best audience, but the book can appeal to all readers 18 and older.

See AUTHOR, page 10

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NWHerald.com • Sunday, April 24, 2016

| Style |

10

• AUTHOR

sources to help me edit and put it into book form while I continued with my own countless revisions.

Why is this story important to you?

What did you enjoy most about writing this book? What was the hardest part?

Continued from page 9

I always looked at my grandpa, Charles Atterberg, as one of the most honorable men I had ever known. He passed away in 2010 and never had a chance to read the book, but I based the main character’s nobility greatly off of my grandpa’s. This story is the culmination of every childhood dream I’ve ever had. I’ve always wanted to be somebody important who stood up for what was right, even if no one else would. In Dragon Heart, the main character does exactly that. In a world full of uncertainty, he brings hope that things one day will get better as long as you never give up on who you are.

How long did it take you to write? What was your process?

It took me four years. I started out writing weekly novellas in an ongoing writing competition. I would advance the same characters and story as each week went on, like a TV series. By the end of it, I realized I had created an entire book. Soon after that, I gave it to a few trusted

The thing I enjoyed most was the adventures I could take the characters on. I loved the thrill of creating my own world with no limitations on what was possible. The hardest part was not getting burnt out because I was writing so much at once.

How are you publishing this book and why (traditional/indie/self-publishing)?

I self-published because I wanted to keep the integrity of my vision. Although I am very open to change, I wanted to be able to make the final decisions on the characters’ names, the look and feel of the book, as well as how it would be marketed.

What is your education/background?

I am attending McHenry County College for a degree in criminal justice. I have worked at Jewel-Osco for the past eight years, meeting new people every day.

How/why did you decide to write a book?

“DRAGON HEART” BY PETER ATTERBERG RELEASE: Nov. 10, 2015 ABOUT: In a world on the verge of war, Danny Richmond must decide whether to embrace a life of prosperity or sacrifice it all for the lives of the innocent. INFO: Available at Crystal Lake Barnes & Noble and Amazon.com. Information: www.facebook.com/heartofadragon2390.

Peter Atterberg I wanted to write a book because it had always been a goal of mine. I always said I would write one, and I didn’t want to be like so many others who constantly talk about it but never do it.

Who are your favorite authors?

Michael Crichton and Steve Perry.

Pick one: Danielle Steel or John Grisham? John Grisham.

Pick one: Stephen King or Nicholas Sparks? Stephen King.

Pick one: Ebooks or hard/paperbacks? Hard/paperbacks.

What’s next for you?

My next step is furthering the “Dragon Heart” series. Book number two is done, with just a few scenes that need to be added in and an editing job that needs to be completed. I hope the series will somehow find its way onto the movie screen some day.

How can readers discover more about you and you work?

www.facebook.com/heartofadragon2390

Local author? Get your book featured! Fill out the form at NWHerald.com/forms/authorspotlight.

Spring Fling Fashion Show THURSDAY, MAY 5TH 2:00PM TO 3:30PM Fox Point is teaming up with The Pink Door in McHenry to put on a Spring Fling Fashion Show. This event will feature clothing from the Pink Door modeled by residents at Fox Point. There will be a guest emcee and The Shades of Blue Mini Horses will be here along with the Centegra therapy Dogs. Enjoy Wine and Cheese in the Parlor.

RSVP AT 815-669-4498 TODAY! MOVE IN BY 5/31/2016 AND RECEIVE $1000 OFF COMMUNITY FEE!

R EFRES H and reboot at FOX POINT

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Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Sunday, April 24, 2016 •

CLASSIFIED 11

OPEN POSITIONS NOW YOU CAN MAKE A DIFFERENCE! McHenry County Employment Opportunity CNA $11.40/hour, RN $26.50/hour, LPN $19.75/hour, Registry CNA $13.75, Registry RN $30.00, Registry LPN $23.00

Allendale Association

McHenry County Valley Hi Nursing Home is looking for FT/PT CNAs, FT/PT Nurses and Registry for all shifts to join their team. Nursing Assistant Certification required, C.P.R. Cert. preferred and RN/LPN degree required for Nurses. FT employees are eligible for health insurance,, County/employee ty mp ye sponsored pension, and generous spon sp onso on sore so red re d pe pens nsio ns ion, io n, a nd g ener en erou er ouss time off. ou

To apply please visit www.co.mchenry.il.us

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At Valley Hi, we provide a wide range of services including long-term placement, shortterm rehabilitation programs, and Hospice programming. We can care for your loved one when they need intermediate or skilled nursing care or have a need for rehab services to get back on their feet and back home in the community. We are able to provide care for residents who need or have Medicaid assistance, Medicare, and some insurance carriers.

LET’S CHANGE THE GAME

FOR THE BETTER

MPC is searching for Machine Operators and Material Handlers to join our team of motivated individuals. As a Tier 1 automotive supplier, MPC delivers a difference- to our clients, the industry, and our employees. We offer a competitive wage and benefits effective the 1st of the month after you are hired. Available openings

Machine Operators (Full Time) • 12 Hour Rotational Shift: Night Shift Available • 8 Hour Shift: 2nd & 3rd Shift Available Material Handlers • 8 Hour Shift: 2nd & 3rd Shift

Requirements: • High school diploma or GED • Strong attendance history • Ability to stand for 8-12 hours • Ability to work weekends

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If you are serious about being a game-changer, MPC wants to hear from you! Submit an online application at

careers.mpc-inc.com. Pop the hood of your car and you will see the difference we make!

learn.

grow.

SPECIALIZED EDUCATION SERVICES

RESIDENTIAL CARE & TREATMENT SERVICES

P.O.Box1088,GrandAvenue&OffieldDrive,LakeVilla,IL 60046

847-356-2351

heal. CLINICAL & COMMUNITY SERVICES

www.Allendale4kids.org

SECRETARY

Allendale Association, a Child Welfare, Mental Health and Special Education facility is currently seeking a full time Secretary to provide secretarial support for the Residential Services Division professional staff at our Lake Villa IL location. Candidate must have a high school diploma or equivalent, with two years of secretarial experience. A working knowledge of word processing, spreadsheet, and database software (Word, Excel, and Access) and keyboarding/typing skills at 55 wpm also required. Prior experience in a health care provider or a non-profit/human services environment a plus. Per DCFS regulations, must have a valid driver’s license with a good driving record and be at least 21 years of age. We offer a competitive salary, excellent benefits and an education assistance program. Please visit www.allendale4kids.org to download our application and email or send with a copy of your resume to: ALLENDALE ASSOCIATION Attn: HR Dept P.O. Box 1088, Lake Villa, IL 60046 Fax: 847-356-0290 careers@allendale4kids.org AA/EEO


12 CLASSIFIED • Sunday, April 24, 2016

• Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

Get the job you want at NWHerald.com/jobs

GO TO WORK!

Working World Staffing Service has new Jobs!

ACCOUNTING:

Crystal Lake office looking for a full-time accounting professional who is reliable, organized & self motivated. Working knowledge of general ledger and ability to prepare financial statements a must. Minimum of Associates Degree in accounting required.

Please send resume with salary requirements to: April2016Acctg@yahoo.com

Crystal Lake Location Huntley -

Inspectors and Packers - $9 to $10/hr

Woodstock -

Plastic Machine Operators $10 Auto

Crystal Lake -

EXPERIENCED TECH

Diagnosis, Brakes, Suspension & more/ Good Pay – Paid Vacation – Bonuses. Family owned for over 32 years. Possible advancement – Great place to grow! DISCOUNT MUFFLER Crystal Lake, Palatine, Carpentersville Call 708-624-9612

CAREGIVERS Now Hiring... Always Caring Seeking experienced caregivers to provide companionship and assistance with personal care. Available Shifts Weekdays and/or Weekends 3-12 Hour Days &/or Night. 24-Hour Sleep-Overnight Shifts. Apply online: https://va175.ersp.biz/employment Visiting Angels is an EEO employer

2nd shift Janitor/Packer $10 Punch Press Operator Quality Control Inspector $12 to $15

McHenry -

Electrical Assembly $11 to $13/hr

Call 815-455-4490 or stop in: 14 N. Walkup Ave, Crystal Lake Fox Lake Location Spring Grove/Lake Zurich Assembly $8.25 to $10/hr

Wauconda/Richmond/Buffalo Grove Warehouse $9.50 to $11/hr

Ingleside -

Shipping Asst. & Finishing Tech. $10 to $11/hr

Northwest Herald Classified

Call 847-587-2442 or stop in: 28 E. Grand Ave, Fox Lake

877-264-2527 www.NWHerald.com/classified

General Office Cashier / Receptionist Full time Evenings (Crystal Lake, IL)

Accounts Payable (AP) Specialist Ortho Molecular Products is looking to add an experienced Accounts Payable (AP) Specialist to our Accounting team. With over 25 years of experience and stability, Ortho Molecular Products has become an industry leader in manufacturing high quality nutraceuticals and vitamins. PRIMARY DUTIES WILL INCLUDE: the timely and accurate posting of financial transactions, handling all accounts payable, working with vendors and assisting in month and yearly close.

Hours: 12-9pm four days a week and Saturdays 8-6pm

IF YOU HAVE A STRONG INTEREST IN AP WITH MANY YEARS OF EXPERIENCE, THIS MAY BE THE POSITION FOR YOU!

JOB DESCRIPTION: • Answering all incoming calls in a prompt, friendly, professional manner, & transferring them to the appropriate person or department • Accepting payments from customers • Balancing daily deposits • Filing accounting documents • Data entry • Excel and Word experience helpful

The most qualified candidates will have: * High School Diploma * Associates degree in accounting/finance is a plus * At least three (3) years of Accounts Payable (AP) experience * Fundamental knowledge of GAAP and accounting standards * Strong MS Office skills * Highly organized and detail focused * Pleasant and positive attitude and team player

JOB REQUIREMENTS:

SM-CL1179069

• Previous dealership experience desired. • Excellent math aptitude and attention to detail • Bilingual English/Spanish a plus • Ability to multi-task • Professional appearance • Ability to work independently • Be willing to submit to a pre-employment screening which includes a background check and drug screen

Email response only - send to: alawrence@brilliancehonda.com

OPEN POSITIONS NOW YOU CAN MAKE A DIFFERENCE!

As a full-time member of the Ortho Molecular Products team you will be eligible for: full health and dental benefits, voluntary benefits (vision, disability, hospital, etc.), paid time off, holiday time off, gym membership, wellness programs, 401(k) with company match and bonus opportunities. STOP WORKING A JOB AND START YOUR CAREER WITH ORTHO MOLECULAR PRODUCTS TODAY! Email a copy of your resume to:

recruiter1@ompimail.com to be considered for this position.

SM-CL1180258

Allendale Association

learn.

grow.

SPECIALIZED EDUCATION SERVICES

RESIDENTIAL CARE & TREATMENT SERVICES

P.O.Box1088,GrandAvenue&OffieldDrive,LakeVilla,IL 60046

847-356-2351

heal. CLINICAL & COMMUNITY SERVICES

www.Allendale4kids.org

OUTCOMES SPECIALIST

Allendale Association,a Child Welfare, Mental Health and Special Education facility currently has a full time position for an Outcomes Specialist at our Lake Villa IL location, to assist in the completion of intake related paperwork, tracking reports and information, and the compilation of data for various reports. Candidate should have a high school graduate/ GED or equivalent experience with some continuing education in a business related field, and a knowledge of general computer software (e.g. Word, Excel). Prior experience with case management and/or experience with DCFS, DHS, probation departments, or school districts a plus. Per DCFS regulations, must have valid driver’s license w/good driving record and be at least 21 years of age. We offer a competitive salary, excellent benefits and an education assistance program Please visit www.allendale4kids.org to download our application and email or send with a copy of your resume to: ALLENDALE ASSOCIATION Attn: HR Dept P.O. Box 1088, Lake Villa, IL 60046 Fax: 847-356-0290 careers@allendale4kids.org AA/EEO


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Sunday, April 24, 2016 •

DRIVER

OPEN POSITIONS NOW YOU CAN MAKE A DIFFERENCE!

Allendale Association

learn.

grow.

heal.

SPECIALIZED EDUCATION SERVICES

RESIDENTIAL CARE & TREATMENT SERVICES

CLINICAL & COMMUNITY SERVICES

P.O.Box1088,GrandAvenue&OffieldDrive,LakeVilla,IL 60046

847-356-2351

www.Allendale4kids.org

CASE SPECIALIST Allendale Association,a Child Welfare, Mental Health and Special Education facility currently has an opening for a full time Case Specialist to coordinate contact between clients and all outside agencies, clients’ families, guardians, referral sources and other individuals involved in the treatment of clients. Candidate will prepare and present required reports, compile data and arrange visits. Requires Bachelor’s Degree in Social Work, Psychology, or related human services field, and two years related experience. Per DCFS regulations, must have valid driver’s license w/good driving record and be at least 21 years of age. Competitive salary, excellent benefit package & an education assistance plan. Please visit www.allendale4kids.org to download our application and email or send with a copy of your resume to: ALLENDALE ASSOCIATION Attn: HR Dept P.O. Box 1088, Lake Villa, IL 60046 Fax: 847-356-0290 careers@allendale4kids.org AA/EEO

CLASSIFIED 13

MECHANIC – PART TIME

CDL SEMI DRIVER

Flat bed & dump work. Good driving record & experience required. Call 815-337-8200 or email: stonetreelandscapes@yahoo.com FARM - 5 Temporary Farm worker's dates of need, 5/30/16 - 11/5/16. Must have 3-month verifiable experience hand harvesting vegetables, to include 3 months' tractor driving experience & affirmative verifiable job references. Workers will plant cultivate and harvest Green Beans, Peppers, Strawberries, Summer Squash, Asparagus, Cucumbers, Eggplant, Tomatoes, Sweet Corn, Melons Pumpkins, Fall Squash, Flowers, Gourds & Indian Corn Workers will care for plants in the greenhouse, bend & stoop or work on knees for long periods of time. Must be able to lift & carry 60 lb. bags of sweet corn. Guaranteed 3/4 of contract hours. Tools, supplies, equip provided at no cost. Conditional housing for noncommuting workers. Transportation & subsistence reimbursed to worker upon completion of 50% of contract or earlier if appropriate. $12.07/Hr. EOE. Worksites in McHenry County IL. Random drug testing at employer's expense. Report or send resume to the nearest IL Career Center & reference Job Order # 3756556 or call 312-793-1284. Tom's Farm Market & Greenhouses Inc. Huntley IL.

Semi & heavy equipment. Call 815-337-8200 or email: stonetreelandscapes@yahoo.com

NURSE

The Reason You Went Into Nursing:

HIGH SCHOOL SECRETARY

Family Nurse for clinic in Crystal Lake. Part time, great work environment, making a real difference in the lives of many.

Min. req: HS Diploma or equiv, comp/sec skills. 12 mo, FT. Full benefits, and salary neg. App Deadline: 5/2/16 Start date: 5/18/16 Send Resumes to:Tom Lind, Principal Tlind@rbchs.com Fax: 815-678-4324

PAINTER NEEDED – Inside and Out Small Farm $10/hr to start. Call: 815-347-6888

Richmond-Burton CHS

Resumes to pmontemurro@hpclinic.org www.hpclinic.org

PHONE SOLICITORS WANTED Earn Ca$h from Home

Be an independent contractor. Schedule home donation pick-ups of clothing & household items to benefit a national veteran's organization. Must have local & long distance phone service, good phone presence, energetic & self-motivated. Call 224-244-5888 Mon-Fri 9am-5pm for information or email: charityservice4700@gmail.com

PRODUCTION SUPERVISOR WANTED

Retired Minister Provides Non-Medical Home

Seasonal Mechanic

MAILBOX & POST SALES & INSTALLATION

WernerCo a Metal Fab Manufacturer seeking a motivated leader to direct staff to meet production requirements to maximize use of labor, material and equipment. BS Eng/Operations Mgmt & 10+years of supervisory experience preferred. Submit resumes to recruiter@wernerco.com

The Village of Huntley has an opening for a Seasonal Mechanic.

Companion Care for Elderly & Disabled Persons 815-338-2234 or email: dplarsen1073@att.net

Apply at: www.huntley.il.us

815-653-7095 ~ 815-341-7822 www.mailboxpostman.com

PARTNER ABUSE INTERVENTION PROGRAM COORDINATOR

815-355-8790

Social Services

F/T, Intervention Program in local domestic violence agency. Position involves program development, staff supervision. Bachelor's degree with 5 years exp. required, Master's degree preferred.

Send resume to michellek@turnpt.org

STALL CLEANING PERSON WANTED Full or part time. $10/HR if experienced. Wauconda. 312-203-7241

SWIMMING POOL SERVICE ASSISTANT

Temporary position - full time. No experience needed. Must be hard working. Immediate opening.

Please call: 847-514-2942 Cary, IL.

WAREHOUSE / DELIVERY

FT

Tues-Fri 9am-6pm. Must be punctual, detail oriented, able to lift 50lbs. and have a clean driving record.

Apply at Woodstock Farm & Lawn Center

2020 S. Eastwood Dr., Woodstock, IL 815-338-4200

WILDLIFE TECHNICIAN

FT - Carpentry skills preferred. Duties include working on Ladders, Roofs & Trapping. Also Part Time General Labor position available. Experience a plus! Please email resumes: mike@problemanimal.com or call 847-394-9800

HANDYMAN

Anything to do with Wood

We can Fix or Replace Doors and Windows Senior Discount 815-943-4765 The Illinois Classified Advertising Network (ICAN) provides advertising of a national appeal. To advertise in this section, please call ICAN directly at 217-241-1700. We recommend discretion when responding. Please refer questions & comments directly to ICAN.

Need customers? We've got them! Advertise in print and online for one low price.

Call Classified today! 877-264-2527


14 CLASSIFIED • Sunday, April 24, 2016 READER NOTICE:

As a service to you, our valued readers, we offer the following information. This newspaper will never knowingly accept any advertisement that is illegal or considered fraudulent. If you have questions or doubts about any ads on these pages, we advise that before responding or sending money ahead of time, you check with the local Attorney General's Consumer Fraud Line and/or the Better Business Bureau. They may have records or documented complaints that will serve to caution you about doing business with these advertisers. Also be advised that some phone numbers published in these ads may require an extra charge. In all cases of questionable value, such as promises or guaranteed income from work-at-home programs, money to loan, etc., if it sounds too good to be true, it may in fact be exactly that. Again, contact the local and/or national agency that may be able to provide you with some background on these companies. This newspaper cannot be held responsible for any negative consequences that occur as a result of you doing business with these advertisers.

• Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

HEBRON MOVING SALE SAT - TUES, APR 23-26 8-5 12308 PRICE RD. Weather Tek Tray Mats, Front, Rear & Cargo for a Equinox 2010, Rec Room Furniture, 2 Electric Fireplaces, 2 Oak Computer Hutches, Everlast Punching Bag, Assorted Free Weights, from 5 to 45 lbs, Char Grill Smoker, 5HP Rototiller

C. L. CrimeStoppers

BIKE AUCTION

at Lucky Brake Bicycle, Route 14 & Dole (Rain Date: Sat, May 7)

White Maytag Dishwasher- $75/OBO 815-444-9254

Specialized Men's Bicycle 26in - $260/OBO LIKE NEW. 815-334-8847

WICKER CHAIRS - Very sturdy, large, high back antique, cushioned, 2 available, made in Sheboygan Wisc. $150/OBO 630-835-5694

Whirlpool Tub/Indoor - 42 x 66, Dark Navy Blue New, never used, (paid $1,950 new), sell for $400/firm. 815-653-4612

1750 N. Richmond Rd. April 21st-24th

Take an Extra 10% OFF our already low prices. Tractors, Tool Boxes, Furniture, Appliances, Patio Sets, Mattresses and more.

Cary Estate Sale 6316 Shannon Drive Friday, Saturday & Sunday 8-3 Lots for Everyone! Don't Miss It!! KANE COUNTY ANTIQUE FLEA MARKET Shows March – December ~ Hundreds of Dealers

KANE COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS 525 S. Randall Rd. (Between Routes 38 & 64) St. Charles, Illinois

South Elgin Moving Sale SAT & SUN, APR 23 & 24 8-4

64 S. Center St. TOP TO BOTTOM, ALL MUST GO! From Baby Grand to Baubles

26 in. Woman's Diamondback - 21 speed, purple/white, great condition $125. 630-835-5694 BICYCLES - (2) Sun 7 speed Bicycles, model Ruskin, for Adults. Garage kept, in good condition. These were $349 new each, selling for $150 each. Call 815-690-0235

Bike Tandem, Never Used, Kaulana Lua, Yellow, $200. 815-382-7457 DON'T NEED IT? SELL IT FAST!

4 Hair Styling Stations W/ Mirrors - $100/each Call: 815-575-3003 9-5 Mon-Sat Woodstock Memorial Park (4) Plots - Section 7 Lot 60. $1,250/ea or 4 for $4000. 815-568-8247 You Want It?

Northwest Herald Classified Call 877-264-2527 or www.NWHerald.com

877-264-2527

Sat & Sun April 23 & 24 9am - 1pm 2021 Olmstead Drive

Reese 18K Fifth Wheel hitch, tools, furniture, men's/women's plus size clothes, accessories, housewares, decor, log rack, bike rack, bicycle, and much more!

Woodstock Fishing/Business Sunday Only! 1021 Chesterfield Ct.

Admission $5 each day ~ Children Under 12 FREE Parking Free

FRI, SAT, SUN, APR 22, 23, 24 9-4 507 W. KIMBALL

Share your flea finds: #iFounditAtKane @KCFMarket

Gear, Tackle, Lathe, Fly Tying Supplies, Etc.

9am – 3pm

Info: 630-377-2252 www.kanecountryfleamarket.com

Time to Clean Out Your Closet & Garage 2016 Flea Market & Garage Sale Days May 21 & 22 @ McHenry County Fairgrounds

Seeking Antique & Collectible Vendors Artisan with Hand-Crafted Items, Garage Salers & Direct Sales Vendors

HARVARD

24620 HUNTER RD

Saturday/Sunday 4-23 & 4-24 9am to 3pm. Household items; Light Fixtures, Ceiling Fans, Washer/Dryer (LP), Lamps, Freestanding Bar, Chairs, Wire Closet Shelving, Dehumidifier, Window Shades & Woven Wood Blinds, and much, much more! Find !t here! PlanitNorthwest.com

We've Got It!

Classified has GREAT VARIETY!

WOODSTOCK - WE ARE RETIRING!

Sat. April 30 ~ 12-5pm Sun. May 1 ~ 7- 4pm ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ Next Show June 4 & 5 ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★

★ Over 100 Bikes ★ SAT, APR 30 10 - Noon

Assured Appliance, 121 N. Emmett St, Genoa 847-293-0047

& Much More!

MCHENRY - VLP EVENT

Adult - Youth - Child

Reconditioned and Guaranteed Washers, Dryers, Stoves and Refrigerators. Good Selection. Low Prices.

Advertise here for a successful garage sale!

Call 877-264-2527

McHenry Numbers at 8:30am

Motorcycle Riding Jacket - EXCELLENT CONDITION!! MUST SEE LEATHER JACKET - "WILDA" BRAND - Never worn! Men's "M" with zip out liner! Smoke Free Home. Retails for $450. REDUCED TO $100. Photos on NWH website 815-382-4305

CASH ONLY

Suzuki Racing Jacket - Brand New, Mostly black, red and gray. Excellent condition, Men's "L" has all the pads & vents like other Racing Jackets! Smoke Free Home, REDUCED!! $100. 815-382-4305 Marengo

Picker's Sale!

Electric Dryer – Maytag, Bisque $75 815-861-2174

Huge Sale Filled With Vintage / Antique Tools, Fishing, Photography, Clocks, Books And Much More.

FRIGIDAIRE CHEST FREEZER

MODEL # FFCO9C3AW6, WHITE, 16 CUBIC FEET 41" X 21" X 34" deep, VERY GOOD CONDIITON $100. YOU HAUL 815-546-7396

See Photos at http://www.ctnorthern.com

Kenmore Window Air Conditioner – $100 5200BTU. Works Great! Hardly used! 815-3540654

This is a CARING TRANSITIONS Sale

Kitchen Range – Kenmore, White, 5 Burner, Gas $260 815-861-2174

Microwave – OTC, White, GE Profile $60 815-861-2174 Have a news tip?

Email: tips@nwherald.com


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Sunday, April 24, 2016 • PANASONIC VHS-C CAMERA , batteries and cables inc. In Marengo $20 obo. 630-835-5694 Club Weider Exercise Station with various exercise stations. Excellent Condition - $100. 847-322-9588

Exercise Bike, Nordic Track GX 4.7, Like New! $250 815-382-7457 Nordic Track Elliiptical Auto Strider 990, I fit interactive technology + extras, $400/obo. 815-861-3699

5 by 7 Trailer with Spare - $295/OBO 8153348847

10 BLOCK woodworking planes. Mostly STANLEY, basic to adjustable mouth, cleaned and ready $30-$55 each. 815-444- 0504

6' Wood Step Ladder, 8' Wood Step Ladder (Keller) 4in Heavy Duty Belt Sander - $65 for all 3 847-624-9544 DELTA Universal Miter saw/Planer Stand - Heavy duty. 7 ft of support, Sturdy, Stable, Built-in pneumatic 3 position lift. Like new, very solid HD work stand. $160. Call 815-444-0504 New V-Blocks Starrett #271-C Precision Ground, Black Oxide, Matching Pair With Clamps & Rod $75/OBO. 630-835-5694 STANLEY Handplanes & Vintage Tools -.Cleaned and restored. Have block, smoothing, jack & jointer planes, $40 to $150. Also have rabbet & scraper planes and Disston hand saws ready to pick up. Call 815-444-0504

Starrett Depth Venier 0 to 12 inch, English & metric #448 - $100 or best 630-835-5694 Marengo

FAUCET 7-1/2 Year Old Male Orange Tabby DSH

CLASSIFIED 15

Golf Putter – Mens Taylor Made Ghost SI 35" $75. 847-322-9588 Ping I3 Golf Clubs, 3 Wood, 5 Wood, 7 wood Men's Senior Flex. All three $150. 847-322-9588

Punching Bags (2) Everlast, 35 & 65 lbs, $50/both. 815-814-1823

I love being 7 because I'm more settled in my ALL COLLECTIONS, AUTOGRAPHS, ESTATES Music & Military CASH 815-354-6169 head. And though my knees complain, I can still Antique and Modern Guns Old Lever Actions, Winchesters, Marlins, Savages, etc. Old Pistols run and jump and Revolvers. Cash for Collection. FFL License. 815-338-4731

STARRETT PROTRACTOR with venier scale & 2 blades - $60/OBO. 630-835-5694

www.helpingpaws.net 815-338-4400

HUMMELS, LLADROS, PRECIOUS MOMENTS

Wood Chipper - $245/OBO. LIKE NEW 815-334-8847

Guinea Pig, White, Long Hair Male

815-353-7668

Is my 16 year old daughters furniture. Includes dresser w/hutch, chest of drawers and night stand. Great condition. $250 for all three. Will not separate.

Powered Wheelchair, Invacare-Promto 31 Reduced to $500/firm. 815-759-9361

1 male and 2 female with cage and dishes.

Text or call 847-293-6558 Tracy

“Quickie” Wheelchair – W/ Leg Rests, & Chushions. $250 847-669-3937

815-526-2109

HAY EQUIPMENT JD 336 baler #30 ejector $5000, M&W 3 point wheel rake $900, NI 467 haybine $500, 2 16 ft basket wagons $200 each. 815-353-1622

BEDROOM FURNITURE - PINE

Couch – 75” w/ Chair, Tan & Brown, Trim Wood Carving. 815-403-4388 (Mchenry) Curio Cabinet - Pine, Half Moon, $40. 815-578-1429 Dining room table. $250; L-Shaped couch, brown. $400 moving must go. Negotiable. 815-451-3213 Johnsburg Karastan Oriental Rug- Originally $450, Selling for $100/OBO 815-690-3894

Kitchen Table with 4 Chairs, Light Oak, $125.00. Pics available. 815-347-6405 Living Room Set with Ottoman, $350. 815-403-2044 Rattan Furniture, Sofa, Floor Lamp, End Table and (2) Chairs, EXC COND! $250 815-943-5304 Settee LA-Z-BOY, Excellent Condition, Denim Blue, $75 Pics available. 815-347-6405 Sofa ~ 84” Tan, Excellent Condition, $200/obo. 815-385-8771 WHITE WICKER Bedroom Furniture - Pier One. Great Quality, Excellent condition, Smoke free home: Mirror: 22.5" x 2" x 32"; 3 drawer dresser: 34.5" x 22.75" x 33"; 6 drawer dresser: 61" x 25" x 32" REDUCED!! $350. 815-382-4305

Custom Rifle & Pistol Cases made out of domestic & exotic hardwoods, starting @ $200. 708-363-2004 John Deere Lawn Tractor - 42” cut, 20 HP engine, good condition, 10 years old, first $400 takes it 815-459-0398

Lawn Service, Garden Tilling, Mowing, Gravel Clean-Up V&V Lawn Care 815-648-2229 LAWN TRIMMER & MOWER

Craftsman 13 inch battery rechargeable lawn trimmer, like new and Briggs & Stratton 7.25 EX self propelled mower 3 years old retail $500. will sell both for $300. Call 815-261-2825, leave message

Perrennial Hardy Geraniums - $3.50/ea 815-338-5621 PULL BEHIND FERTILIZER SPREADER - Earthway plastic type. $15/OBO. 630-835-5694 Marengo Area

TREES ~ NICE! - Evergreens 6'-8', 3 or more $225, Maples 3”- 6” $350+ . Delivered and planted. 815-378-1868

8 Foot Fiberglass Black Truck Cap - $65/OBO 8153348847

Air Conditioner, G. E. Window, 12000 BTU Energy Star with remote, used 1 year, $225.00. 815-345-1282 American Girl Doll Addy Double Wood School Desk and Bench, Brand New Condition $40 815-349-0206 American Girl Doll Horse Sparks Flying Brand New Condition $20 815-349-0206 American Girl Doll Josefina's Table & Chairs - Wooden table, 2 matching chairs carved w/ cornstalk design, table has a pullout compartment - $40. 815-349-0206

American Girl Doll Wicker Moses Basket - includes the bed pad, blanket, pillow, hanging heart & bow. Brand new condition $35. 815-349-0206

BBQ- Stainless Steel Charm Glow, 4 Burner w/ Cover $25 224-569-6246 Brown Jordan Aegean Collection - Beige, oval table 48 x 72 w/ glass top, great condition with few scratches $150. 815-349-0206 Chaise - Brown Jordan Aegean Collection Chaise Lounge - Beige In great condition w/ few scratches, needs to have the slip replaced, $135 OBO. 815-349-0206

Crocheted Afghans, New, Varied Sizes, Colors for Baby, Crib & Adult, $45 & up. 815-477-4667 Custom SUV cover - Ordered to fit 2002 and newer Ford Explorers. May fit others Good shape, only used couple months. $200/OBO. 630-835-5694 DODGE DAKOTA HOOD - Black hood from a 2000 Dakota, will fit 1997-2004 models, Was on the truck less than 15K miles. Excellent condition. $95. 815-814-7289

GMC Roof Carrier W/ Lock - $145/OBO. LIKE NEW 8153348847 Pet Porter - Large - Airline Approved. Excellent Condition - $40. 847-322-9588

Stain Glass Picture, Cowboy on Horse, Leading Pack Mule, Exc Cond, 27x32, $250. 847-961-6583 Suitcase - Hard Sided Lightweight Oversize Expandable with wheels, Black - $15. 847-322-9588 Suitcase - Hardsided with wheels, blue Approximately 26 x 10 x 18, $10. 847-322-9588

With cage, water bottle and food dish.

Also 3 Hamsters

FREE TO GOOD HOME!

IZZY 7 Year Old Female Miniature Schnauzer I have found that to love and be loved is the most exhilarating of all emotions. Why should I settle for anything less? www.helpingpaws.net 815-338-4400

MADILINE: 9 Month Old Female Orange Tabby DSH I had to make my own way...I had to go out in the world and become strong, and discover my mission. www.helpingpaws.net 815-338-4400

Cat Tree 3 Layers, About 5 Feet High Immaculate Condition! $100/obo. 847-254-6500

Dunlop Irons - Full set, hardly used, driver, putter, 7 wood, 2 dozen balls -$75 815-455-3239 Golf Bag - Salzenger, 15 Clubs, Size 8 Shoes, Glove, 2 dozen golf balls, $70. 815-578-1429

Follow the Northwest Herald on Twitter. McHenry County area breaking news, entertainment news, feature stories and more! @NWHerald

Stay connected with Northwest Herald facebook.com/nwherald.com Twitter: @nwherald

Fluffy Pups for adoption, $250/ea. 8470-487-5900

Lionel & American Flyer Trains WANTED TO BUY: Vintage or New, working or not. Bicycles, Outboard motors, fishing gear, motorcycles or mopeds, chainsaws, tools etc. Cash on the spot. Cell: 815-322-6383

Powered by:

1976 Cadillac Eldorado Convertible, $27,500 Price Neg. 815-236-0500 or 847-791-9016 1992 Pontiac Grand Am - Good Running Car 117K miles, $1,000/obo

847-977-6468

2005 Honda CR-V - 40,000 miles, white/tan, auto, no accidents, gasoline, $3000. Call 916-389-1450

★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★

CLASSICS WANTED

Restored or Unrestored Cars & Vintage Motorcycles Domestic / Import Cars: Mercedes, Porsche, Corvette, Ferrari's, Jaguars, Muscle Cars, Mustang & Mopars, $$ Top $$ all makes, Etc. ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★

JOHN DEERE 726 WITH ELECTRIC START, older model, original owner with all manuals, runs but needs carb cleaned out. $150/OBO. Marengo 630-835-5694

Toro Power Clear Snowblower 221QR – 21” Width, Like New! $150 815-245-8983

Chihuahua Pups, 9 Weeks, Also Chinese Crested

CALL STEVE 847-542-5713

GUINEA PIGS (2) FREE TO GOOD HOME With cage and extras. 262-949-7195

Kimball Upright Piano- $395/OBO W/ Bench Seat. Good Condition! MUST GO! 815-403-8472

FREE CHICKENS 12 young fryers. 815-334-1878

STEIFF, ETC!

Golf Putter - Mens 35" Tour Edge Backdraft GT-Pro With SuperStroke Grip - $15. 847-322-9588 Northwest Herald.

Giving you more!

2001 Ford Mustang (4) Wheels and (2) Tires, 17” $150/all. Huntley Area 815-245-8433 KNACK ROOFERS RACK FOR PICKUP TRUCK FITS 6' OR 8' BED ADJUSTABLE, UNIVERSAL, BOLT TOGETHER $1200 new, 8 months old, $300/obo. 815-212-9171

Northwest Herald Classified It works.

Call today to place your ad

877-264-2527


16 CLASSIFIED • Sunday, April 24, 2016

• Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

JM SEAMLESS GUTTERS • Seamless

Gutters 5” & 6” • Leaf Protection (Different Styles Available)

• Soffit

& Fascia • Aluminum Wrap

Free Estimates Fully Insured Reasonable Pricing 815-404-9749

J&J TREE SERVICE, INC. Free Estimate WE'LL GO OUT ON A LIMB FOR YOU !

MAYA LAWN LANDSCAPING DAKER CONSTRUCTION CORP. Carpentry, Drywall, Painting Free Estimates Call Mike 708.651.6219

ALL HOME REPAIRS Interior/Exterior Carpentry Light Fixtures / Electrical Deck Repairs Doors Hardware Plumbing Bath Kitchen Tile Power Washing & Gutter Cleaning All Jobs Big and Small Serving McHenry County and Surrounding Area

An Affordable Electrician

847-344-5713

Weekly Mowing Mulching Planting Brick Pavers Patios Sidewalks & Retaining Walls Spring Clean-up Natural Stone Top Soil & Bobcat work. Fully Insured/Bonded. House Cleaning Available

Vicente - 815-382-4538

21 Yrs. Experience, Free Estimates, Insured Lawn Maintenance Weekly~Tree Service Install & Remove ~ Spring Clean Up ~ Edging & Mulch ~ ~Trimming ~ And Much More! ~

815-261-2835 or 815-404-8530

847-566-2663

Free Estimates Veterans Disc Senior Disc Single Parent Disc 40 Years Experience Licensed Bonded Insured

Brush Removal and Lot Clearing

815-648-1489

Fully Insured

Fax 815-648-1564

30+ Years

website: jjmaint@frontier.com

OTTO'S LANDSCAPING Edging ✦ Mulch ✦ Dethatching ✦ Planting Trimming & Removal of Trees, Bushes & Evergreens ✦ Brick Patios/Walkways

Free Estimates ✦ 815-943-6103 Mowing, Mulching & Pruning, Complete Yard Maintenance, Brick Patios, Sidewalks

815-388-5609

WILL BEAT ANY ESTIMATE

Stonetree Landscapes Inc.

S&W Furniture Refinishing ✦

Tree Removal, Tree Trimming, Stump Removal,

Mulch Landscape Stone Sand & Gravels Topsoil Garden Mixes Flagstone Boulders Pick Up & Delivery

815-337-8200

stonetreelandscapes.net We Accept Visa Mastercard Discover

Pictures increase attention to your ad! Be sure to include a photo of your pet, home, auto or merchandise.

Need Help Rebuilding, Repairing or Replanting?

Call to advertise 877-264-2527 Or place your ad online nwherald.com/placeanad Newspaper subscriptions make great gifts! Show them you care everyday! Call 815-459-8118 today to send a gift subscription. Northwest Herald

Check out the

At Your Service Directory

Place your Classified ad online 24/7 at: www.NWHerald.com/PlaceAnAd Have a news tip? Email: tips@nwherald.com

BREAKING NEWS available 24/7 at NWHerald.com

Northwest Herald Classified It works.


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Sunday, April 24, 2016 •

NJE LANDSCAPING INC.

Construction Maintenance Patios / Walkways Seasonal Clean ups Retaining Walls Mulching Lawn Installation Trimming / Pruning Plantings Tree & Stump Removal Down Spouts Lighting Fully Insured www.njelandscaping.com

Noe - 708-603-9141 ORTIZ LAWNCARE

Lawn Maintenance - Bush & Tree Trimming Seasonal Clean-Up - Mulch & More

Call Today for a Free Estimate !! 815-404-4244 or 815-403-8050

CLASSIFIED 17

GPM

815-900-8342 ✦ 2 FREE MOWINGS ✦

Fertilizing & Weed Control, Landscape Design Installation & Maintenance, Tree & Shrub Maintenance ✦ Free Estimates

Spring & Fall Cleanups

ORTIZ LANDSCAPING ★ SPRING CLEAN-UP ★

Mulch Brick Patios Tree Removal Maintenance Work Insured.

815-355-2121

email: amulfoortiz99@gmail.com

PACO'S LAWN CARE

Commercial / Residential ✤ Trim Trees ✤ Clean-up ✤ Planting ✤ Mowing ✤ Retaining Walls ✤ Mulching ✤ Sidewalks Full Maintenance ~ Tree Services 10% off ✤ Snowplowing placidohernandez28@gmail.com

Fully Insured/Free Estimates 815-403-5673 262-220-1175

Triple Ground Hardwood Mulch Natural Brown $25 per yard Color Brown / Black $30 per yard Please call 847-514-2100 ~ Free Delivery ~

ROYAL DECORATING & REMODELING Complete Remodeling Painting Room Additions & Improvements Insured Bonded Free Estimates

815-271-5530

E.C. LAWNCARE

BOB EVANS

~ SPRING CLEAN UP ~

815-261-7111

(Ask for Enrique) Insured/Bonded DON'T NEED IT? SELL IT FAST! Northwest Herald Classified Call 877-264-2527 or www.NWHerald.com

www.HuskieWire.com All NIU Sports... All The Time

FIREWOOD & MULCH

FREE MULCH

Every 5 yard is FREE! Buy 8 yards,Get 2 FREE! th

Dark Brown Premium Mulch

www.HuskieWire.com All NIU Sports... All The Time

Don't worry about rain! With our

Great Garage Sale Guarantee

$40 per cubic yard

you'll have great weather for your sale, or we'll run your ad again for FREE*.

$45 per cubic yard Call Gary for Delivery 847-429-9900 bobevansfirewoodandmulch.com

Call to advertise 877-264-2527

Place your Classified ad online 24/7 at: www.NWHerald.com/PlaceAnAd

More people read the Northwest Herald each day than all other papers combined in McHenry County!

Red or Brown Dyed Mulch

*within 4 weeks of original sale date. Ask your representative for details. Northwest Herald. Giving you more!


18 CLASSIFIED • Sunday, April 24, 2016

• Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

POWER

Tree & Stump Removal, Inc. 10% OFF, Exp Mar, '16

Also Mulch & Firewood

815-943-6960 Fully Insured 24 Hour Emergency Ce ll 815-236-5944 *Trimming & Removal *Specializing Large & Dangerous Trees *Storm Damage *Lot Clearing *Stump Grinding *Pruning

a

Need customers?

ROUGH CUT TREE SERVICE LLC.

We've got them! Send your Help Wanted Advertising 24/7 to: Email: helpwanted@shawsuburban.com Fax: 815-477-8898

Don't worry about rain!

With our Great Garage Sale Guarantee you'll have great weather for your sale, or we'll run your ad again for FREE. Call to advertise 877-264-2527

A-1 AUTO

Will BUY UR USED CAR, TRUCK, SUV,

MOST CASH

WILL BEAT ANY QUOTE GIVEN!!

$400 - $2000 “don't wait....call 2day”!! 815-575-5153 ★★★★★★★★★★★

I BUY CARS, TRUCKS, VANS & SUVs 1990 & Newer Will beat anyone's price by $300. Will pay extra for Honda, Toyota & Nissan.

815-814-1964

or

815-814-1224

★★★★★★★★★★★

Need Help Rebuilding, Repairing or Replanting? Check out the

At Your Service Directory Northwest Herald Classified

Tree Removal and Disposal - including Ash Trees Stump Grinding - Weekly Lawn Service Available Insurance Work Welcome. Insured Free Estimates

Advertise in print and online for one low price.

Call Classified today!

Call Dennis

815-236-6274 Cell 815-337-4502 Office

877-264-2527 16' Sylvan Fishing Boat- $6,000- Beam of 76.5” & Depth 52”, 50hp Honda 4 Stroke (1015hrs), Minnkota Co-Pilot (Never Used), Eagle Fish Mark 320, C Finder 320DS, Radio, AM/FM Cassete & Weather, Custom Made Cover, Custom Made Trailer, 2 Downriggers, 7 Pole Holders. 815-568-7995

FREE BOAT SHOW

COME TO THE AREAS LARGEST IN WATER BOAT SHOW SEE NEW PONTOONS FISHING SKI AND WAKEBOARD BOATS, KAYAKS, SAILBOATS, BOAT LIFTS AND MARINE PRODUCTS FREE ADMISSION AND PARKING

LINDY'S LANDING ON BANGS LAKE IN WAUCONDA APRIL 29, 30 AND MAY 1ST FOR MORE INFO GO TO LAKECOUNTY WATERSPORTS.COM

1996 Skeeter Bass Boat 17.6' Tournament Rigged

2004 Trail-LIte, R-Vision, 28', 4400 Lbs.

BASSTRACKER BOAT FOR SALE

MOTORCYCLES WANTED

150HP fuel injected mariner, hydraulic steering, Fiberglass Ext, slide-out and couch, sleeps 6, new tires manual jack plate, hot foot, 4 blade SS prop, + upgrades, $10,500. 815-345-1282 2 fish locators, on board battery charger, 3 newer 2015 Rockwood Signature Ultralight Camper batteries, AM/FM stereo, 24 volt motor guide, 70 lb th 815-653-9304 hand-bow mount trolling motor. Boat is stored inside, 5 Wheel, Like New! $27,500. trailer has Buddie bearings, spare tire and transom saver, $7900. Call Wes 815-382-0025 2008 - TV 18 * Deep V Tournament Series Tracker Length: 18.6 Ft. Large Casting Platforms, 2007 - 115 HP Mercury Optimax, 2008 * Trailstar Trailer (swing tongue), Minn Kota Terrova 80lb. Thrust Trolling Motor w/iPilot Wireless GPS and Universal Sonar 2, Lowrance Elite 5 HDI Depth Finder Hummingbird Model # 345C Depth Finder Minn Kota MK 220D On-board Battery Charger * This boat looks and runs like new. Very low hours and professionally maintained after every use. Accessories include: Full Cover, Autobilge Pump, 2 Pedestal Casting Seats, and more! Asking: $13,500

Call Chuck : 708- 494-5703

Boat - Aluminum, 14', Good Condition! Call 847-452-8956 Days or 224-800-6604 Nights Send your Help Wanted Advertising 24/7 to: Email: helpwanted@shawsuburban.com Fax: 815-477-8898

All makes, cash paid, reasonable. Will pick-up. 630-660-0571

Woodstock Studio $600/mo + sec. Efficiency

$575/mo + sec, 1BR $700/mo + sec. All 3 furnished with all utilities included, no pets. 815-509-5876 Need Help Rebuilding, Repairing or Replanting? Check out the

At Your Service Directory

McHenry Huge 3BR Apt In Town, No Smoking, No Dogs, Air Cond. $845/mo + utilities, Broker. 815-575-6869


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Sunday, April 24, 2016 • PUBLIC NOTICE

Walden Oaks Apartments - Affordable Senior Living Facility 1155 Walden Oaks, Woodstock 815-338-7630 Hispanic Housing Development

Woodstock 1BR $645 & 2BR $745

All appliances, A/C, balcony, on site laundry, no pets. 847-382-2313 ~ 708-204-3823 woodstocknorthwestapartments.com

Woodstock ~ Quiet, Nice 1BR, Heat Included

Vouchers considered, $735/mo.

815-337-0628

Crystal Lake - Randall Village, 2 BR, 2 BA, 2nd Floor, Frplc, W/D, Exercise Room, Pool, $1,200/mo. Avail. June 1st 815-953-5434

Crystal Lake 2BR Condo, Secure Bldg, Heat, Water

Gas incl, $940/mo, no pets, avail June. 815-459-0260 Richmond 1BR, 1BA Condo, 1st Floor, W/D, 1 Car Gar. No pets/smoking, $825/mo + sec. 815-341-1169

The Villas of Patriot Estates 829 Ross Lane Newly Constructed Townhomes In McHenry

1 Month Free At $1299.00, Limited Time Only!

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE 22nd JUDICIAL CIRCUIT MC HENRY COUNTY WOODSTOCK, ILLINOIS

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING McHenry/Whispering Oaks 55 +Bank, Community BEFORE THE VILLAGE BOARD OF Wells Fargo N.A. TRUSTEES OF THE VILLAGE 2BR Condo, 1 Bath, 1 CarPlaintiff, Garage, Close to Town. OF OAKWOOD HILLS, vs. $63,000. 815-861-4742 - Call aft 3:30PM Chris Goff; Credit Union 1, Robert McHENRY COUNTY, ILLINOIS Goff; Scott Knight; David Knight; Publisher's Notice: All real estate advertising in this Unknown Heirs and Legatees of Notice is hereby given in complinewspaper is subject to the Fair Housing Act which Woodstock Build Your Dream Home onUnknown Our Beautiful Ronald E. Goff; Owners ance with 65 ILCS 518-2-9 that a makes it illegal to advertise "any preference, limitation 5 Acre Parcel on Rose Farm Rd, or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, and $110K. Nonrecord920-989-1218 Claimants; Richard Public Hearing will be held before handicap, familial status or national origin, or an Kuhn, as Special Representative for the President and Board of Trustees intention, to make any such preference, limitation of of the Village of Oakwood Hills, Ronald E. Goff (deceased) discrimination." Familial status includes children under McHenry County, Illinois, at their Case No. 16 CH 00186 the age of 18 living with parents or legal custodians, Village Board Meeting on regular Notice to Heirs and Legatees. pregnant women and people securing custody of children under 18. Notice is hereby given to you, the May 5, 2016, to consider an This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate Unknown Heirs and Unknown Annual Appropriation Ordinance. which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that Legatees of the decedent, Ronald E. Copies of the Proposed Ordinance all dwellings advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal Goff, that on March 22, 2016, an may be examined upon request at opportunity basis. order was entered by the Court, the Oakwood Hills Village Hall, To complain of discrimination call HUD toll-free at 1-800-669-9777. naming Richard W. Kuhn, 552 S. 3020 North Park Drive, Oakwood The toll-free telephone number for the hearing impaired is 1-800-927-9275 Washington Street, Suite 100, Hills, Illinois, 60013. The Public Naperville, Illinois 60540, Tel. No. Hearing will be held at 7:30 p.m. PUBLIC NOTICE 630-420-8228, as the Special in the Board Room at the Village Representative of the above named Hall, 3020 North Park Drive, decedent under 735 ILCS 13-1209 Oakwood Hills, Illinois 60013. STATE OF ILLINOIS (Death of a Party). The cause of IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF action for the Foreclosure of a cer- Dated this 24th day of April, THE TWENTY-SECOND tain Mortgage upon the premises 2016 JUDICIAL CIRCUIT Isl Cheryl LoSasso MCHENRY COUNTY-IN PROBATE commonly known as: 1404 Village Clerk Adams Street, Lake in the Hills, IL Village of Oakwood Hills 60156. In the Matter of the Estate of ROSANNE V SPEARS (Published in the Northwest Herald (Published in the Northwest Herald Deceased on April 10, 17, 24, 2016) April 24, 2016.)1180348 1176408 Case No. 16PR000058 CLAIM NOTICE

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PUBLIC NOTICE

Notice is given of the death of: ROSANNE V SPEARS of: LAKEMOOR, IL Letters of office were issued on: 3/30/2016 to: Representative: JILL M QUILLIN 121 S SHERIDAN RD LAKEMOOR, IL 60051 whose attorney is: POPER, MICHAEL C 130 CASS STREET WOODSTOCK, IL 60098 Claims against the estate may be filed within six months from the date of first publication. Any claim not filed within six months from the date of first publication or claims not filed within three months from the date of mailing or delivery of Notice to Creditor, whichever is later, shall be barred. Claims may be filed in the office of the Clerk of Circuit Court at the McHenry County Government Center, 2200 North Seminary Avenue, Woodstock, Illinois, 60098, or with the representative, or both. Copies of claims filed with the Clerk must be mailed or delivered to the representative and to his attorney within ten days after it has been filed. /s/ Katherine M. Keefe Clerk of the Circuit Court

PUBLIC NOTICE ASSUMED NAME PUBLICATION NOTICE Public Notice is hereby given that on /April 1, 2016, a certificate was filed in the Office of the County Clerk of McHenry County, Illinois, setting forth the names and postoffice address of all of the persons owning, conducting and transacting the business known as D.MARIE'S LAWNCARE AND MORE located at: 7608 BEAVER ROAD WONDER LAKE, IL 60097 Dated April 1, 2016 /s/ Mary E. McClellan McHenry County Clerk (Published in the Northwest Herald April 10, 17, 24, 2016) 1176518

PUBLIC NOTICE ASSUMED NAME PUBLICATION NOTICE

(Published in the Northwest Herald Public Notice is hereby given that April 10, 17, 24, 2016) 1176410 on March 29, 2016, a certificate was filed in the Office of the County Clerk of McHenry County, Illinois, setting forth the names and postPUBLIC NOTICE office address of all of the persons owning, conducting and IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE transacting the business known as 22nd JUDICIAL CIRCUIT MIDWEST CLASSIC TRUCKS MC HENRY COUNTY WOODSTOCK, ILLINOIS located at: 2805 KENDALL CROSSING, Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. JOHNSBURG IL 60051 Plaintiff, vs. Chris Goff; Credit Union 1, Robert Dated March 29, 2016 Goff; Scott Knight; David Knight; Unknown Heirs and Legatees of /s/ Mary E. McClellan McHenry County Clerk Ronald E. Goff; Unknown Owners and Nonrecord Claimants; Richard Kuhn, as Special Representative for (Published in the Northwest Herald April 10, 17, 24, 2016) 1176368 Ronald E. Goff (deceased)

Legal Notice Notice of Public Hearing Algonquin-Lake in the Hills Fire Protection District NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that a public hearing will be held at a special meeting of the Board of Trustees of the Algonquin-Lake in the Hills Fire Protection District on a Budget and Appropriations Ordinance for the fiscal year 2016-2017 for the Algonquin-Lake in the Hills Fire Protection District, McHenry and Kane counties, Illinois, scheduled for 6:45 p.m., May 25, 2016, at 1020 West Algonquin Road, Lake in the Hills, Illinois 60156. NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that a tentative form of said Budget and Appropriations Ordinance will be on file and available for public inspection at 1020 West Algonquin Road, Lake in the Hills, Illinois from 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Monday through Friday, beginning on April 21, 2016 and on the Fire Protection District website www.alfpd.org.

IEP and other testing data. Should

you wish to access, review or19 pick CLASSIFIED up the file, please contact Kelly

Sandberg at ksandberg@d155.org or 815-455-8500 ext 1011 prior to May 13,2016.

If you do not pick up your file, it will be destroyed on or after June 1, 2016. Thank you, Kimberly Dahlem Director of Student Services Community High School District 155

(Published in the Northwest Herald April 13 through 27, 2016) 1177306

PUBLIC NOTICE Before the Planning and Zoning Commission Of the Village of Johnsburg

In the Matter of the Application of Dick and Mary Wantuch And Khanh Nguyen as Joint-Applicants Legal Notice Notice is hereby given that the Johnsburg Planning and Zoning Commission will hold a public hearing on Tuesday, May 10, 2016, at 7:00 p.m. in the Johnsburg Village Hall, 1515 Channel Beach Ave., Johnsburg, Illinois, for the purpose of considering the application of Dick and Mary Wantuch and Khanh relating to the Nguyen property commonly known 3315 Johnsburg Road, Johnsburg, Illinois PIN 09-14-400-030 The applicants request that the Planning and Zoning Commission for the Village of Johnsburg grant a special use permit to accommodate the keeping of more than four domestic animals on a zoning parcel. Said special use is for the keeping of six dogs residing on the parcel in a non commercial capacity. Interested persons may examine copies of the proposed petition, map, ordinance or other submit ted documents, if any, at the Village Hall during normal business hours.

Submitted by: Claudett E. Peters, Village Administrator Village of Johnsburg

(Published in the Northwest Herald April 24, 2016) 1180345

We are At Your Service!

(Published in the Northwest Herald April 24, 2016) 1180352

PUBLIC NOTICE Dear Community District 155 High School Student: As part of the Illinois Records Act (ISSRA) a copy of your temporary school record is being retained by Community High School District 155. These records must be maintained by our district for five full years after you have graduated or exited our district. We are writing to inform you that the 2010 files will be destroyed in 2016. Your file includes all of your special education eligibility forms, IEP and other testing data. Should you wish to access, review or pick up the file, please contact Kelly Sandberg at ksandberg@d155.org or 815-455-8500 ext 1011 prior

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BEARS DRAFT PREVIEW Since 1967

A P R I L 2 2-24 , 2 0 1 6 • P R O FO OT B A L LW E E K LY.C O M

OPTIONS APLENTY AT NO. 11 HUB ARKUSH: BEARS FIRST PICK LIKELY TO BE ON OFFENSIVE OR DEFENSIVE LINE / 2 w h a t’s i n s i d e

‘The List’: We select the top five draft classes in Chicago Bears history / 3 Updated: Bears depth chart / 5 Kevin White

N D

Mock drafts: Full first-round mock and seven-rounder for the Chicago Bears / 10-11

GM Ryan Pace


Bears 1st pick likely ‘O’ or ‘D’ lineman With the opening round of the 2016 NFL Draft now just days away, it’s time to take stock of how far the Bears have come in their first full year-plus under Ryan Pace and John Fox and see if we can’t figure out what they’re going to be focusing on this coming Thursday through Saturday. At the NFL owners meetings in Florida a few weeks ago, Bears Chairman George McCaskey explained his satisfaction with the first year under his new football regime. “They’ve [Pace and Fox] energized the building,” McCaskey said. “They’ve surrounded themselves with positive and capable people. We’ve got the structure in place. We just need to continue to add players who are guys who can make a difference in the fourth quarter.” The perception going into last season was that the offense might just be pretty good, but the defense would need work. Yet the Bears drafted Kevin White, Hroniss Grasu, Jeremy Langford and Tayo Fabuluje to further bolster the offense and added only Eddie Goldman and Adrian Amos on defense. The Bears enter this year’s draft off a season in which they were 11th running the football, 23rd passing, 21st in offense and 23rd in points scored. They’re also looking to replace starters Matt Forte and Martellus Bennett. The 2015 defense actually performed slightly better, finishing 22nd against the run, 4th against the pass, 14th in total defense and

FROM THE EDITOR

By HUB

ARKUSH

harkush@chicagofootball.com @Hub_Arkush

20th in points allowed. The ‘D’ already has added three likely starters via free agency in inside linebackers Danny Trevathan and Jerrell Freeman and five-technique Akiem Hicks. Last year’s focus in the draft was infrastructure. This year, it’s playmakers. The only positions the Bears seem likely to ignore in the first few rounds are quarterback, wide receiver, tight end – due to a lack of quality prospects more than need – and linebacker. With right tackle Bobby Massey the only significant addition on offense in free agency, it’s impossible to rule out the Bears taking a running back or offensive lineman high. The Bears have a clear need for at least

one starter at defensive end and maybe two, and Fox concedes the secondary may need work as well. “I think Kyle’s [Fuller] got room for improvement like we all do,” Fox said. “I think it’s in there, just like our team. We were good in spots; we have to learn how to be good consistently. He’s developing and learning what that is, not resisting.” Fox also admits Antrel Rolle might need competition. Asked what Rolle has left, Fox said, “It’s hard to say. These guys go away and they’re not in your eyesight for a while and it’s always interesting to see how they come back. “Obviously, Antrel is one of our more veteran players, brought great leadership to our defensive team when he was available, and even when he wasn’t available [to play] he was always there with his experience.” The Bears’ demands are easy to spot, but the supply is a lot trickier to value. Running back Ezekiel Elliott and the top two cornerbacks, Jalen Ramsey and Vernon Hargreaves III, likely will be gone when the Bears pick. If one isn’t, they might pounce. There are no safeties worthy of the 11th pick. Between offensive tackles Ronnie Stanley and Jack Conklin and defensive linemen DeForest Buckner, A’Shawn Robinson and Sheldon Rankins, at least one and possibly two or three will be available. It is from that pool the Bears first pick is most likely to come.

BY THE

NUMB3RS

9

Total number of picks the Bears have in the 2016 NFL Draft, with an additional selection in both the fourth and sixth rounds.

8

The number of times the Bears have picked 11th overall, where they will draft in this year’s first round.

2010

The last time the Bears were slated to draft No. 11 overall. They traded it as part of a package to acquire QB Jay Cutler. Pro Football Weekly is produced by Shaw Media, the Daily Herald Media Group and the Chicago Sun-Times in partnership with other Illinois daily newspapers.

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ProFootballWeekly.com • April 22-24, 2016

| PRO FOOTBALL WEEKLY

2


3

Richard Dent

By

PRO FOOTBALL WEEKLY

ProFootballWeekly.com @PFWeekly

Round 1, No. 18: Willie Gault, wide

receiver

Round 2, No. 33: Mike Richardson,

defensive back Our choice for the top Bears draft class ever really isn’t all that difficult. In 1983, the Bears had the greatest draft in franchise history – period. Take away the Bears’ monster draft class of 1983, and you might as well take away the teams’ lone Super Bowl championship a few years later.

You’ve heard of hits and misses in the NFL draft? How about hits and hits and hits, topped off with a Hall of Fame hit? The draft was 12 rounds back then, and the Bears’ first eight picks went like this: Round 1, No. 6: Jimbo Covert, offensive tackle

Round 4, No. 91: Tom Thayer, guard Round 4, No. 107: Pat Dunsmore,

tight end

Round 8, No. 203: Richard Dent, de-

fensive end

Round 8, No. 219: Mark Bortz, guard

Unbelievable. Seven of those first eight picks went on to play at least 90 games in the NFL, with Dunsmore (27 games) proving to be the only exception. The group combined for 153½ sacks, 48 interceptions, 351 catches and 45 receiving touchdowns, not to mention the countless blocks that Covert, Thayer and Bortz helped to set for all-time great Walter Payton. Did we already mention this was an easy choice?

AP file photo

2. 1961 One word: Dit-kaaa. Unless that’s two words. Is that two words? Either way, the Bears’ class of 1961 included eight players whose NFL careers spanned at least 70 games.

3. 1965 The Bears had two picks in the top four selections, and they nailed both of them: Dick Butkus at No. 3 overall and Gale Sayers at No. 4 overall. So what if many of their other 18 picks that year didn’t make much noise in the NFL?

4. 1975 With the fourth pick in the NFL draft, the Chicago Bears select … Walter Payton, running back, Jackson State. That tells you all you need to know.

5. 2003 What, you thought that we’d neglect the 21st century? Pssh. The Bears’ class of 2003 started off bumpy – see: Michael Haynes and Rex Grossman – but recovered with a pair of tremendous value picks, Charles Tillman in Round 2 and Lance Briggs in Round 3.

ProFootballWeekly.com

1. 1983

Round 3, No. 64: Dave Duerson, de-

fensive back

PRO FOOTBALL WEEKLY | April 22-24, 2016 •

PFW picks the Bears top 5 draft classes ever


ProFootballWeekly.com • April 22-24, 2016

| PRO FOOTBALL WEEKLY

4

As draft looms, Bears ‘on our way’ Chicago buys whole lot of freedom with strong free-agency stretch By JAY TAFT Rockford Register-Star The Chicago Bears stayed very busy during the latest free-agency period, and it looks like they might have just bought themselves a little freedom. Freedom to maneuver their roster in ways they couldn’t before (i.e. “Kyle Long, back to guard you go”). Freedom to explore other areas of need (like finding a safety) without the dire urgency that used to be there. And, possibly most important of all, freedom to go after anything, and anyone, they covet on draft day. (Can you say “Welcome to Chicago, Joey Bosa, Myles Jack or DeForest Buckner,” whichever one slides to No. 11 overall?) The freedom comes because the Bears were not only busy in the football marketplace the past month, but they were fruitful. Of course only time will tell, but at first peek it would appear as if veteran head coach John Fox and still-green general manager Ryan Pace are working together with a purpose. “It’s about getting the right kind of guys in there, and the right kind of guys to represent our city and our organization,” Fox said. “But of course, with a highlight on some athleticism and explosion.” Those are both evident in their top two free-agent hauls, inside linebackers Danny Trevathan and Jerrell Freeman. With two potential stars in the primes of their career, the Bears quickly shored up one of their weakest links, which kicked off the process of letting the free-thinkers take over the draft war room. Former Cardinals right tackle Bobby Massie was quickly brought in to not only provide leadership up front, but to allow Long the freedom to flow back to his original spot on the line. Two other O-linemen (Ted Larsen and Manny Ramirez) were signed at good prices, too, and suddenly one of the thinnest units on the team was seriously beefed up. The Bears scored with the acquisition of defensive end Akiem Hicks, a 6-foot-5, 324-pound beast who spent his first four seasons with the Saints and Patriots, as well. Targeting guys they were familiar with – both on the team, and outside it – the Bears shored up some obvious holes. They held on to key free agents who had a chance to bolt (primarily receiver Alshon Jeffery, tight end Zach Miller and defensive back Tracy Por-

AP file photo

Chicago Bears linebacker Danny Trevathan talks at a news conference in March in Lake Forest. Trevathan was the Bears first big move in free agency, agreeing to a four-year contract.

“There are a lot of things that go into the preparation in being the best. We’re on our way.” John Fox Bears head coach ter), and looked outside the box to try and fill needs. The last player the Bears inked was safety and special-teams player Omar Bolden, and he was the eighth free agent they lured over from Denver since Fox was fired by the Broncos and hired by the Bears in January 2015. It’s quite clear why Fox is reaching into his deep bag of experience. “We know what we’ve got there with those guys,” he said.

As for why the players like to return to a Fox-run program? “He’s a player’s coach. He knows how to communicate with us,” Bolden said. “He knows how to treat us, and he’s fun. He just loves to win, and the guy’s a great leader.” The Bears did lose running back Matt Forte and tight end Martellus Bennett, but with a young Jeremy Langford providing hope for the future at tailback, and Miller showing what he can do at tight end when healthy

late last year, they may just get a pass on those losses. They also finally gave up on defender Shea McClellin – but in this case, we’re looking at a clear addition-by-subtraction situation. But not just because of one thing, because of all of this, the Bears’ draftday braintrust will have to worry less about filling desperation needs, and more about finding that special talent that could lead this team to greatness for years to come. Is there more work to be done? “A whole heck of a lot,” Pace recently said. But are they a whole lot closer than they were when free agency kicked in on March 9? “There are a lot of things that go into the preparation in being the best,” Fox said. “We’re on our way.”


DEPTH CHART

T

S

his is our first look at the 2016 depth chart following nearly seven weeks of free agency and with days to go until the NFL Draft. We will continue to update our Bears depth chart at ProfootballWeekly.com between now and when the Bears report to training camp in Bourbonnais in late July, when the team will release its unofficial depth chart prior to the first preseason game.

– Kevin Fishbain

Omar Bolden Harold Jones-Quartey Anthony Jefferson

OLB

LAMARR HOUSTON

OLB

PERNELL McPHEE

JERRELL FREEMAN

Willie Young

Christian Jones Jonathan Anderson

ILB

DANNY TREVATHAN

Sam Acho Lamin Barrow

John Timu Danny Mason

CB

DE

CB

TRACY PORTER

AKIEM HICKS Will Sutton Cornelius Washington Greg Scruggs

Bryce Callahan Jacoby Glenn

DE

NT

MITCH UNREIN

Bruce Gaston Terry Williams

Ego Ferguson D’Anthony Smith Keith Browner

EDDIE GOLDMAN

KYLE FULLER Sherrick McManis De’Vante Bausby

DEFENSE How much better does this defense look than the one that took the field in Week 17 last season? The obvious upgrades come at inside linebacker, and they’re massive with the additions of Danny Trevathan and Jerrell Freeman, moving Christian Jones, John Timu and Jonathan Anderson to reserve/special-teams roles. The D-line could still use a starter. Mitch Unrein is a very dependable player (on both sides of the ball), but is better as a team’s third D-end. It seems Ego Ferguson has progressed well from his season-ending injury, so we’ll see where he’s slotted when OTAs begin. Ferguson and Will Sutton have versatility to play DE or NT. No changes at outside linebacker, but something is missing – speed. Lamarr Houston and Willie Young came on strong last season, proving they could be effective in a 3-4. Pernell McPhee, when healthy, was the best defensive player on the team, but none of the three displays the type of speed off the edge that could help the pass rush. In the secondary, the starting four returns with clear questions behind them. How comfortable are the Bears going into the season with Bryce Callahan as the starting nickel? If Antrel Rolle gets hurt, would the Bears be ready to go with Harold Jones-Quartey, Omar Bolden or Chris Prosinski again? Both corner and safety are prime positions where the Bears could use an early pick.

OLT

WR

OLG

ALSHON JEFFERY

CHARLES LENO JR.

MATT SLAUSON

Marquess Wilson Cameron Meredith

Tayo Fabuluje Jason Weaver

Ted Larsen

C

HRONISS GRASU Manny Ramirez Cornelius Edison

ORG

ORT

KYLE LONG

BOBBY MASSIE

Ted Larsen Manny Ramirez

Nick Becton Martin Wallace

QB

WR

JAY CUTLER

KEVIN WHITE

Khari Lee Rob Housler Gannon Sinclair

WR

EDDIE ROYAL

David Fales Matt Blanchard

Josh Bellamy Deonte Thompson Nathan Palmer

TE

ZACH MILLER

Marc Mariani Marcus Lucas

KR

DEONTE THOMPSON

PK

ROBBIE GOULD

P

PAT O’DONNELL

RB

Omar Bolden Marc Mariani

Ka’Deem Carey Jacquizz Rodgers Senorise Perry Paul Lasike

MARC MARIANI

JEREMY LANGFORD

PR

Eddie Royal

LS

AARON BREWER Patrick Scales

ProFootballWeekly.com

The biggest changes on this depth chart come at running back and tight end, where Jeremy Langford and Zach Miller, respectively, move up from No. 2 to starter, highlighting the chance the Bears are looking closely to add depth at those positions in the draft after moving on from Matt Forte and trading Martellus Bennett. On the offensive line, we should note that some of the reserve offensive tackles are interchangeable, and players like Matt Slauson and Kyle Long can play multiple positions up front. If a tackle had to leave a game, Long would likely move over and Ted Larsen or Manny Ramirez would play guard. There should be some spirited competition at center and the guard spots with the additions of Larsen and Ramirez. Left tackle is a position that could be addressed in the draft, too. The wide receiving group looks strong, on paper. If healthy, that’s a stellar top three, with nice depth in the forms of Marquess Wilson, Marc Mariani, Josh Bellamy and Deonte Thompson, who received valuable reps last season. We’ll certainly see a fourth quarterback added to this depth chart between now and the start of OTAs. Whether or not it’s someone good enough to challenge David Fales for the No. 2 job will be one of the intriguing parts of draft weekend.

Chris Prosinski Demontre Hurst

ILB

S

ADRIAN AMOS

OFFENSE

ANTREL ROLLE

5 PRO FOOTBALL WEEKLY | April 22-24, 2016 •

2016

PRE-TRAINING CAMP


ProFootballWeekly.com • April 22-24, 2016

| PRO FOOTBALL WEEKLY

6

12 prospects Bears might be targeting at No. 11 Who will the Bears take with the 11th overall pick? Mock drafts have a wide variety of players who could be wearing the navy and orange next season. Below is our guess at 12 targets for the Bears either at No. 11, or another spot in the first round if they decide to trade up or down. Former director of college scouting Greg Gabriel provided Pro Football Weekly with the following scouting reports. Players are ranked in order of Gabriel’s draft grades.

DE DeForest Buckner Oregon

6-7, 291 pounds Way we see it: This is a player who has shown improvement every year he has been at Oregon. Has the natural physical traits to be a dominant defensive lineman in the NFL. While he plays in a DeForest 3-4 scheme at Oregon, he Buckner can play in any scheme at the next level. Has really come on as a pass rusher this year and learned how to set up opponents and put moves together. Will no doubt be a top 10 pick and could very well be the first or second defensive linemen drafted. Should

come in and start right away. As good as he is, he still has unlimited upside.

CB Vernon Hargreaves III Florida

5-10, 204 pounds Way we see it: He has the traits needed to be a top cover corner in the NFL. Can play press or zone equally well. Gets and keeps good position and plays the ball equally well. Has excellent hands and ability to track the ball. Is very willing in run support, can shed and is a good tackler. He plays the game with a cockiness that is a good thing. Very sure of his ability. He will challenge receivers and has fun playing the game. Will be a high pick and should come in and start as a rookie.

DE Shaq Lawson Clemson

6-3, 269 pounds Way we see it: He will be one of the better defensive linemen in this draft. Plays both on his feet and in a threepoint stance. Lawson flashes dominating ability with his strength, power, instincts and skill set. He is a very good player versus the run and as a pass rusher. He’s scheme versatile, can play end in a 4-3 or 3-4. Just needs to get

run and pass blocker and a top competitor. Plays an aggressive brand of football. Punishing run blocker who looks to finish. Sets quickly in pass protection and does a good job mirroring opponents and anchoring. Overall, like most rookies he will most likely DT A’Shawn Robinson start off on the right side. While he can Alabama play left tackle in the NFL, he may find 6-4, 307 pounds Way we see it: When you factor in his a home at right tackle and be a 10-year age, you can see that he has unlimit- fixture. I have no doubt he will be a ed upside as a player. He turned 21 on winning player at the next level. March 21st. He is versatile in that he can play in any scheme and plays just DE Kevin Dodd about any defensive line position. He is Clemson best suited to be either a 3-technique in 6-5, 277 pounds a 4-3 or a 5-technique in a 3-man front. Way we see it: He had a very strong He is excellent as a run-down player 2015 with 63 total tackles including and still developing as a pass rusher. 23.5 tackles for loss and 12.0 sacks. He He has all the physical tools to become was a late bloomer who really came a very good NFL defensive lineman. He on. He has the physical tools to be a is strong and athletic and just begin- very good NFL player. Has very good ning to come into his own. Will start size and the frame to get to 290+. Dodd and be a contributor as a rookie. High plays the run and pass very well, has pick! good instincts and is seldom fooled. With his size and athleticism, he can play end in a 3-4 or a 4-3. Still has upOT Jack Conklin side. He can be a rookie starter and be Michigan State a strong contributor. 6-6, 308 pounds Way we see it: A consistent player at left tackle for Michigan State. He is big, strong and physical. Consistent See PROSPECTS, page 12 a little bigger to play in a 3-4. Lawson has excellent overall athleticism. Will come in and start right away for just about any NFL team. Is young and still has tremendous upside.


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8

READ OPTIONS Perfect timing for the Bears to need a D-lineman, but when do they draft one? opens the door for many things at No. 11, including selecting a cornerback to outside linebacker, a left tackle or Ezekiel Elliott, the best running back By in the draft. ajahns@suntimes.com Alabama defensive tackles A’Shawn @adamjahns Robinson and Jarran Reed appear to be options at No. 11, but they might max The timing is perfect. The Bears out as two-down run-stoppers. They need difference-makers on their defen- could always develop better pass-rush sive line, and this year’s class has been skills, but that upside might be minimal. routinely touted as deep and special. Is the 11th overall pick too high for With lying widespread at this time of year, there is no need for Bears a part-time player? It might be prudent general manager Ryan Pace to fib. to wait until the second round (41st Everyone knows how good this year’s overall pick) or the third round (72nd class is and what his current roster overall) to acquire such a player. holds. vvv “It’s a spot when we talk about improving our defense, it’s an area where Coach John Fox said something we can make quick improvement,” Pace said at the NFL owners meetings. about his team at the owners meetings that’s worth remembering during the But who and when? The class’s depth will make for in- draft. Essentially, he wants his team to teresting decisions by Pace. It really get faster, particularly on defense. The

ADAM JAHNS

us r io o ! ic s f l e ck h � D a t Sn al He

Bears are lacking a true speed rusher off the edge. “Defensive front help is obviously a deep area,” Fox said. “[But] those elite pass rushers are hard to find. They don’t come around very often. So we’ll still be looking to improve any way we can.” vvv Never rule out anything during the draft. But the Bears’ decisions to sign inside linebackers Danny Trevathan and Jerrell Freeman in free agency said plenty about how they feel about their options in the draft: They don’t like them. If the Bears don’t draft an inside linebacker, John Timu and Jonathan Anderson, two undrafted rookies from a year ago, will be the top reserves at the ultra-violent position. But Pace seems to be OK with that. He points to all their playing time last

season. “Anderson, when I think of him, what comes to mind is that he’s very athletic and he runs very well,” Pace said. “When I think of Timu, I think of a guy that’s extremely instinctive and physical and tough. They both possess different traits. But there was a great value to them playing as much as they did.” vvv

Tight end is a need for the Bears that warrants more attention. The Bears absolutely have to take one after trading Martellus Bennett and losing out on Saints restricted free agent Josh Hill. But it’s a thin class for tight ends. Pace himself described it as merely OK. But they need to add someone to their tight-end mix, which is led by veteran Zach Miller. If the Bears are going to reach on any position, this is it.

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Most project Chicago to draft for ‘D’ in 1st round The consensus is that Bears GM Ryan Pace and coach John Fox will look to add more playmakers to the defense in the draft, especially with their first pick at 11th overall. But there could be a couple offensive players who, if they’re available, would be hard to pass up for a team that finished 21st in yards and 23rd in scoring last season and then lost two of its top skill position players. The Bears’ leading rusher over the past eight years, Matt Forte, is now a Jet. Tight end Martellus Bennett, a Pro Bowl pick in 2014 when he had 90 catches, is with the Patriots. Pace and Fox originally paid lip service to their young runners, Jeremy Langford and Ka’Deem Carey, and then made a lucrative offer to Denver’s restricted free agent, C.J. Anderson, who the Broncos eventually retained. How do Pace and Fox really feel about Langford and Carey? We’ll find out for sure if Ohio State’s do-it-all

OPINION

By BOB

LeGERE

rlegere@dailyherald.com @BobLeGere

running back Ezekiel Elliott is still on the board when the Bears pick on the night of April 28. There’s probably a 50-50 chance, and there’s no doubt Elliott would make any NFL team better immediately. But the Bears have bigger needs on defense, and even on offense, where the line remains a work in progress. If Notre Dame’s Ronnie Stanley falls to 11, he projects as a plug-and-play left tackle, who also makes the Bears better immediately, no matter how much they say they like Charles Leno Jr. Taking Stanley might be an easy decision for the Bears, but what if he’s

gone and Michigan State’s Jack Conklin is available? The Spartan is a popular Chicago choice in many mocks. But some scouts believe Conklin will be more effective in the NFL as a guard, and the Bears are solid there. Their two best linemen are guards – Kyle Long and Matt Slauson – and they recently added veterans Manny Ramirez and Ted Larsen to the interior-O-line mix. That could change if rumors of a Slauson trade come to fruition, but for now, tight end is a bigger concern. For all his selfishness and petulance, Bennett is still one of the NFL’s top all-around tight ends. The problem is, he doesn’t want to be. He wants to be Jimmy Graham, sprinting downfield to make big catches, while someone else does the dirty work that comes with being an all-around tight end. Fortunately for the Bears, they can find a complement to their gifted receiving tight end Zach Miller well beyond the first round. It’s possible the best tight end in the draft, Arkansas’ Hunter Henry, could be there when the Bears pick in the second round, 41st overall. As long as Miller remains healthy, which is hardly a given, the Bears’ bigger need is for an in-line blocker at tight end. Those guys will be available on the third day.

And there’s also the search for Jay Cutler’s successor. The sooner that begins the better because Cutler will be 33 before the draft ends. Pace believes it’s good policy to draft a quarterback at some point in most years. “It’s a good class,” he said of the current crop. “I don’t want to get into the specifics, but there are a handful of guys that are up near the top. There are also a handful of quarterbacks in the middle part of the draft that I feel good about and that we’ve got to make sure we’ve accurately graded.” It’s more likely the Bears will look at quarterbacks in the middle rounds. There are a couple of former Florida Gators who might interest the Bears, though neither finished his career in Gainesville. After he lost the starting job to Jeff Driskel, 6-foot-4, 231-pound Jacoby Brissett played two seasons at North Carolina State, where he threw 43 TD passes and just 11 interceptions. After Driskel lost the job, he played his final season at Louisiana Tech as a graduate student. The 6-foot-4, 234-pounder ran a 4.49 40-yard dash at the Scouting Combine, the fastest of any quarterback. Neither player is NFL ready, but both have enough tools to project as starters down the road.

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9 PRO FOOTBALL WEEKLY | April 22-24, 2016 • ProFootballWeekly.com

Bears have options to add talent on ‘O’ at No. 11


ProFootballWeekly.com • April 22-24, 2016

| PRO FOOTBALL WEEKLY

10

PFW MOCK DRAFTS N F L F I R S T- R O U N D P R E D I C T I O N S

Hub Arkush GM/EDITOR

HARKUSH@PROFOOTBALLWEEKLY.COM

With two blockbuster draft trades in the books, could there be another with less than a week to go before Draft Day? Anything’s possible in today’s NFL.

1

RAMS (VIA TRADE WITH TITANS)

Carson Wentz QB, N. DAKOTA ST.

Great athlete, fierce competitor. Can he handle huge step up in class?

2

EAGLES (VIA TRADE WITH BROWNS)

Jared Goff

QB, CALIFORNIA

Howie Roseman’s guy, and he paid dearly to get him.

3

CHARGERS

Jalen Ramsey

CB/S, FLORIDA STATE

Quite possibly the surest thing in this draft wherever he plays.

4

COWBOYS

Myles Jack OLB, UCLA

Rod Marinelli hopes he’s the next Derrick Brooks or Lance Briggs.

5

JAGUARS

Vernon Hargreaves III CB, FLORIDA

We have our doubts about him, but lots of insiders have him here.

6

RAVENS

Laremy Tunsil OT, OLE MISS

The Wizard of Oz never looks a gift horse in the mouth.

7

49ERS

Ronnie Stanley OT, NOTRE DAME

More than a few teams rank Stanley ahead of Tunsil.

8

BROWNS (VIA TRADE WITH EAGLES)

Joey Bosa

DE, OHIO STATE

Browns stay close to home to begin rebuilding defense.

9

BUCCANEERS

DeForest Buckner DE, OREGON

A rare prospect at the five-technique – Calais Campbell is the comp.

10

GIANTS

Ezekiel Elliott

RB, OHIO STATE A luxury Giants can afford after breaking the bank on “D” in free agency.

11

BEARS

A’Shawn Robinson

DT/DE, ALABAMA Robinson may be the best player on

AP Photo/Brynn Anderson

North Dakota State QB Carson Wentz throws during practice for the North team prior to the Senior Bowl in January at Ladd–Peebles Stadium, in Mobil, Ala. Pro Football’s Weekly’s Hub Arkush projects Wentz as the No. 1 overall pick of the 2016 NFL Draft, with the Rams selecting him. the board and he fills a huge Bears need.

the best option available in this draft.

12

17

SAINTS

Sheldon Rankins

DT, LOUISVILLE Some think he may be special, just draft him and then figure out where he plays.

13

DOLPHINS

Jack Conklin

OT, MICHIGAN STATE This kid could be the steal of the draft at 13, unless Bears take him first.

14

RAIDERS

Reggie Ragland

ILB, ALABAMA Raiders are stockpiling playmakers and this is a good fit.

15

TITANS (VIA TRADE WITH RAMS)

Taylor Decker

OT, OHIO STATE Titans go for Ohio St./Michigan bookends with Lewan, and both can play right or left.

16

LIONS

Laquon Treadwell

WR, OLE MISS He’s not Megatron but he is easily

FALCONS

Shaq Lawson

DE, CLEMSON Falcons are desperate for pass rush and this kid’s a good one.

18

COLTS

Jason Spriggs

OT, INDIANA Possibly the most underrated player in this draft fills a huge need.

19

BILLS

Kevin Dodd

DE, CLEMSON Rex Ryan’s answer to Mario Williams’ exile.

20

JETS

Darron Lee

OLB, OHIO STATE This could be a little high for him, but a nice fit in Todd Bowles scheme.

21

WASHINGTON

William Jackson III

CB, HOUSTON And this is definitely a reach, but Washington must address secondary.

Josh Doctson

22

27

VIKINGS

28

TEXANS

WR, TCU Texans need someone to benefit from double-teams on DeAndre Hopkins.

23

Corey Coleman

WR, BAYLOR Bridgewater is stuck in neutral until Vikings get him some weapons.

24

BENGALS

Jarran Reed

DT/DE, ALABAMA Bengals love drafting big guys high and this is a real value pick.

25

STEELERS

Mackensie Alexander

CB, CLEMSON Steelers didn’t expect him to fall this far, thrilled with help on the corner.

26

SEAHAWKS

Leonard Floyd

OLB, GEORGIA Typical Seahawks pick, draft an amazing athlete and try and make him a player.

PACKERS

Vernon Butler

DT, LOUISIANA TECH A large space-eater to try and fill B.J. Raji’s shoes. CHIEFS

Artie Burns

CB, MIAMA (FLA.) The heir apparent to Sean Smith is another big, long corner with better speed.

29

CARDINALS

Noah Spence

DE/OLB, E. KENTUCKY This is the perfect spot for one of the draft’s controversial prospects with huge upside.

30

PANTHERS

Emmanuel Ogbah

DE/OLB, OKLAHOMA ST. Panthers can’t pass another potential difference maker for their pressure “D.”

31

BRONCOS

Paxton Lynch

QB, MEMPHIS Elway hopes he’s found the next –and less expensive – Brock Osweiler.


BEARS 2016 DRAFT PREDICTIONS

Kevin Fishbain WRITER/EDITOR

KFISHBAIN@PROFOOTBALLWEEKLY.COM

What can be more ridiculous than trying to predict the first round of the NFL Draft? Projecting all nine Bears picks, of course. The following seven-round Bears Mock Draft lays out scenarios for GM Ryan Pace and the front office considering the team needs and players available each round.

1

PICK 11

OSU RB Ezekiel Elliott

If the Bears really want Elliott, they may have to move up a pick or two to get ahead of the Giants, assuming the Eagles don’t pick the draft’s top back. The Bears have an extra fourth-round pick to use as ammo, and this scenario likely needs help from a team grabbing Paxton Lynch. The familiarity between the Bears and Elliott is high because of running backs coach

Stan Drayton, Elliott’s position coach at Ohio State in 2014. Yes, the team is confident in Jeremy Langford, but its aggressive pursuit of C.J. Anderson shows that if the right player is there to help the offense, they’ll make a play. An Elliott-Langford backfield duo would be tremendous for the long-term and help an offense that has lost Matt Forte and Martellus Bennett this offseason without replacing them from the outside.

2

PICK 41

Mississippi State DT Chris Jones

The defensive lineman class is deep, allowing the Bears to wait until the second to grab someone like Jones who has great length (6-foot-6 with 34 ½” arms) and is considering a player on the rise with his best football ahead of him. He could step in and start next to Eddie Goldman and Akiem Hicks.

3

PICK 72

N. Iowa CB/S Deiondre’ Hall

Hall has the size, physicality,

ball skills and versatility to play corner or safety. He’ll need some time to develop coming out of the FCS, which is fine for a Bears team returning four starters in the secondary, and Hall certainly has some special-teams traits.

4

PICK 106

Stanford QB Kevin Hogan

The mid-round quarterbacks will be intriguing to watch. If one team grabs a signal-caller in Round 3, will others get anxious and start taking them off the board? If Hogan is still around in the fourth, he’d be a solid quarterback to develop in the Bears’ system behind Jay Cutler and David Fales. He is smart and posted impressive numbers including a career 65.9-percent accuracy rate and 75-29 touchdown-interception ratio.

4

PICK 127

North Dakota State OT Joe Haeg

This mock draft assumes that the Bears truly are comfortable with Charles Leno at left tackle for the present and future, but they still

need depth at tackle. Haeg has a desirable frame for the position at 6-6, 304 pounds with 33 3/4” arms. He started 60 games and protected Carson Wentz.

5

PICK 150

Washington OLB Travis Feeney

Pace and Fox want to increase team speed, and they could certainly use an upgrade in that department off the edge. Enter Feeney, who notched a 4.50 40 at the Combine. He had 17.5 tackles for loss last season, but will drop in the draft because of some injury questions. He has tweener traits, but Fangio should be able to find a spot for a player with this kind of athleticism.

6

PICK 185

Northwestern DL Dean Lowry

Depth still has to be added in the trenches, and if the Rockford Boylan product slips to the sixth round, the Bears should grab him. As a defensive end who slid inside on passing downs, Lowry was very productive in

Evanston with 13.5 tackles for loss last season. He shined at the Combine with his athleticism and has a 6-foot-6 frame able to hold 300 pounds, ideal to play the five-technique.

6

PICK 206

Georgia Tech CB D.J. White

You can never have enough corners. It’s one of the thinner positions on the Bears – and Pace didn’t draft any in 2015. White has plenty of experience with good ball skills and he type of physicality teams want out of players who can contribute early on special teams.

7

PICK 230

Arkansas State TE Darion Griswold

It’s a bad time for a weak tight end class for the Bears with a need for depth behind Zach Miller. Griswold would add to the small-school crop for Pace’s second class. He was impressive at the Shrine Game and got the call-up to the Senior Bowl thanks to good hands and athleticism.

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RIVER NORTH

PRO FOOTBALL WEEKLY | April 22-24, 2016 • ProFootballWeekly.com

PFW MOCK DRAFTS

11


ProFootballWeekly.com • April 22-24, 2016

| PRO FOOTBALL WEEKLY

12

Bears have a number of options in 1st round • PROSPECTS

Continued from page 6

CB Eli Apple Ohio State

6-1, 199 pounds Way we see it: He is a physical corner who has all the athletic tools needed to excel at the next level. He is tall and long and shows a strong jam at the line of scrimmage. Has the ability to Eli Apple mirror opponent very well in press man. Has excellent body control and transitions quickly. Reacts well to the ball and has good hands. He is a willing run support guy who can tackle but does not consistently wrap up. Because of his age, he may start off as a third corner but he will be a starter in short order. Has the physical tools to be an eventual No. 1 corner.

ducive to success in the NFL. Strong and powerful inside with creativity and cutback ability. Consistently gets yards after contact. Very quick-footed with quick change of direction and a burst. Reliable as a receiver with soft hands and run-after skills. Excellent blocker, especially in the pass game. Will start right away. Better than Melvin Gordon last year.

OT Ronnie Stanley Notre Dame

6-6, 312 pounds Way we see it: Athletically, he may be the best tackle in this draft. Has all the physical traits to be an outstanding pro. Needs to become a more intense, physical player. Some question his mental toughness. Ronnie His strength is good Stanley enough but if he wants to be among the best he needs to get stronger in both the upper and lower RB Ezekiel Elliott body. He almost came out last year and he did himself a favor staying in Ohio State 6-0, 225 pounds school. When he is on his game he Way we see it: Has been the bell cow is outstanding, but he can get a litat Ohio State. Has a running style con- tle lazy with his technique. There is

TAKE TWO PAT FINLEY

ARTHUR ARKUSH

Is the NFL Draft the Bears’ Super Bowl? With the NFL draft in Chicago for a second consecutive year, Pat Finley of the Chicago Sun-Times and Pro Football Weekly’s Arthur Arkush discuss the venue, the city and the Bears’ draft outlook.

FINLEY: Last year at this time, Arthur, we didn’t know what the NFL Draft would look like. How would it function outside of New York City? Would it snow? Would the free “Draft Town” fan festival be a hit? Would fans care that the top two quarterbacks were hanging out at home? My question for you, Arthur: Has it been a success? And, short of the public’s insatiable love of football, why? ARKUSH: Aesthetically, Pat, it was

perfect. From the splendor of Grant Park on an unseasonably warm and picturesque weekend hosting 200,000 “Draft Town” attendees, to the best

venue in the city – the Auditorium Theatre – serving as the perfect TV backdrop, Chicago couldn’t have been painted in a better light. That’s a stark contrast from soaring murder rates and a historic debt crisis, so it was a resounding success from my view. The weather and great amenitites were a huge boon, but the NFL Draft hype machine could probably be successful being held in Chernobyl. With no commitment to Chicago beyond 2016, will the league begin a long residency here like the one it had in New York? Or will the NFL soon flock to what’s once again its second-largest market, Los Angeles, or elsewhere?

FINLEY: Like Chicago’s best actors and fast food, the NFL will move out West eventually. The only question is, will that be in 2017, when Chicago’s contract is up, or in 2019, when the Rams complete the great Pyramid of

some risk to him but all the tools are body control. Is disruptive in the run game and will chase the ball. Is an efthere. ficient and effective pass rusher who consistently gets sacks and QB presDT Jarran Reed sures. His best fit is as a 3-technique Alabama in a 4-3, but he can also play a 0 or 1 6-3, 307 pounds tech in a 4-3. Is too short to play at the Way we see it: Usually plays inside 4-tech, but may be able to play some but will get some snaps at the 5-tech- nose in a few off from defenses. Will nique. He is big, strong and power- most likely be selected in the second ful and a very good run-down player. half of the first round. He is quick to find the ball, has good anticipation and makes plays in the run game. Lacks the speed, top quick- OLB Leonard Floyd ness and burst to be a top pass rusher Georgia but he can provide inside pressure. 6-6, 244 pounds Way we see it: A tall, long and lean The type that is good at pushing the player who is used in a variety of pocket. Can play in a 3- or 4-man front ways. Lines up inside and outside, up and will start as a rookie. Unless he develops his pass-rush technique, he and down. A very good athlete with will be limited to being a run-down speed and is very good in space. Has his problems near the line of scrimplayer. mage. Lacks top strength and bulk and can get overpowered. Has to DT Sheldon Rankins make plays with his speed and quickLouisville ness. That won’t happen at the next 6-1, 299 pounds level. Will get drafted high because of Way we see it: Rankins is a fun guy his athleticism, but I feel unless used to watch on tape because he plays so properly he will struggle in the NFL. hard. While he is short, he has length Has to be picked by the right team. and good hand use which overcomes his short stature. He is quick and • Draft reports written by Greg Gaexplosive with very good power and briel, PFW’s draft expert. Inglewood? My impression always has been that the draft would leave Chicago after 2016, but maybe the Los Angeles timeline helps them keep it for another cycle. Like NFL games have become, the draft is a great television spectacle and a so-so in-person event, but Draft Town is changing that. To put fans – many of whom can drive in from other NFL markets – in Grant Park on a spring day is a beautiful thing. Arthur, is this Chicago’s Super Bowl? And what about that game, anyway?

ARKUSH: For the sake of Bears’ brass and fans, let’s hope not, but as for hosting it, we both know an outdoor Super Bowl in the NFL’s second smallest stadium isn’t happening. I suppose the draft, which allows the city to show off for an event it’s better suited to host, is decent consolation. There are some interesting Chicago draft angles, too, with former Bear Jeff Fisher’s Rams desperate move up to No. 1 and local product Laquon Treadwell poised to potentially be the first wideout selected. What other Chicago story lines exist? And could a draft coup for the Bears make contending for the upcoming Super Bowl achievable? FINLEY: The Bears are more than one draft away from thinking Super Bowl, but a decent one this year

could have them poised to sneak into the bottom half of the playoffs. Ryan Pace fared about as well as a GM whose No. 1 pick sat out all year could possibly expect, landing keepers in Eddie Goldman, Jeremy Langford and Adrian Amos. I’m a believer that the best way to draft well is to take as many bites at the apple as possible, and Pace has nine picks from which to work – or from which to trade. Notre Dame tackle Ronnie Stanley and wide receiver Will Fuller qualify as Chicago story lines, sure, but nothing would captivate the city like a bold Bears draft pick. Got any bold predictions for what the Bears will do, Arthur?

ARKUSH: I predict the Bears will draft good players with great athleticism, versatility and football character, said every GM, ever. Seriously, Ezekiel Elliott at No. 11 might be viewed as bold by some, as we all know about the changing RB landscape, but what better way to bolster Chicago’s post-Matt Forte backfield outlook than with another marvelous three-down back, with ties to the Bears? If Elliott is gone, like I expect, reaching slightly for a starting five-technique like Kevin Dodd (one-year producer) or Robert Nkemdiche (underachiever; forget the strong football character part) would punctuate the front-7 rebuild boldly.


NFC NORTH REPORT

13

BY ARTHUR ARKUSH

DETROIT LIONS (10 picks, including No. 16 overall) Biggest needs: OL, DE, WR Marvin Jones and Jeremy Kerley won’t be mistaken for Calvin Johnson, but combined with Golden Tate, Eric Ebron and Theo Riddick, the newcomer wideouts can help fill the mega void created by Johnson’s retirement. Answers at right tackle and center on one of the NFL’s weakest O-lines are less apparent. Even if Riley Reiff kicks across the line, a left tackle is needed, and center Travis Swanson was the worst member of Detroit’s disappointing front five. DE Ezekiel Ansah is an absolute terror, improving each season culminating with his first Pro Bowl nod in 2015. Devin Taylor also had his best campaign and Wallace Gilberry was a solid veteran

signing, but finding another player who can rush and defend the run would maximize Ansah and a defensive tackle room with questions of its own, and address fragile depth after the veteran departures of Jason Jones and Darryl Tapp. We’re tempted to list strong safety, where Detroit’s top two players – Isa Abdul-Quddus and James Ihedigbo – are gone, replaced by injury-prone Rafael Bush and unproven Tavon Wilson. But replacing a transcendent player like Johnson won’t be easy, and Detroit, now more than ever, clearly lacks a true, big-bodied burner capable of dictating coverages and getting on top of defenses.

Kevin Dodd

Five players who make sense at No. 16: OT Taylor Decker, Ohio State OT Jack Conklin, Michigan State DE Kevin Dodd, Clemson DT Sheldon Rankins, Louisville WR Laquon Treadwell, Mississippi

MINNESOTA VIKINGS (8 picks, including No. 23 overall) Biggest needs: WR, S, OL

LaquonTreadwell Treadwell Laquan

GREEN BAY PACKERS (9 picks, including No. 27 overall) Biggest needs: ILB, DT, OT The Packers are moving Clay Matthews back to the edge in the hopes of improving his durability and pass-rush production, but without a better contingency plan inside than Jake Ryan and Sam Barrington, the opportunity cost could be significant. Ryan and Barrington are tough and relentless, but lacking in coverage. The Packers need at least one speedy inside ‘backer who can hang with backs and tight ends on short and intermediate routes. Even if B.J. Raji had opted not to take a playing hiatus in 2016 and re-signed in Green Bay, the Packers would still be thin (figuratively, not literally) up front. Without Raji and with ascending Mike Pennel serving a four-game suspension to

Rick Spielman has been one of the NFL’s better drafters in recent years, but his focus will be on correcting two high-profile draft misses – Cordarrelle Patterson and Matt Kalil. Wonder what the receiver prototype Minnesota covets looks like? On paper, it’s Patterson: big and strong with lethal long speed and run-after-catch ability. But Patterson has tantalized instead of taking advantage of his opportunities, relegating him to simply being a dynamic returner after it appeared he was on pace for a formidable triple-threat role as a rookie. Spielman landed a Round 5 gem in Stefon Diggs last offseason. Now finding a physical gamebreaker to play outside becomes paramount for Diggs’ and, more importantly, Teddy Bridgewater’s growth.

begin the year, the Packers are likely to tap into a rich interior D-line draft – perhaps early – in search of someone who can help their No. 26 run ‘D’ and, ideally, also provide some push. Although Green Bay returns its top seven O-linemen for a group that, when healthy, is one of the NFL’s better units, Don Barclay was exposed badly when asked to step in on both edges. J.C. Tretter fared better, but Ted Thompson could look ahead to 2017, when 60 percent of the starting unit – Josh Sitton, David Bakhtiari and T.J. Lang – hits free agency unless new contracts are signed. Five players who make sense at No. 27: DT Andrew Billings, Baylor NT Austin Johnson, Penn State ILB Reggie Ragland, Alabama LB-S Darron Lee, Ohio State OLB Emmanuel Ogbah, Oklahoma State

Harrison Smith might be the NFL’s best allaround safety east of Seattle. His new running mate, Michael Griffin, is an upgrade over Andrew Sendejo, yet Griffin is 31 and on a one-year deal. Locking up Smith is Spielman’s No. 1 nondraft priority and finding his future sidekick should be fairly high on his remaining list. The 2015 wild-card team boasts one of the league’s most talented and deepest rosters, allowing them to look beyond 2016. It’s necessary when it comes to Kalil and C John Sullivan, whose performance and health, respectively, could signal the end of their Vikings tenures after the season. Five players who make sense at No. 23: WR Laquon Treadwell, Mississippi WR Josh Doctson, TCU S-OLB Su’a Cravens, USC S Darian Thompson, Boise State C Ryan Kelly, Alabama

Andrew Billings

Andrew Billings

PRO FOOTBALL WEEKLY | April 22-24, 2016 • ProFootballWeekly.com

PFW breaks down needs of Bears’ division foes


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ProFootballWeekly.com • April 22-24, 2016

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PRO FOOTBALL WEEKLY | April 22-24, 2016 • ProFootballWeekly.com


ProFootballWeekly.com • April 22-24, 2016

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