HAWKS WIN, SET UP ELIMINATION GAME AT HOME
STANLEY CUP PLAYOFFS Blackhawks - 3 Blues - 2 (OT) Blackhawks leads series 3-2
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Brandon Bollig
SATURDAY, APRIL 26, 2014 • NWHERALD.COM • 75 CENTS
Dunleavy hits eight 3-pointers as Bulls pull out 100-97 victory
Carrick witness arrested
Sports, C1
EVENT ENDURES THROUGH COMMUNITY
He’s charged with stealing safe from McHenry home By CHELSEA McDOUGALL
Afternoon Drive
cmcdougall@shawmedia.com WOODSTOCK – A former McHenry man with a lengthy criminal history, who has admitted he likely threw a punch that killed a missing Johnsburg teen, picked up new felony charges in McHenry County. Shane M. Lamb, 29, who listed a Chicago address on a sworn affidavit, was arrested Thursday on a warrant for residential burglary and theft. The arrest warrant was issued April 16, but police had some difficulty locating Lamb, who eventually was found in unincorporated McHenry. He was taken into custody without incident. He remains in custody at
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Photos by Sarah Nader – snader@shawmedia.com
Brady Caldwell (from left), 8, of Wonder Lake, Sara Russell of Woodstock and Cameron Caldwell, 3, of Wonder Lake fill their plates with spaghetti, breadsticks and salad Friday during the 50th annual spaghetti dinner at Greenwood Elementary School in Woodstock. The event is the school’s biggest fundraiser of the year.
the McHenry County Jail in lieu of $150,000 bond, meaning he needs to post $15,000 to be released. Shane Lamb The affidavit was arrested also said he Thursday. was unemployed. According to McHenry Deputy Police Chief John
See ARREST, page A7
50
years of spaghetti
Greenwood school celebrates half century of serving dinner By SHAWN SHINNEMAN
Term limits could be tricky issue for Quinn
I
Voice your opinion Do you think a term limit amendment will pass in Illinois? Vote online at NWHerald.com.
By SOPHIA TAREEN The Associated Press CHICAGO – Democratic Gov. Pat Quinn distinguished himself early in his political career as a fighter for term limits, but this election year it’s Illinois Republicans who are championing efforts to cap lawmakers’ time in office. The proposals – including a legislative one this week – have put Quinn in a tricky spot ahead of November when
t’s still the spaghetti dinner. Greenwood Elementary School looks different than it did in 1964, when the thing started. It’s bigger. There’s a library now. The event itself draws a larger crowd. They added a rock wall something like 10 years ago. But, even 50 years since it started, it’s still the spaghetti dinner. “What’s nice about it is that it kind of stays the same,” Thomas Wollpert said. “It is what it is, every year. No matter who’s running it or who participates in it, the spaghetti dinner is the spaghetti dinner.” Wollpert should know. He attended them as an infant, then as a preschooler, then as a student of the school. Later, in adulthood, he went as a teacher. This year, he took a new view of the night, as the school’s principal. That fact, he says, is exciting – but the spaghetti dinner is always exciting. The spaghetti dinner is the spaghetti dinner.
he’ll ask voters for a second full term after rising to the office from lieutenant governor. Over the years he’s painted himself as an outsider and is known for embracing such populist ideas, but Republican businessman Bruce Rauner has seized the issue and criticized Quinn’s commitment. At the same time, term limit proposals don’t have backing
Barb Wilson (left) serves breadsticks to Darin Corrao (from left), Elaine Corrao and Kyle Corrao, 6, all of Wonder Lake, during the 50th annual spaghetti dinner. “It’s home,” Wollpert said of the school in Woodstock. “This is home for me.” The spaghetti dinner was not the spaghetti dinner in 1961. That was
See TERM LIMITS, page A7
LOCALLY SPEAKING
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Rival questions his commitment to new restrictions
sshinneman@shawmedia.com
CRYSTAL LAKE
POLICE TO CARRY DRUG ANTIDOTE The Crystal Lake Police Department recently was approved by the Illinois Department of Human Services’ Division of Alcoholism and Substance Abuse to administer naloxone. Narcan is the brand name for naloxone, which counteracts the effects of heroin and other opioid drugs. For more, see page B1.
Cary-Grove’s Eva Burk
Huntley’s Macy Tramblay (left) and Emily Schmidt Michael Smart for Shaw Media
HIGH
LOW
60 41 Complete forecast on A10
HUNTLEY: Morgan Schulz helps C-G girls cruise to sixth McHenry County Track and Field team title. Sports, C1
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Bill Schuette’s first year as principal of the little country school on Greenwood Road.
See DINNER, page A7