jhnt_2016-06-19

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SU ND A Y, J UN E 19 , 20 16 • $1.5 0

HERALD NEWS The

SPORTS

Top choice Brandon Baranski is boys volleyball player of the year / 44

TheHerald-News.com

FATHER’S DAY Joliet priest, stepfather and ‘barking dog’ for justice to celebrate final Mass / 3

LOCAL NEWS

Victory Light

JCA beacon replica inspires, brings back memories / 6 PEOPLE

Light reading

Minooka library group helps summer reading needs / 52

Have IRA questions? Let’s talk. Call or visit your local Edward Jones branch today. Serving the Will County area for over 30 years.

EDWARD J. DOLLINGER, AAMS® Financial Advisor 735 Essington Joliet, 60435 815-744-2127

SETH WORMLEY Financial Advisor 2730 Caton Farm Rd. Joliet, 60435 815-254-1735

PAUL A. KALAFUT, CFP® Financial Advisor 1132 W. Jefferson St. Shorewood, 60404 815-744-8150

MARK KARNER, CFP® Financial Advisor 3077 W. Jefferson St. Joliet, 60435 815-744-2742

RONALD T. MOLO, AAMS® Financial Advisor 3225 Fiday Rd. Joliet, 60431 815-439-8221

Member SIPC

www.edwardjones.com SM-CL0362786

TODAY’S WEATHER

HIGH

LOW

91 73

Sunny, with a high near 91. Light south-southeast winds becoming southwest 5 to 10 mph. Winds could gust as high as 15 mph. Complete forecast on page 5


The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Sunday, June 19, 2016

2

HERALD NEWS The

TheHerald-News.com OFFICE 2175 Oneida St. Joliet, IL 60435 815-280-4100 Fax: 815-729-2019 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday-Friday NEWSROOM 815-280-4100 Fax: 815-729-2019 news@theherald-news.com SUBSCRIBER SERVICES 800-397-9397 customerservice@shawmedia.com 6 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday-Friday, 7 a.m. to 10 a.m. Saturday Missed your paper? If you have not received your paper by 7 a.m. Monday-Friday, or by 8 a.m. Sunday, call 800-397-9397 by 10 a.m. for same-day redelivery. SUBSCRIPTIONS Monday-Friday: $1.00 / issue Sunday: $1.50 / issue Basic weekly rate: $6.50 Basic annual rate: $338 To subscribe, make a payment or discuss your delivery, contact Customer Service. CLASSIFIED SALES 877-264-CLAS (2527) classified@shawsuburban.com Fax: 815-477-8898 LEGAL NOTICES publicnotice@theherald-news.com 877-264-2527 Fax: 630-368-8809 RETAIL ADVERTISING 815-280-4101 OBITUARIES 877-264-2527 obits@theherald-news.com General Manager Steve Vanisko 815-280-4103 svanisko@shawmedia.com Editor Kate Schott 815-280-4119 kschott@shawmedia.com

The Herald-News and TheHerald-News.com are a division of Shaw Media. All rights reserved. Copyright 2016

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Remembering, honoring our fathers As the saying goes, father knows best. As a child I probably didn’t think that was true. I was, after all, the kid who told my dad, “You’re not the boss of me,” when he gave an instruction I didn’t want to follow. After two boys who would respond with, “Yes daddy,” in a similar situation, I was, to put it mildly, a handful. But more often than not, that adage has probably been true (at least in my case). It certainly was the time I stuck a screwdriver in an outlet (I was 2 and outside of causing half of the lights in the house to go out, the action did not cause any lasting damage). And it has been numerous other times too. Fathers often get a bum rap in our society. If you’ve got a good one, be thankful. If you have someone who has acted like a father and provided guidance and support, be grateful for that too. Plans today include visiting my dad (and mom) for lunch or dinner. We’ll

VIEWS Kate Schott probably grill some burgers. I’ve made him chocolate chip cookies – which in our family is a sign of my true love for him. Happy Father’s Day to all the dads out there.

Everyday Heroes

We still are seeking nominations for this year’s Everyday Hero’s initiative from The Herald-News and Morris Herald-News. An Everyday Hero is that person who gives without expecting any recognition or accolades for doing so – those who selflessly donate their time and talents to help those in need or to better their community. We’re looking to bestow Everyday Hero awards on at least a dozen special people in Will and Grundy counties. Nominees must be at least 13 years old,

and live or work in either Will or Grundy counties. Submit the name, hometown and workplace of your nominee, along with a letter of 300 or fewer words, describing why your nominee deserves the honor. Our awards breakfast is scheduled for Sept. 9 at the Joliet Country Club and we’ll devote a special section in the Sept. 11 Sunday edition to our recipients. Applications will be accepted through July 15 at www.theherald-news. com/forms/everyday-heroes/ or mail it to: The Herald-News, Attn: Everyday Heroes, 2175 Oneida St., Joliet, IL 60435. For information, contact Projects and Events Manager Sarah Dilg at 815-2804113. Thank you for reading The Herald-News.

• Kate Schott is editor of The Herald-News, the Morris Herald-News and Herald Life. She can be reached at kschott@shawmedia.com or 815-2804119. Follow her on Twitter @Kate_ Schott78.

Welter to seek 75th House District seat being vacated by Anthony By HEIDI LITCHFIELD

hlitchfield@shawmedia.com

County residents interested in the post were not immediately returned. Anthony was appointed to be the 75th District’s representative in August 2013 when previous state Rep. Pam Roth, R-Morris, stepped down when she moved to Texas. In November 2014, Anthony won the seat when he faced off against Shugart. “I know the decision to step down must not have been made lightly, therefore, I wish Mr. Anthony the best of luck on his future endeavors,” Shugart said in a statement emailed to Shaw Media publications. “The fact is, now our communities will have a new representation in Springfield. I look forward to debating the issues and continuing to advocate for property tax relief and working to end the dysfunction in Springfield, by passing a budget that is fair, balanced, and protects local taxpayers,” she continued. “It does not matter to me who will be my opponent in November, I will continue to work hard. My commitment has never wavered, and my mission remains unchanged.” Anthony’s resignation was to be effective Friday morning, according to Capitol Fax, a Springfield-based daily political newsletter covering Illinois politics. The online newsletter posted Thursday a letter dated June 16 that appears to be on Anthony’s House of Representatives letterhead and states his intent to resign from office at 8:26 a.m. Friday.

MORRIS – Grundy County Board Chairman David Welter said he is considering seeking to fill the Illinois House of Representative seat that John Anthony is leaving. Anthony, R-Joliet, is resigning his office to take a job in the Illinois Department of Corrections, according to a news release issued Thursday by House Republican Leader Jim Durkin, R-Western Springs. Anthony said he expected to issue a statement Friday, but as of 4 p.m. Saturday, one had not been received. His resignation will leave the 75th District House seat open until the current term ends in January. The Republican Party also can caucus a candidate on to the November general election ballot, where Anthony was to face Democrat Martha Shugart. “I feel very strongly the next person to fill this role needs to help play a role in the state passing a balanced budget,” Welter said. Grundy County Republican Chairman Aren Hansen said there will likely be a Republican committee created with chairmen from Grundy, Kendall, LaSalle and Will counties to choose the replacement for Anthony’s seat. Hansen said the person chosen by the committee will fill in the remainder of Anthony’s term, as well as be caucused onto the ballot in Anthony’s place to run in the fall. Messages left Friday with James Marter, the • Shaw Media reporter Matt Schury and HerKendall County GOP Chairman, seeking com- ald-News Editor Kate Schott contributed to this ment on whether he was aware of any Kendall report.

WHERE IT’S AT Advice .............................................. 60, 62 Business .................................................40 Classified.......................................... 70-75 Comics ....................................... 58-59, 70 Cover story ........................................3, 22 Local News..........................................2-24 Lottery.....................................................36 Nation/World ...................................37-38 Obituaries .........................................31-36 Opinion.............................................. 41-42 People................................................52-56 Puzzles ............................................. 60-62 Sports.................................................43-51 State ........................................................36 Television ............................................... 57 Weather .................................................... 5

ON THE COVER The Rev. Raymond Lescher is retiring from the Sacred Heart Catholic Parish Church in Joliet. He was set to celebrate his last Mass as a parish priest on Father’s Day. 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

In retirement, Joliet priest will continue serving the poor By DENISE M. BARAN–UNLAND

J

dunland@shawmedia.com

OLIET – It’s fitting for the Rev. Ray Lescher to celebrate his last Mass as a parish priest today at 10 a.m. After all, it is Father’s Day. For 17 years, Lescher has been the spiritual father to 180 people at Sacred Heart Catholic Church in Joliet. But he’s also the stepfather of 10 children, and now has 23 grandchildren, 10 great-grandchildren and one greatgreat-grandchild. Through it all, Lescher’s aim was to represent the Catholic Church in its truest universal sense. He paraphrased the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. as having said the most segregated time in the United States is Sunday morning. “This was never true at Sacred Heart,” Lescher said. “We are black; we are white; we are brown; hospitable and welcoming to everyone.” On Thursday, the Will County Board recognized Lescher with a proclamation. Board member the Rev. Herb Brooks Jr., a pastor at St. John Missionary Baptist Church in Joliet, read the proclamation and commended Lescher’s many contributions to the church, parishioners and Will County residents. “Father Ray, the work you’ve done sets the bar high for others to follow,” board member Denise Winfrey said to Lescher. Sister Judith Davies, chancellor for the Diocese of Joliet, echoed that sentiment, and added that Lescher’s concern for others – especially the poor and those without rights – is evident in his actions. “He is known as someone who loves the Lord, loves the people of Sacred Heart and is a champion for social justice,” Davies said. “He’s just a man of integrity.” And yet, Lescher wrestled with the notion of priesthood. The desire to be a father in the literal sense was strong. “I always wanted to have 10 children,” he said. But God’s calling was stronger, and Lescher yielded to it.

Fatherhood journey

Born in Chicago, Lescher was ordained in 1963 and said his first Mass at Immaculate Conception Church in Elmhurst. In June of that year, he was assigned to St. Rose of Lima Church in

Eric Ginnard – eginnard@shawmedia.com

The Rev. Ray Lescher is seen at his home June 7 in Joliet. Lescher left the priesthood in 1975 after meeting his future wife, Anne, who had 10 children from a previous marriage. After Anne’s death, Lescher came back to the priesthood in 1998 and raised his 13-year-old granddaughter in the rectory of Sacred Heart in Joliet. Kankakee. That church, Lescher said, had a connection with the black community of the northeast side of town. Serving that community was a mission church, Our Lady of Fatima. Nearby was another Catholic church, St. Stanislaus, which had a school and did not welcome blacks. After three years, Lescher approached Romeo Blanchette, then the bishop of the Diocese of Joliet. Lescher asked Blanchette to close the mission and integrate St. Stanislaus. Lescher said Blanchette did, and Lescher was assigned to St. Stanislaus as an associate pastor. “I spent the next nine years at St. Stanislaus, where I met my wife, Anne,” he said. Lescher also became involved with the civil rights movement. He marched, boycotted, and was gassed and arrested, he said. He also started several programs there: The St. Martin of Tours Infant

Nursery, the Dr. King Adult Education Center, the Dr. King Daycare Center, the Old Fair Park Daycare Center, the St. Martin of Tours Resale Shop and the Dr. King Summer Tutorial Program. Anne, a widow with 10 children, directed the infant nursery and resale shop. “I fell in love with Anne,” Lescher said. “She was the most marAnne velous woman I’ve seen Lescher to this day. She was just a warm and loving person.” Lescher said he left the priesthood in June 1975 and accepted a job in Minnesota with the Ramsey County Correctional Center in St. Paul. He bought an eight-bedroom house for $27,900, and moved in Anne and six of her children. At the time of their marriage, Anne was 41 and Lescher was 40. The Catholic Church would not

More online Visit this article at TheHerald-News. com to view a video of the Rev. Ray Lescher discussing the main challenge affecting black Catholics today. allow the couple to be married in the church, but Lescher said he and Anne did join a Catholic church in the St. Paul area and became very active in it. Lescher said the years he shared with Anne were the best of his life. “During that time, we raised six of her children. We raised seven of our grandchildren and – being an interracial couple – we found a niche as foster parents, so we raised four foster children,” he said. “For five years we had 15 kids in the house, and seven of those were under 7 years of age. The washer and dryer went all day and all night.”

See FATHER’S DAY, page 22

The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Sunday, June 19, 2016

A TRUE FATHER TO ALL


The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Sunday, June 19, 2016

4

LOCAL NEWS

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Contact Kate Schott at 815-280-4119 or kschott@shawmedia.com

Some men spent their entire careers working out of that building, many children visited as youngsters, including some of our members who would go on to work there. Jeremiah Gericke

Firefighters Local 1544 president

Lockport fire station No. 1 reconstruction underway By BRIAN STANLEY

More online

bstanley@shawmedia.com LOCKPORT – The Lockport Township Fire Protection District has been around for 121 years, and until a few weeks ago the building that was Station 1 had lasted for almost half that time. But firefighting equipment has changed so much in the last six decades that the 1959 structure at Seventh and Ninth streets needed to be replaced. Fire trustees and officials held a ceremonial groundbreaking for that replacement Friday morning. Construction equipment began moving actual dirt about an hour later. The $3.8 million project is scheduled to be completed in February. “Some men spent their entire careers working out of that building, many children visited as youngsters, including some of our members who would go on to work there,” Firefighters Local 1544 President Jeremiah Gericke said. “There was some sadness as many people came down for a last look, but at the same time the old [station] was not without its issues.” Fire Chief Dave Skoryi said the old station had insulation and flooding

Visit TheHeraldNews.com to see more video and images from this story.

The fire district serves 77,000 people in Lockport, Crest Hill and Romeoville. Station 1 typically responds to calls in central Lockport and the northeast section of Lockport Township. Deputy Fire Chief Frank Blaskey said the fire engine from Station 1 will operate from Station 4 and the ambulance will be at Station 6 during construction. The Homer Township and Northwest Homer fire districts will also respond for calls near their area, he Eric Ginnard – eginnard@shawmedia.com said. Lockport fire district President Several Lockport Township Fire Protection District personnel and elected officials speak David Palya said the design of the at a groundbreaking ceremony Friday about the importance of Fire Station 1 in Lockport. 7,390-square-foot station will reflect the district’s past while modernizing the A new Fire Station 1 will be in place by 2017. structure. “There are seven arches that resemproblems, sewer and electrical lines for women firefighters. needed to be replaced, most modern “Our board is very fiscally responsi- ble the Seven Arch Bridge that crossed equipment was too large to fit in the ble but I appreciate that they saw this the Des Plaines River in Lockport for over 100 years,” Palya said. bay doors and there were no facilities had to be done,” Skoryi said.

Lincoln-Way D-210 seats new members, OKs interfund loan By FELIX SARVER

fsarver@shawmedia.com NEW LENOX – The Lincoln-Way District 210 board became whole again Thursday, and it also approved some corrective financial action. New board members Joseph Kosteck and Joe Kirkeeng were appointed and seated, bringing the board back to seven members after Arvid Johnson and Kathleen Casey resigned within the past two months. After receiving 19 applications, Kosteck and Kirkeeng were chosen by the board after a marathon closed session meeting June 9 that lasted close to

of Will and Grundy Counties

six hours. Superintendent Scott Tingley said Friday that the board also adopted a resolution to authorize an interfund loan and budget-line item transfers. The interfund loan was needed to prevent the operations and maintenance fund from having a negative balance, Tingley said, as funds cannot have a negative balance at the close of the fiscal year. The fiscal year ends June 30. Money was taken out of the operations and maintenance fund as a result of an agreed-upon procedures report, Tingley said. The report detailed how bond proceeds since 2006 were used as

well as fund transfer discrepancies. Tingley said money from the education fund has to be moved to the operations and maintenance fund so it does not have a negative balance. Based on the AUP report, the board in April directed district officials to transfer $4.6 million from the district’s operating funds back to the capital projects fund, as well as about $366,985 from the education fund back to capital projects. The district will need to increase its borrowing by $5 million as a result of those fund transfers. With the budget-line item transfers that the board approved Thursday, Tingley said the district had expenses

Support

in certain line items of the budget that should have been in other line items that needed to be fixed. “It’s corrective accounting,” he said. With the fiscal year coming to a close June 30, Tingley said, the district will see what it receives from the state in terms of funding. The district is still running a deficit and officials will see what the total deficit is after the fiscal year, he said. Last July, district officials gave a budget closeout presentation that reviewed the fiscal 2015 budget. Tingley said he would anticipate that presentation taking place this July as well.

Big Brothers Big Sisters of Will and Grundy Counties

bbbswillgrundy.org


Daily forecast

Seven-Day Forecast for Will County TODAY

5

To receive daily weather forecast text alerts on your mobile phone, visit TheHerald-News.com.

MON

WED

TUE

National Weather

FRI

THU

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

SAT

Seattle 70/54 Billings 82/51

Sunny and hot

A heavy afternoon t-storm

91

92

73

63

Partly sunny Delightful with Mostly cloudy, Periods of sun Partly sunny and less sunshine a stray with a t-storm humid t-storm

83

58

85

78

64

Almanac

62

89/71

91/73

7

8

Noon

2 p.m.

4 p.m.

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

Air Quality

Reading as of Saturday

105

50 100 150 200

300

500

Kankakee 92/72

Today

Hi 91 92 92 89 88 89 91 90 90 92 87

Lo W 73 s 73 s 72 s 73 s 73 s 71 s 74 s 73 s 72 s 72 s 71 s

Monday

Hi Lo 91 60 91 66 93 66 91 63 89 64 89 61 92 64 91 65 91 68 92 63 89 60

W t pc s t t t t t s t t

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

Today

Hi 91 90 91 91 93 93 92 91 93 91 85

Lo 74 73 73 74 75 74 72 70 74 70 70

W s s s s s s s s s s s

Monday

Hi Lo W 91 64 t 91 63 t 91 63 t 91 63 t 92 65 t 92 64 t 91 62 t 90 58 t 93 67 s 92 69 s 88 60 t

Illinois River Stages

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

Fld: flood stage. Prs: stage in feet at 7 a.m Saturday. Chg: change in previous 24 hours. DES PLAINES Station Fld Prs Chg Station Fld Prs at River Forest ....... 16 ..... 4.65 near Russell ............ 7 ..... 4.76 ... +0.03 at Riverside ............. 7 ..... 2.54 near Gurnee ............ 7 ..... 3.04 .... -0.09 near Lemont .......... 10 ......6.13 at Lincolnshire .... 12.5 ..... 7.55 .... -0.20 at Lyons .................. -- ... 11.02 near Des Plaines ...... 5 ..... 9.39 .... -0.24

Source: Illinois EPA

Pollen Count

Data as of Saturday

Sun and Moon low moderate high very high

Source: National Allergy Bureau

Coal City 92/73

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

90/72

Morris

92/74

5

Peotone

91/73

91/73

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

5

Joliet

Ottawa

Streator

90/72

91/75

Yorkville

Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset

Today 5:19 a.m. 8:30 p.m. 7:43 p.m. 4:58 a.m.

Monday 5:19 a.m. 8:30 p.m. 8:34 p.m. 5:44 a.m.

Full

Last

Miami 89/76

Hammond

Oak Lawn

91/73

91/74

Houston 88/73

89/73

90/74

91/73

Sandwich

Atlanta 85/66

Chicago

Oak Park

Aurora

Kansas City 91/71

El Paso 102/76

86/73

De Kalb

New York 88/65 Washington 90/68

Los Angeles 98/63

Evanston

90/72

UV Index Today

Trees Grass Weeds Molds absent

64

63

Elgin

Temperatures High ............................................ 89° Low ............................................ 57° Normal high ................................ 82° Normal low ................................. 61° Record high ................... 94° in 1994 Record low .................... 48° in 1982 Precipitation 24 hours through 3 p.m. yest. .. 0.00” Month to date .......................... 1.27” Normal month to date .............. 2.40” Year to date ........................... 10.33” Normal year to date ............... 15.81”

0

Chief Meteorologist

Denver 95/59

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.

85

82

Detroit 91/71

Chicago 89/73

San Francisco 77/54

Bill Bellis

Minneapolis 91/67

New

Chg ..... none .... -0.45 .... -0.42 ..... none First

Today Monday Hi Lo W Hi Lo W 99 70 s 97 69 s 60 54 r 63 51 r 85 66 s 87 69 s 93 73 pc 94 72 pc 91 64 s 93 70 s 82 51 s 85 57 s 79 55 s 92 63 pc 82 60 s 80 61 s 91 66 s 92 67 s 83 59 s 88 65 s 88 66 s 89 70 s 91 71 s 93 66 s 93 75 s 92 77 s 95 59 pc 84 60 s 94 73 s 89 65 t 91 71 s 93 62 t 85 73 pc 85 74 pc 88 73 c 90 74 pc 88 70 s 91 69 s 91 71 s 94 70 s 86 62 s 87 66 s 107 84 s 116 87 s 90 74 s 93 75 pc

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

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

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

Today Monday Hi Lo W Hi Lo W 88 77 t 88 78 t 98 78 pc 96 77 pc 63 48 pc 63 55 pc 109 80 s 110 83 s 96 80 pc 97 80 t 98 73 pc 94 73 t 70 51 sh 73 57 s 56 35 s 54 37 s 99 75 s 101 76 s 88 77 pc 88 77 pc 100 70 s 102 70 s 64 55 r 64 50 pc 91 74 pc 87 73 pc 90 84 pc 89 83 t 88 70 s 90 70 s 67 44 s 68 42 s

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

Today Monday Hi Lo W Hi Lo W 98 63 s 105 68 s 90 70 s 90 74 s 91 74 s 92 76 pc 89 76 t 86 76 t 85 71 s 88 63 t 91 67 s 79 60 t 91 66 s 92 70 s 86 77 c 88 76 pc 88 65 s 86 69 s 91 70 s 92 70 s 96 75 s 90 66 t 86 71 pc 87 68 s 91 67 s 92 72 s 118 89 s 120 91 s 88 67 s 88 70 s 78 58 s 77 58 s 77 55 s 82 57 s 92 57 s 93 59 s 94 76 s 95 75 s 83 62 pc 93 70 s 84 70 s 84 71 s 70 54 pc 79 55 pc 90 68 s 94 74 s Today Hi Lo W 94 59 s 69 59 pc 82 55 pc 95 80 t 73 56 t 80 59 pc 70 56 c 95 82 t 69 56 sh 75 66 pc 74 56 t 82 67 pc 84 77 t 67 54 r 80 71 pc 92 69 s

Monday Hi Lo W 94 60 s 67 57 t 89 62 s 91 79 t 71 56 t 80 61 pc 71 58 c 95 82 pc 65 60 r 73 66 c 74 60 t 82 70 pc 86 77 c 65 53 sh 81 71 pc 94 62 t

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

Jun 20

Jun 27

Jul 4

Jul 11

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2016

Five Locations To Serve You Basinger’s Pharmacy 2130 W. Jefferson St., Joliet • (815)-725-1102

Medela Breast Pumps and Accessories including: • Breastmilk collection bags & storage bottles

• Battery packs • Pump in Style Breast Pump

• Freezing & storage packs

• Shoulder Bag

• Breastmilk cooler set

• Soothing gel pads

• Breast shields

• Valves & membranes

• Freestyle Breast Pump The new Affordable Care Act (ACA) requires most health insurance plans (including Medicaid) to cover breast pumps. This means you could receive these products for little or no out-of-pocket cost.

Basinger’s Pharmacy - City Center 300 N. Ottawa St., Joliet, IL 60432 • (815) 722-3200

Basinger’s Pharmacy - Primary Care 2025 S. Chicago St., Joliet, IL 60436 • (815) 723-0300

Basinger’s Madison Pharmacy 330 Madison Street - Suite 102, Joliet, IL 60435 • (815) 582-3440

Essington Pharmacy 2202 Essington Rd., Joliet, IL 60435 • (815) 267-3253 SM-CL0362097

The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Sunday, June 19, 2016

WEATHER


The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Sunday, June 19, 2016

| LOCAL NEWS

6

New Victory Light reignites fond memories By BOB OKON

bokon@shawmedia.com JOLIET – The Victory Light replica at Joliet Catholic Academy’s Heritage Quad spurred memories of the old one at last week’s dedication ceremony. The new Victory Light was lit Thursday by Max Ziesmer, who was the last person to turn off the original light in June 1990. Ziesmer was on the Joliet Catholic High School baseball team that finished second in the state tournament that spring. “They let us turn on the Victory Light,” Ziesmer said. “We literally turned the light on for the last time.” In the fall of 1990, Joliet Catholic High School combined with St. Francis Academy to form Joliet Catholic Academy. JCA is located on the Larkin Avenue campus that was home to St. Francis Academy. The old Victory Light still stands in the former Joliet Catholic High School building that now is used for senior housing. The residence complex is called Victory Center, a tribute to the iconic value of the Victory Light in the building on Broadway Street. Joliet Councilman Pat Mudron was at the dedication ceremony, and he, too, had a vivid Victory Light memory from his days as a Joliet Catholic wrestler in 1967. “I was fortunate enough to win the state championship. They turned the Victory Light on for me,” Mudron said with the hint of a smile that suggested it remains a special moment for him. “One of the priests got the call and turned on the Victory Light so everyone would know I won,” he said. He noted those were the days before social media, and the Victory Light actually served as a news alert to notify people of a Joliet Catholic High School victory. The school’s location on a hill, with the Victory Light rising above a three-story building, made it particu-

Eric Ginnard – eginnard@shawmedia.com

The Joliet Catholic Victory Light stands against an overcast sky during the Thursday ribbon-cutting ceremony for the school’s Heritage Quad and Victory Light at JCA’s campus in Joliet. larly useful as a beacon. “The idea was that you could view it from a distance and know Joliet Catholic High School won tonight,” Mudron said. The new Victory Light is a replica at ground level but will have high visibility on Larkin Avenue. It features a halo on top to combine the Joliet Catholic High School tradition with that of St. Francis Academy, which used a halo as a victory symbol. That image has been used as a symbol for JCA since it was formed, Principal Jeffrey Budz noted. But alumni have long wanted to

see an actual Victory Light on campus again. “When I first came to JCA 11 years ago, I heard rumblings: You’ve got to get the Victory Light back on campus again,” Budz said. The Rev. Bob Colaresi, principal at Joliet Catholic High School from 1975 to 1988 and now on the Board of Members at JCA, remembers how students in those years often wanted to climb up the tower to the Victory Light for photographs. Still, Colaresi said, he first thought the plan to replicate the Victory Light was “frivolous” when he heard it.

“The idea was that you could view it from a distance and know Joliet Catholic High School won tonight.” Pat Mudron

Joliet councilman At the dedication ceremony, Colaresi said, he could see what it was all about. “The physicality of a symbol means everything,” he said. “It’s a really good replica.”

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JOLIET – A judge on Friday refused to reconsider a life sentence for a Joliet man who killed a woman two years ago at Evergreen Terrace. Judge Carla Alessio Policandriotes said nothing in Drumaine S. McKinley’s history should mitigate an extended prison term. McKinley, 37, was convicted in March of first-degree murder for the Sept. 3, 2014, death of Joslyn Woods. Woods, 20, and McKinley had arranged Drumaine a paid sexual encounter McKinley online and met about 6:20 a.m. at the public housing complex at 363 N. Broadway St. in Joliet after exchanging text messages. They went into the laundry room and had sex before there was a dispute over money, and Woods brought out a knife, which McKinley used to stab her repeatedly,

according to trial testimony. On Friday, McKinley was wearing a yellow Department of Corrections jumpsuit as he stood at a lectern next to Assistant Public Defenders Timothy Specht and Dana Jakusz. Specht argued prosecutors had not given written notice they would seek a “brutal and heinous” enhancement from the jury until minutes before jury selection started. Specht also noted McKinley has an infirm mother and is married with two grandchildren. Will County Assistant State’s Attorney Mark Fleszewski countered McKinley should’ve taken his family “into consideration before he did what he did and killed Joslyn Woods.” “He’s been in and out of the Department of Corrections his whole adult life. Can you tell me how he’s provided some moral example to his grandchildren as other grandparents do,” Alessio Policandriotes said. The judge ordered McKinley back to prison and said any further issues would be heard by the appellate court.

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Jefferson Street bridge reopens Friday SHAW MEDIA JOLIET – The Jefferson Street bridge in downtown Joliet has reopened. The Illinois Department of Transportation has completed the painting project and was to reopen the Jefferson Street movable bridge at 3 p.m. Friday, according to a news release issued Friday afternoon by the city of Joliet. The bridge was open prior to that time, according to eyewitness reports. Painting on Jefferson Street began in July 2015 with plans to finish the job in October. But the paint job was interrupted by the discovery of structural problems that were repaired. The bridge was then reopened for the winter and shut down in April so workers could resume the paint job. IDOT spokeswoman Gianna Urgo said earlier this week that the state expected to finish the bridge in the coming weeks.

the Cass Street bridge over the Des Plaines River starting, weather permitting, July 5. The closure is necessary for a bridge painting and cleaning project to protect from deterioration, according to a news release issued Friday by IDOT. The bridge is expected to reopen in the fall. The state is painting both bridges, two of the five drawbridges that cross the Des Plaines River in downtown Joliet. Once the Cass Street bridge closes, a posted detour will direct westbound traffic on Cass Street to follow Route 53 north on Scott Street, west on Ruby Street and north on Broadway Street. Motorists should travel west on Theodore Street to connect with Shaw Media file photo Plainfield Road. Construction crews work in April on the deck of the Jefferson Street bridge in downtown After Cass Street is done, IDOT Joliet. plans to close the Jackson Street bridge for an estimated two weeks Friday’s news about Jefferson an announcement from IDOT that for mechanical and electrical reStreet reopening was coupled with it intends to start a full closure of pairs.

Board reaches deals for courthouse, sheriff’s facility By MIKE MALLORY

mmallory@shawmedia.com JOLIET – The Will County Board has agreed to terms with three firms for work on the new courthouse and sheriff’s department. The County Executive’s Office negotiated a contract with Farnsworth Group Inc. of Shorewood for $991,663. The company will test, adjust and balance the heating, ventilation and air-conditioning systems of the proposed 11-story courthouse in downtown Joliet. Capital Improvements Committee Chairwoman Ragan Freitag, R-Wilmington, said Friday that the committee chose Farnsworth Group for several reasons.

But most importantly, the firm aligned with the board’s intent to use local vendors and labor on the project. She said the company was also professional and the quality of its past work stood out among the other competitors. The board also approved a $735,000 contract with Chicago-based Gilbane Construction to manage the assembly of the courthouse. The company prioritized community outreach and using local labor for the project, Freitag said. The firm is willing to hold open forums for companies that want to be a part of the bidding process, and it intends to educate the public about the project. Freitag said the firm is open to splitting up portions of construction to different com-

panies, if necessary. “They also want to work with local schools and tradespeople to bring apprentices in and have them learn,” Freitag said. “I thought that was outstanding.” Board member Cory Singer, R-Frankfort, was the lone dissenting vote on both courthouse contracts among those present. The new courthouse, once complete, is expected to cost about $150 million to $160 million. Most county officials have been in agreement for years that a new courthouse is needed due to overcrowding. Will County’s population has tripled since the existing courthouse opened in 1969. The third contract the board agreed to Thursday – with all present voting in

favor – was for $18,447. HR Green Inc. will design landscaping for the sheriff’s department facility, slated to break ground this year. The cost of the project is estimated at $30 million. To pay for both projects, and others, the county will issue up to $275 million in bonds. The Finance Committee expressed, in its last meeting, an intent to issue the bonds sooner rather than later due to low interest rates. There will be a special meeting Tuesday of the Capital Improvements Committee to evaluate the budget for the sheriff’s facility project. Freitag said the committee is likely to hold bimonthly meetings as both projects come closer to fruition.

Railroad crossing improvements set to start Monday in Braidwood SHAW MEDIA BRAIDWOOD – The Illinois Department of Transportation announced Friday that as part of the Chicago-to-St. Louis high-speed rail project, the Main Street crossing over the Union Pacific Railroad tracks in Braidwood will be closed, weather permitting, starting Monday. The improvements include installa-

tion of four-quadrant gates to prevent vehicles from traveling over the tracks while trains are passing, new signage and pavement markings, and upgrades to pedestrian crossings and sidewalks, according to the news release. The crossing is set to open, weather permitting, by July 25. A detour will direct traffic to use the Coal City Road crossing, according to the news release.

Eastbound traffic on Main Street – also known as Route 113 – should go north on Route 129, east on Coal City Road, across the tracks, and south on Route 53 to meet back up with Route 113. Westbound traffic on Route 113 should take the reverse route. Motorists can expect delays, should allow extra time for trips through the area, and should pay attention to flaggers and signs in the work zones.

The upgrades are part of the highspeed rail program to accommodate passenger service between Chicago and St. Louis at speeds up to 110 mph, reducing the length of the trip by one hour. The entire corridor is tentatively scheduled to be complete by the end of 2017, according to IDOT. About 150 crossings along the route will be improved to include additional safety features.


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Engineering Initiative Continues at line up, so I changed mine to line up with teammate Tim Lockhart’s hole because he had done a lot of work on his,” West student Kendra Shouse said. A year of knowledge Since August, the students in the new Introduction to Engineering Design class have used the highly sought after Project Lead the Way curriculum to better understand the engineering process. Teachers went through extensive training in summer 2015 in Chicago to ensure the best possible application of the curriculum for the inaugural class. Joliet West High School student Trinity Bias gives her Introduction to Engineering Design final project PowerPoint demonstration showing the miniature golf course she and her team created.

JOLIET – Joliet Township High School Introduction to Engineering Design students were given one final challenge before the year ended – to build a miniature golf course. The catch? Each student had to create an individual hole for the theoretical mini golf fairway, which would then be woven into a cohesive course while in teams with project managers – a task these engineering students had not faced this year. “This was the first real group project where the students had to come up with something that goes together to look

like one designer created it,” Joliet West Introduction to Engineering Design teacher Erin Wagner said.

Students have learned the design process used by engineers; how to sketch and draw visual representations of ideas; measurements and statistics; how to create a model of their idea; geometry; reverse engineering technique where students take a product and enhance it; how to thoroughly document their ideas from concept to creation; CAD Inventor software; and finally, how to collaborate as a team.

This Introduction to Engineering Design class was brought to JTHS through a collaboration of ExxonMobil and Cargill to enhance the STEM – short for science, technology, engineering and mathematics “These students stepped up to the – classes within the district, due to the challenge and were motivated because high demand of future jobs in these areas. this project was fun and it incorporated Students enrolled in the courses at West everything they have learned throughout and Central were divided into teams of the year. That’s the golden ticket, when three to four students, where they had to cohesively come up with a theme and design using parameters set by the teachers. Each student came up his or her own hole, then worked with the team to ensure each individual creation worked seamlessly with those made by their peers. “When we finished our courses did not Sponsored by

Joliet West High School student Hugo Quintana presents his team’s movie theatre-themed miniature golf course, which was created as a final project for the Introduction to Engineering Design course. SM-CL0362887

Joliet Central High School Introduction to Engineering Design student Taylyn Paris stands in front of the 3D printers as it prints the train she created during class using Inventor 3D software.


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JT West/Central we can combine fun and information students learn all year for a project,” Central Introduction to Engineering Design teacher Dale West said. “We had to set the format for our project, answer each other’s questions and work together, but we were prepared for this project because of what we learned over the year, especially the design process,” Central student Alfonso Rios said. Real-world application

Electrical or mechanical engineer hopeful Gabriel Hernandez of Joliet Central High School builds his 3D miniature golf course as a part of his final project for the Introduction to Engineering Design class new this year to Joliet Township High Schools.

“This has given the students a real-world application. Instead of going to the top of the ladder, which would be me in this This encourages team building and West student Mario Leon said this project case, they have to problem-solve together. communication, and it worked very well,” was a step into what a typical engineer West said. goes through when on a project. Students respected the process and “In an engineering career, engineers have team dynamic given to them for this to bond with other people and those final project. people need to be able to answer to a “As an engineer there is a lot of teamwork leader,” Leon said. involved. I am a student who asks the teacher a question every five minutes, so it was different to go to team members for help. It definitely made us more selfsufficient,” Central student Victoria Bryant said. Assigned project managers had to learn how to manage themselves as well as others, and they had to take all parts to make one miniature golf park for the final PowerPoint presentation.

Joliet Central High School Introduction to Engineering Design students Carlos Lockwood, left, Victoria Bryant, center, and Alfonso Rios collaborate on their “cities around the world” themed miniature golf course as a part of their final project. SM-CL0362888

“I learned that communication was key. If someone was off task I had to tell them and help them get back on track, and it was important to not get frustrated with other ideas,” West student Hugo Quintana said.

Joshua Yarnell prints out his final miniature golf design project and places copies in his Introduction to Engineering Design notebook to keep for future use. Yarnell was part of the new class offered at Joliet Township High Schools, West and Central campuses, during the 2015-16 academic year.

• Sunday, June 19, 2016

Teachers at West and Central decided this final project would offer a real-life experience for the students. Each group had to work together, but also had to work under a student project manager to field problems instead of the teacher.


The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Sunday, June 19, 2016

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MINOOKA – In a school board meeting held in the district’s old boardroom because of painting and carpeting of the Career Center Room, Minooka Community High School board members Thursday said their goodbyes to interim Superintendent Jim Blanche. Kenneth Lee, who was hired as the new superintendent in April, will begin July 1. Blanche began his interim position with the district July 2014, replacing previous Superintendent Jim Colyott, who was terminated from his position two months before. Board President Mike Brozovich said Lee has some big shoes to fill. “One of the most important things I appreciate is that you accepted this as an interim position,” Brozovich

said to Blanche, “and you still applied your skills and past experiences as if you would have been here longer. ... You really helped the district the past two years. You were greatly appreciated.” Blanche thanked the board and said there has been a good collaboration between administration, the board and staff. “Your building leadership couldn’t be better,” he said. “This was a phenomenal way to end my career.” Blanche also gave members what he called, “marching orders.” “I encourage you to continue workshops at least on an annual basis,” he said, “to continually improve your skills.” He also told them not to forget their responsibilities to keep in contact with their legislative representatives, who do place importance on their concerns, he said.

21

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

One of the most important things I appreciate is that you accepted this as an interim position, and you still applied your skills and past experiences as if you would have been here longer. ... You really helped the district the past two years. You were greatly appreciated.


The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Sunday, June 19, 2016

| COVER STORY

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• FATHER’S DAY

Continued from page 3

Despite their joy together, Lescher said he and Anne did experience challenges. For instance, they both underestimated her boys’ response to having a white stepfather. “A couple of the boys acted out – skipping school, truancy stuff – and ended up in the correction department on probation. Here I am, a big shot in the corrections department, and I’m going to court with my own kids,” Lescher said. “But Anne and I, we stayed strong together – and our love was strong – so we were able to hang tight.” Lescher is especially proud he and Anne could offer the kids a Catholic education for grade and high school. Some of the children attended college, he said. Education was a top priority for Lescher and Anne. “I enjoyed family life,” Lescher said. “I enjoyed being a husband. I enjoyed

being a father, and I took pride in all the kids’ sporting events and dancing events.” After Anne died of esophageal cancer Feb. 7, 1995, Lescher contacted Joseph Imesch, the bishop of the Diocese of Joliet at the time, and asked to return as a priest.

A return to ministry

Imesch agreed and assigned Lescher to Sacred Heart in 1998. He succeeded the Rev. Dick Bennett, who for 12 years had worked hard to incorporate a changing neighborhood into the active life of the church. The following year, Imesch also granted permission for Lescher to raise his then-13-year-old granddaughter Jessica, as her current situation was not working well. Jessica lived with Lescher at the rectory for the next 13 years, he said, where the Sacred Heart community embraced her with love and acceptance. Lescher then immersed himself in the Joliet community and became a

“barking dog” for justice. He was a member of the following groups: Joliet Area Community Based Organization, Warehouse Workers for Justice, Joliet Citizens United Against the Detention Prison, Joliet Citizens United Against Silver Cross Hospital, Churches United in the Fight Against AIDS and Joliet Citizens for the Eighth District. Only the last group is still active, Lescher said. Raymond A. Bolden, a member at Sacred Heart, feels Lescher will be a blessing wherever he goes next. “He has been a man of honor, a man of courage, a man of serious spirituality, and he’s been a leader in the idea of ending poverty, ending hatred and ending needless incarceration,” Bolden said. “He’s been a real priest.” Having served as a father on multiple levels, Lescher feels all fathers should show acceptance, forgiveness, encouragement and love. He’s thankful for majoring in journalism at the University of Notre Dame, as it helped him write clear, concise sermons. Lescher said he is thrilled to have served under two great popes, Pope John XXIII and Pope Francis. He doubts he’ll be bored in retirement. Lescher plans to catch up on fishing, reading (“I went cold turkey on the TV 18 years ago”) and vegetable gardening (“I grow the kitchen sink. I throw in everything”). “To me, gardening is therapy. It’s

“He has been a man of honor, a man of courage, a man of serious spirituality, and he’s been a leader in the idea of ending poverty, ending hatred and ending needless incarceration.” Raymond A. Bolden

Member of Sacred Heart Catholic Church very calming,” Lescher said. “I love to see things growing. All you have to do is water them and they never talk back to you.” Lescher will live in an apartment near a small church that has no priest, so he will celebrate Mass there daily. And where is this apartment? In Hopkins Park, near Momence where Anne is buried, in Pembroke Township right outside Kankakee, Lescher said. It’s also the fourth-poorest township in the United States, he added. Many of its residents have no electricity or running water. “As a side note, it’s got very sandy soil. It grows the second largest number of watermelons in the United States,” Lescher said. “So I’ll have two gardens there.”

• The Herald-News reporter Mike Mallory contributed to this story.

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The Rev. Ray Lescher left the priesthood in June 1975 to marry Anne, a widow with 10 children. He bought an eight-bedroom house for $27,900, and moved in Anne and six of her children. “She was the most marvelous woman I’ve seen to this day. She was just a warm and loving person,” Lescher said.

SM-CL0325696


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Criteria for Neighborhood Heroes include: • Outstanding yard • Horticulture and color • Your own work • Joliet-based residence • Improvements to residence considered • Self-nominations encouraged

Are you at risk? Peripheral vascular disease (PVD) is a serious condition that affects millions of Americans.

Thursday, June 23 | 6:30 p.m. Presence Saint Joseph Medical Center | Auditorium C 333 North Madison Street, Joliet Peripheral vascular disease (PVD) refers to blockages in arteries in the body other than in the heart which can lead to stroke or debilitating leg pain. A ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) can occur without warning and is 90% fatal — yet, the majority of people with PVD are living unaware of their risks. Learn more about your risk of PVD from cardiologist, Dr. Mary Gordon at our free lecture and screening* which includes:

We’re a major connec�on to the global marketplace But we don’t import or export goods. CenterPoint Proper�es develops loca�ons where we believe businesses and communi�es will thrive, like the CenterPoint Intermodal Center in Joliet and Elwood where more than $65 billion in goods pass through each year. Our investment in Will County has created thousands of jobs and millions of dollars in tax revenue for local ci�es and towns.

+ Ultrasound of the carotid arteries and abdominal aorta and a check of the circulation in your legs. + This is the same screening you see advertised for almost $200 elsewhere. Learning to reduce your risk factors is the best way to manage and even reverse PVD. Early detection can literally save life and limb. You must attend the presentation to schedule your free screening.

Get in touch.

To register, call 877.737.4636.

We’re proud to be a part of the local community.

Learn more at www.centerpoint.com/parks.

* You must meet the risk criteria to qualify for the free screening. © 2016 Presence Saint Joseph Medical Center

• Sunday, June 19, 2016

Visit www.projectacclaim.org for more information or send email nominations to jmzalanka@hotmail.com

SM-CL0363027

Receive a Project Acclaim Certificate, heroic Yard Sign, Joliet City Council recognition, tickets to the Annual Honors and Recognition Banquet this fall, and the envy of their neighbors. Deadline: July 31, 2016

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

Nominate a Neighborhood Hero!

Project Acclaim and the City of Joliet are partnering to find families who take pride in their community with their home and their landscaping in an annual awards program.


The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Sunday, June 19, 2016

| LOCAL NEWS

24

Lockport contractor convicted of defrauding Chicago program for women-owned businesses SHAW MEDIA CHICAGO – A Lockport-based subcontractor was convicted Friday on fraud charges “for scheming to help a general contractor falsely satisfy its female hiring requirement” on city of Chicago construction projects, according to a news release from the U.S. Attorney’s Office of the Northern District of Illinois. Elizabeth Perino, owner of a certified Women’s Business Enterprise, allowed her company to be claimed as a subcontractor on city projects so the general contractor could satisfy its requirement to assign a portion of the work to female-owned businesses, ac-

cording to the news release. Perino falsified paperwork to conceal the fact that her business, Lockport-based Perdel Contracting Co., would perform no actual work on the projects. Evidence at the four-day trial revealed that Perino and a co-worker agreed to act as a “pass-through” on two city projects, including one at O’Hare International Airport, authorities said. Perino, 62, of Willowbrook, was convicted on three counts of wire fraud and one count of mail fraud, according to the news release. She faces up to 80 years in prison; a sentencing hearing will be set at a later date.

JOLIET POLICE BRIEFS JOLIET – Joliet police reported the following incidents Saturday.

Joliet police investigate report of gunfire

Police were called to a report of people yelling and shots being fired in the vicinity of Second and Miller avenues at 12:30 a.m. Saturday. No evidence of gunfire was found, police said.

Man reports being robbed at knifepoint in Joliet

A man reported being robbed at knifepoint at 4:20 p.m. Friday in the 1000 block of Hickory Street. The victim reported being held at knifepoint while a man grabbed $300 in cash from his pocket and then fled, Joliet police said. A description of the suspect was not

available Saturday.

Motorcyclist in intensive care after Joliet accident

A motorcycle driver was injured Friday in a head-on collision with a car. The name of the 38-year-old man was not available. But Joliet police said Saturday that he was being treated in the neurological intensive care unit at Presence Saint Joseph Medical Center. The man was driving south at 4:50 p.m. on River Road in an area between Theodore Street and Riviera Boulevard at the time of the collision, police said. The driver of a Nissan Altima turned left in front of the motorcycle when the collision occurred, police said. The Nissan’s driver, whose name also was not provided, was ticketed for failure to yield, police said.

– Bob Okon

1 injured in New Lenox traffic crash NEW LENOX – One person was injured in a traffic crash Friday in New Lenox. The incident occurred about 5:30 p.m. at Joliet Highway and Anderson Road, New Lenox Fire Protection District Lt. Tom Van Tilburg

said. The crash between two passenger vehicles involved three people, Van Tilburg said, one of whom was taken to Silver Cross Hospital with injuries that were not life-threatening.

– Anna Schier

Haven’t gotten around to it? Find someone to do it for you in the At Your Service Directory in the classified section.


25

No-cost training can update your job skills

City of Joliet Water Quality Report is available at http://www.cityofjoliet.info/waterqualityreport

If you are without computer access and would like a copy of the report by mail, please call the Public Utilities Department at (815) 724-4230.

If you’re looking to update your skills, or learn new skills for a new career, Workforce Services Division can help those who qualify get the training they need to get back to work at no cost to you. Visit www.jobs4people.org and click on “Job Seekers” then “Career Scholarships” or call 815.727.4444 for more information.

Workforce Services Division of Will County

City of Joliet Smart Message Community Alert Network Receive notification and emergency information from the Public Utilities, Public Works, Police, and Fire Departments by email or text message. Sign up from the City of Joliet homepage at http://www.cityofjoliet.info

www.jobs4people.org

Equal opportunity employer. Auxiliary aids and services are available upon request to individuals with disabilities.

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JOLIET WEST

1120 Richards St.

715 W. Jefferson St.

815-726-1229

815-723-0099

(Across From Certified Foods)

(1 Block East of Raynor)

JOLIET WEST

PALOS HEIGHTS

LOCKPORT

SHOREWOOD

(Corner of Jefferson + Larkin Behind Subway)

708-448-0209 122nd & Harlem

(Porter Plaza)

815-838-1638

(Rt 52-1 1/2 mile west of Rt. 59 next to Skooter’s Roadhouse)

1710 W. Jefferson St.

815-725-6613w

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• Sunday, June 19, 2016

2400 Glenwood Avenue • Joliet, IL 60435 815.727.4444 • Illinois Relay: 711

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

ARE YOU OUT OF WORK?


The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Sunday, June 19, 2016

| THE HERALD-NEWS

26

FUNERAL SERVICES DIRECTORY Banquets/Catering

Cemeteries

Funeral Homes

Funeral Homes Family-Owned & Operated • Cremation Service Options

Funeral Luncheons & Catering 1630 Essington Rd., Joliet 815.254.2500 www.cemenospizza.com

Espanol The Catholic Cemeteries www.dioceseofjoliet.org/cemeteries oof the Diocese of Joliet

Resurrec�on Cemetery Mausoleum 200 W. Romeo Rd. (135th) Romeoville

Mt. Olivet Cemetery 1320 E. Cass St. Joliet

Ss. Cyril & Methodius Cemetery East Joliet on Rt. 6

Restaurant & Catering

829 Moen Avenue • Rockdale, IL 60436

815-725-1977

SPECIALIZING IN POST FUNERAL LUNCHEON

St. Mary Na�vity Cemetery Crest Hill, Caton Farm Rd.

St. John The Bap�st Cemetery

Funeral Homes

Advance Funeral Planning Serving The Community Since 1929

• A myriad of options • On site Crematory • Prearranged-Traditional Cremation-Memorial Services

3200 Black at Essington Rds. Joliet, IL 60431

815-741-5500

1201 W. Route 6 at Deerpath Dr Morris, IL 60450

815-942-5040

adno=0364745

www.fredcdames.com

Joliet, Ruby at Clement St.

St. Patrick Cemetery

Joliet, W. Jefferson St. at Hunter St.

Holy Cross Cemetery Crest Hill, on Theodore St.

Risen Lord Cemetery & Crema�on Columbaria

1933 - 2016 83 Years

1501 Simons Rd. (127th) Plaineld/Oswego

604 Theodore Street Crest Hill, Illinois 60403

815-723-9371

Burial Options Available: · Mausoleum Crypts

· Grave Space · Crema�on Niche Columbaria · Monument & Marker Sales

· Advance Planning with 0% Financing

Serving the Community Since 1908

• On-site Crematory with viewing chapel. • Personalized Pre-Arrangements. • Private family dining areas. • Children’s activity room.

1211 Plainfield Rd., Joliet, IL 60435 www.tezakfuneralhome.com 815-722-0524

Pre-Plan Today...

Elwood Banquets

by Silver Dollar Restaurant 422 Mississippi Ave. • Elwood, IL 60421 815-423-6700 • Private room for funeral luncheons •

Minutes away from Abraham Lincoln Cemetary

Pisut Funeral & Cremation Services

For Peace of Mind Tomorrow! Grave Space Available at all Eight Cemetery loca�ons throughout Crest Hill, Joliet & Plaineld to Serve You! New Cremation Niche Columbarium Now Available at Mt. Olivet & Resurrection Cemeteries!

815-886-0750

815-886-0750 Espanol www.dioceseofjoliet.org

2320 Black Road, Joliet 815-744-0022 www.CHSFuneral.com

Woodlawn Funeral Home & Memorial Parks 3201 W. Jefferson St., Joliet, IL 60431

815-725-0100

• Joliet’s Only Combination Funeral Home & Cemeteries • Traditional Funeral Services • Cremation & Memorial Services • Advance Planning • Burial Services Proudly Serving Families For Decades

www.woodlawnfunerals.com

1211 Plainfield Rd. Joliet, IL

815-722-0998

To advertise in this directory, please call (815) 280-4101 SM-CL0362082


(815) 725-1700 IC

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Se Habla Espanol 208 N. Larkin, Joliet

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DU D Nancy Hibler 815-263-5791

INCREDIBLE RANCH - PERFECT CURB APPEAL! This lovely home shows pride of ownership & boasts plaster walls, 3BRS, 1.1 baths, eat-in kitchen, full bsmt w/tons of storage, new 30 year roof, windows, updated bath & 2 GREEN HOUSES, one with gas, heat & electric! $130’s - Call Nancy Hibler today!

Nancy Hibler 815-263-5791

CHECK THIS ONE OUT - STUNNING UPDATES! Fantastic 2BR ranch boasting a gorgeous kitchen w/custom cabs, granite tops & SS appls, new flooring & paint thru-out, large LR, FR w/frpl, updated bath, furnace, windows, concrete, more! $150’s - Call Nancy Hibler today!

Nancy Hibler 815-263-5791

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BEAUTIFUL DECORWay, - YOU MUST(Rt.GET 15837 Weathervane Plainfield 59 to Renwick west to Weathervane) 1ST TIME OPEN - YOU MUST INSIDE! offering a charming GET INSIDE3BR THIShome AMAZING HOME! You will fall in love with this superbly maintained & decorated home offering kitchen w/SS appls, the large hardwood floors thru-out mainLR, levelFlorida (in-lay design in the LR, DR & landing), 2 story LR, inviting foyer, beautiful room w/bar, HUGE vinyl fenced yard eat-in kitchen with breakfast bar & SS appls,gorgeous formal DR,family room adjacent to kitchen w/beautiful brick (144x150) & 2-1/2 car garage. Newer fireplace, 3 spacious bedrooms, large loft, 2 full & 2 half baths. Finished basement w/rec room, huge bar & 4th flooring, granite c-tops, windows, doors & bath! $162,500 - Call Nancy today! bedroom! Too much to list! NOWHibler $329,500 - Nancy Hibler will show you through this outstanding home!

Nancy Jim Karges Hibler 815-263-5791 815-474-1144

WELL MAINTAINED STONE RANCH! Don’t hesitate on this well-built ranch offering hdwd floors & plaster walls, gorgeous stone frpl, sunroom, 3BRS, 1.2 baths, large fenced yard, bsmt, 2.5 car garage, main flr lndry & tons of storage! $160’s - Call Jim Karges, Mng Brkr.

Nancy David Jim Hufford Karges Hibler 815-263-5791 815-474-1144 815-483-7634

GLENWOOD MANOR - PRICED TO SELL! Well kept tri-level in a sought-after area! 3BRS, LR & DR w/hdwd flrs, large FR w/brick frpl & Pergo flrs, screened porch, fenced yard, kitchen skylight, brick paver drive & patio, updated baths, more! $160’s - Call Jim Karges, Mng Brkr!

Nancy Jim Karges Hibler 815-263-5791 815-474-1144

COMMERCIAL LAND FOR SALE! This parcel consists of 4 lots - 3 having 50’ frontage, 1 having 100’ frontage on highly traveled Plainfield Rd. Approx 142 feet deep. 3 pos ingress/egress accesses. Tons of potential just seconds from the I55/Rt 30 interchange. Call Jim Karges, Mng Brkr!

Nancy Jim Karges Hibler 815-263-5791 815-474-1144

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SOLID BRICK RANCH - NEW LOW PRICE! Spotless home offering 2BRS, 1-1/2 baths, plaster walls, hardwood floors and bsmt rec room. Updated roof, furnace, a/c coil, bath & some flooring. Fenced yard, 1 car garage, all appls, more! NOW $131,500 - Call Jim Karges, Mng Brkr.

Bob Vergo 815-954-0233

GRAND HAVEN - RANCH STYLE UNIT! Situated in a sought-after area this fantastic home offers beautiful views of the 12th fairway, an open LR/DR & kitchen, relaxing lanai, family room, 9’ ceilings, paver patio & 2.5 car garage. $240,000 - Call Bob Vergo today!

Bob Vergo 815-954-0233

COUNTRY CHARMER - PRICED TO SELL! Situated on a well manicured 3/4 acre lot this spacious home boasts 5-6 BRS, an inviting front porch & foyer, 2 baths, hdwd flrs, a 2nd kitchen upstairs, full bsmt & 2-1/2 car garage! $169,900 - Call Bob Vergo today!

Bob Vergo 815-954-0233

NEW LISTING - OSWEGO TOWNHOME! Beautiful end unit overlooking the lake! Gorgeous kitchen w/hdwd flrs & SS appls, amazing 2-story LR w/frpl, 2BRS + loft, 2-1/2 baths, master BR w/WIC, 2 car attached & relaxing patio. $149,900 - Call Mary Schild today!

Mary Schild 815-483-0354

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QUALITY CONSTRUCTION - CREST HILL! Built with 2x6’s giving the home an increased R value, a beautiful kitchen, 3 large BRS, 2-1/2 baths, den or 4th BR, bsmt rec room, Florida room, big FR, 2.5 car garage, deck, pool & gazebo! $220,000 - Call Bob Vergo today!

JUST LISTED - DIAMOND DUPLEX! Outstanding dÈcor & upkeep in this 3BR, 2 bath duplex boasting a fenced yard w/shed, 50 ft dog run, Pergola/patio & peaceful views of lake. LR w/ frpl & hdwd flrs, eat-in kitchen w/all appls, more! $160’s - Call Steve Roots today! SM-CL0362891

Steve Roots 815-954-6830

LOCKPORT RANCH - HUGE LOT! Situated on a 102 x 406 lot this adorable home is well maintained and ready for new owners! 2BRS, finished & carpeted attic w/pull down stairs, large storage unit, fenced yard and 2 car garage. $149,000 - Call Terry Fenoglio today!

Terry Fenoglio 815-370-4482

MOVE IN CONDITION - JUST $79,900! Rarely available 4 BR home offering 1 full & 1 half baths, a main floor master, LR, DR & kitchen, full basement, more! Call Joe Contreras for more details or your private viewing at 815370-0846 TODAY!

Joe Contreras 815-370-0846

DREAM HOME IN MANHATTAN! Spacious & beautiful 2-story home boasting 4 big BRS w/ WIC’s, 2-1/2 baths, a large loft & oversized 3 car garage! 9’ ceilings, luxury master, main flr lndry, full bsmt & fenced yard w/patio! $289,900 - Call David Hufford today!

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

Serving the area with pride since 1950!

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David Hufford 815-483-7634


The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Sunday, June 19, 2016

| THE HERALD-NEWS

28

SHOWCASE of HOMES

WONDERFUL 2 STORY HOME IN MOKENA

11510 Bryn Mawr Way…Ready for new owners & new memories! Spacious 4 bedroom 2.5 updated bath on 1 acre lot offers ample living space, plenty of closet and storage space! New furnace & central air conditioning plus updated roof, siding & windows. See through wood burning fireplace. Wet bar in family room. Hardwood floors in entry, dining room, kitchen, laundry and master bedroom which is a suite with sitting room. Granite in 21x12 kitchen. Main level laundry. Full unfinished basement. Screened in porch is great for entertaining. Epoxy garage floor and much more! Asking $359,800. Call Staci Stanek today at 815-600-0423 for your personal tour. View even more photos at www.cbhonig-bell.com

JOLIET – OPEN TODAY 1:30-4 336 Earl Avenue…Brick ranch on 101x140 lot, hardwood floors in both bedrooms & 21x14 living room with fireplace, office/sun room opens thru French door to patio with hot tub, firepit & storage shed in fenced backyard. Updated kitchen with farmhouse sink, full basement, oversized 2.5 car garage. Asking $167,900. Jim greets you at the open house today or call him at 815-693-2970. Preview multiple photos at www.cbhonig-bell.com

CREST HILL - $157,000 2145 Root Street…Close to Richland schools & minutes from I-55 via Rt. 30! On corner 91x137 lot, 3 bedrooms (2 on 1st floor plus 23x11 bedroom upstairs), plaster walls, updated siding, roof plus new central air conditioning. Possible room for expansion in full basement or attic! Garage space for 3 cars. Call Mark today at 815-277-7388 for a private showing. Preview multiple photos at www.cbhonig-bell.com

OPEN HOUSE Jim Skorupa 815-693-2970 815-744-1000

BOLINGBROOK - $354,900 820 Lindsey Lane…In Barclay Estates, 5 bedrooms including 1st floor master suite – ideal for related living, 3 full baths, family room fireplace, numerous upgrades in kitchen such as 42” cabinets. Professionally landscaped lot, large wrap-around deck, sprinkler system, plus includes a home warranty! Contact Frank for an appointment today at 708-646-6447. View multiple photos at www.cbhonig-bell.com

Frank Ristucci 815-609-4360 708-646-6447

Mark Reum 815-744-1000

NEW LENOX - $286,900 1608 Pheasant Lane… NEW PRICE! Amazing 1+ acre lot, just waiting for your family to make their memories here. Great 3 bedroom 2 bath home with large kitchen and family room with fireplace. Basement boasts loads of storage as does the 2 car attached garage. Recent improvements include roof, exterior lighting, and many mechanicals! Call Lee today at 815-478-3872 to see this exceptional home. Preview photos at www.lee-hansen.com

Lee Hansen 815-478-3872 815-485-3401


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HONIG-BELL REAL ESTATE CAREER CENTER www.educaterealestate.com

336 Earl Ave, Joliet MLS 09249233… Brick ranch on 101x140 lot, hardwood flrs in both bedrooms & 21x14 liv rm with fpl, office, bsmt. $167,900 Jim Skorupa 815-693-2970

2875 Heritage Dr, Joliet MLS 09255260… 1st floor condo in flexicore bldg, 2 bedrooms, 2ba, all appliances, inunit laundry, 1 car detached gar, $104,900 Rimas Stankus 773-590-0205

2601 Star Lite Dr, Joliet MLS 09253188… New Lenox Schools! All brick, 2 bedrooms, 1.5ba, 1st flr laundry, fam rm & kitchenette in bsmt, 2.5 car gar. $169,900 Lee Hansen 815-478-3872

8037 Harrier Ave, Joliet MLS 09252579… Minooka Schools, duplex with updated carpet & wood flring, 3 bedrooms (1st flr master), loft, $170,000 Pam Cassano 815-370-1536

1957 Calla Dr, Joliet MLS 09250609… Plainfield Schools, 9 ft ceilings on main flr, 2 bedrooms, 2.5ba, liv rm fpl, all appliances. $130,000 Sara Young, Managing Broker 815-685-5090

323 S May St, Joliet MLS 09250510… New siding, some updated windows, 3 bedrooms (2 down & 1 up), updated kit, 12x21 fam rm, bsmt, $142,000 Leah Kapsimalis 630-337-8387

811 Peale St, Joliet MLS 09249220… Near I-80, many recent updates, 3 bedrooms, 2ba, vaulted ceiling on main level, lower level fam rm, huge gar. $179,000 Candy Salomoun 708-927-1320

2417 Fleetwood Dr, Joliet MLS 09256296… Min from I-355, 4 bedrooms & bonus rm up, ceramic tile thru main level, fam rm fpl, lge covered paver patio, $255,000 Sue Dufault 815-342-8123

1610 Highland Ave, Crest Hill MLS 09242710… On double lot, hardwood floors in all 3 bedrooms, updates incl kit, bath, windows & roof. Bsmt, 2 car gar. $139,900 Sheri McAdams 815-592-1261

15955 Rankin Dr, West of Lockport MLS 09253830… Almost 1 acre, updated kit, many windows & roof! 3 bedrooms, attached & detached garages & storage bldg, $269,900 Tammy Tschida 815-378-9608

1729 Fieldstone Dr, Shorewood MLS 09247584… Minooka Schools, endunit 2 bedroom condo, 4 walk-in closets, vaulted liv/din combo, pool & clubhouse. $142,000 Michael Smetana 815-207-3949

24700 W Manor Dr, Shorewood MLS 09244952… Updated brick ranch in The Manors, 2,600+ sq ft, 4 bedrooms, 2.5ba, bsmt, side load 3 car gar, paver patio, $419,900 John Palmer 815-741-0260

22047 S Burr Ridge Dr, Shorewood MLS 09249137… 1.67 acres on the river, Minooka Schools, 4 bedrooms, 3.5ba, vaulted ceilings, fin walkout bsmt, 3 car gar. $405,000 Caitlin Davenport 815-370-5701

22220 S Eastcliff Dr, Shorewood MLS 09254858… On 1 acre on the river, Minooka Schools, 2,800+ sq ft, wood flring in most rms, fam rm with fpl. $339,900 Carol Bradac 815-210-3288

23816 Sussex Dr, Channahon MLS 09255525… New siding, updated bath, windows & air! Hardwood flrs on main level, 3 bedrooms, 2nd bath in bsmt. $178,500 Rick Gray 815-955-2705

1509 Creekside Dr, Minooka MLS 09244182… Furnace, air, siding & roof new in 2015! 3 bedrooms, Brazilian hardwood in kit, liv & din rms. Fam rm fpl, $240,000 Amy Rogus 815-210-8633

12005 Peterson Rd, Minooka MLS 09256758… 20+ acres (mostly tillable), 32x48 bldg, 2 bedroom 2ba raised ranch, updated carpeting, siding & roof. $380,000 Ellen Williams 815-483-5788

7402 Atkinson Cir, Plainfield MLS 09254646… Rarely available 4 bedroom, vaulted liv rm, fam rm with fpl, fin bsmt, updated appliances & air. $250,000 Carey Zeller 630-287-8658

4716 Riverwalk Dr, Plainfield MLS 09247177… End-unit condo, 1 level living, 2 bedrooms, den, 2ba, vaulted 25x15 liv rm, all appliances. $160,000 Sara Young, Managing Broker 815-685-5090

1712 Golden Ridge Dr, Plainfield MLS 09251933… 5 upstairs bedrooms, 3.5ba, kit opens to fam rm with fpl, French drs to den, liv/din combo, partly fin bsmt. $257,900 Marie Clucas 815-325-4966

26104 Stewart Ridge Dr, Plainfield MLS 09250455… Bank owned, Oswego Schools, 6,000+ sq ft incl fin bsmt, 4 bedrooms & bonus rm up, 2 fpl. $775,000 Judy Archer, Managing Broker 815-791-9028

13014 Skyline Dr, Plainfield MLS 09251274… 4,300+ sq ft, custom trim & finishes, 5 bedrooms, 4ba, 2 fpl, hardwood flrs thru most of main level, bsmt. $485,000 Sarah Smolen 815-814-6257

5905 Lake Pointe Dr, Plainfield MLS 09252328… Wesmere Country Club, 3 bedrooms, 2.5ba, vaulted liv/din combo, wood flr in updated kit & fam rm, lge deck.$190,000 Ellen Williams 815-483-5788

13029 Stockton Ave, Plainfield MLS 09249036… 3,200+ sq ft, vaulted fam rm with fpl, hardwood flr in kit, 5th bedroom in bsmt, community pool & clubhouse.$359,000 Shelbey Hammond 630-292-2998

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The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Sunday, June 19, 2016

| THE HERALD-NEWS

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4 to 8 p.m. at Anderson Memorial Chapel, 606 Townhall Drive, Romeoville. A Christian burial service for Mrs. Lois Breyne will be Tuesday, June 21, 2016, 9:30 a.m. from the funeral home chapel to St. Andrew the Apostle Church for a 10 a.m. Mass. Graveside service to follow at Saints Peter and Paul Cemetery in Naperville. In lieu of flowers, contributions would be greatly appreciated at The Cystic Fibrosis Foundation or St. Andrews/ Catholic Education Foundation, Diocese of Joliet, 16555 Weber Road, Crest Hill, IL 60403. (www.AndersonMemorialHomes.com) 815886-2323

DOROTHY CAREY

Dorothy Carey, 94, was called to be with the Lord on June 5, 2016. She is survived by her children, Robert (Lisa) MARY E. BUTLER Carey, Sandra (Russell) Bennett, Thomas Mary E. Butler (nee Snyder), 65, of New Lenox, (Pamela) Carey, James (Sue) Carey, Dorothy M. Carey; and daughter-in-law Carla (the late Ronald passed away Tuesday, June 14, 2016, at Joliet W.) Carey. Area Community Hospice Home. Devoted grandmother to 13 grandchildren and Mary was born in Joliet to the late Albert and eight great-grandchildren. Olga (nee Kocolowski). Preceded in death by her husband, Ronald She was the beloved wife of Richard; loving mother of Andrea (Tony) Pfieffer, Elizabeth (Tony) James (2008), and her son, Ronald William Butler-Elder and Caroline (fiancé Lawrence Carls) (2009). Dorothy was born in Boone, Iowa, to the late Butler; dear sister of Albert Snyder, Patricia Snyder (deceased), Arlette (Lawrence) Seppi, James Leonard and Ethel Dolak. The family moved to the Hyde Park area of Chicago, where she met her Snyder and Steven (Ginger) Snyder; cherished aunt and great aunt of many nieces and nephews. future husband, Ronald. In 1952 Dorothy and Ronald moved to Plainfield, Mary was a retired special education paraprowhere they raised 6 children. fessional for Lincoln-Way Area Special EducaA lifelong member of St. Mary Immaculate tion District 843. She was the most beautiful, Church of Plainfield, Dorothy dedicated her life to intelligent, talented woman her husband of 46 her family and faith. years has ever met. Dorothy’s family would like to thank the staff of In lieu of flowers, Memorials in Mary’s name the Lakewood Nursing Home Plainfield for their to the Cancer Foundation of your choice would care and kindness. Thank you to the family of be appreciated. Family will receive friends for a Memorial Visitation at Kurtz Memorial Chapel 102 Tom and Pam Carey for all the care and love they E. Francis Road, New Lenox, IL 60451, on Sunday, gave our mother in her final years. By her request, a private family service will be June 26, 2016, from 2 to 6 p.m. A Memorial Mass held. Interment will be at the Plainfield Township will be at 10 a.m. Monday, June 27, 2016, at St. cemetery. Mary’s Catholic Church, Mokena. www.kurtzmemorialchapel.com or 815-485• Continued on page 32 3200 for information.

Happy Birthday

Teddy Weis June 20, 2016

REMEMBERING RE

you on your 80th Birthday.

REMEMBERING

our happy carefree Childhood days.

REMEMBERING

playing and eating soda crackers by the creek.

REMEMBERING

clopping downtown in your mother’s high heel shoes.

REMEMBERING

going to Sprauge Dairy for ice cream.

REMEMBERING

setting off to Mackinac Island and not making it. Because we got lost and drove around in a big circle. Memories cannot be bought, sold or given away For they are ours to keep in our hearts forever.

Friends Forever, Joan

31

• Sunday, June 19, 2016

Deborah Bailey, age 61, went home to be with the Lord on June 12, 2016, at St. James Hospice, Chicago Heights, Illinois. Born in Indianapolis, Indiana, she has resided in the Joliet area for over 30 years. Preceded in death by her parents. William Layton and Beulah S. Layton; her sister, Lorrela Layton; and brother, Donald Layton; and daughters, Katrina Layton and Rose Marie Bailey. She leaves to mourn her two sons, Victor (Yolanda) Bailey and Anthony (Melissa) Bailey; and one stepson, Claude Turner Jr.; devoted JOHN EARL BRISCOE companion, Claude Turner Sr., ex-husband Victor Born: Dec. 22, 1958 Bailey Sr.; brothers-in-law, Arnold Bailey, Stevie Died: June 2, 2016 (Lisa) Bailey, and Jimmy Thomas; and sistersin-law, Rose Sweeney, Nancy Bailey, Catherine Mr. John Earl Briscoe, age 57, Bailey and Mary Bailey. of Taylor, Arkansas, formerly Funeral services will be 11 a.m. Monday May 20, of Winnfield, Louisiana, and 2016, at Mount Zion Baptist Church, 402 SingleChannahon, Illinois, passed ton Place, Joliet, Illinois 60436. Visitation 10 to 11 away on Thursday, June 2, 2016, am. Rev. Roger Zeke Gates, officiating. at Springhill Medical Center in Springhill, Louisiana. There are not enough words to describe the man that John was. He was the best husband, father, papaw, brother, son, and friend. It brought him no greater pleasure in life than to work hard and provide for his family. In this he expressed his deep love for us all. We never doubted his love for a moment. Laziness was not a part of his vocabulary. Everything LOIS BREYNE that his hands found to do, he did with all of his Born: Nov. 29, 1932 strength and unto the Lord. He continually poured Died: June 17, 2016 his life into the lives of each person he knew. A more faithful friend could no man find. His Lois (Hendrickson) Breyne, “Peg” of Carol integrity, loyalty, and passion for God sustained Stream, IL, passed away Friday, June 17, 2016. She was 83 years old. Born in Hazard, Nebraska, him and will continue to be his legacy. He served on Nov. 29, 1932, Peg previously lived in Romeo- in many capacities, including youth pastor, royal ranger commander, and deacon at First Assembly ville and Lemont, IL. Peg met her husband of 63 of God of Winnfield for many years. He continued years while attending Wayne State College in his ministry at First Assembly of God of Springhill Wayne, Nebraska. She taught first and second as associate pastor, then senior pastor of Taylor grade for 28 years at St. Andrew the Apostle School in Romeoville. Peg loved teaching all of her Assembly of God in Taylor, AR, and later served students and many of her students’ children. She as youth pastor at Kings Corner Assembly of God and her husband, Ron, were part of the founding of Sarepta, LA. At the time of his passing, he was worshiping at Life Church in Springhill. parishioners at St. Andrew as well. Peg was a Mr. Briscoe was preceded in death by his devoted wife, mother, grandmother and friend who enjoyed art, flowers, bird watching, her dog parents, Nicholas James Briscoe and Edna P. Lampman Briscoe; and sister, Dorma Kooyenga. Shags, but first and foremost her grandchildren. He leaves his cherished wife of 30 years, She loved spending as much time with her husTammy LeBaron Briscoe, of Taylor, AR; three band, children, and grandchildren as possible. children, Jamie Nichole Elder (Chad) of Springhill, Peg is survived by her loving husband of 63 LA, Hilary Danee’ Hart (Dustin) of Springhill, LA, years, Ronald; four children, Matthew (Cathand John Michael Briscoe of Taylor, AR; grandson, erine), Patrick (Gena), Mary Carlos (Dennis), Houston Vaughn Hart of Springhill, LA; mother-inand Christopher (Janice). Peg also is survived law, Joyce LeBaron of Taylor, AR; brothers, Gene by six grandchildren, Owen, Timothy, Taylor, Conor, Henry and Margaret; and her sister Phyllis Briscoe of Minooka, Bob Briscoe (Ruth) of Mazon, Mike Briscoe (Linda) of Channahon, Terry Briscoe Wardenburg of Colorado. She also is survived (Brenda) of Channahon; sisters, Ann Chandler by brothers- and sisters-in-laws, Joyce Rife, Lois (Warren) of Morris, Pat Harvey (Bobby) of JonesBreyne, Leah and Chuck Steininger, and Leo and boro, LA, Donna Briscoe of Kirksville, MO, Pam Patricia Breyne; as well as numerous nieces, Helton (Perry) of Braidwood, and Mary Briscoe of nephews and great-nieces and nephews. Jerseyville. Peg was preceded in death by her eldest Funeral services were held Tuesday, June 7, son, Timothy “Timmer”; her parents, Cecil and 2016, at the First Assembly of God of Winnfield Florence Hendrickson; and her brothers, Jerome with Reverends Mike Howell and Geary Phillips and Marilyn Hendrickson. officiating. Interment followed in the Atlanta Visitation will be Monday, June 20, 2016, from

Cemetery in Atlanta, LA, under the direction of Southern Funeral Home in Winnfield.

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

OBITUARIES DEBORAH BAILEY


• Continued from page 31

RUTH ANN COLEMAN

THOMAS CLEAVER

Ruth Ann Coleman (nee Gillingham), resident of Joliet since 1962. Born in Richland Center, Thomas Cleaver “TC,” age, 61. WI, and spent her childhood on Suddenly Sunday, June 12, 2016, a farm in Gillingham WI. Afflictat Presence St. Joseph Medical ed by Parkinson’s and cancer, Center with his family by his she passed away at the Joliet side after complications from an Area Community Hospice Home, surrounded by undiagnosed heart condition. her family praying the Lord’s Prayer, Friday, June Born in Joliet and a lifelong 17, 2016. Age 76 years. Joliet and Rockdale area resident. A graduate Survived by her four sons, Jason of Joliet, Scott of Joliet West High School and Rockdale Grade (Kathy) of Shorewood, Tom (Lydia) of Rio Rancho, School. Retired owner/operator over the road truck driver. “TC” loved life. If you asked him what NM, and Bill (Meg) of Chicago; five grandchildren, his nationality was, he would respond by indicat- Ryan (Alli), Eric, Abbey, Megan Ruth and Elana; ining “Rockdalian.” He enjoyed living life, getting on laws; step-sisters, Barbara and Shirley; and many nieces, nephews, cousins and friends. his Harley and riding. Sturgis was a familiar and Preceded in death by her husband, Jack; her annual destination since 1983. It wasn’t just the ride, it was the people he met wherever he went. parents, Theron and Helen Gillingham; stepmother, Frances; and brothers, Wendell, Willis and One of “TC’s” favorite sayings: “Are you gonna Sterling. ride all day? See neon, pull in!” Did we mention Ruth was a kind- hearted wife, mother to four Miller Lite was his favorite? He was a kind, generous man and was always there when you needed boys, grandmother and friend to a number of spehim with a smile on his face. He touched so many cial people. Investing her time in all, including her immediate and extended family, Ottawa ST UMC, lives, and we who knew him the best are damn Dorcas-Priscilla Circle Group and the “Lunch grateful he was in ours. He loved to cook, watch NASCAR, was a Cubs fan, and loved Brian Piccolo. Bunch” of retired Joliet teachers. An encourager to her children and grandchildren, cheering them Preceded in death by his mother, June (nee Lucky) Cleaver. Survived by his loving and devot- on to their achievements. A student a North Central College (paused by ed wife, Carol Faye Cleaver; one son, Dylan Keal Cleaver of Rockdale; one daughter, Martina Rose marriage and attention to raising her family), and a graduate of St. Francis University with a Neese of Southern; his father, Dean (Monika) degree in elementary education. Beginning in ’85, Cleaver of Shorewood; one sibling, Scott (Judy) Cleaver of Joliet; one aunt, Lois McNally of Joliet; taught 20-plus years (fourth and fifth grades) at his “goofy” mother-in-law, Pam Heseltine of Earl Thomas Jefferson and Carl Sandburg Schools in Joliet. She was a trailblazer in the use of emergent Park, IN; also survived by all of his Road Dawg technology in the classroom (Larry Stilgebauer Brothers – you know who you are! Award ’00), which only was exceeded by her love “Peace, Love, Dove.” A Celebration of Life Service will take place on Sunday, June 26, 2016, for books and reading. Recognized in the community, many might at Cantigny VFW Post 367, 826 Horseshoe Drive, have bumped into her at the library, the theater Joliet. from 3 to 10 p.m. As “TC” requested, or on a bicycle ride. A local business owner with cremation rites have been accorded with final interment to take place at a later date in Spearfish her husband, Ruth was a member and former president of the Will County Reading Council, Canyon, South Dakota. “TC” thought it was the officer of the Illinois Delta Kappa Gamma Society, most beautiful place on Earth. In lieu of flowers, and co-founder of the Joliet YMCA Bicycle Club. donations to the charity of your choice in “TC’s” Funeral services will be held at the Carlname would be appreciated. Fred C. Dames son-Holmquist-Sayles Funeral Home, 2320 Black Funeral Home in charge of arrangements. For information, call 815-741-5500 or visit his Book of Road, Wednesday, June 22, at noon. Interment Woodlawn Memorial Park II. MemoMemories at www.fredcdames.com.

rials to Joliet Area Community Hospice will be appreciated. Visitation Wednesday from 9:30 a.m. until the time of services.

For information or questions, call 815-744-0022 or visit www.chsfuneral.com. • Continued on page 33

Same Family Owned for 4 Generations 1105 East 9th St., Lockport For Information: www.oneilfuneralhome.com

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(815) 838-5010 Raymond Alberico

In loving memory of my husband, our father and grandfather who passed away 43 years ago today. As time unfolds another year, loving memories keep us near. No longer in our life to share, but in our hearts, you’re always there. Sadly Missed and Loved, Wife, Children, & Grandchildren

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Donald Meyers Happy Father’s Day

This special day is not as special without you here to celebrate. Today we remember “A Parent’s Love” . You will remain forever in our hearts. Your Loving Family

Timmy’s Garden Walk 10TH ANNUAL

When: Saturday, June 25, 2016 (Rain or Shine) Time: 9:00 am - 4:00 pm Cost: $15 per ticket

Where: Join us for a self-guided tour of some of the most beautiful gardens in the Joliet, Plainfield, Shorewood, and Crest Hill communities.

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The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Sunday, June 19, 2016

| OBITUARIES

32


• Continued from page 32 Born: Feb. 17, 1928 Died: June 15, 2016

NICHOLAS GOVERNALE Nicholas Governale found peace in his home with his family by his side on Wednesday, June 15, 2016, after a courageous battle with renal cell carcinoma. He was 64. He is lovingly remembered and survived by his wife for 36 years, Rita (Sullivan) Governale; his children, Cynthia (James) Worst, Melissa Mae Governale, Amanda Governale; his grandchildren, Peyton and Ashley Worst, and Anthony West; siblings, Sam (Virginia) Governale, Mary Ann (Richard) Plese, Thomas (Susan) Governale, and Sandra (Kent) Ayers; and numerous nieces and nephews. He is preceded in death by his parents, Carmon and Josephine (Proietto) Governale; daughter, Teresa Krizmanic; and Taco Jo. Nick’s joy for life and genuine kindness toward

Tuesday, June 21, 2016, at 11 a.m. at the Blackburn-Giegerich-Sonntag Funeral Home. As per Nick’s wishes cremation rites will be accorded. Visitation is from 2 to 8 p.m. Monday.

• Continued on page 34

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33

• Sunday, June 19, 2016

Lloyd M. Flatt, age 88, of Joliet, passed away peacefully Wednesday, June 15, 2016, at Presence St. Joseph Medical Center. Born Feb. 17, 1928 in Cookeville, TN, to the late Sidney and Mary Eliza (Roberts) Flatt, he worked as a foreman for GAF Mastic Tile in Joliet. He also was a professional musician, playing lead guitar in numerous country and western bands throughout the area, including Johnny Reb Band, JR and the RJ’s, Melody Mountain Boys and the Country Ramblers. Lloyd loved country music and the Chicago Cubs, and was a songwriter and poet. He was the nicest man who ever walked, and loved by many. He was a loving husband, a devoted father and a beloved grandfather and great-grandfather. Survived by his children, Lloyd Flatt Jr., Joann (Ralph) Gaspar, Donna Featherstone, Denise (Chester) Wood, Beverly (Rudy) Mejia, Wanda (David) Todd and Kevin Flatt; 21 grandchildren; many great-grandchildren; one sister, Dorothy Seeman; one brother, J.L. Flatt; son-in-law, Don Struble; and numerous nieces and nephews. Preceded by his first wife of 54 years, Irene; his second wife, Phyllis; one daughter, Betty Struble; one grandson, Jimmy McKinnon; two brothers, Hubert and Cecil Flatt; and one sister, Roxy Hensley. Funeral services for Lloyd Flatt will be at 10:30

others will stand as an inspiration to those fortunate enough to have him in their lives. He was a great outdoorsmen, passionate about family and fishing. An accomplished baker and loyal son, he worked in the family’s business, The Washington Bakery, even after bringing his tenacious work ethic to ComEd/Midwest Generation, where he worked with some of his dearest friends and fishing buddies for 38 years. The family asks, in lieu of flowers or plants, that you share a kind word, deed, or smile with someone that fills your heart as Nick did ours. He is greatly missed. Funeral Services will be held

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

LLOYD M. FLATT

a.m. Wednesday, June 22, 2016, at the Fred C. Dames Funeral Home, 3200 Black at Essington Roads, Joliet. Interment will be in Woodlawn Memorial Park. Visitation Tuesday, 4 to 8 p.m. For information, call 815-741-5500 or visit his Book of Memories at www.fredcdames.com


• Continued from page 33

SHERYL LYNN LARSON Sheryl Lynn Larson, of Evanston, IL, passed away on June 4, 2016, at the age of 62, surrounded by her family after a hard-fought, 22-year battle with breast cancer. Sheryl was born in Peoria, IL, to Donald and Janet Larson. She attended Joliet West High School, studied journalism at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, and received her B.A. in journalism from the University of Minnesota. Sheryl was a gifted writer and editor, working for more than 10 years as managing editor of “In These Times,” shining light on subjects such as the AIDs epidemic, the Iran Contra arms scandal, Agent Orange, and the Times Beach dioxin disaster. She carried that passion for truth and social engagement forward for the rest of her life. In 1995, she turned to real estate, another passion, where she worked with her business partner of 25 years, Ginny Holbert. Sheryl loved houses and she loved people, but more than that, she loved bringing them together. Real estate also allowed her to share her design sensibility, and for a short time, she also worked as an interior designer. More recently, she did graduate study in gerontology, believing that knowledge would allow her to provide a valuable service in her own senior years. Those who knew her were certain she would do just that. People who knew Sheryl benefited in many ways. She was a generous spirit, a Swedish yenta who brought couples together, a mentor

who helped countless young people pursue their dreams, and a brilliant cook who loved nothing more than entertaining. She was a confidante for her many friends, always making one feel like the most important person in the room. She was always there for her family and relished every one of the concerts, soccer games, dance performances, and rhythmic gymnastic meets of her children and grandchildren. Sheryl tackled breast cancer as she did many things – with energy, determination and intellectual vigor. After her initial diagnosis in 1994, she had a long respite, but the cancer returned in 2011. Rather than accept defeat, she challenged the limited options initially presented to her by oncology protocols, and instead sought out more innovative thinking. In 2013, her tireless quest led Sheryl and her husband, Hank, to move temporarily to Houston, TX, where she received targeted and exhaustive therapies. The treatments allowed her to enter into remission in September, 2014. When cancer returned in 2015, Sheryl was undaunted, first seeking treatment at the University of Chicago. In January, 2016, she was accepted into a clinical trial at Vanderbilt University, using therapies conceived with the help of genetic testing. Early scans and studies demonstrated success beyond other cohort members. Unfortunately, in early May, it was clear that cancer had again shifted its attack. Sheryl entered hospice on June 3 and passed the next day, surrounded by her four daughters and Hank. Throughout the past three years, her Houston oncologist, Dr. Khaled Jabboury, remained her close adviser and friend. Sheryl asked that memorial

contributions go to the Jabboury Foundation for Cancer Research Inc., 12121 Richmond Ave., Suite 107, Houston, TX, 77082. www.jabboury.org She is survived by her husband, Hank Kinzie, who also was her lover, friend, confidant and worthy opponent of 32 years; her children, Taya Kinzie (Michael Combopiano), Kyle Kinzie (Dean Bushala), Hannah Kinzie (Ryan Navratil), and Ella Kinzie; her father, Donald J. Larson; and her sisters, Renee (Tom) Kemph and Jana (Brian) Smith; and their children, Ricky and Regan Kemph, Frank and Taryn Smith. Sheryl will also be greatly missed by her loving (and spoiled) grandchildren, Hadley and Corrin Bushala, Jude Singer, Niccolo and Lorenzo Combopiano. She also leaves a number of nieces and nephews, along with countless extended family and friends, who appreciated her willingness to listen and advise. Sheryl was preceded in death by her mother, Janet C. Larson. The family of Sheryl Larson wishes to extend sincere thanks for the outpouring of love and support. A Memorial Celebration is being planned for the latter part of July, 2016. For information, call 847-673-6111 or visit www.habenfuneral.com.

FREDA A. MALONE Born: Jan. 26, 1926 Died: June 16, 2016

cooking for them, especially for the holidays and traveling with them. She also loved her cat, Ginger. Freda is survived by her daughter, Peggy (Jim) Bozich; son, Tom (Lana); grandchildren, Josh Malone, Justin (Patti) Malone, Dan Davidson, Shawn Davidson and Amanda (Donald) Burry; great grandchildren, Zachary and William Davidson. She is preceded in death by her husband, Gilbert, in 2004. Freda’s family would especially like to thank the staff at Park Point Health Care for their love and kindness and exceptional care that they showed her on a daily basis. She knew you loved her. A visitation will be held on Sunday, June 19, 2016, from 4 to 7 p.m. at the U.C. Davis-Callahan Funeral Home. Enhanced video tributes will be played. A celebration of Freda’s life will be held on Monday, June 20, 2016, at 10 a.m. at the funeral home, officiated by Dr. Chuck Richardson. Burial will follow at Evergreen Cemetery. Arrangements have been entrusted with U.C. Davis-Callahan Funeral Home, 301 W. Washington St., Morris. For information or to convey condolences, visit www.ucdaviscallahan.com or call the funeral home at 815-942-0084.

Freda A. Malone, 90, of Morris, passed away Thursday, June 16, 2016, at the Park Pointe Nursing Home. Born in Morris on Jan. 26, 1926, she was the daughter of the late Alvin and Anna (Thompson) Enerson. Freda’s biggest love was her family. She loved

Michelle Mancuso Petrovic

• Continued on page 35

In Loving Memory of

Francis A. Berens “Frank”

In loving memory of our daughter who passed away 32 years ago today Love you,

The Mike & Lillian Mancuso Family

SM-CL0362229

In Loving Memory Of

Ronald Range

1919-2010

12-7-1937 ~ 6-17-2011

Six years have come and gone, but still greatly missed and loved. Life is not the same without you.

Daddy,

It Has Been Five Years on June 17, 2011 And Not To Mention Today Is Father’s Day. I Sometimes Find Myself At A Loss Of Words To Say. But I Just Want To Let You Know You Meant The World To Me !!! Only A Heart As Dear As Yours Would Give So Unselfishly !!!! Happy Father’s Day Daddy Desperately Missing You & Loving You Eternally Love Rowena SM-CL0340986

SM-CL0362225

The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Sunday, June 19, 2016

| OBITUARIES

34

Love, Wife, children, and grandchildren


• Continued from page 34

TEMPIE L. PEER

Born: Sept. 25, 1930 Died: June 12, 2016

Tempie L. Peer (nee Long), of Fort White FL, formerly of Lockport. Tempie peacefully ended her journey on this earth to begin a new one in heaven, surrounded by her family as they celebrated her life with stories, song and dance just as she had requested many times. She is survived by her husband of 57 years, O’Dell Peer of Fort White, FL (formerly of Lockport); two sons, John Wilds of St. Anne, Gary Wilds (Paula) of Forest View; one daughter, Viola Tomko (William) of Wilmington. Also survived by grandHENRY J. PASCH children, Michael Wilds, Amanda Linehan (Brian), Born: June 21, 1921 Brandi Tomko-Blovas (Rob), Kenneth Tomko Died: June 6, 2016 (Kristal); great-grandsons, Parker and Ronan; and great-grand-doggies, Loki, Mason and Faye-Faye. Henry J. Pasch went home to the Lord on Monday, June 6, Preceded in death by her daughter, Tammy. She was a member of Mikesville Presbyterian 2016; his family was at his side. Church in Mikesville FL, where she shared her Henry was born in Kiel, love of God with her church family and friends. Germany, on June 21, 1921, to Mrs. Peer retired from Moose International as Bertha and Henry Pasch. He came to America at grand chancellor. Her passion to help children and the age of 3 and grew up in Chicago, Bellwood elderly had her making friends all across the U.S. and Palatine. On Dec. 12, 1942, Henry married and Canada. She continued this calling, with love Mae Westendorf. They were married for 72 years; and joy in her heart, up until her passing. Mae passed away at age 90 on Dec. 20, 2014. Cremation rites accorded, with private interHenry was preceded in death by his sister. ment. Memorial service to follow at a later date. Margaret (Fritz) Chiappetta. He is survived by five children, James (Darlene), Jan (Walter) Dearie, Jerry (Lori), Jeff (Michelle Allegretti), and Jaymee CHARLES F. POTTORFF JR. (Ken) Lindblom. He was the grandfather of 12, Born: June 3, 1923 Tony (Teressa) Pasch, Tara (Jeff) Paine, Kristine Died: June 14, 2016 McIntosh (Brian Hautzinger), Kathryn (Gene) Wise, Ryan (Kellie) Pasch, Elisabeth (John) Kaplan, Charles F. Pottorff Jr., age 93, Janelle Pasch, Amber (Mike) St. Clair, Alaina a longtime resident of Plainfield, (Greg) Prawdzik, Alyssa Pasch, Kyle Lindblom and passed away on Tuesday, June Michelle Lindblom. Loving great-grandfather of 14. 14, 2016, at Presence St. Joseph Henry was a WWII veteran serving 31 months in Medical Center in Joliet. He was the Aleutian Islands with the U.S. Army Corps of born June 3, 1923, in Fairfield. Engineers. He was a builder and entrepreneur at Loving father of Jan Pottorff heart and in 1950 H.J. Pasch Construction Compaof Italy, Diane (Dave) Hohisel ny was born. He began with room additions and of Fontana, WI and Tom custom homes (with many of his clients becomPottorff of Mayfield, KY; adored ing lifelong friends). As the company’s reputation grandfather of David Jr. (Becky) for excellence grew with the help of his three sons, they began commercial work that included Hohisel, Dennis Hohisel and Derek (Sarah) Hohisthe renovation of the Gaylord Building, the Gladys el; cherished great-grandfather of Mallory, Halyn,

RICHARD RONALD QUALLS Born: March 30, 1935 Died: Jan. 27, 2016

Richard Ronald Qualls, age 80, of Dunedin, Florida, peacefully passed away on Jan. 27, 2016, after a stay at Sun Coast Hospice. Richard was born in Decatur to Robbie and Arthur Qualls on March 30, 1935. He married Marion Mitoraj in Chicago on Aug. 25, 1956, at St. Pius V Catholic Church. Richard was a veteran, having honorably served in the U.S. Army. Richard worked in industrial sales for Darling & Company and then on his own, founding QualCote Inc. in 1985. Richard and Marion raised their four children in Lockport and then Plainfield, Illinois. They retired to Honeymoon Island, Florida, in 2001 where he was a member of Our Lady of Lourdes Catholic Church, Dunedin, Florida. Richard was one of 10 children and is preceded in death by his beloved mother, Robbie Peterson, brother Art Qualls, sister Glenn Lyons and her husband Dale Lyons. Richard is survived by his wife of 59 years, Marion; their children, Daniel Qualls of Norton Shores, Michigan, his wife, Susan, granddaughters, Valerie Benham and Paige Breen. His son, Michael of Wylie, TX, his wife, Susan, and granddaughters, Jennifer Eisenbath and Amy Qualls. His son, Timothy of Oxford, CT,

his wife, Amy, grandsons, William and Sam. His daughter, Susan Yeazel of Downers Grove, her husband, James, and granddaughter, Audrey. If desired, donations in Richard’s name can be made to Suncoast Hospice, www.thehospice. org/Donate. Memorial Mass of Christian Burial will be celebrated on Friday, June 24, 2016, at 10:30 a.m. at St. Mary Immaculate Catholic Church, 15629 S. Route 59, Plainfield, IL 60544. Inurnment to follow at Abraham Lincoln National Cemetery in Elwood. Arrangements entrusted to Overman-Jones Funeral Home & Cremation Services, 15219 S. Joliet Road., (Corners of Route 30 & Route 59) Plainfield, IL 60544. For information, call 815-436-9221 or www.overman-jones.com

ANDREW PAUL RANDOLPH Andrew Paul Randolph “Knuckle,” age 27. Suddenly Friday, June 17, 2016, at his home. Born in Joliet, the son of Roger and Kim (nee Lindquist) Randolph, he was a lifelong resident. Graduate of Joliet West High School. Formerly employed by NCR and currently with AMS Seals in Plainfield. Member of the South Wilmington Fireman’s Beach Club. Andy was a motorcycle enthusiast and mechanically inclined, building a truck. He was a loving father, and enjoyed camping, fishing, and participating in his daughter’s activities. Surviving are his two daughters, Ava Rose and Bree Victoria; his loving parents, Roger “Butch” “Boots” and Kim Randolph of Sevierville, TN; one sister, Kelly (Marcus) Wright of Joliet; one brother, Matthew Randolph of St. Petersburg, FL; the mother of his children, Amanda Newman of Manhattan, IL; maternal grandmother, Charlotte Lindquist of Joliet; paternal grandmother, Rosemary (Ray) Conroy of Minooka; dearest nephew of Beth Siebers of Joliet, Kim (Skip) Eller of Wilmington and Lori (Brian) McNamee of Channahon. Preceded by his infant daughter, Brooke Victoria (2009); maternal grandfather, Robert Lindquist (1995); and paternal grandfather, Roger Randolph (2016). A Memorial Service for Andy will be held Wednesday, June 22, 2016, at 11:30 a.m. at the Fred C. Dames Funeral Home, 3200 Black at Essington roads, Joliet. Memorials in his name, to his daughter’s education fund, will be established later and would be appreciated. Visitation 2 to 8 p.m. Tuesday. 815-741-5500. Visit his Book of Memories at www.fredcdames.com

• Continued on page 36

35

• Sunday, June 19, 2016

Catherine DeRosa Pacheco, born April 13, 1938, in Joliet, Illinois, went to be with the Lord Friday, June 10, 2016, at her home in Tampa, Florida, surrounded by her loving family. Cathy relocated from Colorado Springs to Tampa, Florida, in 2005. She was very involved in the Italian community in Tampa. She was an outstanding member of The Italian Club of Ybor City and L’Unione Italiana. Cathy was a retired educator and an active member of the Town and Country Senior Center. She belonged to the Cat’s 9 Senior Dance Group who traveled around the Tampa area to various senior facilities entertaining the elderly with song and dance, many times taking center stage as lead. Cathy will be remembered by her vitality for life, generosity, and infectious sense of humor. She had a love for all animals, taking in numerous animals needing a loving home. She was especially fond of horses. Cathy was a devoted mother, grandmother, aunt, sister, and cousin. She is survived by her two daughters, Cathy Lyn Pacheco of Dallas, Texas and Cristy Pacheco-Woodke (Dean) of Kansas City, Missouri; two beloved grandchildren, Shannon Munstedt and Joshua Eatman; two sisters, Jean Callan and Marylynn Kalas (Paul); one brother, Joseph DeRosa; and several nieces, nephews and cousins. A memorial service will precede a Celebration of Life, July 9, 2016, at The Italian Club of Tampa, Florida.

Connor and Jackson Hohisel; devoted son of the late Frank and Irene (nee Vaughan) Pottorff; dear brother of Robert “Bob” Pottorff of Plainfield and the late Earl(Lorraine) Pottorff; fond uncle, great-uncle and friend of many. Charles grew up in Plainfield, was a 1941 graduate of Plainfield High School, where he excelled as a baseball pitcher and served inthe U.S. Army from 1943 to 1945 during World War II. After the war, Charles got married and owned and operated Jack’s Grill in downtown Plainfield. He later was a member of the Teamsters Union and served as a Plainfield village trustee for two years and for 20 years as mayor of Plainfield from 1957 to 1977. Charles was active in many civic groups such as the American Legion Marne Post 13 (Past-Commander), Plainfield Masonic Lodge 536 (Master Mason) and Shriners International. He was an avid golfer and enjoyed bird hunting. Visitation from 3 to 7 p.m. Sunday, June 19, 2016, at Overman-Jones Funeral Home & Cremation Services, 15219 S. Joliet Road, Plainfield. Masonic services will be 6 p.m. Sunday in the funeral home. Additional visitation from 10 a.m. to noon Monday, June 20, 2016, in the funeral home. Funeral services will follow noon Monday in the funeral home with the Rev. Andrew O’Neal officiating. Interment: Abraham Lincoln National Cemetery, Elwood. For those who wish to leave a lasting tribute to Charles’ life, memorials can be made to: Plainfield Area Interfaith Food Pantry, 22525 W. Lockport Road, Plainfield, IL 60544, 815439-8394, www.plainfieldfoodpantry.org www.overman-jones.com, 815-436-9221

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

CATHERINE DEROSA PACHECO

Fox Museum, the Historic Fitzpatrick House, and numerous additions to White Fence Farm Restaurant. He retired in 1990 and he and Mae found a new passion in travel; they visited all 50 states, Canada and Europe. Winters found them enjoying the sun and sand in Puerto Escondido, Mexico, for over 25 years. Henry was a member of the Lockport VFW, past member of Lockport High School Advisory Committee and LADC. He was accepted into the Lockport Rotary in 1966 and was made honorary member in 2009. He and his wife were members of St. Dennis Catholic Church for over 64 years. The family wishes to extend their gratitude to Henry’s caregivers from United Senior Services and to the Joliet Area Community Hospice for their support in his final days. A Memorial Mass will be held at 10 a.m. Wednesday, June 22, at St. Dennis Catholic Church in Lockport. Cremation rites have been accorded and interment will take place at Abraham Lincoln National Cemetery.


The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Sunday, June 19, 2016

| THE HERALD-NEWS

36

Activists look to build on momentum of Sanders campaign By SARA BURNETT

The Associated Press

CHICAGO – Whatever happens with Bernie Sanders and the race for president, his supporters say one thing is certain: Their movement will continue. Roughly 3,000 activists are gathering in Chicago this weekend to talk about how to build on the momentum of Sanders’ insurgent campaign now that the primaries are over. They say they’re looking to unite forces for changes such as a $15 federal minimum wage, better

ILLINOIS ROUNDUP

1

News from across the state

Springfield schools change discipline policy due to law

SPRINGFIELD – Springfield Public Schools will begin determining punishments for fighting on more of a caseby-case basis under a new state law, Superintendent Jennifer Gill said. The change is being driven by reforms to the Illinois school discipline code, the Springfield State Journal-Register reported. The new law ends zero-tolerance policies and requires schools to exhaust all other forms of discipline before expelling students or suspending them for more than three days. It’s meant to address the school-to-prison pipeline, a term

police accountability, health care for all and preventing climate change. “We have a huge opportunity right now,” Becky Bond, who served as a senior adviser to Sanders’ campaign, told a crowd inside the McCormick Place convention center on Saturday. “We have the makings of getting something much huger than what we’ve done on the Bernie Sanders campaign.” Hillary Clinton has secured enough delegates and superdelegates to be the Democratic Party’s presumptive nominee, but the Vermont Senator has not

conceded the nomination. In a livestream address on Thursday, he said the two campaigns will be working together to “transform the Democratic Party” and to ensure this summer’s Democratic National Convention adopts the most progressive platform in party history. He also urged supporters to continue their “political revolution” and to join him in working to defeat presumptive Republican nominee Donald Trump. There was little talk of either Trump or Clinton at the weekend’s “People’s

Summit,” although many attendees railed against Democratic Party rules they argue were rigged to ensure Clinton secured the nomination. RoseAnn DeMoro, executive director of National Nurses United, called it “corruption in the political machinery of the Democratic Party.” Her organization, a labor union that backed Sanders, organized the summit. Mostly, however, the conversations were centered on stirring massive change on progressive issues, separate from “establishment politics.”

critics use to describe school policies and institutional practices that funnel students out of the classroom and into the criminal justice system. Gill said she supports the change and believes it will allow schools to better handle discipline. But she said it will be a major adjustment. Gill said many districts, including Springfield, operated under a zero-tolerance policy for fighting, meaning the punishment, often 10 days out of school, was cut and dry. But that will change with the upcoming school year as the new law goes into effect in September.

ISU’s planning director, David Gill, said demolition of the H-shaped residence hall complex is expected to be finished during the first week of July. The housing complex consisted of two sets of linked residence halls flanked by a dining center. The dining center and the Whitten-Hamilton residence hall have already been razed, but demolition of the Atkin-Colby residence hall is underway. The Bloomington Pantagraph reported school officials decided to raze the buildings because of the high cost of retrofitting them with sprinklers to comply with state law. No timetable has been set for construction of the new nursing building, which would need state funding.

Archbishop Fulton Sheen have taken a step they say is key in relaunching an effort to have him canonized by the Roman Catholic Church. The Peoria Diocese announced last week Sheen’s family agreed to file paperwork in New York to move his remains from St. Patrick’s Cathedral to Peoria’s St. Mary’s Cathedral. The Journal Star in Peoria reported Joan Sheen Cunningham, Sheen’s 88-year-old niece, filed the petition, which also has the support of her siblings. In 2014, the refusal of the Archdiocese of New York to permit the transfer of Sheen’s remains led the Peoria Diocese to suspend its push for Sheen’s sainthood. The New York archdiocese now says Sheen’s remains could go to Peoria for any beatification ceremony and then be returned to New York.

2

ISU nearly done razing residence halls

NORMAL – The demolition of Illinois State University’s more than 50-year-old residential hall complex should be done within weeks to make room for a nursing school building.

3

Family seeks to bring remains of archbishop to Peoria PEORIA – Relatives of Illinois-born

– Wire reports

OBITUARIES • Continued from page 35

WILLIE B. RANGE Willie B. Range, 101, passed away at home in Joliet on Saturday, June 18, 2016. Funeral Services will be next Saturday, June 25. Arrangements pending at Range Funeral Home, 815-722-2215, www.rangefuneralhome.com

JESSIE REES Jessie Rees passed away peacefully on Saturday, June 11, 2016, at home. Beloved wife of the late Douglas Rees. Loving mother of Steven (Cheryl) Rees; Michael (Rita) Rees, Diane (Kirk) Stevens, Jan (Bill) Gable. Dearest grandmother of Jenny (Greg) Frazier, Ben (Laura) Rees, the late Rebecca Rees, the late Jacob Rees, Laurie Cooper, Michael Rees, Erica (Jason) Hazen, Sarah Stevens, Patrick (Meagen) Stevens, Rachel (Kyle) Hunter, Kate Gable. Several great-grandchildren. Sister-in-law to Carolyn

Stump of Lafayette, IN. Jessie enjoyed playing golf, was a member of a golf league for years. She was an avid bridge player and played in several bridge clubs as well. She was an active member of Westminster Presbyterian Church. There she served on many committees, and also served as a deacon. She delivered meals on wheels. In lieu of flowers donations can be made to the Alzheimer’s Association. A Memorial Service will be held on July 15, 2016, at 11 a.m. at Westminster Presbyterian Church, 1015 Winthrop, Joliet, with the Rev. Matthew Robinson officiating. Family will receive friends from 10 a.m. until the time of service. Committal and Inurnment immediately following at Woodlawn Memorial Park.

AL-LYNNE RUSSELL

and Madison, Tony Kay Laicin family, Kim Graham family, Kayla Patton family, Sara and Dawn Porter Al-lynne Russell “Peep” and many other good, loyal friends as well as (Hentsch), age 54. Passed away Facebook friends, Alisha, caregiver and John May 13, 2016, at home under “Barracuda” Shepherd, as well as her strange difficult circumstances. looking dog, Spike. A very pretty and artistic Preceded by her father, Al Hentsch (Oct. 2015); girl. Owner/operater of Peeps paternal grandparents, Albert and Dorothy Techniques, a very successful (Wachter); maternal grandparents, Albert and biker jewelry and glass tattoo business. Virginia (Fahrner) Verick; uncle, William A. Verick. She loved NASCAR races, Harley-Davidson Private funeral services will be held at Elmhurst motorcycles, Mopar and her pool. Al-Lynne also Cemetery in Joliet. nursed and cared for her father the last two years Condolences may be sent c/o Papes-Shepherd of his life. family, 3155 Willardshire Road, Joliet, IL 60431. Survived by her three children, Michelle Visit her Book of Memories at www.fredc“Shelley” Russell (“Oppie”) Novak, Matthew A. dames.com. (Elena) Russell and Tre Orozco; grandchildren, Aubrie and Brooklyn Russell, her mother, Jyme V. Papes-Shepherd; only brother, Robert Bruce Papes Jr.; uncle, Michael E. (late Donna Brown) Papes Sr. and family; aunt, Dr. Joan E. Papes and family; great uncle, Art (Bernie) Verick and family; aunt of Micheala Papes Emme and Robert Bruce Papes III; cousins, Mary (Steve) Metz and family, Gary (Brenda) Shska and family; friends, Lisa Rock


37

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NATION & WORLD BRIEFS Lawyers for Ferguson seek Michael Brown records

Belgian authorities charge 3 in major anti-terror raid

BRUSSELS – Belgian authorities charged three men with terror-related crimes after two days of raids and the detention of 40 people in a major investigation which they said required “immediate intervention” because they feared a new attack was close. Across Belgium parties were held Saturday to watch live broadcasts of the country’s soccer team playing Ireland at the European Championships in neighboring France and some media said such events could have been the targets. Prime Minister Charles Michel said the nation would remain “extremely vigilant, hour by hour,” but that the terror level across the nation would remain at the

Iraqi troops seize Fallujah hospital, clear mines

BAGHDAD – Iraqi forces gained control of the main hospital in Fallujah on Saturday and were clearing mines after driving the Islamic State group from most of the city, one of its last remaining strongholds in the Anbar province west of Baghdad, a military official said. Fighting was still underway in parts of the city, where U.S. and Iraqi warplanes targeted snipers and other IS positions, Brig. Gen. Haider al-Obeidi told The Associated Press. Troops had cautiously advanced toward the hospital, fearing that the militants would use patients as human shields, but when they stormed the facility they found no patients inside, he said, adding that the Iraqi flag has been raised over the building.

Egyptian court sentences 2 Al-Jazeera employees to death

CAIRO – An Egyptian court on Saturday sentenced six people, including two Al-Jazeera employees, to death for allegedly passing documents related to national security to Qatar and the Doha-based TV network during the rule of Islamist President Mohammed Morsi. Morsi, the top defendant, and two of his aides were sentenced to 25 years in prison for membership in the now-banned Muslim Brotherhood group but were acquitted of espionage, a capital offense. Morsi and his secretary, Amin el-Sirafy, each received an additional 15-year sentence for leaking official documents. El-Sirafy’s daughter, Karima, was also sentenced to 15 years on the same charge.

–Wire reports

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• Sunday, June 19, 2016

KANSAS CITY, Mo. – The city of Ferguson and other defendants in a wrongful-death lawsuit by Michael Brown’s parents are seeking access to any juvenile records of the black 18-year-old who was fatally shot by a white police officer in 2014 – a request once rejected by a judge after a newspaper and blog sought such documents. The motion, filed this month, seeks St. Louis County family court records concerning outcomes of any Brown-related juvenile cases “or records of any alleged delinquent acts committed by or pertaining to” him. The motion argues that any such information “is reasonably calculated to lead to the discovery of admissible evidence” in the lawsuit against the St. Louis suburb, former Police Chief Thomas Jackson and Ferguson officer Darren Wilson, who shot and killed the unarmed Brown during an August 2014 confrontation.]

second-highest level, meaning a threat of an attack “is possible and likely.”

NATION&WORLD | The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com

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The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Sunday, June 19, 2016

| NATION

38

Dems to give Trump ‘rude awakening’ in summer battle By LISA LERER and JULIE BYKOWICZ The Associated Press

NEW ORLEANS – Donald Trump’s unconventional campaign is about to feel the heat of political organization. Hillary Clinton and her Democratic allies have invested at least $41 million in commercials in crucial states such as Ohio, Florida and Nevada over the next six weeks, a series of summer broadsides against her Republican opponent. Those messages will be echoed by hundreds of Clinton workers in those same states and amplified by President Barack Obama and other top Democrats. Trump has made few preparations for contending with that sort of welloiled political machine. His campaign has no advertising plans and is just now hiring employees in important states. Republican leaders are far from in agreement on how best to talk to voters about the polarizing billionaire, or if they will at all. And Trump is running out of time: Early voting starts in Iowa in just 3½ months. “It’s political malpractice,” said Mitch Stewart, Obama’s 2012 battleground states director and a Clinton backer. “He’s in for a rude awakening. This isn’t a national vote contest where you can be on cable news every day and

AP file photo

GOP presidential candidate Donald Trump speaks during a rally Wednesday in Atlanta. dominate coverage. This is literally going state by state and coming up with a plan in each.” Clinton’s large June and July ad buy comes as a reward for her near-constant fundraising. In May, she raised $27 million in primary election money that must be used before she accepts her party’s nomination at the convention in late July. Trump is playing catch-up. He did not begin raising money in earnest un-

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til May 25, having largely financed his primary bid through personal loans to his campaign. Clinton’s latest spots, highlighting her past advocacy for children, are an attempt to reintroduce the returning presidential candidate – she lost the 2008 Democratic primary to Obama – to general election voters. Her campaign is spending about $23 million on ads by the convention, according to advertising tracker Kantar Media’s CMAG.

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But those voters are also hearing from Priorities USA, a super political action committee financed by millions of dollars from Clinton’s staunchest supporters. The goal of those that $18.7 million batch of ads: cast Trump as a con-man and bully unprepared to be commander in chief. “When I saw Donald Trump mock someone with a disability, it showed me his soul. It showed me his heart,” says the father of a young girl with spina bifida, whose story is featured in one of the ads. It’s a strategy Democrats successfully used four years ago against Obama’s GOP opponent, Mitt Romney. Over that summer, Priorities USA relied on an intensely negative advertising campaign to define Romney as unconcerned with the worries of average Americans. Now, facing an opponent with far higher negative ratings and a weaker political organization, Democrats see an opportunity not only to retain the White House, but also make a strong play for winning control of the Senate and adding scores of Democrats to the House. In the past week, Obama, Vice President Joe Biden and Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., have lined up behind Clinton. Her primary rival, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, is expected to support her eventually.

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The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Sunday, June 19, 2016

40

BUSINESS

Could metformin be an elixir for aging? Dear Mr. Berko: Our neighbor is an engineer. He’s a bright, well-read 76-year-old, and he’s nobody’s fool. He was telling us about a drug called metformin, which he says delays the aches and pains of advancing age and postpones many of the devastating diseases that can come with age, such as heart disease, arthritis and cognitive decline. My wife and I don’t need the drug (yet), but I’d like to know what pharmaceutical company makes metformin and whether you’d buy the stock. I’ve had some good luck buying stock in drug companies you’ve recommended. Have you heard of this drug and how effective it is? – MB,

Vancouver, Washington Dear MB: I may have a little bit

more luck than the average investor picking drug stocks because there are some very wise medicine men in my circle of acquaintances. So every once in a while, I’ll get a firsthand update on a certain drug, the effectiveness of which fails, matches or exceeds expectations. Metformin, first approved by the U.K. in 1957, is an oral diabetes medicine that helps diabetics control their blood sugar levels. It took our dismal Food and Drug Administration only 37 more years to approve metformin in the U.S. Resultantly, Bristol-Myers

TAKING STOCK Malcolm Berko Squibb (BMY-$72) began producing and marketing metformin in 1994. It’s prescribed primarily for patients with Type 2 diabetes and sometimes used in combination with insulin or other medications. When I asked about metformin, two of those esteemed sources chuckled and suggested that your neighbor has fallen for the old Fountain of Youth scheme. This was the dream of Juan Ponce de Leon, the 4-foot-11-inch first governor of Puerto Rico, who believed it would bring him enormous wealth. And Ponce de Leon was a real ponce, too. However, there are numerous early indications that your neighbor knows what he’s talking about. Metformin has demonstrated impressive efficacy in mitigating many of the effects of old age. Now gerontologists and the National Institutes of Health will be testing metformin, hoping it will ease the creaks, calamities and constraints of aging. Some of the ascribed results have been startling and quite dramatic. And because metformin has little or no history of side effects on humans

or other animals, researchers at the NIH consider this drug to be the best choice among a group of considered drugs. Therefore, Dr. Nir Barzilai, a researcher at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, will be testing metformin in a clinical trial, to be called Targeting Aging with Metformin, or TAME. Barzilai and his researchers will present metformin to thousands of patients who currently have one or two of three conditions: cancer, heart disease and cognitive impairment. The participants will be monitored to determine whether metformin remedies or heals the symptoms. Then a second group of research gerontologists will test metformin on 3,000 seniors at 14 aging centers around the U.S. According to Dr. S. Jay Olshansky, professor of public health at the University of Illinois at Chicago, this trial will take six years – a really dumb waste of time – with half the seniors taking metformin and half receiving the placebo. Most urologists are familiar with metformin, which has also enjoyed superb success with prostate cancer patients. And researchers at MD Anderson Cancer Center’s oncology unit are impressed with metformin’s positive outcomes in colorectal, pancreatic and breast cancers and multiple

myeloma. Metformin is sold under the brand names Glucophage, Fortamet, Riomet, Glumetza, Diabex and Obimet. There are many manufacturers; the U.S. patent expired in 2002. It is available in numerous generic versions and costs less than a penny a pill to produce. BMY owns most of the metformin market in the U.S., although it’s also produced by Mallinckrodt (MNK$58), Teva Pharmaceutical Industries (TEVA-$55), Mylan (MYL-$46), Dr. Reddy’s Laboratories (RDY-$47) and a dozen smaller pill mills. It’s as cheap as aspirin; 240 tablets (1,000 milligrams) will cost you only $12. Even if metformin is the elixir the medical community hopes it can be, there probably will be little profit for those owning stock in the manufacturers. But never, ever underestimate the U.S. pharmaceutical industry. If metformin has the expected curative potential, pharmaceutical lobbyists will bribe Congress to restrict its manufacturers so big pharma can raise the price to $100 a pill. But even at $100 a pop, those little pills could be worth it.

• Please address your financial questions to Malcolm Berko, P.O. Box 8303, Largo, FL 33775, or email him at mjberko@yahoo.com.

BUSINESS BRIEFS Business plan workshop set to take place at USF incubator this week

JOLIET – The University of St. Francis College of Business and Health Administration Business Incubator, in partnership with the Fox Valley chapter of SCORE, presents the third workshop in its business series. At the workshop, titled “Business Model Canvas,” attendees will learn three key concepts that have reformed the startup and corporate business case development process. This single-page worksheet system helps business with new products, services or strategic alternatives develop and screen options to determine the probability of success. The workshop will take place at USF’s main campus from 6:30 to 8 p.m. Tuesday in room C-207 of Donovan Hall, 603 Taylor St., Joliet. Discussion and networking will follow. The event is free and open to the public, but an RSVP is requested. To RSVP, email incubatorstudent@stfrancis.edu or call 815-740-5071.

Shorewood Dunkin’ Donuts to host grand opening Wednesday

SHOREWOOD – Rich Mommsen, owner of the new Dunkin’ Donuts in Shorewood, will hold a grand opening

from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Wednesday where he will give away free car washes. The first 500 guests that day will receive a coupon for a free medium hot or iced coffee and a DD travel mug, and one guest will win coffee for a month in a raffle. A ribbon-cutting is planned for noon. The Dunkin’ Donuts is located inside a Gas N’ Wash station at 1201 W. Jefferson St. in Shorewood.

XPO Logistics recognizes Joliet driver for achieving 3 million accident-free miles

our customers.” Broyles and Spiker join 10 other distinguished XPO drivers who have achieved 3 million accident-free miles since the company’s LTL operations began in 1983. XPO Logistics Freight employs some 15,000 professional truck drivers in its nationwide LTL service network.

Allegra Marketing, Print, Mail earns international marketing award

ROMEOVILLE – Romeoville-based Allegra Marketing, Print, Mail was recognized recently by international JOLIET – XPO Logistics, a global provider of transfranchise network Alliance Franchise Brands with the portation and logistics, announced that professional Marketing Trailblazer Award. truck driver Thomas Spiker has surpassed 3 million Naperville residents and Allegra owners Tom and accident-free miles. He was honored at XPO’s less-than- Linda Wilhelm and their team developed the award-winning cross-media marketing campaign that combined truckload service center in Joliet. The company also direct mail, signs and banners, collateral, promotional honored Bryan Broyles of Mundelein. product giveaways, Internet-based outreach and special Tony Brooks, president of XPO’s LTL business, said offers to deliver its message and generate targeted the accomplishments of the two men exemplify the sales leads. company’s constant focus on safety. “Three million miles equates to some 30 years of shar- Located at 576 W. Taylor Road in Romeoville, Allegra serves businesses in the southwest suburbs of Chicaing the road accident-free over a distance of roughly go. For information, call 630-759-4872 or visit www. 120 times around the Earth,” he said in a statement. allegraromeoville.com. “That’s a truly impressive safety performance. We’re – The Herald-News proud to have these professionals on our team, serving


OPINIONS

41 The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Sunday, June 19, 2016

OUR VIEW

Happy Father’s Day to the dads Fatherhood is a gift, not only to a family but often to a man himself. It is a part of a man’s life that is unlike what he shares with his friends, co-workers, his wife or his own parents. It’s a big responsibility, but it’s an opportunity as well. It allows a man, no matter his station in life, no matter what hardships or obstacles he might face, to make a difference in the lives of children who will love and depend on him. There are many studies and statistics that show how children benefit when there is a mother and a father in their home. They are less likely to live in poverty. They do better in school. They’re less afraid to take reasonable risks, and they even learn to enjoy things such as vacations a little more. As an individual, a father can profoundly affect his children’s lives. Fathers teach us things. There are the traditional things such as how to throw a ball, catch a fish, tie a tie or parallel park – but there’s more to it than that. They set an example just by being there in how they live their lives, how they treat our mothers, how they treat us. Sometimes, we don’t realize and appreciate all our fathers did for us until we become adults or parents ourselves. It’s strange the first time a person hears the echo of their father’s voice in their own as they talk to their children. New fathers learn what those before them, including their own dad, did: It is not always easy to mean so much to other people. But it is definitely worth it. For many of us, dad is still that guy we look up to, who we look for to share our triumphs the same way we used to scan the stands after getting a big hit in a Little League game. The father of the family looms large, whether he is still with us or not. It doesn’t matter if there are one, two or more people who you think of as a father: If you think of them fondly on Sunday, it’s because they made a difference in your life as only a father can. Make sure to call and say thanks, or do something with him that you both enjoy, or just be in his orbit for a little while. And Happy Father’s Day to all you dads out there.

THE FIRST

AMENDMENT

Tell lawmakers impasse is unacceptable You are undoubtedly aware that the state of Illinois now has not had a budget for more than a year. What’s worse, there is no end in sight for the political fight in Springfield that has led to this deplorable situation. The media have already started reporting on the possibility of schools not opening this fall if the Legislature and governor do not agree soon on a budget – or at very least a plan to fund public education until they can reach a budget deal. Rest assured that District 202 schools will definitely open Aug. 17 as scheduled. However, to be clear, continued delays by the Legislature and governor could seriously hurt us. State funding makes up about 27 percent of District 202’s operating revenue. That’s about $67.5 million. That figure does not include funding for transportation or special education. If the state does not find a way to fund public schools, we will have to rely on our “savings” to operate and pay the bills, just like

that most people want to avoid the situation altogether. We understand and share those feelings. Lane Abrell Still, if there was ever a time to call your local representatives, this is it. Even though they don’t have the average home. We have enough a strong role yet, they are still money to keep the doors open for responsible for carrying our approximately 100 school days. concerns to the capitol. A list of Obviously, that’s not a lot of time. District 202’s state and local electUntil a budget or PreK-12 ed representatives is posted on the funding plan is called for a vote, district’s website, www.psd202.org, our local representatives have under “Community.” very little role in this situation. Meanwhile, please know that The state governance system gives the School District 202 Board and the power to decide which bills administration will continue to get heard, debated and voted on to watch this situation and act where the speaker of the House and the Senate president. The governor, of and how we can. We will also continue to plan for course, has the final say when he all contingencies to make sure that signs or rejects the bills that come all of our students and families to him. receive appropriate services and Therefore, Gov. Bruce Rauner, supports to the best of our abilities. House Speaker Michael Madigan and Senate President John Together, we will continue to Cullerton must find a way to work prepare learners for the future. together to create a budget that • Lane Abrell is the Superinadequately and fairly supports tendent of Schools for Plainfield all Illinois public schools, for this Community Consolidated District year and beyond. Things are so bad in Springfield 202.

GUEST VIEW

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 • Sunday, June 19, 2016

| OPINIONS

42

Trump’s smoke screens obscure weakness Donald Trump knows how to stir things up – mostly by churning embers until they produce a giant smoke screen. I’ve noticed (as you likely have) that when Trump gets into trouble, he lashes out with a series of accusations that obscure the activity that got him there. Trump enveloped fraud charges by Trump University students within a dark cloud of his own complaints, primarily that the U.S.-born judge in the case couldn’t be fair because his parents are Hispanic. Within hours no one was talking about fraud. Next came the Orlando tragedy, with 49 people dead in the largest mass killing in recent U.S. history. But instead of expressing shock at the horror of the event, or concern for the survivors, Trump sent out disgraceful self-congratulatory tweets. “Appreciate the congrats for being right on radical Islamic terrorism,” Trump tweeted while victims were still in the nightclub. “I don’t want congrats, I want toughness [and] vigilance.” Trump later claimed he had gotten “tens of thousands of tweets and calls and letters of congratulations,” from people upon their learning of the massacre. Now, it may seem odd to you that any person’s first response to a horrific mass killing would be to fire off a congratulatory message to a politician. Well, it was odd. NBC News combed Trump’s Twitter account and found four celebratory tweets at Trump, not thousands. Lone wolf terror shootings have been predicted by everyone from

VIEWS Donna Brazile former President George W. Bush and former Vice President Dick Cheney to President Barack Obama and our CIA and Homeland Security chiefs, and no one sent them flattering tweets in the wake of violence. That Trump’s first reaction was to promote himself reveals a dreadful personal callousness that paralleled the shooter’s stoniness while he talked to police, walking among the bodies, caring only about getting his message out. Nor does Trump confine his congratulaDonald tory tweets to homebred Trump terrorist attacks. When an Amtrak train derailed on May 12, 2015, his description of the carnage was stone-cold clinical, followed by self-puffery: “Amtrak crash near Philadelphia, train derails – many hurt, some badly. Our country has horrible infrastructure problems.” As the 144 injured passengers were being pried from the wreckage, Trump followed up nine minutes later with, “The only one who can fix the infrastructure of our country is me – roads, bridges, airports. I know how to build, politicians only talk!” Trump’s lack of feeling for Orlando victims and relatives – coupled with his penchant to capitalize politically on a mass killing, even as the youths

were being operated on – brought him an avalanche of criticism. One headline said Trump had “miserably failed” his first leadership test. He plunged in the polls, and his negative ratings soared to 70 percent. As he has done repeatedly when in trouble, Trump’s response was to send up multiple smoke screens. He first faulted Obama for not using “radical Islam,” a phrase that ISIS likes. This broad-brush term fits ISIS’ theme that the U.S. opposes the Muslim faith in general, even with adherents such as the late boxing legend Muhammad Ali, Minnesota Rep. Keith Ellison and many American Muslims in our armed forces. When that flopped, Trump called for the president to resign. More backlash. Three days after his infamous Orlando tweets, Trump was still dodging criticism. Another smoke screen was in order. Trump next called for a ban on all Muslim immigrants. But our country was initially settled by immigrants fleeing religious persecution, so he met with a round of stiff criticism from Republican leaders. So he tried another smoke screen. On the 241st birthday of the U.S. Army, Trump next accused American soldiers in Iraq of stealing money that they were supposed to distribute. “I want to know who were the soldiers that had that job, because I think they’re living very well right now, whoever they may be.” A Trump aide walked this one back, claiming Trump meant to say Iraqi soldiers. But Iraqi soldiers had no U.S. money to distribute.

When all these smoke screens dissipated, Trump turned to wacky conspiracy theories. He cited a “secret” memo that purportedly proved Obama was supporting al-Qaeda. Trouble is, the memo wasn’t secret. It was an intelligence evaluation citing the difficulty in vetting fighters in Syria to make certain they weren’t with al-Qaeda. Trump’s “proof” was an article published by Breitbart, a discredited and disgraced right-wing news agency. In 2010, Andrew Breitbart selectively edited an NAACP officer’s video talk to make it appear she turned down a white farmer for a loan. But a longer version proved she was talking about how she approved the loan. Trump’s skill in getting media coverage is documented in his book “The Art of the Deal,” where he flatly states that saying outrageous things gets publicity. Yep, and cable media and others enjoy promoting Trump’s outrageous commentary. Trump has cultivated a reputation for being straight-forward because he says ungodly things. He is not, however, giving words to his candid thoughts. His outrageousness is calculated, used to manipulate the media into shifting the spotlight, especially when he’s in deep trouble. Here’s what we all can predict – more of this outrageous bad behavior.

• Donna Brazile is a senior Democratic strategist, a political commentator and contributor to CNN and ABC News, and a contributing columnist to Ms. Magazine and O, the Oprah Magazine.)

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Marine thanks person who paid for meal

To the Editor: This is a little late but I would like to share it anyway. On Memorial Day, my wife and I went to the Southern Bell restaurant for breakfast. I am a veteran and I was wearing a veteran T-shirt and my Marine Corps Veteran cover. After we finished, I went to pay my bill and was informed that it was taken care of. I asked who did this so that I could thank them but was informed the person did not want to be known, and that they had left. If this person reads this, I would like to say thank you. It’s not too often I get recognized for my service, and I think there are a lot of veterans who do not get recognized also. So again, I say thank you not only for our breakfast, but for recognizing my service.

Chester Sobczak Joliet U.S.M.C. Vietnam

The Rialto Theatre has value

Father’s Day

To the Editor: City owned vs. private? Is the taxpayer’s money being used wisely? What would the tax revenue be if this property were run by a private corporation? (Some stock owned by Joliet residents?) Sell it to the highest bidder; then the taxpayers wouldn’t have their taxes wasted and the revenue could pay for things we can’t afford today. I have only read about the costs to the taxpayers. A business would definitely make a profit; if not, the city can take its license back or force it to sell. Joliet has to be in charge of our city. We the people must take charge. What about the Union Station, Silver Cross Field, Splash Station and even the Public Works Department that’s doing work our local businesses do? This website, everyonepaystaxes.com, shows how we could run Joliet. This is a federal tax proposal in which we can all participate, to save our country.

To the Editor: Where’s Speaker Michael Madigan’s head at, off in the ozone? He was never one to say much, now he says even less, makes practically no logical argument and gets little done, submits a budget $7 billion in the red with a few hours to go. The state is billions in the red, bills go unpaid, where’s his sense of urgency? He needs a thorough psych exam. Prop up Speaker Madigan and watch his 2, 3 and 4 run things from behind the scene. Sincerely,

Don Zwiers

Thomas Cechner

Joliet

To the Editor: Come Sunday, it’s Fodder’s Day down on the farm.

Raymond F. Stoiber Joliet

Where’s Speaker Madigan?

Lockport


43

HIGH EXPECTATIONS

Minooka’s Baranski is The Herald-News 2016 Boys Volleyball Player of the Year / 44

Eric Ginnard – eginnard@shawmedia.com

Minooka standout Brandon Baranski, who competed on the Indians’ varsity for four seasons, capped his prep career by being selected as a first-team all-stater by the Illinois High School Volleyball Coaches Association after recording 378 kills, 57 blocks and 48 aces for a squad that finished with a 34-4 record.

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SPORTS


| SPORTS

44

The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Sunday, June 19, 2016

Brandon Baranski, The Herald-News 2016 Boys Volleyball Player of the Year, will continue his volleyball career at Loyola University. “Loyola is a beautiful school, and they were talking to me before any other college coaches,” Baranski said. “It’s a great fit since I feel kind of close to home, and they’re a great program.” Eric Ginnard – eginnard@ shawmedia.com

THE HERALD-NEWS 2016 BOYS VOLLEYBALL PLAYER OF THE YEAR

Volleyball definitely in Baranski’s blood By CURT HERRON

cherron@shawmedia.com When an athlete’s mother earns hall of fame honors as a college volleyball player, then directs a volleyball club for many years, it’s a good bet the athlete will become involved with the sport – and that was the case for Brandon Baranski from an early age. But it doesn’t guarantee an athlete will have the ability and determination to become one of the state’s best volleyball players, and get the opportunity to compete in college for one of the nation’s top programs – which has happened for the Minooka standout. Baranski, who competed on the Indians’ varsity for four seasons, capped his prep career by being selected as a first-team all-stater by the

Illinois High School Volleyball Coaches Association after recording 378 kills, 57 blocks and 48 aces for a squad that finished with a 34-4 record. This year’s Herald-News Player of the Year will continue both his career and education at Loyola University in Chicago, where he’s looking forward to making his mark for a program that captured consecutive NCAA championships in 2014 and 2015. His mother, Terri (Hibner) Baranski, played at Joliet Central before competing as an outside hitter and setter at Syracuse University from 1986 to 1989. In recognition of her career at the school in Syracuse, New York, she was inducted into its Orange Plus Hall of Fame in 1994. After returning to Joliet following her college years, she started coaching and

Brandon Baranski returns a serve for Minooka against Joliet West during a Lockport Regional semifinal May 24 Shaw Media file photo

directing at Joliet’s Uno Volleyball Club, where she had played while in high school. Twenty-four years later, she’s still at the club, which is on South Larkin Avenue just off Interstate 80. She is joined there by her husband, Tony,

another Central graduate, who played club ball at Illinois. “When I started playing in third grade, she handed me a volleyball and was like, ‘You’re going to come play with all of the girls because

there’s no boys that want to play with you.’ ” Baranski said. “So I would under-hand serve to the girls. A lot of people get burned out in this sport, but I never did. I really love the game and never want to stop playing this game if I don’t have to. “She owns this gym, and we play as much as we can. It’s great to be a part of this family. When my age group came in, we started making a name for the boys program at Uno, which was very small, but we’ve grown and gone to nationals. It’s a smaller club, but we’re really tight here, and we have good coaches. I’m really good friends with my coach now, Dave Bachtler, and he’s taught me so much about the game, and I can’t thank him enough.

See BARANSKI, page 45


THE HERALD-NEWS 2016 ALL-AREA BOYS VOLLEYBALL TEAM

By CURT HERRON

cherron@shawmedia.com

Rhome Apton Plainfield South The senior middle recorded 178 kills, 70 solo blocks, 60 block assists, 94 digs and 16 aces.

Neal Brown Lincoln-Way Central The senior outside hitter finished with 255 kills, a .297 percentage, 94 digs and 15 aces to earn third-team all-state honors. Will play at Carthage College. Scott Christensen Lincoln-Way West The senior outside hitter set a school record with 365 kills and added 170 digs and 34 aces. Ben Gabor Joliet Catholic A two-time all-East Suburban Catholic Conference pick, the senior outside hitter and middle had 221 kills and 52 blocks. Lucas Galifos Lincoln-Way East The senior middle, who earned all-state third-team honors, collected 221 kills and 69 blocks. He will play at McKendree University.

Brandon Baranski Minooka The Herald-News Player of the Year and Nathan Heller a two-time all-area selection. The senior Providence Catholic outside hitter had 378 kills, 57 blocks The three-year varsity player was a and 48 aces to earn first-team all-state leader for the Celtics as a senior middle. recognition. Will continue his career at Will continue his career at St. Ambrose Loyola University. University. Danny Beaudin Minooka The two-time all-area selection had 222

• BARANSKI

Continued from page 44

“My mom kind of kept it as a little bit of a secret that she was in the hall of fame, and I’ve only finally figured it out in the last two years. So now I’m kind of striving to do as well as my mom – maybe not be in the hall of fame, but I’m going to go and make a name, just like her, to keep the Baranski volleyball name alive at the collegiate level.” His younger sisters, Taylor and Anna, also play volleyball; and Taylor, who will be a junior, also is looking at some Division I programs. Baranski is proud of the success his teams enjoyed while he played for coach Janel Grzetich at Minooka. The

Jack Huizinga Lincoln-Way East The senior rightside was named a Indians lost in the sectionals to state qualifier Lincoln-Way East. “We’ve worked really hard the last few years,” Baranski said. “We went hard in practice, worked hard in morning practices and putting in the effort and time. And we were really good friends, too. All of that helped to make us a good team and made us play well. We showed up when it counted and got some wins under our belts, and that gave us more confidence. “Lincoln-Way East was an excellent team with strong players, and we were pretty evenly matched. They came out on top that last time, but our sights were the exact same as theirs – we wanted to make it to state and go as far as we possibly could and hopefully meet up with Glenbard West. Minooka should still be good, since we have a

second-team all-stater after recording 261 kills, 33.5 blocks, 164 digs and a school-record 61 aces. Will continue his career at Missouri Baptist. Quinn Isaacson Plainfield North An all-state honorable mention selection, the junior outside hitter/setter recorded 160 kills, 320 assists, 152 digs and 31 aces. Mike Kulinski Lincoln-Way Central The senior setter handed out 722 assists, contributed 108 digs and added 33 aces to receive third-team all-state honors. He will play at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Tyler Mitchem Bolingbrook The senior middle, who is headed to Lewis University, finished with 193 kills, 45 blocks and 27 acres to pick up firstteam all-state recognition.

Anthony Pitchford Joliet Central The senior outside hitter finished with 235 kills, 19 blocks and 21 aces. He will continue his career at Olivet College. Blake Reardon Joliet Catholic A three-time all-area and all-ESCC pick, the senior outside hitter had 534 kills, 43 blocks and 38 aces. Set an IHSA record for kills (1,552). The second-team allstater is going to Bowling Green. Weslee Rogman Plainfield Central The senior three-year starter moved from a middle to an outside hitter. Will continue his career at Lees-McRae College. Eric Van Dyck Lincoln-Way East A first-team all-state selection, the senior libero tied the school record with 427 digs and served up 22 aces. Will play at Lindenwood University.

Luke Van Eck Anthony Pfeiffer Joliet West Lockport The four-year starter collected 289 A sophomore setter, he led the Porters with 356 assists, 199 kills, a .325 percent- kills, 65 blocks, 117 digs and 31 aces as a middle. Will play at Dominican University. age and 37 aces, and added 31.5 blocks and 117 digs. Kyler Van Rossum-O’Connell Joliet West Kyle Piekarski The setter was a four-year starter and Plainfield North a two-time all-area pick. He had 827 The senior middle received first-team all-state honors by collecting 56 blocks, assists, 242 digs, 72 kills and 37 blocks. 137 kills and serving 26 aces. Will contin- Will continue his career at Fontbonne University. ue his career at Loyola University.

“I’m going to go and make a name, just like [my mom], to keep the Baranski volleyball name alive at the collegiate level.” Brandon Baranski

H-N boys volleyball player of the year couple of really good players who were on the varsity the last two years, and they should be the team captains.” Now Baranski looks forward to competing at Loyola. Although the head coach of those title teams, Shane Davis, has moved on, Baranski is quite familiar with his successor, Mark Hulse, since the current Ram-

blers coach recruited him to the Rogers Park campus. “Loyola is a beautiful school, and they were talking to me before any other college coaches,” Baranski said. “They were very welcoming and friendly, and the coaches are great guys, and I keep in contact with them, and they talk to me. It’s a great fit since I feel kind of close to home, and they’re a great program. “Mark Hulse, the new head coach, was mostly the recruiter, while Shane Davis was coaching the team. Since he was the assistant, him stepping up is nice. I know him on a good level since he was the one that contacted and met with me. It’s pretty crazy seeing Midwest teams winning, and it’s great that I get to be a part of it. I feel very lucky to get this opportunity.”

• Sunday, June 19, 2016

The past two Herald-News all-area boys volleyball teams were senior-oriented, with at least 15 seniors among the 20 selections. And this year’s squad is made up almost entirely of seniors, with all but two players graduating. Four members of this year’s team were returning honorees. Joliet Catholic’s Blake Reardon is a three-time selection, while Minooka’s Brandon Baranski and Danny Beaudin and Joliet West’s Kyler Van Rossum-O’Connell are repeat picks. State quarterfinalist Lincoln-Way East led all squads with three selections. Fourteen of the 18 seniors on this year’s all-area team will continue their careers in the sport in college. Here’s a closer look at this year’s all-area team:

kills, 99 blocks and 43 aces as a senior middle, helping him to be named thirdteam all-state.

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

Seniors dominate all-area boys volleyball team

45


The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Sunday, June 19, 2016

| SPORTS

46 MORRIS LADIES SHOOTOUT: LOCKPORT

Freshman Thompson joins Kucharski, Lockport girls By JEFF DE GRAW

Shaw Media correspondent MORRIS – When you construct a new house, you start with a solid foundation and build up from there. That is the message that Lockport girls basketball coach Dan Kelly, whose Porters competed in last week’s 20th annual Morris Ladies Shootout, is sending this summer. “You have to start with a solid foundation and build from there, no matter what you are trying to accomplish in anything,” Kelly said. “The summer is about improving and becoming a team. There are no banners given for the summer. No one should be losing any sleep over wins or losses during this time of year. “We must become more consistent and play as a team. This year, we have a great mix between all levels on the varsity. We have a wealth of youth, but we also have the senior leadership that is needed. The foundation is there.” The Porters are coming off a 10-18 season with a young team. This year’s group will have much more experience, a freshman who will be looked upon to contribute, and a key returnee from injury. Lockport will lean on 5-foot-10 senior Laurel Kucharski, who earned All-SouthWest Suburban Blue honors as a junior, led the Porters in scoring and is a four-year varsity player. “I can’t believe this is my senior season,” Kucharski said. “We have a great group this year. We all learned a lot last year, and we were a very young team. We all gained great experience, and I’m excited with the new group we have added. “I scored mostly with the inside game last year, so I really have been working on my ball handling and hitting more of the outside shot. We have some freshmen with our summer group, and I remember what it was like. We talk a lot about what to expect and what you can do to be ready for high school ball.” The freshman who has gained the most notoriety early is 6-2 Treasure Thompson, who attended Richland in Crest Hill. “Treasure has incredible potential for a freshman,” Kelly said. “She is in the 6-2 range, hopefully still growing, and has a great personality. You can see the leadership qualities at a young age. She can handle the ball and did play some point guard in junior high.” Thompson played well on the floor in the Morris Shootout and is finding out quickly the difference in the level of varsity basketball. “I do feel some pressure being a freshman,” she said. “I have to blend in, and it is becoming easier. This team is

Lockport’s Laurel Kucharski looks to pass around Lincoln-Way West’s Raquel Chavez during play Tuesday at the 20th annual Morris Ladies Shootout. Photos by Larry W. Kane for Shaw Media

“Unity is what we preach – play as a team.” Dan Kelly

Lockport girls basketball coach

said. “We have very good chemistry, especially with the mix we have. Everyone has been working hard to have a successful season. I’m working on improving my defense, working out, playing travel ball and enjoying the summer and getting better.” Junior Destiny Davis will return at the point guard position after missing most of the last two seasons with knee injuries. “It’s good to be playing again,” Davis said. “I just go out and play; you can’t worry about getting hurt. I haven’t played in so long. I just go play and work on getting better. If we can play toLockport’s Treasure Thompson drives to the basket around Yorkville’s defense during gether, this season will be fun. We have play Tuesday at the 20th annual Morris Ladies Shootout. the talent to be very successful.” Kelly summed up what he hopes for Joining Kucharski as a veteran the season. great, as they have accepted me and we “Unity is what we preach – play as all get along. I did a little of everything leader will be junior Taylor Hopkins, a a team,” he said. “Work every day at at Richland, but my favorite on the floor third-year varsity player. “We really have the potential to do becoming better. If we do that, we won’t is to get a rebound and get the ball down well this season,” the 5-8 swing player lose much sleep during the season.” court quickly so we can score.”


SLAMMERS 9, BOOMERS 1

By CURT HERRON

cherron@shawmedia.com

• Sunday, June 19, 2016

JOLIET – With the way the Joliet Slammers have been playing lately, Saturday night’s game with Schaumburg was a good one for an appearance by Hall of Famer Andre Dawson. While the Cubs and Expos legend did some coaching in addition to talking with fans and signing autographs, he also got the chance to see the Slammers turn in some of their best baseball of the year. The Joliet pitching staff, which has struggled throughout the season, received another strong effort, with four pitchers combining for a two-hitter. And the Slammers’ bats again were smacking the ball around the park, finishing with 14 hits. The result was a 9-1 victory over Schaumburg for the Slammers’ third win in a row. That boosted their record to a season-best 19-14, which moved them one-half game behind East Division leader Windy City. Joliet – which won, 9-0, in Friday’s opener of the weekend series – improved to 9-4 on the season at Silver Cross Field and has won seven of its last eight home games. After starting the season at 8-11, the Slammers now have won 11 of their last 14 contests. One of the most interesting stories of the evening was the debut of pitcher Shane Bryant, who allowed only one hit and one run through the first six innings. Like his new manager, Jeff Isom, Bryant not only played at Purdue but also hails from that immediate area. “[Catcher] Casey Fletcher had a good game plan, and I decided to go with it since he’s been here and is a very smart kid,” Bryant said. “Luckily, I was able to execute more times than not; and even though I threw more balls than I wanted to, the result was good today. I was a little nervous for the first pitch, but once I got a strike, I was good; and after [the team] put up eight in three innings, all of the pressure went off of me. “I was just sitting at home and watching some super-regional play, and I got the call from coach. I wanted that opportunity, so it was awesome to get that call.” Bryant received all of the run support that he needed in the second inning when Joliet scored four runs to take control for good. After Jake Gronsky reached on an error, newcomer Denzel Richardson (4 for 4) singled and the runners advanced to second and third. Fletcher (2 for 3, four RBIs) followed with a two-

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

Joliet tops Schaumburg for 2nd-straight night

47

Larry W. Kane for Shaw Media

The Joliet Slammers’ Carter Bell watches his base hit during Friday night’s game against the Schaumburg Boomers at Silver Cross Field in Joliet. Bell was 2 for 4, including a double,during Saturday night’s 9-1 win over Schaumburg in Joliet. run single, then Phil Bates (2 for 4) hit a two-run homer to make it a 4-0 contest. Joliet added four more runs in the third after Carter Bell (2 for 4) led off with a double and scored on a single by Marc Flores (2 for 5), who is tied for second in the league with 27 RBIs. After Gronsky walked and Richardson singled, Fletcher drove in a pair with a single, then Charlie White (2 for 5) added another single to increase the host’s lead to 8-0. The Boomers (16-16) scored in the fourth to snap a string of more 21 innings without Joliet pitchers allowing a run. But the Slammers took a 9-1 lead when Bell belted a solo shot to left to add to his league-leading total of 32 RBIs. The two homers also gave the Slammers 18 for the month and 31 on the season, which ranks among the top to-

tals in the league. Chris Rice, Brent Choban and Kevin Simmons each pitched an inning, and the trio only allowed one hit while striking out four during their combined three innings of relief. “This was our fifth series win in a row,” Isom said. “We continue to talk to our guys about continuing to win series, and they’re doing it. We’ve had some very good pitching performances the last three games and only gave up one run. And a lot of that has to do with the offense that we’re putting up there. “Guys one through nine in our lineup are swinging the bats very well right now. And when that happens, they say that hitting is contagious, and it takes a lot of pressure off of the pitching staff, as well. We’ve been preaching to our guys that they just need to go out and throw strikes. We’ve got a very

good defense, so let it work, and don’t give up those extra runners.” Schaumburg entered the series on a roll, having won eight straight; but thanks to the two big wins to kick off the set, Joliet was assured of capturing its fifth-straight series victory. In Friday’s contest, the Slammers scored seven runs in the initial three innings to provide more than enough support for Liam O’Sullivan, who picked up his third win after allowing just three hits in six innings while striking out five batters. Marc Rutledge allowed only two hits and struck out three in three innings of relief to pick up the save. Alfredo Rodriguez, Boo Vazquez, Joe Staley and White all collected two hits in Friday’s win while Gronsky drove in two runs for the Slammers, who finished with 14 hits.


The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Sunday, June 19, 2016

| SPORTS

48 FOOTBALL: ROMEOVILLE FROM USF 7-ON-7

Brighter outlook for Gibson and Romeoville football By DICK GOSS

dgoss@shawmedia.com JOLIET – Oliver Gibson is convinced Romeoville will be a better football team than it was a year ago, when the Spartans finished 1-8 in his inaugural season at the helm of his alma mater, where he was named the national defensive player of the year as a senior. For proof, look no further than his team’s sideline. “We have more than 28 guys now,” he said during last week’s 7-on-7 passing jamboree, orchestrated by the University of St. Francis at Memorial Stadium. “The guys were committed over the winter. Now our sideline will look like a sideline.” The 28 he referred to was the number of varsity players the Spartans had last season. There will be significantly more this time around – and perhaps as important as anything else, Gibson expects the offensive line to be a positive. “That’s the big thing, the offensive line,” he said. “(Guard) Scott Oderio is a real leader. We’re strong in the middle of the offensive line with Thaddeus Ampadu and Felipe Alvarez also in there.” If the protection holds up, Romeoville should score points in its Southwest Prairie Conference round-robin schedule. Gibson terms quarterback Cam Neely – a 6-foot-5, 175-pound junior – a Division I prospect who is “a true quarterback.” Returning senior running back Jordan Nettles is a threat anytime he can get into space. “Our conference is tough,” Neely said. “The guys got in the weight room in the offseason. I think our offensive line will be good. Our receivers need a little work, but they will get better and better. Jordan is a good back, which he will show if the offensive line gives him some blocking.” “Our team worked hard in the weight room in the offseason, and the offensive line is looking good,” Nettles said. “We have a lot of new team members. We have a new offensive scheme and a lot more speed as well. I’ve been working on getting down the field and

“Everyone doubts us, but that just makes us work harder.” Cam Neely

Romeoville quarterback

making plays.” Gibson said Nettles can be a special player. “He puts his foot in the turf and gets vertical,” he said. “He is all you would want in a football leader. He is not afraid to get vocal now.” Chaz Kuhn is the Spartans’ offensive coordinator; and Julio Carrasco, the head coach of the Romeoville girls basketball team, is the defensive coordinator. Anthony Imbordino, who has coached at Plainfield Central, his alma mater, in addition to Romeoville, is working with Carrasco on the defensive side of the ball. “I think we’ll be good defensively,” Carrasco said. “We have 50-some guys showing up every day. Last year, I think we had 24 suited up at the end of the season.” Gibson, who played at Notre Dame before embarking on a long NFL career, mentioned junior defensive end/ linebacker Mike Caceres as a defensive player to watch. “He will be a good one,” he said. Romeoville had not enjoyed a significant amount of success in recent years; but, on the other hand, everyone will enter the new season 0-0. “Everyone doubts us, but that just makes us work harder,” said Neely, who played some varsity basketball as a sophomore and said he is considering expanding his athletic résumé to include baseball next spring. “The playoffs are always a goal, and I believe we can do it.” “We’re trying to get in the playoffs and maybe beyond,” Nettles said. “We want to get in the playoffs, but right now we’re trying to win Game 1,” Gibson said. “This team is focused. These kids don’t want the feeling they had last year. “It’s personal for me because I played here.”

AP file photo

Bears punter Pat O’Donnell warms up before a game Jan. 3 against the Detroit Lions at Soldier Field.

BEARS

Punter Pat O’Donnell hopes to use competition to continue improvement By JOHN LAVACCARE

jlavaccare@shawmedia.com LAKE FOREST – In the heat of summer minicamp, any windy day is an opportunity for Bears punter Pat O’Donnell to prepare for the harsh conditions he will face this fall at Soldier Field. “You just try to take advantage of days where it’s a little windy, and you just try to prep for the season,” O’Donnell said. “Any time you get some wind, you just try to use it to the best of your advantage.” During his second NFL season in 2015, O’Donnell improved on his net-punting average by a full two yards, from 37.7 to 39.7 yards a punt. However, O’Donnell still finished just tied for 19th in the league in that statistic among punters with more than 50 attempts. This offseason, the Bears brought in an undrafted free agent, Barrington native Ben LeCompte, at the punter position. Although O’Donnell is expected to retain the job, he said the presence of LeCompte as competition has been “a good thing.” “It definitely makes me raise my standards, and it’s good to have him push me. I’m pushing him, and at the end of the day, we both get better,” O’Donnell said. O’Donnell first made headlines at the NFL Draft Combine in 2014, when he bench-pressed more than future top pick Jadeveon Clowney

and tied for the fastest 40-yard dash for a kicker or punter since at least 2006. Teammate Marc Mariani, who has worked with O’Donnell in practice as a punt returner for the last two years, said that athleticism is one of the things that stands out about the punter. “He is unbelievably gifted athletically, ” Mariani said. “He can do so many things that I haven’t seen from a punter.” Mariani said he sees a bright future for O’Donnell. “When he starts maximizing his potential, he’s going to be unbelievable,” Mariani said. “I tell people this all the time, I think he’ll play 15-20 years in this league. He’ll play as long as he wants. I just have a world of respect for him. He’ll get it right, he’ll figure it out. And when he does, it’s going to be brutal for everyone.” O’Donnell said his goals for the future remain focused on steady improvement. “Stay consistent,” O’Donnell said. “Build on last season, just continue to move forward. Anytime you add another year in this league, you just try to improve.” He thanked Bears fans for their “awesome” support over the past two years. “It’s definitely a privilege to be a Chicago Bear, and I’m looking forward to next season,” O’Donnell said.


GOLF: U.S. OPEN

By DOUG FERGUSON

Saturday At Oakmont Country Club, Oakmont, Pa. Purse: TBA ($10 million in 2015) Yardage: 7,254; Par: 70 Second Round

The Associated Press

AP photo

Shane Lowry of Ireland reacts after making a birdie on the seventh hole during Saturday’s third round of the U.S. Open golf championship at Oakmont Country Club in Oakmont, Pa.

Leaderboard at time of suspended play in the 3rd round Shane Lowry Andrew Landry Lee Westwood Sergio Garcia Dustin Johnson Branden Grace Scott Piercy Jason Day Bryson DeChambeau Zach Johnson Daniel Summerhays

Score -5 -3 -2 -2 -2 -1 E +1 +1 +1 +1

Thru 13 13 15 14 13 F 13 F F 17 14

the putter behind his neck as if he wanted to snap it. He took the one-shot penalty and then saved his mood with an 8-foot bogey putt. “To hole that second putt was massive for me and massive for my whole day,” Lowry said. After two of the longest days brought on by three rain delays in the opening round, Sunday becomes a sprint. Landry, the 28-year-old qualifier who has never been on a stage remotely this big, didn’t flinch when he had the 18-hole lead or when he played alongside Johnson, who can intimidate with athleticism and power off the tee. “No nerves, very comfortable,” he said after finishing at 3 under through 13 holes. The leader in the clubhouse when the day ended was Branden Grace, who last year at Chambers

Bay was tied for the lead until he hit 3-wood onto the train track and out-of-bounds for a double bogey that cost him. Good news for the South African: A train can be heard from Oakmont, but not hit. Grace pieced together a 66 to reach 1-under 209, four shots behind Lowry. The most intriguing character is Johnson because of his long list of heartache in the majors, particularly last year at Chambers Bay in the U.S. Open when he was 12 feet away from winning and took three putts to finish one shot behind Spieth. He had made only one bogey in 36 holes until it began to get away from him – a double bogey on No. 3 when a chip came back to his feet, a bogey from the bunker on the par-3 sixth, a sloppy bogey on the tough 10th hole with a wedge that came up woefully short. Johnson stayed optimistic. “I’m giving myself opportunities,” he said. “Feel like I’m hitting my putts on my line with the correct speed. So, I mean, at some point, they will start to go in. Hopefully, that’s tomorrow. ... I’ve been in the position before. I know what to expect. I know how to handle it. So hopefully, the ball falls my way tomorrow.” Day opened with four birdies in five holes and shot 66, leaving him six shots behind Lowry. Spieth also started strong with three quick birdies, only to get derailed with a double bogey. He had to settle for a 70 and was nine shots behind Lowry.

(a-amateur) Dustin Johnson Andrew Landry Scott Piercy Sergio Garcia Gregory Bourdy Shane Lowry Daniel Summerhays Andy Sullivan Jim Furyk Lee Westwood Lee Slattery Louis Oosthuizen Adam Scott Marc Leishman Zach Johnson Jason Kokrak David Lingmerth Russell Knox Harris English Bryson DeChambeau Brendan Steele Justin Thomas Derek Fathauer Sung Kang Yusaku Miyazato Daniel Berger Graeme McDowell Branden Grace Kevin Na Ethan Tracy Kevin Streelman Matt Kuchar Matt Fitzpatrick Emiliano Grillo Brooks Koepka Kevin Kisner Charl Schwartzel Rob Oppenheim Andrew Johnston James Hahn Rafa Cabrera Bello Byeong Hun An Jason Dufner Jordan Spieth Spencer Levin Bill Haas Chris Wood Jason Day Matt Marshall Brandon Harkins Patrick Rodgers Justin Hicks a-Jon Rahm Bubba Watson Danny Willett Chase Parker Tim Wilkinson Cameron Smith Ryan Moore Charley Hoffman Billy Horschel Angel Cabrera Hideto Tanihara Romain Wattel Matteo Manassero Martin Kaymer Danny Lee Missed cut Tony Finau Gary Stal Kevin Tway Geoff Ogilvy Phil Mickelson K.T. Kim a-Scottie Scheffler Sebastian Soderberg Jamie Donaldson Justin Rose

67-69-136 66-71-137 68-70-138 68-70-138 71-67-138 68-70-138 74-65-139 71-68-139 71-68-139 67-72-139 72-68-140 75-65-140 71-69-140 71-69-140 71-69-140 71-70-141 72-69-141 70-71-141 70-71-141 71-70-141 71-71-142 73-69-142 73-69-142 70-72-142 73-69-142 70-72-142 72-71-143 73-70-143 75-68-143 73-70-143 69-74-143 71-72-143 73-70-143 73-70-143 75-69-144 73-71-144 76-68-144 72-72-144 75-69-144 73-71-144 74-70-144 74-70-144 73-71-144 72-72-144 73-72-145 76-69-145 75-70-145 76-69-145 72-73-145 71-74-145 73-72-145 73-72-145 76-69-145 69-76-145 75-70-145 75-70-145 71-75-146 71-75-146 74-72-146 72-74-146 72-74-146 70-76-146 70-76-146 71-75-146 76-70-146 73-73-146 69-77-146 72-75-147 71-76-147 74-73-147 71-76-147 74-73-147 73-74-147 69-78-147 75-73-148 74-74-148 72-76-148

a-Justin Suh 75-73-148 Denny McCarthy 76-72-148 Aron Price 76-72-148 Matthew Baldwin 75-73-148 Robert Streb 76-72-148 Bernd Wiesberger 76-72-148 Patrick Reed 74-74-148 Paul Casey 75-73-148 Luke Donald 76-72-148 Rory McIlroy 77-71-148 Chris Kirk 75-73-148 Soren Kjeldsen 73-76-149 William McGirt 75-74-149 Keegan Bradley 71-78-149 Lucas Glover 75-74-149 a-Sam Burns 74-75-149 T.J. Howe 76-73-149 Mikael Lundberg 75-74-149 a-Sam Horsfield 76-73-149 David Toms 80-69-149 J.B. Holmes 76-73-149 Kevin Chappell 76-73-149 Kent Bulle 76-74-150 Ernie Els 75-75-150 Retief Goosen 73-77-150 Aaron Wise 74-76-150 a-Nick Hardy 77-73-150 a-Kyle Mueller 77-73-150 Patrick Wilkes-Krier 78-72-150 Anirban Lahiri 73-78-151 Brandt Snedeker 80-71-151 Webb Simpson 77-74-151 Andy Pope 77-74-151 Tyler Raber 73-78-151 Frank Adams III 76-75-151 Andres Gonzales 76-75-151 D.J. Trahan 77-74-151 Yuta Ikeda 75-76-151 Jimmy Walker 75-76-151 Rickie Fowler 76-75-151 Mark Anguiano 77-74-151 Thitiphun Chuayprakong73-79-152 J.J. Henry 77-75-152 Alex Noren 74-78-152 Carlos Ortiz 76-76-152 Hideki Matsuyama 74-78-152 a-Christopher Crawford 76-76-152 Billy Hurley III 78-75-153 Jaco Van Zyl 75-78-153 Smylie Kaufman 77-76-153 Thomas Aiken 79-74-153 Mike Miller 72-81-153 Matt Borchert 73-80-153 Miguel Tabuena 74-80-154 Kiradech Aphibarnrat 78-76-154 Wes Short Jr. 78-76-154 Jeev Milkha Singh 76-79-155 Max Kieffer 77-78-155 a-Derek Bard 77-78-155 Jim Herman 76-79-155 Dicky Pride 78-77-155 Patton Kizzire 77-78-155 Jason Allred 78-77-155 Richie Schembechler 79-76-155 Toru Taniguchi 78-78-156 Mike Van Sickle 76-80-156 Tom Hoge 78-78-156 Steven Bowditch 84-73-157 Derek Chang 80-77-157 Jeff Maggert 79-79-158 Gregor Main 84-74-158 a-Charlie Danielson 78-81-159 Kevin Foley 75-85-160 Austin Jordan 77-84-161 a-Ryan Stachler 78-84-162 Soren Hansen 79-84-163 Zach Edmondson 89-77-166 Henrik Stenson 69-WD Peter Hanson 77-DQ

• Sunday, June 19, 2016

OAKMONT, Pa. – Stalled by rain, the U.S. Open is almost back on schedule. And when another marathon day finally ended Saturday with Shane Lowry of Ireland atop the leaderboard at Oakmont, it was more chaotic than ever. None of the six players who remained under par has ever won a major championship. Lee Westwood and Sergio Garcia, who between them have played in 142 majors without winning, were only three shots behind. Andrew Landry, in his first U.S. Open, didn’t look the least bit rattled and was two shots back. And then there was Dustin Johnson, no stranger to suffering in the majors. He had the 36-hole lead, started the third round late Saturday afternoon by stuffing his approach to 5 feet for birdie, and then hit his next tee shot so far left that it went over a counter of lemonade glasses and into a concession stand, the ball settling next to a blue tub filled with bags of ice. He nearly made birdie. Bogeys followed and he also was three shots behind. Jason Day worked himself back into the mix. Jordan Spieth did not. Through it all, Lowry looked poised as ever. With a chance to give Irish golf its 10th major in 10 years, he ended the day at 5-under par through 14 holes when darkness suspended the final round. He was thrilled to stop and catch his breath. And he can’t wait to get back out at 7 a.m. local time Sunday. “We all know that this course can jump up and bite you in a split second,” Lowry said. “So yeah, I’m two ahead with 22 holes left. Let’s not get ahead of ourselves. These are the best golfers in the world behind me. I have to go out there and do what I’ve been doing all week. I’m really looking forward to tomorrow. This is exactly where you want to be. I’ve been beating myself up over the last six months trying to get in this position. “I’m here now. I might as well enjoy it while I’m here.” It wasn’t so enjoyable earlier in the day when he was lining up a 30-foot birdie putt and nudged the ball with his putter. It moved ever so slightly, enough for Lowry to see, and he turned in disgust to call over an official, then held

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Shane Lowry on top in a chaotic marathon

49


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50


INDIANS 13, WHITE SOX 2

By BRIAN DULIK

The Associated Press

“It can’t get any worse than it is right now,” said White Sox catcher Dioner Navarro, who previously played with Shields in Tampa Bay. “Obviously, everybody knows something is up because I don’t remember him going through a stretch like this. But believe me, there is nobody that feels worse about it than him.” The Sox trailed 7-0 when Shields strode slowly off the mound to the dugout. Matt Purke entered and threw nine straight balls, walking in the final run that was charged to Shields. Yet, White Sox manager Robin Ventura isn’t ready to remove Shields from the rotation.

CUBS 4, PIRATES 3

Rizzo, Bryant, Ross homer in win The ASSOCIATED PRESS

CHICAGO – Anthony Rizzo, Kris Bryant and David Ross each homered to back Jon Lester and lead the Cubs to a 4-3 victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates on Saturday night. The major league-leading Cubs (46-20) improved to a season-high 26 games above .500 while the Pirates lost for the ninth time in 10 games. Lester (9-3) won his fifth straight start. Rizzo and Bryant each hit their 16th home run, and Ross made it 4-3 with a solo drive in the sixth that chased Jonathon

Niese (6-4). The Cubs won again even though Dexter Fowler left the game because of discomfort in his right hamstring. Lester went six innings, allowing three runs and seven hits. He struck out seven and walked three after issuing none in his previous three starts. The Pirates are now two games below .500 for the first time this season at 33-35 – quite a fall for a team that was 28-19 about three weeks ago. Jordy Mercer hit his first career leadoff homer for Pittsburgh. He also doubled and scored in the third and got hit by a pitch in the

left foot with the bases loaded in the fourth to give the Pirates a 3-1 lead. But Niese couldn’t hold it. The left-hander gave up four runs and six hits in 51⁄3 innings and lost his second straight start. Ross cut it to 3-2 in the fourth when he squeezed in a run, and Bryant tied it in the fifth with his drive well beyond the left-field bleachers. Ross put Chicago on top with his homer to left. And the Cubs’ bullpen made it stand, with Hector Rondon working the final four outs for his 12th save in 14 chances.

WHAT TO WATCH Auto racing 7:30 a.m.: Formula One, European Grand Prix, at Baku, Azerbaijan, NBCSN 12:30 p.m.: NASCAR, Xfinity Series, American Ethanol E15 250, at Newton, Iowa, FS1 College baseball 2 p.m.: NCAA Division I, World Series, Game 3, TCU vs. Texas Tech, at Omaha, Neb., ESPNU 7 p.m.: NCAA Division I, World Series, Game 4, Coastal Carolina vs. Florida, at Omaha, Neb., ESPN2 Diving 7 p.m.: U.S. Olympic Trials, men’s platform synchronized semifinals, at Indianapolis, NBCSN Drag racing 3 p.m.: NHRA, Thunder Valley Nationals, finals, at Bristol, Tenn. (same-day tape), FS1 Golf 10 a.m.: USGA, U.S. Open, final round, at

Oakmont, Pa., FOX 10 a.m.: Ladies European Tour, Tipsport Golf Masters, third round, at Pilson, Czech Republic (same-day tape), GOLF 1 p.m.: LPGA Tour, Meijer Classic, final round, at Belmont, Mich., GOLF Pro baseball 12:10 p.m., White Sox at Cleveland, WGN 1 p.m.: Texas at St. Louis OR Detroit at Kansas City, MLB 7 p.m.: Pittsburgh at Cubs, ESPN Motor sports 1:30 p.m.: Red Bull Global RallyCross, at Daytona, Fla., NBC Pro basketball 7 p.m.: NBA Finals, Game 7, Cleveland at Golden State, ABC Soccer 1:30 p.m.: UEFA, European Championship, group

stage, Switzerland vs. France, at Lille, France, ESPN 1:30 p.m.: UEFA, European Championship, group stage, Romania vs. Albania, at Lyon, France, ESPN2 4 p.m.: MLS, Sporting Kansas City at FC Dallas, ESPN 6:30 p.m.: MLS, Seattle at New York Red Bulls, FS1 WNBA basketball 1 p.m.: New York at Indiana, NBA Volleyball 3:30 p.m.: AVP Tour, New York City Open, at New York, NBC 8 p.m.: FIVB Women’s Grand Prix, United States vs. Japan, at Long Beach, Calif. (tape-delayed), NBCSN 10 p.m.: FIVB Women’s Grand Prix, United States vs. Turkey, at Long Beach, Calif. (same-day tape), NBCSN

GB — 11½ 14 16 20½ GB — 6½ 7 13½ 21 GB — 7 10 12½ 16

Saturday’s Results Cubs 4, Pittsburgh 3 Arizona 4, Philadelphia 1 Houston 5, Cincinnati 4, 11 innings Miami 9, Colorado 6 San Francisco 6, Tampa Bay 4 Texas 4, St. Louis 3 Atlanta 4, N.Y. Mets 3 Milwaukee at L.A. Dodgers (n) Washington at San Diego (n)

Central Division W L Pct Cleveland 37 30 .552 Kansas City 37 31 .544 Detroit 34 34 .500 White Sox 33 35 .485 Minnesota 20 48 .294 East Division W L Pct Baltimore 39 28 .582 Boston 38 29 .567 Toronto 39 32 .549 New York 34 34 .500 Tampa Bay 31 35 .470 West Division W L Pct Texas 44 25 .638 Seattle 36 32 .529 Houston 33 36 .478 Los Angeles 30 38 .441 Oakland 28 40 .412

GB — ½ 3½ 4½ 17½ GB — 1 2 5½ 7½ GB — 7½ 11 13½ 15½

Saturday’s Results Cleveland 13, White Sox 2 N.Y. Yankees 7, Minnesota 6 Baltimore 4, Toronto 2 Boston 6, Seattle 2 L.A. Angels 7, Oakland 1 Houston 5, Cincinnati 4, 11 innings San Francisco 6, Tampa Bay 4 Texas 4, St. Louis 3 Kansas City 16, Detroit 5

Sunday’s Games Pittsburgh (Taillon 1-0) at Cubs (Hendricks 4-6), 7:08 p.m. Atlanta (Teheran 2-7) at N.Y. Mets (deGrom 3-3), 12:10 p.m. Colorado (Anderson 0-0) at Miami (Koehler 5-6), 12:10 p.m. San Francisco (Peavy 3-6) at Tampa Bay (Odorizzi 3-3), 12:10 p.m. Arizona (Miller 1-6) at Philadelphia (Eflin 0-1), 12:35 p.m. Cincinnati (Finnegan 3-4) at Houston (Fiers 4-3), 1:10 p.m. Texas (Perez 6-4) at St. Louis (Leake 5-4), 1:15 p.m. Milwaukee (Garza 0-0) at L.A. Dodgers (Maeda 6-4), 3:10 p.m. Washington (Gonzalez 3-5) at San Diego (Pomeranz 5-7), 3:40 p.m. Monday’s Games St. Louis at Cubs, 7:05 p.m. Arizona at Philadelphia, 12:05 p.m. San Francisco at Pittsburgh, 6:05 p.m. Colorado at Miami, 6:10 p.m. Washington at L.A. Dodgers, 9:10 p.m.

Sunday’s Games White Sox (Rodon 2-6) at Cleveland (Carrasco 2-2), 12:10 p.m. San Francisco (Peavy 3-6) at Tampa Bay (Odorizzi 3-3), 12:10 p.m. Seattle (Walker 3-6) at Boston (Price 7-4), 12:35 p.m. Toronto (Stroman 6-2) at Baltimore (Tillman 9-1), 12:35 p.m. Cincinnati (Finnegan 3-4) at Houston (Fiers 4-3), 1:10 p.m. N.Y. Yankees (Eovaldi 6-3) at Minnesota (Santana 1-7), 1:10 p.m. Detroit (Zimmermann 9-3) at Kansas City (Young 2-6), 1:15 p.m. Texas (Perez 6-4) at St. Louis (Leake 5-4), 1:15 p.m. L.A. Angels (Weaver 5-6) at Oakland (Surkamp 0-4), 3:05 p.m. Monday’s Games White Sox at Boston, 6:10 p.m. Seattle at Detroit, 6:10 p.m. Tampa Bay at Cleveland, 6:10 p.m. Baltimore at Texas, 7:05 p.m. L.A. Angels at Houston, 7:10 p.m.

NBA FINALS (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) Golden State 3, Cleveland 3 Thursday, June 2: Golden State 104, Cleveland 89 Sunday, June 5: Golden State 110, Cleveland 77 Wednesday, June 8: Cleveland 120, Golden State 90

Friday, June 10: Golden State 108, Cleveland 97 Monday: Cleveland 112, Golden State 97 Thursday: Cleveland 115, Golden State 101 x-Sunday: Cleveland at Golden State, 7 p.m.

COPA AMERICA QUARTERFINALS Thursday Seattle United States 2, Ecuador 1 Friday East Rutherford, N.J. Peru 0, Colombia 0, Colombia advanced

4-2 on penalty kicks

Saturday Foxborough, Mass. Argentina 4 Venezuela 1 Santa Clara, Calif. Mexico vs. Chile (n)

Seattle winner vs. Foxborough winner, 8 p.m. Wednesday Chicago East Rutherford winner vs. Santa Clara winner, 7 p.m. THIRD PLACE Saturday, June 25 Glendale, Ariz. Semifinal losers, 7 p.m. CHAMPIONSHIP Sunday, June 26 East Rutherford, N.J. Semifinal winners, 7 p.m.

SEMIFINALS Tuesday Houston

FRONTIER LEAGUE East Division W L 19 13 19 14 17 14 16 14 16 16 9 22

Pct. .594 .576 .548 .533 .500 .290

GB — — 1½ 2 3 9½

West Division W L Pct. 20 11 .645 20 13 .606 19 13 .594 14 19 .424 13 18 .419 8 23 .258

Saturday’s Results Joliet 9, Schaumburg 1 Evansville 2, River City 0 Washington 8, Windy City 6 Lake Erie 4, Traverse City 3 Florence 5, Gateway 3 Normal 3, Southern Illinois 2 Evansville 4, River City 2

GB — 1 1½ 7 7 12

Sunday’s Games Schaumburg at Joliet, 1:05 p.m. Traverse City at Lake Erie, 1:05 p.m. Windy City at Washington, 4:05 p.m. Normal at Southern Illinois, 65:05 p.m. Florence at Gateway, 6:05 p.m.

Windy City Slammers Washington Lake Erie Schaumburg Traverse City

Southern Illinois Evansville River City Gateway Normal Florence

• Sunday, June 19, 2016

CLEVELAND – James Shields’ nightmare season just keeps getting worse. The right-hander allowed eight runs and only retired five batters in his shortest start of the year and the Cleveland Indians cruised to a 13-2 win over the White Sox on Saturday night. Shields (2-9) was acquired by the Sox in a trade June 4 with San Diego and is 0-2 with a 21.81 ERA in three starts since. The former ace has given up a whopping 21 earned runs on 24 hits in just 82⁄3 innings. “To be honest, I don’t know

exactly what’s going on,” the 34-year-old Shields said. “The most disappointing thing is I’m disappointing my teammates and not giving us a chance to win. You want to come to a new team and do well. I feel fine, but I’ve got to be better.” Shields pitched at least six innings in his first 10 starts of 2016 but hasn’t topped five in his last four outings. The Indians built a 4-0 lead before he recorded an out, highlighted by a three-run homer by Mike Napoli. Dating back to his final appearance with the Padres on May 31, Shields is 0-3 with a 24.62 ERA and has allowed at least seven runs in all four games.

Central Division W L Pct 46 20 .697 35 32 .522 33 35 .485 31 37 .456 27 42 .391 East Division W L Pct Washington 43 25 .632 New York 36 31 .537 Miami 36 32 .529 Philadelphia 30 39 .435 Atlanta 22 46 .324 West Division W L Pct San Francisco 43 26 .623 Los Angeles 36 33 .522 Colorado 32 35 .478 Arizona 31 39 .443 San Diego 27 42 .391

Cubs St. Louis Pittsburgh Milwaukee Cincinnati

AMERICAN LEAGUE

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

Shields hit around again, White Sox lose to Indians

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MLB NATIONAL LEAGUE


The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Sunday, June 19, 2016

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PEOPLE

Minooka gets Little Free Library Community service project designed to make summer reading easy By JEANNE MILLSAP

Shaw Media correspondent

M

INOOKA – For those who haven’t noticed yet, there is a new library in town. It’s a small one. In fact, it’s called the Little Free Library – but its potential is large. The new library is not a building, but a kind of outdoor enclosed bookcase that contains hardbacks and paperbacks, fiction and nonfiction, for the old and young. Books can be borrowed by anyone at any time without checking them out or paying for them. When a book is read, the reader can return it or lend it to someone else. Easy. It’s located in front of the Minooka Village Hall, directly across from Minooka Creamery, and with its bright red-and-white barn appearance, it’s not easily missed. The library is the result of a community service project by the kids in the Minooka 4-H Plus One Homeschool Club. “You take one, you read it, and you give it back,” said the club’s president, 11-year-old Brayden Caraynoff-Huber. “It’s free sharing at one place. It saves money on books.” “I think it’s a really good idea because we’re also helping the really young children learn how to read,” said the club’s treasurer, Kristen Hightower, also 11. Secretary Lina Spielman, 13, donated a box of books to the library and said she was happy to share them with others who might enjoy them. “It’s good for the community,” she said. “You don’t have to return them like a regular library. ... I hope a lot of people use it. There are a lot of families with little kids and other people who are just looking for something to read.” The library was just installed, and people already have been taking notice and borrowing. It was the 4-H club’s leader, Kelly Caraynoff, who came up with the idea, seeing other examples online. “We all had a hand in the construction,” she said. The parents and other adult volunteers cut the wood and did a lot of the woodworking, and the kids helped them with the design, assembly and painting. Each of the 12 active members of the club helped, including pressing their painted hands around

Jeanne Millsap for Shaw Media

The Little Free Library is a community service project of a Minooka 4-H club. Members are (from left) Kristen Hightower, Zeke Minett, Brayden Caraynoff-Huber, Kaelan Minett, Lina Spielman and Audra Spielman.

Know more The Little Free Library is located outside the Minooka Village Hall, at 121 McEvilly Road.

The Little Free Library in front of the Minooka Village Hall is ready for borrowing. the bottom of the structure. The barn design even has real shingles on its roof, and the club worked hard to make sure it was waterproof. Caraynoff said Minooka Grain and Lumber donated the lumber, and the village of Minooka dug the post holes. Volunteer Jake Weaver said the

kids learned about making mistakes, as well, as the first one they built was all wrong. “The first one we burned in my fire pit,” he said. “It literally went down in flames.” Kristen said she has several books she will donate, including ones about

cats, kittens and puppies, and one called “Misty the Abandoned Kitten.” “I think there will be a lot of little girls who will come and some little boys,” she said. “And they can read with their mom and dad, too.” Lina said she’s going to be looking for some donated books herself, such as anything from the “Land of Stories” series by Chris Colfer. Brayden said he’s looking for “Star Wars” books. The Minooka 4-H Plus One Homeschool Club also is involved in other community service projects, such as Pop Tab Dump Day and creating a pollination garden in Lions Park in Minooka.


The HERALD–NEWS PLAINFIELD – Nine District 202 teachers will each get to take part in special professional growth programs this summer with the help of a special grant designed to support innovative teaching. The Plainfield Foundation for Excellence created the Professional Development Awards five years ago to help individual teachers expand and improve their classroom skills and knowledge. The foundation received 43 applications this year. The awards of up to $500 each can be used to pay for registration fees, tuition, conference/class-related mate-

rials, travel, lodging, meals or other professional development expenses for classes or programs to be taken this summer. The 2016 Professional Development Award winners are: • Melissa Aubuchon, Indian Trail Middle School – Aubuchon will take a course offering teaching strategies and tools for exceeding expectations of the Common Core state learning standards. • Cindy Cook, Crystal Lawns Elementary School – Cook will take a course focusing on bullying among girls and female empowerment. • Elaine Diveley, Plainfield East High School – Diveley will use her

The HERALD–NEWS BOLINGBROOK – Two new assistant principals will take their positions at Bolingbrook High School and Pioneer Elementary School for the 2016-17 school year. Veteran Valley View School District 365U educator Susan Farmer will assume her new role as assistant principal at Pioneer Elementary School, while Christine Ruddy, Bolingbrook High School assistant principal of school improvement, will become assistant principal for curriculum and instruction at Bolingbrook High School. Susan Farmer, who is a product of the VVSD Farmer system having graduated from Romeoville High School after attending R.C. Hill and West View (now Martinez), has served as an ESL teacher at Brooks Middle School for the past five years. Before that she was a third-grade bilingual teacher at Jonas Salk Elementary School for two years, an ESL social studies teacher for three years at Lukancic Middle Christine School and an ESL social studies teacher at Ruddy Brooks for two years. A graduate of Northern Illinois University, she obtained a bachelor’s degree in business administration and a master’s in literacy education from NIU. She also holds a master’s in educational leadership from Concordia University. During Farmer’s career with VVSD, she has worked on numerous committees at the district level and assisted with development of VVSD’s ESL Common Core Curriculum Standards. Ruddy has been in her current position at BHS for two years while also serving as director of Phoenix Experience. Before that she was the BHS guidance department chair for seven years. She holds a bachelor’s degree in psychology and a master’s in guidance counseling from Lewis University in Romeoville. Before coming to BHS, Ruddy was an attendance caseworker for the Education Service Network in Morris for nearly five years and a Romeoville police officer for five years.

course teaching how to work with oppositional, defiant and disruptive children and adolescents. • Megan Rich, Grand Prairie Elementary School – Rich will take programs focusing on service learning at the American Speech and Hearing Association’s summer conference. • Megan Smith, Drauden Point Middle School – Smith will attend the Tri-County Summer Agricultural Institute to learn how Will County contributes to the “farm to table” process, and to learn how food, fiber and renewable resources are produces. For more information about the foundation or to make a donation, visit www.d202foundation.org.

LTHS grad receives Associate Press Award The HERALD–NEWS LOCKPORT – Zach Bernard, a graduate of the Lockport Township High School Class of 2010, earned first place at Broadcast News Competition Award. Bernard won a first-place Best News Series Associated Press Award for his five-piece story titled, “The Five Year Fix: Improving Wellness and Decreasing Poverty in Fort Wayne.” The award was presented at the Associated Press Awards dinner April 30 in Indianapolis. Bernard is employed as a radio broadcaster and web news journalist for the National Public Radio station, WBOI (89.1), in Fort Wayne, Indiana. He was a resident of Lockport before taking a radio broadcasting job in Fort Wayne. After graduating from LTHS, Bernard went on to earn his bachelor of arts Photo provided degree in broadcast journalism and political sciZach Bernard, a graduate of the Lockport Township ence at Illinois State University. He later received High School Class of 2010, earned first place at a master’s degree in public affairs reporting from Broadcast News Competition Award. the University of Illinois at Springfield.

PEOPLE BRIEFS Lockport Township junior earns Eagle Scout rank

With summer right around the corner, Will County Clerk Nancy Schultz Voots wants to give couples getting married in Will County information on where LOCKPORT – Cody Douglas Carto apply. berry, a junior at Lockport Township To apply for a license, go to the Will County Clerk’s High School, has been named an Office, located at 302 N. Chicago St., Joliet, from Eagle Scout by the Boy Scouts of Cody Monday through Friday, or call 815-740-4626. America for helping rescue dogs. Douglas However, there are satellite offices located in Will Carberry built a viewing area for Carberry County that issue licenses as well. To schedule an rescue dogs at the All Herding Breed appointment, call: Dog Rescue of Illinois in Joliet, which allows dogs to • Bolingbrook – 630-759-1317 be shown to potential adoptive families in inclement • Crete – 630-672-8279 weather. • Plainfield – 815-436-8308 For additional information or to find the Will Four Will County Clerk’s Office County Clerk’s Office holiday schedule, visit www. sites offer marriage licenses thewillcountyclerk.com. Last summer, the Will County Clerk’s office issued – The Herald-News almost 1,000 marriage licenses from June to August.

• Sunday, June 19, 2016

Farmer, Ruddy named assistant principals at Bolingbrook schools

grant to allow her to present at the American Association of Teachers of French annual national convention. • Laura Dovalovsky, Plainfield Central High School – Dovalovsky will take a course on ways to make Science, Technology, Engineering and Math curriculum relevant. • Megan Madigan, Freedom Elementary School – Madigan will attend the Kodaly Level 3 music education workshop. • Dana Rakoci, Bonnie McBeth Learning Center – Rakoci will take a class focusing on emotions and learning for younger students. • Kristen Rhodes, John F. Kennedy Middle School – Rhodes will take a

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

9 teachers to attend professional growth programs


The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Sunday, June 19, 2016

| PEOPLE

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D-86 employees recognized The HERALD–NEWS JOLIET – The following Joliet Public School District 86 employees retired during the 2015-16 school year. Collectively, these employees have worked in District 86 for a total of 798 years and 7 months. Building support services: Ronald Sossong. Dirksen Junior High: Kathy Aultz, Madonna Fiorelli, Mary O’Keeffe, September Pollack and Peggy Wylde. Farragut Elementary: Karen Barnett, Roberta Chamberlain and Mary Therese Orlando. Hufford Junior High: Debbie Baldwin, Nancy Crowe, Dianne Glazar and Mary Hurst. J.F. Kennedy Administrative Center: Dr. Charles Coleman, Charyll Colstock, James Colstock, Marlene Downey, Louise Kraft, Pamela Mathis, Kathryn Moore, Thomas Mount, E. Wesley Russell and Janice Taylor.

Edna Keith Elementary: Tyrine

Mason.

ROMEOVILLE – The Romeoville Parks & Recreation Department offers a wide variety of activities and programs. • Fun in the Sun Day Camp – Now through Aug. 12. Ages 5 to 14. • Preschool Day Camp – June 20 through Aug. 5. Ages 3 to 4. • The Little Mermaid – Performance at 6:30 p.m. Aug. 4. Ages 7 to 15. • Fitness Summer Camp – June 20 to June 23. Ages 7 to 12. • Fun in Motion Camp – July 11 to July 14. Ages 7 to 12. • The Ville Basketball Academy – July 25 to July 28. Grades three to nine. • Youth Boxing – Ages 6 to 14. • Sports Kids Youth Archery – Through Sept. 30. Ages 7 to 10 and 11

50th Wedding Anniversary

A.O. Marshall Elementary: Thomas

McGregor.

Marycrest Early Childhood Center:

Carol Johnson and Nancy Newcomb. Sator Sanchez Elementary: Irene Duran. Carl Sandburg Elementary: Barbara Bohnert. Isaac Singleton Elementary: Freda Manigo. Washington Junior High: Jerry Crudup and Kathleen Kerestes. Woodland Elementary: Nancy Horwath. In addition, the following employees celebrated working 25 years in District 86: A.O. Marshall Elementary: Joann Burkhart. Gompers Junior High: Theresa Matejcak. Pershing Elementary: Donzalene Ramos.

Romeoville Parks & Rec plans programs The HERALD–NEWS

Bob & Sis

to 14. • Sports Kids Family Archery – July 14 through Aug. 4. Ages 6 to 16. • Girls Volleyball League – Player evaluations are 10 a.m. July 16. Practices start the week of July 18. Grades four to six, and grades seven and eight. • Themed Fun Runs – July 11 to Aug. 15. Ages four to six. • Kip Clinic – July 9. Ages 6 to 15. • Flip Flop Clinic – June 20 and July 15. Ages 6 to 15. • Kidz Pop Singing Class – June 28 through Aug. 9 and July 9 through Aug. 20. Ages 5 to 10. • Volcanoes – Aug. 10. Ages 5 to 9. • Whirly Ball – Aug. 9. Ages 5 to 12. • Boys Hip Hop – June 24 to July 29. Ages 7 to 18. For more information, visit www. romeoville.org/361/Online-Brochure.

Robert and Anna Marie Sterioti celebrated 50 years of marriage on May 7th. They are the proud parents of Rob (Wendy) and Rebecca (David) Talarico. They are surrounded by their 6 terrific grandsons: David Talarico, Sam Sterioti, Tommy Talarico, Joey Talarico, Max Sterioti and Robert Talarico. They are the owners of Bob & Sis’ Catering and still working together after all these years.

Local Wedding Directory

Banquet Rooms Available for Your

PEOPLE BRIEF

Special Occasion

nental breakfast and Bloody Mary bar CASA of Will County to hold 4th annual ‘Golf for the Child’ classic followed by an 8:30 a.m. shotgun start. JOLIET – CASA (Court Appointed Special Advocates) of Will County, a nonprofit serving abused and neglected children in the Will County juvenile court system, is set to host the “Golf for the Child” classic presented by Exelon on June 24 at Prairie Bluff Golf Club in Lockport. The golf event helps to raise funds for CASA of Will County, which trains volunteer advocates to act as the voice of children involved in the juvenile court system due to no fault of their own. The event will feature an 18-hole scramble tournament with a 7:30 a.m. conti-

Registration is $125 per golfer or $500 per foursome and will include use of practice range, locker rooms, on-course prizes and games (Hole-In-One, Closest to the Pin, Longest Drive, Longest Putt Contest and Beat the Pro), goodie bags for all registrants, continental breakfast, drink tickets and full luncheon buffet with silent auction and additional prizes. Luncheon tickets are available for $50 each. To register, visit www.golfforthechild. com. For more information about CASA, visit www.casaofwillcounty.org.

– The Herald-News

ST.GEORGE SERBIAN SOCIAL CENTER

Serving Your Banquet Catering Needs for over 30 Years • Two Reception Halls • Parties from 50 - 375 • Variety of Dinners & Lunches

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367

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(815) 722-5398

To advertise in this directory, please call (815) 280-4101


DEAN’S LIST ROUNDUP

Augustana College (winter

Blackburn College

• Hayley Magruder – Joliet

Carroll University

Channahon: • Laura Simon Frankfort: • Ryan MacCracken • Karoline Pirko • Emily Tanis Lockport: • Lauren Rasmussen Morris: • Alexandra Henning New Lenox: • Mary O’Hara • Morgan Richter • Jacob Sytsma • Bridget Turrisi Plainfield: • Bethany Crosson • Troy Howat Romeoville: • Veronica Patino Shorewood: • Danielle Sebek

Clemson University

• Casey Lee Dowdle – Plainfield (president’s list) • Mia Clare Jones – Homer Glen (president’s list) • Spencer T. Smith – Frankfort

Concordia University

• Adam Zmikly – Lockport

Creighton University

• Emily Hauser – Bolingbrook • Kevin Kelly – Frankfort • Frederick Harvey – Joliet • Jessica Cvejic – Plainfield • Jerry Estes – Plainfield

Emerson College

• Kira Compton – Channahon

Fontbonne University

• Amy Koncar – Joliet • Catherine Maschmeyer – Frankfort

Grand Valley State University

• Zachary Amrein – Lockport • Kayla Bates – Plainfield • Melissa Campbell – Plainfield • David Cantillon – Orland Park • Gretchen Carlson – Frankfort • Rachel Chase – Bolingbrook

• Emily DeMoss – Bolingbrook • Mia Digiacomo – Orland Park • Marisa Dunbar – Manhattan • Marissa Enlow – Plainfield • Caroline Floyd – Joliet • Michael Ford – Homer Glen • Justin Frapasella – Plainfield • Emily Gallagher – New Lenox • Tara Galovich – Frankfort • McKenna Ganassin – Plainfield • Kate Garcia – Mokena • Maribeth Govern – Plainfield • Kristina Graefen – Mokena • Emma Hahs – New Lenox • Caitlin Hamaker – Plainfield • Kelly Heynen – Frankfort • Rebecca Hoekstra – Frankfort • Katherine Hoopa – New Lenox • Ryan Huisenga – Mokena • Haleigh Hunter – New Lenox • Hannah Hunter – New Lenox • Mergime Imeri – Plainfield • David Inda – Plainfield • Garret Kooi – Lockport • Bethany Kukla – Mokena • Jamie Lukasik – Lockport • Abigail Lyons – New Lenox • Stephanie McDonald – New Lenox • Gloria Mileva – Plainfield • Krista Nauseda – Lockport • Michelle Nedved – Mokena • Katelyn Nowobilski – Orland Hills • Katelyn O’Grady – Plainfield • Kristen Olejnik – Homer Glen • Kristin Petrella – Plainfield • Emily Phad – Lockport • Liam Purtle – Lemont • Jason Putman – Mokena • Ashley Raehsler – New Lenox • Kathleen Reaney – Lockport • Nicole Revak – New Lenox • Dana Ruettiger – Joliet • Katarina Samardzija – Orland Park • Paige Schedin – New Lenox • Emily Simonelli – Plainfield • Ryan Smith – Mokena • Sara Stevens – Bolingbrook • Nicholas Urban – Lemont • Thomas Vachon – Plainfield • Nadine Vaicaitis – Orland Park • Alyssa Vierk – Mokena • Molly Whatley – Lemont • Amanda Witsaman – Homer Glen • Brandon Witsaman – Homer Glen • Olivia Witsaman – Homer Glen

Hope College

• Katelyn Cunningham – Crest Hill • Jordan Dennen – Joliet • Victoria Gonda – Joliet • Patrick Kilgallon – Plainfield

Iowa Wesleyan University Braidwood: • Dalton Robert Kinzler

Morris: • Jenna Mari Carpenter Plainfield: • Stephanie Nicole Tillmann Romeoville: • Jacob Daniel DiPego • Alyssa Marie Morales

Ithaca College’s School of Health Sciences and Human Performance • Rachelle Sartori – Joliet

Loyola University Maryland • Elena Kamely – Homer Glen • Arden Prendergast – Joliet

Luther College

• Anna Beamsley – Joliet

Milwaukee School of Engineering Plainfield: • Shannon Mahoney • Elizabeth Paoli • Hannah Smith

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute • Sarah Straub – Plainfield

Ripon College

• Nayely Gonzalez – Joliet • Tene Robinson – Romeoville

Rochester Institute of Technology

• Alyssa Brdlik – Plainfield • Evan Oslakovich – Lockport

Rockford University

• Kaitlyn Cech – Plainfield (distinguished scholar)

Spring Arbor University

• Joseph Dearduff – Channahon

University of Iowa

• Jessica Paleczny – Bolingbrook • Marcus Smith – Bolingbrook • Victor Valentin – Bolingbrook • Colleen Reynolds – Frankfort • Brigitte Waldier – Frankfort • Brianna Glazier – Homer Glen • Charles Harris – Homer Glen • Andrew Jatis – Homer Glen • Elizabeth McLaughlin – Homer Glen • Nathan Vejvoda – Homer Glen • Ryan Ward – Homer Glen • McKenna Carson – Joliet • Margaret Turk – Joliet • Luke Burnett – Lockport • Stacy Garrard – Manhattan • Nickolas Olson – Manhattan • Haley Tribo – Manhattan • Monica Belt – Morris • Samantha Helland – Morris • Ben Alvarado – New Lenox • Morgan Commet – New Lenox

• Gregory Derk – New Lenox • Lily Doyle – New Lenox • Sarah Florek – New Lenox • Peter Grubisich – New Lenox • Gabriel Jaramillo-Salgado – New Lenox • Jerald Lombardo – New Lenox • Jessica Mampe – New Lenox • Samantha Redmond – New Lenox • Olivia Renzi – New Lenox • Kirsten Anderson – Plainfield • Alyssa Bosko – Plainfield • Ashley Bosko – Plainfield • Erin Corcoran – Plainfield • Brian DuSatko – Plainfield • Samantha Ford – Plainfield • Gianna Hay – Plainfield • Cortney Kunkle – Plainfield • Leigha Meredith – Plainfield • Rachel Mickow – Plainfield • Natalia Montalvo – Plainfield • Paul Puglisi – Plainfield • Brett Ritter – Plainfield • Megan Ruzicka – Plainfield • Melanie Schutten – Plainfield • Olivia Skare – Plainfield • Eriq Vazquez – Plainfield • Ashley Zepeda – Plainfield

University of Rochester • Valerie Nicola – Joliet

University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee

New Lenox: • Emily Head • Sara Lynn Petrone Plainfield: • Cassandra Ashley Diehl • Bradley William Marshall

University of Wyoming

• Allison Waldvogel – Joliet

Washington University Frankfort: • Tahj Alli-Balogun • Devin Werner Joliet: • Michael Bannon Morris: • Craig Claire New Lenox: • Timothy Heyer Plainfield: • Emma Turnbull

How to submit People submissions can be emailed to news@theheraldnews.com. Photos should be sent as attachments to an email. Submissions are subject to editing for length, style and grammar and run as space is available.

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• Sunday, June 19, 2016

2015 term) • Douglas Ganster – Braidwood • Haley Ruch – Frankfort • Katelyn Farrell – Joliet • Ashley Comeau – Romeoville • Austin Allbert – Morris • Elizabeth Elberts – Morris • Arielle Robinson – Morris • Hanna Pegarsch – Peotone • Brandon Greek – Plainfield • Jason Pacanowski – Plainfield • Alexander Swatek – Plainfield • Derek Biliskov – Plainfield • Rachel Cheval – Frankfort • Joseph Teresi – Channahon • Hannah Militello – Channahon • Gabrielle Muir – Channahon • Elizabeth Warkocki – Frankfort • Brianna Hartney – Frankfort • Jessica Berry – Lockport • Nicolas Miller – Romeoville • Madison Rodgers – Morris • Emma Smith – New Lenox • Elaina Stevens – New Lenox • Dominick Sullivan – Bolingbrook • Tyina Ruiz – Plainfield • Brittney Crawford – Coal City • Kristin Schmidt – Frankfort • Katie Morton – Lockport • Kathryn O’Brien – Lockport • Sean Fitzgerald – Manhattan • John Sarhage – Manhattan • Joseph Strain – Manhattan • Brandon Wills – Mazon • Dominique Hartsfield – Romeoville • Cayle Higgins – Romeoville • Sylvia Salinas – Morris • Brandon Tidaback – Morris • Jessica Campbell – New Lenox • Matthew Stevens – New Lenox • Dena Baity – New Lenox • Joseph Carroll – New Lenox • Marisa Hollems – New Lenox • Amanda Ico – Bolingbrook • Alyssa Clarida – Homer Glen • Michelle Johnson – Homer Glen • Kallista Kamberos – Homer Glen • Chloe Dale – Plainfield • Madeline Voss – Frankfort • Somer Druszkowski – Manhattan • Amanda Moore – Coal City • Abigail Norris – Coal City • Madeline Witt – Frankfort • Jordan Arndt – Lockport • Kaitlin Jaros – Lockport • Katelyn Miller – Manhattan • Sierra Scanlan – Romeoville • Mitchell Malone – Minooka • Lauren Severson – Morris • Andrew Gerasch – New Lenox • Nina Iraci – New Lenox

• Jordan Thill – Bolingbrook • Sarah Crawford – Plainfield • Katherine Donaldson – Plainfield • Comet Blecha – Plainfield • Tristan Bennis – Plainfield • Danielle Alfrey – Lockport • Robert Nicholas – Morris • Annalise Bauers – Plainfield • Alison Mangino – Plainfield

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

Below is a list of local students that earned a spot on the dean’s list for fall 2015. We will continue to run schools in alphabetical order as space permits.


The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Sunday, June 19, 2016

| PEOPLE

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GOTTA DO IT June 19 • Junk in the Trunk – Setup is 8:30 a.m. Sale is 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., 100 Commercial Drive, Morris. For information, call Ken at 815942-2032 or email willis824@comcast.net. • Frankfort Country Market – 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.; also June 12, Kansas and Oak streets, Frankfort. Visit www.villageoffrankfort.com. • Father’s Day Picnic – Noon, Croatian Cultural Club, 1503 Clement St, Joliet. Lamb and chicken on the spit, cevapcici, sandwiches, bake sale. Bravo Band starts playing at 1 p.m. Call 815-723-3154.

Extended School Year program offered in D-202 Teacher’s assistant Will Harvey (from left), Extended School Year student Aaron Amaya and teacher’s assistant Melanie Pfister climb the playground trees at Elizabeth Eichelberger Elementary School on June 13 during the first day of District 202’s ESY program. The ESY program offers qualifying students learning opportunities to help maintain skills during summer break. It runs Monday through Thursday at Bonnie McBeth Learning Center, Liberty Elementary School and John F. Kennedy Middle School.

June 20 • Money Management and Budget Preparation for Seniors – Senior Services Center of Will County, 251 N. Center St., Joliet. Call 815-723-9713 or visitwww.willcountyseniors.org. • Will County Mobile Workforce Center – 9:30 a.m. to noon and 1 to 3:30 p.m., Fountaindale Public Library, 300 W. Briarcliff Road, Bolingbrook. Visit jobs4people.org. • English as a Second Language Grammar Club – 10 a.m., Plainfield Public Library, 15025 S. Illinois St., Plainfield. For information, call 815-263-8145 or email thess@ plainfieldpubliclibrary.org. • Microsoft Word – 1:30 p.m.; also 10:30 a.m. June 16, Workforce Center of Will County, 2400 Glenwood Ave., Joliet. How to use Microsoft Word in job searches. RSVP at 815-723-3885 and press 0, or email chellis@ willcountyillinois.com. • Lockport Farmers Market – 4 to 8 p.m., 222 E. 9th St., Lockport. • Roger W. Powell Seminar – 4 to 6 p.m., Golden Corral, 2100 W. Jefferson St., Joliet. Ages 9 to 17. Free. For information, call 815730-1617. June 21 • Lemont’s Farmers Market – 8 a.m. to 1 p.m., Talcott and Stephen Streets, Lemont. • English as a Second Language Reading Club – 10 a.m., Plainfield Public Library District, 15025 S. Illinois St., Plainfield. Call Tania Hess at 815-263-8145. • Career Café – 10:30 a.m., Workforce Center of Will County, 2400 Glenwood Ave., Joliet. RSVP at 815-723-3885 and press 0 or chellis@willcountyillinois.com. • Facebook class – 1:30 to 2:30 p.m., Senior Services Center of Will County, 251 N. Center St., Joliet. Call 815-723-9713 or visit www.willcountyseniors.org. • Bingo – 5 p.m., Harry E. Anderson VFW Post 9545, 323 Old Hickory Road, New Lenox. Call 815-485-8369 or visit vfwpost9545.org. • Bingo – 6:45 p.m., Knights of Columbus, 100 S. Infantry Drive, Joliet. Call 815-7250746. • Midwest Crossroad Chorus of Sweet Adelines International – 7 p.m., Trinity Christian School, 901 Shorewood Drive, Shorewood. Call 866-588-7464 or visit midwestcrossroad.org.

Photo provided

June 22 • AARP Smart Driving Class – 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., Senior Services Center of Will County, 251 N. Center St., Joliet. $15 (AARP members) and $20 (non-members). Registration required. Call 815-723-9713 or visit www. willcountyseniors.org. • Memory Clippers – 9 a.m. to noon, Manhattan Township Historical Society, 255 S. State St., Manhattan. Digitize and organize artifacts. Email ManhattanHistorical@yahoo. com. • Will County Mobile Workforce Center – 9:30 a.m. to noon and 1 to 3:30 p.m., Plainfield Public Library, 15025 S. Illinois St., Plainfield. Visit jobs4people.org. • Get Your Skills Together Workshop – 10 a.m. to noon, MEC/Grundy Workforce Services, 1715 N. Division St., Morris. Free. Email gmartine@jjc.edu. • The Encore Resale Shop extended hours – 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. through Aug, 31, 710 Cedar Crossing, New Lenox. Regular hours are 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Tuesdays, Fridays and the first Saturday of each month. Proceeds benefit Silver Cross Hospital. For information, call 815-300-7117. • English as a Second Language Grammar Club – 10 a.m., Plainfield Public Library District, 15025 S. Illinois St., Plainfield. Call 815-263-8145 or email thess@plainfieldpubliclibrary.org. • Networking Your Way to a New Job – 2:30 p.m., Workforce Center of Will County, 2400 Glenwood Ave., Joliet. Free. RSVP by

calling 815-723-3885 and press 0, or email chellis@willcountyillinois.com. • ESL Conversation Group – 3 p.m., White Oak Library District, Crest Hill Branch, 20670 Len Kubinski Drive, Crest Hill. Call 815-5524185 or visit whiteoaklibrary.org. • Downtown Joliet Farmers Market – 4 to 9 p.m., Chicago Street, Joliet. Music by The Vaudevileins, Featured Brewery, Three Floyd’s. • Free CUB Clinic – 7 to 8:30 p.m., Joliet Public Library, 3395 Black Road, Joliet. Bring utility bills for one-on-one consultation. Register at 815-740-2660. For more information, call CUB’s Consumer Hotline, 800-669-5556 or visit www.CitizensUtilityBoard.org. June 23 • Will County Mobile Workforce Center – 9:30 a.m. to noon and 1 to 3 p.m., Wilmington City Hall, 1165 S. Water St., Wilmington. • English as a Second Language Conversation Club – 10 a.m. and 6:30 p.m., Plainfield Public Library District, 15025 S. Illinois St., Plainfield. Call 815-263-8145 or email thess@plainfieldpubliclibrary.org. • Farmers Market – 2 to 6 p.m., Joliet Junior College Greenhouse Facility, 1215 Houbolt Road, Joliet. For vendor list, visit www.jjc.edu/info/farmersmarket. • ESL Conversation Group – 3 p.m., White Oak Library District, Lockport Branch, 121 E. Eighth St., Lockport. Call 815-552-4185 or visit whiteoaklibrary.org. • Bolingbrook Farmers Market – 4 to

9 p.m., The Promenade on Sandburg Way, Bolingbrook. • ESL Conversation Group – 6:30 p.m., White Oak Library District, Romeoville Branch, 201 Normantown Road, Romeoville. For information, call Pat at 815-552-4185 or visit whiteoaklibrary.org. June 24 • Will County Mobile Workforce Center – 9:30 a.m. to noon and 1 to 3 p.m., Mokena Public Library, 11327 W. 195th St., Mokena. • Fish Fry – 11 a.m. to 9 p.m., Knights of Columbus Council 4400, 1813 E. Cass St., Joliet. Fish, chicken and shrimp. Carry out. Call 815-723-3827. • Bingo – Doors open 4 p.m. Cards begin 6 p.m., St. Mary Nativity School, 702 N. Broadway St., Joliet. • Fish Fry/Karaoke – Fish fry is 4 to 8 p.m. Karaoke is 8 p.m. to midnight, Cantigny VFW Post 367, 826 Horseshoe Drive, Joliet. Call 815-722-5398. • Pork Chop Dinner – 4 to 7 p.m., Croatian Cultural Club, 1503 Clement St., Joliet. Pork chops or chicken dinner with mashed potatoes and gravy, coleslaw, bread and butter. $10. Desserts available. Music starts at 7:30 p.m. Carryouts available. Call 815-723-3154. • Fish Fry – 5 p.m., Harry E. Anderson VFW Post 9545, 323 Old Hickory Road, New Lenox. Karaoke begins at 8:30 p.m. Call 815-4858369 or visit vfwpost9545.org. June 25 • Free Jobs Fair – 9 to 12:30 p.m., Minooka Central Community High School, 301 South Wabena Ave., Minooka. Call Julie at 815-4649908 or email jlmceinc@aol.com. • Monthly Latex Paint Collection – 9 a.m. to noon, New Lenox Township Recycling Yard, 1100 S. Cedar Road, New Lenox. Paint is sorted, mixed and reused in ShareFest projects. For more information, email Gary at gary@sharefestnewlenox.com. • New Lenox French Market – 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., 1 Veterans Parkway, New Lenox. • Plainfield Farmers Market – 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., Plainfield Plaza, Fort Beggs Drive and Route 59, Plainfield. • June Book Nook Sale – Noon to 4:30 p.m., White Oak Library, Crest Hill Branch, 20670 Len Kubinski Drive, Crest Hill. Donated collections on gardening, history, travel, children’s stories. For information, call 815725-0234 or visit whiteoaklbrary.org. • Fish Fry – 4 to 8 p.m., Knights of Columbus Council 4400, 1813 E. Cass St., Joliet. Fish, chicken and shrimp. Carry out. Call 815-723-3827. June 26 • Food Collection – Noon to 1 p.m., Frankfort Township Food Pantry, 11000 W. Lincoln Highway, Frankfort and New Lenox Food Pantry, 1100 S. Cedar Road, New Lenox. For information, contact ShareFest at 815-7172614 or fooddrive@sharefestwillcounty.com.


Movies

’: In Stereo (CC): Closed captioned (G): General audience (PG): Parental guidance (14): Parents strongly cautioned (M): Mature audiences only (N): New show.

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Intervention: Then & Now (N) What Would You Do? (N) (CC) Intervention ’ (PG) (CC) Intervention (N) ’ (14-D,L,S) The First 48 ’ (14) (CC) Intervention: Then & Now ’ Preacher (MA-L,V) (CC) Preacher (N) (MA) (CC) Ride with Norman Reedus (N) Preacher (MA) (CC) Ride with Norman Reedus (5:00) I Am Legend (’07) ››› North Woods Law (14) (CC) North Woods Law (14) (CC) North Woods Law (14) (CC) Lone Star Law ’ (14) (CC) North Woods Law ’ (14) North Woods Law (N) ’ (14) House/Payne Peter Popoff Paid Program (5:00) Obsessed (’09) ›‡ Idris Elba. Madea’s Family Reunion (’06) ››‡ Tyler Perry, Blair Underwood. nBig Ten Elite nNebraska Football Classic nMaryland Football Classic nPurdue Football Classic nOhio State Football Classic nIowa Football Classic Shahs of Sunset (CC) (N) (14) Shahs of Sunset (N) (14) Real Housewives-Dallas (N) Shahs of Sunset (14) Happens (N) The Real Housewives of Dallas (CC) (14) Still King (N) Still King (N) Still The King Still The King Cops Rel. Cops Rel. Cops Rel. Cops Rel. (5:30) Sister Act 2: Back in the Habit (’93) ››, Kathy Najimy Jim Gaffigan Wedding Crashers (’05) ››› Owen Wilson, Vince Vaughn. Wedding Crashers (’05) ››› Owen Wilson, Vince Vaughn. nGolf Scene nSportsNet (N) nBeer Money nPoker Night nHeartland Poker Tour (14)(CC) nWorld Poker Tour nSportsNet (N) nSportsNet (N) nFight Sports Alaskan Bush People (N) Alaskan Bush People (N) Alaskan Bush People (N) Shark Week Sharktacular Homestead Rescue (PG) (CC) Shark Week Sharktacular K.C. Under. Liv-Mad. (4:55) Descendants (’15) (G) K.C. (N) Liv-Mad. (Sea Stuck/Middle Walk the Girl Meets Dadnapped (’09) ››› (G) Bunk’d ’ (G) The Kardashians The Kardashians The Kardashians (N) Rich Kids of Beverly Hills (Season Finale) (N) (14) (CC) The Kardashians nSunday Night Countdown (N) nMLB Baseball Pittsburgh Pirates at Chicago Cubs. (N) (Live) nSportsCenter (N) (Live)(CC) nSportCtr (N) nSportsCenter (N) (Live)(CC) nCollege Baseball NCAA World Series — Coastal Carolina vs. Florida. (N) (Live)(CC) nE:60 nUEFA Euro (N) nESPN FC (N) Guy’s Grocery Games (G) Guy’s Grocery Games (N) (G) Food Network Star (N) (G) Beat Flay (N) Beat Bobby Chopped (G) Food Network Star (G) Joel Osteen Dr. Jeremiah Finding Nemo (’03) ›››‡ Voices of Albert Brooks, Ellen DeGeneres. Despicable Me (’10) ››› Voices of Steve Carell, Jason Segel. (4:00) Iron Man 3 (’13) ››› Thor: The Dark World (’13) ››‡ Chris Hemsworth, Natalie Portman. Thor: The Dark World (’13) ››‡ Chris Hemsworth, Natalie Portman. A Country Wedding (’15) Jesse Metcalfe. (G) (CC) Good Wit. (Season Finale) (N) Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Fixer Upper (G) (CC) Lakefront (N) Lakefront (N) Caribbean Caribbean Island Life (G) Island Life (G) Hunters Hunters Int’l Caribbean Caribbean American Pickers (PG) (CC) American Pickers (PG) (CC) American Pickers (PG) (CC) American Pickers ’ (PG) American Pickers ’ (PG) American Pickers ’ (PG) Mother, May I Sleep With Danger? (’16) (14-D,L,S,V) (CC) Killer Assistant (’16) Premiere. (CC) Mother, May I Sleep With Danger? (’16) (14-D,L,S,V) (CC) Ridiculous. Ridiculous. (5:00) Coach Carter (’05) ››› Samuel L. Jackson. John Tucker Must Die (’06) ›‡ Jesse Metcalfe. Ladylike ’ Ladylike ’ Kingdom (N) Kingdom (N) Nicky, Ricky School Full House (G) Full House (G) Jim Gaffigan Jim Gaffigan Friends (PG) Friends (PG) Friends (PG) Friends (PG) The Haves and the Have Nots The Haves and the Have Nots The Haves and the Have Nots The Haves and the Have Nots The Haves and the Have Nots The Haves and the Have Nots Snapped (PG) (CC) Snapped (PG) (CC) Snapped (N) (PG) Dateline Presents: Conviction (N) (PG) (CC) Snapped ’ (PG) (CC) Bar Rescue ’ (PG-L) Bar Rescue ’ (PG-L) Bar Rescue ’ (PG-L) Bar Rescue ’ (PG-L) Bar Rescue ’ (PG-L) Bar Rescue ’ (PG-L) (5:00) The Mummy Returns (’01) ››‡ Brendan Fraser. Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull (’08) ››‡ Harrison Ford. (CC) Robin Hood (’10) ››‡ Wrecked (MA) Wrecked (MA) (4:45) The LEGO Movie (’14) The Pacifier (’05) ›› Vin Diesel, Lauren Graham. (DVS) Shrek 2 (’04) ››› Voices of Mike Myers. (DVS) Umarete Wa Mita Keredo Courtship of Eddie’s Father Father of the Bride (’50) ›››› Spencer Tracy. (CC) (DVS) Life With Father (’47) ›››‡ William Powell. (CC) Sister Wives ’ (PG) (CC) Sister Wives (N) ’ (PG) (CC) Single Dad Seeking... (Season Finale) (N) ’ (PG) (CC) Single Dad Seeking... ’ (PG) (CC) Urban Altern. It Is Written Faith (N) Manna Fest Living-Edge Turning Point With Doctor Connection Wretched TV Van Impe (N) Flipping Paid Program Last Ship (Season Premiere) The Last Ship (N) (14-L,V) The Last Ship (14-L,V) (CC) The Last Ship (14-L,V) (CC) (5:30) Now You See Me (’13) ››‡ Jesse Eisenberg. NinjaGo Wrld, Gumball King of Hill Cleveland Cleveland American Dad Family Guy (14-D,L,S,V) (CC) Rick, Morty Chicken Mr. Pickles (N) China, IL Food Paradise (PG) (CC) Paradise (Season Premiere) Xtreme Waterparks (N) (PG) Swimming (Series Premiere) Water Wo. Waterprks (N) Xtreme Waterparks (PG) (CC) Reba (PG-D) Reba (PG-D,L) Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond Gaffigan (Sea Gaffigan (N) King King King King Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Motive (N) ’ (PG-D,V) (5:30) Diary of a Mad Black Woman (’05) ›› Kimberly Elise. The Wood (’99) ›› Omar Epps, Taye Diggs. Black Ink Crew ’ (14) Black Ink Crew ’ (14)

SUNDAY HOROSCOPE By EUGENIA LAST

Newspaper Enterprise Association TODAY – The way you express your ideas will make a difference to how others perceive you. Keep your emotions tucked away and don’t launch a project prematurely. Give yourself a chance to come up with an ironclad plan that even your toughest critic will have trouble opposing. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) – Divulge your plans and see what type of reaction you get. Once you know who stands with you and against you, it will be easier to move forward. CANCER (June 21-July 22) – Do what you want to do. Letting others manipulate your plans will

leave you feeling bad. Once you start heading in a direction that interests you, it won’t matter what others do. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) –Get involved in something that challenges you mentally but doesn’t put a huge dent in your wallet. Saying no to temptation will ensure that you stick to what you can handle. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) – Do something that will stimulate you physically and make you feel good about your appearance. Refuse to let anyone put demands on your time or toy with your emotions. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) – Talks, conferences, trade shows or anything else that interests you will spark new ideas and encourage you to bring about positive change. Don’t be a follower; trust in yourself.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) – Once you’ve made up your mind, make your move. An agreement with a special someone will bring about positive and passionate changes at home. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) – Cut your costs, downsize your life, and make everything easier and less stressful. It’s up to you to say no to excess and yes to responsibility. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) – Put your plans in motion. You’ll have the energy and wherewithal to turn an idea into something tangible. Celebrate your success with someone you love. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) – Serious discussions will have their ups and downs, but, in the end, you will be able to come to terms with what’s best for everyone involved. Follow your heart.

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) – Approach others with caution. Keep your plans a secret until you are fully prepared to present what you have to offer. Put time aside to spend with a loved one. ARIES (March 21-April 19) – Make plans to do things that will bring you and a loved one closer together. You’ll learn something new about someone during an emotional situation. It’s a good day to make a personal commitment. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) – Put greater emphasis on the way you look and how you present yourself to others. An encounter with someone unusual or different from you will be enlightening. Incorporate what you learn into your lifestyle.

• Sunday, June 19, 2016

A&E AMC ANIMAL BET BIGTEN BRAVO CMT COM CSN DISC DISN E! ESPN ESPN2 FOOD FREE 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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TELEVISION | The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com

Madam Secretary (14-L) (CC) sCBS 2 News at 10PM (N) (CC) BrainDead ’ (14-D,L,V) (CC) Elementary ’ (14-L,V) (CC) Blue Bloods ’ (14-L,V) (CC) CBS 2 60 Minutes (N) ’ (PG) (CC) sNews (N) nSports Sun (N) Open House American Ninja Warrior ’ (PG) (CC) (DVS) 1st Look ’ NBC 5 Despicable Me 2 (’13) ››› Voices of Steve Carell. (CC) nNBA (N) n2016 NBA Finals Cleveland Cavaliers at Golden State Warriors. (N) (Live)(CC) nNBA (N) sEyewitness News at 10pm (N) Inside Ed. (N) Windy City ABC 7 J. Kimmel (N) Two/Half Men Person of Interest (14-V) (CC) sNews/Nine (N) nInstant Replay Chicago Best Friends (PG) Friends (PG) Raymond Elementary ’ (PG-V) (CC) WGN 9 Two/Half Men 3’s Company The Ropers Jeffersons ANT 9.2 Sanford & Son Sanford & Son Sanford & Son Sanford & Son Sanford & Son Sanford & Son Johnny Carson ’ (PG) (CC) The Tu (Series Premiere) (N) Interview Check, Please Austin City Vicious Special (N) (14) (CC) Masterpiece Mystery! (N) ’ (14) (CC) PBS 11 The Boy in the Dress (N) (CC) Theater Talk In the Loop Castles: Britain’s Forti DCI Banks Banks searches for a missing girl. Detectorists POV California’s Three Strikes law. ’ (PG-L) PBS 20 On Story (G) 2 Broke Girls 2 Broke Girls Seinfeld (PG) Seinfeld (PG) King King Mike & Molly There Yet? There Yet? Cheaters ’ (14) (CC) CIU 26 Mike & Molly BestPan! Paid Program Flipping CIZE Dance Friday the 13th (’80) ›› I Know What You Did Last Summer (’97) ›› U2 26.2 Law & Order: Criminal Intent Andy Griffith Columbo Columbo’s suspect turns up dead. (G) Odd Couple Honeymnr Cheers (PG) Bob Newhart Mary T. Moore Taxi (PG) (CC) ME 26.3 Andy Griffith Cimarron Strip (14) (CC) Hill Street Blues (14) (CC) Hill Street Blues (14) (CC) NYPD Blue ’ (MA) (CC) NYPD Blue ’ (14-D,V) (CC) ME2 26.4 Wagon Train The Wiz (’78) ›› Diana Ross. A teacher takes a journey to an urban jungle called Oz. The Five Heartbeats (’91) ››‡ Robert Townsend, Michael Wright. BNC 26.5 Corrina, Cor. Final Word nInside; Bears nBensinger nWhacked Out sFox 32 News (N) ’ FOX 32 nU.S. Open (N) The Simpsons The Simpsons Brooklyn Nine Family Guy ’ Last Man Skyfall (’12) ›››‡ Daniel Craig, Judi Dench. Quantum of Solace (’08) ››‡ Daniel Craig. ION 38 (4:00) Casino Royale (’06) nTitulares Tele. Acceso Total Mentiras Perfectas (N) (SS) TEL 44 (4:30) Acceso Total Mod Fam Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Laughs (PG) Anger Anger Anger Anger Crazy Talk ’ MY 50 Mod Fam Sector 4: Extraction (’14) Olivier Gruner, Salman Bokhari. Medicina (N) Medicina (N) Twin Dragons (’91) ››‡ TF 60 Pistol Whipped (’08) › Steven Seagal, Lance Henriksen. Los Tigres del Norte (N) Sal y Pimienta (PG) sNoticias 66 (N) sNoticiero (N) nRepublica Deportiva UNI 66 Aqui y Ahora (N) (SS)


The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Sunday, June 19, 2016

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FUN&GAMES Arlo & Janis

Beetle Bailey

Big Nate

Blondie

The Born Loser

Dilbert

Frazz

Monty

Non Sequitur

Pearls Before Swine


Pickles

The Family Circus

FUN & GAMES | The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com

Rose is Rose

The Argyle Sweater

Frank & Ernest

• Sunday, June 19, 2016

Soup to Nutz

Crankshaft

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The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Sunday, June 19, 2016

| FUN & GAMES

60 How to treat depression during pregnancy Dear Dr K: I have been on SSRI medicines for depression for five years. I’m trying to get pregnant, and I hear SSRIs might be dangerous. What do I need to know? Dear Reader: I love to receive questions I can answer confidently. Yours is not one of them. The evidence from different studies is conflicting. Here’s my best attempt to weigh the risks against the benefits. Treating depression is important for both your sake and your baby’s. Untreated depression during pregnancy increases your risk of postpartum depression. It also makes it more likely your baby will be lethargic, irritable and underweight at birth. But what kind of treatment? Medication is one option. The selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) are the most common drugs prescribed for depression. SSRIs include fluoxetine (Prozac), sertraline (Zoloft), citalopram (Celexa), escitalopram (Lexapro), fluvoxamine (Luvox) and paroxetine (Paxil). Another option is “talk therapy.” This can be traditional one-on-one sessions with a therapist. It also can mean family therapy, involving you, your spouse and possibly other family members. Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) is a particular talk-therapy technique that can help you learn ways to think positively and solve problems. Even if your doctor says you need to continue taking medication along with talk therapy, you may be able to lower your dose or reduce the length of time you need the medication. You also can explore other non-drug options. For example, consider exercise (under your doctor’s supervision) or mindfulness meditation to help manage your depression. The question you’re asking is whether the SSRIs pose a risk to your baby – in particular, a risk of causing birth defects. I don’t think such a risk has been proved beyond doubt. But I think studies suggest

SUDOKU

ASK DOCTOR K Anthony L. Komaroff

there may be a small but real risk from some SSRIs. A large study was conducted by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and published in 2015. It involved nearly 30,000 babies. The study compared the medicines babies with and babies without birth defects had been exposed to. Most of the SSRIs, including the most commonly prescribed SSRI (sertraline), did not seem to be linked to birth defects. However, paroxetine and fluoxetine were. For those two SSRIs, the risk was small, but real. The FDA, the American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology and the American Academy of Family Physicians have stated paroxetine likely is unsafe in pregnancy. Guidelines from the American Psychiatric Association and the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists recommend medication for expectant mothers with severe depression (except paroxetine). But for pregnant women with mild to moderate depression, they recommend psychotherapy. Only your doctor can make specific recommendations for you. But my general advice is this: If in the years before pregnancy your depression has been severe, you probably will need medication along with talk therapy during the pregnancy. In that case, the risk to you and your baby from not taking medication is probably greater than the risk of taking it. • Write to Dr. Komaroff at www.askdoctork.com or Ask Doctor K, 10 Shattuck St., Second Floor, Boston, MA 02115.

HOW TO PLAY Each row, column and set of 3-by-3 boxes must contain the numbers 1 through 9 without repetition.

PREVIOUS SOLUTION

CROSSWORD


NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD button 75.) Collar 77.) One of Spain’s Balearic Islands 79.) Ones fully agreeing with you, metaphorically 81.) Kind of pick 82.) “P.U.!” 85.) Controversial TV personality’s magical sidekick? 88.) “I’m not overwhelmed” 89.) Overwhelms, as with humor 91.) Ironically, small Starbucks size 92.) “Two thumbs up!” 93.) “Quién ____?” (“Who knows?”: Sp.) 95.) QB’s try: Abbr. 96.) “Primal Fear” star, 1996 97.) Rimes of country 98.) Hurt a Bond villain? 101.) A little progress, idiomatically 102.) Quick smoke? 105.) Loving, as eyes 106.) Inits. at Grand Central Terminal 107.) Feds 109.) Fanny ____, Barbra Streisand role 111.) Quickly 113.) Sign on Lucy’s “Peanuts” booth … or a hint to this puzzle’s theme 116.) Broccoli pieces 117.) Four Corners tribe 118.) What’s played mainly for kicks? 119.) Mid-Long Island community 120.) Rahm Emanuel’s postWhite House title 121.) Not onboard, say DOWN 1.) Make sense 2.) “Ish” 3.) Sports bigwig every February 4.) Alternative to a cab 5.) Resort area in northeast Pa. 6.) 12-Across’s skill 7.) “____ moi le déluge” 8.) Big name in audio equipment 9.) Audio equipment 10.) Jump-start of sorts, in brief

11.) Eucalyptus lovers 12.) Our Children magazine org. 13.) Release 14.) The P.L.O.’s Arafat 15.) Just below average 16.) Resolve a dispute in a modern way 17.) Has the lights off, perhaps 18.) Detective’s assignment 21.) “Butt out!” briefly 24.) Certain airline alerts, for short 29.) Knight’s greeting 33.) Continues forward 34.) Topless? 35.) Plead not guilty 37.) ____ and aahs 38.) Moue 39.) Good listeners 42.) “Ask Me Another” airer 43.) Suborn 44.) Directed the rowers 45.) Matchmaking site that asks, “Do you keep kosher?” 46.) Land in South America 48.) “You sure got me pegged!” 49.) Strong appetite 50.) Latin love 52.) Bird so named because of its call 56.) Frequent James Franco collaborator 58.) Rock whose name sounds good? 59.) Certain notebooks 61.) Where “The Princess Diaries” is set 63.) & 65 Technological escalations 66.) “The Hunger Games” star, in tabloids 67.) Pattern for a forensic scientist 69.) Future dealings? 71.) Chip material 74.) Financial ____ 76.) Dickens nom de plume 78.) Beat 79.) Department head 80.) In fine shape 81.) Yemeni seaport 82.) Baseball V.I.P.s 83.) Like many uneditable files 84.) “Cry me a river!” 86.) Tabloid twosome

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87.) Stereotypically rowdy dudes 90.) 1961 Michelangelo Antonioni drama 94.) Awards won by Stephen King and Agatha Christie 96.) Successor to South Carolina’s Thurmond in the Senate 97.) Time to give up? 99.) Kentucky Derby winner’s wreath 100.) Abbr. on a cover sheet 101.) Furnishings 103.) More dangerous in the winter, say 104.) Comedy, e.g. 105.) Loopy little films? 107.) Down Under greeting 108.) Bad thing to lose 110.) Rolling in it 112.) Superlative finish 114.) Longoria of “Telenovela” 115.) She-bear: Sp.

76

81

100

105

75

80

96

99

69

74

91

95

52

61

86

90

42

56

66

85

94

61

18

47

60

78

89

51

59

71

88

46

55

77

17

41

45

58

70

16

30

40

54

63

15

35

49

62

29

34

44

57

14

22

28

38

53

13

25

37

48

12 21

33

43

111

9

20

23

82

8

120

121

ANSWERS TO LAST WEEK’S PUZZLE A W N R H I F O L S E C Y R U S

L O O M S

O O M P A

S W E E P

S T E R E O

P A E A N S

U N L E A S H E S

T O O D L E O O

B A L K S

H E C K L E

T A R E L I I C A N P O S T

O B E S E

S S W I T S O T O O P C H U E T W E S Y F I F F E T V E E E R N

B O N A

A R G O

H A R E

O D O R

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

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

S E T

J A W B E F O B U N B L E N Y U W H E E A T T A

U S H E R

V A E A N A N D E O N E R A R P S A D O E X L A O N O S B S I

S T O L E

T R O L L

M A X I M S

E L A T E

D E F E A T E D

T H A T S T H A T

N O W I D E P E E O C C U L T

N I C E T Y

G O A D S

M I A M I

A L B U M

E L I S E

M I R A

S N G U P G S

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

• Sunday, June 19, 2016

ACROSS 1.) Jump to conclusions 7.) Off-guard 12.) Medium 19.) Has reservations 20.) It may be waved from the top of a pyramid 22.) Olympic group in red, white and blue 23.) Result of shaking a soda too hard before opening? 25.) Parts of many modern addresses 26.) In ____ (gestating) 27.) Homecoming giveaways 28.) Herbert of the Pink Panther films 30.) Limited 31.) 5 is a high one 32.) Busy Apr. workers 34.) Noted sexologist, in her infancy? 36.) Yahoos 38.) Common tidbits in fried rice 40.) “Is That All There Is” singer Peggy 41.) Any day now 43.) Daniel ____ National Forest 44.) Stocking stuffer 45.) Heroine of “The Rocky Horror Picture Show” 47.) Strike caller 48.) “The paternity results are in … it’s the protagonist of a long-running BBC sci-fi show!”? 51.) Bury 53.) Masseuse’s stock 54.) Messages you don’t want to send to your parents accidentally 55.) Nosy person’s request 57.) Watson’s creator 58.) Element of one’s inheritance 59.) Go to ____ 60.) Cousins of gulls 62.) Maiden name of Harry Potter’s mother 64.) 1970s-’80s Sixers star and friends? 68.) Take out to dinner 70.) Area with R.N.s 72.) Disorder that the Ice Bucket Challenge benefited, for short 73.) Certain Facebook reaction

2

FUN & GAMES | The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com

ATTENDING PHYSICIANS • By Finn Vigeland

1


SUDOKU TRIPLES

The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Sunday, June 19, 2016

| FUN & GAMES

62

Reader vents: Rudeness is rampant in my generation Dear Abby: I officially have found my biggest pet peeve. It’s a pervasive issue with my generation of committing to something and not showing up. They’ll flake at the last minute, or refuse to commit to something because there’s a possibility something better will come along. And constantly showing up late has become normal with young adults. Furthermore, despite the many technological advances that allow us to communicate quickly, their failure to communicate about plans astounds and infuriates me. I’ve encountered this problem too often with friends, co-workers, bosses and professors at university. I have tried to let it roll off my back and remind people about how their rudeness affects others, but I’m not sure what else I can do.

BE A GOOD

DEAR ABBY Jeanne Phillips Obviously, I can’t control other people. How can I express my frustration without being a monster? –

Had It Up To Here Dear Had It: I assume you already

have expressed your frustration to at least some of the people you have described. If this happens regularly, it’s a sign they don’t care how their behavior affects others. You can spare yourself much stress if you start “deleting” irresponsible, self-centered individuals from your circle to the extent it’s possible. Of course, you can’t do that with those who have control over your life such as professors or

NEIGHBOR

employers right now, so you will have to tolerate some of this behavior for the present. Dear Abby: My father, a widower, is in his late 80s. He’s in great shape, still drives, goes on vacations and volunteers twice a week. He is brilliant, and enjoys cars, gambling and eating. I promised I’d call him on a weekly basis, but I don’t know what to talk to my father about. He’s a man of few words, so our conversations are somewhat limited after I ask about his interests. I’d be very appreciative if you or your readers can suggest some topics I haven’t thought of. – Stumped Daughter Dear Stumped Daughter: How about talking to your father about some of your own interests – what you have been doing, movies or plays you have seen, restaurants

Volunteer.

you have tried he might enjoy, what’s going on with other relatives and current events. If necessary, make a short list of topics from your local newspaper and keep it with you when you call him. And remember, conversations don’t have to be long ones – just interesting. Dear Readers: Allow me to wish a Happy Father’s Day to fathers everywhere – birth fathers, stepfathers, adoptive and foster fathers, grandfathers and all of those caring men who mentor children and fill the role of absent dads. I applaud you all! – Love, Abby P.S. And per many readers’ requests, I’m giving a shout-out to dual-role moms, too. • Write Dear Abby at www. dearabby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.


63

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

Architectural Masterpiece in Shorewood’s Lake Forrest Minooka High Schools which are among the highest rated in Will County. You may view a unique drone video and obtain complete details on this home at cbhonigbell.com…use MLS ID 09191549 for quick access. This is a beautiful opportunity for you and the price has just been reduced to $490,000!

ABOUT THIS PROPERTY

• Sunday, June 19, 2016

This distinctive custom built home was planned for gracious living. It features superb architectural finishes and amazing ceiling treatments. The open floor plan has over 3,400 square feet. There is a luxurious master bedroom with an on-suite on the first floor. A winding staircase leads to 3 more large bedrooms plus a bonus room. All of the bedrooms have walkin closets. The focal point on the main level is the 2 story family room with a beautiful natural stone fireplace, skylights and hardwood floor. A gourmet kitchen is perfectly positioned in relation to the family room and eating area. It has granite counters, custom cabinetry and an island with an arched opening into the family room. The formal living room-dining room arrangement has crown moldings, an arched opening and hardwood floor. The picturesque mature landscaping has accent lighting and a Rain Bird irrigation system. There is a 17x33 Unilock patio from which to enjoy the back yard. Children in this area attend Walnut Trails Grade and

Address: 21263 Majestic Pine St, Shorewood Size: 3,451 square feet, 4 bedrooms and 3.5 baths Room sizes: Living room 14-by-12; dining room 13-by-12; family room 23-by-15; kitchen-eating area 15-by-23; bonus room 8-by-21; master bedroom 17-by-16; additional bedrooms 10-by23; 16-by-14 and 15-by-11 Price: Just reduced to $490,000 Realtor: Diane Lambert of Coldwell Banker Honig-Bell 815-509-0656, 815-207-4002 or e-mail dianemlambert70@gmail.com

518-520 N. Raynor Avenue, Joliet

23049 Persimmon Ln., Plainfield 3 bed, 2 1/2 bath. Open

floor plan. Finished bsmt with additional BR. Oversized corner lot. Great location near shopping and schools. Offered at $209,500 Tom Mulvey, Managing Broker, 730-1900 x22 MLS# 09142447

10733 Revere Road, Mokena

Solid all brick 2-unit in a great neighborhood with stable existing tenants. Leases expire May 2017 and June 2017 respectively. Gross rent $2,200/mo. Written pre-qualification letter required for viewing appointment. Offered at $179,500 Tim Brophy, 730-1900 x20 MLS #09258820

3 bed, 2 1/2 bath quad level. Spacious kitchen with eating area. FR with fireplace. Backyard backs to park. Master suite with fireplace. Offered at $339,900 Tom Mulvey, Managing Broker, 730-1900 x22 MLS# 09235800

Dow Realty, Inc. DowCompanies.com

815-730-1900 1300 W. Jefferson St. Joliet, IL 60435

Tom Mulvey

CRB, CRS, GRI

Managing Broker

Jane Hopkins

GRI, ABR, SFR

Broker

Tim Brophy Broker


The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Sunday, June 19, 2016

| PROPERTIES

64

REAL ESTATE

$230,000, 202 Montieth St, Joliet 604331730, 08-18-202-001-0000, Tristan Shaw to Jeffery Hill & Janet Hill, April 11 $195,000, 2014 George Ave, Joliet 604350417, 07-06-317-029-0000, Amalia Pabst to Manuel Gomez, May 10 $115,000, 1421 Woodbridge Rd 3a, Joliet 60436-1377, 07-17-116-001-1020, Mary A Anton CHANNAHON to Pamela R Scott, May 4 $245,000, 25042 W Mcmillin Dr, Channahon $215,000, 1423 Fitzer Dr, Joliet 60431-5380, 60410-3276, 10-08-211-008-0000, William J O 06-06-202-022-0000, Robert W Tarver to John Connell to Michael S Salazar & Ericka Johnson, Quintero Jr & Kristi Quintero, May 9 April 18 $272,000, 2503 Saddle Ridge Ct, Joliet 60432$87,500, 24424 W Eames St, Channahon 0718, 08-06-304-031-0000, Martin G Mayer to 60410-5174, 10-09-103-008-0000, James W Kyle D Rakowski & Jorie L Rakoski, April 27 Mangun to Kenneth F Jepsen Jr, May 8 $96,500, 129 S Raynor Ave, Joliet 60436-1545, $236,000, 24430 S Egret Dr, Channahon 07-17-219-023-0000, Bank of New York Mellon 60410-8645, 10-09-404-012-0000, Cathy Trustee to Candido Martinez, Feb. 10 Scachtschneider to Molly B Greer, May 6 $139,000, 1212 Briargate Ave, Joliet 60435$242,500, 24422 S Tonka Ave, Channahon 3930, 07-05-310-006-0000, Mary K Robbins to 60410-9718, 10-09-306-001-0000, Dean J Valentine to Thomas M Binzen & Dawn R Binzen, Juan Lopez, May 3 $107,000, 1317 Roosevelt Ave, Joliet 60435March 25 3923, 07-05-316-014-0000, Julian J Rodriguez to Jennifer M Guest, April 13 CREST HILL $379,900, 25121 W Shepley Rd, Joliet 60404$257,000, 16523 Zausa Dr, Crest Hill 604037605, 06-32-401-007-0000, Michael H Moore 0769, 04-19-406-006-0000, Christopher E to Justin M Smith & Kimberly K Smith, April 29 Belanger to Francisco Paredes, May 25 $140,500, 24424 W Pellinore Dr, Joliet 60404$150,000, 1348 Acorn Dr, Crest Hill 604036666, 06-33-107-033-0000, Fannie Mae to 0951, 04-32-105-022-0000, Russell Pozen to Louis A Vanco, May 10 Daniel Herrera & Laure O Keeffe, April 26 $248,000, 2418 Rockwood Dr, Joliet 60432$109,000, 1600 Marlboro Ln, Crest Hill 604030801, 08-06-313-010-0000, Thomas L Woods 2059, 04-32-420-003-0000, Freedom Homes to Nicholas J Shaub & Michelle I Shaub, May 12 LLC to Pedro Camacho, April 21 $104,000, 1415 Edgerton Dr, Joliet 60435$230,900, 16233 Goose Lake Dr, Crest Hill 3761, 07-06-109-015-0000, US Bank NA Trustee 60403-1518, 04-19-106-077-0000, Meisento Andrzej T Pieniazek, April 1 heimer Trust to Brent W Bloxsom & Connie R $198,000, 1219 Glenwood Ave, Joliet 60435Bloxsom, March 2 5825, 07-08-116-024-0000, Jacobs Trust to $145,000, 21517 Loch Ln, Crest Hill 60403Michael Ruscitti, May 17 1196, 04-30-309-030-0000, Michael R $100,000, 1220 Plainfield Rd, Joliet 60435, Tangedahl to Dulce K Vargas Palacios, April 29 07-05-114-015-0000, Blommaert Properties LLC $219,000, 16517 Coventry Ln, Crest Hill to Daniel A Robles, April 8 60403-0714, 04-20-312-003-0000, Donald $197,000, 1809 Prairie Wind Dr, Joliet 60435B Thomas to Alejandro J Merida & Veronica 0689, 03-36-406-015-0000, Peter M Eskra to Merida, April 8 Eric Malcolm, May 6 $230,000, 21300 Brush Lake Dr, Crest Hill $181,000, 1512 Taylor St, Joliet 60435-5738, 60403-3292, 04-19-313-053-0000, Pecha Trust 07-08-107-003-0000, Vaugh Trust to Paul H to Michael Pecha, April 25 Anderson, May 10 $145,000, 2105 Leness Ln, Crest Hill 60403$117,000, 1000 Wilcox St, Joliet 60435-4551, 1923, 04-31-210-007-0000, Luis Villanueva to 07-04-310-012-0000, Matthew E Floyd to Sarah Cassi Cruz, May 5 $500,000, 2351 Bicentennial Ave 12, Crest Hill Henschen, April 29 $60,000, 107 Saint Jude Ave, Joliet 6043660403-8328, 07-06-114-025-1012, Latte Hold1205, 07-18-118-022-0000, Fannie Mae to ings LLC to Sam Giordano & Wendi Giordano, Latoya Cartwright, March 29 April 26 $255,000, 1026 Essington Rd 4, Joliet 60435$132,000, 2020 Greengold St, Crest Hill 2841, 06-01-310-006-1004, Wathanapaisal 60403-1728, 04-31-119-042-0000, Moises Trust to An Duy Le & Joa Le, April 22 Arroyo Jr to Elizabeth Steinys, May 2 $196,500, 1018 Ann St, Joliet 60435-3490, $70,500, 1836 Burry Circle Dr, Crest Hill 07-06-319-011-0000, William O Connor to Chad 60403-2002, 04-32-406-017-0000, Primestar A Orlick, April 28 Fund I TRS LLC to Daniel E Rowe, April 27 $113,000, 1321 Colorado Ave, Joliet 604353704, 07-05-112-001-0000, Miguel Inamagua ELWOOD $215,000, 21360 S Oxbow Ct, Elwood 60421- Robles to Irene D Reed, April 29 $260,000, 1106 Kerry Ln, Joliet 60431-8646, 6007, 11-17-401-011-0000, US Bank NA Trustee 06-03-329-005-0000, Sharie K Clement to to Derek Ellis, April 27 Jason Eggman & Teresa Eggman, April 19 $263,000, 24726 S Sycamore St, Elwood $171,000, 1012 Belden Way, Joliet 6043560421-9477, 11-16-127-005-0000, David D 0404, 07-06-320-016-0000, Mark Brown to Thetford to Daniel R Modesto, April 1 Iracema Y Garcia, April 28 $122,500, 2237 Muriel Ct, Joliet 60433-8437, JOLIET 07-25-401-003-1002, Smith Trust to Joseph $160,000, 2421 Brush Hill Cir, Joliet 604320809, 08-06-301-067-0000, Erin Kormaniak to Barnett, April 25 $130,000, 2311 Madonna Ave, Joliet 60436Maira Ochoa, May 3

TRANSACTIONS

1158, 07-18-106-023-0000, Kelly Cabay to Emily S Pawlak, May 13 $112,000, 2131 Maplewood Ln, Joliet 604339624, 07-25-306-019-0000, Joyce A Harris Estate to Lawrence F Pennuto III & Melissa C Pennuto, May 9 $162,000, 1118 Elizabeth St, Joliet 604354324, 07-04-402-004-0000, Stephen R Bailey Jr to Brandon J Williams & Samantha Williams, April 29 $142,000, 1129 N May St, Joliet 60435-4413, 07-05-402-020-0000, Jeffrey R Dudek to Michael A Santschi & Jennifer R Santschi, April 11 $80,000, 1118 Thighland Ave, Joliet 60435, 07-04-305-003-0000, Stefannie M Bollino to Rodolfo Gamino Arriaga & Maria Guadalupe Torres, May 10 $180,000, 1702 New Lenox Rd, Joliet 604339723, 07-24-103-002-0000, Gayle A Vojtanek to Rochelle L Thomas & Darnell A Campbell Sr, April 1 $152,500, 2209 Graystone Dr, Joliet 604318782, 03-35-210-012-0000, Kelly E Larson to Alaina L Binion & Jeremy R Hansen, April 22 $125,000, 1122 Plainfield Rd, Joliet 604354422, 07-05-401-019-0000, Michael B Williams Jr to Shawna L Meeuwsen, April 15 $210,000, 1010 Western Ave, Joliet 604356802, 07-08-408-003-0000, Amber Haas to Jerry Fordyce & Sue E Fordyce, May 6 $145,000, 2105 Douglas St, Joliet 60435-5628, 07-07-119-022-0000, Norma J Heintzleman Estate to Ivan Romo Ortega, May 5

LOCKPORT

$82,500, 1311 S State St, Lockport 604413799, 04-23-321-002-0000, Swanson Trust to Frank Spirovski & Lydia Spirovski, May 7 $140,000, 16113 Bent Grass Dr, Lockport 60441-4650, 05-30-414-027-0000, First Midwest Bank Trustee to Stephanie N Darin, April 29 $206,500, 16544 Willow Walk Dr, Lockport 60441-1104, 05-31-102-157-0000, Frank V Schmitt to Frank A Rosellini & Michelle P Rosellini, May 1 $255,000, 17822 Witchell Ln, Lockport 60441, 05-31-104-043-0000, David M Traynere to Christopher J Roney & Larissa A Roney, May 8 $240,000, 15312 S Edgewood Dr, Lockport 60441-7620, 05-18-153-016-0000, David N Staszak to Richard L Goodwin & Elizabeth Ann Goodwin, April 15 $181,000, 15151 Laurel Ln, Lockport 604411300, 05-28-101-029-1003, Michael A James to Darek Stanley Kaczmarczyk & Anna Kaczmarczyk, April 25 $285,000, 15624 W 163rd St, Lockport 604917938, 05-20-100-037-0000, Tami L Essenburg to Guy J Scalzitti & Tami L Dieter, April 12 $150,000, 1902 S State St, Lockport 604414334, 04-26-111-001-0000, John Schoenberg to Casey Murphy & Azalia Lopez, May 3 $133,875, 16751 S Sunset Ct, Lockport 60441, 05-30-205-084-0000, US Bank NA Trustee to Bartlomiej Dzielski, March 31 $154,000, 1150 Grandview Ave, Lockport 60441-3649, 04-24-314-012-0000, Travis Trust to Amanda Majka, December 17 $255,000, 16734 Buck Path, Lockport 60441-7646, 05-07-302-027-0000, Timothy C Mccaffrey to Michelle L Ruppaner, April 27 $173,000, 16907 Diamond Ct, Lockport 604414830, 04-25-203-052-0000, Patricia A Klug

Estate to William Burke & Ruth Burke, April 28 $140,000, 16635 W 144th Pl, Lockport 604412332, 05-07-102-012-0000, Steven J Matela to Daniel Motes, May 6 $180,000, 17669 Gilbert Dr, Lockport 604411103, 05-31-203-025-1001, Goll Trust to Michael Swolinski, March 29 $89,000, 1527 East St, Lockport 60441-4526, 04-26-203-027-0000, Anthony Beltrame to Jennifer E Lynn, April 28 $390,000, 18080 Blossom Ave 45, Lockport 60441-1000, 05-32-308-010-0000, Brian Wille Construction Inc to Michael J O’Neill, April 28 $160,500, 1001 Valley Ln, Lockport 604413752, 04-24-314-032-0000, Daniel Szybinski to Karol Pietka, May 11 $174,500, 2115 S Austrian Pine St, Lockport 60441-3873, 04-26-215-025-0000, Michael L Lennhardt to Nawal Hamdan, April 28 $383,000, 15710 Valley View St, Lockport 60441-1030, 05-32-307-021-0000, Brian Wille Construction Inc to Jeremy D Wierenga & Stephanie M Wierenga, May 6 $361,400, 15710 Mueller Way, Lockport 60441-1024, 05-32-306-027-0000, Brian Wille Construction Inc to Jacob V Harris & Ashley E Harris, May 6 $157,000, 16662 W Adobe Dr, Lockport 60441-6336, 05-30-302-063-0000, Margaret A Richards to Kelly Lynne Balachowski, April 22 $275,000, 16621 S Coventry Ln, Lockport 60441-6262, 05-21-304-001-0000, Keith J Kubik to George Holstein & Rosa Holstein, May 4 $190,000, 1008 Macgregor Rd, Lockport 60441-2219, 04-13-200-009-0000, Andres Cavazos Jr to Robert J Smolen, April 15

NEW LENOX

$107,290, 138 Terry Ellen Ln, New Lenox 60451-1144, 08-09-204-004-0000, HUD to Joseph Machak, April 29 $310,000, 1665 Eagle Cir, New Lenox 604512890, 08-23-413-008-0000, Chicago Title Land Trust Co to Kevin D Holden & Ashley L Holden, March 30 $234,900, 119 E 4th Ave, New Lenox 604511812, 08-22-101-012-0000, Thomas Dohm to Justin Rex & Holly Rex, April 29 $477,050, 1841 Mays Dr, New Lenox 604514108, 08-29-301-010-0000, Marquette Bank Trustee to Michael Doyle Giampaolo & Erin E Giampaolo, May 24 $131,000, 244 E Woodlawn Rd, New Lenox 60451-2288, 08-22-315-007-1001, Sarah E Ford to Bradley E Jamrozik & Lieren J Sinnamon, April 19 $138,500, 176 Oakview Dr, New Lenox 604511449, 08-15-104-011-0000, Hackett Trust to Luke S Munch & Natali Munch, April 29 $296,345, 2275 Alta Vista Dr, New Lenox 60451-8803, 08-36-105-010-0000, Marquette Bank Trustee to Andrea M Stoettner & Janice M Stoettner, March 29 $374,200, 2081 Brandon Hill Rd, New Lenox 60451-3382, 08-34-210-017-0000, DRH Cambridge Homes Inc to Andrew K Gahan, April 4 $306,001, 2181 Sky View Dr, New Lenox 60451-8811, 08-36-101-010-0000, Marquette Bank Trustee to Gino Berrini & Charissa Berrini, March 29 $225,000, 241 S Anderson Rd, New Lenox

• Continued on page 65


REAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS 60544-6370, 04-06-108-016-0000, Doherty Trust to Randolph Churchill & Theresa Churchill, May 17 60451-1962, 08-23-103-012-0000, Concetta $142,500, 21213 W Cypress Ln, Plainfield L Dubenic to Jerry Jeldreks & Kimberly A Nied60544-6331, 02-31-326-032-0000, O Neill Trust balec, April 5 $393,000, 2082 Rownham Hill Rd, New Lenox to Deborah L Lindhorn, Feb. 26 $199,500, 2112 Cumberland Dr, Plainfield 60451, 08-34-200-004-0000, DRH Cambridge Homes Inc to John P Wood & Elizabeth M Wood, 60586-5512, 03-31-109-004-0000, William T Iwsneski to Ryan Stensaker, April 9 April 7 $182,000, 2104 Winding Lakes Dr, Plainfield 60586-6614, 03-32-202-004-0000, Donald A PLAINFIELD Orseno Jr to Armando Patino Rojas, April 29 $199,500, 21312 W Douglas Ln, Plainfield $185,000, 13807 S Hickory Ln, Plainfield 60544-5600, 02-31-353-034-0000, Twardowski Trust to Wendy M Smogor, April 22 • Continued on page 66 $191,750, 21465 W Chestnut Ln, Plainfield

Karen Robertson, Broker 65

Realtor®, BPOR, e-PRO, GRI, SRS, SRES

815.482.8734 Real Estate.. Real Easy!

JUST LISTED 2512 Riivendell, New Lenox

This beautifully updated 4 BR, 2 1/2 bath home is located on a quiet cul du sac in Burr Oaks subdivision. This home has been Professionally landscaped and decorated. Newly remodeled kitchen and baths! Finished basement. Large 1st floor laundry. Some of the many amenities are: granite, stainless appliances, fireplace, steam shower, crown molding, built in bookcases, plantation shutters, paver patio, security system, heated garage. Newer roof, windows and furnace. Troy schools. So much more ... Don’t miss out! Call Laurie Bauer of Spring Realty @ 815-342-5379 for your private showing. Priced at $299,900

Laurie Bauer Spring Realty 815-342-5379

SM-CL0362890

Susie Scheuber

#1 Selling Agent 2015 • Joliet, Plainfield, Shorewood • #1 RE/MAX Agent, Joliet, Plainfield Shorewood 2015 • Over 18.4 million in sales in 2015 • Will County Top 20 Agent for years 2012 thru 2015 • Five Star Real Estate Agent by Five Star Professional for 2013-2015

• RE/MAX Hall of Fame Award recipient

The market is moving, are you? karen@makeamove.us | www.makeamove.us

MINOOKA CUSTOM HOME

• Ranked in the top 1% of all Real Estate Brokers in the U.S. – Chicago Agent Real Data • REAL Trends Best Real Estate Agents in American for years 2013 thru 2015 Ultimate Professionals

Quality Built 4 Bedroom home with formal Livingroom and Diningroom

16559 S Fox Run Cir. Plainfield | $284,000

SM-CL0362895

Better than new! Beautiful single family ranch home in the villas of fox run. This is the promenade model - the largest at 1994 sq feet! This gorgeous property features hardwood flooring, 42” cabinetry in kitchen, granite counter tops, pendant lighting, ss appliances & large center island. Other features include spacious dining area, great room w/fireplace & den/office. The master bedroom features a large wic, & private master bath w/walk in shower & double bowl vanity. Sgd off master leads you to private patio area. This property has been meticulously maintained & shows pride of ownership! The villas at fox run is open to all ages (not a 55 & over community) - close to shopping, restaurants & schools!

www.susiescheuber.com 815.263.5988

plus main floor Familyroom with fireplace! Large eat-in Kitchen with appliances, island and pantry walks out to deck and porch. Plus vaulted Master Suite, 2.5 Baths, full Basement, 3 Car Garage with concrete drive, New roof and siding. All sets on lovely quiet and large cul-de-sac lot. Convenient walk to parks and schools. Don’t miss....$279,000. Call Joni Meyer, Broker-Manager, Village Realty at 815-474-1136.

• Sunday, June 19, 2016

TREEmendous! Private acre lot, the ultimate home for relaxation and entertainment, away from it all yet close to access to expressways and train station! The main level is open, with 3 bedrooms, 3 full baths, 2 fireplaces, island kitchen and wooded views. The master retreat is tucked away in the east wing, with private bath, walk in closet and balcony overlooking the rustic 4 season getaway, with heated floors, soaring cedar lined ceilings, skylights, indoor pool and hot tub. Upstairs hosts a 4th bedroom , en-suite bath and a 15x27 office/flex/play room. The finished walkout basement with 3rd fireplace, rec room, storage room, full bath and additional bedroom complete this home, perfect for related living. Full brick exterior with brick paver drive. The overhead garage doors and openers are recently replaced, as are both high efficiency furnace and AC units.

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

• Continued from page 64


The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Sunday, June 19, 2016

| PROPERTIES

66

REAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS • Continued from page 65

$298,000, 24447 Tufton St, Plainfield 605855766, 01-33-304-027-0000, Jeffrey Schoenberg60544-6445, 04-06-255-018-0000, Jones Trust er to Shannon M Kirby, April 18 $175,000, 16629 Winding Creek Rd, Plainfield to Ernest P Bruss & Charlene M Bruss, May 13 60586-9616, 03-23-309-008-0000, Eric Zach$232,000, 21013 W Redberry Ct, Plainfield 60544-9361, 04-06-201-002-0000, Mclaughlan ary Foster to Craig A Drane & Regina R Drane, Trust to Daniel J Smitko & Elaine M Smitko, April May 26 $54,000, 24247 Farmstead Ln, Plainfield 22 60544-8887, 03-16-403-006-0000, Hintzche $223,000, 2305 White Eagle Dr, Plainfield Trust to Andrew J Remley & Molly A Remley, 60586-5262, 03-32-204-026-0000, Randall W May 2 Jessen to Cecil Kuhse & Mary Kuhse, May 3 $182,000, 24212 Walnut Cir 180302, Plainfield $169,990, 23063 Judith Dr, Plainfield 6058660585-2261, 01-28-201-060-1002, Brad T 9639, 03-23-315-001-0000, Scott K Phillips to Prunty to Craig Hagerman & Amy Hagerman, Donald A Shurtliff, May 6 $152,000, 2406 Oak Tree Ln, Plainfield 60586- March 29 $179,000, 24200 Leski Ln, Plainfield 605857192, 03-27-403-035-0000, Ronald Scartozzi to 2782, 01-21-408-030-0000, Danje Campbell to Richard A Ermilio & Lindsay Hartung, April 29 $180,000, 2407 Leckrone Dr, Plainfield 60586- Shelly L Quast, April 22 $188,000, 24129 Pear Tree Cir, Plainfield 6962, 03-30-419-008-0000, Kathleen Hoffman 60585-6179, 01-28-201-012-1008, 16 Tuttle LLC to Andrew Turner & Melissa Turner, April 29 $165,149, 1704 Whispering Oaks Dr, Plainfield to Kaitlin Jane Allen & Michael Luis Morales, March 21 60586-6636, 03-33-301-084-0000, VA to $180,000, 21025 W Orange Blossom Ln, PlainWilliam Harder III, April 21 field 60544-9346, 04-06-251-001-0000, Philips $145,230, 2208 Cherry Ridge Dr, Plainfield Trust to Roman Jakimow & Elizabeth Jakimow, 60586-5393, 03-32-102-030-0000, VA to March 23 Ashley L Sabat, March 31 $268,000, 24821 Vermette Rd, Plainfield $261,698, 24640 W Harvester Dr, Plainfield 60585-7729, 01-32-410-036-0000, William 60544-4210, 03-09-304-009-0000, K HovnaVanasdlen to Christopher M Pawlowski, May 17 nian at Fairfield Ridge to David Ronald Seyller, $293,000, 13414 Blackstone Ln, Plainfield May 6 $395,504, 25115 W Prairie Grove Dr, Plainfield 60585-5330, 01-33-306-025-0000, National Residential Nominee S to Shawn M Johnson, 60585-7979, 01-29-203-042-0000, William May 13 Ryan Homes Inc to Jack M Chan, April 28 $335,000, 12843 Bradford Ln, Plainfield $255,000, 25110 Edison Ln, Plainfield 605852239, 01-20-408-015-0000, Brandon Niewinski 60585-2245, 01-33-204-013-0000, Tammy Cienkus to Nicholas Watson & Lorrayne Rae to Linas Salavejus, April 16 Watson, March 17 $227,000, 2505 Clear Creek Dr, Plainfield $115,000, 15602 Brookshore Dr, Plainfield 60586-6586, 03-30-423-020-0000, Steven T 60544-7725, 03-17-406-026-0000, BSP2 LLC to Council to Brad W Rowley, April 15 Patrick G Vaughan & Georgina F Giannelli, May 5 $330,000, 24928 Winterberry Ln, Plainfield $203,900, 15316 S Poppy Ln, Plainfield 6054460585-5684, 01-29-204-027-0000, Edward D 9203, 03-17-203-026-0000, Bostanche Jr Trust Knox to Eric Morgenstern & Margaret Morgento Dragan Blagojevic & Danijela Blagojenic, May stern, March 30 $246,000, 24924 Blakely Dr, Plainfield 60585- 10 $163,000, 2105 Culver Ct, Plainfield 605867723, 01-32-406-012-0000, Jason Sowinski to 8300, 03-34-109-008-0000, Shawna MeeuMichael P Kirk & Hollis S Kirk, April 26 wsen to Robert Trevino & Gloria E Trevino, April $265,000, 24912 Vermette Rd, Plainfield 15 60585-7737, 01-32-408-020-0000, Steven C $155,000, 15305 S Corbin St, Plainfield 60544Eklund to Michael Matus & Erin Matus, April 6 $174,900, 24847 Franklin Ln, Plainfield 60585- 3121, 03-15-107-009-0000, Laura A Mcmillan to 2210, 01-20-405-051-1005, Kristina W Browning Emily Hough, April 29 $423,000, 13021 Northland Dr, Plainfield to Atif Jaridar, April 29 60585-6707, 01-32-105-016-0000, Steven C $130,500, 24837 W Pine Cone Ln, Plainfield 60586-8293, 03-20-401-010-0000, Baldomero Husch to Matthew Yates & Alyson Yates, April 23 Barrios to Brian E Smith & Michelle L Smith, $318,000, 14854 S Flanders Ln, Plainfield April 15 60544-4220, 03-09-304-036-0000, K Hovnania $169,000, 1704 Hidden Oaks Ct, Plainfield at Fairfield Ridge to Mireille Rizkalla, May 16 60586-1650, 03-33-302-090-0000, Michael $249,900, 14743 Independence Dr, Plainfield R Reeser to Rafael Vasquez & Karen G Lopez, 60544-2769, 03-08-405-010-0000, Cedric M March 23 Suitt to Jason Linton & Misty Linton, April 21 $359,000, 24730 Illini Dr, Plainfield 60544$320,000, 14054 Hunt Club Ln, Plainfield 2435, 03-16-303-002-0000, Cartus Financial Corp to Krzysztof Olma & Christine Olma, March 60544-2463, 03-02-401-051-0000, Fannie Mae to Jeffrey Haydon & Emily Haydon, April 6 25 $380,000, 12815 Hawks Bill Ln, Plainfield $272,000, 24110 Fox Creek Ct, Plainfield 60585-2536, 01-31-204-010-0000, Weichert 60586-2293, 03-21-409-009-0000, Bank of Workforce Mobility to Mohammad Khan & Faiqa New York Mellon Trustee to Jeffrey Figlewicz, Khan, April 30 March 11 $317,000, 13413 Blackstone Ln, Plainfield $177,000, 24604 George Washington Dr 201, 60585-5380, 01-33-308-022-0000, William R Plainfield 60544-4421, 03-09-101-045-0000, Betourne to Atanas Kostov, April 6 Christine Penney to Elvin Mclaughlin, April 22

$295,000, 15535 S Robin Ct, Plainfield 605441558, 03-17-407-023-0000, Thomas B Chesebro to Kevin Hall Jr, April 21 $299,900, 13421 Millbank Dr, Plainfield 605855349, 01-33-305-029-0000, Richard J Rackow to Brian Novak & Andrea Novak, April 28 $217,500, 14031 Isle Royal Cir, Plainfield 60544-6974, 03-01-413-002-0000, Jennifer Clark to Ivica Ivanchev, May 11 $322,000, 13555 Savanna Dr, Plainfield 60544-7187, 03-05-209-004-0000, Steven Ferguson to Curtis Penney & Christine Penney, April 8 $308,000, 13606 Marigold Rd, Plainfield 60544-1928, 03-05-213-006-0000, Nick Franks to Mark P Kane & Karyn P Kane, March 25 $345,000, 13609 Eagle Ridge Ct, Plainfield 60544-9678, 03-04-208-010-0000, Steven Strepek to Jonathan D Walker & Agnes Marie E Walker, May 7 $297,000, 13615 Jordan Ln, Plainfield 605447154, 03-05-207-018-0000, Wafeek Aiyash to Brandon M Niewinski & Christine M Niewinski, April 21 $269,900, 13626 Jordan Ln, Plainfield 605447174, 03-05-210-011-0000, Ronald A Frydrychowski to Erin K Hagan, May 6 $122,000, 13750 Bristlecone Dr 204, Plainfield 60544-9379, 04-06-176-006-1016, Mary F Boyer to Beverly D Hall, April 27 $181,500, 13818 S Mallard Dr, Plainfield 605443705, 03-04-204-016-0000, Todd F Prohaska to Wayne D Kolcz Ii, Feb. 12 $322,000, 13312 Ione St, Plainfield 605852162, 01-33-431-019-0000, Jeff Groenenboom to Andre L Lomax & Keisha Lomax, April 28 $193,000, 1851 Beckwith Ct, Plainfield 605868312, 03-34-304-034-0000, Virginia K Jaeger to Erik Stein & Lindsay Stein, May 3 $160,000, 17065 S Lily Cache Rd, Plainfield 60586-2107, 03-27-203-002-0000, Patrocia L Criss to Shelley A Falconer, April 22 $210,000, 1710 Sierra Highlands Ct, Plainfield 60586-5934, 03-33-311-001-0000, Joseph L Gagliano to Joseph L Gagliano III & Courtney D Gagliano, April 28 $390,000, 12736 Waterford Blvd, Plainfield 60585-2483, 01-32-302-007-0000, Ann M Oakley Propst to Daniel Jaime & Daisy Jaime, May 16 $210,000, 1905 Arbor Falls Dr, Plainfield 60586-5723, 03-32-401-053-0000, Matthew J Hillison to Jill A Zapata & Luis D Zapata, April 11 $60,000, 12104 Red Clover Ct, Plainfield 60585-7814, 01-29-201-030-0000, LSREF2 Cobalt Il LLC to Stan Jones & Lawrence J Jones, April 27 $205,000, 1852 Eberhard Ln, Plainfield 60586-6408, 03-34-310-015-0000, Kathleen M Smutnak to John Gallagher, April 26

ROMEOVILLE

$204,000, 1699 Richfield Trl, Romeoville 60446-5225, 04-18-110-001-0000, Dodge Jr Trust to Aaron Cornwell & Katie Palecca, April 19 $148,000, 1735 William Dr, Romeoville 604461461, 03-13-206-021-0000, Deutsche Bank Natl Trt Co Trustee to Alexandra Papiez, September 30 $213,000, 2057 W Helen Dr, Romeoville 60446-5347, 03-13-113-009-0000, Thinh D Nguyen to Tung Lam, April 6

$240,000, 1861 Grassy Knoll Ct, Romeoville 60446-3903, 03-12-202-013-0000, Andrew P Eck to Jean M Cilione, April 27 $113,000, 218 W Birchwood Dr, Romeoville 60446-1004, 02-27-103-010-0000, Paul A Aloisio to Razel Gomez, May 3 $173,000, 1578 Sunflower Dr, Romeoville 60446-3770, 04-07-101-028-0000, Corum LLC to Robert Groner & April Groner, May 3 $143,000, 251 Summerfield Dr, Romeoville 60446-5038, 03-12-404-008-0000, US Bank NA Trustee to Abbas Aziz, April 21 $245,000, 206 Violet Dr, Romeoville 604464899, 04-07-304-021-0000, Wesley J Norkus to Alberto Cortez, April 18 $175,000, 18 Abbeywood Dr, Romeoville 60446-1111, 02-27-312-040-0000, Joseph Lustro to Chason Kapatos & Jenna Kapatos, April 28 $100,000, 208 Spangler Rd, Romeoville 60446-1839, 04-03-112-006-0000, Ramsdorf LLC to Michael Chase, May 3 $154,000, 1578 W Ludington Cir, Romeoville 60446-5313, 04-18-106-076-0000, Mary Elizabeth Bromenschenkel to William E Loghry & Lorraine M Loghry, April 30

SHOREWOOD

$215,000, 1102 Ravinia Ct, Shorewood 604049444, 06-16-108-027-0000, Robert A Shively to Jesse Contreras & Sarah Contreras, April 18 $149,000, 108 Dupage St, Shorewood 604049465, 06-16-206-021-0000, Quigley Trust to Tina Fries, April 29 $349,000, 216 Honors Dr, Shorewood 604049565, 06-17-201-056-0000, Roger J Hansen to James E Joutras & Dawn T Joutras, May 3 $307,500, 1302 Callaway Dr N, Shorewood 60404-8156, 06-20-204-002-0000, Martha Rosemon to Martin F Dignan & Susan R Dignan, April 26 $293,100, 1815 Spencer Way, Shorewood 60404-1239, 06-08-308-021-0000, NVR Inc to Cynthia J O Neil, May 10 $280,000, 207 Austin Dr, Shorewood 604045327, 06-17-109-001-0000, James Welsh to Peggy L Goode, March 26 $215,000, 24611 Kaylee St, Shorewood 60404-0675, 06-21-106-008-0000, Michael Poort to Amy Virginia Billo & Gregory Andrew Billo, April 6

WILMINGTON

$49,000, 211 Walleye Cir, Wilmington 60481, 24-04-128-001-0000, Byline Bank to Michael D Pippin, May 4 $90,000, 2455 Fossil Cove Ln, Wilmington 60481, 24-04-104-031-0000, Jody Peacock to Earl Knodel, April 3 $185,000, 1931 Lakewood Dr, Wilmington 60481-1726, 24-01-302-079-0000, Velma M Rhodes to Richard Dimenna & Jolene Dimenna, May 3 $150,000, 202 Hayden Ct, Wilmington 604811028, 17-25-101-009-0000, Christine Harrison to Christopher Francis & Katherine Francis, May 17 $161,000, 1405 Elwood St, Wilmington 604811025, 17-24-309-010-0000, Anthony L Lucas to Felix Orasco, April 27 $85,000, 1221 Park Dr, Wilmington 604811542, 17-36-304-011-0000, Donna J Cosgrove to Aaron Tidmore, April 28


G! TIN LIS W NE

COME HOME...TO YOUR VACATION SPOT!!!!

CHECK THIS ONE OUT - A DEAL AT $79,000

Check out this one of a kind home on nearly 2 acres with the Dupage River as a back drop. 4BR/3-1/2 BA home w/finished basement & 3 car garage. So tastefully decorated & appointed w/quality custom finishes throughout. $425,000. Call or text Mark Meers today (815)347-7900. Additional info/pics: www.MarkMeers1.com

Fantastic 3BR home that’s ‘MOVE-IN READY’ and just waiting for new owners! There’s a superbly updated kitchen with eating area & all appliances, mud room, freshly painted interior in beautiful neutral colors, new carpeting, updated furnace, central air & hot water heater. Basement, storage shed & walk-up attic - ideal to finish if you want to add more space! Call Nancy Hibler today for more details or your private viewing at 815-263-5791

PR IC E

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LAKE OF THE WOODS-SHOREWOOD

Mark Meers Spring Realty 815-347-7900

NEW ON THE MARKET! 24653 COACHFORD CT

1647 ARDMORE AVE, GLENDALE HEIGHTS • Sprawling 2 Bedroom Ranch with Finished Basement!

• Huge Finished Basement with Tons of Additional Storage Space!

• Formal Living & Dining Rooms are Perfect for Entertaining!

• Brick Paver Patio Overlooks Expansive Yard with Shed & Pool!

• Eat-In Kitchen Boasts Plentiful Cabinetry & SS Appliances!

• Hurry! Don’t Miss This Incredible Home!

• Two Generously Sized Bedrooms with Large Closets!

• Priced to Sell in the $160’s!

RosemaryWestTeam.com Pr ic eS la sh ed !

STUNNING Custom Brick 2 story home with 4 (possible 5) bedrooms & 2.5 bathrooms all in desired River Crossings Shorewood! Beautiful professional landscaping w/ brick paver patio/retaining wall! Large updated kitchen featuring granite counter tops, seated island,all new SS appliances &large pantry. Sunny dinette/sunroom overlooks gorgeous yard. Master suite boasts LARGE WIC, private vanity, soaking tub, ceramic shower, & dual sink vanity’s! Main Floor features grande entrance w/ formal living & dining rooms. Additional den/office space! 1st floor large laundry/mud room. Super family room just off kitchen. $364,900

Nancy Hibler Karges Realty 815-725-1700 815-263-5791

Shannon Dames RE/MAX Ultimate Professionals 815-600-0653 SM-CL0362118

Rosemary West RE/MAX Professionals Select 630-807-9700

• Sunday, June 19, 2016

Yes, this magnificent large three story stick- built beauty is located in a water sports and recreation wonderland! No need to leave home to fish, kayak, swim or enjoy miles of nature trails. Jump on your golf cart and enjoy it all, Club House, Amenities Center, Pool, Lakes and much much more.....all just steps from your elegant custom designed home! This three/four bedroom home soars above a treed lot with magnificent views. Walk out basement rec room and an attached 2.5 car garage. Wrap around upper deck and lower patio. Private sheltered gazebo will stay with twinkling lights in the trees for ambiance on the quiet evenings. The living space in the home is unique and features too many amenities and custom designs to list. MUST be seen. Like walking into a magazine.....truly impressive finishes that are one- of -a -kind! 3 bedroom, 2.5 baths and an open floor plan with soaring ceilings and windows! Huge upper level loft functions as a second family room. Main floor master suite. Custom wood breakfast counter, crown moldings with mosaic trim, hardwood floors, stainless kitchen appliances and a home you will be proud to show off. This is a master-piece, call Deb Olson, The Deb Olson Team of Spring Realty for a breath-taking tour today! Priced at $209,900!

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

SHOWCASE of HOMES

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Century 21 Affiliated Each office is independently owned and operated.

1020 Essington Rd., Joliet (815) 730-1199 • Century21Affiliated.com OFFERING PRE-LICENSING CLASSES. CALL 815-730-1199 FOR DETAILS!

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YOUR HOME PICTURED HERE!

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NEW LISTING!!

Your Address 7629 173rd Street, Tinley Park

• Hair Salon- New Lenox $169,900....Available • Transmission Shop- 75th St. Downers Grove....ForLease • Retail Building-Torrence Ave, Lansing....For Lease • Daycare Center - Far West Joliet.... ForSale • Daycare Space - North Joliet....For Douglas K. Lease Geissler 815-735-2585 Yoursisnext!ListToday!

8910 E. Mallard Ln, Wilmington

1076 Ronald Dr, Joliet

Amazing home in sought after McIntosh acres subdivision! Home includes 2 lots owned on a channel w/ private dock & short boat ride to Kankakee River! New hardwood floors, rear of previous 6 car garage is great entertainment area or room for over night guests. Call Top Barb Gall 815-791-2715 Producer Barb Gall today!

Move Right In! Beautifully decorated, spacious 1,932 SF 3BR 2 full 2 half baths. Kitchen counter space w/ island. Master suite w/ large walk-in closet double sinks. Full finished basement w/ half bath, heated garage, out building w/ electric. Don’t miss $228,000. Call Rich today Rich Burt 815-715-9332 815-715-9332.

22929 N 3400 East Rd , Emington

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Beautiful 4 bedroom country home! This home sits on 4 acres! Includes a large 72 x 48 pole barn, perfect for horses! $99,900 MLS# 09050070 Call Dan today 815-919-4537

Dan Jungles 815-919-4537

FREE MARKET ANALYSIS

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Picture perfect Tinley Park home 3BR w/ possible 4th BR/office in lower level. The immaculate, newly remodeled kitchen includes new cabinets, granite counters, ceramic flooring and new electric. Sump pumps, windows, garage siding all 2 years old! $220,000 Call Ann 815-545-1167 for more Team Shouldice 815-733-8711 details!

JU

The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Sunday, June 19, 2016

| THE HERALD-NEWS

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Ever wonder what your house is worth? 1013 Brush Hill Cir, Joliet

26502 W. Fox Trl, Channahon

21232 Prince Lake Ct, Crest Hill

2 Hilltop Ct, Lemont

IMMACULATE Duplex! Completely remodeled 3BR 2.5 baths w/ fresh paint, new carpet throughout. Stainless appliances, large master bedroom w/ full bath, walk in closet w/ custom built organizer. Open floor plan, beautiful tree lined back patio. Joyce Don’t miss out, call Joyce today 815Wisneski 258-0848 815-258-0848

End-unit 2BR .5 bath townhome in Desirable Hunters Crossing. Entrance opens to dining/sitting area, cozy loft overlooks 2 story family room. Large eat in kitchen w/ plenty of cabinets and counter space, full basement, 2 car garage. Enjoy amenities like Donna Rudd several fishing ponds, bike paths, 815-342-0599 parks, greenspace. Call Donna today!

Looking for an active lifestyle? Welcome home to premier 55+ community, Carillon Lakes. Enjoy the 3 hole Golf Course/ Putting Greens, Pools, Stocked Lakes, Tennis Courts. 2 BR, 2 bath w/open floor plan, eat Dan Sliter 312-343-0816 in kitchen, Din Rm, Living Rm w/fireplace. Griffiths Master BR w/walk-in closet, private bath. Danielle 815-715-3122

Outstanding spacious 4 BR, 2.5 bath premium corner lot home in great location. Full finished basement, hardwood floors, SS appliances, formal living room, dining room, family room w/ fireplace, nice master BR w/ private bath, walk in closet, office, storage. Home Warranty Tina Cinfio & Diane Paxson included. Call Tina today 815-953-3951 815-953-3951

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THINKING OF SELLING? CALL FOR A FREE MARKET ANALYSIS. LOOKING TO BUY? WE CAN HELP! CALL OR TEXT CHRIS 815-715-3524

Debra Catalano

Senior Loan Officer | NMLS# 195500 Direct (630) 379-0205 Cell (630) 973-8381 dcatalano@msiloans.biz

www.MSIEasyPath.com/debra-catalano 20844 S. Sarver Dr, Shorewood MINOOKA HIGH SCHOOL! RON LEE ESTATES! 4 BR, 2.1 BATH RANCH, .44 ACRE LOT. $185,000!

21542 Eich Dr, Crest Hill NEW LISTING! RENWICK CLUB! 3 BR, 2.1 BATH 1700 SF. TOWNHOME $154,900!

Chris Caputo, Broker, SFR, ADPR The Caputo Team Centruy 21 Affiliated (815) 715-3524 EMAIL: chris@caputoteam.net WEB: www.chriscaputo.net SM-CL0362881

Whether you’re buying, selling, refinancing, or building your dream home, you have a lot riding on your mortgage loan officer. Since market conditions and mortgage programs change frequently, you need to make sure you are dealing with a top professional who is able to give you quick and accurate financing options. “Ensuring that you make the right choice for you and your family is my ultimate goal. I’m committed to providing my customers with mortgage services that exceed their expectations.” www.MSIEasyPath.com

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Mortgage loans are subject to qualification; credit review and approval; receipt of satisfactory appraisal; and verification of income, assets and debt information. Copyright © 2016 Mortgage Services III, LLC. a subsidiary of First State Bank, MemberFDIC. Equal Housing Lender. NMLS# 172606


69

Coldwell Banker Honig-Bell

815-744-1000

Bob La Tour 815-922-3020

www.boblatour.com Known for honesty and integrity

REALTY OF JOLIET EACH OFFICE INDEPENDENTLY OWNED AND OPERATED.

Nick Fredrick 708-829-1683

3033 W. JEFFERSON ST. STE. 101, JOLIET

WWW.REMAXREALTYOFJOLIET.COM • (815) 741-3100

Wilmington

$720k

4 BR, 4.5 BA 2 Story. 3 FP. On water w/priv. deep water slip w/spectacular views. Family & Rec rooms, Sunroom. Custom built. More! Call for more details.

Romeoville

WE ARE OFFERING PRE-LICENSING CLASSES STARTING JUNE 21ST IN JOLIET.

$150’s

Biggest & Best Chestnut model End unit townhome. 2235 Sq. Ft! 3 BR, 2.5 BA. All remodeled & redecorated. Granite countertops, Fireplace. What a great place! Call for more details.

FOR MORE INFORMATION, CALL 815-530-5633 1613 AUGUSTA LN , SHOREWOOD - $245,000

$70’s

Cute 2 BR home w/real full masonry fireplace. 3.5 car garage! Some hardwood floors & some new windows. Call for more details.

Crest Hill

VICTORIA DILLON 815-545-2121

3243 LONGFORD DR , JOLIET - $150,000

Impeccable sprawling ranch over 1800 square feet of living space. This home has been exceptionally finished from top to bottom - new paint & flooring throughout. Spacious living room features custom built-ins & tiled fireplace. Rare bonus sun room you will not find in other models. Large master bedroom - full master bath including a whirlpool tub . Modern kitchen with stainless steel appliances & double oven. Full basement with ten-foot ceilings & rough-in for a third full bath. Come see... This home is sparkling from top to bottom!

$100 DOWN FHA PROGRAM & SELLER WILL PAY 3% CLOSING COSTS! If you are looking for a great location and a great price, this is the one for you! This home is nestled in college park, close to shopping, highway access, and restaurants! The interior features laminate wood floors throughout the main level, a nice size kitchen open to the dining area and family room. Cuddle up with your loved ones next to the fireplace in the family room! There is also plenty of room to entertain on the deck in the large fenced backyard. www.hudhomestore.com | www.ILhomesite.com

RYAN BEHRENS 815-791-1715

RON & DARLENE GERSCH 815-741-5658

$60’s

1st floor Condo. Maple cabinets; Marble countertops, whirlpool tub. All appliances. Call for more details.

SM-CL0362886

JOLIET 2-UNIT READY FOR INVESTOR!

1912 CORA ST, CREST HILL - $125,000

3313 HERITAGE LAKE DR. (UNIT 1), LOCKPORT

Great for first-time homeowners or an investment. No carpet! A ranch home in the Chaney/Stern Park area of Crest Hill. Eat-in kitchen plus a dinette area. Large bedrooms with laminate floors. Fenced rear yard with a deck and a porch! 2 car garage. Basement. Go to hudhomestore.com for information and education Call Burneva McCullum for help or questions 779-279-4711

Ready to move into - wonderfully cared for - like new - tastefully decorated - large rooms - beautiful deck overlooking the fencedin back yard - gourmet stove and all appliances stay - kitchen with breakfast nook - lots of closet space - loft - 2 car attached garage - call Nancy Freeman for details (815-530-5633) or e-mail: nfreeman221@comcast.net LD

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BURNEVA MCCULLUM 779-279-4711

MARC FREEMAN 815-741-3100

7440 W GRAND RIDGE RD - $325,000 COUNTRY HOME - 7 ACRES

5625 MUSKIE TRAIL, GOOSE LAKE DON’T MISS OUT ON THIS ONE! $239,900

Potential abounds with this 5 bdrm country home on 7 acres. Original hdwd & plank flooring. Exotic kitchen w/modern conveniences. In addition, it’s a profit center w/ 2 grain bins & a corn crib that can be rented out & several acres share cropped. It has a 60’x75’ steel bldg w/ office & bath in excellent condition. Many other out buildings & garage. Visit me at: www.CarolBoland.com

Spacious ranch on large serene wooded lot w/4 bdrms, 3 baths & 2.5 garage. Partially finished basement with wet bar, electric fireplace and pool table is perfect for entertaining. Kitchen with island dining area has sliding glass doors leading out to deck. All appliances stay. Relax in the hot tub off of the deck while enjoying the view of the decorative pond and secluded back yard. Shared boat dock on adjacent lot. Call Melissa or view property at www.mcresong.illinoisproperty.com.

CAROL BOLAND 815-354-2102

MELISSA CRESONG 815-690-3682

4 BEDROOM HOME FOR LEASE!

1007 N Cora Street…Updated property with new siding, roof & windows within the past 8 years. Freshly painted 1st floor unit has 2 bedrooms, living & dining rooms plus eat-in kitchen with appliances. 2nd floor unit has separate side entrance with 1 bedroom & bath plus kitchen appliances stay. 2 car garage, basement. Separate gas & electric service. Great potential as investment or live in one unit & rent the other! Asking $94,900 Contact Jayne for further details today – view even more photos at www.jaynesellshomes.net

Looking for potential renters with good credit for this spacious home at 2910 Bloomfield Joliet. 4 bedrooms 2 1/2 baths full unfinished basement. Master bedroom has it’s own bath and walk-in closet. In excellent condition. Available now. Two year lease minimum, no section 8 please. $1700 per month.

SALE OR RENT $125000 Great location on this town home - Troy schools! 2 car garage, 2 bedroom & all stainless kitchen & balcony! 2nd floor laundry. Convenient to I 55 & I 80. Call me today!

(815) 405-1738 www.jaynesellshomes.net SM-CL0362338

SM-CL0362275

JAYNE SINCHAK

TOM HOOKS 815-741-5074

KATHY BLESSENT 815-351-2588

WE NOW OFFER PRE-LICENSING CLASSES. CALL 815-530-5633 FOR DETAILS!

• Sunday, June 19, 2016

Joliet

SHOREWOOD - $154,900

Hurry on this one! Move-in condition, 3 bedroom, 1 1/2 bath, townhouse in Walnut Trails. Hardwood laminate floors in living room- open to eat-in kitchen. New ceramic flooring and backsplash in kitchen with 42’ cabinets, breakfast counter, custom built-ins , and all appliances stay! Huge master bedroom with custom closet organizer, second floor laundry, updated full bath with new tub, ceramic, and vanity! Patio and 2 car garage. Minooka school district-walk to school. Low assoc. fees! 215 Parkside Shorewood. To view interior pictures visit www.victoriadillon.com G! TIN LIS W NE

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

THE LA TOUR SALES TEAM


70 CLASSIFIED •

Sunday, June 19, 2016 • The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com For Better or For Worse

Education

Driver

$6000 Sign on Bonus! Up to $85,000 /yr.

Home Weekly. Quarterly Safety Bonuses Regional Deliveries. Tanker End. Required and Hazmat strongly preferred.

Now Hiring Dedicated Tank Drivers Joliet, IL Apply online at: www.ruan.com/jobs 800-879-7826 Dedicated to Diversity. EOE

Driver

ROUTE TRUCK DRIVER - Full time dependable Class B

Follow The Herald-News on Twitter @Joliet_HN JOBS ANNOUNCEMENTS STUFF VEHICLES REAL ESTATE SERVICES LEGALS Find it all right here in The Herald-News Classified

CDL. Must have 3 yrs driving exp. Class A CDL & tank a plus. Paid holidays & vacation. Morris based. Call 815-416-0400 9a-5p.

DRIVERS - $60K+. Must own passenger van or large SUV. Able to pass physical + drug test. Email: chad@cs-transport.com

OFFICE ASSISTANT

NP NURSING FACULTY

full-time data entry, receptionist duties. FAX: 815-726-9450

Lewis University, Romeoville, seeks NP Nursing Faculty. Doctorate required.

Apply: jobs.lewisu.edu

ESTIMATOR FOR POINT OF PURCHASE DISPLAYS

Joliet, IL Mfg. Company seeks to hire an Estimator to prepare estimates on displays to be made of wood, metal & plastic & enter on ERP system. Min 5 years experience. Email: jobs@megroupinc.com

HOLEWATCH / FIREWATCH Total Safety hiring Holewatch / Firewatch

Seeking Qualified Personnel to Work in Industrial Setting in Morris, IL Pays up to $15/hour with eligibility for overtime Work Hours Include 7/10s or 7/12s Apply on Wednesday 6/22/16 - Friday 6/24/16 at Clarion Inn, 400 South Larkin Ave, Joliet, IL Accepting Applications between 9AM - 4PM Or Until Positions Filled Prior Related Experience Preferred But Not Required Must Be Able to Communicate in English All Forms of Legal Work Authorization Accepted Post-Offer Drug Testing Required for Qualified Applicants

Get the job you want at TheHerald-News.com/jobs

PACKERS NEEDED!

1st, 2nd and 3rd shift available $10.00 per hour... long term positions - Work available everyday

We will be providing free transportation to and from work in Aurora, IL Apply: Elite Staffing, 301 E Cass St, Joliet, IL 60432 779-279-8380 amartinez@elitestaffinginc.com

PRODUCTION WORKERS

Apollo Colors, Inc, has Day & Night shift opportunities for dependable & productive individuals at our Rockdale facility. Full time temp positions that may lead to hire depending on business conditions and job performance. GED or HS diploma with good math and reading skills. Manufacturing background preferred. Drug test and background check required. Competitive pay rate for temp and those hired will enjoy an increased starting wage and excellent benefits. Apply to: Apollo Colors 1550 Mound Rd., Rockdale, IL 60436 jobs@apollocolors.com

Are you made for ALDI?

Are you made for ALDI?

We are looking to hire Store Associates, Casual Store Associates, Shift Managers and Manager Trainees for the following locations:

We are looking to hire Store Associates, Casual Store Associates, Shift Managers and Manager Trainees for the following locations:

HIRING EVENT

• Plainfield (all three locations) • Joliet (both locations) • Bolingbrook (both locations) • Romeoville

HIRING EVENT

• Bolingbrook (both locations) • Romeoville • New Lenox

Store Associate - $13.00/HR Shift Manager - $17.50/HR, when acting as a Shift Manager Manager Trainee - $47,320/YR* With an opportunity to earn $75,000 - $85,000/YR as a Store Manger *$22.75/HR (average 40 hrs/week)

Store Associate - $13.00/HR Shift Manager - $17.50/HR, when acting as a Shift Manager Manager Trainee - $47,320/YR* With an opportunity to earn $75,000 - $85,000/YR as a Store Manger *$22.75/HR (average 40 hrs/week)

Please visit the following location on Wednesday, June 22, 2016 between the hours of 13550 Rt 59 6:00 AM –6:00 PM Plainfield IL 60544 to fill out an application:

Please visit the following location on Thursday, June 23, 2016 between the hours of 1310 Lily Cache Lane 6:00 AM –6:00 PM Bolingbrook IL 60490 to fill out an application:

SM-CL1198921

SM-CL1198925


The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Sunday, June 19, 2016 •

JOLIET

1403 CORAL BELL DR.

ROOFERS

Experienced Flat Roofers & Shingles needed immediately. Transportation a must. Call Dan 630-257-8180 x18

Camera

Lost Sunday, June 5 @ Civil War Days in Manhattan. Silver Cannon Camera in Black Case with Memory Card.

REWARD!

815-866-7187

CAT “JACK”

Black and white. REWARD! 815-741-8788 or 630-636-8018 New Information

LOST SHELTIE KALLIE

Please do not call her or chase her. If seen please call (815) 290-9531

TABBY CAT

Young, grey, found about a week ago vicinity of Whitney and Glenwood in Joliet. Please call 815-723-1763

RETIREMENT SALE!

JUNE 16, 17, 18 & 19TH 8-2PM

LOCKPORT Second Time Around SALE ! First United Methodist Church

PEOTONE COUNTRY FLEA MARKET SAT, June 25th 5:30AM - 1PM

★ Held At ★ Peotone Will County Fair Grounds Outside Sellers: $20/per vehicle FREE Buyer Admission Organized by Jerry Rossen 708-997-0245

BRIDGE by Phillip Alder

1 Pc Beige Fiberglass Shower – Built In- $200 815-341-6965 2 Electric Scooters (LIKE MOPEDS) – In Good Cond! Go 30-40mph, asking $700ea 815-838-1232

10th & Washington Saturday June 18th 9am – 6pm

Sunday June 19th 11am – 3pm

MORRIS

Powered by:

HARMON ACRES SUBDIVISON

(off Lisbon Rd.) Maps at participating homes – Rain or Shine!

Thurs, June 23 & Fri, June 24 9am-4pm

Queen carved head and foot board, chandeliers, electric piano keyboard, wicker, chain saw, desks, weight bench w/bar & weights, antiques, 24 ft. fiberglass Werner Class 1 ladder, outdoor swing, tanning bed, Wurlitzer organ, Longaberger baskets, baby equipment, lawnmover, oblong table w/4 chairs, platform rocker, sofas, shell-pink milk glass, Fitz & Floyd, Westmoreland, Lenox & Goebel items, household & much misc! 3 homes also open on Sat, June 25 located at 1806 Charles, 1806 Bruce, & 806 Thomas Dr.

Plainfield Garage Sale 5201 Montauk Drive June 17, 18 & 19 8AM-3PM Household, Bikes, Tools, Camping, Desktop Computer, Kids Items, Toys, Xmas, Clothes, & MORE!!! Have a news tip? Contact Kate Schott at 815-280-4119 or kschott@shawmedia.com

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

Electric Washer and Dryer, only 1 year old, $400 for set. “Haier” brand, high efficiency. Call 779-703-3859.

CLASSIFIED 71

2011 Lincoln Town Car Sig Series,19K Mi.

1 owner, Sr citizen driven, $19,750. 815-730-1300

MOTORCYCLES WANTED

Cresthill 2BR, Garage, Incl Water, Avail Now!

$830/mo + security deposit

708-638-6474

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

Laura Fraser from Scotland said, “I’ve always been an actor, a lowly actor without power, so I’ve never been corrupted. I’ve never even directed.” This week, we have been studying “cover an honor with an honor.” We have witnessed lowly cards win tricks by becoming high; and we have seen that this rule is not etched in stone -- covering an honor with an honor can be a mistake. However, there is also the other end of the spectrum, as highlighted by this deal. South is in two hearts for the third time this week. West leads his club three. East takes the trick with the ace and shifts to the spade 10, wondering if declarer might have the king and his partner the queen -- but risking declarer’s having a singleton king. Here, though, West takes the trick with his king, cashes the club king, and returns the spade seven (the higher of two remaining cards). East wins and, say, shifts to a diamond. What happens after that? North’s two-heart rebid showed 6-9 points with only a doubleton heart. With a third heart, he would have raised one heart to two, not responded one spade. South can afford only one heart loser. Suppose he starts with dummy’s nine. Although this is not an honor, if East fails to cover with his queen, the contract can be made. The nine will lose to West’s ace, but a moment later, South’s king will kill East’s queen, and his jack and 10 will collect West’s five and eight. In contrast, if East plays his queen on dummy’s nine, West gets two trump tricks with his ace and eight.


72 CLASSIFIED •

Sunday, June 19, 2016 • The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com

Essington Rd, 1st Floor, Appl, D/W, Blt in Micro Sept dining, ceil fanx, 2 A/C, mirrored closets, carport, no pets. 815-744-5141 The Herald-News Classified It works.

Get the job you want at TheHerald-News.com/jobs

Morris $15 sq. ft., up to 1,032 sq. ft. Office Space Joliet – West Side. Newly Remodeled. All New Inside. 2.5CGAR. Double City Lot. Fenced Yard. Pets Welcome. for Lease, 2 blocks from Courthouse, P.O., Banks, etc. Enclosed Frnt Porch. $1400+Dep 815-474-9054 Century 21 Coleman-Hornsby 815-942-9190 Lockport – Spacious 3BR 1B, Finished Basement.

Accepting Applications

Studio, 1, 2 & 3 Bedrooms Income Restricted Apartments

*Spacious Floor Plans *24-Hr Emergency Maintenance *Laundry Facilities in Each Building *Minutes from Metra, Pace, Schools, Downtown Joliet

Call for Appointment!

815-722-7556

W.W. Grainger-Distribution Center/ Warehouse Associate- Minooka, IL

Visit us at the FREE JOBS FAIR

350 N. Broadway, Joliet, IL 60435 Office hours 9am-4:30pm M-F

Joliet - Updated Studio / 1BR Utilities Included Elevator, Laundry, Great Views, Near Bus and Downtown, $499 - $649/mo. 815-726-2000 Jolietrentalunits.com Joliet West Side 2BR, Secure Building

Clean and modern. 815-354-1451~ 815-260-9814

2CGAR. 114 Riley Ave. $1100. 779-205-9166

EFFICIENCIES ~ MAZON, NO LEASE Kitchen, Laundry. Utilities Provided. 1-630-910-5304 or 1-630-698-2229 Joliet - Downtown - Conveniently Located

Newly updated, clean furnished rooms, elevator, utilities incl, $104/wk, $450/mo & up. 815-722-1212

Joliet ~ Big Clean, Furnished, Wood Floors Fridge, Microwave, Laundry, Elevator. On Bus Line. $105/wk, $455/mo. 815-726-2000

Twin Oaks, Spacious 2BR, 1.5BA, Appl, D/W MINOOKA INDUSTRIAL UNIT Micro, 2 A/C, huge closets. Free Heat. 2000 sqft office space w/ optional 1000 sqft at815-744-5141 Minooka Central Comm High School tached warehouse space. 18'x14' overhead West of St. Joe's Hosp, Large 3BR, 1.5BA, Open Flr door, heated bath. 301 S. Wabena Ave, Minooka st plan, 1 floor, updated kitchen, appl, D/W, micro, 815-482-5643 2 A/C, ceiling fans. 815-744-1155

Saturday, June 25 9am-12:30pm

We have 1st and 3rd shifts available

APPLY VIA EMAIL OR ONLINE:

joyce.hopkins@grainger.com www.experiencedone.com Keyword Search: MINOOKA

Grainger is an Equal Opportunity Workplace and an Affirmative Action Employer. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, disability, or protected veteran status.

2, 3 & 4 Bedroom Homes. Call now or visit our website for more info www.protown.org or call 815-722-1389

Black Rd, 3BR, 2BA, Farm House, Appl, D/W, Elec entry, gas heat, updated kitchen, central A/C, 2 car heated garage. 815-744-1155 Joliet – 2BR 1B, All Appls. W/D HU, Big Backyrd/Patio, Full Unfn. Basement, $950/mo 815-272-4383 Joliet – 2BR, 1.5B, Full Basmt, W/D, Stove, Fridge, Fenced Yrd. $1200/mo + SEC. Utl. Not Incl. 773-376-3417

SM-CL1199031

Operations Manager & Supervisor Joliet, Illinois Come discover your direction at Holland! Holland, Inc., is a recognized leader in next-day delivery, quality handling, and on-time performance in the LTL industry. Holland has openings for an Operations Manager and Supervisor at our terminal in Joliet, Illinois Operations Manager – Responsibilities • Responsibilities include the management of supervisors including the supervision of drivers, dock workers and clerical staff related to the loading, unloading and movement of freight, including all pertinent clerical functions. • Working in direct conjunction with the terminal manager for enforcement of all company rules and regulations relating to safety, hazardous materials, government regulations and collective bargaining agreements. Successful candidates will have a bachelor’s degree or the equivalent combination of education and work experience; Experience in the Transportation industry; and effective verbal, written, and interpersonal communications skills on a management level Operations Supervisor - Responsibilities: • Supervise and coordinate all activities of dockworkers and other support personnel. • Provide planning, direction and control of all available resources for insuring timely, damagefree, safe loading/unloading of freight on assigned shifts. • Provide support personnel and dockworker training and performance feedback to ensure that all work is performed according to company approved procedures and standards.

If you are interested in applying, please go on-line to: http://www.hollandregional.com/careers YRC Worldwide is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer Minorities/Females/Persons with Disabilities/Protected Veterans

SM-CL1198962

Successful candidates will have a bachelor’s degree or equivalent work experience; 1-2 years supervisory experience, knowledge of proper freight handling/loading techniques; and strong organizational skills.

The Herald-News Classified It works.

JOBS ANNOUNCEMENTS STUFF VEHICLES REAL ESTATE SERVICES LEGALS The Herald-News Classified and online at: TheHerald-News.com


The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Sunday, June 19, 2016 •

Asphalt Paving & Sealcoating

Boswell Blacktop Paving

Driveways Parking lots Resurfacing Sealcoatings Patchwork & Repairs. Free Estimates Fully Insured

708-301-5700

815-462-3511

CENTURY DRYWALL

VETERANS PAINTING “HIRE A VET”

Drywall Hanging Taping Patching & Repairs Plaster Repair

Jerry

CLASSIFIED 73

Residential

• Interior & Exterior Painting • Wall Paper Removal • Drywall Repair (some taping) • Staining & Varnishing

630-258-4861

Reasonable Price That You Can Afford ! 815-258-3813

ZOBEL ELECTRIC

All Residential Work Breaker Boxes & Back Up Generators Installed LOCALLY Owned & Operated Free Estimates Licensed/Insured

815-741-4024 815-823-2300

ILLINOIS ELECTRICAL SERVICES Residential/Commercial

SOUTHWEST AUTO SALVAGE WE BUY JUNK CARS LOCKPORT, IL

Domestic 815-723-6878

Back-up Em. Generators Panel/Service Upgrade Swim Pools/Hot Tubs

Free Estimates Licensed & Insured 815-722-2402

Foreign 815-722-4629

Free Estimates Cell: 815-719-0615 Specializing but not limited to the following: Lawn mowing Clean up Fresh Mulch Sod Trim Trees & Plants Stone Dirt Retaining Walls Drain Tiles Patios Walkways and More. Snow Removal

www.southwestauto.net

Free Estimates!

K&B Concrete Inc.

( Laborers' Needed ) 815-838-9322

Lawn Maintenance Flowers Trees Shrubs Tree Removal Retaining Walls Brick Pavers, Mulch, Decorative Stone & rock Asphalt Removal Sod Ground Leveling Doing Concrete Specializing in California Finishing

ROLDAN LANDSCAPING

“THE PLACE FOR PARTS” Since 1980

Fully Insured – Since 1993 Driveways Sidewalks Patios Foundations Stamped Concrete Additions Garage Excavating Hauling

Jose Zavala Landscape

Francisco cell: 815-666-0136 Office: 815-409-7906

GUTTER SPECIALIST

francoroldan@yahoo.com

5” & 6” Seamless Aluminum Gutters Siding, Soffit, Fascia Residential Roofing Custom Colors Available

We are At Your Service! The Herald-News reaches Will County 6 days a week Plus TheHerald-News.com is available 24/7.

Quality Isn't Expensive.... It's Priceless!

FREE ESTIMATES

THE DECK DOCTORS

PRESSURE WASHING STAINING SEALING “Total Wood Care” Painting & Repairs Decks Fences Siding, Playsets Concrete, Etc. Insured Free Estimates

815-729-3383 815-325-1792 A division of A-1 Decorating

Get the job you want at TheHerald-News.com/jobs

The Herald-News Classified It works.

Call to advertise in the At Your Service directory.

815-726-5900

877-264-2527

classified@shawsuburban.com

AJD Sons Landscaping

Weekly lawn mowing Clean up Mulch Stone Sod Seed Dirt Trees & Plants Patios Retaining walls Brick Pavers

Free Estimates!

815-462-0026 LOCAL NEWS WHEREVER YOU GO! Up-to-date news, weather, scores & more can be sent directly to your phone! It's quick, easy & free to register at TheHerald-News.com

TEXT ALERTS Sign up for TextAlerts to receive up-to-date news, weather, prep sports, coupons and more sent directly to your cell phone! Register FREE today at TheHerald-News.com

JOHN'S PAINTING

Find the help you need

Interior/Exterior Drywall Repairs, Free Estimates 25 yrs Experience Fully Insured Locally Owned.

815-207-3835

The Herald-News Classified It works. Follow The Herald-News on Twitter Will County area breaking news, entertainment news, feature stories and more! @Joliet_HN

At Your Service In print daily Online 24/7


74 CLASSIFIED •

Sunday, June 19, 2016 • The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com

STUMP GRINDING & TREE SERVICE

DO YOU HAVE UNSIGHTLY TREE or BUSH STUMPS?

Channahon New Construction

Tired of mowing around them?

Call us for Fast, Friendly Service Remove your Stumps Today !!

815-693-6122

Upscale home with 4 car garage, 4 bedroom, 2.5 bath, full basement, real wood floors, granite, etc. All upgrades included in price! $319,500. Immediate Occupancy

Land Auction Three (3) Small Tracts Grundy & Kendall Counties Auction Location

Saturday July 9 at 10 AM

LOW COST ROOFING LLC.

Parcel 1) 30 Ac Tillable Land, Vienna Twp, Grundy County. Building permit included. Parcel 2) 25 Ac Tillable Land, Vienna Twp. Grundy County Parcel 3) 19.88 Ac - Creek, Pasture & Tillable. Great blg site, Seward Twp, Kendall County Terms: 10% down on Auction date & close in 30 days. For more complete terms, maps, flyer & info, please contact agency or visit website.

Tear Offs Lay-overs Repairs Soffit Fascia Gutters

815-955-8794 Free Estimates Locally Owned Licensed Bonded & Insured

Need To Contact Us?

Would you like to subscribe or do you have a question about your delivery? To place a Classified Ad

877-264-CLAS (2527) 815-526-4489

CHRONICLE

www.richardaolson.com OWNER: Estate of Robert Dirker Atty: Frank Black, Morris 815-942-0549

Richard A. Olson & Assoc. Morris IL 815 942-4266 Dick Olson 815-258-3003 Erik Olson 815-931-0699

(800) 397-9397 For Retail Advertising

K C

American Legion Hall 508 Depot St, Mazon IL

Do you a News Tip or Story Idea? 2175have Oneida Street, Joliet, IL 60435

630-845-5355 TheHerald-News.com

Real Estate Brokerage | Auctions | Land Sales

SM-CL0362358

The Herald-News Classified It works.

Get the job you want at TheHerald-News.com/jobs

The Herald-News Classified 877-264-2527 TheHerald-News.com Get Text Alerts! Stay informed during breaking news. Sign up for breaking news text and email alerts at TheHerald-News.com

Our Great Garage Sale Guarantee! If it rains on your sale, we will run your ad again the next week for FREE! Call 877-264-2527 or email: classified@shawsuburban.com The Herald-News Classified


The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Sunday, June 19, 2016 • hearing on Tuesday, July 5, 2016, at 6:30 p.m., or as soon thereafter the matter may be heard, in the Will County Office Building located at 302 North Chicago Street, Joliet, Illinois, to consider changes to Articles 155-7, 155-9, and 155-10 of the Will County Zoning Changes being Ordinance. considered pertain to Elder Cottage Housing Opportunity (ECHO) units. PUBLIC NOTICE For more information about the proposed changes, please contact IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR David Dubois, Director of the THE 12TH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT Development Review Division WILL COUNTY - JOLIET, ILLINOIS and Zoning Administrator, at 815-740-8140. Copies of the Wells Fargo Bank, NA proposed changes are available Plaintiff, the Will County Land Use at vs. Department, 58 E. Clinton St., Suite Unknown Heirs and Legatees of 100, Joliet, Illinois or online at Sean A. Heffernan; Nancy Ryan; www.willcountylanduse.com. Rhonda Jackson; Ranita Sinish a/k/a Ranita Heffernan; Sara Ryan; LEONARD VALLONE Michael Ryan; LVNV Funding LLC; CHAIRMAN Unknown Owners and Nonrecord WILL COUNTY PLANNING AND Claimants; Richard Kuhn, as ZONING COMMISSION Special Representative for Sean A. (Published in the Herald News Heffernan (deceased) June 19, 2016) 1198591 Defendants. Case No. 16 CH 00768 Notice to Heirs and Legatees. PUBLIC NOTICE Notice is hereby given to you, the Unknown Heirs and Unknown Please take notice the Village of Legatees of the decedent, Sean A. Shorewood has changed its meetHeffernan, that on May 25, 2016, ing schedule with respect to meetan order was entered by the Court, ings of the Committee of the Whole. naming Richard W. Kuhn, 552 S. Effective on June 28, 2016, the Washington Street, Suite 100, Village of Shorewood President and Naperville, Illinois 60540, Tel. No. Board Trustee's Committee of the 630-420-8228, as the Special Whole meetings will be held on the Representative of the above named Fourth Tuesday of each month at decedent under 735 ILCS 13-1209 the Shorewood Village Hall - One (Death of a Party). The cause of Towne Center Blvd., Shorewood, IL action for the Foreclosure of a - commencing at 7:30 p.m. or certain Mortgage upon the premises such later time as the Regular Village Board Meeting is adjourned. A commonly known as: complete schedule of all meetings 387 W. Exchange Street, of the Village of Shorewood Crete, IL 60417. Boards, Committees and Commis(Published in the Herald-News on sions is available for public inspecJune 12,19,26, 2016) 1196946 tion in the office of the Village Clerk during regular business hours.

PUBLIC NOTICE IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR THE 12TH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT WILL COUNTY - JOLIET, ILLINOIS JPMorgan Chase Bank, National Association Plaintiff, vs. S.R., a minor; State of Illinois; Unknown Heirs and Legatees of David D. Redus; Unknown Owners and Nonrecord Claimants; Richard Kuhn, as Special Representative for David D. Redus (deceased) Defendants. Case No. 16 CH 00869 Notice to Heirs and Legatees. Notice is hereby given to you, the Unknown Heirs and Unknown Legatees of the decedent, David D. Redus, that on June 1, 2016, an order was entered by the Court, naming Richard W. Kuhn, 552 S. Washington Street, Suite 100, Naperville, Illinois 60540, Tel. No. 630-420-8228, as the Special Representative of the above named decedent under 735 ILCS 13-1209 (Death of a Party). The cause of action for the Foreclosure of a certain Mortgage upon the premises commonly known as: 12755 W. Manhattan Monee Road, Manhattan, IL 60442. (Published in the Herald-News on June 19, 26, 2016, July 3, 2016) 1198873

PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING Notice is hereby given that the Will County Planning and Zoning Commission will hold a public

May 26, 2016

Ownership of Business Name of Business: AiryS Easy ACCESSories Certificate No.: 30806 Filed: June 8, 2016 Located at: 101 South Joliet Street Joliet Ill 60436 Name(s) and residence of address (es) of the person(s) owning, conducting or transacting business: Jannice Barefield 101 South Joliet Street Joliet, Ill 60436 IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand and Official Seal at my office in Joliet, Illinois. /s/ Jannice Barefield June 8, 2016 /s/ Nancy Schultz Voots County Clerk (Published in the Herald-News June 12,19,26, 2016) 1196951

PUBLIC NOTICE Will County Clerk's Office Assumed Business Name Certificate of Registration of Ownership of Business Name of Business: Bernie's Certificate No.: 30804 Filed: June 8, 2016 Located at: 206 Redbud Drive Joliet Il 60433

Name(s) and residence of address (es) of the person(s) owning, (Published in the Herald-News on conducting or transacting business: June 19, 2016) 1198507 Joshua Betts 206 Redbud Drive Joliet, Il 60433 PUBLIC NOTICE IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have set my hand and Official hereunto THE WILL COUNTY BOARD WILL HOLD A PUBLIC HEARING TO Seal at my office in Joliet, Illinois. DISCUSS CHANGES TO THE WILL /s/ Joshua Betts COUNTY CHAPTER 53 WATER WELL PERMIT AND WATER SUPJune 8, 2016 PLY ORDINANCE, DURING THE PUBLIC HEALTH & SAFETY /s/ Nancy Schultz Voots COMMITTEE REPORT AT WILL County Clerk COUNTY BOARD MEETING ON THURSDAY, JULY 7, 2016, AT 9:00 A.M., IN THE COUNTY BOARD (Published in the Herald-News ROOM, SECOND FLOOR OF THE June 12,19,26, 2016) 1196956 WILL COUNTY OFFICE BUILDING, 302 NORTH CHICAGO STREET, JOLIET, ILLINOIS. THE PUBLIC IS PUBLIC NOTICE INVITED AND WILL BE ALLOWED TO MAKE COMMENTS AT THAT Will County Clerk's Office TIME. THE PROPOSED CHANGES Assumed Business Name TO THE ORDINANCE ARE ON Certificate of Registration of DISPLAY AT THE WILL COUNTY Ownership of Business OFFICE BUILDING, COUNTY CLERK'S OFFICE, 302 NORTH STREET, JOLIET, CHICAGO Name of Business: ILLINOIS, AND MAY BE VIEWED DURING REGULAR BUSINESS North 40 Designs HOURS OF 8:30 A.M. - 4:30 P.M. MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY. THE PROPOSED CHANGES CAN ALSO Certificate No.: 30772 VIEWED ONLINE AT Filed: May 26, 2016 BE WWW.WILLCOUNTYBOARD.COM Located at: UNDER THE MEETINGS SECTION. 905 Southgate Rd. New Lenox, IL 60451

CLASSIFIED 75

/s/ Ann Benge Notary Public (Published in the Herald-News on June 5, 12, 19, 2016) 1194555

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

JOBS ANNOUNCEMENTS STUFF VEHICLES REAL ESTATE SERVICES The Herald-News Classified and online at: TheHerald-News.com

NOTICE

PUBLICATION POLICIES This publication reserves the right to edit or reject any ads without comment. This publication is careful to review all advertising but the burden of truthful content belongs to the advertiser. We use standard abbreviations and we reserve the right to properly classify your ad. All ads are subject to credit approval. We reserve the right to require prepayment. We accept cash, check, Visa, Mastercard, Discover, and American Express. CHECK YOUR AD Please check your ad the first day it is published. If you see an error, call us immediately and it will be corrected for the next available publication date. Our liability is for only one publication date and shall not exceed the total cost of the first day of publication.

Publisher's Notice: All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Fair Housing Act which makes it illegal to advertise "any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation of discrimination." Familial status includes children under the age of 18 living with parents or legal custodians, pregnant women and people securing custody of children under 18. This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which (Published in The Herald-News Name(s) and residence of address is in violation of the law. Our June 19, 26, 2016) 1198946 (es) of the person(s) owning, con- readers are hereby informed that ducting or transacting business: all dwellings advertised in this Vonda L. Pfunder newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. 905 Southgate Rd. To complain of discrimination New Lenox, IL 60451 call HUD toll-free at PUBLIC NOTICE IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have 1-800-669-9777. hereunto set my hand and Official The toll-free telephone number Will County Clerk's Office Seal at my office in Joliet, Illinois. for the hearing impaired is Assumed Business Name 1-800-927-9275 /s/ Vonda L. Pfunder Certificate of Registration of

HIRE CLOSER. HIRE HAPPIER.

Why look far and wide for the best local talent? Just visit ChicagoJobs.com. Offering thousands of career candidate profiles, Chicagoland’s most comprehensive online job boards attract the most qualified local job seekers in a wide variety of industries and skill sets. Look to ChicagoJobs.com for employees who live close to the place your business calls home.

Shaw Media is a partner of ChicagoJobs.com.


The Herald-News / TheHerald-News.com • Sunday, June 19, 2016

| THE HERALD-NEWS

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