LOCAL&REGION
Page B2 • Friday, May 24, 2013
Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com
New regulations for recreational vehicles • LITH Continued from page B1 a year. He was one of 65 people to apply for the job, and nine to interview. Magnussen has worked in Mount Prospect as building inspector and in West
Dundee as the chief building official. The village also updated regulations for how boats, trailers and recreational vehicles are stored from December through March. The vehicles now have to be placed on asphalt, concrete, brick pavers or patio
blocks approved by village staff. Previously, recreational vehicles were required only to be placed in rear or side yards, according to a memo to the Village Board from Community Development Director Dan Olson. The surface also has to be at least 9-by-18 feet.
Project will displace theater production in fall • MCC Continued from page B1 expansion is paid off, the increased revenue from three additional classrooms as part of the expanded manufacturing department and new theater is expected to continue. While the project would cause students in the theater program to be displaced
“Some local theaters and high schools have already offered their space.” Jay Geller Head of the theater department in the fall, Jay Geller, head of the theater department, said he supported the move. Geller said the new space
would be more tailored to theater students and allow more classes to be offered across all fields. The existing Black Box Theater will not be available in the fall, but Geller said a production still will take place. “I will be figuring something out for theater space,” he said. “Some local theaters and high schools have already offered their space.”
4727 W. Crystal Lake Rd
McHenry
One mile north of Bull Valley Rd across from McHenry High School West Campus
(815) 385-5385 Family owned & Operated Since 1962
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Photo by Jim Seymour – Crystal Lake Historical Society collection
Neisner’s department store in Crystal Lake Plaza was destroyed on April 11, 1965, during the Palm Sunday tornado outbreak. The tornado damaged or destroyed large portions of the city. Five people were killed and 75 were injured. Damage in the city totaled more than $1.5 million, as 80 homes and the shopping center were completely destroyed.
People who lost their houses set up mobile homes in their driveways a man in Waukegan, Dillon said. “You’re kind of numb with what you’re seeing,” he said. “The trees are gone. The houses are gone. Cars are tipped over in the street.” Dillon was tasked with finding places for the 100-plus residents to live while their homes were being rebuilt. He received a call the day after the storm from the president of the Illinois mobile home dealers association, who agreed to provide 95 mobile home units to Crystal Lake. People who lost their houses were able to set up the mobile homes in the driveways of their properties, pipe the plumbing from the basement to the mobile home and resume somewhat of a normal life. “They literally stayed in their own homes,” Dillon said. “Psychologically, that was a help because they could see their house and kind of supervise [the reconstruction] on a daily basis.”
• TORNADO Continued from page B1 damaged dozens of homes. “There was so much debris that you couldn’t get into that subdivision,” said Harry Dillon, the Crystal Lake emergency housing director during the 1965 storm. Dillon was in charge of setting up housing for those displaced. He recalled stories – some tragic and others humorous – such as the one of a man who lost his home while taking a shower, standing bewildered as his walls and roof were sucked away by the storm. A neighbor ran over and gave him a coat. Another home was ripped entirely out of the foundation, and in its place a Chevrolet pickup from down the street rolled in and landed in the home’s basement. A man in the subdivision was balancing his checkbook during the storm, and one of his checks was found by
LIQUOR STORES
• CRYSTAL LAKE • 11. E. Northwest Hwy. (Corner of Rt. 14 & Teckler) 6 DAY SALE: Wednesday, May 22nd, through Tuesday, May 28th, 2013 No County Tax at Crystal Lake Store
Family Owned & Operated Since 1963
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A year to the day after the first mobile home was set up for tornado victims, the last mobile home was removed, and life moved on for the people of Crystal Lake. But for Blazier and Dillon, the storm is a reminder that although McHenry County may be on the outside edge of tornado alley, disaster can strike with little warning. But it also is a reminder of how a community can come together. “People came forward in a crisis like that,” Blazier said. “The Red Cross set up temporary housing at Central High School in the gym, but it was never used. All those people were taken home by other people in the community. And we all got in there and cleaned up as much as we could just to make them feel better.” More information and photos of the 1965 tornado can be found at the Crystal Lake Historical Society at www.clhs.org.
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