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Double slaying Prospective jurors asked about case / 2

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Jury selected for Hickory Street trial By BRIAN STANLEY bstanley@shawmedia.com JOLIET – Nine women and three men were sworn in Tuesday as jurors in the murder trial of the fourth and final defendant in the 2013 Hickory Street slayings. Adam M. Landerman, 21, faces life in prison if convicted of the murders of Eric Glover Jr. Adam M. and Terrance Landerman Rankins. About 50 prospective jurors who were randomly selected came into Judge Amy Bertani-Tomczak’s courtroom about 9:30 a.m. Tuesday. Landerman’s grandmother, two reporters and three law student interns were seated in the audience. Several prospective jurors said they recognized Will County State’s Attorney James Glasgow, who is trying the case, from television appearances. Tricia McKenna and Daniel Walsh are assis-

Jurors selected JUROR 1: White woman, resident of Wilton Center, teacher with a bachelor’s degree in political science. This juror said she had not heard about the case, but noted her younger siblings attended school with the judge’s children. JUROR 2: Black woman, resident of Bolingbrook, nonprofit grant writer with a bachelor’s degree in sociology. This juror said she had not heard about the case. JUROR 3: White woman, resident of Plainfield Township, married, retail employee with a high school diploma. This juror told the judge she is “a little hard of hearing” and has a “very vague” recollection of the case from when the arrests were made. JUROR 4: White man, resident of New Lenox Township, operates a catering business with a bachelor of arts degree. This juror said he had not heard about the case. JUROR 5: Hispanic man, resident of Plainfield, married with four children, employed at the post office with a bachelor of science degree. This juror said he had not heard about the case. JUROR 6: White woman, resident of Lockport Township, married, retired

Lathan Goumas – lgoumas@shawmedia.com

Will County State’s Attorney James Glasgow (center) arrives Tuesday at the Will County Courthouse in Joliet on the first day of jury selection in the trial of Adam Landerman. tant prosecutors. Across the aisle from the prosecution, Landerman sat at a table with attorneys Edward Jaquays and April Simmons. Landerman, who was wearing a dark suit, spent most of the hearing resting his chin on his hand with one finger raised. Prospective jurors were asked where they lived and worked, whether they had

heard about the case and if they could consider only the evidence presented during the trial, which is expected to last until late next week. Two men and two women were chosen as alternate jurors. On Jan. 9, 2013, Glover and Rankins went to Alisa Massaro’s house in the 1100 block of North Hickory Street with

teacher with two years of college. This juror said she had heard about the case “in the very beginning” from The Herald-News, but has not been following it. JUROR 7: White man, resident of Naperville, married with a daughter, a builder and real estate broker with one year of college. This juror said he has not heard about the case and served on a Will County jury in a criminal case 10 years ago. JUROR 8: Hispanic woman, resident of Naperville, married with grandchildren, retired owner of a manufacturing company with a bachelor’s degree in accounting. This juror said she had not heard about the case. JUROR 9: White woman, resident of Joliet, lives with a family friend, teacher with a master’s degree in special education. She has played softball with one witness in the case. This juror said she noticed the case in the newspaper or on the Internet on a few occasions, but does not recall anything specific months later. JUROR 10: White woman, resident of Joliet, lifeguard who is pursuing an associate’s degree. This juror said she had not heard about the case. JUROR 11: White woman, resident of Bolingbrook, married with two children, homemaker with one year of college. This juror said she had not

heard about the case. JUROR 12: White woman, resident of New Lenox, married with three children, school nurse with a bachelor’s degree. This juror said she had not heard about the case. Her parents’ home was ransacked by burglars when she was 8 years old, but she told the judge that would not affect her ability to be impartial in this case. ALTERNATE JUROR 1: White woman, resident of Bolingbrook, dental hygiene student. She said she had not heard about the case. ALTERNATE JUROR 2: White woman, resident of Bolingbrook, band director and flautist with a bachelor’s degree. She said she had not heard about the case and had to obtain an order of protection about a decade ago. ALTERNATE JUROR 3: White man, resident of Shorewood, tow truck driver with a high school diploma. He said he had not heard about the case but has encountered through his job several police officers who may testify. ALTERNATE JUROR 4: White man, resident of Naperville, married, retired mortgage lender with a high school diploma and Army veteran. He said he had not heard about the case.

expectations to “party” with Massaro and her friend, Bethany McKee, investigators have said. Terrance Instead, JoshRankins ua Miner and Landerman were waiting with the young women after the four allegedly made plans to attack and Eric Glover rob them. Jr. Miner strangled Rankins while Landerman allegedly strangled Glover; they got about $100, desecrated the bodies and made plans to dismember them before police interrupted them, according to testimony at previous trials. McKee and Miner opted for separate bench trials last year before now-retired Judge Gerald Kinney; both were found guilty. Massaro cut a deal and pleaded guilty to lesser charges in exchange for testifying against McKee.

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ON THE COVER Kile Thompson slides down one of the many water slides at Splash Station Water Park in Joliet on Friday. See story on page 3. Photo by Eric Ginnard – eginnard@shawmedia.com

CORRECTIONS Accuracy is important to The Herald-News and it wants to correct mistakes promptly. Please call errors to our attention by phone at 815-280-4100.


COVER STORY

3 The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Wednesday, June 10, 2015

A cool place to be Park officials say Splash Station offers outdoor swimming, but not profits By BOB OKON okon@shawmedia.com JOLIET – Siedah Thompson laid by the side of the pool at Splash Station Water Park – relaxed because it was easy to keep an eye on her daughter. “It’s nice that they have this area where I can see my daughter wherever she goes,” said Thompson of Shorewood. “I have been lying here the whole time.” Like most of the adults at Splash Station, getting in the water was not a high priority for Thompson. Keeping track of the kids was. Other parents, too, mentioned the size and layout of Splash Station made that possible. Splash Station is not big enough to be a destination water park. But it does have three body slides, two tube slides, a Lazy River and a kids’ pool play area. Two hundred employees will work there this summer, many of them high school students. Splash Station has never become the moneymaker some envisioned when it opened in 2002 as the first and only water park in Joliet. It was built by the city of Joliet with casino gambling taxes. It was one of four projects – including Silver Cross Field, the Joliet Area Historical Museum and the Joliet Public Library branch on Black Road – built with the idea of improving the city’s quality of life.

Splash Station finances

When the recession hit,

the remaining debt at Splash Station became an annual issue around budget time at City Hall. In 2012, the city made a deal to turn over Splash Station to the Joliet Park District, which always managed the water park but had not owned it. The summer of 2012 was a hot one. A lot of people went to Splash Station to cool off. And, the water park turned a small profit of $5,283, Joliet Park District Executive Director Dominic Egizio said. The next two years, however, Splash Station showed losses: $184,000 in 2013 and $166,000 in 2014. But if Splash Station was built to improve the quality of life in Joliet, it still appears to serve that purpose. “Sixty thousand to 70,000 people use it annually,” Egizio said. “For a town our size, it would be a tragedy not to have outdoor swimming.” The park district, however, is not planning to pour money into Splash Station to add features that might make it bigger or more exciting, Egizio said. When the park district surveyed voters ahead of a $19.5 million bond referendum for park improvements, which was approved last year, Splash Station was rarely mentioned. “It’s a great facility. It serves a need,” Egizio said. “But it’s only available on a good year three months out of the year.”

‘A great price’

Kevin Tully, 16, of Wilmington was at Splash Station with friends Friday on open-

Eric Ginnard – eginnard@shawmedia.com

Nick Doran, 13, and Ellie Ruettiger, 14, slide down one of the many water slides Friday at Splash Station Water Park in Joliet. ing day. “It’s decent,” Tully said of Splash Station. It offers a place to go swimming, he said. There is no outdoor public pool in Wilmington. His friend, Demonte Garrison, 21, of Joliet said he comes every summer. He enjoys the Lazy River. “It’s just calming,” he

said. “It relaxes your mind.” Also at Splash Station on opening day was Jennie Young of Broken Bow, Oklahoma. Young was in town because her husband was doing work at a local refinery, and she brought her two boys to Splash Station to keep busy. “We don’t have water parks in our town,” she said.

But Young travels with her husband around the country and has been to many water parks. She said she was impressed with Splash Station. “It’s awesome,” Young said. “It’s a great price. We travel all over the United

See SPLASH, page 19


The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Wednesday, June 10, 2015

4

LOCAL NEWS

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Contracts approved in Shorewood $1,700 compared to $1,500 in the last contract. The “officer in charge” gets a $1.75 an hour raise instead of $1.25 an hour. And there is an additional 15year step pay increase. With health insurance rates coming in positive, Barrowman said the only change for public employees is the salary increases.

By VIKAAS SHANKER vshanker@shawmedia.com SHOREWOOD – Two groups of Shorewood employees’ contracts have been renewed with a few minor changes. Village trustees approved the collectively bargained three-year contracts for police and public employees on first read Tuesday night. “I know you worked on this one with [Fraternal Order of Police] representatives,” Mayor Rick Chapman said to Village Administrator Roger Barrowman, and others involved in the process including police union and International Union of Operating Engineers Local 150 representatives. The two contracts are similar to the three-year contracts that ended on March 31. Police and public employees will receive 2.45 percent raises this year and next year, and a 2.5 percent raise in year three. In the previous contract, police raises were at 2.75 percent between each year. Public employees raises were 2.25

No parking

Photo provided

Marked are the “No Parking” signs around the islands on Summit Creek Drive in Shorewood. percent the first year, 2.85 percent the second year and 2.35 percent in year three.

Barrowman said changes in the police contract include detectives receiving a raise of

Trustees also approved a no parking ordinance at and around the islands on Summit Creek Drive. Superintendent of Public Works Chris Drey said a property manager brought to the attention of the village that emergency vehicles are obstructed when people park at the islands. A staff report called for four signs to run each way on both ends of the island stating “No Parking Between Signs.” However, Chapman said there also needed to be arrows pointing in the direction of the island area to make sure people understand.

Gas station proposal

Chapman also spoke on the subject of a gas station proposal at the southwest corner of River Road and Route 52, following disapproval from nearby residents at the Planning and Zoning Commission meeting last week, and a protest at the intersection on Sunday. Residents of the neighboring Hunt Club subdivision protested a Lenny’s “Gas ‘n’ Wash” car wash and potential traffic issues with plans for two diesel stations for trucks and other large utility vehicles. “I just want to relay to the people living in that area that the concerns that they had were being listened to,” Chapman said, reaffirming that after last week’s meeting he worked with the property owner to remove the two diesel stations. Chapman added that he was still supportive of the car wash, and he said Route 52 has always been planned as an economic corridor. The gas station is planned to be on the June 23 Village Board agenda.

JJC board OKs renewing college police chief contract By FELIX SARVER fsarver@shawmedia.com JOLIET – Joliet Junior College Board trustees decided to renew JJC Police Chief Pete Comanda’s contract after they previously considered not renewing it. At Tuesday’s meeting, Board Chairman Jeff May and trustees Robert Wunderlich, Michael O’Connell, Maureen Broderick, Andy Mihelich and Student Trustee Saleh Ruman voted to renew Comanda’s contract. Trustee Barbara Adams voted “present.” Board Vice Chair Tina Markley was absent. May said the trustees had to make a decision by May 16 on whether to renew Comanda’s contract and they couldn’t come to a decision in

time. Comanda’s 2014-15 employment contract states the college would need to notify him of nonrenewal of his contract at least 45 days before it would end, which is June 30. May said by law, Comanda would automatically receive the contract. “It was a very close deliberation,” May said about the consideration of Comanda’s contract. “It was a split board with different ideas on it.” When asked why Comanda’s contract was initially proposed for nonrenewal at an April 30 special meeting, May said it was for personnel reasons. JJC President Debra Daniels has declined to discuss if there were any issues with Comanda in the past, saying it is a personnel issue.

Comanda has said he believed his contract was considered for nonrenewal because about two years ago he raised concerns to board trustees about Daniels’ leadership but declined to discuss what those concerns were. Comanda said Tuesday he was relieved and appreciated the board’s approval of his contract. “I’m glad it worked out. It gives the [police] department some consistency and it’s good to have it resolved,” he said. During the public comment portion of the meeting, Comanda reflected on the accomplishments of the JJC Police Department during his time as police chief. He appreciated the support from students and staff when his

“It was a very close deliberation. It was a split board with different ideas on it.” Jeff May Joliet Junior College board chairman

contract was considered for nonrenewal.

Resignations, new positions

Board trustees unanimously approved accepting the resignation of David Seward, financial aid director, and Paige Vanderhyden, workforce development director. Their resignations will be effective June 30 and June 26 re-

spectively, according to board documents. The board approved Yolanda Isaacs, student development vice president, to serve as the interim academic affairs vice president, effective June 10. Mihelich and Broderick voted against the measure. The board also approved Karl Brooks, dean of student success, as the interim student development vice president. Mihelich was the only dissenting vote. Isaacs will replace a position vacated by Donna Stewart, who resigned in May after serving less than a year in the role. JJC President Debra Daniels said she expects to interview candidates for the position in August and finish that process by September.


WEATHER

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National Weather

MON

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

TUE

Seattle 78/55 Billings 81/56

T-shower

89

83

64

Mostly cloudy, t-storms; humid

84

66

67

Mostly cloudy

Mostly cloudy, a t-storm; humid

82

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Bill Bellis

Chief Meteorologist

85/61

89/62

Noon

2 p.m.

5

4 p.m.

0-2 Low; 3-5 Moderate; 6-7 High; 8-10 Very High; 11+ Extreme

Air Quality

Reading as of Tuesday

129

50 100 150 200

300

500

0-50 Good; 51-100 Moderate; 101-150 Unhealthy for sensitive groups; 151-200 Unhealthy; 201-300 Very Unhealthy; 301-500 Hazardous Source: Illinois EPA

Pollen Count

Data as of Tuesday

Source: National Allergy Bureau

Coal City 90/63

91/65

City Aurora Bloomington Champaign Chicago Deerfield DeKalb Elmhurst Gary Hammond Kankakee Kenosha

88/63

Morris

90/65

92/69

Peotone

89/64

Kankakee 90/64

Today

Hi 89 91 92 86 83 85 86 86 92 90 84

Lo W 63 t 69 t 70 pc 60 pc 58 pc 61 pc 61 pc 62 t 69 pc 64 t 56 pc

Thursday Hi Lo 81 64 88 72 90 72 76 59 75 59 77 60 78 61 80 65 90 71 85 70 73 56

W t t pc t t t t t pc t pc

City La Salle Munster Naperville Ottawa Peoria Pontiac Rock Island South Bend Springfield Terre Haute Waukegan

Today

Hi 90 87 86 90 93 92 88 87 93 91 82

Lo W 64 t 61 t 61 pc 63 t 71 t 68 t 64 t 62 t 72 pc 69 pc 54 pc

Thursday

Hi 84 81 81 84 88 87 84 83 91 90 70

Lo 68 64 62 67 74 73 68 66 75 70 54

W t t t t t t t pc pc pc c

Illinois River Stages

Fld: flood stage. Prs: stage in feet at 7 a.m Tuesday. Chg: change in previous 24 hours. DES PLAINES Station Fld Prs Chg Station Fld Prs at River Forest ....... 16 ..... 4.61 near Russell ............ 7 ..... 3.00 ... +0.13 near Gurnee ............ 7 ..... 3.02 ... +0.64 at Riverside ............. 7 ..... 2.56 near Lemont .......... 10 ......6.18 at Lincolnshire .... 12.5 ..... 7.03 ... +0.18 near Des Plaines ...... 5 ..... 8.59 ... +0.27 at Lyons .................. -- ... 10.72

Sun and Moon low moderate high very high

Joliet

Ottawa

Regional Weather 7

Hammond

88/64

Yorkville

Streator

7

5

86/60

Oak Lawn

89/61

The higher the AccuWeather.com UV Index number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection.

Chicago

87/63

89/63

Miami 88/77

Oak Park

Sandwich

90/63

Houston 93/73

85/61

Aurora

Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset

Today 5:19 a.m. 8:26 p.m. 1:30 a.m. 2:00 p.m.

Thursday 5:18 a.m. 8:26 p.m. 2:05 a.m. 3:09 p.m.

New

First

Full

Chg ... +0.29 .... -0.28 ... +0.02 .... -0.15 Last

City Albuquerque Anchorage Atlanta Austin Baltimore Billings Boise Boston Burlington, VT Charlotte Cincinnati Cleveland Dallas Denver Des Moines Detroit Honolulu Houston Indianapolis Kansas City Knoxville Las Vegas Little Rock

Today Hi Lo W 86 65 pc 60 48 s 85 70 t 93 70 s 86 65 s 81 56 t 92 63 c 80 63 s 79 64 pc 89 68 t 89 68 pc 86 63 t 95 72 s 79 56 t 90 67 pc 88 61 t 86 73 pc 93 73 t 90 69 pc 91 70 s 89 67 pc 91 72 c 94 73 s

City Los Angeles Louisville Memphis Miami Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New York City Oklahoma City Omaha Orlando Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, ME Portland, OR Sacramento St. Louis Salt Lake City San Diego Seattle Washington, DC

Today Hi Lo W 76 63 pc 91 71 s 92 73 s 88 77 t 82 57 pc 80 62 s 91 68 s 86 74 t 83 68 s 95 72 s 91 69 s 87 72 t 86 69 s 95 79 s 86 67 s 78 59 s 81 54 s 83 64 pc 94 74 s 84 63 t 74 64 pc 78 55 s 88 73 s

Thursday Hi Lo W 78 63 pc 92 74 pc 90 73 t 88 79 t 70 54 pc 68 57 t 89 70 t 85 74 t 90 68 t 91 72 t 80 68 t 90 73 t 92 71 pc 99 77 s 86 65 t 83 60 t 78 53 pc 95 62 s 91 77 pc 75 61 t 72 64 pc 75 53 pc 95 75 pc

City Acapulco Athens Auckland Baghdad Bangkok Beijing Berlin Buenos Aires Cairo Caracas Damascus Dublin Havana Hong Kong Jerusalem Johannesburg

Today Hi Lo W 90 77 t 80 66 pc 61 53 pc 111 82 s 98 81 pc 80 62 c 73 52 pc 60 46 s 90 68 s 89 76 pc 91 57 s 60 45 s 88 73 pc 92 84 sh 83 56 s 62 40 s

Thursday Hi Lo W 89 78 t 82 66 s 58 50 pc 108 81 s 98 82 t 86 68 s 76 53 s 59 43 pc 88 68 s 89 77 t 89 57 s 61 49 s 89 74 pc 91 83 sh 81 57 s 60 41 r

City Kabul London Madrid Manila Mexico City Moscow Nairobi New Delhi Paris Rio de Janeiro Rome Seoul Singapore Sydney Tokyo Toronto

Today Hi Lo W 89 54 s 66 51 pc 82 59 t 94 81 t 79 55 pc 64 49 pc 75 57 c 106 88 s 75 62 pc 82 67 s 82 63 s 87 65 pc 88 79 t 62 52 sh 78 68 pc 79 54 t

Thursday Hi Lo W 89 57 s 73 58 s 80 56 t 93 81 t 80 54 t 65 49 c 75 57 pc 105 88 pc 85 64 t 84 69 s 84 62 s 81 62 t 87 78 t 62 50 sh 77 68 r 77 56 pc

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

Jun 16

Jun 24

Jul 1

Jul 8

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015

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Thursday Hi Lo W 86 59 s 59 48 pc 85 69 t 92 70 s 92 70 pc 80 58 s 92 63 s 84 61 t 78 58 pc 90 70 t 90 69 pc 78 63 pc 93 72 s 72 54 t 79 68 t 81 63 pc 86 72 pc 91 74 t 89 69 pc 82 69 t 89 69 t 94 77 pc 92 75 t

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62

86/59

UV Index Today

Trees Grass Weeds Molds absent

80

Elgin

Temperatures High ............................................ 84° Low ............................................ 56° Normal high ................................ 79° Normal low ................................. 58° Record high ................... 96° in 1985 Record low .................... 41° in 1977 Precipitation 24 hours through 3 p.m. yest. .. 0.21” Month to date .......................... 0.88” Normal month to date .............. 1.25” Year to date ........................... 10.83” Normal year to date ............... 14.58”

0

83

Chicago 86/60

Denver 79/56

San Francisco 73/57

Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.

Joliet Regional Airport through 3 p.m. yest.

10 a.m.

A p.m. t-storm or two

85

67

Almanac

Partly sunny, a t-storm; humid

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Minneapolis 80/62

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The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Wednesday, June 10, 2015

Seven-Day Forecast for Will County TODAY

5

DAILY FORECAST


Diageo expands its operations in Plainfield By VIKAAS SHANKER vshanker@shawmedia.com PLAINFIELD – The company that bottles Smirnoff, Johnnie Walker and other popular spirits, beers and wine has expanded its Plainfield facility, buying 37 acres of land and a warehouse. Diageo announced Monday it has bought the land at 14020 Coil Plus Drive, next to its existing manufacturing facility at 24440 W. 143rd St. in Plainfield. The land contains a 246,000-square-foot warehouse, which will be used to store finished case goods from bottling operations at the manufacturing facility in Plainfield, as well as other locations, according to a Diageo news release. “We are always looking for ways to optimize our supply chain and when this land

“It’s absolutely fantastic that Diageo has made a huge commitment to the village of Plainfield. As if their investment wasn’t enough, we’re blessed to have them as a true community partner.”

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became available it made strategic sense to acquire it,” Diageo Americas Supply President Paul Gallagher said in the release, adding the investment allows Diageo to expand its Plainfield footprint. The existing facility is the multinational corporation’s largest manufacturing facility in North America. It’s also the primary manufacturing center for all Smirnoff products and employs about 600 people. Village Administrator Bri-

an Murphy said Diageo has expanded its existing bottling facility twice in the past six years before the most recent purchase. The new warehouse will be used for storage. “It’s absolutely fantastic that Diageo has made a huge commitment to the village of Plainfield,” Murphy said. “As if their investment wasn’t enough, we’re blessed to have them as a true community partner. Their continued investment speaks volumes to existing success.”

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The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Wednesday, June 10, 2015

|LOCAL NEWS

8

Manhattan Township murder trial underway By BRIAN STANLEY bstanley@shawmedia.com JOLIET – Jason Gonzalez questioned his uncle’s widow on the witness stand Tuesday about a gun he owned and why he’d been kicked out of their house. Gonzalez, 29, is representing himself while on trial for the murder of his uncle, Lance Goebel, that happened six years ago. Jason Prosecutors Gonzalez said Gonzalez was living with his uncle’s family in the 22700 block of South Cedar Road in Manhattan Township until two months before the Sept. 17, 2009, slaying. Prosecutors believe Gonzalez had become “inappropriately fixated” on children in the family before he was evicted. Goebel’s widow, Kathleen Murphy, testified it was a “regular day” when she came home with her children. Murphy looked through the house for her husband, but found her bedroom ransacked before she discovered his body on the floor near a couch in the living room. Goebel had kept money in envelopes in the bedroom for paintball trips, Murphy said. “I knew they were there. Lance did and you knew they were there,” she told Gonzalez.

“How did you discover I owned a firearm?” Jason Gonzalez Defendant asking Kathleen Murphy, Lance Goebel’s widow “How did you discover I owned a firearm?” Gonzalez asked later. Murphy said she looked in a backpack that belonged to Gonzalez and saw a handgun; this was after he was evicted, but on a day he had come over to go rafting with his uncle. She said finding the gun was one of the reasons she didn’t

want Gonzalez to move in again. Gonzalez is accused of breaking in to his uncle’s home and using a handgun to kill him. Police used cellphone data to track Gonzalez. While being held at the police station, he confessed to his mother while she was recording the conversation for detectives, authorities have said. Gonzalez’s mother told The Herald-News shortly after her son’s arrest that he was diagnosed with borderline personality disorder before being discharged from the Army. The trial is scheduled to continue Wednesday.

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POLICE REPORTS South Chicago Heights, was arrested Tuesday by the Crete Police Department on a charge of drug possession. • Dominique A. McKinley, 23, of the 1400 block of Englewood Street in Joliet, was arrested Monday by the Joliet Police Department on charges of robbery and aggravated robbery. • Larry J. Robinson, 35, of the 2400 block of Burbank Street in Joliet, was arrested Monday by the Joliet Police Department on a charge of retail theft. • Uriel Sam Rojas, 44, of the 1200 block of North Prairie Avenue in Joliet, was arrested Tuesday by the Joliet Police Department on a charge of aggravated domestic battery.

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• Danny Ray Holden, 25, of the 200 block of Reverend Walton Drive in Lockport, was arrested Friday by the Joliet Police Department on charges of reckless discharge of a firearm. • Justino F. Perez, 43, of the 700 block of Richards Street in Joliet, was arrested Saturday by the Joliet Police Department on charges of aggravated driving under the influence and driving with a revoked or suspended license. • Bernard Carlos Castleberry, 59, of Joliet, was arrested Sunday by the Joliet Police Department on a charge of aggravated domestic battery. • Edward Gonzalez, 19, of Romeoville, was arrested Sunday by the Romeoville Police Department on charges of drug possession and operating an uninsured motor vehicle. • Christopher Marr, 19, of the 11000 block of Stratford Road in Mokena, was arrested Sunday by the Mokena Police Department on charges of drug possession. • Alex M. Roberts, of the first block of Davidson Street in Joliet, was arrested Monday by the Joliet Police Department on charges of retail theft, driving on a suspended license, operating an uninsured vehicle and driving the wrong way on a one-way street. • Jeffrey Thomas Aikin, 37, of the 500 block of Chester Court in Plainfield, was arrested Monday by the Plainfield Police Department on charges of drug possession, driving on a revoked or suspended license and speeding. • Brandon J. Brown, 22, of the 1300 block of East Sherrill Road in Minooka, was arrested Monday by Will County Sheriff’s police on a charge of drug possession. • Ronda Cooper, 58, of Florida, was arrested Monday by Will County Sheriff’s police on charges of speeding, drug and paraphernalia possession. • Aaron D. Finney, 24, of the 100 block of Somerset Lane in Bolingbrook, was arrested Tuesday by the Bolingbrook Police Department on a charge of domestic battery. • David M. Fonza, 56, of the 1000 block of Robin Hill in Shorewood, was arrested Monday by the Mokena Police Department on charges of aggravated driving under the influ-

ence and driving with a suspended or revoked license. • Tanya M. Hamilton, 48, of the 8100 block of South Stewart Street in Chicago, was arrested Tuesday on charges of theft and drug possession. • James E. Hatten, 31, of Glendale Heights, was arrested Monday by Will County Sheriff’s police on charges of two counts of theft, driving on a suspended license and battery. • Kelly D. Eric, 34, of the 1000 block of Sherman Street in Joliet, was arrested Tuesday by Will County Sheriff’s police on a charge of aggravated domestic battery. • Miguel A. Martinez, 25, of the 100 block of Interocean Street in

LOCAL NEWS | The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com

Note to readers: Information in Police Reports is obtained from local police departments and the Will County Sheriff’s Office. Individuals listed in Police Reports who have been charged with a crime have not been proven guilty in court.


The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Wednesday, June 10, 2015

| THE HERALD-NEWS

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WILL COUNTY

Unincorporated Wilmington resident wants ‘relief’ from neighbor’s floodlight lleonecross@shawmedia.com

Deborah O’Malley Wilmington area resident river,” O’Malley said. “I have tried. We have tried to negotiate. To date, everything has been very amicable. ... I tried to be a good neighbor, but we are at a standstill. I need relief.” O’Malley said the light is a nuisance when she sits outside at night on her porch. The flat industrial light – a 400 watt with a lumen output between 36,000 and 42,000 – sometimes glares into her home, she said. She said her neighbor erected the lighting years ago for security purposes. But the area

has a low crime rate, she said. “It isn’t justified. ... So it’s a matter of my property and my view, and my enjoyment of my property, versus this gentleman’s concern that he wants to light up the river because he doesn’t like our river dark at night,” O’Malley said. The neighbor was not at the meeting, and O’Malley declined to identify him when asked by a reporter. By a 5-1 vote, committee members Tuesday recommended changes. The last time the Will County Board voted on such a matter, the changes were rejected, with many board members arguing the ordinance did not provide a proper, quantitative method to determine whether lighting is a nuisance or a hazard. The latest version requires the use of a meter sensor that

measures lighting levels. Dave Dubois, development review director and zoning administrator for the Will County Land Department, said the ordinance is complaint-based, meaning the county must first receive a complaint to investigate.

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Will County committee recommends denial of Wheatland Township zoning change By LAUREN LEONE–CROSS lleonecross@shawmedia.com JOLIET – Echoing some residents’ concerns during a public hearing Tuesday, members of the Will County Board’s Land Use and Development Committee recommended denying a controversial proposed zoning change in unincorporated Wheatland Township. By a 4-3 vote, the committee voted down Mokena business owner David Denler’s proposal to rezone 25657 W. Route 30 from agricultural to I-1 Industrial. The recommendation now heads to the full County Board for a vote June 18. Denler’s attorney, Richard Kavanagh, said his client plans to have a facility for his asphalt and concrete paving and maintenance business. His client’s intent is aligned with the I-1 industrial zoning of a 234-acre parcel of land across the street

in the village of Plainfield. But Michael Blaylock, one of the residents who spoke in opposition to the change Tuesday, told committee members he and other neighbors are concerned the property’s rezoning would lead to future zoning changes to heavier industrial uses. “You can’t predict the future. If it’s sold 10 months … or 10 years, you have no control once this is approved,” Blaylock said. “If this property changes hands, we have to live with it.” The property is surrounded to the north, west and south by residential properties. Julie Holzrichter, another resident whose property abuts the 10-acre parcel in question, said residents were concerned about decreased well water quality and increased truck traffic along the corridor, noting Route 30 and the nearby major intersection is “dangerous.”

Since uniting against the project, the group of residents has succeeded in getting other governmental bodies to support its efforts, including the Wheatland Township, Plainfield and Oswego governing boards. Local officials forwarded letters of objection to the rezoning request to the Will County Board. Committee Member Bob Howard, D-Beecher, voted to approve the zoning change, saying the county is otherwise sending the wrong message to good businesses. “A lot of times, we’re saying no to business. ... We’re getting to be known as a county that says no to business,” Howard said. Committee member Judy Ogalla, R-Monee, disagreed. “We want good business to come to Will County. I don’t think we say no to business,” Ogalla said. “But we also have residents who live here and we need to be mindful of them.”

The individual will then have time to come into compliance. The outdoor lighting issue first arose earlier this year when a County Board member received a complaint about two upset neighbors shining lights onto one another’s property.

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• Wednesday, June 10, 2015

JOLIET – Considered an isolated incident at the time, the “light war” that escalated earlier this year between two neighbors in unincorporated Mokena wasn’t enough for Will County officials to strengthen its outdoor lighting rules. But now an unincorporated Wilmington resident hopes the Will County Board takes another hard look, citing her own issue with a neighbor across the Kankakee River. Deborah O’Malley spoke Tuesday to the Will County Board’s Land Use and Development Committee. She said her neighbor is shining his industrial-strength floodlight across the Kankakee River – a nuisance to her and neighbors. “He’s lighting up the entire

“He’s lighting up the entire river. I have tried. We have tried to negotiate. ... I need relief.”

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By LAUREN LEONE–CROSS

LOCAL NEWS | The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com

Officials revisit outdoor lighting rules

11


The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Wednesday, June 10, 2015

| LOCAL NEWS

12

QUICK NEWS Auction for unclaimed property to be held

SPRINGFIELD – Silver bars, commemorative coins, stamps, and jewelry are among the 9,500 items worth $76 million to be auctioned online June 22 to 26, Illinois Treasurer Michael Frerichs announced Monday. “Our unclaimed property team works hard to return valuables to their rightful owners. If the property goes unclaimed for 10 years, the items are auctioned to make room for incoming unclaimed items,” Frerichs said in a news release. Other auction items include vintage cards of Stan Musial, Elvis Presley and Elizabeth Taylor. Baseball Digest magazines with covers of Billy Williams, Johnny Bench and Brooks Robinson also are available. Auction items have been appraised by an outside vendor. Auction participants can register at illinoistreasurer.gov and click on the Unclaimed Property Auction link. For questions, call 217-557-8567.

State Police planning roadside safety checks

JOLIET – The Illinois State Police District 5 will conduct a roadside safety check in Will County during the month of July, according to District 5 Commander Capt. Darryl Bogard. Officers working this detail will be watchful for drivers who are operating vehicles in an unsafe manner, driving with a suspended or revoked driver’s license, transporting open alcoholic beverages, or driving under the influence, according to a news release from the State Police. Alcohol and drug impairment is a significant factor in nearly 40 percent of all fatal motor vehicle crashes in Illinois. The roadside checks are designed to keep Illinois’ roads safe by taking dangerous DUI offenders off the road. This project is funded through the Illinois Department of Transportation, Division of Traffic Safety.

Safety event to be held at Ikea in Bolingbrook

Tollway and Illinois State Police District 15 are hosting a free Kids Identification and Safety Seat event Saturday at the Ikea Bolingbrook. Parents, grandparents and caregivers are invited to stop by and create free kids’ identification cards and get help with child safety seat inspections. The free K.I.S.S. event will be held from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday at Ikea, 750 E. Boughton Road in Bolingbrook. Child safety seat inspections will take place in the family parking lot located east of the store’s main entrance, while kids’ ID cards will be processed in the store’s lobby. At the event, kids can climb aboard an Illinois Tollway Highway emergency lane patrol truck and get behind the wheel of a 26-ton snowplow. Ikea will offer games and activities to keep children entertained and provide information on household safety to parents and caregivers.

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The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Wednesday, June 10, 2015

| LOCAL NEWS

14

PLAINFIELD

District 202 approves salary increases New principal named for Plainfield South High School By FELIX SARVER fsarver@shawmedia.com PLAINFIELD – Plainfield School District 202 has approved salary increases for administrators and support staff for next school year. Unanimous approval Monday of the increases by the district’s School Board means 158 administrators and support staff will receive a 2.5 percent salary increase for the 2015-16 school year. Tom Hernandez, Plainfield School District spokesman, said the board had to take special action to give the raises, which represent an overall cost of $326,144 to the district. “This is something the board has to do,” Hernandez said, and later added, “We get a raise like everybody.” Out of the 158 people receiving salary increases, 97 of them are certified admin-

istrators, eight are non-certified administrators, 34 are nonunion, noncertified support staff and 19 are nonunion certified support staff, he said. Pay for administrators and support staff was frozen in the past, following the economic recession in 2009. Since that year, the school district saved $42 million through operational savings and by cutting about 345 full-time teacher, support and administrative positions. In July 2009, administrator and nonunion support staff salaries were frozen, school

officials said. In February 2010, board members directed administrators and nonunion support staff to pay a greater share of their health insurance, which led to a pay cut for many employees. It wasn’t until 2012 when employees received a 2.5 percent raise, but the increase set salaries back to what employees would have received in 2011, school officials said. Hernandez said teacher salary increases are built into their contract, but there was one year since the recession when their salaries were frozen.

Kinzinger’s office to hold traveling office hours

OTTAWA – The Office of U.S. Rep. Adam Kinzinger, R-Channahon, will hold traveling office hours this month throughout the 16th Congressional District. Staffers will be available to assist and provide guidance for constituents on issues ranging from Veterans and Social Security benefits to Medicare and immigration issues. Constituents are welcome to come to share their questions and concerns. No appointments are necessary. Below is the full list of the traveling office dates, times, and locations. In Will County, the office will be from 9 to 10 a.m. June 23 at Wilmington City Hall, 1165 S. Water St. The office also will be from 11 a.m. to noon June 24 at Dwight Village Hall, 209 S. Prairie Ave.

– The Herald-News

Board members also named Bob Yanello as the new principal of Plainfield South High School, school officials

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By BOB OKON bokon@shawmedia.com LOCKPORT – Crest Hill police officer Joe Locasto looked forward to making his contribution Tuesday to the Law Enforcement Torch Run for Special Olympics. “Do I look like a regular runner?” joked Locasto, letting it be known that the 3-mile run to Joliet would be a challenge for him. Locasto was at the Illinois State Police District 5 headquarters Tuesday with officer Dave Reavis and Det. Jason Opiolo, both also with the Crest Hill Police Department. They were waiting for the torch, which was just minutes away, to arrive from Bolingbrook. Reavis and Opiolo have participated in this run 14 and 15 years, respectively. It was Locasto’s first year. “This was a goal of mine,” said Locasto, who started training in January so he could take part.

Illinois State Trooper Rick Zarate carries a torch Tuesday across the West Ninth Street Bridge. Special Olympics athletes, who gather this weekend in Bloomington, can count on officers such as Locasto and about 100 others from police departments in Will County who joined in the torch run, which continues into Friday. Throughout Illinois, 23 different police department contingents are carrying Special

Olympics torches to Bloomington, the organization’s largest fundraising effort. The work by the departments makes it possible for Special Olympics athletes to participate without having to cover costs that come with traveling to the competition, said Lockport officer Debbie Schenk, who coordinated the run locally. “It’s a chance to give back to the community in a positive light,” Schenk said. “The athletes, they love us and we love them. This allows the athletes to participate in the Special Olympics.” In Will County, the torch run started in Bolingbrook at 9:30 a.m. Tuesday. Runners went through Lockport, Crest Hill and Joliet before bringing the torch to New Lenox for the night. On Wednesday, the run will continue through Kankakee on its way to Bloomington. “We will run into the ceremony for the opening ceremonies,” Schenk said.

“It’s a chance to give back to the community in a positive light.” Debbie Schenk Lockport officer

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• Wednesday, June 10, 2015

Special Olympics torch run goes through Will County

• $28 million in college scholarships offered to latest graduates • 99% of graduates continue onto college • 16% of class recognized as Illinois State Scholars • 18 Advanced Placement course offerings • 28 state championship titles • Significant scholarships available adno=0310818

Photos by Eric Ginnard – eginnard@shawmedia.com

A group of law enforcement officers run Tuesday across the West Ninth Street Bridge during the Law Enforcement Torch Run in Lockport. Seventy-five officers from nine departments ran 35 miles through Will and DuPage counties to support the Special Olympics. The torch run will conclude Friday in Bloomington.


The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Wednesday, June 10, 2015

| LOCAL NEWS

18

House property-tax freeze fails; Rauner says it’s not enough By JOHN O’CONNOR and KERRY LESTER The Associated Press SPRINGFIELD – Democrats in the Illinois General Assembly and Gov. Bruce Rauner spent Tuesday talking about the same issue – relief from increasing local property taxes – but they talked past each other in a continuing deadlock over a state spending plan due by June 30. The Legislature returned for a second day of overtime work and teed up proposals to freeze the amount of property taxes local governments can collect, suggesting they’re identical to what the Republican governor wants, but Rauner denounced the plan as falling short of reform he says is necessary to change the business and political environments in Illinois. It didn’t matter anyway. The House voted down both proposals – the closest fell 30 votes short of the 71 needed. The first-term governor wants changes ranging from reducing business costs on insurance to cover injured workers to term limits to curtain politicians’ power before he’ll negotiate on a state budget. Entrenched legislative Democrats resisted those proposals all spring but adopted a budget they say covers vital services but which falls short of revenue by as much as $4 billion. The Democrats see their property tax offering – and one last week on workers’ compensation – as efforts at compromise. Rauner says he’s compromised too – reducing his “turnaround agenda” to five points – fair legislative remapping and restrictions on civil-liability lawsuits rounding out the plan. “They’ve refused to have

“This isn’t the monster. The monster is the budget you passed last month.” Jim Durkin House Republican leader of Western Springs

real negotiations on specific issues in those five bills,” Rauner told reporters outside the Executive Mansion as the House debated the tax measure. Marengo Democratic Rep. Jack Franks’ plan would freeze at 2015 levels the amount of property taxes that a local government can collect. If City Hall or a park board wants more, they have to ask voters. That’s Rauner’s premise. But his initiative would allow governments to prohibit discussion of certain issues in union negotiations over contracts, such as health insurance benefits or setting staffing levels for certain positions. He also wants to exempt local governments from having to pay laborers on construction projects the “prevailing wage,” set by state law, which he says is often a union scale and most workers aren’t union members. Asked why he won’t accept the stand-alone tax freeze, take credit and continue working on the tangential issues, the governor rejected the idea as a pyrrhic and ultimately hurtful victory. “That’s how we get in the mess we’re in,” Rauner said. “We can’t afford to nibble around the edges with very, very, minor, short-term things that don’t change the long-term trajectory of the

state and then declare victory. That would be a failure of the people of Illinois.” House Speaker Michael Madigan, the Chicago Democrat who Rauner again Tuesday labeled an insider profiting through private legal work from government, reiterated his response to the Rauner agenda: “The solution to that lies in moderation.” “Both Democrats and Republicans in the Legislature view these issues as reducing the wage levels of workers in the state and reducing the standard of living for people in the state,” Madigan said. In response to the governor, Madigan said his law firm works on correcting errors in property-value assessments and that he enforces strict ethical conduct. Franks, a long-term Democrat from conservative suburbs northwest of Chicago keen on stemming the property-tax pinch of rising taxes despite falling home values, was flummoxed by the lack of support. “We can’t put everything on one bill,” Franks said. “It’s not the whole thing, but it’s a very critical portion of how we help our taxpayers.” Republicans jeered during floor debate, lamenting “wasted time” on legislation that won’t make the grade. “This isn’t the monster. The monster is the budget you passed last month,” said House Republican Leader Jim Durkin of Western Springs, urging a return to the bargaining table. The Senate met as a committee-of-the-whole Tuesday, hearing testimony on the impact of property taxes on local governments and school districts. Both chambers plan to be in session the last three Tuesdays in June.

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‘The kids like going here’

19 COVER STORY | The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com

• SPLASH

Continued from page 3

Photos by Eric Ginnard – eginnard@shawmedia.com

ABOVE: Three young boys dig a hole in the sand Friday at Splash Station Water Park in Joliet. LEFT: A young girl slides down one of the many water slides Friday at Splash Station Water Park.

“We’re kind of Splash Station-set. I just love to let them go have fun.” Amy Slattery Joliet mother

…AT THE GRUNDY COUNTY SPEEDWAY Saturday, June 13th Racing divisions include

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• Wednesday, June 10, 2015

States. This is a good price.” The regular admission price at Splash Station is $9 for Joliet Park District residents and $13 for nonresidents. Twilight rates are $4.50 for residents and $6.50 for nonresidents. There are discounts for children or seniors. Season passes for residents are $50 for individuals, $99 for families of two, and another $10 for each family member. Membership was opened to Shorewood residents this year, which worked out well for Jeff Lange. “The kids like going here,” said Lange at Splash Station on Friday with his wife and three children. “It’s affordable and it’s close. It just takes a couple of minutes to get here.” Amy Slattery of Joliet said Splash Station is a place where she can relax while her two children enjoy the water. Lifeguards are posted where they need to be, and the staff is attentive, she said. She does not take her kids to other water parks. “We’re kind of Splash Station-set,” Slattery said. “I just love to let them go have fun.”


The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Wednesday, June 10, 2015

| OBITUARIES

20

OBITUARIES JANETTE A. BUCHHAUSER

Born: Dec. 29, 1927; in Wamego, KS Died: June 5, 2015; in Joliet, IL Janette Arlene (Inskeep) Buchhauser passed away on June 5, 2015 at the age of 87. Beloved wife of the late Robert Roy Buchhauser. They were married in 1946. Janette was born on December 29, 1927 in Wamego, Kansas. She retired from Joliet Federal Savings/Amerifed after 25 years and was an active member of Grace United Methodist Church. Janette was preceded in death by her infant son, Larry. She is survived by her son, Robert Stephen Buchhauser of St. Louis; daughter, Donna Kay (Milan) Eric of Port Washington, WI; three grandchildren, Matthew M. Eric, Stacie Lynn (Joe) Fechter, and Meghan (Jesse) Johnson; two great-grandchildren, Leiah Eric, and Carter Johnson. Funeral services will be held Saturday, June 13, 2015 at 12:00 p.m. at Blackburn-Giegerich-Sonntag Funeral Home, 1500 Black Rd., Joliet. Visitation will be held on Saturday from 9:00 a.m. until the time of service. Janette will be laid to rest at Woodlawn II Memorial Cemetery. In lieu of flowers, donations are welcome on her behalf to Alzheimer’s Association, Greater Illinois Chapter, 850 Essington, Suite 200, Joliet, IL 60435

LAWRENCE FEHER

Born: April 29, 1939; in Cleveland, OH Died: June 8, 2015; in Plainfield, IL Lawrence “Larry” Feher, age 76, of Plainfield, passed away on June 8, 2015. He was born April 29, 1939, in Cleveland, Ohio. Larry worked as a technical writer for Electro-Motive Division of GM in

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McCook, Illinois. He is survived by his loving wife, Patricia (nee Donnelly); sons, Daniel R. (Holly), and Thomas Feher; daughters, Genevieve T. (Edward) Kasza, Anne P. and Kathryn Feher; grandchildren, Alanna, Ella and Olivia Feher and Stefania and Edward Kasza; brother, John P. (Yvonne) Feher. He was preceded in death by his parents, Arthur and Kathryn (nee Clancy); and son, David Feher. Memorial visitation will be held on Friday, June 12, from 2:00 p.m. until 8:00 p.m., at the Beidelman-Kunsch Funeral Homes & Crematory, 24021 Royal Worlington Dr., Naperville. Internment private. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to Joliet Area Community Hospice. For information, 630-922-9630 with online guestbook at www. beidelmankunschfh.com

BOBBY G. FORSYTHE

Born: Sept. 8, 1948; in Clarksville, TN Died: June 7, 2015; in Kankakee, IL Bobby G. Forsythe, age 66, of Wilmington, passed away Sunday morning, June 7, 2015, at Riverside Medical Center in Kankakee. Born September 8, 1948, in Clarksville, Tennessee, Bobby is

a son of Laura Forsythe (nee Jones) of Wilmington, and the late Norris Forsythe, Sr. He was raised and educated in Wilmington, graduated from Wilmington High School, and went on to honorably serve in the U.S. Army during the Vietnam Conflict. Bobby retired from Caterpillar Tractor Company in Joliet in 1998, after 31 years of service. He was a member of the South Wilmington Sportsman’s Club and the Loyal Order of Moose Lodge 241 in Wilmington. Bobby enjoyed hunting, fishing, playing golf, camping and gambling. He will also be remembered as an avid Chicago Bears fan. Survivors include his mother, Laura; wife, Elizabeth (nee Rohland); daughter, Christine Forsythe (Clark Allen) of Wilmington; step-daughter, Mary Dahlgren of Ohio; daughter-in-law, Cori Forsythe (Douglas Carey, Jr.) of Diamond; six grandchildren, Corey Ingram, Lacey Forsythe, Cougar Forsythe, Kellen Forsythe, Kyleigh Dahlgren and Daxton Carey; one great granddaughter, Monika; brothers and sisters, Norris Forsythe, Jr. of Tennessee, Helen Hartman of Wilmington, Doug Forsythe of Custer Park, Kathy (Steve) Gardner of Colorado and Richard (Becci) Forsythe of Saunemin; brother-inlaw, Clarence Dawson of Campus; and many nieces and nephews, including his special niece, Betty (Ron) Haga of Campus. Bobby was preceded in death by his father; son, Jason Forsythe (2010); sister, Dorothy Dawson; and brother-in-law, Jerry Hartman. Visitation will be held on Thursday, June 11, 2015, between the hours of 4:00 p.m. and 8:00 p.m. at Baskerville Funeral Home, 700 East Kahler Road in Wilmington. A

Celebration of Life will follow Friday morning June 12, 2015 at 10:00 a.m. in the funeral home. Burial with full military honors will be in Abraham Lincoln National Cemetery in Elwood. Preferred memorials may be made as gifts in Bobby’s memory to the Jason Forsythe Memorial Scholarship, c/o Wilmington School District Foundation for Excellence, 209 Wildcat Court, Wilmington, IL 60481 Family and friends may sign the guest book or visit Bobby’s memorial page by logging onto: www. BaskervilleFuneral.com Funeral services and arrangements have been made under the direction and care of Baskerville Funeral Home in Wilmington. 815476-2181

NORMAN O. FRITZ Norman O. Fritz, age 87, passed away peacefully, Saturday, May 30, 2015, in California. Norm was born in Manhattan, Illinois, on November 3, 1927, and lived on the family farm until he served in the United States Army

• Continued on page 21

Catherine O’Connor 6/10/1958 – 5/17/2015

Betty L. Borio July 31, 1929 - June 10, 2006

Mom, it’s been nine years since the Good Lord took you to Heaven. I love and miss you very much! Kenny

Support

during the Korean War. He later owned and operated Penn Pacific Trucking Company in California. Norm was always willing and enjoyed helping his family and friends. He enjoyed stock car racing and was inducted in the Mazon Speed Bowl and Grundy County Speedway Hall of Fame. After moving to California he owned and raced thoroughbred horses for many years. He enjoyed golfing. Proceeded in death by his parents, Oscar and Wilhelmina (Horn) Fritz; brother, Kenneth Fritz; and sister, Dorothy (Donald) Walsh. Survived by his immediate family members; brother, Glenn (Bernadine) Fritz. Richard (Cindy) Fritz and Debra (Rob) Farley were his godchildren. Many close nieces and nephews, Kathy (Wally) Gillogly, Wayne (Becky), David (Lou Ann) and Gary (Debi) Fritz, Patricia (Mark) Brannick, Diane (Richard) Tordai, Michael Walsh, Judith (Robert) Murphy, Steven (Barbara), Dale (Karen) and Robert (Alice) Fritz. Also, survived by many cousins and wonderful friends. His family would like to thank the great friends he had in California during his lifetime. Family and friends are invited to gather at St. Peter Lutheran Church, 310 N. Broadway, Joliet from 4:00 to 5:00 on June 11, 2015. A Memorial service will follow at 5:00 p.m. Memorials to St. Peter Lutheran Church will be appreciated.

Happy Birthday Sweetie! I miss you more with every passing day

Eternal Love, Steve

Big Brothers Big Sisters of Will and Grundy Counties

bbbswillgrundy.org


OBITUARIES

PHILLIP H. GERBERT

ANDREW J. KOHLER Andrew J. Kohler, age 40, of New Lenox, passed away on Sunday, June 7, 2015, at Silver Cross Hospital in New Lenox. Andrew is survived by his loving family, wife, Elise Kohler (Huelsman); children, Colin Kohler, Gavin Kohler; parents, Philip and Bernice Kohler (Lemrise); siblings, Louis

after her death, served as resident bartender until earlier this year. In lieu of flowers memorials in Ray’s name can be made to Provena Villa Franciscan, Joliet Area Community Hospice, or Crisis Line of Will County. The family would like to thank all the people who worked tirelessly with Ray in the many years we were blessed to have him. Family will receive friends at the Kurtz Memorial Chapel, 102 E. Francis Rd, New Lenox on Thursday, June 11, 2015 from 3:00 to 8:00 PM. Funeral service Friday, June 9, 2015 with chapel prayers at 9:30 AM to St. Jude Catholic Church, New Lenox, for Mass of Christian Burial at 10:00 AM. Interment Holy Sepulchre Cemetery, Alsip. For info. 815-485-3200 or www. kurtzmemorialchapel.com

RAYMOND N. MORIN Raymond N. Morin, 94, of New Lenox, died on Monday June 8, 2015 at Joliet Community Hospice Home. He is preceded in death by his wife, LeaPayette Morin. Survived by his three children, Donna (Fred) Wlodarski, Gregory Morin and Deborah (Kirk) Ritchie. He also leaves behind six grandchildren, Brian Morin, Todd Morin, Mary (David) Burke, Monique Hides, Justin (Stephanie), and Chuck Wlodarski; and many great grandchildren. Ray grew up in Chicago, the son of Adelord Morin and Alberta Mason Morin. While in technical high school, he found he had an aptitude in and love for telephone repair, and would even borrow books from his teachers so he could learn more at home. During the depression, the only job he could find was in the steel mill, but every weekend, he would walk up the steps of Illinois Bell to see if a job had opened. One day, many months later, he got his wish and started his 40 year career with them, retiring in the 1980’s. He was a lifelong member of the Telephone Pioneers of America. Ray is a U.S. Army WWII Veteran, where he served as a member of the Signal Corps Unit as Wire Chief in mainly Burma and China. He was also a daily volunteer at Provena Villa Franciscan in Joliet during and after his wife Lea’s illness; and

STANLEY A. VROTNEY Stanley A. Vrotney, age 79, of Plainfield. Beloved husband of Josephine nee Riggio for 54 years. Loving father of Karen (Jeff) Shinn, Laura (Kevin) Burke and Marilyn (Douglas) Groebe. Proud grandfather of Mandy, Dave, Kyle Shinn, Scott, Matt Burke, Mike, Nick and the late John Groebe. Caring brother of Ron (Marcella) Vrotney, the late Christine and Dorothy. Preceded in death by his parents, Stanley and Josephine nee Zielinski. Dear friend to many. Funeral Friday June 12, 2015, 9:30 AM from the Vandenberg Funeral Home, 17248 S. Harlem Ave., Tinley Park, IL. 60477 to St. George Church Mass 10:00 AM. Interment is Private. Stan was an avid fisherman, enjoyed gardening and spending winters in Florida. His greatest treasure was his family. He was a proud veteran of the Illinois National Guard. Retired after 35 years as a manager with Jewel Foods. In lieu of flowers, donations to American Cancer Society, 17060 S. Oak Park Ave., Tinley Park, IL. 60477. He will be dearly missed by family and friends but never forgotten.

Visitation Thursday June 11, 2015, from 3:00 to 8:00 PM. For information on services, 708532-1635 or www.vandenbergfuneralhome.com

tions at: www.oneilfuneralhome. com.

LEROY A. WALICZEK LeRoy A. Waliczek, age 86, late of Lockport, passed away peacefully at Joliet Area Community Hospice Home surrounded by his loving family. Born in Chicago, living in Chicago until moving to Lockport in 1995. Retired from the Chicago Fire Department as a Lieutenant in 1983 after 28 years of service. A very proud United States Marine Corps Veteran, served in the Korean War and was a member of the “Chosen Few”. A member of Lockport VFW Post # 5788 and the American Legion. He was an avid Chicago White Sox fan. Preceded in death by a daughter, Donna Waliczek; two sons, Thomas Waliczek and Rick Deckman; his parents, Edward and Helen (Rykaczewski) Waliczek; two brothers, Lefty and Teddy Waliczek; and a sister, Bernadette “Boots” Metke. Survived by his devoted wife of 32 years, Dolores “Dolly” Waliczek; a son, David (Joella) Deckman; two daughters, Mary Lee Scholz and Peggy (Dave) Draksler; two special granddaughters who became their children, Melissa and Jenny Waliczek; 13 grandchildren, Matt, Adam, Susie, Scott, John (Jenna), Tom, Dan, David, Karli, Jason, Josh and Candace; an adored great-granddaughter, Savana Cullinan; brother-in-law, Bob Metke; and sisters-in-law, Rose Waliczek and Vickie Waliczek. Numerous nieces, nephews and many friends also survive. The Waliczek family would like to thank Dr. Co and his staff, JACH and the Hospice nurses, Krys and Diane, for their exceptional care and support throughout LeRoy’s illness. Funeral services will be held Friday, 10:00 am from the O’NEIL FUNERAL HOME, 1105 E. 9TH ST., LOCKPORT, to St. Dennis Church, Lockport for Mass of Christian Burial at 10:30 am. Interment with full Military Honors at Abraham Lincoln National Cemetery, Elwood. Visitation Thursday at the funeral home from 4:00 pm to 8:00 pm. Family and friends can sign the online guest book or to attain direc-

THOMAS R. WILLIAMS Thomas R. Williams, age 86, passed away Wednesday, June 3, 2015, at Joliet Area Community Hospice Home with his family by his side. Survived by his loving wife of 56 years, Maggie (O’Donnell) Williams; children, Lisa (Dave) Rumsey, Tim Williams and Craig Williams; grandchildren, Erin and Patrick Rumsey and Lauren Williams; and numerous nieces and nephews. Preceded in death by his parents, Robert J. and Helen (Reed) Williams; two brothers, Richard and Donald Williams; and one nephew, Douglas Williams. Born in Spring Valley, WI, living in Joliet most of his life. He graduated from St. Patrick Grade School, Joliet Township High School, Joliet Junior College, and Colorado State University. Thomas played basketball through high school and college. A U.S. Army Veteran, retired from Joliet School District #86 and as Will County Assistant Regional Superintendent. He loved spending summers in Rhinelander, WI. The family would like to thank the caregivers at The Inn of Willow Falls-especially Carol and Ann as well as everyone at the Joliet Area Community Hospice Home. Visitation Thursday, June 11, 2015, from 4:00 p.m. until 8:00 p.m. at Blackburn-Giegerich-Sonntag Funeral Home. A Memorial Mass will be held at St. Ann Catholic Church in Channahon on Friday, June 12, 2015, at 11:00 a.m. In lieu of flowers, memorials to Joliet Area Community Hospice would be appreciated.

21

• Wednesday, June 10, 2015

Phillip H. Gerbert passed away peacefully Tuesday, June 2, 2015, at Our Lady of Angel Retirement Home. Age 84. Born in Morris. Survived by his loving wife, Verda, of 61 years. One daughter, Barbara (Martin) Bee; two sons, Mark and Christopher Gerbert; grandchildren, Eric (Valerie) Bee, Kevin (Fiancee Rachel) Bee and Ryan Bee; great grandchildren, Riley and Ethan Bee. Two sisters, Rosemary (dec. Vincent) Oddo and Patricia (dec. Donald) Mattern; sister-in-law, Shirley (Gerald) Gerbert. Many nieces and nephews also survive. Preceded in death by his parents, Gerald and Grace (Le Rette) Gerbert; and one brother, Gerald Gerbert. Phil graduated from University of Illinois in 1953, served in the U.S. Air Force, commissioned 2nd Lt., 19541956, post Korean War, promoted to 1st Lt. He married Verda Herron, February 27, 1954, at St. Pat’s Church in Seneca. Phil worked 33 years at Amoco Chemicals Corp., as a Process Supervisor, retiring in 1992. He volunteered for Sr. Service Center of Will County (Meals on Wheels and Literacy). Longtime member of St. Ann Catholic Church in Channahon. Memorial Mass will be held at Our Lady of Angels Retirement Home, 1201 Wyoming, Joliet., Friday, June 12 , 2015, at 11:00 A.M. Private Inurnment at Abraham Lincoln National Cemetery. Visitation from 10:00 A.M until time of services. In lieu of flowers, memorials to Joliet Area Community Hospice, would be appreciated. For information, please call (815) 744-0022 or visit WWW.CHSFUNERAL.com

Kohler, Philip (Pamela) Kohler, Jr., father and mother in-law, Gerald and Betty Huelsman; and many nieces and nephew. Andrew was a coach for the New Lenox Baseball Association and the Lincolnway Blue Demons. Family will receive friends on Friday, June 12, 2015, from 3:00 to 8:00 PM at Kurtz Memorial Chapel, 102 E. Francis Road, New Lenox, IL 60451. Funeral service, Saturday, June 13, 2015, with prayers at the funeral home at 9:30 AM, and then to St. Jude Catholic Church, 241 West 2nd Avenue, New Lenox, IL 60451, for a Mass of Christian Burial at 10:00 AM. Interment, Good Shepherd Cemetery, Orland Park, IL. For information, www.kurtzmemorialchapel.com or 815-485-3200.

OBITUARIES | The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com

• Continued from page 20


The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Wednesday, June 10, 2015

22

STATE

More online

ILLINOIS ROUNDUP

For longer versions of these stories and more news from across the state of Illinois, visit TheHerald-News.com.

Commencement address by first lady First lady Michelle Obama delivers the commencement address during graduation ceremonies Tuesday for the Class of 2015 at Dr. Martin Luther King College Preparatory High School on the campus of Chicago State University. Obama drew on her hometown connections and personal struggles from college and the White House in the speech, which touched on honor student Hadiya Pendleton, who gunned down in 2013 near the Obama family home. “I was born and raised here on the South Side – in South Shore – and I am who I am today because of this community,” Obama said.

News from across the state

1

Officials trace Illinois contacts of woman with rare TB

SPRINGFIELD – The Illinois Department of Public Health is working to identify people who may have been in contact with a woman who has a rare and deadly form of hard-to-treat tuberculosis. State health officials said Tuesday they are continuing to work with local health departments in northern Illinois and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The woman traveled from India to the United States in April. She arrived at Chicago’s O’Hare International Airport and spent time in Missouri, Tennessee and Illinois before getting sick. She was admitted to an isolation unit at a suburban Chicago hospital and is a patient at the National Institutes of Health Clinical Center in Bethesda, Maryland. Health officials are tracing the woman’s contacts to determine who needs to be tested for TB infection.

2

Farmers wait to survey damage from weekend’s rain

Central Illinois farmers said it’s too soon to tell whether weekend rains will have a longterm effect on their crops. According to National Weather Service meteorologist John Parr, rain totals from the weekend storms varied greatly across the state. About 3.5 inches were recorded five miles west of Bloomington. Most other reporting stations received between 1 and 2 inches. The Pantagraph reported that farmers in areas receiving heavier rainfalls said it will take days before they can tell how much of their crops were lost to

AP photo

wash-outs or drown-outs. “If it drowns the beans, we probably still have time to replant. If it’s corn, it’s probably too late for that,” said Mark Hines, who farms southeast of Bloomington. Hines recorded up to 2.7 inches of rain on his property Monday, leaving water standing in several fields.

3

IHSA names new director to take over in January

BLOOMINGTON – The Illinois High School Association said Craig Anderson will become its next executive director. Anderson will take over in January after current Executive Director Marty Hickman’s previously announced retirement. The IHSA oversees high school sports in Illinois and has about

800 member schools. Anderson takes over as the IHSA faces a class-action lawsuit over concussions filed late last year. Anderson is the Bloomington-based organization’s administrator for football, baseball and wrestling. He also oversees IHSA’s officials department and previously worked as a teacher, coach and athletic director.

4

Air Force sergeant who fled Illinois trial found in Nevada

SCOTT AIR FORCE BASE – An Air Force sergeant who disappeared while awaiting a child sex assault court-martial trial at Scott Air Force Base has been arrested in Nevada. The U.S. Air Force Office of Special Investigations said Tech. Sgt. David Lawrence

Helm, 35, was arrested Monday night after an interstate traffic stop in Reno. Helm is accused of sexually assaulting a girl between the ages of 12 and 16 at several locations in 2013 and 2014, including the southwestern Illinois air base and in LaFollette and Gatlinburg, Tennessee. An adult female allegedly was assaulted at Scott and in Dayton, Ohio. Helm had been scheduled to appear in a military court Monday. The nine violations Helm faces include charges of sexual assault and taking an indecent photograph of the adult woman without her consent.

5

Mom says Chicago school didn’t protect son from sex abuse

CHICAGO – A woman is suing Chicago’s school district, alleg-

ing her son was sexually abused by two of his kindergarten classmates last year and school officials didn’t do enough to stop it, even after learning of the abuse. The mother of the unidentified Wendell Smith Elementary School student filed the lawsuit Tuesday in federal court, the Chicago Sun-Times reported. In her lawsuit, the woman said the abuse started in January 2014. She said the boys’ teacher sometimes let students leave the classroom without supervision to use a bathroom meant for older children. She said a school worker told the principal he had heard her son and another boy fighting, and that when he went to check on them, the boys were naked from the waist down.

– Wire reports


NATION&WORLD

23

ILLINOIS LOTTERY Midday Pick 3: 5-8-6 Midday Pick 4: 6-2-6-5 Evening Pick 3: 8-1-0 Evening Pick 4: 9-2-1-8 Lucky Day Lotto Midday: 10-11-16-23-35 Lucky Day Lotto Evening: 3-12-25-39-42 Lotto jackpot: $12.25 million MEGA MILLIONS Numbers: 6-16-17-25-36

MegaBall: 7 Megaplier: 5 Est. jackpot: $20 million POWERBALL Est. jackpot: $50 million WISCONSIN LOTTERY Pick 3: 4-4-4 Pick 4: 3-0-2-6 SuperCash: 2-5-11-16-33-38 Badger 5: 8-13-17-19-26

NATION & WORLD BRIEFS House GOP plan would cut Amtrak by $242M

spent decades in isolation after forming a Black Panther Party to protest prison conditions. WASHINGTON – Legislation Tuesday’s order came a day that would cut Amtrak’s budget after a federal judge ruled the by $242 million was working state can’t fairly try Woodfox, its way through the House, although there’s new funding for now 68, a third time for the video cameras inside locomotive killing of a prison guard 43 years ago, and the “only just remecabs to record train engineers to help investigators get to the dy” would be setting him free after all the years he spent in bottom of crashes such as last “extended lockdown.” month’s deadly derailment in Woodfox long has maintained Philadelphia. Amtrak announced last month his innocence in the guard’s killing. it will install the cameras after years of delays. The measure advancing Tuesday contains $9 Officer on video in pool party incident resigns million approved last week to McKINNEY, Texas – The white fund the inward-facing camera police officer who was recorded initiative in the budget year on video pushing a black girl starting in October. Amtrak is among many domes- to the ground at a North Texas pool party resigned from the tic programs whose budgets police force Tuesday. are cut or frozen by the GOP Officer David Eric Casebolt measures as automatic spending resigned from the McKinney curbs known as sequestration are again hitting federal agencies Police Department after almost 10 years on the force, said his after two years of relief. attorney, Jane Bishkin of Dallas. Police Chief Greg Conley conCourt temporarily blocks ‘Angola 3’ inmate release firmed the resignation at a news ST. FRANCISVILLE, La. – Prison conference later Tuesday, saying activist Albert Woodfox, the last Casebolt had not been pressured. A video recorded by another member of the “Angola Three” teenager and posted online inmates held in solitary confinement at the Louisiana State showed Casebolt pushing a biPenitentiary, will have to wait at kini-clad black girl to the ground least several more days to see if on Friday and brandishing his he’ll experience the “immediate” gun at other black teens after he and other officers responded to and “unconditional” freedom complaints about the pool party ordered by a federal judge. at a community-owned McKinA federal appeals court ney swimming pool. Tuesday temporarily blocked – Wire reports the release of Woodfox, who

AP photo

Members of the New York State Department of Corrections and Community Supervision emergency response team take a break while searching Monday for two murderers who escaped from the Clinton Correctional Facility in Dannemora, N.Y.

Police descend on small town in search for 2 escaped killers By MICHAEL HILL and MICHAEL VIRTANEN The Associated Press WILLSBORO, N.Y. – With police helicopters hovering overhead, hundreds of law officers in body armor poured into this small town in the Adirondack foothills Tuesday in a search for two killers who used power tools to break out of a maximum-security prison 30 miles away. The hunt that began over the weekend focused on Willsboro, close to Lake Champlain, after residents reported seeing a couple men walking on a road late Monday during a driving rainstorm. Hundreds of black-clad searchers wearing bulletproof vests and sidearms methodically worked their way shoulder-to-shoulder in the rain through hilly woods, fields and swamps, checking every home, garage, shed and outbuilding, then yelling, “Clear!” when there were no signs of the inmates. By early evening, it appeared the sweep had come up empty, and there was no

confirmation from police that the escaped convicts had been there. Authorities have fielded numerous tips since the breakout from the Clinton Correctional Facility in Dannemora, about 20 miles from the Canadian border, but they appeared to have jumped hardest on this one. David Sweat, 34, and Richard Matt, 48, cut through a steel wall, broke through bricks and crawled through a steam pipe before emerging through a manhole outside the prison grounds. They were discovered missing early Saturday after stuffing their beds with clothes to fool guards on their rounds and leaving behind a taunting note: “Have a nice day.” Given the meticulous planning that went into the breakout itself, there was speculation the inmates had arranged for someone to pick them up outside the prison and were long gone from the area. On Monday, authorities said the inmates could be anywhere – perhaps Canada or Mexico. On Tuesday, Willsboro

dairy farmer George Sayward said he saw troopers parked next to his barn around 5 a.m., and they told him they were there because of a possible sighting of the convicts. Around 7 a.m., Sayward said, he heard one trooper tell another to call in 100 more men. “The next thing I know, there were a ton of them, by the busload,” Sayward said. State Police said more than 400 corrections and other law enforcement officers were in the area and planned to go door to door, checking homes and seasonal camps. The escape from the 3,000-inmate state prison has raised suspicions the men had help on the inside. Investigators have been questioning prison workers and outside contractors to try to find out who may have supplied the power tools. Contractors have been doing extensive renovations at the 170-year-old prison, a hulking, fortress-like structure that looms over Dannemora’s main street. A $100,000 reward has been posted for information leading to the men’s capture.

The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Wednesday, June 10, 2015

LOTTERY


The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Wednesday, June 10, 2015

| STATE/NATION

24

Hastert in court for hush-money case LEFT: Former House Speaker Dennis Hastert arrives Tuesday at the federal courthouse in Chicago for his arraignment on federal charges that he broke federal banking laws and lied about the money when questioned by the FBI. BELOW: Hastert is surrounded by police and media as he leaves the courthouse.

By MICHAEL TARM and SARA BURNETT The Associated Press CHICAGO – A haggard Dennis Hastert appeared in court Tuesday for the first time since he was indicted, pleading not guilty to charges that he violated banking rules and lied to the FBI about promising to pay $3.5 million in hush money to conceal misconduct from his days as a high school teacher. As his attorney entered the plea on his behalf, the 73-yearold former House speaker stood motionless, his hands folded and eyes downcast at the floor. When the judge asked if he understood he had to submit a DNA sample and could go to jail if he violated any conditions of his release, the man who was once second in the line of succession to the presidency answered quietly, “Yes, sir.” Hastert has not spoken publicly about the accusations that emerged two weeks ago and quickly raised questions about possible sexual abuse by the once-powerful Republican legislator from Illinois. Neither he nor his attorneys commented after the hearing. The politician-turned-lobbyist is accused of evading federal banking laws by withdrawing hundreds of thousands of dollars in smaller amounts and lying about the money when questioned. At the start of Tuesday’s hearing, Hastert reached into a coat pocket and pulled out his passport, handing it to his attorney, who turned it over to a court official. Surrendering foreign travel documents is a standard condition of release. The former congressman also was ordered to have any firearms removed from his property by June 23 and was forbidden from having contact with victims or witnesses in the case. Judge Thomas M. Durkin spent most of the 20-minute hearing explaining how he believed he had no conflict of interest in the matter but then giving attorneys on both sides until Thursday to say if they want him to stay on the case. The issue came up because Federal Election Commission

AP photos

records indicate he donated $500 to the “Hastert for Congress” campaign in 2002 and $1,000 in 2004. Durkin was an attorney at a Chicago law firm at the time of the contributions. Durkin cited those donations and that he knew Hastert’s son, Ethan. The two worked together in private practice before Durkin became a judge. But, the judge said, he does not consider the younger Hastert “a personal friend.” To the best of his knowledge, he said, he never met Dennis Hastert. “I have no doubt I can be impartial in this matter,” the judge said. After the judge issue is resolved, Durkin or another judge brought in to replace him will lay out a timetable for prosecutors to share evidence with the defense. Hastert could seek a plea deal or take his case to a jury. Any trial probably would be many months away. Appearing much thinner than in his days as speaker, Hastert walked into court slowly, slightly bent over. He appeared nervous as he sat at a defense table waiting for the hearing to begin, rubbing his

chin, biting his lip and occasionally scanning the courtroom benches packed with reporters. At one point, a defense attorney reached over and patted him on the shoulder. His lead attorney, Thomas C. Green, is based in Washington and has represented clients in the Watergate, Iran-Contra and Whitewater cases. Chicago attorney John Gallo also is on Hastert’s defense team. Steven Block is the lead U.S. prosecutor. Prosecutors did not shed any more light on the secret Hastert allegedly sought to conceal by paying the person the indictment refers to as “In-

dividual A.” A person familiar with the allegations told The Associated Press the payments were intended to conceal claims of sexual misconduct from decades ago. The person spoke to the AP on the condition of anonymity because the investigation is ongoing. If convicted, Hastert faces a maximum five-year prison term on each of the two counts. The indictment made public May 28 claimed Hastert agreed in 2010 to pay Individual A $3.5 million to “compensate for and conceal [Hastert’s] prior misconduct” against that person. It said he paid $1.7

million before federal agents began scrutinizing the transactions. He allegedly started by withdrawing $50,000 at a time and changed course when automatic bank transaction reports flagged those withdrawals. The indictment said Hastert then began taking cash out in increments of less than $10,000 to skirt reporting rules, which primarily are meant to thwart money laundering by underworld figures. It’s not illegal to withdraw large amounts in cash. But it’s against the law to structure the withdrawals with the intent of dodging reporting requirements. Hastert, who is married with two sons, follows a well-trodden path of other Illinois politicians who have walked through the revolving doors at Chicago’s federal courthouse. Several recent governors, Chicago aldermen and other public figures have entered pleas in the same building. Among the most recent were former Gov. Rod Blagojevich, a Democrat, and former Gov. George Ryan, a Republican. Both men were convicted on corruption charges.


OPINION

WRITE TO US: Letters must include the author's full name, address, and phone number. Letters are limited to 300 words; must be free of libelous content and personal attacks; and are subject to editing for length and clarity at the discretion of the editor. Send to news@TheHerald-News.com or The Herald News, Letters to the editor, 2175 Oneida St., Joliet IL 60405.

‘Ghost payrolling’ is not a good idea SPRINGFIELD – Way back, in 1973, then-Gov. Dan Walker hired a young Georgetown University graduate and others for his staff but paid them with money from state agencies rather than from the governor’s office. The practice ruffled some feathers, as well it should. Folks in Springfield started calling them “ghost payrollers.” After all, it appeared Walker was trying to make it look as if he was spending less money to run his office than he really was. Despite the outcry, the practice continued, and not just for the four years Walker was governor. Both Republican and Democratic governors have emulated Walker’s method of artificially deflating their budgets by pushing off some of their expenses on state agencies. While it is perfectly legal, it’s a lousy practice. Government needs to be transparent about how it spends money. And this practice isn’t the least bit transparent. It wasn’t a good idea when Walker did it. It wasn’t a good idea when Rod Blagojevich did it. It wasn’t a good idea when Pat Quinn did it. And it most certainly isn’t a good idea now that Gov. Bruce Rauner is doing it. House Democrats vented mock outrage June 4 about Beth Purvis, who is Rauner’s top education adviser. She earns $250,000 and is paid from the Department of Human Services, which is the state’s top welfare agency. That is an awful lot of money. Considering that at least 20 local school superintendents across Illinois are earning more than Purvis, it doesn’t seem particularly out of line for what the top education policy adviser to

THE FIRST

AMENDMENT

REEDER REPORT Scott Reeder the governor ought to be making. But some Democratic lawmakers have found religion when it comes to the evils of ghost payrolling – at least when a Republican governor is doing it. It’s odd we never heard a peep from them when Quinn had at least five of his staffers drawing salaries from the Department of Human Services. Of course, that’s beside the point. It’s a political game, plain and simple. The cost to the taxpayers is exactly the same whether the money is drawn from a fund for the governor’s office or some executive agency. The reason this is a bad practice is that government needs to be transparent. And it’s hard to know just how much taxpayer money is being spent to operate the governor’s office when money is siphoned from various agencies. Purvis is a victim, but not a victim of sexism as some Republicans claim. She is a casualty of the ongoing war between House Speaker Michael Madigan and Rauner. She got caught in the crossfire. But she should recover from her political wounds. After all, other “ghost payrollers” have. Look no further than the young Georgetown graduate Walker hired. His name? Patrick J. Quinn, the 41st governor of Illinois.

• Scott Reeder is with the Illinois Policy Institute. He can be reached at sreeder@illinoispolicy.org.

25 The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Wednesday, June 10, 2015

The Herald-News Editorial Board Bob Wall, Denise Baran-Unland, Hannah Kohut, Chris LaFortune and Kate Schott

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Illiana toll road should be built

To the Editor: Put the Peotone airport on the back burner and use the money for an Illiana toll road, perhaps all the way to Interstate 39 and Interstate 80. That would be a great bypass for the congested Chicago area and foster even more traffic and the logistics and warehouse business south of Joliet. Look what I-88 did for Naperville and Aurora. The problem with a new airport is that it needs a critical mass of flights and business to be viable. Gary already is built and is an excellent location but still struggles. Thomas Cechner Lockport

Hitler’s rise reminds of things occurring today

To the Editor: Did anybody happen to see the History Channel last week? It was about the rise of Hitler, and I tell you – it really scared me. He did a lot of things that we see going on today in the way the current administration is running things. He accomplished the complete transformation of Germany with less than 50 percent support of the population. You had to see it to make you wonder about what is going on in Washington these days. At around the same time, there was a “fundamental transformation” going on in Russia following the guidelines established by Karl Marx (who, by the way, was German) in his “Communist

Manifesto.” Woe is me! Two Socialist-based “fundamental transformations” leading to a world war and hundreds of thousands killed. The “Communist Manifesto” by Marx and “Mein Kampf” (pronounced “man kampf”) – “My Struggle” – an autobiographical manifesto by National Socialist leader Adolf Hitler; I wonder how many copies of these are lying around the White House and Congress these days? Kind of makes you wonder if the laws passed years ago during the Eisenhower administration against communism are still on the books. I also have to wonder how they teach history in our schools. Do you think it’s fair and balanced? Ray Malmgren New Lenox

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 Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Wednesday, June 10, 2015

26

SPORTS

Have some sports news? Contact Sports Editor Dick Goss at 815-280-4123 or at dgoss@shawmedia.com.

COMEBACK FALLS SHORT

Plainfield North takes supersectional to extra inning but loses to Mount Carmel / 27

Larry W. Kane for Shaw Media

Plainfield North second baseman Bryan VanDuser tags out Mount Carmel’s Jeremy Houston on an attempted steal during Tuesday’s Class 4A Crestwood Baseball Supersectional at Standard Bank Stadium. Plainfield North lost, 11-5, in eight innings.


27 SPORTS | The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com

CLASS 4A CRESTWOOD SUPERSECTIONAL: MOUNT CARMEL 11, PLAINFIELD NORTH 5 (8 INN.)

Mt. Carmel beats Plainfield N. in extra innings By CURT HERRON cherron@shawmedia.com CRESTWOOD – Plainfield North’s baseball team came all the way back from a 5-1 deficit in the sixth inning to force extra innings with Mount Carmel in Tuesday’s Class 4A Standard Bank Stadium Supersectional. But the Caravan moved back in front with six runs in the eighth inning and defeated the Tigers, 11-5, to earn their third semifinal trip in the past five years. The Tigers (30-8), who were making their furthest advancement in the postseason, got outhit, 15-6, by the Caravan (35-4). North had evened the score in the bottom of the seventh when Jason Pacanowski smacked a solo shot that went just inside the right field foul post. But in the eighth, Mount Carmel regained control. Ako Thomas led off with a single, Josh Stowers reached on an

error, and Malik Carpenter singled to make it 6-5. Jeremy Houston singled home another run, and then Bob Seymour added an RBI single. Nick Wheeler drove in two more runs with a triple, and AJ Lewis added another RBI single. In the first inning, Lewis tried to score on a grounder, but Zach Jarosz’s throw home to Pacanowski ended the threat. Jarosz led off the bottom of the first with a walk and was bunted to second by Bryan VanDuser. With two outs, Joshua Garner got an RBI single to right to put North up. After North starter Kyle Strepek got out of a bases-loaded jam with a strikeout in the top of the second, the Tigers had a pair of baserunners in their half, with Richard Bryza got a single, which was the end of the offense for much of the rest of the game. Mount Carmel starter Cameron Hupe retired the final two hitters in the second and then set North down in order

Heartbreak city for Peotone SUBMITTED REPORT BLOOMINGTON – There are tough losses to swallow, and then there’s the one the Peotone softball team suffered Tuesday in the Class 3A supersectional at Illinois Wesleyan University. The Blue Devils (32-6) scored three runs in the top of the eighth inning to take a 5-2 lead, only to see Washington rebound to score four in the bottom of the eighth – capped by Zoe Wetherell’s walk-off threerun homer – to win, 6-5, and advance to Friday’s state during the next three innings to retire 11 straight batters. The Caravan moved in front for good in the third when Carpenter reached on a two-outfielder’s choice. Alek Thomas followed with an RBI double to

semifinals at East Peoria. Winning pitcher Madi McCoy hit a game-tying, two-run homer off Allie Johnson in the sixth. Johnson struck out seven and retired 12 straight batters in one stretch. Carley Maupin had three hits, and Emily Carstens chipped in a triple, two walks and three runs scored for Peotone. The game originally was scheduled for Monday but was postponed because of rain. Peotone earned its berth in the supersectional with a 7-1 victory over Joliet Catholic in the title game of the Morris Sectional. center and then came home on Houston’s single to center. After leaving two more runners in scoring position in the fourth, Mount Carmel added another run in the fifth when Alek Thomas blasted a solo

shot to center. Strepek exited after allowing eight hits while striking out six in five innings. Mount Carmel added two more runs in the sixth after Stowers drew a bases-loaded walk and then Carpenter drove in a run with a sacrifice fly. North finally got some baserunners in the sixth when VanDuser and Jacob Dunham led off with walks. Garner sent a long drive to center but Stowers made a diving catch. But Strepek belted another shot to center and it went over Stowers’ head and to the wall, allowing both runners to score on the triple. That marked Hupe’s exit from the contest after 51⁄3 innings. He allowed three hits and struck out four before being relieved by Caravan ace Nelson Munoz, After Munoz yielded a wild pitch which allowed Strepek to score to make it 5-4, left fielder Alek Thomas made a diving catch to rob Matthew Babuskow of an extra-base hit.

• Wednesday, June 10, 2015

Larry W. Kane for Shaw Media

Plainfield North shortstop Zach Jarosz waits on the ball as Carmel’s Jeremy Houston dives back to second base during Tuesday’s Class 4A Crestwood Supersectional held at Standard Bank Stadium. Plainfield North lost, 11-5, in eight innings.


The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Wednesday, June 10, 2015

| SPORTS

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JOLIET SPORTS LEGEND

Inwood family sure to miss Tony Fazio By DICK GOSS

Tony Fazio was a family man, a coach and, in his high school and college days, a football player. “He had a lot of respect from the people who knew him,” said Dennis Schley, former Romeoville football coach and athletic director. “People that worked with him revered him.”

dgoss@shawmedia.com JOLIET – He was just a teen-age kid. He was working at Inwood Golf Course when he walked to the parking lot with his girlfriend and gave her a goodbye kiss. A Joliet Park District director happened to see it and wanted to fire the kid. Tony Fazio, the jack of all trades at Inwood, went to bat on the kid’s behalf. Former longtime Joliet Township athletic director and golf coach Paul Morzorati recalled the story: “Tony said, ‘You can’t do that, he’s a good kid, he just made a mistake.’ He saved his job, and the kid wound up one of the best workers out here.” Morzorati, former Romeoville football coach and athletic director Dennis Schley and Inwood general manager Brian Legan sat on the deck at Inwood last week and reminisced while discussing the loss their Inwood family suffered. Fazio died May 24 at the Joliet Area Community Hospice Home. He was 78. Schley’s association with Fazio went back about 40 years. “I came to Romeoville in 1974 and became the head coach in 1977,” he said. “I followed Tony as head coach.” “He told me back then, ‘When you’re dealing with 15-, 16-, 17-year-old kids, they’re going to make mistakes. Let them make mistakes, and they’ll learn from it.’ That’s the kind of person he was. “He liked to see the bright side of kids. I was in charge of the drug program when we started one at Romeoville. He took kids to the counselor and sat in with the parents. There’s nothing he wouldn’t do to help kids.” Fazio grew up with Morzorati on the south side of Joliet. “I have a picture of his third birthday,” Morzorati said. “He was the brother I never had. He always said we were lucky to grow up on the south side of Joliet.” Fazio played football at Joliet Township and at Joliet Junior College. “Not many people know this, but he also was a Golden Gloves champion,” Morzorati said. “He had a boxing scholarship to Wisconsin available to him, but he didn’t go. He played football at JJC. When we were all going to Illinois State, I thought he would play football there, but he didn’t.” Fazio did, however, love the game, and he got into coaching and teaching at Romeoville, which was Lockport West when he began his career. “When Tony resigned as head football coach, he got out of it for a couple of

Photos provided

years,” Schley recalled. “My first year as head coach, we beat Naperville North at our place, I had the media and family to talk to on the field afterward. It had to be a half-hour after the game, I’m finally leaving the field, and there’s Tony Fazio, who is not coaching at the time, waiting for me at the gate to say hi and give his congratulations. That was him.”

After a couple years away, Fazio returned to coaching as a freshman assistant. He coached with Dick Ruppel on the freshman level. “My last three years, Tony was a varsity assistant,” Schley said. “We had a good relationship and a lot of fun. He was always very well prepared. He was very technique oriented and detailed.” As retirement from Romeoville neared, Fazio began working for the park district. “Tony worked at Woodruff original-

ly,” Schley said. “He, Dick Ruppel and I were tri-managers from 1987 until about 1996. We all got along well. Leroy Leslie and Mel May were at Woodruff then.” “All these guys that we had running the courses were educators,” Legan noted, indicating it was no surprise. “During Tom Himes’ career here, Dennis and Tony were here. “I’ve been here since 2005. I grew up at Woodruff and didn’t know much about Inwood. Dennis and Tony gave me the guidance I needed. Tony basically was the manager of day-to-day operations here. He had the touch with people. In terms of guidance for me, he picked my brain and the brains of those guys here, and he gave me the opportunity to pick his brain.” “Tony got upset easy if any stuff didn’t go right,” Schley said. “He was a good people person, though. If he didn’t think something would work, he told you to your face. He had a lot of respect from the people who knew him. People that worked with him revered him.” Morzorati said Fazio had the ability to recognize potential problems early on. For example, the greeting a visitor received had to be proper. “Tony always said your whole impression of a course is how the person behind the counter greeted you,” Morzorati said. “Tony was a team player and, ultimately, it was a big deal for me to work with all these guys,” Legan said. “It takes a team. We’re a family here, and we lost one of the chiefs. The work ethic of these guys and Tony, you don’t always see that.”


STANLEY CUP FINAL – GAME 4: LIGHTNING AT BLACKHAWKS, 7 P.M. TODAY, NBCSN

By ANDREW SELIGMAN The Associated Press

AP photos

Blackhawks defenseman Duncan Keith shoots against the Tampa Bay Lightning during the third period Saturday in Game 2 of the Stanley Cup Final in Tampa, Fla.

“It’s a puck-pressure game. It’s like a track meet. I think when teams are pushing the pace and you’re skating, you have no choice but to move and skate yourself. That takes a lot of energy.” Scott Stevens New Jersey Devils co-head coach Tampa Bay Lightning’s Brian Boyle tries to reach a loose puck as he falls between the Hawks’ Duncan Keith (right) and Bryan Bickell during the second period Monday in Game 3 of the Stanley Cup Final at the “I think (Oduya will) be all right. He looked all right today. United Center. er in this day and age because this game is so fast and quick,” said New Jersey Devils co-head coach Scott Stevens, who retired as the all-time leader in games played by a defenseman. “It’s a puck-pressure game. It’s like a track meet. I think when teams are pushing the pace and you’re skating, you have no choice but to move and skate yourself. That takes a lot of energy. You need to be in great shape. It’s hard to log those minutes.” Keith certainly isn’t the only defenseman carrying a

heavy load for the Hawks. They lost Michal Rozsival to a broken ankle in Game 4 of their second-round series against Minnesota. They have been relying primarily on Keith, Seabrook, Niklas Hjalmarsson and Oduya, and they could be down another man Wednesday. Oduya missed part of Monday’s loss with an unspecified upper-body injury, and coach Joel Quenneville said “we’ll see on both” when asked about him and any potential lineup changes in Game 4. He did add:

We’ll see how he is tomorrow.” Still, the last thing the Hawks need is to lose another defenseman. The load the top four have been carrying was a big topic of discussion, particularly in the Western Conference finals against Anaheim. Only four of those games were decided in regulation; and when it comes to total minutes for the Hawks’ defensemen, the numbers in these playoffs are staggering. Keith is by far tops on the team with 626:48 through 20 games. Second is Seabrook, nearly 100 minutes behind him

• Wednesday, June 10, 2015

CHICAGO – Between his production and the amount of time he is spending on the ice, the numbers this postseason for Blackhawks defenseman Duncan Keith sure are impressive. With his boundless energy, the two-time Norris Trophy winner is playing a huge role for a team eyeing its third Stanley Cup in six years. He’s not the only defenseman carrying a big load. The Hawks are a bit short-handed in that area, a concern as they try to erase a 2-1 deficit against Tampa Bay in the Stanley Cup Final. Game 4 is Wednesday, and they could be without Johnny Oduya. But whether he suits up or not, the Hawks still will have one of the game’s best defensemen on their side in Keith. “He’s one of those special, special athletes that, you know, won’t give up,” teammate Brent Seabrook said. “He’s fun to have been around and watched him progress into this player that he is. I think, like I said, he’s got so many great qualities that set him apart from different players in the league that make him great.” Keith leads the league with a plus-14 rating in these playoffs and has been nothing short of a workhorse for the Hawks. He is averaging 31 minutes, 20 seconds in the postseason and has played at least 40 minutes in three overtime games. In another game, he came within nine seconds of that mark, and he’s doing it in an age where the tempo is quick. Teams are on the move, looking to push the pace. Keith, Chris Pronger and Nicklas Lidstrom are the only defensemen to log more than 31 minutes a game in a significant playoff run since 2001, according to STATS. His 18 assists put him in a tie for fifth on the single postseason list with Ray Bourque and Larry Murphy, trailing only Paul Coffey (25), Al MacInnis (24), Brian Leetch (23) and Bobby Orr (19). And his 20 points are tied for 15th all-time among defensemen. “I think it’s probably hard-

at 529:53, followed by Hjalmarsson (519:57) and Oduya (494:52). Center Jonathan Toews (423:29) is fifth. But after Oduya, the drop in total minutes among defensemen is steep, with Rozsival (174:22) followed by Kimmo Timonen (141:23), Kyle Cumiskey (85:13), David Rundblad (37:25) and Trevor van Riemsdyk (9:01). Quenneville insisted he has not seen any signs of fatigue from that group. “The guys take care of themselves to a different level,” he said. “They prepare to the excitement and importance of the next game. They find ways where they’re ready to compete. Whatever is in front of them, they feel the more they get, the better they’ll play. They don’t mind playing big minutes.” Stevens, currently second in games played by a defenseman to Chris Chelios, said the toughest part was the mental grind, the swings that come with winning and losing, particularly this time of year. He also believed the more time he got on the ice, the better he performed. But he realized there was a balance to strike. He preferred shorter shifts with quick breaks rather than long ones. He said players need to know when to pull back, maybe letting a rush go when they have no chance to catch up. Nutrition and conditioning were key for him, as they are for Keith – who has talked about the importance of both. Stevens avoided sugar, loaded up on pasta or fish, drank plenty of water, and never went hungry. “Everyone wants to play a lot, but sometimes too much might (not) be (beneficial) for yourself and the team,” he said. “If you have the people there that you can trust in the other minutes and maybe take a bit away from myself and another key defenseman, why not, especially if it’s going to be a long series or a long playoff run? But when push comes to crunch or it comes to Game 7, I’m sure you’ll be ready for the 30 minutes or 32 minutes or whatever it takes at that point.”

SPORTS | The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com

Keith carrying impressive load for Hawks

29


WHITE SOX

Fanning 14 vs. Houston, Sale makes Sox history “That night, we just couldn’t really solve Sale. That night was all about Chris Sale.”

By BRIAN SANDALOW The Associated Press CHICAGO – White Sox manager Robin Ventura’s feelings about Chris Sale’s recent run were pretty clear Monday night. “He was fantastic,” Ventura said. “He’s really been on a roll, and some of the numbers he’s starting to rack up are impressive, especially how long this organization has been here.” Sale struck out 14 in eight innings, and the White Sox handed Houston its fifth straight loss, 3-1, on a rainy Monday night. Highly regarded Carlos Correa drove in the Astros’ run in his big league debut. Beyond that, Houston didn’t get much against Sale, who became the first Sox pitcher to fan at least 10 in four straight games, the team said in citing Elias Sports Bureau. It was Sale’s third straight game with 12 or more strikeouts. He gave up one run and five hits. “I don’t pay attention to any

A.J. Hinch Houston Astros manager

AP photo

White Sox starter Chris Sale delivers a pitch against the Houston Astros during the first inning Monday at U.S. Cellular Field. of that. I just try to come in and do my job,” Sale said of his recent numbers. “If it’s good, it’s good. If it’s bad, it’s bad. Just go out there with everything I’ve got.” Correa, the top pick in the 2012 draft, was promoted from Triple-A and became the youngest player in the majors

at age 20. Batting sixth and playing shortstop, he went 1 for 4 for the AL West leaders. In the fourth, Correa came up with runners at second and third and two outs. After a replay review, he was called safe for beating out a grounder to short for his first run batted in. David Robertson struck out

two for his 11th save. Avisail Garcia hit a two-run homer in the fourth in a game that started 25 minutes late because of rain and later was delayed for 38 minutes. And that was more than Sale (6-2) needed to beat Correa and the Astros. “That night, we just couldn’t really solve Sale,” Houston manager A.J. Hinch said. “That night was all about Chris Sale.” Lance McCullers (2-1) took the loss. He also was taken in the 2012 draft and became close friends with Correa while they were together in the Astros’ system. Correa was hitting a combined .335 with 10 home runs,

44 RBIs and 21 doubles with 18 stolen bases between Fresno and Double-A Corpus Christi. Correa popped out in his first at-bat. After his single, he grounded out and struck out to cap a day that saw him fly into Chicago and deal with two rain delays. “It was a crazy day,” Correa said. Coming off his 11-strikeout, complete game Wednesday against Baltimore, McCullers went seven innings and allowed three runs and four hits while striking out seven. Hinch said he didn’t consider taking McCullers out after the 38-minute delay in the bottom of the third. He wished somebody else had been removed, however. “I would have been fine if they didn’t bring Sale back, though,” Hinch said.

FINALLY, AN RBI

The Sox took a 1-0 lead in the second on Melky Cabrera’s single, driving in Adam LaRoche. For Cabrera, it was his first run batted in since May 28 in Baltimore.

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The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Wednesday, June 10, 2015

| SPORTS

30


SLAMMERS 11, WILD THINGS 1

MLB

FRONTIER LEAGUE West Division W L Pct Normal 15 6 .714 Rockford 15 7 .682 River City 12 10 .545 Schaumburg 10 12 .455 Joliet 9 13 .409 Windy City 7 13 .350 Gateway 7 16 .304 East Division W L Pct Evansville 15 6 .714 Southern Illinois 15 7 .682 Traverse City 12 9 .571 Florence 9 13 .409 Washington 9 13 .409 Lake Erie 8 12 .400 Frontier 7 13 .350 Tuesday’s Results Joliet 11, Washington 1 Traverse City 3, Gateway 1 Florence 11, River City 4 Lake Erie 3, Rockford 0 Southern Illinois 9, Frontier 3

GB — ½ 3½ 5½ 6½ 7½ 9 GB — ½ 3 6½ 6½ 6½ 7½

By MIKE FITZGERALD Shaw Media Correspondent JOLIET – Despite having batting averages below the Mendoza line, Max Casper and JD Williams provided an offensive spark for the Slammers in their series opener Tuesday night against the Washington Wild Things. Casper, with a .143 average, and Williams, hitting .128, combined for three hits and three RBIs in helping Joliet to a 5-1 lead over Washington in the eighth inning of the Frontier League game at Silver Cross Field. The Slammers added a 6-spot in the bottom of the eighth and won, 11-1, ending a three-game losing streak. The Slammers led the Wild Things, 4-1, before Casper, the eighth hitter in the batting order, tripled to right to score

Jack Cleary, who had doubled. It was Cleary’s second double of the night. The Slammers led the Wild Things, 2-1, in the bottom of the fourth inning when Williams, the ninth hitter in the order, hammered a two-run single to center to score Hunter Ridge and Cleary to make it 4-1. Right fielder Phil Bates hit his first home run of the season, a two-run shot over the left-field wall, to give the Slammers a 2-1 lead in the bottom of the third inning. Williams led off the inning with a single. Two errors and a single led to Washington’s first run in the top of the first inning. Slammers starter Andrew Strenge retired the first two Wild Things hitters before CJ Beatty reached on an error by first baseman Ridge. Sam Mende followed with a single

to center that advanced Beatty to third. Lee Orr then hit a routine ground ball to third baseman Mike Garza, but Garza could not find the handle and Beatty scored to make it 1-0. Joliet threatened in the bottom of the first inning when Charlie White led off with a single, and Phil Bates reached on an error by shortstop Jeudy Valdez. Wild Things lefty Tim Flight struck out Russell Moldenhauer and then had Garza hit into a 6-4-3 double play to end the inning. Flight entered the game 2-0 with a 3.62 ERA. Strenge, who entered with a 2-1 record and a 3.66 ERA, settled down after the first inning. He pitched five scoreless innings and struck out seven. David Kubiak pitched scoreless seventh and eighth innings for Joliet.

Pro hockey playoffs Stanley Cup Finals Game 4: Tampa Bay at Blackhawks, 7 p.m., NBCSN Pro baseball Cubs at Detroit, 6 p.m., CSN Houston at White Sox, 7 p.m., CSN+ Washington at New York Yankees, noon, MLBN Boston at Baltimore, 6 p.m., ESPN Golf European PGA Tour, Lyoness Open, first round, at Atzenbrugg, Austria, 4 a.m., TGC Soccer Men’s national teams, exhibition, Germany vs. United States, at Cologne, Germany, 1:30 p.m., FS1 Youth, FIFA, U-20 World Cup, round of 16, Brazil vs Uruguay, at New Plymouth, New Zealand, 2:30 a.m., FS1

PRO BASEBALL ROUNDUP

Abreu, Rodon power Sox past slumping Astros CHICAGO – Jose Abreu hit a tie-breaking two-run homer, Carlos Rodon threw six scoreless innings, and the White Sox beat Houston, 4-2, on Tuesday night to hand the Astros their sixth straight loss despite top draft pick Carlos Correa hitting his first homer. Abreu’s 10th home run of the season broke a scoreless tie in the bottom of the sixth and propelled the Sox to their second win to start the three-game series with the AL West-leading Astros. The homer and Melky Cabrera’s two-run double in the eighth were enough for the Sox to continue the Astros’ slide while Houston’s offensive woes continued. Rodon (2-0) allowed four hits and two walks while striking out five and throwing a career-high 116 pitches.

Except for Abreu’s home run, Keuchel (7-2) was strong in the loss.

Sanchez and Davis lead Tigers to win over Cubs

DETROIT – If Anibal Sanchez’s slump is over, he owes a big thanks to Rajai Davis. Sanchez pitched 72⁄3 scoreless innings and Davis had a big day at bat and in the field as the Detroit Tigers beat the Cubs, 6-0, Tuesday night. Davis had a double, a triple and stole a homer from David Ross, while Sanchez (4-7) ended a four-start slump that saw Detroit lose all four games while he posted a 7.71 ERA. Sanchez allowed six hits and walked two while striking out seven. “I started hitting the corners and keeping my pitches in the right zone for the situation,” San-

chez said. “I give all the credit to James (McCann) – I don’t think I shook him off once all night.” Jon Lester (4-5) took the loss, giving up five runs on nine hits and two walks in 41⁄3 innings. “He had good stuff, but they kept finding places to hit the ball,” Cubs manager Joe Maddon said. “They weren’t pummeling him by any means, but they never let him get into a groove.”

Heston pitches no-hitter to lead Giants over Mets

NEW YORK – Chris Heston pitched the first no-hitter in the majors this season in his 13th career start, leading the San Francisco Giants over the New York Mets, 5-0, Tuesday night. The rookie allowed three baserunners – all on hit batters. He also had a two-run single for his first big league RBIs and finished with two more hits

than the Mets. “Lot of emotions going through my mind right now,” Heston said moments after the final out. “Hasn’t sunk in yet. Looking forward to catching my breath and celebrating a little bit.” The pitching-rich Giants have thrown a no-hitter in four straight seasons, with Heston following Matt Cain’s perfect game against Houston in 2012 and hitless gems by Tim Lincecum in 2013 and ’14. The only other team to accomplish that feat was the Los Angeles Dodgers from 1962-65, according to STATS. Hall of Famer Sandy Koufax pitched all four of those. Heston (6-4) struck out 11 – six looking – for the defending World Series champions and allowed just two balls into the outfield.

– Wire reports

31

• Wednesday, June 10, 2015

NATIONAL LEAGUE Central Division W L Pct GB St. Louis 38 20 .655 — Cubs 30 26 .536 7 Pittsburgh 31 27 .534 7 Cincinnati 26 31 .456 11½ Milwaukee 22 37 .373 16½ East Division W L Pct GB New York 31 28 .525 — Washington 30 28 .517 ½ Atlanta 28 30 .483 2½ Miami 24 35 .407 7 Philadelphia 22 38 .367 9½ West Division W L Pct GB Los Angeles 33 25 .569 — San Francisco 33 26 .559 ½ San Diego 30 30 .500 4 Arizona 27 30 .474 5½ Colorado 26 30 .464 6 Tuesday’s Results Detroit 6, Cubs 0 Milwaukee 4, Pittsburgh 1 N.Y. Yankees 6, Washington 1 Toronto 4, Miami 3 Cincinnati 11, Philadelphia 2 Atlanta 6, San Diego 5 San Francisco 5, N.Y. Mets 0 St. Louis at Colorado (n) Arizona at L.A. Dodgers (n) Wednesday’s Games Cubs (Arrieta 5-4) at Detroit (Greene 4-5), 6:08 p.m. Philadelphia at Cincinnati, 11:35 a.m. Miami at Toronto, 11:37 a.m. Washington at N.Y. Yankees, 12:05 p.m. St. Louis at Colorado, 3:10 p.m. Milwaukee at Pittsburgh, 6:05 p.m. San Diego) at Atlanta, 6:10 p.m. San Francisco at N.Y. Mets), 6:10 p.m. Arizona at L.A. Dodgers, 9:10 p.m.

Bottom of order delivers as Joliet ends 3-game skid

WHAT TO WATCH

SPORTS | The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com

AMERICAN LEAGUE Central Division W L Pct GB Kansas City 33 23 .589 — Minnesota 33 25 .569 1 Detroit 31 28 .525 3½ White Sox 27 30 .474 6½ Cleveland 27 30 .474 6½ East Division W L Pct GB New York 33 25 .569 — Tampa Bay 31 28 .525 2½ Toronto 30 30 .500 4 Baltimore 27 30 .474 5½ Boston 27 32 .458 6½ West Division W L Pct GB Houston 34 26 .567 — Texas 30 27 .526 2½ Los Angeles 29 29 .500 4 Seattle 26 32 .448 7 Oakland 23 36 .390 10½ Tuesday’s Results White Sox 4, Houston 2 Detroit 6, Cubs 0 Baltimore 1, Boston 0 N.Y. Yankees 6, Washington 1 Toronto 4, Miami 3 L.A. Angels 8, Tampa Bay 2 Seattle 3, Cleveland 2 Kansas City 2, Minnesota 0 Texas at Oakland (n) Wednesday’s Games Houston (Velasquez 0-0) at White Sox (Quintana 2-6), 7:10 p.m. Cubs (Arrieta 5-4) at Detroit (Greene 4-5), 6:08 p.m. Miami at Toronto, 11:37 a.m. Washington at N.Y. Yankees, 12:05 p.m. Boston at Baltimore, 6:05 p.m. L.A. Angels at Tampa Bay, 6:10 p.m. Seattle at Cleveland, 6:10 p.m. Kansas City at Minnesota, 7:10 p.m. Texas at Oakland, 9:05 p.m.


The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Wednesday, June 10, 2015

32

L FOOD

EMON

OVE

Sweet-tart infusions made for kids, adults

AP photos

Mixed Berry

Mango-Chili

Mixed Melon

1 medium cucumber, peeled and seeded 2 tablespoons chopped fresh mint 8 to 16 ounces gin (optional)

2 cups fresh berries (strawberries, blueberries, raspberries, blackberries or a combination) 8 to 16 ounces vodka (optional)

1 cup fresh mango chunks 1 to 2 serrano chilies (remove seeds for less heat) 8 to 16 ounces tequila (optional)

1 cup cut watermelon 1 cup cut honeydew or cantaloupe melon, or a mix 8 to 16 ounces light rum (optional)

Nutrition information per serving: 70 calories; 0 calories from fat (0 percent of total calories); 0 g fat (0 g saturated; 0 g trans fats); 0 mg cholesterol; 15 mg sodium; 19 g carbohydrate; 1 g fiber; 16 g sugar; 0 g protein.

Nutrition information per serving: 60 calories; 0 calories from fat (0 percent of total calories); 0 g fat (0 g saturated; 0 g trans fats); 0 mg cholesterol; 15 mg sodium; 19 g carbohydrate; 0 g fiber; 17 g sugar; 0 g protein.

Nutrition information per serving: 60 calories; 0 calories from fat (0 percent of total calories); 0 g fat (0 g saturated; 0 g trans fats); 0 mg cholesterol; 20 mg sodium; 19 g carbohydrate; 0 g fiber; 17 g sugar; 0 g protein.

Nutrition information per serving: 60 calories; 0 calories from fat (0 percent of total calories); 0 g fat (0 g saturated; 0 g trans fats); 0 mg cholesterol; 15 mg sodium; 16 g carbohydrate; 0 g fiber; 15 g sugar; x g protein.

Straight-up fresh lemonade is, of course, delicious. It’s the classic summer refreshment. And we’re going to walk you through making a truly wonderful basic lemonade, as well as some terrific infused lemonades that doctor up that basic batch with some fantastic complementary flavors. But first, let’s move way beyond basic. Because as good as a straight up lemonade is, we can’t help but think it gets even better when you add a little splash of something adults-only. Now we’re talking fun in the sun. The important thing to consider when adding alcohol to lemonade is you are playing with a highly acidic ingredient. This means you’ll want to select liquors that play nicely with that. They should either be relatively neutral to let the lemon juice shine, or they should be complementary. Tequila and mezcal, for example, love citrus. And don’t limit yourself to the hard stuff. Rose and sweet white wines, such as riesling, also are nice. So are hard cider and India pale ale. Always plan for 1 to 2 ounces of liquor per serving of lemonade. While bottled lemon juice is fine for most cooking, freshly squeezed juice shines and makes a real difference in drinks such as these. To prepare these infused lemonades, simply pick a flavor combination below, then combine it with our Base Lemonade. For best flavor, be sure to let the mixture chill at least 2 hours.

Base Lemonade

Infused lemonades (from left): cucumber, mixed berry, herb, mango-chili and watermelon.

Cucumber

By ALISON LADMAN • The Associated Press

Herbal ¼ cup fresh lemon

verbena leaves 1 tablespoon fresh lemon thyme 2 tablespoons fresh mint leaves 8 to 16 ounces vodka (optional)

Nutrition information per serving: 50 calories; 0 calories from fat (0 percent of total calories); 0 g fat (0 g saturated; 0 g trans fats); 0 mg cholesterol; 15 mg sodium; 16 g carbohydrate; 0 g fiber; 14 g sugar; 0 g protein.

1 cup freshly squeezed lemon juice (about 4 to 6 lemons) ½ cup honey Pinch of salt Cold water Choose the flavor you’d like to infuse your lemonade with. Combine those ingredients in a blender, then add the base lemonade ingredients, the lemon juice, sugar or honey and salt. Blend until very smooth. Transfer to a ½-gallon pitcher, pouring it through a fine mesh strainer. Add enough water to bring the volume to the top of the pitcher. Refrigerate for at least 2 hours. Stir well and serve over ice.

Nutrition information per serving: 50 calories; 0 calories from fat (0 percent of total calories); 0 g fat (0 g saturated; 0 g trans fats); 0 mg cholesterol; 15 mg sodium; 16 g carbohydrate; 0 g fiber; 14 g sugar; 0 g protein.


33

The doctor is in! Use these medical professionals as a resource for your needs. A different question will be answered by each on the second Wednesday of each month

Ask The Experts! Here’s your chance to get FREE advice and answers from some of the area’s most distinguished medical professionals. Please include your Name, Address, Phone Number and Health Question. Send your question to:

“Health Beat” The Herald-News 2175 Oneida St. Joliet, IL 60435

Q: How common is hearing loss? A: Over 36 million people in the United States have hearing loss. Although hearing loss is often associated with aging, hearing loss is present in newborns, children, teenagers, young adults and adults. The majority (65%) of people with hearing loss are younger than age 65. There are more than six million people in the U.S. between the ages of 18 and 44 with hearing loss, and nearly one and a half million are school age. Hearing loss affects all age groups. Here are some general guidelines regarding the incidence of hearing loss: • 3 in 10 people over age 60 have hearing loss; • 1 in 6 baby boomers or 14.6%, have a hearing problem; • 1 in 14 Generation Xers or 7.4%, already have hearing loss; • At least 1.4 million children (18 or younger) have hearing problems; • It is estimated that 3 in 1000 infants are born with serious to profound hearing loss. If you have any concerns about your hearing or that of a loved one you may contact our office with any questions or to schedule a hearing evaluation.

Dr. Karen Pastell is a licensed audiologist in Joliet with over 25 years of experience.

For more information or to participate in this monthly feature, call your sales account representative or 815-280-4101

PODIATRY

Health Beat Question Form

ESSINGTON PODIATRY GROUP 1960 Essington Road, Joliet

Mail this form to: “Health Beat” at The Herald-News 2175 Oneida St., Joliet, IL 60435

815-436-3555

Name:______________________________________________ Address: ___________________________________________ ____________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________

Andrew Wahl, D.P.M. * Board Certified By The American Board of Podiatry Surgery Board Certified*

* Board Certified By The American board of Podiatry Orthopedics

Q:

I am 80 years old and in good health, but I have a very red swollen bump on the top of my big toe. I move around okay, but I’m limited by the toe pain. Am I too old for bunion surgery?

A:

No. If the bunion is an arthritic problem, then removing the bony bump, a simple bunionectomy, or joint replacement can be done. This type of surgery will heal quicker than a more complicated bunionectomy where the bone is broken and shifted. Removing the arthritic bone and replacing the joint with an implant, if needed, will increase the movement of the toe and eliminate the pain.

Phone: ( ______ ) ____________________________________ Health Questions: __________________________________ ____________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________

www.prairielandaudiology.com

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• Wednesday, June 10, 2015

Answers will run the second Wednesday of each month.

815-744-5661

Karen Pastell, Au.D. Doctor of Audiology

THE HERALD-NEWS | The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com

HEALTH BEAT

Prairieland Audiology LLC 2121 Oneida St. Suite 303 Joliet, IL 60435


The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Wednesday, June 10, 2015

34

PUZZLES CROSSWORD

SUDOKU

BRIDGE by Phillip Alder

The tough lead to remember well

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Christina Rossetti, a 19th-century English poet, said, “Better by far that you should forget and smile than that you should remember and be sad.” In bridge, though, if you remember, you will often end up smiling; if you forget, you will surely be sad. In today’s deal, look only at the West hand. East opens one club, South overcalls four spades, and after two passes, East doubles to show a very strong hand that is presumably short in spades. After West decides to pass (do you agree?), what should he lead? East might open two clubs, but three-suiters need bidding space, which would be at a premium after a two clubs-two diamonds-three clubs start to the sequence. South made a sensible four-spade overcall. This would typically have required an eight-card suit, but with two singletons, it was a good idea to consume as much bidding space as possible. Make life as difficult for responder as you can. Over East’s balancing double, West had a tough call. His balanced hand suggested defense, but his useful minor-suit honors hinted at offense. (In this layout, six clubs fails if South leads a spade.) I think most experts would have passed. When the opponents sacrifice, especially at a high level, it is (almost always) right to lead a trump. In this carefully constructed deal, if everyone is playing double-dummy (knowing where all 52 cards lie), that is the only lead to defeat four spades. South can be held to seven spades and two club ruffs in the dummy. ******


Seniors avoid taking meds for a variety of reasons

30 Fr. ladies 31 It may be a step up 33 Go from 30 to 35 degrees, say 35 Noted quartet

49 Take ___ down memory lane 52 Summed up

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4 Panhandle state: Abbr.

54 Register printout

7 ___ sizes

57 Cholesterol type, for short

8 Littlest ones in litters

D A E W O O

O X E N

M O L O L T U O S C V I R S E I N K I D I D I D E A D D

Z I T I

I S A A C

T E N T O N S

R E N T O U T

E S P R I R S T O U S U B N D I E M R G P I N E A D W E

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

S E N A T P L U S

O L G A

I T S I N

H I R E

E C C L E S

P E A K

S M U T

N E S

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64 Not conducted elsewhere

6 Extra-wide shoe spec

58 Fit

A G I R N E E E S T S O E N S C H E I R R

S T A I R

63 Hobo transporter

5 Content of some festivals

51 German “Oh!”

I F E D I E R A L E E M E F M S E B F R A I R S E A T H R I A E R I P A R E C H A P E A T E S I T E

M A R L A

62 Jots down

2 20,000 pounds

47 Peculiar sundial numeral

F L A B

3

DOWN

45 Surrealist Max

A I W A

2

13

1 Slow movers

44 Horne with backup horns

U N R E S T S

W E A R

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

1

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40 Competitor of Mug

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE S W E E P A R S A N I T G E O

60 Word spelled out in an Aretha Franklin hit

37 “This Land Is 65 Difficult Your Land” composer/singer

G E T I N O N

• Write to Dr. Komaroff at askdoctor.com, or Ask Doctor K, 10 Shattuck St., Second Floor, Boston, MA 02115.

28 Lets out

Edited by Will Shortz

9 Executive fiscal grp. 10 Reason for extra play 11 Spice up 12 Unshiny finishes 14 Send elsewhere, as a patient 15 Go along with 20 Fundamentally 23 Manager’s credential, for short 26 “Stee-rike!” caller

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PUZZLE BY JOE KROZEL

28 Co-owner of a French firm, maybe

39 Mai ___ 41 “Collages” author

50 ___ & Whitney (aircraft engine manufacturer)

52 “___ the bag” 29 French legislative 42 Castilian vis-à-vis 55 Sports event body Spanish with electronic 32 Sort of: Suffix scoring 43 Kind of strike 34 That, in Madrid 56 Everest, for one 44 Judeo-Spanish 36 Hero pilots 59 Yes, in 46 Gather in rows, Yokohama 37 Become a part of as cloth 61 Party in Mideast 38 Social 48 “O.K., here goes negotiations, for disturbances …” short

Online subscriptions: Today’s puzzle and more than 7,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Read about and comment on each puzzle: nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/studentcrosswords.

HOROSCOPE TODAY – You have the talent and drive to reach your goals. Put self-doubt and anxiety behind you and believe in your abilities. A positive attitude will encourage others to back your plans. Enthusiasm and intuition are your strong suits and should be cultivated. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) – Don’t compromise your good name. Trying to impress others by embellishing what you have to offer won’t work. Personal and professional dealings will solidify faster if you are up-front. CANCER (June 21-July 22) – Be a participant. Your community will benefit from your talents, and you will learn more about the environment you live in. Important friendships will result from your involvement in local affairs. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) – Excessive debt or overspending will leave you in a vulnerable position. Stick to your budget and limit major expenditures until your financial situation has stabilized. Stop being so generous. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) – Dwelling

on past regrets will lead to a loss of confidence. Focus on positive goals. A change in attitude will improve your image and increase your chance to advance. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) – Don’t feel guilty if you pamper yourself once in a while. Everyday pressures can take a toll on your health, and making a point to do the things you find most relaxing will help. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) – Set aside some quiet time and give your mind the freedom to wander. A calming atmosphere will spark your imagination and help you formulate and initiate your ideas. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) – Difficulties getting along with others will quash any hope of group activities. Consider devoting your time and attention to something you can work on all by yourself. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) – The constant pursuit of career goals will limit the time you spend with loved ones. Leave room in your schedule to

bond with those who mean the most to you. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) – A changing economy will keep you on your toes with regard to investments. Time you spend researching and developing your financial plans will be well spent. Utilize and market your skills with precision. PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) – Use your initiative. Waiting for someone else to lead the way will slow down your progress. Step up to the plate and make things happen. ARIES (March 21-April 19) – Attend local cultural events, or head to regions that inspire you. Don’t limit yourself to the same old routine. Investigate the neighborhood or an unfamiliar destination in order to discover something out of the ordinary. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) – You can expand your job prospects and your circle of friends by becoming more involved in community affairs. New friendships will result in more exposure for your ideas and plans.

• Wednesday, June 10, 2015

strategies to help your mother stay on schedule. For example, she can use a seven-day pillbox; set alarms on her watch, phone or clock; or make a chart that shows when to take which medicine. If your mom uses a computer or smartphone, a medication management app could help. These apps organize pill information and remind you when to take them. There also are automatic pill dispensers that pop out the right pills at the right times. Many pharmacies offer programs to call and remind you to get a prescription refilled. Other programs estimate when you’ll finish a medication and automatically refill the prescription, then remind you to pick it up. Maybe side effects are a problem. If so, encourage your mother to talk to her doctor. The doctor may be able to switch the medication or adjust the dose to eliminate the side effects, or at least make them more manageable. Finally, I’ve found that my patients are more likely to take their medications if they understand why they need them. When a doctor hands you a prescription, he or she should make sure you understand what it’s for and what will happen to you if you don’t take it. Your mother should not hesitate to ask for this information -- even if she has been taking a particular drug for years.

ACROSS 1 Bitter conflict 7 Speaker ___ 13 More impoverished 15 Processed bauxite 16 Longtime “General Hospital” actress 17 Place for a “Don’t Mess With Texas” buckle, perhaps 18 Former giant in communications, for short 19 Egocentric demand 21 “Scram!” 22 Seems about to happen 24 Chicago-toToronto dir. 25 Like a smooth operator 27 Not send an expected invitation, say

L A D I N O

ASK DOCTOR K Anthony L. Komaroff

Crossword

PUZZLES & ADVICE & HOROSCOPE | The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com

Dear Doctor K: My mother is supposed to take several medications each day, but she doesn’t take them consistently. What can I do to get her back on track? Dear Reader: I’ll bet when you were a kid and your parents were hounding you about taking your medicine, you never imagined a day would come when you’d be doing the same to them. Nearly three out of four Americans report that they do not always take their medication as directed. So there are a lot of people who are in the same position as your mother. And, obviously, for the medicines to work, a person’s got to take them. I don’t know your mother, so I don’t know why she isn’t taking her medications as she should. But I can tell you about some reasons my patients have shared with me for not taking theirs. One of the biggest issues is cost. People are often prescribed a brand-name drug that they can’t afford. If cost is an issue for your mother, she should talk to her doctor or pharmacist. A generic alternative may be just as effective. If your mother is on Medicare and hasn’t enrolled in the Medicare drug program (called Part D), suggest that she check into that. It may be able to cover a big fraction of her drug costs for relatively little money (compared to the cost of the drugs). Another reason people don’t take their medicines as directed is the fact that many older people are on multiple medicines. It can be hard to keep track of what to take, and when. Many people simply forget. If you think that may be a problem, suggest

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The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Wednesday, June 10, 2015

36

COMICS Arlo & Janis

Garfield

Big Nate

Frank & Earnest

Crankshaft

Soup to Nutz

Stone Soup

The Born Loser

Dilbert

Rose Is Rose


Blondie

Pearls Before Swine

Real Life Adventures

DEAR ABBY Jeanne Phillips divorced, but we didn’t stop going to church. It’s crazy, I know. After we divorced, I knew I messed up and deep down I knew I loved him. So, now that we have remarried, it seems like he’s taking the role of Christian husband back to biblical times. This means he is the head of the house (which I get), but to the point where I am almost like a fixture. I would say I’m here for my looks, but I am overweight. I would say it’s for the sex, but it isn’t happening morning, noon and night, if you know what I mean. I would say it is the money, but now, after his last raise, he makes more than I do. He cooks most of the time because he gets home before me. The house is always clean, and we share the household bills and expenses. So, I’m kinda lost and confused. Do I have a purpose here? Or am I only here to help pay the bills? – Starting to Wonder Dear Starting to Wonder: Only your husband can answer that question. However, part of a husband’s duties to his wife is to make her feel “honored and cherished,” and if that isn’t happening, your remarriage is in trouble. Marriage counseling (possibly within the church) might help you to reconnect with each other, and I strongly recommend it. Unless you find out why you’re unhappy and fix it, this marriage will not last.

• Write to Dear Abby at www.dearabby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.

• Wednesday, June 10, 2015

The Argyle Sweater

Dear Abby: Several months after I had my first daughter from a six-year relationship that ended sadly, I started flirting with a married man. (I realize now that I was still heartbroken and trying desperately to forget my ex.) The flirtation turned into a full-blown affair that resulted in another child. Her father isn’t in the picture because the now-ex-wife (who still lives with him) forbids him from having any contact whatsoever with our daughter. I admit I have lied by telling my little girl that her daddy is a workaholic, and that’s the reason he doesn’t see her when she asks about him. She is now 4. How or when do I tell her the truth? Would counseling help? – On the Spot in California Dear On the Spot: You didn’t mention whether your former lover is contributing financially to the support of his daughter, but if he isn’t, please make sure he does. An attorney can help, and so can the child-support agency in your state. And yes, it would also be a good idea to discuss this with a counselor to help you communicate to your daughter, in a way that’s age-appropriate and won’t damage her self-esteem, that Daddy won’t be in the picture. It’s important she knows she can trust her mother to give honest answers when she asks a question, because if she doubts it, it may create problems when she’s older. Dear Abby: My husband and I were going along in life, doing it our way, until we decided we wanted to return to the church, so we stopped drinking and smoking pot. We hit a rough patch in that journey and

COMICS & ADVICE | The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com

Daughter with absent dad 37 needs to be told the truth

Beetle Bailey


The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Wednesday, June 10, 2015

| TELEVISION

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Ent (N) Criminal Minds ’ (14-L,V) CSI: Cyber ’ (14-L,V) (CC) The Briefcase (N) ’ (CC) CBS 2 !News (N) ! News (N) Hollywood (N) ’ (PG-L) (CC) American Ninja Warrior ’ (PG) (CC) I Can Do That NBC 5 Mod Fam Celebrity Wife Swap (N) (CC) The Middle ’ Goldbergs blackish ’ ABC 7 !ABC7 News Wheel (N) Supernatural (14-D,L,V) (CC) !WGN News at Nine (N) (CC) WGN 9 Two/Half Men Two/Half Men Arrow ’ (14-L,V) (CC) Sanford & Son Sanford & Son Good Times Good Times All in Family All in Family Jeffersons Jeffersons ANT 9.2 !Chicago Tonight (N) ’ Suze Orman’s Financial Solutions for You ’ (G) (CC) PBS 11 !PBS NewsHour (N) ’ (CC) Rick Steves Travelscope Globe Trekker (G) (CC) (DVS) Wild! ’ (G) (CC) (DVS) PBS 20 Charlie Rose (N) ’ (CC) Mike & Molly Mike & Molly ! 7 Eyewitness News There Yet? There Yet? Family Guy ’ Engagement CIU 26 Cops Rel. Cops Rel. Forensic Files Forensic Files Paternity Judge Faith U2 26.2 Jerry Springer ’ (14) (CC) Laverne Laverne Laverne ME 26.3 M*A*S*H (PG) M*A*S*H (PG) Andy Griffith Andy Griffith Laverne The Wild, Wild West (PG) Mission: Impossible (PG-V) The Fugitive (PG) Ironside (Part 2 of 2) (PG) ME2 26.4 Bernie Mac Deja Vu (’06) ››› Denzel Washington, Val Kilmer. BNC 26.5 The Hughleys The Hughleys Bernie Mac Big Bang Mod Fam !News (N) ’ (14-L) Bullseye (N) ’ (PG-L) MasterChef (N) FOX 32 Ghost Whisperer (PG-L) (CC) Ghost Whisperer (PG-L) (CC) Ghost Whisperer ’ (PG) (CC) ION 38 Ghost Whisperer ’ (PG) (CC) Tierra de Reyes (N) ’ (SS) El Senor de los Cielos (N) ’ Avenida Brasil (N) ’ (SS) TEL 44 Caso Cerrado: Edicion Family Feud "MLB Baseball Houston Astros at Chicago White Sox. From U.S. Cellular Field in Chicago. (N) MY 50 Family Feud Fugitivos (Series Finale) (N) El Cartel de los Sapos (N) TF 60 7 Seconds (’05) Wesley Snipes, Tamzin Outhwaite. (SS) Amores con Trampa (N) Lo Imperdonable Que te Perdone (N) UNI 66 La sombra del pasado (N)

6:00 BASIC CABLE A&E AMC ANIMAL BET BIGTEN BRAVO CMT COM CSN DISC DISN E! ESPN ESPN2 FAM FOOD FX HALL HGTV HIST LIFE MTV NICK OWN OXY SPIKE SYFY TBS TCM TLC TLN TNT TOON TRAVEL TVLAND USA VH1

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!News (N) CSI: Crime Scene Investigat’n Corden (N) !News (N) Tonight Show-J. Fallon (N) Meyers (N) !News (N) Jimmy Kimmel Live (14-D,L) Nightline (N) Name Game Friends (14-D) Friends (PG) Raymond Day at a Time Day at a Time 3’s Company 3’s Company Suze Orman’s Financial Solutions for You ’ (G) (CC) !Journal (G) Tavis Smiley Charlie Rose (N) ’ (CC) Seinfeld (G) Seinfeld (PG) King King American Dad King of Hill Cleveland King of Hill Carol Burnett Perry Mason (PG) (CC) Perry Mason The Man From U.N.C.L.E. The Saint (PG) Fallen (’98) ›› Denzel Washington. Mod Fam TMZ (PG) (CC) Dish Nation TMZ Live (PG) Ghost Whisperer (PG-L) (CC) Ghost Whisperer ’ (PG) (CC) !Telemundo (N) "Titulares, Mas Tierra de Reyes ’ (SS) Walking Dead Big Bang The Walking Dead ’ (14-L,V) !Noticias 66: El Chavo (G) Fugitivos (Series Finale) (N) !Noticias 66: !Noticiero (N) "Contacto Deportivo (N)

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Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty (4:00) We Were Soldiers (’02) Sahara (’05) ››‡ Matthew McConaughey, Steve Zahn. (CC) Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome (’85) ››› Mel Gibson, Tina Turner. Insane Pools: Deep End Tanked ’ (PG) (CC) Tanked ’ (PG) Tanked ’ (PG) (CC) Tanked ’ (PG) Tanked ’ (PG) (CC) Chocolate City (’15) Premiere. Robert Ri’chard. (CC) The Game (N) Frankie (N) Post Show (N) Frankie-Neffe Chocolate City (’15) (CC) The Game ’ The Game "BTN Football in 60 "Michigan State (N) "BTN Football in 60 "Treasure "Michigan State "Treasure "College Field Hockey Million Dollar Listing Million Dollar Listing Million Dollar Listing Million Dollar Listing (N) Million Dollar Listing Housewives/NYC CMT Red Carpet 2015 (N) 2015 CMT Music Awards (N) (Live) (PG-L) (CC) 2015 CMT Music Awards From Nashville, Tenn.; fans vote for winners. (PG-L) South Park South Park South Park South Park South Park South Park South Park South Park Daily Show (N) Nightly (N) At Mid. (N) South Park "MLB Baseball Chicago Cubs at Detroit Tigers. (N Subject to Blackout) (Live) "Postgame (N) "SportsNet (N) "Postgame (N) "SportsNet (N) "SportsNet (N) "SportsNet (N) Alaskan Bush People (14-L,V) Alaskan Bush People (14-V) Siberian Cut ’ (MA) (CC) Siberian Cut (N) ’ (MA) (CC) Siberian Cut (N) ’ (MA) (CC) Siberian Cut (N) ’ (MA) (CC) Girl Meets Jessie (G) Jessie (G) Jessie (G) Austin & Ally Liv & Maddie K.C. Under. I Didn’t Do It So Raven So Raven Jessie ’ (G) Jessie ’ (G) The Soup (PG) E! News (N) (PG) He’s Just Not That Into You E! News (N) (PG) He’s Just Not That Into You (’09) ›› Ben Affleck, Jennifer Aniston. "MLB Baseball Boston Red Sox at Baltimore Orioles. (N Subject to Blackout) (Live) "Baseball Tonight (N)(CC) "SportsCenter (N) (Live)(CC) "SportsCenter (N) (Live)(CC) "SportsCenter (N) (Live)(CC) "BattleFrog Ch. (N) "2014 CrossFit Games(CC) "2014 CrossFit Games(CC) "BattleFrog College Champ. "Baseball Tonight (N)(CC) Boy Meets... Boy Meets... Baby Daddy Melissa Melissa (N) Daddy (N) The 700 Club ’ (G) (CC) Varsity Blues (’99) ›› Premiere. James Van Der Beek. Diners, Drive Diners, Drive My. Diners My. Diners My. Diners My. Diners (N) Craziest (N) Guilty Pleas. Diners, Drive Diners, Drive My. Diners My. Diners Mike & Molly Mike & Molly Sweet Home Alabama (’02) ›› Reese Witherspoon. Jack and Jill (’11) › Sweet Home Alabama (’02) ›› Reese Witherspoon. Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls The Waltons ’ (G) (CC) The Waltons ’ (G) (CC) The Middle ’ The Middle ’ The Middle ’ The Middle ’ Golden Girls Property Brothers (G) (CC) Property Brothers (G) (CC) Hunters Int’l (N) Hunters (N) Hunt Intl (N) Property Brothers (G) (CC) Brother vs. Brother (G) (CC) American Pickers (PG) (CC) American Pickers (PG) (CC) American Pickers (PG) (CC) American Pickers (PG-L) (CC) American Pickers (PG) (CC) American Pickers (N) ’ (PG) (5:00) The Novack Murders Cleveland Abduction (’15) Taryn Manning. (14-L,S,V) (CC) Cleveland Abduction: Beyond Beyond the Headlines Cleveland Abduction (’15) Girl Code (N) Girl Code ’ Catfish: The TV Show ’ Catfish: The TV Show ’ Catfish: The TV Show ’ Girl Code ’ Girl Code ’ Teen Mom ’ (PG-L) (CC) Henry Danger SpongeBob Full House (G) Full House (G) Full House (G) Full House (G) Fresh Prince Fresh Prince Friends (PG) Friends (PG) Friends ’ (PG) (CC) Dateline on OWN (14-V) (CC) Dateline on OWN ’ (14-D,V) 20/20 on OWN ’ (14) (CC) 20/20 on ID ’ (14-V) (CC) 20/20 on OWN ’ (14) (CC) 20/20 on ID ’ (14-V) (CC) Prancing (N) Play-Play (Series Premiere) Prancing Player Gets Played Madea’s Family Reunion (’06) (5:45) Madea’s Family Reunion (’06) ››‡ Tyler Perry. Jail (PG-L,V) Cops (14-V) Cops (14-V) Cops (PG-L,V) Cops ’ (PG-L) (CC) (5:56) Cops ’ Jail ’ (PG-L) Cops ’ (14-L,V) (CC) Cops ’ (PG-L,V) (CC) (5:00) The Lost World: Jurassic Park (’97) ››‡ Jurassic Park III (’01) ››‡ Sam Neill, William H. Macy. The 13th Warrior (’99) ›› Antonio Banderas, Diane Venora. Seinfeld (PG) Seinfeld (CC) Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Conan (N) (14) The Office (14) Conan (14) (5:15) Janie (’44) ›› (CC) Bathing Beauty (’44) ›› Red Skelton, Esther Williams. (CC) Road to Singapore (’40) ››› Bing Crosby. Getting Gertie’s Garter (’45) ››‡ Still Didn’t Know I Didn’t Know I Was Preg Still Didn’t Know Still Didn’t Know (N) Diagnose Me ’ (14) (CC) Diagnose Me ’ (14) (CC) Amazing Darryll King Diane Ministry Specl Jubilee-Dick Jerusalem Robison Ministry Specl Discovery Joni The 700 Club ’ (G) (CC) Castle (PG-D,L,V) (CC) (DVS) Castle (PG-D,L,V) (CC) (DVS) Castle ’ (PG-L,V) (CC) (DVS) Castle ’ (PG-D,L,S,V) CSI: NY ’ (14-L,V) (CC) CSI: NY ’ (14-L,V) (CC) Wrld, Gumball Teen Titans King of Hill King of Hill Bob’s Burgers Cleveland American Dad American Dad Family Guy ’ Family Guy ’ Chicken Aqua Teen Man v. Food Man v. Food Man v. Food Man v. Food Man- Food (N) Man Fi. Food Bizarre Foods America (PG) Bizarre Foods/Zimmern Man Fi. Food Man Fi. Food The Dukes of Hazzard (G) 2015 CMT Music Awards (N) (Live) (PG-L) (CC) Raymond King King King King Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Swab Stories Swab (N) Walk-Sh. (N) Love & Hip Hop: Atlanta ’ Love & Hip Hop: Atlanta ’ The Switch (’10) ››‡ Jennifer Aniston, Jason Bateman.


COMMUNITY

“Babies, babies, babies”

877-264-CLAS

CLASSIFIED

(2527)

Photo by: K. Wilber

classified@shawsuburban.com TheHerald-News.com/classified

Submit your photo, including a headline and photographer’s name to MyPhotos at

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 10, 2015

classified@shawsuburban.com

PLANT WORKERS FORKLIFT DRIVERS NEEDED United States Cold Storage Minooka is seeking permanent, full time forklift drivers. 2nd, 3rd and weekend shift openings. Starting Pay is $14.85 and benefits are fantastic!

Animal Care

PET GROOMER

Timberline Animal Hospital in Joliet. Must be experienced. Full Time. Call 815-729-1556

CASHIER/CLERK - full time Apply at: Shorewood Home & Auto 1002 W. Jefferson, Shorewood

DRIVERS:

Crest Hill Linehaul Openings! Great Pay, Benefits & Hometime! CDL-A w/X & T, 1 yr. Exp. Req. (EOE/AA)

Old Dominion Freight Line Call Mike Jeske: 815-730-7592

Drivers: Local Recruiting Fair Mon 6/15 - Wed 6/17, 8:30a-4:30p CDL (A or B) 2 yrs exp Apply: TruckMovers.com Walk-ins Welcome Hampton Inn, 6540 S. Cicero Ave, Bedford Park, IL Call Kim: 855-204-3216 BREAKING NEWS available 24/7 at TheHerald-News.com

Please email resume to midwestforkliftjobs@ uscold.com or drop off resume to guard shack at 601 Twin Rail Drive, Minooka, IL 60447

Family owned Manufacturing Facility looking for entry level Plant Workers for tasks such as: production assistance, cleaning, painting, and various duties as needed. Must be a hard working team player with a positive attitude able to handle a fast paced environment. Apply in person at: Tri-State Asphalt 1362 Bungalow Rd, Morris

HANDYMAN for Joliet rental property. Must have tools & vehicle. Daytime hours only. Call 815-726-2000

JOB FAIR

Wednesday, June 10 9am-3pm La Quinta Inn & Suites 225 West South Frontage Rd Bolingbrook, IL 60440

General Labor (packaging candy), Machine Operator, Janitorial/Sanitation 1st, 2nd, 3rd shift available. $9-$10/hr plus OT. Holiday pay / longevity bonuses avail. Ask for Kathy or Estefania with Elite Staffing at 630-240-6760 Everify

Send your Classified Advertising 24/7 to: Email: classified@ shawsuburban.com Fax: 815-477-8898 or online at: TheHerald-News.com/ placeanad

DRIVERS WANTED

Full time, part time & seasonal Semi Drivers needed. Excellent hourly pay and full benefits. Late model equipment. Illinois and surrounding areas, home every night. Must have Class A CDL. Tanker experience not required but must be able to obtain tanker endorsement. Farmers, women, minorities and retired candidates are encouraged to apply. Seasonal would be approximately May - October. Can work around crop schedules. Email resume to info@tsasphalt.com or apply in person at Tri-State, 1362 Bungalow Road, Morris.

PRODUCTION HELP

Product Sort / Wash Dept. Benefits / $9.00/hr start. Apply in Person: Ajax Linen & Uniform 1005 Geneva St. Shorewood

SUSPENSION MECHANIC Must have own tools. Competitive wages. Health Insurance, 401K, vacation pay. Apply at:

Joliet Suspension

809 S. Larkin Ave. Rockdale, IL. 60436 Call: 815-729-0356

DENTAL ASSISTANT/ RECEPTIONIST

Wanted PT. Reliable, enthusiastic and energetic team player. Please fax resumes to: 815-846-9416 or email: radiantdentalcare@ gmail.com

BEAGLE “LACIE”

Female, tri-color, spayed, young, about 20 pounds, micro chipped. Last seen at County Line Rd & Route 52 on Thurs, May 7 @ 6:30p.m. Pls call 815-730-1157 or 312-504-9172 with any info.

Place your Classified ad online 24/7 at: www.TheHerald-News.com/ PlaceAnAd

KNUDSON AUCTION & APPRAISALS 815-725-6023 “Since 1947”

REWARD FOR SAFE RETURN

Cat “Ashley”

Joliet - Rooney Heights, lost from Rooney Dr on Friday 3-20. Siamese Mix, beige and grayish white with dark marking on her face, shorter hair, 6 years old, spayed. Inside cat, has eye issues. 815-725-8101

CAT ~ WINSTON

Male, 3 years old, mostly black on top, white legs, white spot on its back. Lost in Reedwood area in Joliet on Sunday evening, 4/12.

$100 REWARD 815-725-1348

TRUCK DRIVERS-early morning for US Mail. Exp'd. CDL required. Tractor Trailer Straight Truck. Extensive bkrnd check. Call: 815-726-2569

TWO-PERSON MANAGEMENT TEAM NEEDED Independent Living Senior Community - Essington Place. Mgrs live onsite & work together to better the lives of our senior residents while running the business. Competitive salary & benefits. Ideal duo is team orientated with sales exp. Applicants must apply & interview together. Send both resumes to: Kelly.Sanders@ holidaytouch.com For more info visit: careers.holidaytouch.com

SILVER EARRING

Lost couple weeks ago on a Friday at the American Legion Hall 1080, Ingalls Ave in Joliet. If found, please call 815-955-7616

Joliet

Don't Miss It! Call MJ for pictures or an appointment to view

815-693-9610

High Quality – Great Condition Fantastic Values Queen Henredon 5 Piece Bedroom Set, Full Size Bedroom Set, Thomasville Dinette Set & Lighted Curio, 2 Frech Provincial Love Seats, Desks, File Cabinets, Recliner, Accent Tables, Hickory Dining Set with Curios & Buffet, Swivel Chairs, Stove, Treadmill, Bicycle for 2, Royal Doultons, Waterford, Dresdens, China, & Much More

JOLIET

June 13th 9am-3pm

LOST SHELTIE KALLIE

Please do not call her or chase her. Email kiers12003@yahoo.com or call Kathy at (815) 353-8598 or Natalie at (309) 824-0107 LOST Yorkiepoo near McDonald & Water St. Tan in color, wearing Blue Collar, Please Call if Seen 815-514-8524

408 North Reed Office Furniture, Mini Freezers, Kitchen Table and Chairs, Exercise Equipment, Treadmill Exercise Bikes, Children's Doll House, Easy Bake Oven and more! Being the FIRST to grab reader's attention makes your item sell faster!

Vintage Faire Linens Glassware Wedgewood Waterford China Crystal Yard Art Re-Purposed Art Wind Chimes Mosaics Hand Tools Yard Tools Jewelry Irish Dolls Framed Pictures Quilts Tablerunners More, More, More

2009 Arden Pl Joliet West Side June 12 th & 13th Friday & Saturday 9:00 am to 2:00 pm

JOLIET / SOUTH SHOREWOOD

Log House

Garage Sale Rain or Shine ! June 12 & 13 FRI, 8AM – 4PM SAT, 8AM – 2PM 22539 S. RIVER RD River Rd & Shepley

Joliet Fri. & Sat. June 12 & 13 9:00 am to 3:00 pm

Garage Sale Days

June 12 & 13 Fri & Sat, 8am – 3pm Over 100 Homes! Look for the Big Red & White Striped Banners !!

HOMER GLEN

Essington at Black Roads

THUR-FRI/June 11 & 12

Just some Great Clean Things; Bridal Gown, Antique Baptismal Gowns, Chandeliers, Couch, 1950 Radial Arm Saw, Tred Mill, Waterford Angel, Waterford Place Mats, Roll Top Desk, Plant Pots, Like New Kitchen Table/6 Chairs, TOOLS, Hardware, 57 years of Household Items, Large Fish Tank with Stand/Acces. Tons of Household Stuff!

JOLIET

3461 Pandola

JOLIET

THURS - SAT JUNE 11, 12, 13 9AM - 3PM

June 11, 12 Thursday / Friday 9AM – 3PM 1620 Mason Ave

Clublands of Joliet

Larkin East Sub-Div

collectibles, vintage and Much More More !

JOLIET

7311 Fordham Ln. Furniture, baby & toddler clothes/toys, household items & MUCH MORE!

Lockport CRAFT & VENDOR SHOW June 14th from 10am til 4pm Moose Lodge

118 E. 10th St.

June 13 & 14 SAT & SUN 8AM – 4PM

Hosted by RUSH EVENTS

SAT - SUN 9AM – 4PM

1222 Clara Ave.

MULTI FAMILY SALE

14833 GLEN CREST LN

JOLIET LIQUIDATION SALE

The Herald-News Classified

June 12,

June 13 & 14

159 th & Cedar Rd. household items, womens clothing & More !

877-264-2527

Clara & Midland

Friday Only !

8AM – 5PM 508-510 Ruby St.

Highlight and border your ad!

The Herald-News Classified

office furniture, office supplies, electric motors/parts, V-belt, Plus Much More !

877-264-2527

Call today to place your ad

The Herald-News Call 877-264-2527

www.TheHerald-News.com

Sanctuary Subdivision 11 Families

Books, Toys, Household Items, Tools, Furniture, Much More

815-729-0243

BRAIDWOOD

JOLIET

877-264-2527

DON'T NEED IT? SELL IT FAST!

LOCKPORT

THURS, FRI, SAT JUNE 11, 12, 13 8AM - 5PM 913 MacGregor Dr. Tools, clothes, NASCAR, sports.......Sox, Bears, Blackhawks, plumbing & electrical supplies

& SO MUCH MORE! DON'T NEED IT? SELL IT FAST! The Herald-News Classified Call 877-264-2527 or TheHerald-News.com


40 CLASSIFIED Manhattan

Village of Manhattan

Community Wide Garage Sale June 19 & 20 8:00am – 3:00pm All participant's addresses will be listed in a map of the community. Maps will be available for distribution on June 12 at Village Hall, 260 Market Pl., Manhattan, IL and online at www.villageofmanhattan.org For questions, please call Village Hall (815) 418-2100

MOKENA

• Wednesday, June 10, 2015 • The Herald News / TheHerald-News.com

PLAINFIELD

RURAL SALE SAT, JUNE 13 8AM - 2PM

Antique 45's Vinyl ie; Elvis, BTO, Paul McCartney... collection of 200 w/sleeves. $399/for collection 815-744-6062 Brian

County Line Rd, 1 mile South of Route 126

Plate Collection Official Honeymooners, 23K gold rim, all 8 plates $300. 815-942-3147 9a-6p

Furniture, LP Stereo, Lathe, Welder, Equipment & MUCH MORE!

Rare Bradford Plates 8” Bird Plates (10), in natural colors - discontinued, $300 Call 10am-4pm 815-723-7260

PLAINFIELD

Huge Sale June 11, 12, 13

Thurs, Fri, Sat 8am – 3pm 13124 W. Regan Rd.

THURS, FRI, SAT JUNE 11, 12, 13 8AM - 2PM

Trestle table/benches, copper kettle & candlesticks, dog houses /kennels, posters, CD's, books & Much More !

15847 Spanglers Farm Drive

NEW LENOX

Tools, Clothing (Mens & Womens) Electrical, Plumbing, Carpentry

& MUCH MORE!

SAT & SUN JUNE 13 & 14 9AM - 4PM 203 YORK PLACE LOTS of household items, crafts & MUCH MORE!

PLAINFIELD Community

Garage Sale !

~Over 10 Families~ June 11,12,13 Thurs, Fri, Sat 8am – 3pm

Wesmere Lakes & Woods Caton Farm & Wesmere Pkwy

Plainfield Thurs, Fri., Sat. June 11 - 13 9am-3pm

1849 Eberhard Lane Multi Family

Riding mower,lawn mower, lawn tools, K. Anderson, toys, clothes (men,women,girls (7-16)), Tools, brand name athletic shoes, sports equipment, tons of misc.

ROMEOVILLE

Over 50 Homes ! June 13th

Saturday Only !! 8AM – 2PM Grand Haven, Adult Resort Community located on Renwick Rd. ½ mile West of Weber. ANYTHING YOU WANT WILL BE HERE ! Private Community No Early Birds.

Leather Coat – Men's full length, black, medium, Marc Mattis, never worn $50. 815-485-8830

40+ homes!

June 11-13 Thurs, Fri & Sat 8am-4pm

Womens Clothing 3X & 4X, Like new, some Brand New, incl; pant, blouses, sweaters, outfits, (5) boxes available, $25 to $40 per box. 815-744-4338

1711 Courtwright Dr Caton Farm & County Line

DON'T NEED IT? SELL IT FAST! The Herald-News Call 877-264-2527

Baby Formula - 6 cans of powder Enfamil Premium Formula, 12.5 oz. Cans $8.00/each. 815-436-5171

Bathroom Vanity - 19” drop in retro pink cast iron sink, 2 available, $50/obo each. Must see to appreciate. Call Betty for details 815-436-6717

Mt. Olive, Cemetery , Joliet. Section 7, lot 143. In the Lovely older section. $1,300/each-obo. 530-243-6756

~ WANTED ~ Buying Stereo Equipment

Ham, CB, Short wave radios, guitar & amps prefer vintage, will consider all working or not, no TV's, computers, or auto audio Call - Wayne 708-927-1871

Bronk Rd & Sunset Ridge Dr.

Plainfield

Kendall Ridge Garage Sales

1940's Bakelite Record Holder with WWII graphics – airplanes, soldiers, tanks & ship, $100. 815-467-6964 8a-7p

Gas Stove – Of white, like new, self-cleaning oven, $100. Call Pat 815-592-4552 BREAKING NEWS available 24/7 at TheHerald-News.com

Exercise BALANCE BALL SPRI 65cm Red High Grade Like New, also will throw in CORE secrets DVD. $25 815-254-1015

Adjustable Drafting Table 42”W x 30”D x 33”T $50. Email cbar577329@aol.com for photo 815-436-4222 Black Leather Couch Like New ! $150/obo. 815-744-4338 Corner Baker's Rack Like New - $40. Email cbar577329@aol.com for photo - Call 815-436-4222 End Table – Handmade Solid wood, w/ Drawer $25. 815-436-4222 Foyer/Hall Table w/ Baskets 31-1/2”W x 15-3/4”D x 32-1/2”T sold as is, $15. Email cbar577329@aol.com for photo 815-436-4222

Hexagon Pine End Table Solid wood - $35. 815-436-4222 Oak Bedroom Suite Queen bed, dresser, night stand & chest. Excellent condition $100/OBO. 815-439-4588

Sofa Set – Couch & love seat, floral print, beige background, mauve roses, very good condition, will separate $325. leave message 815-725-6951

TWIN BEDS (2)

Extra long, Sealy Posturepedic plush mattress with 39 x 80 adjustable base, head only with remote. One bed never used. $399/both. 815-729-2321 Two Antique Chairs 2 high back chairs for dining, stripped & ready for re-finishinf $150 for both. 815-485-8726 Vintage 4 Piece Bistro Set Solid, wrought iron, $200. Email cbar577329@aol.com for photos 815-436-4222

Wooden Bookcase 5 Shelf $75 815-436-4222

Gun Case – Ridgid hard case for rifle or shotgun, New, never used, Paid $26, asking $19/OBO. 815-354-3458 Plano Gunguard SErifle/shotgun case, rigid hard plastic/foam padded, brand new never used. Paid $27 asking $19 815-354-3458

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F15030156 WELLS IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE 12TH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT WILL COUNTYJOLIET, ILLINOIS Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., Plaintiff, vs. Harriet Robinson aka Harriet E. Robinson aka Betty Robinson; Unknown Owners and Non-Record Claimants, Defendants. CASE NO. 15 CH 1096 606 Gardner Street, Joliet, Illinois 60433 NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION The requisite affidavit for publication having been filed, notice is hereby given you, Harriet Robinson aka Harriet E. Robinson aka Betty Robinson, and UNKNOWN OWNERS and NONRECORD CLAIMANTS, defendants in the above entitled cause, that suit has been commenced against you and other defendants in the Circuit Court for the Judicial Circuit by said plaintiff praying for the foreclosure of a certain mortgage conveying the premises described as follows, to wit: LOT 2 IN F.W. SCHROEDER'S SUBDIVISION OF BLOCK 37, AND PART OF BLOCK 36, WEST OF HICKORY CREEK, OF CANAL TRUSTEES' SUBDIVISION OF THE WEST HALF OF SECTION 15, TOWNSHIP 35 NORTH, AND IN RANGE 10, EAST OF THE THIRD PRINCIPAL MERIDIAN, IN THE CITY OF JOLIET, IN WILL COUNTY, ILLINOIS. P.I.N.: 07-15-318-003-0000 Said property is commonly known as 606 Gardner Street, Joliet, Illinois 60433, and which said mortgage(s) was/were made by Nathaniel Robinson aka Nate Robinson (Deceased) and Harriet Robinson aka Harriet E. Robinson aka Betty Robinson and recorded in the Office of the Recorder of Deeds as Document Number R2001071163 and for other relief; that Summons was duly issued out


The Herald News / TheHerald-News.com • Wednesday, June 10, 2015 • of the above Court against you as provided by law and that said suit is now pending. NOW THEREFORE, unless you, the said above named defendants, file your answer to the complaint in the said suit or otherwise make your appearance therein, in the Office of the Clerk of the Court at Will County on or before JUNE 26, 2015, a default may be taken against you at any time after that date and a Judgment entered in accordance with the prayer of said complaint. YOU MAY STILL BE ABLE TO SAVE YOUR HOME. DO NOT IGNORE THIS DOCUMENT. By order of the Chief Judge of the Circuit Court of the Twelfth Judicial Circuit, this case is set for Mandatory Mediation on June 23, 2015 at 2:15pm at the Will County Court Floor (Arbitration Annex-3rd Center), 57 N. Ottawa Street, Joliet, Illinois. A lender representative will be present along with a court appointed mediator to discuss options that you may have and to pre-screen you for a potential mortgage modification. For further information on the mediation process, please see the NOTICE OF MANDATORY MEDIATION on file with the Clerk of the Circuit Court or by contacting the Plaintiff's attorney at the address listed below. YOU MUST APPEAR ON THE MEDIATION DATE GIVEN, OR YOUR RIGHT TO MEDIATION WILL TERMINATE. This communication is an attempt to collect a debt and any information obtained will be used for that purpose. Steven C. Lindberg ANSELMO LINDBERG OLIVER LLC 1771 W. Diehl Rd., Ste 120 Naperville, IL 60563-4947 630-453-6960 866-402-8661 630-428-4620 (fax) Attorney No. Cook 58852, DuPage 293191, Kane 031-26104, Peoria 1794, Winnebago 3802, IL 03126232 (Published in the Herald-News May 27, 2015 June 3, 10, 2015)

PUBLIC NOTICE IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE TWELFTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT WILL COUNTY, CHANCERY DIVISION OLD PLANK TRAIL COMMUNITY BANK, N.A., AS SUCCESSOR IN INTEREST TO FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF ILLINOIS, Plaintiff, v. RICHARD K. TREMBLE; DEBBY A. TREMBLE; DBI/ASG MORTGAGE HOLDINGS, LLC; ILLINOIS HOUSING DEVELOPMENT AUTHORITY; UNKNOWN OWNERS and NONRECORD CLAIMANTS, Defendants. 15CH 01173 Residential Foreclosure Property Address: 11533 191ST STREET MOKENA, ILLINOIS 60448 NOTICE OF PUBLICATION

TO UNKNOWN OWNERS AND NON-RECORD CLAIMANTS The requisite affidavit for publication having been filed, notice is hereby given to you, Unknown and Non-Record Owners Claimants, Defendants in the above entitled suit, that the said suit has been commenced in the Circuit Court of Will County, Illinois, by the Plaintiff, Old Plank Trail Community Bank, N.A., successor in interest to First National Bank of Illinois, against you, praying for the foreclosure of a certain Mortgage conveying the premises described as follows, to wit: THAT PART OF THE NORTH 1/2 OF LOT 92 LYING SOUTHERLY OF THE FOLLOWING DESCRIBED LINES: BEGINNING AT A POINT IN THE WEST LINE OF SAID LOT 175.93 FEET SOUTH 00 DEGREES 01 MINUTES 13 SECONDS WEST OF THE NORTHWEST CORNER THEREOF; THENCE SOUTH 89 DEGREES 41 MINUTES 08 SECONDS EAST 79.83 FEET TO A POINT OF CURVE; THENCE NORTHEASTERLY ALONG AN ARC OF A CIRCLE CONVEX SOUTHERLY AND HAVING A RADIUS OF 329.0 FEET FOR A DISTANCE OF 20.18 FEET TO A POINT IN THE EAST LINE OF SAID LOT 175.31 FEET SOUTHERLY OF THE NORTHEAST CORNER THEREOF, IN ROBERT BARTLETT'S SUNNY ACRES, A SUBDIVISION OF THE EAST 1/2 OF THE SOUTHEAST 1/4 OF SECTION 6 (EXCEPT THE NORTH 14 ACRES THEREOF) ALSO THE NORTHEAST 1/4 OF SECTION 7 AND THE SOUTHEAST 1/4 OF THE NORTHWEST 1/4 OF SAID SECTION 7 ALL IN TOWNSHIP 35 NORTH, RANGE 12, EAST OF THE THIRD PRINCIPAL MERIDIAN, ACCORDING TO THE PLAT THEREOF RECORDED AUGUST 1, 1946, IN PLAT BOOK 2, PAGE 70, AS DOCUMENT NO. 610822, IN WILL COUNTY, ILLINOIS. COMMONLY KNOWN AS: 11533 191st St., Mokena, IL 60448 PIN NO: 09-07-200-037 The Mortgage was made on September 3, 2003 by Richard K. Tremble and Debby A. Tremble, as Mortgagors to First National Bank of Illinois, as Mortgagee and recorded on September 17, 2003 in the Office of the Recorder of Deeds in Will County, Illinois as Document No. R2003231702. Summons was duly issued out of the Circuit Court of Will County against you as provided by law, and that suit is now pending. Now, therefore, unless you, the above Defendants, file your answer to the complaint in this case or otherwise file your appearance in the office of the Circuit Court Clerk, on or before June 26, 2015 a default may be entered against you at any time after that day and a decree entered in accordance with the prayer of said complaint. YOU ARE FURTHER ADVISED THAT THE TIME IN WHICH THE SUBJECT REAL ESTATE MAY BE

REDEEMED FROM FORECLOSURE, PURSUANT TO LAW, COMMENCES TO RUN WITH THE FIRST DATE OF PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE. PAMELA J. MCGUIRE, Clerk Circuit Court of Will County, Illinois Sarah K. Lash (No. 6300299) CHUHAK & TECSON, P.C. 30 South Wacker Drive, Suite 2600 Chicago, IL 60606 (312) 201-4202 I658052 (Published in the Herald-News May 27, 2015 June 3, 10, 2015)

PUBLIC NOTICE F12100280 WELLS IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE 12TH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT WILL COUNTYJOLIET, ILLINOIS Wells Fargo Bank, NA, Plaintiff, vs. Illinois Healthcare and Family Services; Kevin J. Nolan aka Kevin Nolan; Lisa J. Nolan aka Lisa Nolan; Wells Fargo Bank, N.A.; Columbia Station Homeowners Association; Unknown Owners and Non-Record Claimants Defendants. CASE NO. 15 CH 259 2722 Rosehall Lane, Aurora, IL 60503 NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION The requisite affidavit for publication having been filed, notice is hereby given you, Kevin J. Nolan aka Kevin Nolan, and UNKNOWN OWNERS and NON-RECORD CLAIMANTS, defendants in the above entitled cause, that suit has been commenced against you and other defendants in the Circuit Court for the Judicial Circuit by said plaintiff praying for the foreclosure of a certain mortgage conveying the premises described as follows, to wit: LOT 162 IN COLUMBIA STATION - UNIT 2, BEING A SUBDIVISION OF PART OF THE NORTHEAST 1/4 OF SECTION 6, TOWNSHIP 37 NORTH, RANGE 9 EAST OF THE THIRD PRINCIPAL MERIDIAN, ACCORDING TO THE PLAT THEREOF RECORDED SEPTEMBER 11, 2001 AS DOCUMENT R2001-119773, IN WILL COUNTY, ILLINOIS. P.I.N.: 01-06-207-057-0000 Said property is commonly known as 2722 Rosehall Lane, Aurora, IL 60503, and which said mortgage(s) was/were made by Kevin J. Nolan and Lisa J. Nolan aka Lisa Nolan and recorded in the Office of the Recorder of Deeds as Document Number R2010057161 and for other relief; that Summons was duly issued out of the above Court against you as provided by law and that said suit is now pending. NOW THEREFORE, unless you, the said above named defendants, file your answer to the complaint in the said suit or otherwise make your appearance therein, in the Office of the Clerk of the Court at Will County on or before JULY 6, 2015, a default may be taken against you

at any time after that date and a Judgment entered in accordance with the prayer of said complaint. YOU MAY STILL BE ABLE TO SAVE YOUR HOME. DO NOT IGNORE THIS DOCUMENT. By order of the Chief Judge of the Circuit Court of the Twelfth Judicial Circuit, this case is set for Mandatory Mediation on June 23, 2015 at 2:15 p.m. at the Will County Court Annex-3rd Floor (Arbitration Center), 57 N. Ottawa Street, Joliet, Illinois. A lender representative will be present along with a court appointed mediator to discuss options that you may have and to prescreen you for a potential mortgage modification. For further information on the mediation process, please see the NOTICE OF MANDATORY MEDIATION on file with the Clerk of the Circuit Court or by contacting the Plaintiff's attorney at the address listed below. YOU MUST APPEAR ON THE MEDIATION DATE GIVEN, OR YOUR RIGHT TO MEDIATION WILL TERMINATE. This communication is an attempt to collect a debt and any information obtained will be used for that purpose. Steven C. Lindberg ANSELMO LINDBERG OLIVER LLC 1771 W. Diehl Rd., Ste 120 Naperville, IL 60563-4947 630-453-6960 866-402-8661 630-428-4620 (fax) Attorney No. Cook 58852, DuPage Kane 031-26104, 293191, Peoria 1794, Winnebago 3802, IL 03126232 (Published in the Herald-News June 3, 10, 17, 2015)

PUBLIC NOTICE

certain Mortgage conveying the premises described as follows, to wit: LOT 26, IN WOODBINE SUBDIVISION, BEING A SUBDIVISION OF PART OF THE WEST 1/2 OF THE SOUTHEAST 1/4 OF SECTION 10 AND PART OF THE EAST 1/2 OF THE SOUTHWEST 1/4 OF SECTION 10, ALL IN TOWNSHIP 36 NORTH, RANGE 11 EAST OF THE THIRD PRINCIPAL MERIDIAN, ACCORDING TO THE PLAT THEREOF RECORDED MARCH 25, 1992 AS DOCUMENT NO. R92-20937, IN WILL COUNTY, ILLINOIS. Commonly known as: 14014 DORAL LANE HOMER GLEN, IL 60491 and which said Mortgage was made by, RONALD PRESBITERO A/K/A RONALD J. PRESBITERO; LINDA A. PRESBITERO; Mortgagor (s), to WELLS FARGO HOME MORTGAGE, INC. Mortgagee, and recorded in the Office of the Recorder of Deeds of WILL County, Illinois, as Document No. 2003198985; and for other relief. UNLESS YOU file your answer or otherwise file your appearance in this case in the Office of the Clerk of this County, Pamela J. McGuire Clerk of the Court 14 W Jefferson Suite 212 Joliet, Illinois 60432 on or before July 10, 2015, A JUDGMENT OR DECREE BY DEFAULT MAY BE TAKEN AGAINST YOU FOR THE RELIEF ASKED IN THE COMPLAINT. YOU MAY STILL BE ABLE TO SAVE YOUR HOME. DO NOT IGNORE THIS DOCUMENT. By order of the Chief Judge of the Circuit Court of the Twelfth Circuit Court, this case is set for Mandatory Mediation on 07/14/15 at, 1:00 p.m. at the Will County Court, Annex 3rd Floor (Arbitration Center) 57 N. Ottawa Street, Joliet, Illinois. A lender representative will be present along with a court appointed mediator to discuss options that you may have and to prescreen you for a potential mortgage modification. For further information on the mediation process, please see the attached NOTICE OF MANDATORY MEDIATION. YOU MUST APPEAR ON THE MEDIATION DATE GIVEN OR YOUR MEDIATION WILL BE TERMINATED. PIERCE & ASSOCIATES Attorneys for Plaintiff Thirteenth Floor 1 North Dearborn Chicago, Illinois 60602 Tel. (312) 346-9088 Fax (312) 346-1557 PA 1411340 I658554 (Published in the Herald-News June 10, 17, 24, 2015)

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR THE 12TH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT WILL COUNTY - JOLIET ILLINOIS WELLS FARGO BANK, N.A. PLAINTIFF VS RONALD PRESBITERO A/K/A RONALD J. PRESBITERO; LINDA A. PRESBITERO; STATE OF ILLINOIS; UNITED STATES OF AMERICA; WELLS FARGO BANK, N.A.; THE WOODBINE HOMEOWNERS ASSOCIATION; THE SHERWIN-WILLIAMS COMPANY; UNKNOWN OWNERS AND NON RECORD CLAIMANTS; FIRSTSECURE BANK AND TRUST CO. F/K/A FAMILY BANK AND TRUST COMPANY, AS TRUSTEE UTA DTD 12/13/96 AND KNOWN AS TRUST NO. I-188; UNKNOWN BENEFICIARIES OF TRUST NO. I-188 DTD 12/13/96; DEFENDANTS 15 CH 345 14014 DORAL LANE HOMER GLEN, IL 60491 NOTICE BY PUBLICATION NOTICE IS GIVEN YOU, UNKNOWN BENEFICIARIES OF PUBLIC NOTICE TRUST NO. I-188 DTD 12/13/96; defendants, that this case has IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR been commenced in this Court against you and other defendants, THE 12TH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT asking for the foreclosure of a WILL COUNTY - JOLIET, ILLINOIS

Wells Fargo Bank, NA, PLAINTIFF Vs. Lane E. Grice a/k/a Lane E. Allen; Tye Allen; Wells Fargo Bank, N.A.; Lakewood Falls Phase 5 Homeowners Association; Unknown Owners and Nonrecord Claimants DEFENDANTS 15 CH 00493 NOTICE BY PUBLICATION NOTICE IS GIVEN TO YOU: Tye Allen, Unknown Owners and Nonrecord Claimants That this case has been commenced in this Court against you and other defendants, praying for the foreclosure of a certain Mortgage conveying the premises described as follows, to-wit: THAT PART OF LOT 113 IN LAKEWOOD FALLS UNIT 5 POD 22, BEING A SUBDIVISION OF PART OF THE SOUTHEAST 1/4 OF SECTION 12, TOWNSHIP 36 NORTH, RANGE 9, EAST OF THE THIRD PRINCIPAL MERIDIAN, ACCORDING TO THE PLAT THEREOF RECORDED OCTOBER 12, 1999 AS DOCUMENT R99-124554 DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS: BEGINNING AT THE NORTHWEST CORNER OF SAID LOT 113; THENCE NORTH 88 DEGREES 18 MINUTES 23.3 SECONDS EAST, 111.44 FEET; THENCE SOUTH 01 DEGREES 41 MINUTES 37 SECONDS EAST, 32.40 FEET; THENCE SOUTH 88 DEGREES 15 MINUTES 26 SECONDS WEST, 123.17 FEET TO A POINT ON A CURVE; THENCE NORTHERLY ALONG A CURVE NONTANGENT TO THE LAST DESCRIBED LINE BEING CONCAVE WESTERLY HAVING A RADIUS OF 195.00 FEET AND A CHORD BEARING OF NORTH 18 DEGREES 09 MINUTES 07 SECONDS EAST A DISTANCE OF 34.61 FEET TO THE POINT OF BEGINNING IN WILL COUNTY, ILLINOIS. COMMONLY KNOWN AS: 359 Reston Circle Romeoville, IL 60446 and which said Mortgage was made by: Lane E. Grice a/k/a Lane E. Allen the Mortgagor(s), to Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. as Nominee for ComUnity Lending, Incorporated, as Mortgagee, and recorded in the Office of the Recorder of Deeds of Will County, Illinois, as Document No. R2004094480; and for other relief; that summons was duly issued out of said Court against you as provided by law and that the said suit is now pending. YOU MAY STILL BE ABLE TO SAVE YOUR HOME. DO NOT IGNORE THIS DOCUMENT. By order of the Chief Judge of the Circuit Court of the Twelfth Judicial Circuit, this case is set for Mandatory Mediation on August 4th, 2015 at 2:15 pm at the Will County Court Annex-3rd Floor (Arbitration Center), 57 N. Ottawa Street, Joliet, Illinois. A lender representative will be present along with a court appointed mediator to discuss options that you may have and to pre-screen you for a

potential mortgage modification. For further information on the mediation process, please see the attached NOTICE OF MANDATORY MEDIATION.YOU MUST APPEAR ON THE MEDIATION DATE GIVEN OR YOUR RIGHT TO MEDIATION WILL TERMINATE. NOW, THEREFORE, UNLESS YOU file your answer or otherwise file your appearance in this case in the Office of the Clerk of this Court, Pamela J. McGuire Clerk of the Court 57 N. Ottawa Street Joliet, IL 60432 on or before July 10, 2015, A DEFAULT MAY BE ENTERED AGAINST YOU AT ANY TIME AFTER THAT DAY AND A JUDGMENT MAY BE ENTERED IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE PRAYER OF SAID COMPLAINT. CODILIS & ASSOCIATES, P.C. Attorneys for Plaintiff 15W030 North Frontage Road, Suite 100 Burr Ridge, IL 60527 (630) 794-5300 DuPage # 15170 Winnebago # 531 Our File No. 14-15-01174 NOTE: This law firm is a debt collector. I659147 (Published in the Herald-News June 10, 17, 24, 2015)

CLASSIFIED 41 In the Matter of the Estate of ESTHER C. MAUE, Deceased. No. 2015 P 196 CLAIM NOTICE Notice is given to creditors of the death of Esther C. Maue. Letters of Office were issued to Charlene R. Leigh, whose address is 11035 Daniel Trail, Mokena, IL, 60448 and Larry W. Null, whose address is 1804 South Oaklawn Drive, St. Anne, IL 60964 as Independent Representatives whose attorney of record is HYNDS, ROOKS, YOHNKA & BZDILL, 105 W. Main Street, Morris, Illinois 60450. The estate will be administered without court supervision, unless under Section 28-4 of the Probate Act of 1975 any interested person terminates independent administration at any time by mailing or delivering a petition to terminate to the Clerk.

Claims against the estate may be filed in the Circuit Clerk's Office, Will County Courthouse, Joliet, Illinois, or with the representative, or both, on or before the 3 day of December, 2015, or if mailing or delivery of a notice from the representative is required by Sec. 18-3 of the Probate Act of 1975, the date PUBLIC NOTICE stated in that notice. Any claim not filed on or before that date is barred. Copies of a claim filed with STATE OF ILLINOIS, CIRCUIT the clerk must be mailed or delivCOURT WILL COUNTY ered by the claimant to the repreIN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE TWELFTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT sentative and to the attorney within ten (10) days after it has been WILL COUNTY, ILLINOIS filed. IN THE MATTER OF THE PETITION TO CHANGE THE NAME(S) OF Hynds, Rooks, Yohnka & Bzdill Shukruthi Krishna TO Iniya Krishna 105 W. Main Street, P.O. Box 685 Morris, IL 60450 Phone: 815-942-0049 CASE NO: 15 MR 1243 NOTICE

Notice is hereby given that the undersigned on behalf of Shukruthi Krishna, minor shall apear in the Will County Court Annex Building, 57 N. Ottawa, Joliet, Illinois, 60432 courtroom A236 at 9 a.m. on the 17th day of July, 2015 before the judge assigned to hear said matter, and then there present a petition requesting the name of Shukruthi Krishna be changed to Iniya Krishna.

(Published in the Herald-News June 3, 10, 17, 2015.) HN 2210

PUBLIC NOTICE INVITATION TO BID

Lockport Township High School District 205 is soliciting bid quotations for the purchase and delivery of 1,400 cases of copy paper. Sealed bid quotations are being accepted by the Board of Education /s/ Krishna Kumar until Tuesday, July 7, 2015 at /s/ Roshni Krishna 2:00 p.m. The bid should be dePetitioners livered to the District Office Building at: (Published in the Herald-News June 3, 10, 17, 2015.) HN 2211 Lockport Township High School 1323 E. Seventh Street Lockport, IL 60441

PUBLIC NOTICE

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR THE TWELFTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT WILL COUNTY, ILLINOIS PROBATE DIVISION

Each contractor bidding on this project must obtain a Bid Package named Copy Paper, bid quote number 495 and confirm the data provided in the Bid Specifications.


42 CLASSIFIED

• Wednesday, June 10, 2015 • The Herald News / TheHerald-News.com

the bid documents and detailed Please call our office if you have specifications at the above address, any questions on this legal notice. between the hours of 8:00 A.M. and 4:30 P.M., Monday through (Ph # 815 588-8116) Friday. All bidders will be required (Published in the Herald-News to submit Bid Security in the form of a Certified Check, Cashier's Check June 10, 2015.) HN 2244 or a Bid Bond in the amount of Ten percent (10%) of the Base Bid, payable to the City of Joliet. PUBLIC NOTICE The successful bidder will be required to post performance Security LEGAL NOTICE and to provide a Certificate of InsurCITY OF JOLIET ance as set forth in the Invitation of ADVERTISEMENT TO BIDS Bid and the General Terms & ConCONTRACT NO. 2108-0715 ditions. Bidders must be prequalified with PROJECT NAME: WELL 24D the City of Joliet to bid this project REHABILITATION-2015; JOLIET, IL pursuant to Ordinance 7345. A bidder shall become prequalified in The City of Joliet, Illinois, does one of the following ways: hereby invite sealed bids for the 1) If a company is currently Well 24D Rehabilitation project, prequalified by the State of Illinois (via IDOT or the Capital DevelopJoliet, Illinois. Bids will be received at the Office of ment Board), such person shall the City Clerk, City of Joliet Munici- submit a copy of said prequalificapal Building, and 150 West Jeffer- tion to Office of the City Clerk prior son Street, Joliet, Illinois 60432- to the date and time set for the bid 4156 until 9:00 A.M. local time on opening. If a company is not State June 25, 2015, at which time they 2) will be opened and publicly read of Illinois prequalified as described above, they shall submit a City of aloud. Those desiring to bid may examine Joliet Prequalification Form and a

financial statement. The prequalification forms can be obtained from the City of Joliet website at http://www.cityofJoliet.info/ index.aspx?page=97. This prequalification MUST be renewed yearly. The current price for City of Joliet prequalification is $175, which offsets the costs for independent auditor review of the documents. Those documents are to be submitted to City Clerk's Office, City of Joliet, 150 W. Jefferson Street, Joliet, IL 60432, at least 6 days prior to the bid opening and must be accompanied by $175 and need to be updated annually. In addition to the form being submitted, a financial statement prepared or certified by a duly certified public accountant should be also submitted. The certified public accountant shall also certify that he/she is presently a duly certified public accountant in the state in which he/she is certified. This financial statement must include the company's latest balance sheet and income statement showing the following items: Current Assets (e.g., cash joint venture accounts, accounts receivable, notes receivable, accrued income, deposits, materials inventory, and

prepaid expenses). The evaluation of the independent auditor shall determine the amount of prequalification. Prequalification shall be valid for a period of twelve (12) calendar months following the date of verification by the independent auditors. 3) Bids from bidders who have not submitted required prequalification documents as required in subsection (1) or (2) above shall not be opened. The City of Joliet reserves the right to reject any and all bids, parts of any and all bids, or to waive technical errors or omissions in bids. The Contract shall be subject to the provisions of the Prevailing Wage Act (820 ILCS 130/1 et seq.) to the extent required by law. ALL PROPOSALS ARE SUBJECT TO THE REQUIREMENTS OF THE CITY OF JOLIET PROCUREMENT CODE (Section 2-430 - 2-453 of the Code of Ordinances) BID DOCUMENT FEE: $0.00 James D. Hock

City Manager hereunto set my hand and Official Margaret E. McEvilly, Seal at my office in Joliet, Illinois, Contract Administrator this 1st day of June, 2015. (Published in the Herald-News June 10, 2015.) HN 2238 NANCY SCHULTZ VOOTS COUNTY CLERK

310 N. LARKIN AVE UNIT C-4 IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have JOLIET IL 60435 hereunto set my hand and Official Seal at my office in Joliet, Illinois, IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have this 8th day of June, 2015. hereunto set my hand and Official Seal at my office in Joliet, Illinois, NANCY SCHULTZ VOOTS this 26th day of May, 2015. COUNTY CLERK (Published in The Joliet HeraldNANCY SCHULTZ VOOTS News on June 10, 17, 24, 2015) (Published in the Herald-News County Clerk PUBLIC NOTICE JHN2245 June 10, 17, 24, 2015.) HN 2243 (Published in the Herald-News Certificate #29995 was filed in the May 27, June 3, 10, 2015.) HN PUBLIC NOTICE office of the County Clerk of Will 2116 PUBLIC NOTICE County, Illinois on June 1, 2015 Certificate #30002 was filed in wherein the business firm of the office of the County Clerk of Will Certificate #29982 was filed in County, Illinois on June 8, 2015 the office of the County Clerk of Will WINSTON OAKS Need customers? wherein the business firm of County, Illinois on May 26, 2015 CONDOMINIUMS wherein the business firm of Located at 515-525 Winston ABSOLUTE HOME INSPECTIONS We've got them. CLASSICS & COLLISION Drive, Bolingbrook, IL 60440 was AUTOBODY registered; that the true or real Located at 710 W BERGERA Advertise in print and name or names of the person or BRAIDWOOD IL 60408 was regispersons owning the business, with tered; that the true or real name or Located at 515 SUMMIT STREET online for one low price. their respective post office address names of the person or persons JOLIET IL 60435 was registered; Call your (es), is/are as follows: owning the business, with their re- that the true or real name or names spective post office address(es), of the person or persons owning classified advertising is/are as follows: BEN BARTOLINI the business, with their respective representative today! 8100 PARK AVENUE post office address(es), is/are as DAVID M OLDHAM follows: BURR RIDGE, IL 60527 877-264-2527 710 W BERGERA The Herald-News Classified IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have BRAIDWOOD IL 60408 JAMES A. BICEK

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The Herald News / TheHerald-News.com • Wednesday, June 10, 2015 •

CLASSIFIED 43

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The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Wednesday, June 10, 2015

| THE HERALD-NEWS

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