nwht_2016-06-04

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NORTHWEST HERALD SAT U RD A Y , JUN E 4 , 20 16 • $1.0 0

THE ONLY DAILY NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN McHENRY COUNTY

NWHerald.com

SPORTS

Stopped short Huntley to play for 3rd after losing semis to New Trier / B2 LOCAL NEWS

CL death case

Man’s drug-induced homicide charges dismissed / A6 LOCAL NEWS

Onward

Seniors from Marian Central, Johnsburg graduate / A10-11

NEARING A DECISION

County Board members, local officials discuss Randall Road project / A3 TODAY’S WEATHER

HIGH

LOW

78 57

A cold front will move through mainly during the afternoon, bringing a line of showers and a few thunderstorms. Gusty winds and brief heavy downpours are possible. Complete forecast on page A5


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Saturday, June 4, 2016

2

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May the force of laughter be with you! I have just finished laughing. Hilariously. It started with a grin. Then moved on to a chuckle. It transitioned to a giggle, snickered into a snort and burst into a guffaw. I cracked up, split my sides, and I think I actually whooped. My eyes dripped tears and my lungs emptied and my bladder leaked. And during that rapturous time you could have hit me on the head with a brick and I wouldn’t have cared. Yep, that laughing episode momentarily erased any worries I had and replaced them with downright happiness and slightly wet underpants. And when it was all over, I felt like I had just run a marathon, which for me was more like a sprint from the couch to the fridge during a commercial. But it was worth every teardrop and every writhing, convulsing breath. So what caused my brief junket into unabashed joy that pretty much almost did me in? Well, would you believe it was some lady wearing a Star Wars Wookie mask? Specifically, it was Candice Payne, a mom from Texas, wearing a talking Chewbacca mask as she sat in her car in a parking lot at a Kohl’s store. That mental image in itself is at least worth a chuckle. While she was returning some items at the store, she spotted the mask and, on a whim, decided to buy it. She brought it to her car, set up her camera, and recorded an unscripted video of her wearing the present to herself. Then she popped it on Facebook for her friends to watch and waited for their reaction. And, boy, did she get a reaction! Within a few days millions had watched it and now her video is the most-watched Facebook video of all time. It has been calculated that an average of 1 in every 47 people on the planet have seen it. Now, if you’re in one of the clumps of 46 people in existence who has not watched Candice’s video, maybe you’d better catch up with the rest of humanity. So, if you haven’t yet seen this, go and watch it now (Google “Chewbacca Lady”) and

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JUST HUMOR ME Michael Penkava then come back and I’ll continue… What do you think? Well, if you didn’t at least smile, perhaps you should go directly to the “Illinois Roundup” section and look for something about the state budget that tickles your fancy. But, if you’re like the rest of us, you couldn’t help but laugh along with the lady in the video. And why was that? Well, that’s a good question… First of all, laughter is infectious. It’s a human emotion that we quite naturally want to imitate. Watching someone laugh, we sympathetically mimic not only the emotion of happiness but also even the facial expressions and resulting laughter. We become sentimentally infected and join in. But there’s something more in Candice’s video. We see the child-like joy during an innocent child-like experience. It’s like when our kids played with a cardboard box for hours. Or we gave them carte blanche with some pots and pans. Or we let them loose in our clothes closet. Fun, delight, joy. So maybe there’s a lesson here for all of us: Maybe we don’t need the latest and greatest to be truly happy. Maybe it really is the simple things that bring us joy. And maybe we just need to recapture some of our unpretentious childness once in a while and enjoy a good laugh. But forget about getting a Chewbacca mask to spark your mirthfulness. The stores are sold out and you can pay upwards of $1,000 for one on eBay. Maybe I’ll just bid on the empty box the mask came in and play with that.

• Michael Penkava is a retired teacher who taught for 35 years at West Elementary School in Crystal Lake. The empty box cost $25. It was not nearly as much fun as he thought it would be. He can be reached at mikepenkava@comcast.net.

WHERE IT’S AT Advice.............................................................A34-35 Business.........................................................A28 Buzz.................................................................A29 Classified.......................................................A37-47 Comics.......................................................A32-33, 37 Home & Garden..............................................A30-31 Lottery.............................................................A23 Nation&World................................................A23-25

Neighbors........................................................A15-21 Puzzles............................................................A34-35 Obituaries.......................................................A14 Opinions.........................................................A26-27 Sports................................................................B1-16 State...............................................................A22 Television................................................................A36 Weather.................................................................A5

The daily

TWEET @NWHerald

“Absolutely not worth it. Use that $100 mil on other area improvements.” @HeadOnASwivel

on proposed funding to expand Randall Road

The daily

POST Facebook.com/NWHerald

“Maybe being a Trump supporter is shortening peoples’ lives because they’re being attacked?” Christopher Neufeldt

on a post that referenced both attacks against Donald Trump supporters and a report that Americans’ lives are getting shorter

The daily

DIGIT

97

The amount in millions of dollars that the proposed Randall Road expansion and intersection improvement project will cost

ON THE COVER Algonquin village president John Schmitt (left foreground) takes notes as he waits to speak Friday at the McHenry County Board Committee of the Whole meeting during a discussion on the Randall Road widening project. See story, page A3. Photo by H. Rick Bamman – hbamman@shawmedia.com

CORRECTIONS

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A CLOSER LOOK

3 Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Saturday, June 4, 2016

LOCAL OFFICIALS SHOW SUPPORT FOR PROJECT Randall Road widening nearing decision By KEVIN P. CRAVER

kcraver@shawmedia.com WOODSTOCK – McHenry County Board members got an earful during their threehour workshop on the long-planned Randall Road improvement project. Much of it came in the form of presentations from county staff and consultants regarding the need to widen the road and improve its intersection with Algonquin Road. Some of it was from local political and business officials pleading with them not to put the brakes on the $97 million project after a decade of planning. County Board Chairman Joe Gottemoller,

R-Crystal Lake, ended Friday’s Committee of the Whole with the decision that the board has to make next – whether to allocate the money for buying the needed land, which has been stuck in committee. “The next question is, do we buy the land we need to buy in order to improve this transportation corridor?” Gottemoller said. A resolution to allocate $10 million toward land acquisition has been in limbo in the board’s Transportation and Finance and Audit committees since April, and has not been brought to the floor for a vote. Although the Randall Road plan has been

See EXPANSION, page A4

Photos by H. Rick Bamman – hbamman@shawmedia.com

TranSystems engineering consultants senior vice president Brian Fairwood discusses the Randall Road widening project at the McHenry County Board Committee of the Whole meeting Friday at the Administration Building in Woodstock.

McHenry County Board members listen to TranSystems engineering consultants senior vice president Brian Fairwood as he discusses the Randall Road widening project at a Committee of the Whole meeting Friday at the McHenry County Administration Building in Woodstock.


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Saturday, June 4, 2016

4

LOCAL NEWS

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Residents weigh in on expansion plan By SAMANTHA MOORE smoore@shawmedia.com

ALGONQUIN – With local, state and county officials talking about plans to widen Randall Road, McHenry County motorists who were visiting Randall Road businesses on Friday voiced their opinions on the topic. The proposal to widen Randall Road to six lanes from Harnish Drive in Algonquin to Ackman Road in Lake in the Hills comes with a price tag of $97 million. Although those in favor of the proposal hope widening the road will alleviate congestion, those against it find the project too costly. “Right now, I just don’t feel it’s a necessary expense,” Darlene Weglarz of Algonquin said. For some drivers, the congestion on Randall Road is a fact of life. The densely packed businesses will continue to attract a multitude of drivers re-

gardless of lane expansion, they said. Algonquin resident Luis Varela acknowledged the congestion, but said he could not justify the cost of the project. Other residents said the project’s budget could be more appropriately spent in other areas. For Lynne Quinn of Algonquin, the cost would be better Darlene justified in funding education Weglarz Algonquin resident rather than widening the road, she said. Because of the current congestion on Randall, many drivers resort to accessing stores through back roads. Others find themselves deterred from shopping, considering the congestion simply not worth

‘‘ Right now, I just don’t feel it’s a necessary expense.”

the hassle of traffic. “I avoid Randall Road at all costs,” Karyn Peterson of Lakewood said. Frequent drivers of Randall Road become aware of the heavily congested hours. In an effort to avoid frustration, local drivers said they try to refrain from traveling on Randall during periods of rush hour. “You don’t want to go out at 5 o’clock or 6 o’clock,” Ann Arnold of Sleepy Hollow said. Other drivers acknowledged the congestion on Randall Road as deserving of a lane expansion. Whether it’s daily commutes or grocery shopping, some view the traffic as evidence supporting the need for an expansion project. Although unsure whether the project and its expense most efficiently solves the problem, Huntley resident Robert Gallagher believes Randall Road needs to be widened. “It’s definitely a necessity,” he said.

Voice your opinion

LOCAL DEATHS

• EXPANSION

OBITUARIES ON PAGE A14

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Bernice E. DiMarco 87, Beloit, Wisconsin Elizabeth J. “Betty” Mills 88, Cary Helen Wylupek 93, Wauconda

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Continued from page A3

tion of board members wants the project to be scuttled altogether, questioning its cost, its necessity, or both. Plans call for the project to be taken down in two phases. The first would widen Randall Road to six lanes from Harnish Drive in Algonquin north to Polaris Drive in Lake in the Hills, and would improve its intersection with Algonquin Road by adding two more turn lanes and eliminating some entry points. The second phase would widen Randall Road to six Joe lanes from Polaris Drive Gottemoller north to Ackman Road. The $65.7 million price tag for the first phase could be lessened by $10.6 million through federal funds aimed at improving air quality and reducing traffic congestion, which improving the intersection would do, said Brian Fairwood, principal for TranSystems, the Schaumburg firm hired by the County Board to design the project. The Randall/Algonquin intersection has no dedicated right turn lane from northbound Randall Road onto eastbound Algonquin and only one left turn lane on Randall Road in either direction, while intersections to the north and south on Randall Road have more, which Fairwood said

has created a bottleneck. The current design plan of three turn lanes from Algonquin onto Randall, two turn lanes from Randall onto Algonquin and a dedicated right turn lane for all directions will cut wait times in half at the intersection, he said. It also will cut average Randall Road travel time on that stretch from 5.3 minutes to 2.7 minutes, he said. Local officials again John Schmitt made their case to the County Board that the project is necessary to relieve congestion in a business corridor that generates $2.7 million in sales tax revenue a year for county government and $9.5 million a year Paul for Algonquin and Lake in Mulcahy the Hills. Algonquin Village President John Schmitt called the impasse and what he called a lack of planning for the future “disheartening.” He said Algonquin residents take side roads because of the congestion, and only take Randall Road if they’re traveling out of the area. “Without [the project], McHenry Coun-

Although upgrading to six lanes would make businesses on Randall Road more readily accessible, the project’s two-phase construction deters some residents from its promises. Phase one alone, which would stretch from Harnish Drive to Polaris Drive, is estimated to require Robert two years of conGallagher struction before its completion. Huntley Adding a conresident struction zone and equipment makes other drivers wary of clogging the already-congested road. Weglarz is concerned the project might add further danger to Randall Road. “Right now, I feel that expanding it would be more of an accident zone,” Weglarz said.

‘‘ It’s definitely a necessity.”

ty will never reach its potential. The planning has been done, and has to be executed for the communities, the region and this county,” Schmitt said. Lake in the Hills Village President Paul Mulcahy called the current plan “a plan that will work,” and expressed “a great deal of frustration” with the impasse and second thoughts after years of work. “This is a solution that works. To quibble about what may or may not be in the plan when this one works is stalling. It’s wasting everyone’s time,” Mulcahy said. The local governments were joined by speakers from the McHenry County Council of Governments and the McHenry County Economic Development Corp., both of which also support the project. Comments from some of the 17 County Board members who attended the workshop reflected the split. Robert Nowak, R-Lake in the Hills, drives the area frequently and supports the project. “I’d like to see this thing move forward and get this going. That’s my vote,” he said. But member Michael Rein, R-Woodstock, remained steadfast in his opposition in remarks read by Diane Evertsen, R-Harvard – Rein was ill and could not make the meeting. “As it is being presented now, I am 100 percent opposed to this project,” Rein wrote. Friday’s presentation will be given again to the Transportation Committee, where the resolution to buy right-of-way now sits, and to the Finance and Audit Committee, Gottemoller said.


WEATHER

5

A cold front will move through, mainly during the afternoon, bringing a line of showers and a few thunderstorms. Although the severe threat is low, gusty winds and brief heavy downpours are possible. Breezy and cooler conditions will move in Sunday. Temperatures through the middle of next week will remain at or below normal for this time of year.

TODAY

SUNDAY

78 57

73 58

TUESDAY

76 54

M. cloudy, more P. sunny, breezy, Mostly sunny, breezy humid; 50% t-storms cooler; 20% showers and pleasant

75/55

77/57

Rockford

76/58

78/57

TEMPERATURES High ............................................ 84° Low ............................................ 55° Normal high ................................ 76° Normal low ................................. 54° Record high ................... 95° in 1895 Record low .................... 37° in 1945 Peak wind .................. WSW at 7 mph PRECIPITATION 24 hours through 4 p.m. yest..... 0.00” Month to date .......................... 0.42” Normal month to date .............. 0.36” Year to date ........................... 14.06” Normal year to date ............... 13.52”

Dixon

DeKalb

78/57

78/57

Sandwich

Rock Falls

79/58

78/57

75/57

80/60

St. Charles

78/57

AIR QUALITY TODAY

79/58

74/60

Chicago

80/59

Orland Park 77/59 Hammond Joliet

77/58

75/61

79/59

Gary

78/60

Ottawa

79/59

Kankakee

76/59

NATIONAL WEATHER

FOX RIVER STAGES Fld

Prs

Chg

Station

Fld

Prs

Chg

Montgomery............ 13......11.61.......-0.09 New Munster, WI ..... 10........6.21.......-0.09 Nippersink Lake ....... --........4.12........none Waukesha ................. 6........2.89.......-0.01

WEATHER HISTORY

SUN AND MOON

High and low records were set on June 4, 1985. Williston, N.D., had a low of 31 that broke the record from 1910. Macon and Augusta, Ga., reached 100 degrees or higher.

Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset

POLLEN COUNT

MOON PHASES

Source: National Allergy Bureau

2145 South Eastwood Drive NEXT TO WOODSTOCK HARLEY-DAVIDSON ®

OVER 60 YEARS OF GREAT SERVICE… AND A GOOD DEAL MORE! HOURS: Mon-Thurs 9am-7pm Fri 9am-6pm • Sat 9am-5pm

Today 5:18 a.m. 8:26 p.m. 5:14 a.m. 7:55 p.m.

FRIDAY

83 67

83 66

P. sunny, warm, P. sunny, warm, humid; 30% t-storms humid; 30% t-storms

NATIONAL CITIES City

Today Hi Lo W

Atlanta 88 Baltimore 82 Boston 73 Buffalo 81 Charlotte 91 Chicago 80 Dallas 84 Denver 76 Houston 79 Kansas City 82 Las Vegas 109 Los Angeles 84 Louisville 76 Miami 89 Minneapolis 66 New Orleans 86 New York City 83 Seattle 83 Wash., DC 83

70 69 60 64 71 59 66 52 70 59 82 63 66 79 56 74 67 62 71

Sunday Hi Lo W

t 81 67 t pc 85 65 t pc 67 61 r pc 73 60 t t 83 67 t t 75 61 pc t 85 63 s s 81 55 s t 83 66 t pc 79 59 s s 109 78 s s 79 61 pc t 77 62 pc pc 88 80 t c 79 58 pc t 86 74 t pc 76 68 r s 90 61 s t 85 67 t

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

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

Algonquin.................. 3........1.66.......-0.02 Burlington, WI.......... 11........6.67.......-0.06 Fox Lake .................. --........4.16.......-0.05 McHenry.................... 4........1.41.......-0.04

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

Evanston

Aurora

La Salle

Station

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

79/58

Oak Park

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

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

Arlington Heights

79/58

78/57

Statistics through 4 p.m. yesterday

Waukegan

Elgin

Hampshire

THURSDAY

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

77/58

Crystal Lake

79/58

Mostly sunny and pleasant

Kenosha

McHenry

Belvidere 75/56

Freeport

77 57

Partly sunny, breezy and cooler

75/56

Harvard

WEDNESDAY

72 52

Lake Geneva

ALMANAC

UV INDEX

MONDAY

Sunday 5:18 a.m. 8:26 p.m. 6:06 a.m. 9:00 p.m.

New

First

Full

Last

Jun 4

Jun 12

Jun 20

Jun 27

Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Saturday, June 4, 2016

SEVEN-DAY FORECAST FOR MCHENRY COUNTY


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Saturday, June 4, 2016

|LOCAL NEWS

6 HUNTLEY

Ill. appellate court denies appeal of 1st-degree murder conviction By JORDYN REILAND

jreiland@shawmedia.com A former Huntley man convicted of killing his girlfriend in 2012 will remain in prison after his appeal was denied this week. A McHenry County jury found Robert Signorile guilty of the first-degree murder of Michelle Mathieu in 2013. He was sentenced by Judge Sharon Prather to 40 years in prison. Medical crews responded to the couple’s Huntley home in 2012, where they found the 52-year-old woman unconscious and face down in vomit. She died after languishing six days in a coma. Autopsy photos showed the woman was covered in bruises, and medical testimony revealed she had fractured ribs and spine and head trauma that ultimately killed her. The Illinois Second District Appellate Court affirmed the judgment of the circuit court of McHenry County on Thursday, citing that the defendant was not deprived of a fair trial nor did he receive ineffective legal counsel. Signorile argued he was denied a fair trial because of two erroneous comments

made by the prosecutor in the case, and he believed his attorney was ineffective because he failed to preserve objections to the prosecutor’s comments. Signorile said the state’s comments during closing statements lessened their burden of proof because they were telling the jury what they did not have to prove. The appellate court disagreed with the defendant and said prosecutors “discussed every element of the offense.” The prosecutor did not misstate the law or omit discussion of any necessary elements, according to the decision. Robert Signorile also arSignorile gued that prosecutors improperly invoked sympathy for the victim and disparaged the defendant. The appellate court said while they caution prosecutors against referencing a murder victim’s family members for improper purposes, they did not believe the state “dwelled on Michelle’s family members.” The court also said they did not condone the prosecutor’s erroneous com-

ments, and were perplexed as to why they made them given their overwhelming evidence, but the court did not believe those comments were “substantially prejudicial” to the defendant that they would affect the fairness of Signorile’s trial. Signorile argued that the result of his trial would have been different if his attorney had preserved objections to the prosecutor’s comments, but the court said he would be unable to show a “reasonable probability” that would be the case. Patrick Kenneally, the assistant state’s attorney who prosecuted the case, said he is pleased with the appellate court’s decision. “I am proud to have led the prosecution that put Michelle Mathieu’s longtime domestic abuser, and, ultimately, killer behind bars,” Kenneally said. “I am thrilled to see the Second District has affirmed the decision and pray that this final justice will bring Michelle’s family a lasting peace.” Signorile is in the custody of the Menard Correctional Facility. He is up for parole in March 2052.

CRYSTAL LAKE

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

Which recent major road ghghghghg? project best has served the area? ???day’s results as of XX p.m.: Friday’s results as of 9:30 p.m.:

xxxx How often do you eat dinner with xxx your family?

39%

Almost every day

33%

Every day

12% Never

8%

Once or twice a week

8%

Once or twice a month

We Help Make It Happen...

Change in cause of death leads to dismissal of man’s drug-induced homicide charges By JORDYN REILAND

jreiland@shawmedia.com WOODSTOCK – The state’s attorney’s office has dismissed charges against a 25-year-old West Chicago man accused of drug-induced homicide. Joshua M. Manthei, of the 300 block of West Blair Street, was arrested and charged in February with drug-induced homicide and unlawful delivery of a controlled substance in connection with the death of a 22-year-old Joshua M. Crystal Lake man. Manthei Prosecutors said Manthei sold an unknown amount of black tar heroin to Steven D. Brown, who was found unresponsive by his parents in their Crystal Lake residence in early February. Brown was taken to Centegra Hospital – Woodstock, where he died

shortly thereafter, police have said. Assistant State’s Attorney Michael Combs told the court Friday that further testing by the state’s pathologist led to a change in the cause of death, therefore the state could no longer charge Manthei with the alleged offenses. Ken and Maria Brown, Steven Brown’s parents, previously told the Northwest Herald that their son had struggled with addiction since he was a teenager. Maria Brown, Steven’s mother, said on Friday her family was told Steven her son’s previous overBrown doses may have contributed to his death in February and that he did not overdose that evening. She said her family did not know of Manthei until he was arrested, and they are not interested in someone being in jail for something he did not do.

“He is released because they can’t figure out what killed my son that night, and he should be released,” she said. “We’d rather have a period at the end of this journey rather than a question mark but that’s just the way it is.” She said those who have or are currently using drugs need to understand that you don’t have to overdose to die from drug use. Manthei was released Friday morning from the custody of the McHenry County Jail. Romas Mockaitis, Manthei’s attorney, said he believed prosecutors made the right decision because the evidence did not support the charges against his client. “Heroin overdoses in McHenry County happen way too often,” Mockaitis said. “The county needs to find a solution to heroin trafficking and use.” Mockaitis said his client feels relieved and vindicated after he was charged for something he didn’t do.

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NORTHWEST HERALD | Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Saturday, June 4, 2016


8

Photos by Sarah Nader – snader@shawmedia.com

Jazmin Lamas (left), 16, of Harvard and Denise Romo, 17, of Harvard take a selfie at Harvard Milk Days.

Celebrate 75th annual Harvard Milk Days this weekend • 9 to 11 a.m. – Antique tractor display • 6 p.m. – Talent Show, Entertainment • 10 a.m. – Milk Days brunch with emcee Tent Orion Samuelson, Milk Days festival grounds • 10 p.m. – Fireworks display Saturday, June 4 in the Entertainment Tent. Cost is $16. • 6:45 a.m. – Milk Run/Walk registration at Reservations required. Sunday, June 5 Jefferson School, one block east of Route 14 • 1 p.m. – 75th annual Milk Days Parade • 10 a.m. – Community Church Service, North (also the starting line) • 2 p.m. – Milk Days festival grounds open Entertainment Tent • 8 a.m. – Two-Mile Run & Walk and 10K • 3 to 6 p.m. – Midway Madness with • Noon – Milk Days festival grounds open Run, Jefferson School special pricing • Noon – Jr. Dairy Cattle Show • 9 a.m. – Kids’ Dash (50M and 100M), • 4 p.m. – Milk Drinking Contest, Entertain- • Noon to 3 p.m. – Antique tractor display high school track (registration at 8 a.m.) ment Tent. Registration at 3 p.m. • 10 p.m. – Fireworks display grand finale

LOCAL BRIEF Richmond issues boil order for village drinking water

RICHMOND – A boil order has been placed on the Village of Richmond, and is expected to last until Tuesday, Richmond Public Works Supervisor Bill Price said. The boil order was caused by a failure in a chemical feed pump for chlorine, which made the levels of chlorine drop below what the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency requires, he said.

Village President Pete Koenig said the water itself is not contaminated as of Friday afternoon, but there is no guarantee it will stay that way if chlorine levels are down. As a precaution, residents should boil all drinking water or purchase bottled water for drinking until the order is lifted. The village has started alternate methods of injecting chlorine in the system, Koenig said. – Hannah Prokop

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Harvard Milk Days celebrates its 75th anniversary this year with a theme of “Relive the Memories.” The festival grounds at Milky Way Park will be open June 2 to June 5, with an added day of festivities this year. Admission to the park grounds is free; parking is $5 daily or $12 four-day pass (advance sale only). For information, call 815-943-4614 or visit www.milkdays.com.

Following is a schedule of the festival events:

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NORTHWEST HERALD

Dundee Rt. 31 Rt. 25

Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Saturday, June 4, 2016

|LOCAL NEWS

Emilee Bush, 8, of Harvard rides the bumper cars Thursday at Harvard Milk Days at Milky Way Park. This year’s theme is “Relive the Memories.”

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Photo by Sarah Nader snader@shawmedia.com

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zzy, a 2-yearold lab mix, is distracted by the fish in the water while playing catch Friday in the lake at The Hollows Conservation Area in Crystal Lake. The Hollows features more than 6 miles of looped nature trails and three lakes.

LOCAL NEWS | Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

Gone fishin’

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Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Saturday, June 4, 2016

| LOCAL NEWS

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Marian Central Catholic High School Class of 2016 Photos by Sarah Nader • snader@shawmedia.com • For more photos, visit nwherald.com.

Marian Central graduate Alexandra Kaufmann receives her diploma during Marian Central Catholic High School’s graduation ceremony Friday in Woodstock.

Class info Class size: 158 Valedictorians: Hannah Gillespie and Cole Johnson

School motto/ mission statement: Nurturing faith, imparting knowledge, inspiring achievement

“ Quotable

The opportunities ahead call us to action. Don’t be lukewarm; don’t be indifferent; don’t be still. We cannot simply admire but must instead contribute. Contribute to the world around us using our talents, skills and the foundation that we’ve built at Marian Central.”

– Hannah Gillespie, co-valedictorian

LEFT: Marian Central friends hold hands before walking into the gym for commencement Friday. RIGHT: Graduate Danny Matousek, 18, of Crystal Lake waits in line with his classmates before graduating from Marian Central Catholic High School.


Photos by John Konstantaras for Shaw Media • For more photos, visit nwherald.com.

Quotable

I couldn’t be more proud of our class. Over the years we have made so many memories together and have grown so much. It is clear by all we have done within our clubs, sports teams, academics and organizations how much we love Johnsburg. We will always be proud that we get to say we grew up here.” – Samantha Wakitsch, class president

ABOVE: Anastasia Brown listens to a speaker during the commencement ceremony Friday in Johnsburg. Mikayla Andersen (left) plugs her ears as Alexander Anderson belts out a few notes during Johnsburg High School’s graduation Friday in Johnsburg.

Class info Class size: 159 Valedictorian: Lauren Battaglia School motto/ mission statement: “It’s a great day to be a Skyhawk!”

• Saturday, June 4, 2016

LEFT: Salutatorian Drew Johnson (right) shares his speech with Paige Zirkel (left) and Emma Johnson as they wish the Class of 2016 good luck Friday during Johnsburg High School’s graduation.

LOCAL NEWS | Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

Johnsburg High School Class of 2016

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Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Saturday, June 4, 2016

| LOCAL NEWS

12 MARENGO

Consent order to give residents source of safe drinking water By JORDYN REILAND

jreiland@shawmedia.com A consent order will provide residents near Marengo with a permanent source of safe drinking water after an investigation into groundwater contamination, Attorney General Lisa Madigan announced Friday. The order, entered with 300 West LLC and The Arnold Engineering Co., was filed in McHenry County Circuit Court this week, according to a news release. Those affected include homeowners whose private well water safety was compromised by groundwater contamination from the site at 300 N. West St. in Marengo. The Illinois Environmental Protection Agency tested water samples collected in 2013 that revealed cancer-causing agents in groundwater near the site. Madigan’s office filed a complaint as a result against 300 West LLC and The Arnold Engineering Co.,

alleging “substantial danger to the environment, public health and welfare, and water pollution.” The order will require the two companies to investigate and remediate possible soil and groundwater contamination. This will include submitting a plan to the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency on the proposed remediation plans, according to the release. The two companies agreed to extend, install and fund the city’s municipal water infrastructure to nearby residents. Those who elect to receive a hookup to the city public water will receive $2,400 for five years of water bill payments. The two companies also will pay more than $214,000 in civil penalties and reimbursements to the state, according to the release. “This consent order will provide a permanent source of safe drinking water to homeowners,” Madigan said in a release.

                                                                             

      



POLICE REPORTS Information in police reports is obtained from the McHenry County Sheriff’s Office and municipal police departments. Individuals listed in police reports who have been charged with a crime have not been proven guilty in court. Lakemoor • Zachary T. Winters, 23, 1803 Cassandra Lane, McHenry, was charged Monday, April 25, with reckless driving, speeding 35 mph or more and operating an uninsured vehicle. • John P. Weir, 50, 40 Gray Stone Lane, North Barrington, was charged Wednesday, April 27, with driving under the influence of alcohol, speeding, resisting an officer and illegal transportation of alcohol. • Jesus A. Vazquez, 18, 533 Long Beach, Lakemoor, was charged Thursday, April 28, with driving while using a cellphone, possession of marijuana 30 grams and under and possession of drug paraphernalia. • John H. White, 49, 2507 Holiday Hills, was charged Saturday, April 30, with aggravated assault. • Jose A. Valdes, 20, 111 Cordova Road, Carpentersville, was charged Saturday, May 7, with speeding, suspended or revoked driv-

er’s license, illegal transportation of alcohol, possession of marijuana 30 grams and under and possession of drug paraphernalia. Harvard • On May 1, a Harvard resident reported an unknown person damaged a row of mailboxes sometime the previous night in the 400 block of Andrea Court. • Herman C. Hall, 54, 108 W. Brink St., Apt. 4, Harvard, was charged Friday, May 13, with driving under the influence of alcohol, no valid registration, improper lane use, failure to signal, no valid driver’s license, operating an uninsured vehicle and illegal transportation of alcohol. • Ronald J. Elser, 45, 200 E. Diggins St., was arrested Saturday, May 14, on a warrant citing failure to appear in court on a previous domestic batter charge. • Robert J. Crosby, 32, 1031 Minns Drive, Apt. 4, Machesney Park, was charged Sunday, May 15, with driving under the influence of alcohol and improper lane usage. • Brenda R. Lawrence, 36, 716 E. Diggins St., Harvard, was charged Monday, May 16, with domestic battery and endangering the life of a child.

                           

       

  


WOODSTOCK

LOCAL BRIEFS

“We’re excited to be in Woodstock, so we hope it’ll take off there.”

By HANNAH PROKOP

hprokop@shawmedia.com

Julia Muell

ShopFresh Market owner Woodstock, Marengo and Huntley became Piggly Wiggly stores. The Huntley store, 10442 Route 47, opened in 2006 and closed in spring 2015, said Margo Griffin, business development coordinator for Huntley. ShopFresh Market will be open 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. seven days a week, Muell said, adding the store has something for everybody. “We look forward to being there and meeting a lot of the folks in the community,” Muell said. Her family also operates Val’s Fresh Market in Fox Lake, she said.

June 2nd, 3rd, 4th & 5th

“Relive the Memories!”

For more information, contact 815.943.4614 or email at info@milkdays.com Also look us up on our website at www.milkdays.com and on Facebook/Harvard Milk Days Twitter@HvdMilkdays and Instagram HvdMilkdays

6 pm 10 pm

Antique Tractor Display Milk Drinking Contest Entertainment Tent - (registration 3 pm) Talent Show Entertainment Tent Fireworks Display

The 32nd Annual America’s Cardboard Cup Regatta Saturday June 18th Races at Crystal Lake Main Beach

Sunday, June 5th 10 am 12 pm

12 pm 7:30 10 pm

Community Church Service Entertainment Tent Milk Days Festival Grounds Open Market Place/Food Court, Cow Chip Lotto, Carnival, Concessions, Petting Zoo & Chain Saw Carving Jr. Dairy Cattle Show Antique Tractor Display - until 3 pm “New Odyssey” Entertainment Tent Fireworks Display - Grand Finale

NO GATE FEE TO ACCESS GROUNDS! Onsite parking is available - $5.00 Daily 4 Day Parking Pass $12.00 (advanced only)

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6:45 am Milk Run/Walk Registration Registration and starting line are at Jefferson School, just one Block East of Route 14 North 8 am Two-Mile Run & Walk & 10K Run Jefferson School 9 am Kid’s Dash (50M & 100M) High School Track (registration 8 am) 9-11 am Antique Tractor Display 10 am Milk Days Brunch (NEW LOCATION) Emcee Orion Samuelson Milk Days Grounds Entertainment Tent Reservation required. $16.00 1 pm 75th Annual Milk Days Parade 2 pm Milk Days Festival Grounds Open (Midway Madness 3-6 pm special pricing) Market Place/Food Court, Cow Chip Loto, Carnival, Concessions, Petting Zoo & Chain Saw Carving

3-7 pm 4 pm

The Environmental Defenders of McHenry County offers speakers for community education purposes through its Environmental Speakers’ Bureau. Community groups, schools, businesses and government offices may contact the organization with requests for a

The Captain James A. Lovell Federal Health Care Center Caregiver Support program offers a wide range of services for caregivers of eligible military veterans of all eras. Caregivers may be eligible for services if the veteran is unable to perform an activity of daily living or needs supervision or protection based on impairment or injury. Services may include skilled nursing, home health aides, medical equipment, home or vehicle modification, support groups, caregiving training, respite care and more. For information, visit www. caregiver.va.gov or call Pam Rosentreter at 224-610-3472. – Northwest Herald

There’s still time to build your boat!

Harvard Milk Days Saturday, June 4th

Environmental Defenders of McHenry Co. offering speakers

Various services available to caregivers for veterans

Gates Open at 9am Registration from 9am to 11.15am Races start at noon Cardboard available at The Park District Maintenance Garage opposite Main Beach, Crystal Lake Mon-Fri 8.30am-3pm

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• Saturday, June 4, 2016

WOODSTOCK – ShopFresh Market has opened its doors in the former Wisted’s Supermarket location in Woodstock. Owner Julia Muell said the store quietly opened for about a week, and on Wednesday started putting out advertisements on its sales to draw in more traffic. A grand opening will be planned in coming weeks, she said. After some renovations, the building, 330 N. Eastwood Drive, is cleaner and brighter, Muell said. ShopFresh employs about 30 people, Muell said, and features sections including a deli, organic produce, butcher, bakery and liquor. “[There are] a lot of changes,” Muell said. “We’re excited to be in Woodstock, so we hope it’ll take off there.” The Wisted’s was open for about 10 years before it announced it was closing, without giving a reason why, in February. In 2013, Wisted’s supermarkets in

Senior Services Associates is seeking McHenry County residents – particularly those in Harvard, Hebron, Marengo and Woodstock – to volunteer for its transportation program. Volunteers drive their personal vehicles to transport homebound seniors ages 60 years and older to doctor visits, grocery shopping, pharmacy visits and banking or legal appointments. Volunteers set their preferred driving range and availability, receive excess automobile insurance and can choose to be reimbursed for gas mileage. Drivers must be 21 or older, have a valid driver’s license, carry valid auto insurance and consent to a background check. For information, call Anna Lightcap at 815-344-3555.

Defenders member to speak on topics including climate change, recycling and waste reduction, clean water, land conservation, policy planning, natural resources, farmland protection, local food production, native landscaping, wildlife habitat, restoration ecology, sustainability, solar energy, eco-friendly home ideas and more. For information, visit www.mcdef.org or call 815-338-0393.

LOCAL NEWS | Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

ShopFresh Market opens at Wisted’s site

Senior transportation program seeking volunteers


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Saturday, June 4, 2016

14

OBITUARIES

FUNERAL ARRANGEMENTS

BRIEF

Celebrity biographer Wendy Leigh dies in London at age 65

LONDON – The prolific celebrity biographer Wendy Leigh has died in London. She was 65. Her agent, Dan Strone, at Trident Media Group said Friday that she died in a fall from her riverside apartment in London on Sunday. He didn’t give any more details. She was known for her books about David Bowie, John F. Kennedy Jr., Arnold Schwarzenegger, Grace Kelly and other major figures. British media commentator

BERNICE E. DiMARCO

Born: July 5, 1928 in Elgin, IL Died: May 29, 2016; in Beloit, WI

Bernice E. DiMarco, 87, of Beloit, WI, died Sunday, May 29, 2016, in Sun Valley North, Beloit, WI. She was born July 5, 1928, in Elgin, IL, the daughter of Floyd and Elizabeth (McCauley) Dralle. Funeral services will be at 10:30 a.m. Monday, June 6, 2016, in the Daley Murphy Wisch & Associates Funeral Home and Crematorium, 2355 Cranston Road, Beloit, WI. Burial will be at 12:30 p.m. in St. Patrick Cemetery, 15012 St. Patrick Road, Woodstock, IL. Visitation will be from 9:30 a.m. until the time of service Monday in the funeral home.

Roy Greenslade said on his blog that Leigh had a popular touch. “She moved on from sex manuals to write a series of celebrity biographies, most of which antagonized her subjects. But they were always scrupulously researched and full of interesting psychological insights,” he said of Leigh. He described Leigh as a longtime friend and said she was intelligent, uninhibited, and perpetually smiling. – Wire report

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

while her husband was in the U. S. Army in Europe during WWII. In 1947, Helen and Walter moved to Pennsauken, NJ, where they raised two daughters. After Walter passed in 2005, Helen moved to Illinois to be closer to family. Helen was an amazing mother and grandmother. She took great pride in her home and in being a fantastic cook. She loved reading, ELIZABETH J. MILLS knitting, crocheting, and taking pen to paper to write long letters to friends and relatives Elizabeth J. “Betty” Mills, age 88, of Cary, in her beautiful handwriting. passed away June 3, 2016, at Good Shepherd Helen is survived by her daughters, Cheryl Hospital. (Craig) Hammond of Johnsburg and Patricia Arrangements are pending at the Kah(Michael) Mintzer of Plantation, FL; grandle-Moore Funeral Home. 847-639-3817 or children, Michelle (Jeffrey) Hammond-Godkahlemoore.com. dard of Lake Villa, Kimberly (Alan) Webb of Crawfordville, FL, Karen Lennes of Round Lake Beach, Mark (Jennifer) Hammond of Madison, WI, Justin (Margarita) Mintzer of HELEN WYLUPEK Austin, TX, and Julie Mintzer of Houston, TX; Born: Oct. 25, 1922; in Altoona, PA 11 great-grandchildren; and a brother, Walter Died: May 30, 2016; in Round Lake Beach (the late Elizabeth) Wydra of Turnersville, NJ. In addition to her parents, she was precedHelen Wylupek, age 93, ed in death by her husband, Walter Wylupek, of Wauconda, passed away on Feb. 13, 2005; and two brothers, Henry Monday, May 30, 2016, at and Alexander Wydra. Hillcrest Nursing Center in Visitation will be from 9 to 10:30 a.m. Round Lake Beach. She was born Oct. 25, 1922, Monday, June 6, 2016, at Justen Funeral in Altoona, PA, to Edward Home & Crematory, 3700 Charles J. Miller and Marcianna (Novacka) Wydra, immigrants Road, McHenry, IL, 60050, then leaving in from Poland who settled in the coal country procession for the 11 a.m. funeral Mass at St. of Eastern Pennsylvania. As a young woman, Patrick Catholic Church, 3500 W. Washingshe lived in Camden, NJ, and was forced to ton Street, McHenry. Interment will be in St. drop out of school during the Depression Mary’s Cemetery, McHenry. to work in cigar factories in Camden and For information, please call the funeral Philadelphia. On Nov. 14, 1942, she married home at 815-385-2400, or visit www.justWalter Wylupek at St. Joseph’s Polish Catho- enfh.com, where friends may leave an online lic Church in Camden. She continued working condolence message for her family.

Mary Kathleen Benz: The visitation will be from 4 to 8 p.m., with a 7 p.m. prayer service, Saturday, June 4, at Davenport Family Funeral Home and Crematory, 419 E. Terra Cotta Ave., Crystal Lake. For information, call the funeral home at 815459-3411. Bernice E. DiMarco: The visitation will be from 9:30 a.m. until the 10:30 a.m. funeral service Monday, June 6, at Daley-Murphy-Wisch & Associates Funeral Home and Crematorium, 2355 Cranston Road in Beloit, Wisconsin. Burial will follow at 12:30 p.m. in St. Patrick Cemetery, 15012 St. Patrick Road, Woodstock. Timothy A. Drummond: The visitation will be from 3 to 8 p.m. Sunday, June 5, at Bocken Funeral Home, 7042 Kennedy Ave., Hammond, Indiana. The funeral service will be at 11 a.m. Monday, June 6, at the funeral home. Burial will follow in Calumet Park Cemetery in Merrillville, Indiana. For information, call the funeral home at 219-844-1600. Gilbert “Gil” Farnham: The visitation will be from 11 a.m. until the 1 p.m. memorial service Saturday, June 4, at DeFiore-Jorgensen Funeral & Cremation Service, 10763 Dundee Road, Huntley. For information, call the funeral home at 847-515-8772. James “Jim” R. Freise: The celebration of life ceremony will be at 1 p.m. Saturday, June 25, at Norwegian Hollow Hideaway, E4533 Norwegian Hollow Road, Viroqua, Wisconsin. Marilynn H. Harper Pasco: The celebration of her life will be in August. For information, call Querhammer & Flagg Funeral Home at 815-459-1760. William Harrer: The visitation will be from 3 p.m. until the 6 p.m. memorial service Sunday, June 5, at Davenport Family Funeral Home, 419 E. Terra Cotta Ave. (Route 176), Crystal Lake. Interment will be private. For information, call the funeral home at 815-459-3411. Sue Ann Kerlin-Simons: The memorial services will be at 11 a.m. Saturday, June 11, at St. John’s Lutheran Church, 6821 Main St., Union. Luncheon to immediately follow. Dayton Liford: The funeral service will be at 9:30 a.m. Saturday, June 4, at Belvidere Funeral Home in Belvidere. Interment will be in McHenry County Memorial Park in Woodstock. William “Bill” Alan McKee: The visitation will be from 1 p.m. until the 3 p.m. celebration of life memorial service Saturday, June 4, at Evangelical Covenant Church, 220 E. Harrison St., Belvidere. Cremation rites will be accorded. Lillian J. Mergenthaler: The visitation will be from 9 a.m. until the 11 a.m. funeral service Saturday, June 11, at St. Paul’s United Church of Christ, 485 W. Woodstock St., Crystal Lake. Interment will be private. For

information, call Davenport Family Funeral Home and Crematory at 815-459-3411. Gary Noonan: The celebration of life will be at 1 p.m. Saturday, June 11, at the First Presbyterian Church, 7100 Harvard Hills Road, Harvard. Virginia M. Parkin: The memorial Mass celebration will be at 11 a.m. Saturday, Aug. 13, at St. Thomas the Apostle Catholic Church in Crystal Lake. A celebration of life picnic will follow at Veteran Acres Park in Crystal Lake. Octavia J. Reeves: The visitation will be from 10 a.m. until the 1:30 p.m. funeral blessing Saturday, June 4, at Justen Funeral Home & Crematory, 3700 Charles J. Miller Road, McHenry. Interment will be in St. Mary’s Cemetery in McHenry. For information, call the funeral home at 815-385-2400. John O. Renskers: The memorial service will be at 2 p.m. Saturday, June 4, at First United Methodist Church of Crystal Lake, 236 W. Crystal Lake Ave. For information, call Kahle-Moore Funeral Home at 847639-3817. Charles E. Schulten Sr.: The funeral service will be at 10 a.m. Saturday, June 4, in Windridge Cemetery, 7014 S. Rawson Bridge Road, Cary. Grant Hoffman Sension: The celebration of life service will be at 10:30 a.m. Saturday, June 25, at Faith Presbyterian Church, 2107 W. Lincoln Road, McHenry. For information, call Justen Funeral Home at 815-385-2400. Rhina V. Shemaitis: The visitation will be from 2 p.m. until the 5 p.m. memorial service Saturday, June 4, at Kahle-Moore Funeral Home, 403 Silver Lake Road, Cary. For information, call the funeral home at 847-639-3817. Wendell E. Townsend: The funeral service will be at 11 a.m. Saturday, June 4, Ehorn-Adams Funeral Home, 10011 Main St., Richmond. Interment will be in McHenry County Memorial Park Cemetery in Woodstock. For information, call the funeral home at 815-678-7311. Russell E. Tripp: The visitation will be from 9:30 a.m. until the 10 a.m. funeral service Saturday, June 4, at Lutheran Church of the Cross, 2025 S. Goebbert Road, Arlington Heights. Burial with honors will follow in Acacia Park Cemetery in Chicago. For information, call Wait-Ross-Allanson Funeral & Cremation Services at 847-658-4232. Helen Wylupek: The visitation will be from 9 to 10:30 a.m. Monday, June 6, at Justen Funeral Home & Crematory, 3700 Charles J. Miller Road, McHenry, then leaving in procession for the 11 a.m. funeral Mass at St. Patrick Catholic Church, 3500 W. Washington St., McHenry. Interment will be in St. Mary’s Cemetery in McHenry. For information, call the funeral home at 815-385-2400.


NEIGHBORS

To submit news, visit NWHerald.com/Neighbors/connect

Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Saturday, June 4, 2016

Bull Valley

FLOWER TASTING – Bull Valley Garden Club member Mary Moltmann presented the program “Garnishing and Cooking with Edible Flowers” at the club’s May meeting. Pictured (from left) are Joy Kottra, Moltmann, Bev Ganschow, Carol Halma, Frankie Manson and Madi Braje.

COMMUNITY

CALENDAR June 4

• 6:45 a.m. to 10 p.m. – Harvard Milk Days, Milky Way Park, Lawrence Road, Harvard. Continues 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. June 5. Events include a marketplace, carnival, concessions, petting zoo, antique tractor display, entertainment, live music and fireworks. Free admission to park grounds. Parking: $5 daily. Information: 815-943-4614 or www.milkdays.com. • 8 to 11 a.m. – Community garage sale, Lions Park, 1170 Silver Lake Road, Cary. Outdoor sale hosted by the Cary Park District. Spaces for sellers cost $9 for residents, $14 for nonresidents. To reserve a spot, visit the Community Center, 255 Briargate Road. Information: 847639-6100 or www.carypark.com. • 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. – Barnstormer Days, Galt Airport, 5112 Greenwood Road, Wonder Lake. Featuring vintage aircraft, cars and motorcycles on display, flight simulators, games, live music by Bill’s Little Big Band and bi-plane rides from Gypsy Air Tours. Free admission. Pancake breakfast served from 8 to 11 a.m., $7 adults, $5 ages 12 and younger. Information: 815-648-2433 or www.barnstormerdays.com. • 8:30 a.m. to noon – EAA Chapter 790 Young Eagle Flights for kids, Lake in the Hills Airport, 8407 Pyott Road, Lake in the Hills. Free airplane rides for ages 8 to 17 years. Parents must fill out registration forms. Information: 847-639-6310 or www.eaa.org.

15

• 9 a.m. – Deputy Maness Memorial Ride, Woodstock Harley-Davidson, 2235 S. Eastwood Drive, Woodstock. Registration at 9 a.m., escorted ride at 10:30 a.m. Includes raffles, vendors and live music. Cost: $20 a rider, $30 rider/passenger. Proceeds benefit the family of McHenry County Sheriff’s Deputy Dwight Maness. Information: www.woodstockharley-dav.com. • 9 to 10 a.m. – Family Fun Hike, Ryder’s Woods, 750 Kimball Ave., Woodstock. Hosted by The Land Conservancy of McHenry County. Learn about natural wonders found in a 23acre woodland. Trails are unpaved, but level. Free. Information: 815-337-9502 or www. conservemc.org. • 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. – Cary-Grove Food Pantry food and cash donations collection, at the entrances of Jewel-Osco, 800 Route 14, Fox River Grove. Firefighters from the Fox River Grove Fire Protection district will accept donations of nonperishable food and cash to benefit the food pantry. Information: 847-516-3390. • 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. and 1:30 to 4:30 p.m. – Used book and media sale, Johnsburg Public Library, 3000 N. Johnsburg Road, Johnsburg. Sale area will be closed from 1 to 1:30 p.m. to set up for the $2 a bag sale. Information: 815344-0077 or www.johnsburglibrary.org. • 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. – Outdoor flea market, St. Paul’s United Church of Christ, 485 Woodstock St., Crystal Lake. Church members will have booths in the field next to the church. Information: 815-459-5096 or www. stpaulsucccl.org. • 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. – Rummage sale, Light House Church, 2742 Barney Court, McHenry. Gently used items will be available from more than 20 families. Information: 815-344-2205.

GET LISTED! Do you want your club or organization event listed in our Community Calendar? Visit PlanitNorthwest.com and select Add Event. Your submission will appear weekly in the Northwest Herald and online. For information, call Barb Grant at 815-526-4523. • 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. – Hosta Sale & Bolivian Arts & Crafts Fundraiser, Rich’s Foxwillow Pines Nursery, 11618 McConnell Road, Woodstock. Hundreds of varieties of hostas available for $5 and up. All proceeds benefit Heifer International. Sale of Bolivian handicrafts benefits Mano a Mano International Partners. Schedule: 10 a.m. Heifer International’s tribute to the late Margaret Eyre; 10 a.m. to noon hosta leaf identification; 12:30 p.m. “Hosta Highlights and Fundamentals: Care, Fertilizing, Propagation and Maintenance of Hostas.” Information: 815-338-7442 or www.richsfoxwillowpines.com. • 9:15 to 10 a.m. – Hike the Fen with the Algonquin Library, Barbara Key Park, 1500 Jefferson St. (off Pyott Road), Lake in the Hills. Celebrate National Trails Day with a guided hike through the Lake in the Hills fen. Rain or shine. No strollers. Hot dog lunch served after the hike. Free. Registration required. Information: 847-458-3144, or virginia.donahue@aapld.org. • 9:15 a.m. to 1 p.m. – Book sale, Huntley Area Public Library, 11000 Ruth Road, Huntley. Continues 12:30 to 4 p.m. June 5. Hosted by Huntley Area Public Library Friends Foundation

to support library services. Sunday is $5 bag sale day. Information: 847-669-5386 or www. huntleylibrary.org. • 10 a.m. to noon – DAR genealogy workshop, Woodstock Public Library, 414 W. Judd St., Woodstock. Genealogists from the Kishwaukee Trail Chapter Daughters of the American Revolution will help prospective members with applications. Members must be descended from the patriots who assisted in the Revolutionary War. Registration required. Information: 815-527-5049 or marciaflanagan@gmail.com. • Noon to 10 p.m. – Gilberts Community Days 2016, Towne Square Park, 195 Jackson St., Gilberts. Continues noon to 6 p.m. June 5. Includes bands, food, rides, petting zoo and car show. Free admission. Information: 847-4282861 or www.gilbertscommunitydays.com. • 1 to 4 p.m. – Spring plant swap, Johnsburg Public Library parking lot, 3000 N. Johnsburg Road, Johnsburg. Trade perennials and other plants. Donated plants should be labeled with their names (if possible) and growing conditions. Remove any weeds, and make note of invasive species. Free. Information: 815-3440077 or www.johnsburglibrary.org. • 6 to 10:30 p.m. – Characters of Character benefit, Raymond’s Bowl and Entertainment Center, 3960 N. Johnsburg Road, Johnsburg. Attendees bowl three games and get bowling shoe rental, a food ticket and a goody bag for $25. Proceeds benefit Characters of Character, a McHenry-based nonprofit that helps teach children positive character traits. Information: www.charactersofcharacter.org. Continued on page 16


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Saturday, June 4, 2016

| NEIGHBORS

16 BIRTHDAY CLUB

Callan Moffat

Age: 3 Birth date: June 7, 2013 Parents: Cory and Sabrina Moffat Libertyville

• Continued from page 15

Dani Creighton

Age: 4 Birth date: June 5, 2012 Parents: Bill and Courtney Creighton Woodstock

Gianna Conone

Age: 6 Birth date: June 5, 2010 Parents: Jessica and Johnny Conone South Elgin

Area Public Library, 11000 Ruth Road, Huntley. All writers – beginning through experienced – • 6 to 11 p.m. – Williams Street Festival, are invited to network and share their writing Williams Street, downtown Crystal Lake. in a friendly setting. Open to ages 15 and older. Featuring live music by Modern Day Romeos Information: 847-669-5386 or www.huntleyliand LAVA Rock, local food vendors and brary.org. Crystal Lake Brewery beer. Proceeds benefit • 6:30 p.m. – “William Leggee: Memories the Raue Center for the Arts. Free admission. of Living and Working in Huntley,” Cosman VIP fundraiser tickets: $40 includes access Cultural Center, 12015 Mill St., Huntley. The to Raue Center, two private bars, indoor Huntley Historical Society program will feature restrooms and snacks. Information: 815-356Mr. Leggee’s memories and stories. Free. 9212 or www.rauecenter.org. Information: 224-654-2070 or www.huntleyhis• 7 p.m. – Meat raffle, American Legion Post toricalsociety.org. 1231, 1101 W. Algonquin Road, Lake in the Hills. • 7 to 8 p.m. – Chicago Series, Wauconda Featuring steaks, chops, roasts, kebabs, burgers, Area Library, 801 N. Main St., Wauconda. Author ribs, bacon and more. Multiple winners for each June 6 Gayle Soucek will present “Mr. Selfridge in the raffle. Meats provided by Butcher on the Block. Windy City: Marshall Field’s and the Making of • 9 a.m. to noon – “Create a Tile,” WoodInformation: 847-658-2010. a Merchant Prince.” Free. Information: www. stock Public Library, 414 W. Judd St., Woodstock. All ages invited to paint a tile celebrating wauclib.org. June 5 • 7 to 8 p.m. – “Heal Your Back Pain Natthe library’s 125th anniversary. The finished • 6 a.m. to noon – Wonder Lake Sportsurally,” Algonquin Area Public Library, 2600 tiles will be placed in the library entrance. All man’s Club Carp Kill Classic, Shore Hills Harnish Drive, Algonquin. Presented by Chuck materials provided. Free. Information: www. Beach, south of Center Beach on East Lakeshore woodstockpubliclibrary.org. Schulte of Diamond Physical Therapy. Free. RegDrive, Wonder Lake. Two divisions, bowfishing • 9 a.m. to noon – Summer music camp, St. istration required. Information: 847-458-3144 or only and anything goes. One-, two- and threeJohn’s United Church of Christ, 17824 Jefferson www.aapld.org. man team categories. Register from 4:30 to 8 • 7 to 9 p.m. – Crystal Lake Camera Club St., Union. Open to children in second grade a.m. Entry fee: $20 adults, free for children age meeting, Home State Bank, 611 S. Main and older. Voice and instruments welcome. 15 and younger. Information: 815-790-7397. Continues through June 11 ending with a 4 p.m. St., Crystal Lake. Tom Snitzer will present • 6:30 a.m. – McHenry County Bicycle “Becoming a Photo Ninja with Water, Waterfalls, concert. Cost: $25 a child, $75 a family with Club Udder Century Ride, Donley’s Village more than three campers. Information: 815-923- Streams and Coastal Sunsets.” Free. InforHall Banquets, 8512 S. Union Road, Union. Bicy- 4203 or www.stjunion.org. mation: rowham40@sbcglobal.net or www. cle enthusiasts of all ages and experience levels crystallakecameraclub.org. • 1 to 3:30 p.m. – Take Charge of Your are invited to pedal along flat to rolling rural Heath – Live Well, Be Well workshop, routes of 32, 50, 62, 75 or 100 miles through McHenry Villa, 3516 Waukegan Road, McHenry. June 8 northern Illinois and southern Wisconsin. Rain • 9:30 a.m. to noon – “The Art of StorytellSix-week workshop for older adults hosted by or shine. Cost: $40, $10 children ages 6 to 12. Senior Services, Northeastern Illinois Agency on ing,” Woodstock Public Library, 414 W. Judd St., Information: www.mchenrybicycleclub.org or Aging and McHenry Villa. Free. Information: 815- Woodstock. Author and storyteller Joy Aavang udder@charter.net. will help attendees practice the art of storytell344-0246 or kreissig@mchenryvilla.com. • 9 a.m. to noon – Friends of Gateway ing. Free. Information: www.woodstockpublicli• 7:30 to 9 p.m. – Fox Valley Rocketeers Park, Gateway Nature Park, Heritage Lane, meeting, Woodstock North High School, 3000 brary.org. Harvard. Volunteers sought to help restore • 10 a.m. – “Worried About Your MemoRaffel Road, Woodstock. Local club of model the park. Information: 815-337-9502 or www. ry?”, Senior Services Associates, 3519 N. Richrocketry enthusiasts. Information: 815-337conservemc.org. mond Road, McHenry. Presented by Sue Sklar 9068 or www.foxvalleyrocketeers.org. • Noon to 4 p.m. – Ice Cream Social of from the Alzheimer’s Association of Greater 1858, Powers-Walker House in Glacial Park, June 7 Illinois. Free. Registration required. Information: Route 31 and Harts Road, Ringwood. McHenry • 9:30 a.m. – Elgin Genealogical Society 815-344-3555 or www.seniorservicesassoc.org. County Conservation District volunteers in meeting, Gail Borden Public Library, 270 N. • 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. – Friends of the Crystal period attire will recreate the feel of an old-fash- Grove Ave., Elgin. Maureen Brady, owner of Lake Library fundraiser, Culver’s, 501 Pinioned ice cream social. Free. Information: 815Bare Roots Genealogical Services, will present gree Road, Crystal Lake. A percentage of sales 479-5779 or www.mccdistrict.org. “Tapping the Power of Family Search.” Free. will benefit the library. Information: 815-459• Noon to 4 p.m. – Celebrate Lakewood, Information: www.elginroots.com. 1687 or www.focll.com. RedTail Golf Club, 7900 Redtail Drive, Lakewood. • 5 to 9 p.m. – Wonder Lake Lions Club Featuring food, drinks, music, games, moonspaghetti dinner, Isabel’s Family Restaurant, June 9 walk, face-painting, golf lessons, child safety 1110 N. Seminary Ave., Woodstock. Includes • 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. – Ladies Auxiliary seat inspections and more. Free. Information: soup, spaghetti with meat sauce, dinner roll, plant sale, VFW Post 4600, 3002 W. Route 815-459-3025 or www.village.lakewood.il.us. choice of beverage (soda, tea or coffee). Cost: 120, McHenry. Featuring shrubs, plants and • 1 to 4 p.m. – Summer Sunday, Colonel $10 adults, $7 children 10 and younger. trees and garden accessories. Proceeds will Palmer House, 660 E. Terra Cotta Road. Drop-in • 6 to 8 p.m. – HAPL Writers Group, Huntley benefit military veterans. Information: 815program for all ages. Features demonstrations, displays and house tours. Explore how Crystal Lake residents interacted socially in the early 1900s, from quilting to spelling bees, barn raising to boxed lunch socials. Free. Information: www.crystallakeparks.org. • 2 p.m. – Caregivers support group informational meeting, Community Church of Richmond, 5714 Broadway, Richmond. Family Alliance, a community service organization in Woodstock, is thinking about starting a group for anyone caring for an aging parent, spouse or child with special needs. Free. Information: 815678-6521 or www.familyallianceinc.org.

BIRTHDAY CLUB Any child, ages 1-7, can be featured in the Birthday Club. Submit a picture along with the child’s name, age, birth date and parents’ names and addresses. Include a phone number. Photos should be received no later than a month after the child’s birthday. ONLINE: NWHerald.com/forms/birthday EMAIL: neighbors@nwherald.com MAIL: Birthday Club, Northwest Herald, P.O. Box 250, Crystal Lake, IL 60039-0250

459-6254 or linlounels@gmail.com. • 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. – Rummage sale, St. John the Baptist Catholic Church, 2302 W. Church St., Johnsburg. Continues 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. June 10 and 9 a.m. to noon June 11. Half-price sale on Saturday. Information: 815-385-1477. • 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. – Rummage sale, First Church, 236 W. Crystal Lake Ave., Crystal Lake. Continues 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. June 10 and 9 a.m. to noon June 11. An all-season sale of multi-generational clothing, household goods, furniture, books and more. Sponsored by the United Methodist Women. Information: 815-459-0785 or www.firstchurchcl.org. • 5 to 7 p.m. – Open house, VFW Post 5915, 301 Lake Marian Road, Carpentersville. Military veterans invited to enjoy hot dogs and beer, and learn about the VFW. Information: www.facebook.com/vfwpost5915. • 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. – “The Nuts & Bolts of Dystopian Fiction,” Johnsburg Public Library, 3000 N. Johnsburg Road, Johnsburg. For ages 12 to 18. Heather Letto, author of the young adult trilogy “Ascension,” will present a dystopian fiction writing program. Free. Registration required. Information: 815-3440077 or www.johnsburglibrary.org. • 7 p.m. – Crystal Lake Area CROP Hunger Walk organizational meeting, Ridgefield-Crystal Lake Presbyterian Church, 8505 Church St., Ridgefield. New members welcome to discuss the Oct. 16 fundraiser to benefit the Crystal Lake Food Pantry and McHenry County PADS. Information: 815-459-5712. • 7 to 9 p.m. – McHenry County IL Genealogical Society meeting, The Pointe Outreach Center, 5650 Route 14, Crystal Lake. Sandra Trapp will present “Using the Newberry Library for Family History Research.” Free. Information: 815-687-0436 or www.mcigs.org. • 7 to 9 p.m. – FOCUS (Future of Crystal Lake Library Under Study) community engagement, Park Place, 406 W. Woodstock St., Crystal Lake. Residents invited to provide feedback about the library’s services and facility. Registration required. Information: www.clpl.org or 815-459-1687. • 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. – Common Ground lecture, First Congregational Church, 461 Pierson St., Crystal Lake. Jim Kenney, executive director of Common Ground, will present “Europe and Islam – Fears and Realities.” Cost: $10. Information: 815-459-6010 or www.cg.org. Continued on page 21


McHenry

Marengo

17

NEIGHBORS | Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com MEMORIAL DAY TRIBUTE – American Legion Post 192 member Lloyd “Bud” Millard, a veteran of World War II and the Korean War, places flags honoring military veterans at the Marengo Cemetery on Memorial Day.

Harvard

McHenry

HARVARD HISTORY – Alice Hayden (left) and Cheryl McCauley man the Harvard Historical Museum’s booth at the Harvard Milk Days open house May 14 at the Starline Factory. The booth featured a Harvard history trivia contest, and displayed the first Milk Day crown, dating from 1945. The crown is on permanent display at the museum, 308 Hart St. Museum hours are 1:30 to 4 p.m. Sundays, May through October.

Lake in the Hills

Positive character traits focus of camp for youth

GRADUATION CELEBRATION – Tree of Life Unitarian Universalist Congregation celebrated its high school graduates with a ceremony and reception May 15. Pictured (from left) are Jacob Goldberg, graduate of Woodstock North High School; and Emma Stettner and Giselle Relic, graduates of Prairie Ridge High School.

Characters of Character, a nonprofit organization that teaches children about positive character traits, will offer summer camps at Smiling Shamrock Art Studio, 9243 S. Route 31. Sessions will be from 9:30 a.m. to noon June 6-18, July 1123 and Aug. 1-13. Children ages 5 to 9 years old will learn about life skills, such as

being a friend, good health and good manners, through activities and art projects. The cost is $215 for each two-week morning session, $12 extra for an early drop-off at 8:30 a.m. To register, visit www.smilingshamrock.com/calendar. For information, call Peggy Callahan at 847-421-1616 or visit www.charactersofcharacter.org.

• Saturday, June 4, 2016

TECHNOLOGY SHOWCASE – State Rep. Barbara Wheeler visited the “TECH 2016: Students for the Information Age” showcase at the Capitol in Springfield to greet students from Valley View Elementary School. Wheeler also presented them with certificates of recognition at the event, during which they showed how they work collaboratively in their English language arts class by utilizing GAFE (Google Apps for Education). Pictured (from left) are fifth-grade teacher Danielle Jaeger; Wheeler; students Taylor Wickenkamp and Cooper Cohn; and Valley View Principal Amanda Cohn.


Marengo

McHenry

PHONES FOR SOLDIERS – Marengo Community High School Principal Angela Fink (from left), state Rep. Jack Franks and senior Hope LaSota are shown with items collected for the Cell Phones for Soldiers program. Franks visited the school April 29 to help with the collection of cell phones and cell phone accessories to support military service members.

GONE FISHIN’ – Andrew Plauck, Illinois Department of Natural Resources fishery biologist, shows fishing poles that now are available for checkout at the River East Public Library, 813 W. Route 120. The IDNR’s Access to Fishing program promotes fishing and recreational activities by providing the poles, hooks, bait, bobbers, hook removers and knot-tying guides. IDNR activity books, brochures, publications and other items also will be available at the library. For information, visit www.rivereastlibrary.org.

Johnsburg

McHenry

Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Saturday, June 4, 2016

| NEIGHBORS

18

LITERACY NIGHT – Julie Schoen (right), children’s librarian from the Johnsburg Public Library, was one of eight community members who were guest readers at St. John the Baptist Catholic School’s inaugural Literacy Night.

Woodstock

Crystal Lake

MCC to host seminar on Pope’s encyclical McHenry County College’s Sustainability Center will host the Rev. Brian J. Sauder, president of Faith in Place, for a discussion of Pope Francis’ encyclical on caring for the environment at 7 p.m. June 14 in the Luecht Conference Center, 8900 Route 14. The publication, “Laudato Si: On

PIE IN THE SKY – Zion Lutheran School elementary education teacher Aubrey Kuhns (left) and preschool teacher Angie Imlah dodged more than 60 whipped cream pies during the “Pie a Teacher” event at a recent fun night to raise money for the school.

Care for Our Common Home,” was released by the Pope one year ago. Representatives of local faith-based organizations will be available for discussion and questions after Sauder’s presentation. The event is free. For information, call 815-479-7765 or visit www. mchenry.edu/green.

Walk to benefit Helping Paws Animal Shelter Helping Paws Animal Shelter will host its 16th annual Paws in the Park Walk & Pet Fest from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. June 12 at Emricson Park, 900 W. South St. Dogs are welcome on the 1-mile walk. The Pet Fest will feature contests, games, pet-friendly shopping, pet blessings, raffles and more. There will be food and drinks

available to buy from Rosati’s Pizza of Woodstock and Scoops Dairy and Dogs. The cost is $35, $10 for each additional dog, which includes a T-shirt and goody bag. To register, visit www.helpingpaws.net/event/ paws-in-the-park-walk-pet-fest. For information, call 815-338-4400 or email michelle@helpingpaws.net.


Crystal Lake

Harvard

19

McHenry County

Land Conservancy seeks photo contest participants awards will be $100, $75 and $50 respectively. There also is a youth category, open to ages 16 and younger, that will award a $25 cash prize. The selected images will be shown at TLC’s 2016 fundraising event in September. Photographs will be posted on TLC’s website, and a catalog of the photos will be produced. For information, email Melissa Grycan at mgrycan@conservemc.org or visit www.aotlphotocontest.org.

Open to the Public Saturday June 11th 9 am - 12 noon

Fitness Health and Wellness Expo Sun City Huntley At Prairie Lodge 12920 Del Webb Boulevard Fun Walk: 8:00 am (1/2 - 4 mile) Expo: 9:00 - Noon Breakfast: 8:30 am*

For Walk or Expo Info Call: 847-515-7635 * For Fun Walk Participants Only SPONSORED BY:

Sun City Community Association of Huntley and Centegra Health System

Lake in the Hills Triathlon

Sunday, June 19, 2016

6:30 AM • Indian Trail Beach & Ken Carpenter Park This local event is great for beginners and elite athletes. The course consists of a 0.5 mile swim, 15.5 mile bike and a 4.0 mile run for a total distance of 20.0 miles. Registration is limited to 400.

Register at:

www.raceentry.com/race-reviews/lake-in-the-hills-triathlon

Interested in volunteering? Contact 847-960-7460 to help.

• Saturday, June 4, 2016

SALE PREP – The United Methodist Women of First Church – Crystal Lake, 236 W. Crystal Lake Ave., will host their annual rummage sale from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. June 9, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. June 10 and 9 a.m. to noon June 11. Pictured (back row, from left) are Pat Dunn, Colleen Blankenhorn and Marion Neiswander; (middle row) Marlys Goll, Cindy Ewert, Sharon Karch and Sandy Wallace; and (front row) Sue Maifield and Kathy Garis.

The Land Conservancy of McHenry County, a nonprofit organization, invites amateur photographers to participate in a photo contest designed to highlight the inspiring nature of its land preservation work. Each photographer will be matched with a property TLC preserves or manages, and he or she will have until July 31 to visit and photograph the site. There is a $10 application fee. First-, second- and third-place

NEIGHBORS | Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

FIRST COMMUNION – Trinity Evangelical Lutheran Church of Harvard celebrated 10 young members receiving their First Holy Communion. Pictured (back row, from left) are the Rev. Carol Gates, pastor; and Dave Pankonin, liturgist; and (front row) Carter Flores, Andrew Camp, Evan Martin, Ella Martin, Kendall Camp, Mateo Gonzalez, Jacob Edwards, Anthony Gonzalez, Jack Ellis and Connor Flores.


Crystal Lake

Richmond

VIKING STRONG – Crystal Lake Elementary District 47 administrators and Bernotas Middle School students presented an $8,210 check to the National Alliance on Mental Illness McHenry County, proceeds from the school’s inaugural Viking Strong 5K run. More than 400 students, staff, parents and community members participated in the May 1 event at Lippold Park to raise awareness of teen mental health and to provide education on suicide prevention and teen depression. Pictured (back row, from left) are Jeff Prickett, principal of Bernotas Middle School; Scott Campbell, NAMI co-president; Kathryn Ross, NAMI executive director; and Kathy Hinz, District 47 superintendent; and (front row) Bernotas seventh-grade 5K committee members Abby Paco, Julia Emery, Sara Heffernan and Maddy McCormick.

Cary

PARK FOUNDATION SCHOLARSHIPS – The Cary Park Foundation awarded $500 scholarships to four students during Cary-Grove High School’s Honors Night. Pictured (from left) are students Lindsay Bright, Jennifer Pilut, Kyle McAlpine and Jake Kraeger; and Park Foundation board member Mike Renner.

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SPRING CLEANUP – Richmond Garden Club members Vicki Skala (from left), Nora Bowgren and Naomi Peterson work on the club’s garden plot in town.

GOLF OUTINGS

WONDER LAKE OPEN GOLF OUTING, 10 a.m. June 10, Boone Creek Golf Course, 6912 Mason Hill Road, Bull Valley. Sponsored by the Wonder Lake Chamber of Commerce. Registration starts at 8:30 a.m. with a shotgun start at 10 a.m. Cost: $75 a golfer includes continental breakfast, 18 holes of golf, cart, range, lunch, dinner and awards. Registration and information: 815-728-0682 or www.wonderlake.org. FRIENDS OF McHENRY COUNTY COLLEGE FOUNDATION GOLF INVITATIONAL, 8 a.m. June 17, Whisper Creek Golf Course, 12840 Del Webb Blvd., Huntley. Fundraiser to provide financial support to MCC students. Shotgun start at 10 a.m. Cost: $300 a golfer includes brunch, 18 holes of golf, Nike player gift tent, driving range, putting green, appetizers, dinner buffet and awards presentation; $50 dinner only. Registration and information: Dane Walkington, 815-455-8556, dwalkington@mchenry. edu or www.mchenry.edu/supportmcc/golf.

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McHENRY COUNTY MEN’S AMATEUR GOLF TOURNAMENT, 10 a.m. June 24-25, McHenry Country Club, 820 N. John St., McHenry. A two-day, 36-hold stroke play event open to any male resident of McHenry County age 18 or older as of June 24. Cost: $125 a golfer. Entry deadline: June 19. Online registration only at: www.mchenrycountyam.com. POLICE BENEVOLENT ORGANIZATION & ALGONQUIN/LAKE IN THE HILLS FIREFIGHTERS GOLF OUTING, 15th annual, 10 a.m. July 8, Golf Club of Illinois, 1575 Edgewood Drive, Algonquin. Fundraiser for the Algonquin Police Benevolent Organization and the Algonquin/Lake in the Hills Firefighters Local 3985. Noon shotgun start. Cost: $100 a golfer includes 18 holes of golf, lunch, dinner, silent auction and 50/50 raffle with prizes. Registration and information: Bob Chapman 630-880-6600 or rchapman@alfpd.org; or Jason Burzynski, 847-658-4531 or jasonb@ algonquin.org.

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Woodstock

• Continued from page 16

Church to present DVD series on marriage Trinity Lutheran Church, 11008 N. Church St., will host a 12-week “date night” series for couples from 6:30 to 8 p.m. Fridays, starting June 17. The program will feature Mark Gungor’s “Laugh Your Way to a Better Marriage” DVD series. Child care will be available. For information, call 847-669-5780.

Cary

High school to offer youth soccer camp June 13-17 Cary-Grove High School, 2208 Three Oaks Road, will host its annual youth soccer camp June 13 through 17. The camp, open to students entering third through eighth grade in the fall, will be led by the school’s students and coaching staff. It will focus on skill improve-

ment for players at beginning, recreational and travel team levels. The cost is $45 in advance, $50 if registering the first day of camp. Registration is available at www. d155.org/cg under “athletics,” then “camps.” For information, call Mark Olson at 847-639-6535.

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Huntley

21

NEIGHBORS | Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT – Dawn Cook (left), president of the Woodstock Morning Rotary Club, presents a lifetime achievement award to Ron Steadman. Steadman, a charter member of the club, was honored for 23 years of perfect attendance and dedicated service.

• 9 a.m. to noon – Recycling drive, Harvard City Hall, 201 W. Diggins St., Harvard. Sponsored June 10 by the Environmental Defenders of McHenry • 9 a.m. – Bell System breakfast, Colonial County. Because of the costs to get some items Restaurant, 5689 Route 14, Crystal Lake. Bell properly disposed of, a donation will be requestSystem retirees and spouses welcome. Informa- ed for fluorescent bulbs, batteries, monitors or tion: 224-858-7584. televisions. Information: www.mcdef.org. • 11:30 a.m. – Summertime Luncheon, • 9 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. – Magnificat prayer Crystal Lake Senior Services, 110 W. Woodstock breakfast, D’Andrea Banquets & Conference St., Crystal Lake. Cost: $6. Registration required. Center, 4419 Route 14, Crystal Lake. Hosted Information: 815-356-7457 or msmeltzer@ by Magnificat McHenry Chapter, a ministry to seniorservicesassoc.org. Catholic women. Speaker will be Linda Couri, • 4 to 8 p.m. – Fish fry, American Legion Post a former Planned Parenthood counselor who 1231, 1101 W. Algonquin Road, Lake in the Hills. became an advocate for the pro-life movement. All you can eat. Cost: $10 adults, $9 seniors, Tickets: $20. Information: 815-893-4061 or $8 children 12 and younger, $10 shrimp dinner. www.magnificatmchenry.com. Information: 847-658-2010. • 9:30 a.m. – STAR Touring & Riding • 4:30 to 7:30 p.m. – Dinner with Abraham, Woodstock Chapter 193 meeting, Cycle Unity Spiritual Center of Woodstock, 225 W. Craft Yamaha, 1000 S. Eastwood Drive, WoodCalhoun St., Woodstock. The group focuses on stock. Motorcycle riding chapter. All bike brands the teachings of Abraham-Hicks on the art of are welcome. Information: www.woodstock193. allowing natural well-being. Includes meditation, com. a potluck dinner and 90-minute video of Abra• 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. – “Gone Farmin’: A Look ham-Hicks workshop talks. Free. Information: at Huntley’s Agricultural History,” Huntley 815-337-3534 or www.unitywoodstock.org. Area Public Library, 11000 Ruth Road, Huntley. • 6 p.m. – Relay for Life, Huntley Park DisLocal historian Jake Marino will display photos trict, 312015 Mill St., Huntley. Continues through and memorabilia dating from the 1870s through 6 a.m. June 11. Teams and individuals camp out the 1990s on Huntley’s rich farming history. and take turns walking or running around a track Free. Information: 847-669-5386 or www. or path to raise funds for the American Cancer huntleylibrary.org. Society. Information: Kaitlin Thompson at 630• 11:30 a.m. – Women’s Spring Luncheon, 879-9009 or www.relayforlife.org. First Presbyterian Church of Woodstock, 2018 • 6:30 to 8 p.m. – After Hours Movie Night, Route 47, Woodstock. Neta Jackson and Pam Algonquin Area Public Library Eastgate Branch, Sullivan Harvey, co-leaders of a weekly women’s 115 Eastgate Drive, Algonquin. Featuring “Rio,” Bible study, will present “Bearing Fruit That rated G. Free. Registration required. Information: Lasts.” Tickets: $25. Information: 815-338-2627 847-458-3139 or www.aapld.org. or www.fpcwoodstock.org. • 1 to 2:30 p.m. – Pet clinic, Tractor Supply June 11 • 8 a.m. – Woodstock Challenge Run and Company, 150 S. Kennedy Drive, Suite 8A, Pool Party, Woodstock Water Works Aquatic Carpentersville. A showcase of live animals and Center in Emricson Park, 1313 Kishwaukee Val- advice for raising a variety of animals, including domestic pets, as well as cattle, horses, rabbits ley Road, Woodstock. Featuring a 10K run, 5K and other livestock. The store also will host run/walk and 1-mile and half-mile kids/family community groups and activities, including pet run. A pool party is scheduled after the event. adoption. Information: 847-428-0834. Cost: $15, $25. Registration and information: • 1:30 to 3:30 p.m. – “Cooking with the 815-338-4363 or www.woodstockrecreationSun,” Lost Valley Visitor Center in Glacial Park, department.com. Route 31 and Harts Road, Ringwood. Families • 9 a.m. – McHenry Kiwanis Soap Box will discover how to harness the sun’s energy to Derby, Waukegan Road, downtown McHenry. cook food by making their own pizza box solar The parade and pre-race ceremony start at 9 cooker. Registration deadline: June 7. Free for a.m. The derby race for boys and girls ages 8 county residents, $5 nonresidents. Information: through 13 begins at 10 a.m. Information: 815815-479-5779 or www.mccdistrict.org. 385-3000 or www.mchenrysoapbox.com.


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Saturday, June 4, 2016

22

STATE

Videos offer look at violent police encounters By DON BABWIN and JASON KEYSER The Associated Press

CHICAGO – Authorities released hundreds of videos Friday that offer startling glimpses into violent encounters involving Chicago police, including the fatal shooting of a robbery suspect speeding toward them in a van and an incident when an officer slammed his nightstick against a man’s head at a party. The more than 300 video clips – along with audio recordings and police reports – are from 101 incidents investigated by the Independent Police Review Authority. The agency examines misconduct cases and any instance – justified or not – of an officer firing a gun in a manner that could injure someone. The release marks the start of a new city policy to make public all video in police shootings and other incidents within 60 days as part of an effort to restore public trust in its beleaguered police force. The video was captured by police dashcams and bodycams as well as surveillance cameras and bystanders recording on cellphones. Thirty of the 101 cases involve deaths, IPRA spokeswoman Mia Sissac said. One of the videos shows an officer

ILLINOIS ROUNDUP

1

News from across the state

Illinois State Museum preps for possible reopening

SPRINGFIELD – The Illinois State Museum is preparing to reopen after being closed for eight months because of the state’s ongoing budget troubles. But plans for a July 2 reopening are contingent on an upcoming vote by state lawmakers on an admission charge. The Springfield-based museum used to be free for everyone, but will now charge adults a $5 admission fee. Workers have been cleaning exhibits and reconfiguring the building’s front foyer to make it more spacious, said Chris Young, spokesman for the Illinois Department of Natural Resources, which oversees the museum. “We need more space to update displays and bring in new exhibits and contents so

van that barrels in reverse out of an electronics store. The driver, suspected of robbery, was killed. Other video shows officers struggling to subdue a shirtless, muscled man on a sidewalk even after shooting him twice. The man, accused of attacking bus passengers, was hit with a stun gun once on the scene and three more times while being transported in an ambulance, authorities said. Releasing records related to open investigations is nearly unprecedented in a city where the police department for decades had a reputation for secrecy. City Hall fought the release of video showing a white officer shooting black teenager Laquan McDonald 16 times in October 2014. A judge had to compel the city to make it public in November, and the images set off protests forcing steps AP photo toward more openness and sweeping In this April 30, 2012, video frame grab provided by the Independent Police Review Au- changes in the police department. thority, Chicago police fire shots at a vehicle. Police alleged three men were robbing an “These past few months, as the city electronics store by putting items into a stolen vehicle parked inside the store. Police has struggled with so many questions said at the time that officers surrounded the building to get the men to surrender, but about policing and about police aconce the suspects tried to drive off and the vehicle hit an officer, police fired shots. It is countability, it has been clear that we all agree that there’s a lack of trust and one of the more than 300 video clips released Friday by the IPRA. that increased transparency is essenslamming a woman face-first into the going to jail,” and slams the weapon tial to rebuilding that trust,” said Shahood of a car during a party in a West into the side of a man’s head so hard ron Fairley, head of the Independent Side neighborhood in July 2014. The his hat flies off. The city paid each of Police Review Authority. “Today repofficer, baton in hand, screams at the them $50,000 to settle a lawsuit. resents an important first step toward crowd: “Get out of the street or you’re Another shows officers firing at a that end.”

when people come back to the museum in July, they can see new things,” he said. “It’s been a lot of work looking into what the museum would look like.” Workers also have been updating the museum’s website and promoting it on social media, Young told the State Journal-Register. Gov. Bruce Rauner announced in September that the museum was closing as a cost-saving measure during the budget impasse.

2

Drew Peterson’s pension ended over murder-for-hire

helped convict him in the death of his third wife, Kathleen Savio. Peterson’s attorneys said his oldest son uses the pension money to support Peterson’s two children with his fourth wife, Stacy Peterson, who disappeared in 2007. The Chicago Sun-Times reported a final ruling from the pension board is pending. Peterson can appeal the board’s decision in civil court.

3

Murder charge filed in Lake Shore Drive death in Chicago

CHICAGO – Prosecutors in Chicago said murder charges have been filed in the BOLINGBROOK – A suburban death of a woman who was struck by a Chicago police pension board has revoked vehicle on Lake Shore Drive while fleeing the pension of former police officer Drew robbers. Peterson. The Cook County State’s Attorney’s The Bolingbrook Police Pension Board Office on Friday told the Chicago Tribune voted unanimously Wednesday to end 28-year-old Semaj Waters is charged with former Bolingbrook officer Peterson’s murder in the death of 32-year-old Pamela $79,000-a-year pension. The decision Johnson. Johnson died Sunday when a came a day after Peterson was convicted group of men started chasing her and her in a murder-for-hire case in southern boyfriend while they walked Sunday night. Illinois. He was found guilty of trying to Police said one of the men chasing the hire someone to kill the prosecutor who couple had a gun. Johnson was struck by

a white pickup truck when she fled across the busy road.

4

Police: Man set Iowa fires to kill someone, pay off debt

FORT MADISON, Iowa – Authorities said an Illinois man tried to set fires to kill someone in southeast Iowa in order to pay off a $300 debt. Court records said 38-year-old Timothy Brownlee of Macomb is charged in Lee County, Iowa, with two counts of attempted murder and arson and with other crimes. His attorney didn’t immediately return a call Friday from The Associated Press. Authorities said Brownlee is accused of trying to set a Fort Madison house ablaze on Jan. 1 and of successfully torching the house on Feb. 7. The occupants were not injured. Fort Madison police said Brownlee set the fires because he’d been asked by someone to whom he owed $300 to kill a resident at the house. Police have not reported any related arrests.

– Wire reports


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NATION & WORLD BRIEFS Republicans fall in line as reluctant Trump backers

deputy commander. Three other occupants of the 2½-ton troop JANESVILLE, Wis. – He’s finally carrier were found dead shortly after the Thursday morning got Paul Ryan’s endorsement, accident, and two more were but many officials in Donald found dead Thursday night. Trump’s new wave of supportThree survivors were disers remain reluctant backers at best. Leaders who have pledged charged from Fort Hood’s hospital on Friday, Uberti said at their backing still aren’t wholly satisfied with his temperament, a Friday evening briefing at the Central Texas Army post. Idenpolicies or readiness for the tities of the dead were being White House. withheld pending notification of As Trump works to unify the fractured GOP behind him, these their families, he said. Republicans, Ryan among them, are struggling to show the same $12M bonuses, police raid enthusiasm Trump has generat- revealed in FIFA turmoil GENEVA – Sepp Blatter’s $12 ed among rank-and-file consermillion bonus from the 2014 vatives across the nation. “He’s a work in progress,” said World Cup and yet another police raid for evidence of financial Oklahoma Rep. Tom Cole, who crimes at FIFA revealed the promised to support the GOP turmoil at soccer’s world body nominee several weeks ago. was far from over. The scale of Blatter’s pay deal Last 4 missing from Fort Hood accident found dead at the end of his 17-year presidency was finally confirmed by FORT HOOD, Texas – The last FIFA itself in a stunning opening four soldiers still missing after a truck carrying a dozen troops of its financial books Friday. The now-banned Blatter and was washed from a flooded two recently fired top officials – low-water cross at Fort Hood were found dead Friday, bringing secretary general Jerome Valcke the death toll from the accident and finance director Markus Kattner – awarded themselves to nine. raises, bonuses, and future The bodies were found golden handshakes totaling tens downstream from the Owl of millions of dollars. Creek Tactical Crossing where Some of the contracted the swift waters of the flooded payments appear to break Swiss creek swept the troop carrier law, lawyers for FIFA said. from the crossing, said Maj. – Wire reports Gen. John Uberti, Fort Hood

23

Trump’s personal attacks on judge spark concerns By MARK SHERMAN The Associated Press

WASHINGTON – The federal judge who’s hearing a Trump University lawsuit is “a hater of Donald Trump” and ought to be removed from the case. So says Donald Trump, in just one of the recent comments by the presumptive Republican presidential nominee that have legal experts worrying about his commitment to an independent judiciary and his views on presidential powers. In the midst of a heated presidential campaign, Trump has expressed unusually personal criticism – focusing on the judge’s Mexican heritage – although his lawyers have never actually sought to have the judge removed. His comments are bringing overwhelming disapproval from politicians and lawyers in his own Republican Party. On Friday, House Speaker Paul Ryan said of the statements about the judge: “It’s reasoning I don’t relate to; I completely disagree with the thinking behind that.” And conservative legal scholars said Trump’s statements reinforce their worries that he seems to think he can do whatever he wants and disregard rules and conventions that constrain other political candidates. “The concern is that he would act unbounded in the presidency, in a way that doesn’t follow the law,” said John McGinnis, a Northwestern University law professor. Criticism of the Supreme Court and the rest of the federal judiciary has been a regular feature of recent Republican presidential campaigns, including proposals to strip federal judges of lifetime tenure and reduce the budgets of liberal-leaning courts. Those ideas, though, did not single out judges or focus on race, ethnicity or religion. “Here it’s just about Trump,” said Case West-

AP photo

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump speaks Friday at a campaign rally at the Redding Municipal Airport in Redding, Calif. ern Reserve University law professor Jonathan Adler. More troubling, Adler said, is that the recent comments seem to fit a pattern of intemperate remarks Trump has made during the campaign. “He said he would give military officers unlawful orders and expect them to comply,” Adler said, referring to Trump’s claim that the military would follow his orders to torture suspected terrorists. Trump has since backed off on that. “He has repeatedly given indications he has no appreciation for the rule of law,” Adler said. Trump made his first reported comments about U.S. District Judge Gonzalo Curiel in February, linking Curiel’s Mexican heritage with what Trump described as the judge’s “tremendous hostility” over Trump’s plan to build a wall along the Mexican border. Trump has variously referred to Curiel as Spanish, Mexican and Hispanic and has called the judge “a hater of Donald Trump.” He told The Wall Street Journal that Curiel has “an absolute conflict of interest” because of his heritage as well as “an inherent conflict of interest” because Trump wants to build the border wall. Curiel is a native of Indiana whose parents emigrated from Mexico. He received un-

dergraduate and law degrees from Indiana University and served as a federal prosecutor and a judge in the California state judicial system before being nominated to the federal bench by President Barack Obama in 2011. Trump University is the target of two lawsuits in San Diego and one in New York that accuse the business of fleecing students with unfulfilled promises to teach secrets of success in real estate. Trump has maintained that customers were overwhelmingly satisfied. The school emerged as an issue in a February Republican presidential debate, after which Trump made his first comments about Curiel. The judge seemingly raised Trump’s ire anew last week when he ordered the release of documents that had been sealed. Trump’s campaign and private lawyers handling the lawsuits did not respond to requests for comment Friday. Trump’s contention that Curiel is biased against him because of the border plan is “ridiculous,” said Josh Blackman, a young conservative law professor at the South Texas College of Law in Houston. “If that’s the new standard for recusal, every judge in the federal judiciary who has some ethnicity or religion or race that affects a case has to recuse,” Blackman said.

Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Saturday, June 4, 2016

NATION&WORLD


UCLA killer turned violent despite foundation for success By AMANDA LEE MYERS and JUSTIN PRITCHARD The Associated Press

LOS ANGELES – With a wall’s worth of academic degrees from top universities and a new wife in his chosen country, Mainak Sarkar entered midlife with a foundation of success. Then his life began to unravel. This week he snapped, and for reasons that investigators are still trying to understand gunned down those he once held close. Authorities say Sarkar killed his estranged wife in a Minneapolis suburb then drove across half the country to Los Angeles and shot dead the UCLA professor who had helped him earn an engineering Ph.D. As panic began to spread on the bustling UCLA campus, he turned the gun on himself. He left behind devastated families and a shaken university community, a “kill list” that included the name of a second UCLA professor he felt had wronged him – and many unanswered questions. Chief among them is what led him to violence. Police also have not detailed when they believe Sarkar shot Ashley Hasti after apparently breaking into the Minnesota home she shared

“(Mainak Sarkar) was rather combative in his responses. He’d say, ‘I don’t know how to answer that’ or ‘I don’t know what that means.’ He was just very stubborn.” Jeff Eldredge

mechanical and aerospace engineering professor at UCLA with her father; whether he committed other crimes en route to California; or why he felt wronged by another professor on the “kill list” who was not on campus when Sarkar arrived with two semi-automatic pistols. What soon became clear was that Sarkar believed the professor he killed, William Klug, had stolen code from him. In March, Sarkar posted online that Klug – the man he had praised in his 2013 dissertation as a mentor – had “made me really sick.” Colleagues said only a deranged person could conclude someone of Klug’s character would defraud a student. Even before his death, Klug had been hailed as a caring father and gifted educator who inspired his students. Hundreds gathered to honor him at on-campus vigils. Klug’s outgoing personality contrasted with Sarkar’s introversion. Where Klug smiles in pictures,

Sarkar rarely does. “He was a little bit of a loner,” said Ajit Mal, an engineering professor who taught Sarkar in one of his earliest classes at UCLA, where he enrolled in 2006. As Klug’s career and family blossomed in his native Southern California, Sarkar struggled to finish his studies. While at UCLA, Sarkar was “a nice guy going through the same anxieties and struggles as anyone else,” recalled Jeff Eldredge, a mechanical and aerospace engineering professor who was a close friend of Klug’s and helped review and later approved Sarkar’s dissertation. Eldredge called Klug an exceptional person and teacher who had a gentle way giving feedback to students. Even so, Sarkar “didn’t take criticism well” when he submitted a dissertation that advisers returned, requesting signifi-

cant revisions. “He was rather combative in his responses,” Eldredge said. “He’d say, ‘I don’t know how to answer that’ or ‘I don’t know what that means.’ He was just very stubborn.” Sarkar submitted a new document that was barely sufficient for Klug to urge colleagues to grant him a Ph.D. in 2013. By then, Sarkar and Hasti had been married two years. Hasti’s grandmother, Jean Johnson, said Sarkar was reserved and polite but couldn’t handle Hasti teasing him. Once, Johnson said, Sarkar called her and asked how he should respond to remarks Hasti made that bothered him. Johnson described Sarkar as acting like a 2-year-old; Hasti got on the phone and said she had just been joking. “It was really hard to say ‘whoopee,’ ” Johnson recalled of the moment her beloved granddaughter shared that she would marry Sarkar. “I was dumbfounded. I said you’ve got to be kidding.” Sarkar is not featured much in Hasti’s Facebook pictures. When he is, he’s not smiling, even when she is, her hand on his shoulder. In his own sparse Facebook account, Sarkar posted just a few photos of his wife. In some of those, he does smile.

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By RAPHAEL SATTER and ANGELA CHARLTON The Associated Press

PARIS – The swollen Seine River kept rising Friday, spilling into Paris streets and forcing one landmark after another to shut down as it surged to its highest levels in nearly 35 years. Across the city, museums, parks and cemeteries shut down as the city braced for evacuations. The Seine was expected to peak in Paris early Saturday at about 16 feet, 3 inches above normal. Authorities shut the Louvre museum, the national library, the Orsay museum and the Grand Palais, Paris’ striking glass-andsteel-topped exhibition center. “We evaluate the situation for all the (cultural) buildings nearly hourby-hour,” said Culture Minister Audrey Azoulay, speaking to journalists outside the world-famous Louvre. “We don’t know yet the evolution of the level of the Seine River in Paris.” At the Louvre, home to Leonardo da Vinci’s “Mona Lisa,” curators were scrambling to move some 250,000 artworks from basement storage areas at risk of flooding to safer areas upstairs. The Louvre will stay closed through Tuesday; and the Orsay Museum, known for its impressionist art, closed through the weekend. Nearly a week of heavy rain has led to serious flooding across a swathe of Europe, leaving 16 people dead and others missing. Although the rain has tapered off in some areas, floodwaters still are climb-

ing and could take weeks to clear and authorities urged vigilance. Traffic in the French capital was snarled as flooding choked roads and several Paris railway stations shut down. Basements and apartments in the capital’s well-to-do 16th District began to flood Friday as the river crept higher, and authorities evacuated a campground in the Bois de Boulogne park on the western edge of the city. French authorities activated preliminary plans to transfer the French presidency and other sensitive sites to secure places in case of flooding. The SGDSN security agency said the National Assembly, or lower house of Parliament, and the Foreign Ministry were at greater risk. The Louvre said the museum had not taken such precautions in its modern history – since its 1993 renovation at the very least. Disappointed tourists were being turned away, but most were understanding. Elsewhere in Europe, authorities were counting the cost of the floods as they waded through muddy streets and waterlogged homes. German authorities said the body of a 65-year-old man was found in the town of Simbach am Inn and a 72-year-old man died of a heart attack after being rescued from a raging stream in the village of Triftern, bringing the country’s death toll from recent flooding to 11. France’s Interior Ministry also reported the death of a 74-year-old man who fell from his horse and drowned in a river in the Seine-et-Marne region east of Paris, the second death in France.

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• Saturday, June 4, 2016

Seine up to highest water level in 35 years

WORLD | Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

AP photo

Plastic boxes are placed between sculptures as artworks are packed to be moved from the exhibition hall Friday as visitors are turned away from the entrance of the Musee de Louvre, which is closed because of the unusually high water level of the Seine in Paris.

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Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Saturday, June 4, 2016

26

OPINIONS

NORTHWEST HERALD EDITORIAL BOARD:

Dan McCaleb

Kevin Lyons

Valerie Katzenstein

Jon Styf

John Sahly

THUMBS UP, THUMBS DOWN

Operation Recognition makes sense Thumbs up: To Operation Recognition, a 2007 Illinois law that allows veterans who served in active duty and did not complete high school to receive a diploma. The law allowed a Crystal Lake South diploma to be awarded posthumously to Crystal Lake resident and World War II veteran Paul Hayden, who died in 2006 at age 82. The diploma was accepted by Hayden’s widow, Marge, 91, and his four children. The honor holds special meaning for veterans and their families. “We all sat around and shed a couple of tears and wished my dad could be here in person,” son Tom Hayden said. “Better late than never.” We couldn’t agree more. Thumbs up: To the Huntley girls soccer and baseball teams, for the work they put in to still be playing in Saturday’s games as two of our final remaining high school sports teams. The girls soccer team defeated longtime nemesis Barrington, who had ousted them from the playoffs seven of the past nine seasons, to become the school’s first soccer team to reach the state finals. The baseball team, the area’s final remaining team in the playoffs, went from nine wins last season to this year’s 11 a.m. Saturday Huntley Sectional final against Grant. Thumbs up: To St. Mary’s Catholic School in Woodstock, which is celebrating its 100th anniversary this year. Earlier this week, a concert by Paul Vogrinc and the Arise Band was held as part of the yearlong celebration. The school, with about 210 students, serves pre-kindergarten through eighth-grade classes. Many students enrolled are the second, third, fourth and fifth generations of their family to attend the school, according to a Thursday story by Northwest Herald intern reporter Samantha Moore. Principal Brenda Baldassano told Moore that the propensity for families to return to St. Mary’s is a distinguishing quality of the school. Thumbs up: To State Rep. David McSweeney’s resolution directing the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency to study lead levels in Illinois drinking water being approved. It’s good practice to make sure we’re taking our water systems seriously, because we don’t want another Flint, Mich., situation here.

THE FIRST

AMENDMENT

ANOTHER VIEW

Demote outdated promotion rules Secretary of Defense Ashton Carter took office last year with a long list of reforms and not much time to undertake them. He has been successful with a few – notably, opening all combat positions to women – and now he needs to see through another profound change to Pentagon culture: relaxing the military’s strict rules on promotion. The military operates on an “up or out” principle: Officers are expected to be raised to the next grade on a schedule, and (in general) if they fall behind or are passed over for promotion, they may be allowed to stay in long enough to qualify for a pension but will eventually have to move to civilian life. There are some advantages to this: It provides career stability and a clear route for those aspiring to top command posts. It also keeps the middle ranks from becoming overcrowded, which can prevent young officers from getting ahead. Unfortunately, this system also

hampers unconventional career paths. And as the lines between civilian and military roles become harder to draw, the services need to become more flexible. The goal should be more military leaders with advanced degrees, fellowships at think tanks, Rhodes or Marshall scholarships, even experience in the private sector. Almost anything that improves someone’s technical knowledge should be regarded as a benefit. The military should also make it easier for officers and enlisted troops to take leave in times of family crisis. Carter delineated many of these benefits in his wide-ranging Force of the Future personnel plan, released last year. But he quickly ran into resistance in the military and in Congress. At a hearing in February, Sen. John McCain, chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, called the proposals “expensive fringe benefits” that the military could not afford.

In fact, the opposite is true: The Pentagon cannot afford not to make these changes. Unfortunately, their prospects took a sharp turn for the worse when Brad Carson, a former House member serving as the Pentagon’s point man on personnel matters, resigned in March. Carson had incurred the wrath of Congress by starting his job before the Senate confirmed him, creating an unnecessary distraction. Carter needs to show that Carson’s resignation is not a sign that the Pentagon is giving up on these changes to its personnel system. The defense secretary has already assured the heads of the service branches that they can shape new promotion rules to suit their needs. Undoubtedly, more persuasion will be necessary, but Carter must continue pressing the military to change – for its own good and for the good of the nation’s security.

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.

– Bloomberg View


IT’S YOUR WRITE

Dangerous and unacceptable

To the Editor: Residents of Heritage Woods of Huntley and Deer Path of Huntley must walk or ride their scooters about four blocks in the street on Regency Parkway to get to Route 47 and shopping areas. These people are disabled and have limited resources. Making them walk in the street is dangerous, and when the street is covered with snow, ice or rain, it’s impossible. Before issuing permits for these projects, the village should have insisted on a connecting sidewalk to Route 47. How did they think disabled people were going to get to the shopping on Route 47? Did they think they could fly? It’s inevitable that someone will be hurt, disabled or killed, resulting in a lawsuit against the village. It will be noted that the village spent considerable time and resources for new downtown sidewalks and bike paths, including the new proposed path from Jewel to WalMart, but ignored the critical need on Regency Parkway. In addition to the suffering, at least two consequences will affect all Hunt-

VIEWS Austin Berg But then, it all came tumbling down. Because of a law passed in 2011, Lisa’s teenage crime denied her the chance to apply for the state license she needed to become a registered nurse. “To be told after all we’ve been through that I wasn’t good enough … it was devastating,” she said. But she didn’t give up. Instead, she began fighting for Senate Bill 42, which would allow ex-offenders such as herself to apply for a license to work in the health care field after a post-conviction waiting period. After an ex-offender’s application is received, the state licensing board would still consider a number of factors in granting the license, such as the seriousness of the offense, overall criminal history, whether restitution was made to a victim and signs of rehabilitation. But Lisa has bona fides in spades. Amy Snyder is Lisa’s former caseworker, and frequent co-pilot on

ley residents. First, negative press will have a negative impact on the value of our homes and the ability to sell them. Second, the cost of the lawsuit, settlement monies and a rise in the village’s insurance premiums will be passed on to residents by increasing taxes and/or canceling future village projects. For humanitarian and practical reasons, the village should pay to have a sidewalk constructed without delay and recapture the cost when the property is developed. John Silva Huntley

Only themselves to blame

To the Editor: Congressional Republicans are steadfastly refusing to give the president’s Supreme Court nominee a Senate confirmation hearing until after a new president is chosen. What this means is that the court will be without a ninth justice for at least the next 12 months and demonstrates why Donald Trump and Ted Cruz are doing so well in the primaries – voters

her trips to Springfield. She’s proud of the example Lisa sets for others, showing it’s possible to break a cycle of crime and dependency with a positive attitude and a giving spirit. Lieutenant Shane Brandel of the Decatur Police Department is proud of Lisa’s tenacity. The two have been close since Brandel investigated the death of Lisa’s fiancé. “I applaud her for her efforts,” he said. “Most people would just give up.” Unfortunately, hopelessness is a major byproduct of Illinois’ criminal-justice system. Of the 30,000 people who leave Illinois prisons each year, nearly half return within three years. Studies show as many as 60 percent to 75 percent of former offenders are unemployed a year after their release. Thankfully, Lisa has been able to work as a nursing assistant for more than a decade. A job can make all the difference between a life of freedom and a life of crime. Illinois ex-offenders who are employed a year after release have a recidivism rate as low as 16 percent, according to research from the Safer Foundation. It’s concerning then

that Illinois has at least 118 professional and business licenses applicants that can or must be denied due to their criminal history. That’s why reforms such as SB 42 are so important. That’s why instead of leaving the state for greener pastures, Lisa stood and fought for more than just herself. “This isn’t just me,” Lisa said. “There are all types of productive careers that ex-offenders are prevented from pursuing. It’s time we stop beating the same drum. It’s not working, and the music is not pretty.” It’s been more than a year since SB 42 passed out of the Illinois Senate. On May 26, 2016, it passed the House. And as of June 1, the only hurdle that remains is the governor’s signature. To Lisa and Illinoisans like her, it’s more than a bill. In a state that’s short on opportunities, it’s reason to hope.

• Austin Berg is a writer for the Illinois Policy Institute. He wrote this column for the Illinois News Network, a project of the Institute. Austin can be reached at aberg@ illinoispolicy.org.

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

are sick and tired of the obstructionist policies of the reactionaries in the Senate. If Hillary Clinton is elected, Congressional reactionaries will have only themselves to blame. Victor Darst West Dundee

Why does Trump still have support?

To the Editor: If President Barack Obama had made even one of the outlandish statements that have come from Donald Trump, Republicans would have clamored for his

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

resignation. Why does Trump, despite all his insulting name-calling, his disregard for facts, and his frequent threats to those who disagree with him, still have their backing? Carole Elsner Crystal Lake

Wonder what manager will be paid

To the Editor: United Way, a non-profit organization, hired a new marketing manager. One wonders what she will be paid?

Bill McElman Lake In The Hills

• Saturday, June 4, 2016

It’s easy to get cynical about Illinois politics. Frustration is the norm in Springfield. Optimism is an emotional liability. But Lisa Creason doesn’t play by those rules. When it comes to politics in the Land of Lincoln, the single mom from Decatur just pulled off the biggest underdog story of 2016. She drove to Springfield nearly every day of legislative session for two years to fight for her family. And she won. Lisa’s story is one of redemption, starting with a crime she committed more than 20 years ago. She stole money from a Subway cash register when she was 19 to buy food for her newborn daughter. She spent one year in prison. A stray bullet killed her fiancé in 2002. She raised three kids on her own, started an anti-violence nonprofit and went to nursing school. On the day she graduated, she called her mother in tears. She thought she could finally move her children out of Section 8 housing, out of a dangerous neighborhood and off government assistance. She thought her hard work had finally paid off.

OPINION | Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

An Illinois mother’s will to win her right to work

27


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Saturday, June 4, 2016

28

BUSINESS

Hiring slows; many stop looking for work By CHRISTOPHER S. RUGABER and JOSH BOAK The Associated Press

WASHINGTON – U.S. hiring slowed to a near-standstill in May, sowing doubts about the economy’s health and complicating the Federal Reserve’s efforts to raise interest rates. While unemployment slid from 5 percent to 4.7 percent, the lowest since November 2007, the rate fell for a troubling reason: Nearly a half-million jobless Americans stopped looking for work and so were no longer counted as unemployed. Employers added just 38,000 jobs in May, the fewest in more than five years. Less-educated workers bore the brunt of the hiring slump, with a quarter-million high school dropouts losing their jobs in May. That has perpetuated a long-term trend toward a two-tiered job market, with college-educated adults more likely to be employed and earning steady raises. “The shockingly low payrolls gain in May provides further evidence that the economy is showing clear signs of slowing,” said Laura Rosner, an economist at BNP Paribas. The much-weaker-than-expected figure raised doubts that the Federal Reserve will increase short-term interest rates at its next meeting in mid-June or perhaps even at its subsequent meeting in July. Many analysts had expected an increase by July. On Wall Street, the Dow Jones industrial average closed down 32 points, for a

AP photo

Specialist Jorge Fernandez (left) works Friday with traders Daniel Trimble (center) and Mark Muller on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. Stocks are broadly lower in early trading, and bond prices are higher after the government reported a sharp slowdown in hiring last month. loss of 0.2 percent. The disappointing report spilled into the presidential race, with Donald Trump referring to it on Twitter as a “terrible jobs report” and a “bombshell.” The figures come just days after President Barack Obama touted his economic record in Elkhart, Indiana. Americans particularly worried about the economy have been more likely to support outsider candidates such as Trump and Democratic Sen. Bernie Sanders. Trump’s support has also come dis-

proportionately from adults without college degrees, and Friday’s report served as a stark reminder that less-educated Americans have continued to lose economic ground even as overall hiring and growth have picked up since the Great Recession. Essentially all of the 7 million jobs added over the past decade belong to workers with at least some college experience. The number of high school graduates with jobs is 3 million lower than 10 years ago.

“The high school jobs are gone and they’re not coming back,” said Anthony Carnevale, director of the Georgetown University Center on Education and Workforce. “It’s driven by a fundamental shift from an industrial economy to a post-industrial economy.” Craig Lloyd, 27, has mostly worked part-time jobs in restaurants in Wichita, Kansas, since graduating from high school 10 years ago. Some paid as little as minimum wage, while his most recent position as a sous-chef paid $12 an hour. Three months ago, he started his own business selling burritos out of a friend’s food truck on weekends. His wife is returning to school to get her degree, but he doesn’t plan to do so himself. “I’ve really put off getting a higher education, because of the debt that you can incur,” Lloyd said. The hiring stall could be temporary, economists noted. There have been hiring lulls before in the seven-year recovery. But job gains in March and April also were revised downward on Friday, leaving average monthly hiring at a pace of just 116,000 in the past three months. That’s sharply below last year’s average of nearly 230,000. The share of Americans who are working or searching for jobs – a figure known as the labor force participation rate – fell in May to 62.6 percent, near a four-decade low. Separately, Lael Brainard, a Fed board member and ally of Chair Janet Yellen, signaled Friday that the Fed should be in no hurry to act, especially after the bleak jobs report.

THE MARKETS

THE STOCKS Stock

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39.18 65 65.74 67.43 722.34 30.81 97.92 77.2 43.6 39.21 14.42 64.04 43.48 39.59 127.38 75.04 96.81 45.04 63.56

Change

-0.35 -0.09 -0.05 -0.01 -8.06 -0.86 +0.20 -0.15 +0.13 +0.37 -0.52 +0.94 +0.05 -0.41 +0.53 +1.42 -0.73 +0.32 -0.10

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18.66 53.16 34.96 88.37 118.47 13.04 29.94 29.6 131.74 152.89 107.21 64.64 75.13 38.05 85.3 24.41 121.35 82.94 51.79

Change

-0.23 +0.92 +0.24 -0.16 -0.46 -0.17 -0.11 -0.66 -0.67 -0.61 +0.09 -1.17 +0.60 +0.67 +0.52 -0.20 +0.18 -0.05 -0.69

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10.06 68.47 99.59 3.55 102.53 18.79 13.02 159.1 41.69 4.65 68.65 218.99 15.2 44.3 79.94 70.87 78.68 61.47 52.77

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-0.35 -0.33 -1.66 0 +0.53 -0.10 -0.42 -3.19 -0.48 -0.16 +0.33 +0.03 0 -0.87 -0.01 -0.08 -0.42 +0.06 -0.98

COMMODITIES

-31.50

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THINGS

WORTH TALKIN’ ABOUT SATURDAY, JUNE 4, 2016

LOS ANGELES – An actor who starred on the musical dramedy “Glee” pleaded not guilty to federal pornography charges Friday and had his Internet usage and travel severely restricted. U.S. Magistrate Judge Rozella A. Oliver ruled Mark Salling can be released after he posts $150,000 bail, including $100,000 of his own money to guarantee future court appearances. Salling, 33, answered several questions from the judge and entered the not guilty during his court appearance, which also resulted in a July trial date being set.

BUZZWORTHY

Fox apologizes for billboard with strangling from ‘X-Men’

AP photo

Customers eat Wednesday at pop-up restaurant Saved by the Max in Chicago. A vacant restaurant space in Chicago’s Wicker Park neighborhood has become a replica of The Max, the fictitious hangout from the TV sitcom “Saved by the Bell.”

Lines to the ‘Max’ for ‘Saved by the Bell’ pop-up restaurant CHICAGO – Fans of the old TV show “Saved by the Bell” are getting a chance to step back in time and feel like part of their favorite ’90s high school sitcom gang. But chances are they are eating better than the kids at Bayside High ever did. In a plan that class schemer Zack Morris would find genius, a vacant restaurant space in Chicago’s Wicker Park neighborhood has become Saved by the Max, a replica of The Max. The fictitious Southern California hangout was where students would hash things out over fries and milkshakes. “It’s so cool,” said Mallory Carl of Chicago, who was eating at a counter seat on the restaurant’s opening day Wednesday. “The whole atmosphere is just like it, especially that pink Max sign. That was the big iconic image for any time they shifted to a scene here.” Actor and magician Ed Alonzo, who played diner owner Max, also got in on the fun. After liking the project on Facebook, he was invited to appear during opening week at the pop-up diner. Dressed like his TV alter-ego, he surprised fans with magic tricks, just like on the series. “Unfortunately, I don’t think there’ll ever be like a ‘Saved by the Bell’ television special reunion. I think this is as close as I’ll get to it,” Alonzo said. “This is better than the original Max that we used to shoot the show on over at NBC.” The eatery will be open nightly through Aug. 31 for ticketed dinners. It also offers walk-in brunch and late night service. Tickets for the dinners have already sold out. A $35 ticket gets you an appetizer, entree and dessert. Local chef Brian Fisher curated a menu that pays homage to Zack, Slater, Screech and other characters from the show, but also is a step above regular diner food. Items include A.C. Sliders, Mac & Screech and a Preppy BLT. Unlike the TV diner, there is a cocktail menu.

NEW YORK – Twentieth Century Fox has apologized for a billboard that features Jennifer Lawrence’s “X-Men: Apocalypse” character Mystique being strangled. The billboard has been criticized by some who are offended by the imagery of Oscar Isaac’s Apocalypse choking Mystique. Actress and filmmaker Rose McGowan said there’s “a major problem when the men and women at 20th Century Fox think casual violence against women is a way to market a film.” In a statement, Fox said that in highlighting the villainy of Apocalypse, “we didn’t immediately realize the upsetting connotation of this image in print form.” The studio apologized and said it’s removing promotional materials with the image. Fox adds that it “would never condone violence against women.”

Ricky Martin visits Syrian refugees in Lebanon

MINNIEH, Lebanon – Ricky Martin, the world-renowned singer and UNICEF goodwill ambassador, said that the word “refugee” had lost its value but that the international community should “open its heart.” The 44-year-old Puerto Rican spoke during a visit to Lebanon with UNICEF to meet Syrian refugee children. “At this point what we want is to make sure children get their rights. Some children unfortunately are not going to school,” he said Thursday in an exclusive interview with The Associated Press in Minnieh, north Lebanon. News of the visit was released by UNICEF on Friday because of an embargo.

The singer met with Syrian children in Zahleh, in the Bekaa Valley on Wednesday, and in the Minnieh informal settlement, near the northern city of Tripoli, the following day. In Minnieh, the children performed “Maria,” the singer’s dance-along hit tune, and played a game of soccer with the star. During his visit, Martin also met teenagers attending lifeskills training, according to UNICEF. The star, whose charity and advocacy work has focused on combating child labor and human trafficking, said he was moved by a Syrian refugee from Homs he met in Lebanon’s Bekaa Valley. He said the 11-year-old refugee, named Batoul, is “working in agriculture, 12 hours a day. And she’s getting paid with water.” “This is happening to our kids. This is happening to our future generation,” he said.

Matt Damon tells MIT grads to face world’s problems

CAMBRIDGE, Mass. – Matt Damon spoke to Massachusetts Institute of Technology graduates Friday and passed on a little advice he got from former President Bill Clinton. The actor, who grew up near the MIT campus and played a mathematically gifted MIT janitor in “Good Will Hunting,” listed what he described as some of the world’s greatest problems, including income inequality, a corrupt banking system and a broken political system. Then he told graduates: “Turn toward the problems you see. You have to engage.” More than 1,000 undergraduates and almost 1,800 graduate students received their degrees at Friday’s ceremony. Damon, who dropped out of Harvard to pursue his acting career, said being keynote speaker was an honor he didn’t deserve.

TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS Actor Bruce Dern is 80. Singer-actress Michelle Phillips (The Mamas and The Papas) is 72. Bassist Danny Brown of The Fixx is 65. Singer El DeBarge is 55. Actor Scott Wolf is 48. Bassist Stefan Lessard of The Dave

Matthews Band is 42. Actor Russell Brand is 41. Actress Angelina Jolie is 41. Actor Theo Rossi (“Sons of Anarchy”) is 41. Bassist JoJo Garza of Los Lonely Boys is 36. Drummer Zac Farro (Paramore) is 26.

29 Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Saturday, June 4, 2016

‘GLEE’ STAR PLEADS NOT GUILTY IN CHILD PORN CASE


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Saturday, June 4, 2016

30

HOME&GARDEN

Cozy cover

Woven bedspreads, blankets are modern-day heirlooms

W

By SOLVEJ SCHOU • The Associated Press

hen I was a kid, I would weave warm and fuzzy miniature blankets for my Barbie dolls using a tiny loom. Maybe it’s no wonder, then, years later my husband and I covet decorative, traditionally woven bedspreads, including the one now on our bed – a Bates blue-and-white-fringed cotton “Spirit of America” by family-owned Maine Heritage Weavers. For decades, family-owned businesses across the country have produced bedspreads and coverlets created with mechanical looms at their own mills. Made out of natural cotton or wool, in muted hues, AP photos these bedspreads and blankets are modern-day ABOVE: This “Harding” woven wool and cotton blanket bed collection is sold by the family-owned company heirlooms passed down over generations. Pendleton. BELOW: This “Spirit of America” Bates bedspread in a home in Pasadena, Calif., was woven by Maine Heritage Weavers. •••

“It takes three to four weeks to make a bedspread, from getting the yarn, to weaving, finishing and washing,” said Bianca Cloutier, 29, vice president of sales and marketing for Maine Heritage Weavers. “We get emails to this day from couples who’ve had their Bates bedspread since the ’50s, when they got married. A woman told me, ‘My bedspread lasted longer than my marriage.’ ” First established in 1850, Bates Manufacturing Co. became one of the largest textile manufacturers in New England. After the company closed in 2000, Cloutier’s grandfather – former Bates Manufacturing president Fred Lebel – and her mother, Linda Cloutier, founded Maine Heritage Weavers in 2002, which obtained the Bates trademark and carries on that company’s tradition. The company’s $100 to $180 woven bedspreads and coverlets have oldschool names such as “Cape Cod,” featuring a ’70s coastal shell theme, and “Martha Washington’s Choice,” in colors including maroon and sage green. That popular intricate design – with loops of chenille cotton pulled upward from the fabric to make raised flower patterns – is based on a 1940s Bates design recreated from a bedspread George Washington chose

for his wife when they married. “The history behind the Martha Washington’s Choice is a big contributor to its quality and the uniqueness of the bedspread,” said Bianca Cloutier, who grew up using yarn cones from the looms for art projects and collages. Those wanting to learn how to weave a blanket or bedspread might connect with the Handweavers Guild of America, an organization of weavers, spinners, dyers, basket makers and other artists, Cloutier suggested. Also, search for online weaving communities and classes, and invest in a small and simple hand loom. “We also welcome people coming in and seeing the factories themselves,” observing the company’s mechanical looms, she said. “While a loom is a machine, it takes a craftsperson to use it,” added Bob Christnacht, vice president of global sales for the 153-year-old Portland, Oregon-based Pendleton, a blanket, bedding and clothing company that boasts six generations of family ownership. Pendleton, with woolen weaving mills in Oregon and Washington, offers classes on how to make blankets, and the company’s mill store in Portland sells more than 500 different types of Pendleton fabrics, plus

blanket binding and trim, Christnacht said. “Weaving is very visceral and emotional, and part of our human heritage,” Christnacht said. “Your bed, too, is a very personal place, and there’s an emotional and personal obligation to it.” Known for geometrically patterned wool “top of the bed” blankets, Pendleton mainly draws inspiration from nature and Native American culture. As Pendleton Woolen Mills, the company wove traditional blankets and robes for Native Americans in the early 1900s. To this day, in many Native American communities, Pendleton blankets are given as ceremonial gifts. One of the company’s oldest designs, the silver, white and rust patterned “Harding” blanket, has been around since 1923. That was the year President Warren G. Harding and his wife, Florence, attended a dedication ceremony for part of the old Oregon Trail, according to Pendleton. There, Native American chiefs presented the first lady with a Pendleton shawl. The Harding blanket ranges in price from $249 for a twin size to $399 for a king size. The “Silver Bark” blanket collection – also an early design – features arrow, star, diamond and water bug

motifs, and muted blue, white and silver colors inspired by aspen trees and sky. “People think a wool blanket will be warm, but it breathes more than a down comforter and regulates temperature,” Christnacht said. Bethanne Knudson co-founded North Carolina-based The Oriole Mill with her husband, Stephan Michelson, in 2007, making non-toxic woven coverlets, throws and ensembles, mainly out of Egyptian cotton. She said the venture came out of her background in fine arts, industrial textile production and hand weaving, and an interest in sustainability. “We take pride in producing that which doesn’t need to be replaced,” she said.


By DEAN FOSDICK The Associated Press

Time to Pl Plantt Y Your Vegetable Garden Visit Farmer Dennis for the largest selection in McHenry

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• Saturday, June 4, 2016

Gardening can be especially rewarding when some of the harvest is given to charity. Contributing justpicked fruits and vegetables not only alleviates hunger but helps develop healthier eating habits. Nearly 50 million Americans worry about where their next meal is coming from, said Roger Doiron, founding director of Kitchen Gardeners International. His organization encourages charitable garden ventures across the country by, among other things, offering small grants and funding tools through a program called SeedMoney. “Donated produce, whether it was grown in a home garden or public garden, has an important role to play in this,” Doiron said. “Many of these giving-garden projects, such as church gardens or community gardens, offer other societal benefits, such as safe community garden spaces and healthy forms of recreation.” Numerous public and private food-assistance groups have sprouted up, from the federal Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, In-

yards or gardens. What to give? Agencies recommend contributing the most common fruits and vegetables, many of which are among the easiest for children to grow at home or at school. That includes leaf lettuce, peas, carrots, tomatoes, onions and radishes, along with many fruits and herbs. The list may vary by location, so check with a local food bank to see what they can use. “We want our food bank to look like a store,” said Kathy McCabe, executive director of Good Cheer Food Bank & Thrift Stores near Langley, Washington. “We believe in choice. We let clients make the decisions about managing their budgets and diets.” Photo provided by Dean Fosdick via AP The Good Cheer Food Bank proThis photograph taken April 29 at The Good Cheer Food Bank near Langley, Washington, vides foodstuffs, hot soup and basic shows just-picked produce available to people living on the southern end of Whidbey Island. items such as toilet paper and soap A monthly point system is assigned to clients based on the number of people in their family. for people living on the southern porHealthier eating habits are encouraged by assigning low point values to fresh fruits and veg- tion of Whidbey Island. “You can’t measure need, which etables and a higher number of points to processed foods. is pretty consistent throughout the year,” McCabe said. fants and Children; to Feeding Amer- their surplus to local food agencies “The only thing we ask is that ica; Ample Harvest; and Plant a Row and soup kitchens, a significant they live on South Whidbey so we’re impact can be made on reducing for the Hungry, the latter a creation not competing with other food banks hunger,” according to the Plant a of the Garden Writers Association. on the island. But even then, we Row website, which estimates more “If every gardener plants one than 84 million U.S. households have don’t let them leave hungry.” extra row of vegetables and donates

31

HOME & GARDEN | Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

Charity begins in the garden: how to share your harvest


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Saturday, June 4, 2016

32

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 | Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

Rose is Rose

The Argyle Sweater

Frank & Ernest

• Saturday, June 4, 2016

Soup to Nutz

Crankshaft

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Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Saturday, June 4, 2016

| FUN & GAMES

34

Berries have nutritional value Dear Dr. K: You often list berries as one of the most nutritious foods. It’s berry season, and my wife wants to buy lots of them, but they’re a little expensive. So, I’d like to know what makes them so healthy. Call me a skeptic. Dear Reader: I know, I know, I keep repeating it’s the berries. But that’s because it’s true. And if the expense is an issue, consider the expensive foods you buy that definitely are unhealthy. I don’t need to list them – you know what they are. Berries are perhaps the easiest way to follow the fruit part of the “eat more fruit and vegetables” advice you hear all the time, including from me. Berries naturally come in bite-sized portions. They’re sweet but have a low calorie count, partly because they contain a lot of water. If you don’t need to watch your calories – yes, there are people who are born thin – you can “pig out” on them. (Just don’t sprinkle much sugar on them.) For one thing, berries contain a lot of fiber. A cup of raspberries contains 8 grams of fiber, which is more fiber than you’ll find in a serving of oatmeal. For another, berries contain vitamins (C and a little bit of E, because of the seeds). They also contain many less well-known but powerfully beneficial nutrients. One of the most important are substances called anthocyanins. These substances give berries their vivid red, blue and purplish colors. Anthocyanins are antioxidants, which keep oxygen ions and other unstable molecules from damaging DNA, interfering with cells’ energy-making machinery, stirring up inflammation in the body and having a variety of other harmful effects. Anthocyanins are concentrated in the skin of berries (as well as other fruits). In general, the more intense the color, the higher the anthocyanin content. So blue-

SUDOKU

ASK DOCTOR K Anthony L. Komaroff

berries and blackberries usually contain more anthocyanins than strawberries or raspberries. And wild berries have more antioxidants than their larger, paler, domesticated relations. Raspberries also contain a substance called ellagitannin, which imparts flavor and has antioxidant properties that add to the effects of anthocyanins. You may have heard antioxidants in pill form, such as certain vitamin supplements, generally have not been proven to benefit your health, as many had hoped they would. However, antioxidant-rich foods definitely are good for you. Berries are one important example. Be sure to wash berries right before eating them. That’s because berries can harbor viruses, bacteria and other pathogens that cause foodborne illnesses. For me, a good way to start a day is with a bowl of fresh, delicious berries, mixed with French vanilla yogurt and coffee creamer with amaretto flavor. That’s a major part of breakfast every weekend (and often weekdays) at our place. I had a patient who was a professional cook. She once chastised me for talking about how healthy certain foods were. “The point you should be emphasizing is that they are delicious, because they are. The fact that they’re also healthy is the icing on the cake.” She’s right. And berries are healthier than the icing on the cake. • 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


P L I O T G H O N E N T V A Y N G G O O R E D

A B A S E D

K N A V E R Y

M A G N E T O S

G R A S P

A B I E

G L O P

N K E N X E T E H J O O L H E N Q A S I A N S

A N G E L A

B A N Z A I

S W E E P E R S

H E Y L O V E R

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE E N O U G H H O O D

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

A T E M P O

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J I G S D T A E R W L E S T Y A F S S I U N S N L A T A V E N E A D

A N A T O M I C

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L M A O

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N T E R M E E P S A L E N U S G A R

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

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

K N E A D G O T O

F S H A R P

K A V A

of a bad trip 10 Signs of life 15 Paper pusher? 16 What some people do to vows 17 1998 Spike Lee film 18 Sunflowerlike flower 19 Royal name in ancient Egypt 20 The Rosetta Stone, for one 21 Engineer’s home, for short 22 “I’m not buying it” 24 Small vault 25 Caribbean port 28 Choices, choices 29 Pantheon member 30 They cast no votes

O U T S C O R E

1 Result

H A S T O R U N

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

Key employer in England? 34 Woodworker’s device, informally 37 Advance men? 38 “The Miseducation of ___ Hill” (1998 Grammywinning album) 39 Allen of Hollywood 40 Moscato bianco grape product 41 Ring 43 City across the border from Eilat 47 Max. 3,333,360, in Pac-Man 48 Game also called Five in a Row 50 What three of California’s four largest cities share 51 Common name for a chimp 32

T K O

Doing mean work? 56 Very loud 57 Light 58 Teacher’s implementation 59 Affected by wind or water, say 60 Massage 61 Upset 53

DOWN

1 Key

that’s oxymoronic at school? 2 At the original speed, musically 3 Entrap 4 “A Yank at ___” (Mickey Rooney film) 5 Substance 6 Gain access, in a way 7 Body-related 8 Fearsome foes 9 Bone-boring tool 10 Stopped lying 11 Almost up 12 Desk feature 13 Grammywinning LL Cool J song that starts “I’ve been watching you from afar for as long as I can remember” 14 They clean up well 23 Longtime Indiana senator defeated in 2012

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PUZZLE BY MARK DIEHL

Mediterranean vacation spot 27 “Men always hate most what they ___ most”: H. L. Mencken 29 Public figure? 31 “Whatever Lola Wants,” e.g. 33 No longer tied up, say 34 Raucous card game 35 Really must go 26

Best at play 37 Alternators in some internalcombustion engines 39 Acts of a scalawag 42 Put down 44 The Golden Horde, e.g. 45 War cry 46 First name in European politics 36

48

Ran through

49

Get a handle on

52

Herbal stress reliever from Polynesia

54

“___ Baby” (song from “Hair”)

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Unappealing bowlful

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

• Saturday, June 4, 2016

DEAR ABBY I spreading gossip by telling my forJeanne mer husband our Phillips granddaughter’s wedding was off? We had just returned from their engagement party. It is my understanding one wants to cancel, while the other wants to go through with it. The wedding is a year away, and this has been the talk of the family for the past six months. Apparently, there has been trouble in paradise because she had an affair. As a result, they now are going to counseling. Our granddaughter said she was going to move back in with her mother for awhile. – “Gossip” In California Dear “Gossip”: While news the wedding may be off should be the privilege of the engaged couple to reveal, I don’t think telling your former husband there is trouble in paradise and what it entailed was gossip. It is not a secret within the family, and her grandfather is a relative regardless of the fact the two of you are divorced. Dear Abby: I’m a 13-year-old (American) boy with a problem. I act childish, as in hugging my mom every day and saying “I love you” to her. If anyone in my middle school finds out about this, I’m dead meat. Could you please give me some advice? – Sad In South Korea Dear Sad: Gladly. Hugging one’s mother and telling her you love her is nothing to be embarrassed about. It isn’t “childish,” but shows you are a caring son and have a great relationship with her. (Not all teenagers, or their moms, are so lucky.) I see no reason to announce anything to your schoolmates that’s private – first, because the relationship you have with your mom is none of their business, and second, they probably hug their mothers, too. Dear Abby: Can you help me understand something that’s bothering me? Since when is it OK for kids to stand in front of stores and ask for money for things (sports teams, group trips, etc.)? When I was growing up (not that long ago), we held car washes and bake sales and sold candy bars. This standing and asking for money without doing something to earn it drives me nuts. I often have been tempted to say something, but always bite my tongue so as not to cause a scene, but I’m fed up! – Venting In Florida Dear Venting: I confess, when I first started reading your letter, I thought you were a curmudgeon. By the time I reached the end, I realized you have a valid point. This may happen because the adults involved in the fundraising are unimaginative and don’t realize the message this sends to the kids is a poor one. Because it bothers you, talk to the manager of the store where this is allowed because not all businesses encourage it. You also could write a letter to your local newspaper and call attention to the fact that when organizations do this, it teaches young people they can get something for nothing.

ACROSS

S L A P J A C K

Dear Abby: Was

35

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD

FUN & GAMES | Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

Wedding’s iffy future is news, not gossip


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Saturday, June 4, 2016

| TELEVISION

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Mike & Molly ’ Mike & Molly ’ Baskets (CC) Baskets (CC) The Golden The Golden The Golden Frasier “Don Frasier “Don (4:00) Movie: “Wedding Bells” Movie: “Perfect Match” (2015) Danica McKellar, Paul Greene, Linda Movie: “Ms. Matched” (2016, Romance) Alexa PenaVega. Premiere. A The Golden (HALL) (2016) Danica McKellar. (CC) Juan in Hell” Juan in Hell” Gray. Two wedding planners must learn to work together. (CC) wedding planner and a financial adviser hit it off. (CC) Girls ’ (CC) Girls ’ (CC) Girls ’ (CC) Girls ’ (CC) Property Brothers (CC) Property Brothers (CC) House Hunters Renovation (N) Living Big Sky Living Big Sky Property Brothers (CC) House Hunters Renovation (CC) (HGTV) Fixer Upper Finding a farmhouse. Fixer Upper (CC) Roots: A New Vision (N) (CC) (:03) Roots: A New Vision (CC) (:03) Roots Chicken George returns after 20 years. (CC) (HIST) Roots Tom Lea sells George to save his farm. ’ (Part 3 of 4) (CC) Roots Chicken George returns after 20 years. ’ (Part 4 of 4) (CC) Movie: “Honor Student” (2014, Suspense) Josie Loren, Niall Matter. A Movie: “You May Now Kill the Bride” (2016, Suspense) Tammin Sur- (:02) Movie: “His Secret Family” (2015) Haylie Duff. Sarah tracks down (:02) Movie: “You May Now Kill the Bride” (2016) Tammin Sursok, (LIFE) parolee claims that a writer stole her story. (CC) sok. Premiere. A stepsister will do anything to be the bride. (CC) her missing husband and makes a shocking discovery. (CC) Ashley Newbrough. A stepsister will do anything to be the bride. (CC) Caught on Camera Caught on Camera Lockup Lockup Lockup Lockup Lockup (MSNBC) Caught on Camera (MTV) (3:30) Movie: › “How High” ’ (5:50) Movie: › “A Haunted House” (2013) Marlon Wayans. ’ Movie: › “Texas Chainsaw 3D” (2013) Alexandra Daddario. ’ Movie: ››› “Zombieland” (2009, Comedy) Woody Harrelson. ’ Scream ’ (NICK) Thundermans Thundermans Henry Danger Henry Danger Thundermans School of Rock Bella, Bulldogs All In W/Cam Full House ’ Full House ’ Friends (CC) Friends (CC) Friends (CC) (:33) Friends ’ Fresh Prince Fresh Prince Cops Multi-car Cops “Liar Liar Cops “Danger- Cops ’ (CC) Cops (Season Cops “Lady Bit Cops “Coast to Cops “Coast to Cops “Coast to Cops “Naked Cops ’ (CC) Cops “Scary Jail ’ (CC) Jail ’ (CC) Jail ’ (CC) Jail ’ (CC) (SPIKE) collision. (CC) No. 5” (CC) Coast” (CC) Coast” (CC) Perps” (CC) ous Arrests” ’ Premiere) (N) ’ My Finger” ’ Coast” (CC) Monsters” ’ (:10) Movie: ›› “The Quick and the Dead” (1995) Sharon Stone. iTV. A Movie: ››› “True Grit” (1969) John Wayne, Glen Campbell. iTV. A (:10) Movie: ››› “Fury” (2014, War) Brad Pitt, Shia LaBeouf, Logan Lerman. iTV. A (:25) Movie: ›› “The Siege” (1998, Suspense) Den(STZENC) female gunslinger enters a deadly quick-draw competition. ’ one-eyed marshal and a Texas Ranger aid a vengeful teen. ’ (CC) sergeant takes his men on a mission behind enemy lines. ’ (CC) zel Washington, Annette Bening. iTV. ’ (CC) (4:30) Movie: ›› “Watchmen” (2009, Action) Billy Crudup, Malin Akerman, Jackie Earle Haley. A masked Movie: ››› “The Incredible Hulk” (2008, Action) Edward Norton, Liv Tyler, Tim Roth. Movie: ›› “Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles” (1990) Judith Hoag, Elias “Teenage (SYFY) Turtles II” vigilante probes the murder of a fellow superhero. (CC) Bruce Banner faces an enemy known as The Abomination. (CC) (DVS) Koteas. Four superturtles and couple vs. ninja Foot Clan. (CC) Movie: ››› “The Man From Laramie” (1955) James Stewart. A man Movie: ›››› “The French Connection” (1971) Gene Hackman. Two Movie: ››› “The Seven-Ups” (1974) Roy Scheider, Tony Lo Bianco. Movie: ››› “2010” (1984) Roy Scheider, John Lithgow. The man behind (TCM) seeks justice after his brother is killed by Apaches. (CC) New York cops try to foil an international drug ring. (CC) New York cops set out to avenge a comrade’s death. (CC) the 2001 space odyssey joins a U.S./Soviet mission. (CC) Ghost Brothers “Magnolia Hotel” Ghost Brothers ’ (CC) (TLC) Dateline: Real Life Mysteries ’ Dateline: Real Life Mysteries ’ Dateline on TLC A professor is haunted by a dark secret. (N) (CC) Dateline on TLC A professor is haunted by a dark secret. ’ (CC) (TNT) (4:30) Movie: ›› “Jack the Giant Slayer” (2013) Nicholas Hoult. Movie: ››› “The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug” (2013, Fantasy) Ian McKellen, Martin Freeman. (CC) (DVS) Movie: ›› “Hulk” (2003, Fantasy) Eric Bana, Jennifer Connelly. (CC) (DVS) Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond King of Queens King of Queens King of Queens King of Queens Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Reba Bar brawl. (TVL) Reba ’ (CC) Reba ’ (CC) Reba ’ (CC) Reba ’ (CC) Reba ’ (CC) NCIS “Spider and the Fly” Gibbs NCIS “Up in Smoke” A terrorist NCIS “Till Death Do Us Part” The NCIS “Shabbat Shalom” Ziva’s NCIS “Shiva” The team unites to find Modern Family Modern Family Modern Family Modern Family Royal Pains Hank finds romance in (USA) targeting the Navy. (CC) (DVS) NCIS faces devastating surprises. father visits. ’ (CC) (DVS) (CC) (DVS) “Moon Landing” (CC) (DVS) Hong Kong. (CC) (DVS) must protect his loved ones. ’ answers. ’ (CC) (DVS) “Fears” ’ Saturday Night Live in ’90s (VH1) Saturday Night Live in the 2000s: Time and Again ’ (CC) Movie: ››› “The 40-Year-Old Virgin” (2005) Steve Carell, Catherine Keener. ’ Movie: ››› “The 40-Year-Old Virgin” (2005) Steve Carell, Catherine Keener. ’ Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Full Frontal The Detour The Detour Separation Anxiety “Jeff & Luke” Movie: Liar Liar (WTBS) 2 Broke Girls 2 Broke Girls Big Bang PREMIUM 5:00 5:30 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30 REAL Sports With Bryant Gumbel Game of (4:55) Movie ›› “The Divergent Series: Insurgent” (2015) Shailene Movie ››› “The Martian” (2015, Science Fiction) Matt Damon, Jessica Chastain, Kristen Boxing: Orlando Salido vs. Francisco Vargas. (N) ’ (Live) (CC) (HBO) Thrones (CC) Woodley. Fugitives Tris and Four search for allies and answers. (CC) ’ (CC) Wiig. Premiere. A stranded astronaut tries to survive on Mars. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) (4:15) Movie “Birdman or (The (:15) Movie ››› “John Wick” (2014, Action) Keanu Reeves. An exOutcast Kyle Barnes confronts a Movie ›› “The Visit” (2015, Suspense) Olivia De- (:35) Outcast Kyle Barnes confronts Movie “Borat: Cultural Learnings of America for (MAX) Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance)” Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan” ‘R’ a possession case. (CC) possession case. ’ (CC) Jonge, Ed Oxenbould. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) assassin hunts down the gangsters who ruined his life. ’ ‘R’ (CC) Submission (4:30) Penny House of Lies Movie ›› “The Hundred-Foot Journey” (2014) Helen Mirren. An Indian Movie ›› “Woman in Gold” (2015) Helen Mirren. Maria Altmann sues Penny Dreadful Hecate and Ethan House of Lies All Access: Movie ››› (SHOW) Dreadful Stanley Cup “Master” (CC) “Rampart” ‘R’ struggle to survive. the government to recover stolen artwork. ‘PG-13’ (CC) ’ (CC) ’ (CC) eatery opens near an acclaimed French restaurant. ’ ‘PG’ (CC) (:40) Movie “Anarchy Parlor” (2015, Horror) Robert LaSardo. Young Movie “Bloodworx” (2012) Tricia Helfer. College (4:00) Movie “The Lovers” (2014, (5:50) Movie ›› “Shooter” (2007) Mark Wahlberg. A wounded sniper Movie “Bloodworx” (2012) Tricia Helfer. College (TMC) students become test subjects for a new drug. ‘R’ students become test subjects for a new drug. ‘R’ friends meet a sinister tattoo artist in Lithuania. ’ ‘NR’ (CC) Action) Josh Hartnett. ’ ‘R’ (CC) plots revenge against those who betrayed him. ’ ‘R’ (CC) ^ WBBM News at 5:00PM News (N) (CC)

HOROSCOPE By EUGENIA LAST

Newspaper Enterprise Association TODAY – It’s time to size up your situation and make positive decisions. Don’t let anyone dictate how you should be living your life. It’s up to you to make the changes that suit you. With a little common sense and discipline, much can be accomplished. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) – Don’t trust what people tell you. Go to the source and find out what you need to know firsthand before you make a decision or take action. Personal improvements should take top priority. CANCER (June 21-July 22) – Host a gathering or ask for favors that will help you bring about positive

changes to your living quarters. Collaborate with someone as passionate as you are. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) – Generosity will draw attention. Before you make promises, you are best off discussing your plans with anyone who will be affected by your offerings. Charity begins at home, and loved ones should come first. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) – Don’t make a fuss or place demands on anyone. Do something that will help you uncover information that can help you get ahead. Don’t let a needy and demanding someone stand in your way. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) – Trying something new or heading to a destination you’ve never visited before will make your day. If you add a little romance into the mix, you will improve your

personal life. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) – Good fortune is within reach, but only if you do things differently. It’s your unique nature that will separate you from anyone who challenges you mentally or physically. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) – Be very cautious when dealing with friends, loved ones or anyone trying to pry into your affairs. Problems will arise that can result in emotional and physical setbacks. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) – Express your ideas in order to drum up all the help you need to make your dreams come true. A change you make in your personal life will result in extra cash. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) – Don’t let anger get

the better of you. Look for the upside in everything you do and strive to turn negatives into positives. Romance should be a priority. PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) – Travel, disagreements and trying to please everyone will have an adverse effect on your day. Concentrate on creative projects and taking care of your needs. ARIES (March 21-April 19) – Live in the moment. Do things that will make a difference in your life and will leave you feeling mentally, spiritually or physically accomplished. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) – Mingle, participate and expand your interests and friendships. It’s important to keep busy, but also to include the ones you love in your plans. Don’t let someone from your past disrupt your life.


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Saturday, June 4, 2016 •

CLASSIFIED 37

For Better or For Worse

HANDYMAN

SKILLED REMODELERS, CARPENTERS, AND LABORERS WANTED:

For growing remodeling and construction company based in Northwest Suburbs with work centered around the City of Chicago Huge growth potential, full time employees needed, pay based on experience. Bi-lingual a plus. Please email: pe.gemmel@yahoo.com

Anything to do with Wood We can Fix or Replace Doors and Windows POLISH LADY Will Clean Your Home/Office

FREE ESTIMATES. Great References. 224-858-4515

CAT “FELINA”

Female, Apricot color with leopard print on her side with stripes on her legs, green eyes. Lost last weekend, approx May 22 @ Butterfield & Powers Road in Woodstock. Cat requires mediction to survive. CASH REWARD! 815-354-7894

ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT

Elgin metal distributor is seeking a full time experienced administrative asst. Must be friendly, upbeat, organized, have proficient computer skills, detail oriented, have the ability to multi-task and work in a fast paced environment. Duties include but not limited to: receive and service incoming calls, data entry, filing, general customer service and back up support during vacation/sick days. Previous experience a must.

Please email resume to: owens011@yahoo.com

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

Necklace Chain Found Near Gorgios in Crystal Lake 815-404-9570

Travel

OUTSIDE SALES / PART TIME AGENT

Expanding NW suburban agency looking for experienced part time agent for 1-2 days per week as well as outside agents with clients. Agents should be experienced in Amadeus GDs and Client base.

Call Mike Kelly 847-842-0101

RN, LPN

PRAYER to the BLESSED VIRGIN (Never Known to Fail)

E-mail Resume to: bwpeterson@comcast.net

HVAC TECHNICIAN

Seasoned HVAC Technician needed. Minimum 5 years experience. Clean driving record. Must be dependable. Start now!! Email resume comfortairheat@msn.com

Sales

A TV Antenna Will Save you $1000's

Watch all Major Networks and NEVER PAY AGAIN. We install 815-575-1796 suburbanantenna.com

MAILBOX & POST SALES & INSTALLATION

INSIDE SALES ASSOCIATE

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

Woodstock Lumber

Northwest Herald Classified

2 years minimum sales experience. Full time with insurance. Call for appointment: 815-338-0075 1101 Lake Ave., Woodstock Get the job you want at NWHerald.com/jobs

It works.

Trunk2Treasures Estate Sale 1251 Victoria Drive, Algonquin

Cary Estate Sale

Shift Differential and Hiring Bonus Available!

GATEHOUSE ATTENDANT

FINE FURNISHINGS AND MORE

Hosted by Trunk2Treasures Estate Sales 847-239-3313

Sheltered Village, Woodstock

The gated community of Boulder Ridge in Lake in the Hills seeks mature, dependable, outgoing person to provide access control services to the community of Boulder Ridge. Friendly atmosphere.

ALGONQUIN

Twilight: Thursday 6/2 4pm-7pm Friday & Saturday 9am-2pm

FULL & PART TIME

Apply in person or fax resume to: Sheltered Village 600 Borden St., Woodstock, IL Phone 815-338-6440 Fax 815-338-6803, attn: Mary DON

READER NOTICE:

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

Oh, most beautiful flower of Mt. Carmel fruitful vine, splendor of Heaven, Blessed Mother of the Son of God. Immaculate Virgin, assist me in my necessity. Oh star of the sea, help me and show me here you are my Mother. Oh Holy Mary, Mother of God Queen of Heaven and Earth, I humbly beseech you from the bottom of my heart to succor me in my necessity (make request). There are none which can withstand your power. O Mary conceived without sin pray for us who have recourse to thee. (three times) Holy Mary, I place this prayer in your hands (three times) Say this prayer for three consecutive days and then you must publish and it will be granted to you.

Grateful Thanks S. B.

The Illinois Classified Advertising Network (ICAN) provides advertising of a national appeal. To advertise in this section, please call ICAN directly at 217-241-1700. We recommend discretion when responding. Please refer questions & comments directly to ICAN.

Don't worry about rain!

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

FRI & SAT, JUNE 3 & 4 9-5

#'s @ 8:30 ✦ Cash Only 7402 Horseshoe Ct. Moving - Must Go!

Furniture, Rugs, King Brass Bed, Tools, Lawn Furniture, Grill, Vintage Dishes, Glassware, Art, Pictures, Treadmill, Clothing, Purses, Shoes, 100's of Items! Place your Classified ad online 24/7 at: www.NWHerald.com/PlaceAnAd

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

Call to advertise 877-264-2527 Or place your ad online nwherald.com/placeanad


38 CLASSIFIED • Saturday, June 4, 2016 BRIDGE by Phillip Alder

• Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

Huntley Estate Sale -12976 Tall Grass Trail-

MCHENRY - 4410 Lakewood Rd. June 4 & 5 9am to 4pm

McHenry 1929 Lake House Estate Sale-Vintage Tools, Schwinn Bike, Fiesta, Boat & Antiques. Simplicity walk behind snowblower-barely used, Troy Bilt Chipper Shredder,, vintage quilts, Primitive Prayer Bench, Haeger Pottery, Flotec pumps, something for everyone.

Richmond Estate Sale FRI & SAT, JUNE 3 & 4 10-3

5713 Broadway Furniture, Vintage Items, Collectibles

Calvin Coolidge said, “The right thing to do never requires any subterfuge. It is always simple and direct.” At the bridge table, that can be right and wrong, sometimes even in the same deal. In today’s layout, how should South plan the play in six hearts after West leads the diamond 10 to dummy’s king? What is the best defense against this contract? North responded with a splinter bid. He showed four-plus hearts, at least game-forcing values, and a singleton (or void) in clubs. South then bid what he hoped he could make. Since South’s third diamond could be discarded on dummy’s spade queen and his club seven ruffed on the board, declarer apparently needed only to avoid losing two trump tricks. The concern was a 3-0 break. The right play at trick two is for South to lead dummy’s heart two and, when East covers with the three, to put on his four! Here, after it wins, declarer cashes the heart ace and claims. But if the four loses to West’s jack or king, the trumps must be 2-1. Or, if East discards on the first trump, South wins with his ace and leads a heart through West toward dummy’s queen. That looks easy enough, but if East is in midseason form, he will produce some excellent subterfuge: He will drop his diamond queen under dummy’s king at trick one. Now South will be reticent to take the trump safety-play for fear that East has two hearts and gains a diamond ruff when the first trump trick is taken by West’s singleton honor. South is highly likely to play a heart to his ace and, here, go down.

This Sale Features: Bedroom, Dining Room & Living Room Sets, China, Flatware, Crystal, Lighting, Tools, Power Tools, Patio Furniture, Jewelry, Antiques, Vintage Toys & Collectables, Vintage Typewriters, 2011 Jetta Sport Wagen TDI, Long Guns, Hand Guns, & MORE Check us out on estatesales.net & LIKE US ON FACEBOOK Contact: 312-961-9410 or 815-5287045

HUNTLEY ESTATE SALE SAT, JUNE 4 10AM-4PM 13110 Drendel Rd.

Being the FIRST to grab reader's attention makes your item sell faster!

Highlight and border your ad! 877-264-2527

www.NWHerald.com

See pics @ sandylanesales.com Village of Lakewood Estate Sale FRI & SAT, JUNE 3 & 4 9-5 10211 Lakewood Rd. Corner of Haligus & Lakewood

KANE COUNTY ANTIQUE FLEA MARKET Shows March – December ~ Hundreds of Dealers

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

Saturday, June 4 ~ 12-5pm Sunday, June 5 ~ 7- 4pm ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ Next Show July 2 & 3 ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★

Admission $5 each day ~ Children Under 12 FREE Parking Free Share your flea finds: #iFounditAtKane @KCFMarket Info: 630-377-2252 www.kanecountryfleamarket.com

-INGLESIDE-

Furniture, Exercise Equipment, Breyer Horse Barn, Household Items & Much More!

STANTON POINT SUBDIVISION Community Garage Sale

Crystal Lake Outdoor Flea Market Saturday, June 4, 9 am - 3 pm

June 2, 3, 4 9 to 5 Route 59 between Wilson and Grand/Washington Look for signs and flags

Antiques, Depression glass, sports items, linens, farm toys, Precious Moments, silverware, ceramics, albums, bistro table/chairs. St. Paul's UCC 485 Woodstock Street 815-451-1114

JOBS ANNOUNCEMENTS STUFF VEHICLES REAL ESTATE SERVICES LEGALS Northwest Herald Classified and online at: NWHerald.com

ALGONQUIN

ALGONQUIN LAKES NEIGHBORHOOD GARAGE SALE - OVER 40 HOMES! JUNE 2, 3 & 4 THURS, FRI, SAT 9AM – 3PM TOYS, CLOTHES, TOOLS, FURNITURE & SO MUCH MORE GPS – 260 GILLIAN WAY OFF ALGONQUIN RD. BETWEEN LAKE-COOK & SANDBLOOM ~ LOOK FOR SIGNS ~ HOSTED BY; TRACY MCBREEN/RE/MAX NORTHERN ILLINOIS REAL ESTATE APP. ALGONQUIN FRI & SAT, JUNE 3 & 4 9-3

Gaslight North Sub.

710 Hillside Court Hunting Accessories,Tools, gun cases, early Ford Bronco parts, household items, clothing, toys, books and MORE!

Algonquin Garage Sale FRI & SAT, JUNE 3 & 4 8-4 645 Applewood Lane Great Stuff, Lots of Furniture, Luggage, Toys, Home Goods, DVD's, Jewelry, TV's

Come Check It Out! You Want It?

We've Got It!

Classified has GREAT VARIETY!

877-264-2527


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Saturday, June 4, 2016 • Cary Park District's Community Garage Sale on SATURDAY, June 4 from 8:00-11:00 AM at Lions Park 1200 Silver Lake Road in Cary. Multiple sellers!

CRYSTAL LAKE - 1852 SOMERFIELD LANE

3 FAMILIES GARAGE SALE 6/2- 6/4 THUR - 10am to 5pm FRI - 8am to 5pm SAT - 8am to noon Womens Clothes sz-2 to sz-1X CWC, Express, Chico's, Shoes, Boots, Purses, Household items, furniture

CRYSTAL LAKE – 5707 E. HILLSIDE RD MULTIFAMILY GARAGE SALE

THURS-SAT JUNE 2, 3, 4 9-5 NO EARLY BIRDS! ANTIQUES, LOTS OF JEWELRY, SCRAPBOOKING, BIKE, ARTWORK, HOUSEHOLD ITEMS

CRYSTAL LAKE 76 W. CRYSTAL LAKE AVE. CHURCH WIDE GARAGE & PLANT SALE

June 3rd 9am-3pm June 4th 9am-Noon

(June 4th is $2.00 Bag Day) Household, Clothing, Books, Collectibles, Linens, Toys, Sporting Goods and Knick Knacks.

Crystal Lake ESSEX VILLAGE

June 2,3,4 THURS, FRI & SAT 9AM - 5PM

Crystal Lake Multi Family Sale

HUNTLEY GARAGE SALE

FRI & SAT 8-2

11010 N. Myrtle St.

441 Country Lane J. D. Riding Mower, Lego's, Hot Wheels, Juicer, Blender, Toys, Furniture & Much More!

Crystal Lake Multi Family Sale

THURS, FRI, SAT

9-4

377 West Crystal Lake Ave.

1612 Penny Lane June 2, 3 & 4 9-5

20 Years Accumulation! Don't Miss Out!

We are At Your Service! The Northwest Herald reaches 137,000 adult readers in print every week, and 259,000 unique visitors on NWHerald.com every month.

THURS, FRI & SAT 8A-3P 446 KELLY LANE

KELLY WOODS SUBDIVISION Bikes, Books, Toys, Games, Home décor, Furniture, DVD's/CD's, Train Table, Kid's Clothing – Top Name Brand, Crib, Bath, Bedding, Quilts, Rugs, Curtains, Craft Supplies & MUCH MORE

Crystal Lake/Prairie Grove Sale

4602 BUHL RD. Art Glass, Silver, Fenton, Goblets, Dishes, Kitchen Glass, Mid-Century Glass Lamps, Floral Settee, White Dresser with Book Shelves, Antique Rocker, Radial Arm Saw with Stand

Dealer's Paradise and Prices! No Clothes or Kids Stuff!

Electrical Contractor Going Out of Business: Pots, Equiptment & Tools – Priced to Sell. Everything MUST GO! Jerry: 847-516-5281 Tim: 224-623-3565

FOX RIVER GROVE

MULTI-FAMILY GARAGE SALE

25 Brighton Ct

Friday, 6/3 and Saturday, 6/4 9am – 4pm Come and browse our selection of vintage items, furniture, household goods, clothing and more! Don't miss it!

HUNTLEY

ESTATES OF LIONS CHASE ANNUAL GARAGE SALE 14+ families participating. Couches, kitchen table, baby clothes/toys/items, kids clothes/toys, 8 ft trampoline, home decor, kids play kitchen, several baby strollers/carseats, tools, Thirty-One bags, and much more!

560 Kennedy St. MARENGO MULTI-FAMILY SALE 514 Grace St

Thurs June 2 4pm-7:30pm Fri June 3 8am-4:30pm Sat June 4 8am-11am 1973 Honda CB350 Motorcycle, small IKEA couch, various bicycles, lots of brand-name clothes (girls, boys, teen and adult), household items / decor and much more...

MCHENRY - 2706 N. Shorewood Dr

Friday June 3rd from 8-5 Saturday June 4th from 8-3 Multi-family garage sale. Tools, Scaffold, table saw, electronics, glassware, Power Wheels and children's toys.

McHenry Moving Sale

2619 Lauderdale Court June 2nd & 3rd 9-4 & June 4th 9-12 Moving! Everything MUST GO!!!

McHenry Multi Family Sale

THURS, FRI, SAT 9-4 4729 Oregon Trail Lots of Infant-Adult Clothing, Baby Items, Little Tyke Toys, Sports Equipmen & Much, Much Misc! Don't worry about rain! With our

Great Garage Sale Guarantee

DON'T NEED IT? SELL IT FAST!

877-264-2527

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

MCHENRY

Park Ridge Estates Sub Sales

25 HOMES!

Crystal Lake Rd. to Dartmoor THURS, FRI, SAT JUNE 2, 3, 4 9AM - 4PM Something for everyone - Clothes, furniture, baby items, toys, books, kitchen items, tools & MUCH, MUCH MORE!

Ridgefield HUGE Church Rummage Sale Donations From Over 100 Families

FRI, JUNE 3 SAT, JUNE 4

9AM-3PM 9AM-12PM

FRI & SAT, JUNE 3 & 4 8-4

THUR 6/2-SAT 6/4, 9am-4pm

Call to advertise in the At Your Service directory. classified@shawsuburban.com

LAKEWOOD – TURNBERRY 9909 Scots Circle - Thur-Sat, 9am-5pm

Marengo Moving Sale

Collectibles by the 100's!

Crystal Lake Moving Sale

4107 Sunset Lane Saturday, June 4th 9AM-5PM Everything MUST GO! Furniture, Schwinn Bike, Clothes, Household & MORE!

CRYSTAL LAKE MULTI-FAMILY SALE

Many households participating, too many items to list !

1032, 1036, 1060, 1075, 1076 (and more!) W. Stone Creek Circle, Crystal Lake June 2-4, Th-Sat 9:00-4:00.

Johnsburg Garage Sale

Antiques, Books, Clothes, Toys, Housewares & More!

FRI & SAT, JUNE 3 & 4 8-5

CRYSTAL LAKE – HUGE NEIGHBORHOOD GARAGE SALE

High end sale: all household, linens, figurines, furniture. New / like new shoes. Beautiful items. Don't miss it!

Furniture, Household Items, Toys, Name Brand Clothing & Much More!

Village Road off of Randall Road in The Villages Sub-Div from Penny Lane thru Brompton Road

CRYSTAL LAKE GARAGE SALE FRIDAY 10A-5p SATURDAY 9A-4P 6205 Coachlight Rd - 60012 Kids Clothes, Toys & Misc. Household

SATURDAY JUNE 4TH 8-2

CLASSIFIED 39

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

Call to advertise 877-264-2527 *within 4 weeks of original sale date. Ask your representative for details.

8505 Church St. Ridgefield

(Just North of Crystal Lake, East of MCC, off of Ridgefield Rd. Follow signs by Breakers) Directions @ rclpc.org

Everything from Toys to Tools, Furniture to Clothing! RINGWOOD 4805 Patty Lane MULTI- FAMILY GARAGE SALE June 2, 3 & 4 Thurs. Fri. & Sat. 9am-4pm SPRING GROVE - 9511 Champion Ct Friday-Saturday 9-4 Sports memorabilia, baseball cards, household items and more

Wonder Lake Garage Sale 3940 Twin Oaks Drive June 3rd & 4th 8-3

WOODSTOCK - FROM ANTIQUES TO JUNK 1022 Wheeler Street

Friday and Saturday June 3rd & 4th. 9:00-3:00 Metal full size bed circa 1960, Lots of glass items, children's books, desk, curio cabinet and much more.

WOODSTOCK - STUPENDOUS SALE 905 Winslow Ave.

Thurs. 6/2 5:30pm to 8:30pm Fri. 6/3 9:00am to 3:00pm Tons of stuff! Name and designer brand clothing, toys, small appliances, decorations, Coach, bathroom ensembles. SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE!

See more garage sales on the next page


40 CLASSIFIED • Saturday, June 4, 2016

Woodstock Garage Sale

FRI 10-3 & SAT 9-1 902 S. Sharon Dr.

• Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com McCurdy "Still Life with Glass of Wine" 20" x 16" org. oil on canvas, framed. Merrill Chase #235369 appraised for $2495. Asking $150/OBO. Call 815 455-4140

OUTDOOR PATIO SET – New in Box- Hampton Bay Posada 7 piece set sells for $499, 6 chairs w/ gray cushions & glass top table, Asking $390. Call or Text 630-302-8691

26 in. Woman's Diamondback - 21 speed, purple/white, great condition $125. 630-835-5694

Patio Set – 4 Chairs, 1 Table, 3'x3', W/ Umbrella. Good Cond. $125. Cash Only. 847-458-2749

Bike Rack for 2 Bikes – For Vehicle. Draw Tite/Graber. Like New. $100 Call or Text 815-482-8439 Specialized Men's Bicycle, 26 inches - $235/obo. Like New. 815-334-8847

!

Woodstock Garage Sale

FRI 8-4 & SAT 8-3 570 Prairie Ridge Dr.

100/200 amp underground meter socket - perfect condition $50. Call 815 455-4140

Whirlpool Tub/Indoor - 42 x 66, Dark Navy Blue New, never used, (paid $1,950 new), sell for $400/firm. 815-653-4612 DESK - 6-drawer metal desk with 24" x 54" laminate top. Swivel/rocking desk chair with leather arms & back. cloth cushion seat. Both $30. Call 815 455-4140 Panasonic FP-1780 copier with stand $10. Call 815-455-4140

Thur 6/2 - Sat 6/4

9am-5pm

Advertise here for a successful garage sale!

Call 877-264-2527

FREE – 2 Hide-A-Beds – One Sleeps Two, One Sleeps One, Call evenings 815-568-6797

Queen Size Sofa Sleeper & Large Family Tent & Posts Available. 815-482-8439 CALL OR TEXT Two Government steel grain storage bins on farm property in Hebron. Free for the removal. Call 815-355-9414

WAHL APPLIANCE

Reconditioned Appliances Sales and Service Lakemoor 815-385-1872 Kitchen Aid – Mix Master. Older Model. Runs Fine. Paid $450+ for Mixer & Attachments. Selling for $50. 815-568-1175 Kitchen Range - G. E. Profile, 30” White, Self Clean $225. 815-861-2174

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

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

Refrigerator – Whirlpool, 25cft, White, French Door Bottom Freezer, Like New! $400 815-444-9254 Stove - Maytag, Gas Range, White, Self Clean, $100. 815-444-9254 Washer & Dryer, Frigidaire Full Size Laundry Center Gas & Electric, $70/both. 815-568-6822

Buffet – Needs Some Refinishing. $200 Call or Text 815-482-8439 Circa Pre-1900 Douetailed Trunk/Blanket Chest W/ Strap Hinges, Orig. Handles & Surface, 50”Lx27”Wx23”H $300 815-404-1587

Jen Jen - 7 week old Aussie/Beagle. About 6lbs. of LOVE! Sassy, sweet and so cuddly.

Recliner – Dania, Black Leather, Swivel, 1.5 yrs old, Like New Must Sacrifice - $125. Call 847-854-8496

Roll-Top desk – 45” H, 46” W, nice size, walnut finish, locks, very good cond. $200. 815-404-1587 TABLE, CHAIRS, CHINA CABINET – MOVING

Oak harvest table, 6 chairs, china cabinet. Excellent condition $375 or best offer. Other items available. 815-455-6741

Burt

Two oak stave end tables with glass inlay top, excellent condition. $30 each. 815-338-8178

Burt - 1.5 yrs old Terrier mix. About 40lbs of charm! Great dog. Calm, sweet, good with all!

Deer Mount 10 Point Buck, Still in Shipping Crate, $200. 779-444-2049

A GARDENER available spring through fall. 815-276-9461

Woodstock Multi Family Sale 210 Ash Ave. Antiques, Furniture, Legos, Pokemon, Video Games & Systems, Air Hockey Table, Netbook, Samsung Tablet, Lots of Clothes & Household Items

RECLINER - Queen Anne style winged-back recliner. Blue tapestry fabric. w/arm protectors. VERY comfortable. Excellent Condition. $80. Call/Txt 779-236-6986 Crystal Lake

A HEART FOR ANIMALS, INC. PETS OF THE WEEK

McHenry Co. Memorial Park (2) Burial Rights Incls Care/Bronze Memorial, Ideal location. Must sell, $2200 (½ price)obo 815-337-7529 Framed Signed Copy of Peter Hurds “The Little Circus” Exc. Cond! 815-404-1587 LP's Set of World's Greatest Music 17 LP's Hayden, Strauss, Tchaikovsky, Mozart, etc. 60 LP's Classical, Musicals, Comedy, X-mas, etc. All for $50. 815-455-4140

Nordic Track Elliiptical Auto Strider 990, I fit interactive technology + extras, $350/obo. 815-861-3699

Nordic Trak - $55 - Like New 815-759-9948

BRUSH HOG MOWING SERVICES Roughcut Mowing up to 1.5” dia. Brush/Grass. free estimate 630-330-9970 CRAFTSMAN LAWN TRACTOR - Like new 26 HP 54" dual blade, includes weedeater, blower, seeder. Runs perfect. Cost $3500. Selling for $1500 obo. 847-208-2872

Lawn Mower, Scott's, Self Propelled, Runs Great! $150 847-428-1027 Patio Set - Wrought Iron, 4 Chairs w/Cushions and Side Table, $80/all. 815-568-6822 TREES ~ NICE! - Evergreens 6'-8', 3 or more $225, Maples 3”- 6” $350+ . Delivered and planted. 815-378-1868 Troy Bilt Rototiller – One owner, Very Dependable $300. 847-361-1405 Evenings

Ladder - Fiberglass Exten. Ladder. 28' Heavy Duty $150 815-653-4612 Ladder 24 Ft, Warner, Brand new, Type 2 Rating, 225 Lbs, $150. 779-444-2049 2 Oak Bar Stools - $100 815-385-0456 Ladders – Werener - 32', Alum. Exten. Type 1. 4piece – Oak LR Tables W/ Glass Inserts. Michigan 14' Wood Step Type 1. $200 for both. Lamps Avail. $125/OBO 847-669-9377 aft. 6 847-658-8806 Kieffer Built 2 horse steel trailer 1993, $750 cash, new tires 847-409-6151 815-575-5006

Amish Solid Oak Dining Table – 9piece, Incl. 2 Leaves. $300/OBO 847-669-9377 aft. 6.

Bar Stools Indoor / Outdoor - 2 Forged Iron Bar Stools. With back and arms. Seat cushions incl. Heavy, comfortable & durable - "one-of-a-kind" artisan made in Galena. Excellent Condition. $150/pair. Call/Text 779-236-6986 Crystal Lake

Blonde 1950's Dresser – 3 Drawers, Mirror, $75 815-385-0456

COFFEE TABLE - Storage + Function. Traditional, Mahogany, Bun Legs w/ 2 deep drawers & classic pulls on 2 sides. 38" square. Excellent Condition. $100. Call/Text 779-236-6986 Crystal Lake Curio / Display Cabinet (small) - Hammery, Walnut Finish Curio / Display Cabinet w/storage. "For a small space". Lighted, mirror back, 2 glass shelves (adjustable) + bottom 21" has 3 Drawers. 68" H x 26"W x 14"D. Excellent Condition. $75. Call/Text 779-236-6986 Crystal Lake

Drexel Heritage – 2 Upholstered Chairs, W/ Matching Ottoman. Comfortable Chairs, GREAT for MANCAVE! Exc. Cond! $250 Call/Txt 779-236-6986 (Crystal Lake)

SATURDAY – JUNE 4th

10am-4pm. Rain or shine! Free food, entertainment, vendors, adoptable dogs! A Heart for Animals, Inc. PO Box 986 Huntley, IL 60142 (847) 868-2432 www.aheartforanimals.org AKC White Lab Puppies, Born April 18th, Shots/Dew Claws

removed, ready after June 6, reserve now, $550/ea. 815-648-2936 Find !t here! PlanitNorthwest.com

Need customers?

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

We've got them!

Wood Chipper - Like New! $245/obo. 815-334-8847

Advertise in print and online for one low price.

Camera SLR, Yashica FX-D with 35-70 Macro 80-200Macro + accessories, $95. 815-728-1270 Gutter Filters - Sureflow, Starting @ $50 815-385-3762 RETRO KITCHEN TABLES - 2 antique kitchen tables, 1 square white top blue sides, 1 round white top chrome sides, $50 each or best. 630-835-5694

Call Classified today! 877-264-2527 Find the help you need

Room Air Conditioner - 12,000 BTU, $125.00 815-861-2174

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

55 gallon fresh water fish tank and stand. Tank comes with gravel, heater. filter, light & fish.$200 815End Tables – New, 1 yr. old, Beautiful wood, one square, one 307-4177. Will text pics if wanted.

round w/ cut glass top. $100 each. Call 847-854-8496

OUTDOOR PATIO SET - Grosfillex resin patio table + 4 folding/adjustable chairs. Table: 62" x 37" x 30"H. Tall backs on chairs and adjustable for even the beach! St. Tropez Model. Excellent Condition. $60. Call/Text 779-236-6986 Crystal Lake

~ Join us ~

Barks, Bikes, Blues Adoption event! Wildfire Harley Davidson in Villa Park,

LOOKING FOR A JOB? Find the job you want at:

NWHerald.com/jobs

Piano – Baldwin Spinet. $500, Like New, Woodstock 815-337-1812 Have a news tip?

Email: tips@nwherald.com

At Your Service In print daily Online 24/7


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Saturday, June 4, 2016 •

CLASSIFIED 41

PRE-OWNED ANDERSON BMW

360 N. Rte. 31 • Crystal Lake, IL

888/682-4485

www.andersoncars.com

BILL JACOBS BMW

MARTIN CHEVROLET 5220 W. Northwest Highway Crystal Lake, IL

815/459-4000

www.martin-chevy.com

1564 W. Ogden Ave. • Naperville, IL

RAY CHEVROLET

www.billjacobs.com

847/587-3300

800/731-5824

KNAUZ BMW

407 Skokie Valley Hwy. • Lake Bluff, IL

847/604-5000

www.KnauzBMW.com

MOTOR WERKS BMW

Barrington & Dundee Rds. Barrington, IL

800/935-5913

www.motorwerks.com

MOTOR WERKS CERTIFIED OUTLET Late Model Luxury PreOwned Vehicles

1001 W. Higgins Rd. (Rt. 71) or 1000 W. Golf Rd. (Rt. 58) • Hoffman Estates, IL

800/935-5909

www.motorwerks.com

39 N. Rte. 12 • Fox Lake, IL

www.raychevrolet.com

RAYMOND CHEVROLET 118 Route 173 • Antioch, IL

847/395-3600

www.raymondchevrolet.com

BULL VALLEY FORD

1460 S. Eastwood Dr. • Woodstock, IL

800/407-0223

www.bullvalleyford.com

BUSS FORD

888/280-6844

Route 31, between Crystal Lake & McHenry

815/385-2100

www.garylangauto.com

REICHERT BUICK

2145 S. Eastwood Dr. • Woodstock, IL

815/338-2780

www.reichertautos.com

www.andersoncars.com

TOM PECK FORD

13900 Auto Mall Dr. • Huntley, IL

847/669-6060

www.TomPeckFord.com

CRYSTAL LAKE CHRYSLER JEEP DODGE 5404 S. Rt. 31 • Crystal Lake, IL

888/800-6100 www.clcjd.com

815/338-2780

630/584-1800

2525 E. Main Street • St. Charles, IL

www.zimmermanford.com

GURNEE CHRYSLER JEEP DODGE RAM 7255 Grand Avenue • Gurnee, IL

888/800-6100

www.clcjd.com

GARY LANG GMC

GARY LANG KIA

www.garylangauto.com

815/385-2100

815/385-2100

1107 S Rt. 31 between Crystal Lake and McHenry

847/683-2424

ARLINGTON KIA IN PALATINE

888/471-1219

www.gurneedodge.com

SUNNYSIDE COMPANY CHRYSLER DODGE Route 120 • McHenry, IL

815/385-7220

www.sunnysidecompany.com

800/935-5909

www.garylangauto.com

MOTOR WERKS CADILLAC

5404 S. Rt. 31 • Crystal Lake, IL

888/800-6100

200 N. Cook St. • Barrington, IL

www.clcjd.com

www.motorwerks.com

GURNEE CHRYSLER JEEP DODGE RAM

800/935-5923

7255 Grand Avenue • Gurnee, IL

Barrington & Dundee Rds. Barrington, IL

800/935-5913

www.motorwerks.com

O’HARE HONDA

847/234-1700

www.Knauzcontinentalauto.com

RAYMOND KIA

800/295-0166

www.billjacobs.com

KNAUZ MINI

ELGIN HYUNDAI

881 E. Chicago St. • Elgin, IL

847/888-8222

www.elginhyundai.com

ROSEN HYUNDAI

771 S. Randall Rd. • Algonquin, IL

866/469-0114

www.rosenrosenrosen.com

815/385-2100

www.garylangauto.com

AL PIEMONTE CHEVROLET 770 Dundee Ave. (Rt. 25) • Dundee, IL

847/426-2000

www.piemontechevy.com

815/385-7220

www.sunnysidecompany.com

EVANSTON SUBARU IN SKOKIE 3340 Oakton St., Skokie, IL

847/869-5700

www.EvanstonSubaru.com

GARY LANG MITSUBISHI

www.garylangauto.com

815/385-2100

LIBERTYVILLE MITSUBISHI

1200 E. Chicago St. Elgin, IL

847/741-2100

1119 S. Milwaukee Ave.• Libertyville, IL

www.elgintoyota.com

www.libertyvillemitsubishi.com

PAULY TOYOTA

1035 S. Rt. 31, One Mile South of Rt. 14 Crystal Lake, IL

www.billjacobs.com

www.paulytoyota.com

815/459-7100 or 847/658-9050

888/204-0042

LAND ROVER LAKE BLUFF

375 Skokie Valley Hwy • Lake Bluff, IL

847/604-8100

www.knauzlandrover.com

LAND ROVER HOFFMAN ESTATES

866/346-0211

landroverhoffman.com

MOTOR WERKS INFINITI

MOTOR WERKS PORSCHE Barrington & Dundee Rds., Barrington, IL

800/935-5913

www.motorwerks.com

MOTOR WERKS CERTIFIED OUTLET Late Model Luxury Pre-Owned Vehicles

1001 W. Higgins Rd. (Rt. 71) or 1000 W. 1000 W. Golf Rd. (Rt. 58) Hoffman Estates, IL

ANDERSON VOLKSWAGEN 360 N. Rt. 31 • Crystal Lake, IL

888/682-4485

www.andersoncars.com

BILL JACOBS VOLKSWAGEN 2211 Aurora Avenue • Naperville, IL

800/720-7036

www.billjacobs.com

800/935-5909

Barrington & Dundee Rds. Barrington, IL

www.motorwerks.com

ELGIN TOYOTA

300 East Ogden Ave. • Hinsdale, IL

1051 W. Higgins • Hoffman Estates, IL

800/935-5913

815/385-2100

www.Knauz-mini.com

847/604-5050

www.raymondkia.com

224/603-8611

GARY LANG SUBARU

Route 31, between Crystal Lake & McHenry

www.garylangauto.com

Route 31, between Crystal Lake & McHenry

www.oharehonda.com

SUNNYSIDE COMPANY CHRYSLER DODGE Route 120 • McHenry, IL

1035 S. Rt. 31, One Mile South of Rt. 14 Crystal Lake, IL

409A Skokie Valley Hwy • Lake Bluff, IL

119 Route 173 • Antioch, IL

River Rd & Oakton, • Des Plaines, IL

www.gurneedodge.com

Route 31, between Crystal Lake & McHenry

PAULY SCION

815/459-7100 or 847/658-9050

www.arlingtonkia.com

888/538-4492

888/471-1219

GARY LANG CHEVROLET

www.motorwerks.com

409 Skokie Valley Hwy • Lake Bluff, IL

847/202-3900

BILL JACOBS LAND ROVER HINSDALE CRYSTAL LAKE CHRYSLER JEEP DODGE

“Home of the $1,995 Specials”

KNAUZ CONTINENTAL AUTOS

1400 E. Dundee Rd., Palatine, IL

MOTOR WERKS HONDA

GARY LANG CADILLAC 815/385-2100

847/838-4444

www.st-charles.mercedesdealer.com

847/816-6660

Route 31, between Crystal Lake & McHenry

10709 N. Main St. (Route 12) Richmond, IL

1564 W. Ogden Ave. • Naperville, IL

Route 31, between Crystal Lake & McHenry

www.garylangauto.com

7255 Grand Avenue • Gurnee, IL

Golf Rd. (Rt. 58) • Hoffman Estates, IL

BILL JACOBS MINI

FENZEL MOTOR SALES

GURNEE CHRYSLER JEEP DODGE RAM

847/235-8300

www.knauznorth.com

www.steves-auto-sales.com

877/226-5099

www.gurneedodge.com

5404 S. Rt. 31 • Crystal Lake, IL

2950 N. Skokie Hwy • North Chicago, IL

225 N. Randall Road • St. Charles, IL

888/471-1219

CRYSTAL LAKE CHRYSLER JEEP DODGE

KNAUZ NORTH

STEVE’S AUTO SALES

MERCEDES-BENZ OF ST. CHARLES

www.bussford.com

206 S. State Street • Hampshire, IL

GARY LANG BUICK

888/682-4485

www.infinitihoffman.com

815/385-2000

ZIMMERMAN FORD

www.reichertautos.com

1075 W. Golf Rd. Hoffman Estates, IL

ANDERSON MAZDA

360 N. Rt. 31 • Crystal Lake, IL

111 S. Rte 31 • McHenry, IL

REICHERT CHEVROLET

2145 S. Eastwood Dr. • Woodstock, IL

INFINITI OF HOFFMAN ESTATES

www.motorwerks.com

BUSS FORD LINCOLN 111 S. Rte 31 • McHenry, IL

815/385-2000

busslincolnmchenry.com

BARRINGTON VOLVO

300 N. Hough (Rt. 59) • Barrington, IL

847/381-9400


42 CLASSIFIED • Saturday, June 4, 2016 ANIMAL OUTREACH SOCIETY PETS OF THE WEEK

• Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com ASSISI ANIMAL FOUNDATION PETS OF THE WEEK Izzy: Izzy is a 3 year old, female, tabby with a somewhat laid back personality, but she is utter sweetness when she is comfortable with you. She is ready to relax with you and be a great snuggle companion.

Kenzie

Kenzie is a super sweet, playful and incredibly outgoing! She would make the perfect addition to any family!

Trevor

Trevor was adopted out as a kitten with Animal Outreach. In July of 2014 we got a phone call from Save-a-pet stating a good Samaritan dropped him off at that shelter after she was feeding him outside for a month but worried with cold weather coming he would not survive. Very Sweet Cat!

Aurora

Aurora is very sweet but a little on the shy side! She will warm up with time and patience. Aurora would do best in a home with older kids and she hasn't ever been around dogs so older submissive dogs would be best for her! Her foster mom has given her so much love and now she's ready to find a family to call her own!

www.animaloutreachsociety.org

815-385-0005

Northwest Herald.

Giving you more!

To subscribe to the Northwest Herald Call 815-459-8118 or visit: www.NWHerald.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 & 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.

Rosie is a 6 year old, female, Tortie who loves attention, play time and snuggles. She is the perfect cat! Consider adopting her so you can see how much of a joy she is to be around.

Dinky: Dinky is a 1 1/2 year old, female, black kitty who is playful, easy going and enjoys spending time with other cats. She is just a bit shy at first but truly comes out of her shell with just a little love.

www.assisi.org – Email: info@assi.org 815-455-9411 CAT ~ MALE FREE TO GOOD HOME!

10 years old, good health with all shots. Good with kids. 815-455-4701

Upload photos of your family and friends with our online photo album. Share your sports team, birthday party, big catch, pets, or vacation!

Sandy 2 Month Old Female White & Grey DSH

PET'S OF THE WEEK SADIE

9 month old female Blue Heeler mix She came on a transport with her little buddy Diesel. She has a very sweet disposition and is always happy to see you. Beautiful girl!

FLEAYONCE

Rosie:

1 year old female Black DSH She was found as a pregnant stray. She had a litter of 6 kittens at the shelter. She can move her body just like her namesake Beyonce.

DIESEL

9 month old male Terrier mix. This little cutie came from Kentucky with his friend, Sadie. He is a fun lovin puppy that is probably going to stay small. He'll be hard to resist.

Helping Paws Animal Shelter 2500 Harding Lane Woodstock, Il 60098 815-338-4400

Lydia 2 1/2 Year Old Female Terrier Mix

To indulge in a siesta after lunch is the most wonderful luxury. It softens tempers and guards against grumpiness.

www.helpingpaws.net 815-338-4400 BASKETBALL SYSTEM - Huffy Portable with elevator. Can be ballasted with water or sand. Portable on 2 wheels, height adjustable. $55. Spring Grove. 815-675-2151 Camp Ways External Frame Backpack Large 2-compartment bag with 4 outside pockets, water resistant nylon, frame 32" x 18". $40. 815-338-8178

Golf Balls – Used but Like New. $1.00 Each. 847-842-8335 GOLF CLUBS - LIKE NEW, Full Set, Dunlop, Irons plus Titanium Driver, plus 7 Wood, Putter and 2 Dozen Balls $75. 815-455-3239

Train Table by Nilo with Wooden tracks, 60+ Thomas trains, signs etc. $180. Call 815-382-2455

ALL COLLECTIONS, AUTOGRAPHS, ESTATES Music & Military CASH

815-354-6169

Antique and Modern Guns

Old Lever Actions, Winchesters, Marlins, Savages, etc. Old Pistols and Revolvers. Cash for Collection. FFL License. 815-338-4731

Lionel & American Flyer Trains 815-353-7668

Dusty 12 Year Old Female Grey & White DSH

WANTED TO BUY: Vintage or New, working or not.

Electronics, Outboard motors, fishing gear, motorcycles or mopeds, chainsaws, tools etc. Cash on the spot. Cell: 815-322-6383

I will never be too mature to laugh hysterically with my friends. We all laugh so hard our bellies hurt. Anyone for some silly games?

Share your photos with McHenry County!

NWHerald.com/myphotos

HELPING PAWS

There is a foutain of youth; It's your mind, your talents, the creativity you bring to your life. Tap this source, you defeat age.

www.helpingpaws.net 815-338-4400

www.helpingpaws.net 815-338-4400 Send your Help Wanted Advertising 24/7 to: Email: helpwanted@shawsuburban.com Fax: 815-477-8898

Powered by:

1996 Chevy Camero Z28 Conv. 6', Looks/Runs Great, Free 3month Warranty $5000/OBO. 815-344-9440 1996 Chrysler LHS - Full power; 2nd Owner; 76k original miles; Good shape; Many enhancements. $3200. Call: 847-341-1727

1997 Lincoln Town Car Exec. - White, 4D, Full Power, Key Pad Entry, Elegant, 145k, 815-459-8595 2000 Dodge Intrepid $2200. Very Clean & dependable. 815-245-9562


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Saturday, June 4, 2016 •

CLASSIFIED 43

2002 Chrysler Sebring LXI Conv. 92K only. Load- 2001 Victory V92, Low Miles, Runs Great! McHenry 2BR Apt In Town, No Smokin/Dogs. MCHENRY/RINGWOOD ROUTE 31 FRONTAGE ed. Free 3month Warranty. $3900/OBO Including Heat, Elec & Water. $755/mo New tires and battery, $4000/obo 779-704-9153 815-344-9440 Broker. 815-575-6869 2008 Harley-Davidson 1200 Sportster XL Windshield, Luggage Rac, New Tires, 11,000 miles, $6500 obo. 2004 Mercury Monterey. 72K only. Front & Rear Woodstock 1BR $645 & 2BR $745 815-276-5681 A/C. New Breaks/Tires. Looks & Runs Great. Free All appliances, A/C, balcony, on site laundry, no pets. 2013 Harley Davidson FLD Switchback (Red) 1000 Miles. 3mo Warranty. $4900/OBO 815-344-9440 Many extras plus audio system. $9000. 847-639-0359 847-382-2313 ~ 708-204-3823 woodstocknorthwestapartments.com 2007 Chrysler PT Cruiser LTD Edition. 5 Speed, Sun Roof, Power Seats, Ice Cold Air. Free 3month MOTORCYCLES WANTED WOODSTOCK 2 BD, $850/mo. 1st Floor, Warranty. 815-344-9440 W/D in bldng,heat/water, & garbage in-

cluded. 815-236-5921~ 815-236-8854 Woodstock ~ Quiet, Nice 1BR, Heat Included $735/mo. 815-337-0628

2008 Ford Explorer, Silver, 119+K Miles

Marengo - 3BR, 2.5BA TH, Full Basement 2 car garage, $1200/mo + utilities + security dep. 815-482-8080

Safe and Reliable, 4WD, $8,500. 224-230-6846 2007 Dodge Caravan SXT. 83K only. Store-n-go seating. Power Doors. Ice Cold Air. Loaded. Free 3month Warranty. $5500/OBO 815-344-9440

829 Ross Lane

Woodstock Studio $600/mo + sec. Efficiency

$575/mo + sec, 1BR $700/mo + sec. All 3 furnished with all utilities included, no pets. 815-509-5876

Will beat anyone's price by $300.

815-814-1224

A-1 AUTO

MOST CASH

WILL BEAT ANY QUOTE GIVEN!!

$400 - $2000 “don't wait....call 2day”!!

Visit today to take a tour of our community. Call For Details & Specials:

No pets, no smoking.

847-899-7246

Crystal Lake – 1BR, $800 + SEC, Quiet Bldg, Hardwood Floors, No Pets, Heat & Water Incl, Garage Avail. 815-455-6964 FOX LAKE 1 BR, Laundry on-site, no pets, Sect 8 OK, $710/mo + sec. 847-812-9830

Choose from 400 listed homes Flexible Credit Rules

815-814-6004

Gary Swift Berkshire Hathaway Starck Realty MchenryCountyRentToOwnHomes.com

Woodstock 3 Bedroom, 1.5 Bath, C/A, W/D

No garage/no dogs, $1225/mo. 815-382-7667

815-575-5153

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44 CLASSIFIED • Saturday, June 4, 2016 PUBLIC NOTICE IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE 22ND JUDICIAL CIRCUIT MCHENRY COUNTY, ILLINOIS MCHENRY SAVINGS BANK, Plaintiff, vs. WILLIAM J. STEFFENHAGEN, IV, BMO HARRIS BANK, N.A. f/k/a HARRIS BANK, N.A., UNKNOWN & NON-RECORD OWNERS CLAIMANTS, Defendants. Case No. 15 CH 110 NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S FORECLOSURE SALE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that pursuant to a Judgment for Foreclosure and Sale entered in the above-captioned case, the Sheriff of McHenry County, Illinois, or his deputy, on the 16th day of June, 2016, at the hour of 10:00 a.m., in the Civil Process department, Room 262, at the McHenry County Courthouse, 2200 N. Seminary Ave, Woodstock, IL 60098, will sell at public auction to the highest and best bidder, property legally described as follows: Permanent Index Number 09-33-176-016-0000 This property is commonly known as 5707 Lancaster Circle, McHenry, IL 60050, and may contain improvements. This real estate is being sold in an "As Is Condition" for cash or its equivalent in accordance with the terms and provisions of said judgment through which the Plaintiff is owed at least $128,922.28. The successful bidder is required to deposit 10% of the bid amount at the time of the sale with the McHenry County Sheriff, with the balance to be paid by noon of the Tuesday following the sale. For information regarding this real estate, including the possibility of inspection, interested parties may contact Amber L. Michlig or Michael G. Cortina, SmithAmundsen, LLC, 2460 Lake Shore Drive, Woodstock, Illinois 60098 815-337-4900. Dated this 16th day of May, 2016. Bill Prim Sheriff of McHenry County Michael G. Cortina Amber L. Michlig SmithAmundsen, LLC Attorney for McHenry Savings Bank 2460 Lake Shore Drive Woodstock, Illinois 60098 (815) 337-4900 Telephone (815) 337-4910 Facsimile mcortina@salawus.com amichlig@salawus.com ARDC No. 6255782 ARDC No. 6309698 (Published in the Northwest Herald on the May 21, 28, 2016, June 4, 2016) 1189748

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Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Saturday, June 4, 2016 • PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE

PUBLIC NOTICE IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE 22ND JUDICIAL CIRCUIT MCHENRY COUNTY, ILLINOIS

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MCHENRY SAVINGS BANK, Plaintiff, vs. WILLIAM J. STEFFENHAGEN, IV,BMO HARRIS BANK, N.A. f/k/a HARRIS BANK, N.A., UNKNOWN OWNERS & NON-RECORD CLAIMANTS, Defendants. Case No. 15 CH 110 NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S FORECLOSURE SALE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that pursuant to a Judgment for Foreclosure and Sale entered in the above-captioned case, the Sheriff of McHenry County, Illinois, or his deputy, on the 16th day of June, 2016, at the hour of 10:00 a.m., in the Civil Process department, Room 262, at the McHenry County Courthouse, 2200 N. Seminary Ave, Woodstock, IL 60098, will sell at public auction to the highest and best bidder, property legally described as follows: LOT 30 IN BOONE CREEK UNIT FOUR, BEING A SUBDIVISION OF PART OF THE WEST HALF OF SECTION 33, TOWNSHIP 45 NORTH, RANGE 8 EAST OF THE THIRD PRINCIPAL MERIDIAN, ACCORDING TO THE PLAT THEREOF RECORDED OCTOBER 18, 2000 AS DOCUMENT NUMBER 2000R0056933, IN MCHENRY COUNTY, ILLINOIS. Permanent Index Number 09-33-176-016-0000 This property is commonly known as 5707 Lancaster Circle, McHenry, IL 60050, and may contain improvements. This real estate is being sold in an "As Is Condition" for cash or its equivalent in accordance with the terms and provisions of said judgment through which the Plaintiff is owed at least $128,922.28. The successful bidder is required to deposit 10% of the bid amount at the time of the sale with the McHenry County Sheriff, with the balance to be paid by noon of the Tuesday following the sale. For information regarding this real estate, including the possibility of inspection, interested parties may contact Amber L. Michlig or Michael G. Cortina, SmithAmundsen, LLC, 2460 Lake Shore Drive, Woodstock, Illinois 60098 815-337-4900. Dated this 16th day of May, 2016.

Public Notice is hereby given that the proposed Annual Appropriation Ordinance of the VILLAGE OF WONDER LAKE, Wonder Lake, Illinois, for the fiscal year beginning May 1, 2016 and ending April 30, 2017, will be available for public inspection at the office of the VILLAGE OF WONDER LAKE, 4444 Thompson Road, Wonder Lake, Illinois, from and after June 15, 2016. Notice is further given that a public hearing on the adoption of said proposed Annual Appropriation Ordinance will be held on June 15, 2016, at 7:00 p.m. at 4444 Thompson Road, Wonder Lake, Illinois. VILLAGE OF WONDER LAKE By:/s/Jo-Ellen McIntosh VILLAGE CLERK (Published in the Northwest Herald June 4, 2016) 1144984

PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE

Public Notice is hereby given that the proposed Combined Annual Budget and Appropriation Ordinance of the FOX RIVER GROVE FIRE PROTECTION DISTRICT, Fox River Grove, Illinois, for the fiscal year beginning May 1, 2016, and ending April 30, 2017, will be available for public inspection at the office of the FOX RIVER GROVE FIRE PROTECTION DISTRICT, 411 Algonquin Road, Fox River Grove, Illinois, from and after June 4, 2016. Notice is further given that a public hearing on the adoption of said proposed Combined Annual Budget and Appropriation Ordinance will be held on July 5, 2016, at 6:30 p.m. at the Fox River Grove Fire Protection District, 411 Algonquin Road, Fox River Grove, Illinois. FOX RIVER GROVE FIRE PROTECTION DISTRICT By: /s/Patrick B. Hughes Secretary (Published in the Northwest Herald on June 4, 2016) 1193559

PUBLIC NOTICE

The City of Harvard is seeking a Professional Engineering Design firm for work at the Arrowhead Industrial Park. The deadline to submit proposals is June 17, 2016. Contact City Administrator David Nelson at 815-943-6468 for Bill Prim further information. Sheriff of McHenry County (Published in the Northwest Herald Michael G. Cortina June 4, 2016) 1194600 Amber L. Michlig SmithAmundsen, LLC Attorney for McHenry Savings Bank PUBLIC NOTICE 2460 Lake Shore Drive Woodstock, Illinois 60098 ASSUMED NAME (815) 337-4900 Telephone PUBLICATION NOTICE (815) 337-4910 Facsimile mcortina@salawus.com Public Notice is hereby given that amichlig@salawus.com on May 16, 2016, a certificate was ARDC No. 6255782 in the Office of the County filed ARDC No. 6309698 Clerk of McHenry County, Illinois, (Published in the Northwest Herald setting forth the names and on the May 21, 28, 2016, June 4, post- office address of all of the persons owning, conducting 2016) 1189741 and transacting the business known as

GOLUBSKI CARPENTRY AND HOME REPAIR located at: 213 Inverness Trail Mchenry IL 60050 Dated May 16, 2016 /s/ Mary E. McClellan McHenry County Clerk (Published in the Northwest Herald May 21, 28, 2016, June 4, 2016) 1189751

PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE FILE Z-894 Notice is hereby given that the City of McHenry Planning and Zoning Commission will hold a Public Hearing at the McHenry Municipal Center, 333 South Green Street, McHenry, Illinois 60050, at 7:30 P.M. on June 22, 2016 to consider an application by Jonathan Descher, 612 Wimbleton Tr., McHenry, IL 60050 (“Applicant") for the following request in accordance with the City of McHenry Zoning Ordinance: Variance from the Off-Street Parking and Loading Requirements for Fountain Shoppes Shopping Center [313-341 Front St.]; and Use Variance to allow a restaurant serving alcohol with outdoor seating, service and consumption of food and alcohol outdoors, and any other variances required from, including but not limited to, Article III. General District Regulations: H. Operations within Enclosed Buildings Outdoor Seating required effectuating the aforementioned request on the SUBJECT PROPERTY defined herein The property owner is CM Properties, LLC, 325 N. Front St., McHenry IL 60050. The property is located at 313-341 Front Street (Illinois Route 31), commonly known as Fountain Shoppes Shopping Center and generally located on the west side of Front Street, north of Dartmoor Drive and Park Place, and south of Lillian Street and Grove Avenue and consists of 2 acres more or less (“Subject Property”). The proposed business location is 335-337 Front St., and is situated north of Centegra Sports Medicine and south of State Farm within the Shopping Center, with outdoor seating requested in the fountain courtyard. PIN (Property Identification Number) of SUBJECT PROPERTY: 09-35-301-024 The SUBJECT PROPERTY is currently zoned C-5, Highway Commercial District. A copy of the application is on file and may be examined during regular business hours in the City Clerk's Office, at the McHenry Municipal Center, 333 South Green Street, McHenry, Illinois 60050, (815) 363-2100. Published by order of the Planning and Zoning Commission, City of McHenry, McHenry County, Illinois. All interested parties will be given an opportunity to be heard.

CLASSIFIED 47 que proposal gible organizations and units of local government to fund programs that provide prevention, early intervention, coordination, treatment, or recovery support services for McHenry County residents of all ages who have or are at risk of mental illness, substance abuse, developmental disability, autism, or traumatic brain injury. On Monday, June 6, 2016 at 9:00 am the Mental Health Board will host a meeting to review the FY 17 Notice of Funding Availability (NOFA) and FY 17 Funding Application. Please RSVP to Kris Doherty @Kdoherty@mc708.org . Application Period: June 6, 2016 at 12:00 pm - July 29, 2016 at 3:00 pm Applications are available on McHenry County Mental Health Board's website at www.mc708.org. For more information contact: Scott Block, Executive Director at or 815-455-2828 (Published in the Northwest Herald June 4, 2016) 1194621 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 is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. To complain of discrimination call HUD toll-free at 1-800-669-9777. The toll-free telephone number for the hearing impaired is 1-800-927-9275

We are At Your Service!

/s/ Shawn Strach, Chairman Planning and Zoning Commission (Published in the Northwest Herald on June 4, 2016) 1193540

PUBLIC NOTICE REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS McHENRY COUNTY MENTAL HEALTH BOARD FUNDING McHenry County Mental Health Board requests proposals from eli-

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Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Saturday, June 4, 2016

| NORTHWEST HERALD

48 Dennis Anderson, CFP® Branch Manager Senior Vice President – Investments

Get Ready For Life’s Milestones

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SPORTS Huntley goalkeeper Paige Renkosik leaps but can’t stop a long free kick that went in for the first goal of the match for New Trier in the first half of a Class 3A state semifinal at North Central College in Naperville. Huntley lost, 4-0. Jon Langham for Shaw Media

STATE TITLE OUT OF REACH

Huntley aims for 3rd place after loss to New Trier / 2

DAILY PULLOUT SECTION Saturday, June 4, 2016 • NWHerald.com


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Saturday, June 4, 2016

|SPORTS

2

GIRLS SOCCER: CLASS 3A STATE TOURNAMENT

New Trier bumps Huntley

Red Raiders fall in 1st trip to semifinals

VIEWS Jon Styf

New goal: Go out with 1 more win

By JOHN WILKINSON

jwilkinson@shawmedia.com NAPERVILLE – Huntley’s scouting report on New Trier was “spot on,” coach Kris Grabner said with a rueful laugh. The Red Raiders knew to have any success against the two-time defending state champions, they would have to possess the ball better and defend well in the air and on set pieces. It was pretty much all they worked on in the two days of practice leading up to the program’s first state appearance. “We knew they were going to be great in the air and crossing the ball and throw-ins, and they have some talent there, just getting up and winning balls,” Grabner said. All the game planning in the world, however, couldn’t stop New Trier from doing what it has done so well over the past three years: keep clean sheets and get forward dangerously. New Trier scored three times in the second half to beat Huntley, 4-0, Friday in a Class 3A state semifinal at North Central College. The Trevians advance to the 7 p.m. state championship match against Collinsville, a 2-1 winner over Glenbard East in Friday’s second semifinal. Huntley will play Glenbard East at 5 p.m. Saturday in the third-place match. “You’ve just got to forget about today,” Huntley’s Taryn Jakubowski said. “I know it’s going to sting, it’s going to hurt a little bit tonight, but tomorrow’s a new day. Just got to come back fresh and see what happens, try to get that third place.” Huntley was shut out for only the third time this season, unable to penetrate a New Trier defense that hasn’t allowed a goal during this postseason or its past two state title runs. The Trevians have outscored opponents, 69-0, in the 2014, ’15 and ’16 postseasons. “I know they always had a man on me, so that was my cue to be able to pass it and move off of it because I knew I was always going to have someone on me,” Jakubowski said. “But I thought they did a really good job of defending, so I have to give them props.”

lead in the 20th minute when Sam Urban’s long free kick from the left side of midfield snuck through the hands of leaping Huntley goalkeeper Paige Renkosik. “We knew that they were definitely really good at that, and they were really good in the air because they were taller and bigger than us, so we worked on it a lot in practice,” Renkosik said.

NAPERVILLE – Huntley goalkeeper Paige Renkosik isn’t used to heading to the bench. If her memory is right, she left only one other match this season. But Friday, with about 21/2 minutes left, Renkosik headed to the bench, got a hug from coach Kris Grabner, and was replaced by freshman Jenna Franklin. It wasn’t exactly the passing of the torch – Abbey Brown likely will be the Red Raiders’ senior goalkeeper next season when she returns from a torn ACL suffered during the basketball season – but it was something Grabner had thought through. “The awesome thing is that everybody played,” Grabner said after his team’s 4-0 Class 3A state semifinal loss to New Trier at North Central College. “We got every single girl the chance to say that they played at the state tournament; they got on the field.” Grabner knows from experience how much that means. When he was a sophomore in high school, he got into a state finals match and called it “something that I remember, something that I’m proud of.” Now, the Red Raiders have the chance to do something else no other Huntley soccer team has done before – finish with a win. No, it won’t come with a state title attached. But, as senior captain Taryn Jakubowski said afterward, the team wants to bring home a third-place trophy now. “Twelve years, 25 seasons now, it’s ended with a loss,” said Grabner, who coaches both the school’s boys and girls teams. “It’s ended with everybody being upset. It’s the last game together. We don’t play our best game [Friday], but we get to come out

See HUNTLEY, page 3

See STYF, page 3

Jon Langham for Shaw Media

Huntley goalkeeper Jenna Franklin (left) hangs on to the ball despite a collision with New Trier’s Amanda David in the second half of a Class 3A state semifinal Friday at North Central College in Naperville. Huntley lost, 4-0.

OUTSIDE THE BOX SCORE q UNSUNG HERO

Sam Heustis Huntley, jr., D

Heustis often was the last line of defense in the Huntley back four and cleaned up a number of threats.

q THE NUMBER

3

Of New Trier’s four goals, three were scored from free kicks or corners.

q AND ANOTHER THING ...

The match included a two-minute water break in the first half because of the heat. The referee whistled for it after New Trier’s first goal. New Trier hit the crossbar twice in the opening four minutes and took the

Scoreboard Friday’s semifinals New Trier 4, Huntley 0 Collinsville 2, Glenbard East 1 Saturday’s matches Third place: Huntley vs. Glenbard East, 5 p.m. Championship: New Trier vs. Collinsville, 7 p.m.


THE DAILY

• STYF

FEED

Continued from page 2

Awesome feeling to have received my first offer from Northwestern! #gocats – @bigtrevk (Crystal Lake South offensive lineman Trevor Keegan) Story, page 6

What to watch Stanley Cup Final: Pittsburgh at San Jose, 7 p.m., NBCSN The Sharks come home for Game 3 trailing the Penguins, 2-0.

Another tweet

Jon Langham for Shaw Media

Huntley’s Brianna Wilder (front) works to gain control of the ball against New Trier’s Nicole Kaspi in the second half Friday in Naperville.

• HUNTLEY

Continued from page 2

If you’re coming to our MVA Awards Show Tuesday you will find out the name under this card for All-Sports champion. – @nwh_JoePrepZone (Joe Stevenson)

A third tweet

Cary-Grove’s Kathie Wollney, a @MiamiRedHawks track athlete, wins MAC Medal of Excellence: http://www. miamiredhawks.com/genrel/060116aaa. html… – @BarryOnCampus (Northwest Herald contributor Barry Bottino)

“It didn’t have the outcome we wanted it to.” Huntley’s best chance of the first half, and maybe the entire match, came four minutes later. Freshman Braidy Ceh charged up the right side and centered the ball to Jakubowski at the top of the box. A nifty turn sent her defender the wrong way, and she fired a left-footed shot that hit the post and stayed out. “I saw she was coming to get it, and I knew I could fake her one way and get it the other way,” Jakubowski said. “I hit it and just didn’t get it to go in, so sometimes it’s just how the game goes. Just got to live with it and keep going.” In the 46th minute, New Trier doubled the lead, again from a free kick, but this time from much closer range. After a foul just at the top of the 18yard box, New Trier’s Celia Frei drove a curling shot over the Huntley wall to beat Renkosik. Grabner commented on how well the match was officiated, but he disagreed with the call that led to the second goal. “It’s a 50-50 ball, Taryn goes through it, that girl goes down so they call a four on her. ... Of course, it’s an outstanding deadball, holy cow,” Grabner

said. “Our wall stayed together and she just curled it right over the top of them, and Paige never had a chance on it. I don’t think Paige could even see it. “Once that happened, now we’re pushing forward. We changed our formation, we’re getting extra players up top. [Assistant coach Matt] Lewandowski looks at me and he says ‘Two, three, four, it doesn’t matter, let’s go forward and see if we get back in the game.’ So that was kind of our mentality, and it ends up 4-0, no different than 2-0.” In the 58th minute, Sydney Parker made it 3-0 with a header from a corner kick, and in the 66th minute, Nicole Kaspi’s finish in the box made it 4-0. “I know that we could have done more to make sure that none of the crosses came off or we didn’t get the fouls on our end, but we did a pretty good job marking up,” center back Sam Heustis said. Grabner said he saw opportunities for Huntley to threaten, but a composed New Trier team wouldn’t let Huntley on the ball enough to build anything. “When we got Taryn in a little space running at them, they didn’t defend it that well,” Grabner said. “She got her opportunities there. ... I said ‘We’re dangerous if we counter; if we go, we are dangerous,’ and we just never quite got that opportunity in the second half.”

• Northwest Herald sports editor Jon Styf can be reached at jstyf@shawmedia.com or on Twitter @JonStyf.

Public Notice of Draft NPDES Permit Public Notice Number: FRB:15102801.daa Public Notice is hereby given by Illinois E.P.A., Division of Water Pollution Control, Permit Section, 1021 N. Grand Ave. East, P.O. Box 19276, Springfield, IL 62794-9276 (herein Agency) that a draft National Pollutant Discharge System NPDES Permit Number IL0070688 has been prepared under 40 CFR 124.6(d) for Village of Huntley, 10987 Main Street, Huntley, Illinois 60142 From Huntley – West WWTP, 12603 West Main St., Huntley, Illinois 60142 (McHenry County) This facility provides treatment of wastewater generated within its service area. The application, draft permit, and other documents are available for inspection and may be copied at the Agency between 9:30 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. Monday through Friday. A Fact Sheet containing more detailed information is available at no charge. For further information call the Public Notice Clerk at 217-782-0610. Interested persons are invited to submit written comments on the draft permit to the Agency at the above address. The NPDES Permit and Public Notice numbers must appear on each comment page. All comments received by the Agency not later than 30 days from the date of this publication shall be considered in making the final decision regarding permit issuance. Any interested person may submit written request for a public hearing on the draft permit, stating their name and address, the nature of the issues proposed to be raised and the evidence proposed to be presented with regard to these issues in the hearing. Such requests must be received by the Agency not later than 30 days from the date of this publication. If written comments and/or requests indicate a significant degree of interest in the draft permit, the permittee authority may, at its discretion, hold a public hearing. Public notice will be given 30 days before any public hearing.

• Saturday, June 4, 2016

and play again [Saturday].” After the match, Grabner made it clear to his team the semifinal result will have no bearing on what the team accomplished and how they will be remembered, as the best Huntley soccer team yet. It would be easy to be cynical about a third-place match, but Huntley (22-4-2) is every bit sincere about wanting to win it. With 12 seniors, including Katelyn Heiden following along from Europe, it’s a chance to come out and play together one more time as a team, finishing off the longest playoff run in school history. “Obviously, it’s not what we want. …,” Renkosik said. “It’s nice that they have trophies for everyone, but we really want to end the season on a win.” After a state semifinal loss, one Jakubowski said certainly would sting on Friday’s bus trip back to Huntley, that’s as ringing of an endorsement for a third-place match as you can get. One more chance.

SPORTS | Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

Tweet from last night

3


Sterling does it to Marengo again By ALEX KANTECKI

OUTSIDE THE BOX SCORE

akantecki@shawmedia.com GENOA – The Marengo softball team started Friday’s Class 3A Genoa-Kingston Sectional final in encouraging fashion, working a leadoff walk, sacrificing the runner over, and jumping on Sterling pitcher Lexy Staples for a run in the top of the first inning – courtesy of an RBI double by Mariah Dionne. Unfortunately for the Indians, Dionne’s ringing hit down the right-field line that scored Leah Secor for the game’s first run wouldn’t hold up. Marengo’s offense produced only three hits against Staples and freshman pitcher Jayme Eilers, and a two-run triple by Sterling’s Hannah Escamilla in the bottom of the third inning was enough to propel the Golden Warriors to a 2-1 win. Sterling advances to Monday’s Hampshire Supersectional, while Marengo (29-9) – which placed second at state a year ago – ends its season against Sterling (34-5) for the third time in the past four seasons. All three losses have come in the sectional final. “Our kids came out, and I thought that first inning was huge,” Indians coach Dwain Nance said. “I knew one run wasn’t going to be it; they’re too good of an offensive team. ... But there’s no one to blame. I just thought today was another example of how well we could play.” For the second straight game, Marengo’s offense produced only one run. On Wednesday, the Indians outlasted Burlington Central, 1-0, in 10 innings behind a three-hit shutout by Dionne. “Our offense wasn’t clicking on every cylinder,” senior third baseman Allison Jasinski said. “There are things we could have done better, and we know that, but we can’t sit and dwell on that. ... We know that we didn’t take a hold of some of the opportunities we

q UNSUNG HERO Mariah Dionne Marengo, jr., P

Dionne hit a double down the right field line to give the Indians a 1-0 lead in the first. She also allowed two runs (one earned) on six hits in six innings, striking out six and walking two.

q THE NUMBER

1-3

Marengo’s record against Sterling in sectional finals

q AND ANOTHER THING ...

Michael Krabbenhoeft – mkrabbenhoeft@shawmedia.com

Marengo’s Mariah Dionne bats Friday against Sterling during the Class 3A GenoaKingston Sectional final in Genoa. Marengo lost, 3-1.

Scoreboard Friday’s championship Sterling 3, Marengo 1

Sterling will face Carmel or Antioch at 4:30 p.m. Monday in the Hampshire Supersectional. had.” After Dionne’s double in the top of the first, Staples retired 11 of the final 12 batters she faced. Eilers relieved her in the fifth inning, and Marengo had its best chance to score. Megan Anthony led off with a single and Amber Proberts laced a single to left with one out to put runners on first and second. Eilers got the next batter, Secor, to hit into a fielder’s choice at third, and Riley Connell ended the in-

ning with a 6-3 groundout. Five of the final six batters for Marengo struck out, including all three in the seventh. One hit, a line-drive triple by Escamilla that carried over the head of Connell in center field with one out, was the difference Friday. “I think that girl that hit that double, she just got a hold of it,” said Dionne (20-7), who had six strikeouts. “It was rise ball, high in. She just reached up and got it. ... You can’t take anything away from the game. One run isn’t going to win the game.” As the Warriors celebrated and received the sectional plaque, the Indians stood and watched near home plate. Moments later, they huddled in short right field, not ready for the season to end. “Nance just told us, this shows us that we’re not the best team in the state,” said Jasinski, one of two seniors,

After Marengo’s postgame huddle broke in right field, senior Allison Jasinski and junior Leah Secor stayed back and hugged. “I think we’ll be alright. It’s just really hard losing two seniors (Jasinski and outfielder Amber Proberts),” Secor said. “I really looked up to them.” along with Proberts. “And that’s motivation for us to work harder for next year.” Jasinski won’t be on the field (she plans on studying bio-medical engineering at Ohio State University next fall), but she had a message for the 13 returning players. “I just told everyone it really was a blessing for me to be a senior on this team,” she said. “The group of underclassmen, they’re so talented, and I hope that they realize that. They know they can do great things.” Nance, whose teams have gone to the state tournament three times since 2011, expects next year’s team to be as equally competitive. “This is a great team,” Nance said. “They’re a great team in terms of coachability, and in terms of what they do on and off the field. They’re really good kids ... and I know next year we’re going to be tough again.”

SPORTS BRIEF Judge rules U.S. women’s soccer team has no right to strike

issue. U.S. District Judge Sharon Johnson Coleman ruled Friday the team remains bound by a no-strike provision from its CHICAGO – A federal judge ruled the 2005-12 collective bargaining agreement. world champion U.S. women’s soccer The federation warned a strike could team does not have the right to strike to seek improved conditions and wages have forced the women’s team, which is seeking its fourth straight Olympic gold before the Summer Olympics, seeming to end the prospect of an unprecedented medal in Brazil, to withdraw from the disruption by one of the most successful Games and said that would have damaged American soccer as a whole. American national teams. The union wanted the option of striking, The case pits the U.S. Women’s Naalthough it hadn’t said definitively it tional Soccer Team Players Association against the U.S. Soccer Federation, which would. – The Associated Press sued in February to clarify the strike

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Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Saturday, June 4, 2016

|SPORTS

4 SOFTBALL: CLASS 3A GENOA-KINGSTON SECTIONAL


5

SPORTS | Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Saturday, June 4, 2016 Sarah Nader – snader@shawmedia.com

Huntley shortstop Charlie Nugent throws to first after forcing out Prairie Ridge’s Bryce Thelander at second in the sixth inning Wednesday in a Class 4A Huntley Sectional semifinal. Huntley won, 4-0, and will face Grant in the sectional final at 11 a.m. Saturday.

BASEBALL: CLASS 4A HUNTLEY SECTIONAL

Improving Huntley 2 wins from state By JOE STEVENSON

joestevenson@shawmedia.com Huntley gained a reputation through the years as a baseball team that could stick with the best in the traditionally rugged Fox Valley Conference. In 2009, the Red Raiders set the school wins record at 30-7. The next year, they finished fourth in the state, going 29-11. In most seasons since then, Huntley topped 20 wins, and in 2014 the Raiders won another Class 4A regional. So last year’s 9-27 record seemed more like a blip than a trend, although few people outside the program might have guessed Huntley would be the last area baseball team standing. Charlie Nugent would have, but he’s inside the program. “I knew we were going to struggle a

Scoreboard

Saturday’s championship Huntley (24-14) vs. Grant (26-13), 11 a.m. Winner advances to Schaumburg Supersectional No. 2 at 7:30 p.m. Monday. little bit in the beginning of the year, figuring out what everybody’s role was, but we kept being more and more consistent,” said Nugent, the Raiders’ shortstop and one of two seniors starting. “We’re on a good streak now, and we want to keep it going.” The Raiders (24-14) take on Grant (26-13) in the Class 4A Huntley Sectional championship game at 11 a.m. Saturday. The winner advances to Monday’s Schaumburg Supersectional No. 2 at 7:30 p.m. Either Gurnee Warren or Mundelein, which play at 11 a.m. Sat-

urday in the Stevenson Sectional title game, will be the other team. Second baseman Trevor Ranallo, the other senior starter, and Nugent were a combined 7 for 8 in Wednesday’s 4-0 win against Prairie Ridge from the Nos. 7 and 8 spots. “I thought we would be getting better each and every day,” Raiders coach Andy Jakubowski said. “I really did. Our sophomores and juniors grew. We envisioned to be in the sectional. ... I’m real proud of these boys. We’re hot right now, and we’re doing things right and proper right now. That’s why we’re in the position we are.” Junior third baseman Jeff Heinrich and junior first baseman Noah Konie were regular starters all last season. Ranallo and junior catcher Joe Rizzo started for a good portion of the season. So there was not an abundance of experience returning, but considerable

talent from the junior class. “We obviously don’t have as much experience as you’d want, but we’re rolling with the momentum we have in the regional and want to keep it rolling,” junior right fielder Brad Model said. “Two more wins to state.” After Wednesday’s victory over Prairie Ridge, Jakubowski was undecided who would start Saturday’s championship game. Sophomore Nick Laxner, who threw 21 pitches in relief Wednesday, might get the call. Grant threw its ace, Bryan Libby, for 89 pitches Thursday to beat Jacobs, 8-5, and likely will not have him except for an abbreviated stint. Bulldogs coach Dave Behm didn’t know who would start but hinted they might have to mix and match. “We’re in a great spot right now,” Nugent said. “We’re hot right now, and we’ve seen good pitching all year.”


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Saturday, June 4, 2016

|SPORTS

6 CRYSTAL LAKE SOUTH FOOTBALL

Northwestern 1st D-I school to offer Keegan

BELOW: Crystal Lake South freshman offensive lineman Trevor Keegan (back) congratulates teammate Corey Sheehan on a touchdown against Bloom on Sept. 12, 2015, at South. Keegan on Friday received his first Division I scholarship offer, from Northwestern. LEFT: Keegan listens to coaches during halftime. Shaw Media file photos

Rising sophomore O-lineman stands 6-6, weighs 290 By JOE STEVENSON

joestevenson@shawmedia.com The world of college recruitment just became a little more real for Crystal Lake South’s Trevor Keegan. Keegan, a 6-foot-6, 290-pound offensive lineman who just completed his freshman year, received his first offer from an NCAA Division I school Friday at Northwestern. Keegan was invited to a one-day camp at the Evanston school, and Wildcats coach Pat Fitzgerald and his staff did not let the Gators’ budding star lineman leave without making an offer. “They said everything I did was what they wanted,” Keegan said. “I did well today, that’s basically it.” Gators coach Chuck Ahsmann was surprised it happened so soon but said Northwestern had good reasons. “Usually, you don’t get an offer before your sophomore year in high school. It’s just rare,” Ahsmann said. “I was real excited for him. They had been in to see him and they were real impressed with his size, but every school wants you to come to a camp and see what you really look like. “They told me he’s a rare kid and he better be ready for a tidal wave of schools coming in.” Gators quarterback Luke Nolan also was excited for one of the big guys protecting him, tweeting: “Shout out to my big man @bigtrevk on the offer from Northwestern!! Big things coming from this youngster.” Fitzgerald’s staff also told Ahsmann, by NCAA rules, they cannot contact Keegan, so they have to first contact Ahsmann, who then can tell Keegan schools called. Keegan started at guard most of the season for the Gators and was named to the MaxPreps Freshman All-American Team from that website. This likely will be the first of many offers for Keegan. “I just want to be patient and figure it out with my family,” Keegan said. “Be smart about it and look for my future and what it will bring. It’s a decision for

the rest of my life.” Ahsmann went through the process with guard Jake Bernstein several years ago and knows it will get intense for Keegan. “The biggest advice I’m going to give him and his parents (Michael and Amanda) is to enjoy the process,” Ahsmann said. “He has a long way to go.

Jake was nationally recruited, but for me as a head coach that was only basically six months. This is going to be a significantly longer process for him. He has to focus on getting stronger and getting bigger and working hard, and things will continue to happen for him.” Keegan said he has grown a half-inch and added about 30 pounds through his

freshman year at South. Northwestern offensive line coach Adam Cushing came to South about two months ago to visit Keegan and invited him to the camp at that time. Because Keegan pitches with the Crystal Lake Cardinals, he will attend only one more camp this summer, coming up this month at Notre Dame.


MUHAMMAD ALI: 1942-2016

By TIM DAHLBERG

The Associated Press

• Saturday, June 4, 2016

Muhammad Ali, the magnificent heavyweight champion whose fast fists and irrepressible personality transcended sports and captivated the world, has died. He was 74. Ali suffered for years from Parkinson’s disease, which ravaged his body but could never dim his larger-thanlife presence. A towering figure in his prime, he still traveled and made appearances in his later years despite being muted by the thousands of hits he took during his remarkable career. He was hospitalized in Phoenix with respiratory problems this week, and his family gathered around him. He died Friday night, according to a statement from the family. Ali was a giant of his time – a furious and loud fighter whose influence was felt far beyond the ring. He engaged in some of the world’s most iconic fights even though his career was interrupted for more than three years when he refused to be drafted for military service during the Vietnam War. He beat the invincible Sonny Liston, fought a string of thrilling fights with Joe Frazier and stopped George Foreman in the “Rumble in the Jungle” in Zaire. But he paid a terrible price for the estimated 29,000 punches he took to his head during a career that made him perhaps the most recognized person on earth. “I am the greatest,” Ali thundered again and again. Few would disagree. Despite his debilitating illness, he traveled the world to rapturous receptions even as the once-bellowing voice was reduced to a whisper and he was left to communicate with a wink or a weak smile. Revered – and reviled – by millions, Ali cut quite a figure in his prime, indeed, complete with an entourage nearly as colorful as he was urging him to “float like a butterfly, sting like a bee.” He finished with a record of 56-5 with 37 knockouts and was the first man to win heavyweight titles three times. But his life outside the ring was as fascinating – and controversial – as his life inside the ropes. Ali spurned white America when he joined the Black Muslims and changed his name from Cassius Clay to Muhammad Ali. He defied the draft at the height of the Vietnam war – “I ain’t got no quarrel with them Viet Cong” – and lost 31/2 years from the prime of his career. He entertained world leaders, once telling Philippines President Ferdinand Marcos: “I saw your wife. You’re not as

SPORTS | Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

‘The Greatest’ was larger than life

7

AP file photo

Muhammad Ali is held back by referee Joe Walcott (left) after Ali knocked out challenger Sonny Liston in the first round of their May 25, 1965, title fight in Lewiston, Maine. Ali died according to a statement released by his family Friday. He was 74. dumb as you look.” The quiet of Ali’s later life was in contrast to the roar of a career that had breathtaking highs as well as terrible lows. He exploded on the public scene in the 1960s with a series of nationally televised fights that gave the public an exciting new champion and entertained millions as he sparred verbally with the likes of bombastic sportscaster Howard Cosell in interviews. Ali once estimated he had made $57 million in his pro career, but the effect of the punches lingered long after most of the money was gone. That didn’t stop him from traveling tirelessly to promote Islam, meet with world leaders and champion legislation dubbed the Muhammad Ali Boxing Reform Act, meant to protect fighters from being exploited by managers and promoters. While slowed in recent years, he still was able to make numerous appearances, including a trip to Ireland in 2009. Despised by some for his outspoken beliefs and refusal to serve in the U.S. Army in the 1960s, an aging Ali became a poignant figure whose attendance at a sporting event would draw long standing ovations. With his face nearly frozen from the disease and his hands trembling, he lit

the Olympic torch for the 1996 Atlanta Games in a performance as riveting as some of his fights – namely, the “Rumble in the Jungle” and the “Thrilla in Manila.” A few years after that, he sat mute in a committee room in Washington, his mere presence enough to persuade lawmakers to pass the boxing reform bill that bore his name. Born Cassius Marcellus Clay on Jan. 17, 1942, in Louisville, Kentucky, Ali began boxing at age 12 after his new bicycle was stolen and he vowed to policeman Joe Martin that he would “whup” the person who took it. He was only 89 pounds at the time, but Martin began training him at his boxing gym, the beginning of a six-year amateur career that ended with the light heavyweight Olympic gold medal in 1960. Ali promised to shock the world by beating the fearsome Liston in 1964 and he did just that to become heavyweight champion for the first time. He dominated the heavyweight ranks until he was stripped of his right to fight for a living when he refused to be inducted for the draft in 1967. By the time Ali was able to return to the ring following his enforced lay-

off, he was bigger than ever. Soon he was in the ring for his first of three epic fights against Frazier, with each fighter guaranteed $2.5 million in boxing’s first megabucks match. Before the fight, Ali called Frazier an “Uncle Tom” and said he was “too ugly to be the champ.” His gamesmanship could have a cruel edge, especially when it was directed toward Frazier. In the first fight, though, Frazier had the upper hand. He relentlessly wore Ali down, knocking him down in the 12th round and winning a decision. It was the first defeat for Ali, but the boxing world had not seen the last of him and Frazier in the ring. Ali won a second fight, and then came the “Thrilla in Manila” on Oct. 1, 1975, in the Philippines, a brutal bout that Ali said afterward was “the closest thing to dying” he had experienced. Ali won that third fight but took a terrific beating from the relentless Frazier before trainer Eddie Futch kept Frazier from answering the bell for the 15th round. It was, most in boxing agreed, Ali’s last great performance, although he would come back to win the heavyweight title from Leon Spinks to make history by winning the heavyweight title for the third time.


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Saturday, June 4, 2016

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Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Saturday, June 4, 2016

| SPORTS

12 TIGERS 10, WHITE SOX 3

Frazier’s love affair with Sox still strong By DARYL VAN SCHOUWEN

TIGERS 10, WHITE SOX 3

dvanschouwen@suntimes.com

DETROIT – It’s going to take more than a seven-game losing streak or 15 losses in 19 games to sour third baseman Todd Frazier on the White Sox. You might recall when Frazier spent all of a couple of weeks with his new team in spring training that the Jersey boy declared his desire to be a South Side guy beyond next season, his last one under team contract control. One third of the way into 2016, the Toddfather hasn’t changed his tune. “Not one bit,” he said Friday. “That would be nice. I would love that. Without a doubt.” The Sox would no doubt like to have Frazier around for a while, too. Although his batting average slipped to .217 in the Detroit Tigers’ 10-3 win Friday, he owns a team-high 38 RBIs and is tied for the major league home run lead with 17. How unusual is that? Dick Allen and Bill Melton are the only Sox in history to lead the American League in homers. Frazier hit 29 and 35 homers in 2014 and 2015 for the Cincinnati Reds and won the Home Run Derby at the All-Star Game. “I’ll take homers over singles any day of the week,” Frazier said. “That’s what I’m here to do. And it’s about being clutch. That’s what this game is about.” Frazier points to a batting average on balls in play below .200, which suggests

Chicago Eaton rf Sladino ss Frazier 3b Abreu 1b Shuck cf Lawrie 2b J.Rllns dh Av.Grca lf Avila c Sands ph Totals Chicago Detroit

AP photo

White Sox center fielder J.B. Shuck can’t hang on to a fly ball hit by the Tigers’ James McCann for a single in the sixth inning Friday in Detroit. Detroit’s J.D. Martinez scored on the single, but Shuck threw out Mike Aviles trying to score from first base. his batting average luck will even out. He’s also striking out less and walking more than usual. He walked against Jordan Zimmermann (8-2, 2.58) and scored on Jose Abreu’s double Friday. “Once things even out it will be a better season not only for me but the team,” he said. What’s more, Frazier’s defense has been the key to a stabilized infield, and his off-field leadership is invaluable, manager Robin Ventura and third base coach Joe McEwing say. “He walks in with energy every day, in the dugout picking everybody up,” McEwing said. “He’s the consummate teammate. A true professional.” Frazier, 30, is earning $8.25 million

this year and will be eligible for arbitration for another year before he’s eligible for free agency in 2018. It may be early to talk about an extension, but all things considered, the Sox could spend in more foolish ways. “It’s great to hear from any of our guys how much they enjoy it here and their interest in sticking around for a while,” general manager Rick Hahn said. “At this time, though, our focus is on the matter currently at hand – winning ballgames right now. The business side of things can wait until a more appropriate time.” As for the business of winning games, the Sox saw a two-game winning streak snapped, losing by more than four runs

ab 4 4 3 4 4 3 3 4 3 1 33

r 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 3

h 0 0 0 2 1 1 0 1 1 1 7

bi 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 3

Detroit ab r Kinsler 2b 4 2 Maybin cf 4 2 Mi.Cbrr 1b 3 0 An.Rmne pr-1b 0 0 V.Mrtnz dh 5 1 J..Mrtn rf 4 1 J.Upton lf 5 0 Aviles 3b 3 0 J.McCnn c 4 2 J.Iglss ss 3 2 Totals 35 10

010 001 001 — 021 001 24x —

h 2 1 1 0 3 2 1 0 3 1 14

bi 2 0 1 1 2 1 0 0 2 0 9

3 10

DP–Chicago 2, Detroit 1. LOB–Chicago 7, Detroit 8. 2B–Abreu (10), Avila (4), V.Martinez (13), J.Iglesias (7). 3B–J.McCann (1). HR–V.Martinez (9), J.McCann (2). SB–J..Martinez (1). Chicago Rodon L,2-5 Kahnle Purke Detroit Zimmermann W,8-2 Wilson H,5 Wilson Parnell

IP

H

R

6 1 1

7 4 3

4 2 4

ER BB SO 4 2 4

3 1 3

5 1 0

52/3 11/3 1 1

5 1 0 1

2 0 0 1

2 0 0 1

2 1 0 1

3 1 2 0

WP–Rodon. Umpires–Home, John Tumpane; First, Alan Porter; Second, Paul Nauert; Third, Jeff Kellogg. T–3:22. A–31,184 (41,681).

for the first time since April. Without Melky Cabrera (family emergency leave) and several from the bullpen in need of a day off, they played this one short-handed. Left-hander Carlos Rodon (2-5, 4.41 ERA) gave up four runs on seven hits and three walks over six innings, and relievers Tommy Kahnle and Matt Purke, trying to pick up the slack for resting relievers, got pounded for a combined six runs.

WHITE SOX NOTES

Cabrera will miss series for family emergency By DARYL VAN SCHOUWEN

dvanschouwen@suntimes.com

DETROIT – The White Sox will play the entire three-game series against the Detroit Tigers that opened Friday night without left fielder Melky Cabrera, one of their most productive hitters. Cabrera was placed on the Family Emergency Leave List on Friday afternoon because of a family medical issue, and right-hander Tommy Kahnle was recalled from Triple-A Charlotte. He gave up two runs in a 38-pitch seventh inning and was sent back after the game. A corresponding move will be made Saturday, possibly a position player. Cabrera is required to miss a minimum of three days and is expected back Tuesday for the first game of a homestand that starts with the Washington Nationals. A switch-hitter who has been used in the Nos. 2, 3, 4 and 5 spots in the

lineup, Cabrera had played in every game and is hitting .275 with four homers, nine doubles, two triples, 24 RBI and 25 runs scored. It’s a significant loss for a team already getting by with subpar production from Jose Abreu, who had three hits in his past 24 atbats entering Friday. Abreu was batting .242 Melky Cabrera with six homers and 28 RBI. Designated hitter Avisail Garcia, who has played five games in left during his career, took Cabrera’s spot in left field, and light-hitting shortstop Jimmy Rollins was at DH in manager Robin Ventura’s makeshift lineup against Tigers right-hander Jordan Zimmermann (7-2, 2.52). With Austin Jackson likely unavail-

able for a fourth straight game, Ventura was without two-thirds of his normal outfield and stuck with a two-man bench – catcher Dioner Navarro and outfielder-first baseman Jerry Sands. Even though the Sox had an off day Thursday, closer David Robertson and setup men Nate Jones and Matt Albers each pitched two innings in the Sox’s 2-1 victory over the Mets in 13 innings Wednesday. Ventura said Zach Putnam was probably unavailable as well, and using Robertson would have been a stretch. Kahnle and Matt Purke (four runs, one inning) tried to pick up the slack but took a beating in Friday’s 10-3 loss. Jackson still not ready: Jackson (turf toe) tested his foot before the game but was sore and only available in an emergency, Ventura said. “He can hit, but running becomes an issue, slowing down for him,” Ventura

said. The Sox can’t go much longer without putting him on the DL. “He says he’s been feeling better, so we can give him another day and see,’’ Ventura said. “We’ve got three days here, so we can go day-to-day here until we get to that off day.” Adam ain’t: Right fielder Adam Eaton was in his first slump of the year, going 5 for 38 over his past 10 games. Three of those hits came in one game, and his frustration hit a boiling point when he destroyed a container of sunflower seeds in the dugout Wednesday. “It’s been difficult,” Eaton said. “You never really hope that you find a rut as big as I’ve found. But it comes and goes. It’s just how baseball goes at times. It’s no fun. “We always have the saying as well: ‘If you are hitting, keep hitting. If you are not hitting, start hitting.’ ”


CUBS 6, DIAMONDACKS 0

By JEFF ARNOLD

For the Sun-Times

• Saturday, June 4, 2016

CHICAGO – Joe Maddon refers to John Lackey as his lynchpin. It’s a characterization the 37-year-old Cubs starting pitcher accepts as high praise considering the wealth of talent that surrounds him in a rotation that has been central to the Cubs’ success. On a staff headlined by Jake Arrieta and Jon Lester, it has been Lackey who has been one of the most stabilizing pieces to a staff that boasts an ERA under 3. Friday proved to be his latest contribution. Lackey worked 62⁄3 scoreless innings, struck out nine and scattered five hits as the Cubs won for the seventh time in eight games with a 6-0 victory over the Arizona Diamondbacks at Wrigley Field. Until the Cubs broke the game open in the eighth inning when they scored five runs, Lackey again lived up to expectations by simply doing what he does. “I take a lot of pride in being somebody you can count on, being somebody who takes the ball, somebody who goes deep in games, somebody you know what you’re going to get,” Lackey said. On a day when the Cubs’ offense couldn’t muster much off Arizona starter Archie Bradley, Lackey minded his own business. Rather than getting wrapped up in matching Bradley – who struck out 10 – Lackey steadily moved from inning to inning, being the latest Cubs starter to work deep into the game. Lackey (6-2) was efficient over the 100 pitches he threw before leaving with two outs in the seventh and clinging to a 1-0 lead after yielding a two-out walk followed by a single that gave Arizona runners on first and second. Left with the choice to either allow Lackey to finish the inning or to go to his bullpen, Maddon elected the latter, satisfied with the effort Lackey had given. “You saw the edge he provides,” Maddon said. Yet as tight as the game was when Lackey departed and after reliever Adam Warren finished the seventh by inducing an inning-ending double play, Lackey sensed bigger things were coming. It’s a hunch that comes from being around a team that is 23 games over .500 and that is off to the franchise’s second-best start since 1900. Only the 1907 Cubs – who started 40-12 – got out of the gates better than this year’s Cubs, giving Lackey all the evidence he needed that somehow, the offense would come to life. “Once you’ve won this much, kind of regardless of what the score is, you expect something good to happen,” Lack-

SPORTS | Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

‘Lynchpin’ Lackey up to task again

13

AP photo

Cubs starter John Lackey pitches against the Arizona Diamondbacks in the first inning Friday at Wrigley Field. Lackey pitched 62⁄3 scoreless innings in the Cubs’ 6-0 win. CUBS 6, DIAMONDBACKS 0 Arizona ab Segura 2b 4 Bourn rf-cf 4 Gldschm 1b 4 Ja.Lamb 3b 4 W.Cstll c 4 Owings cf-ss 2 Tomas lf 3 Ahmed ss 2 Hrrmann ph-rf 1 Bradley p 2 Barrett p 0 R.Weeks ph 1 Curtis p 0 Bracho p 0 Totals Arizona Chicago

r 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

h 1 0 1 1 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

bi 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

31 0 6 0

Chicago Fowler cf Heyward rf Bryant lf Rizzo 1b Zobrist 2b L Stlla 3b Russell ss M.Mntro c J.Baez ss-3b Lackey p Warren p Soler ph Strop p Fdrwicz ph Grimm p Totals

000 000 000 — 000 001 05x —

ab 4 5 3 3 2 3 1 2 4 2 0 0 0 1 0 30

r 0 1 1 0 1 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 6

h bi 0 0 1 0 1 0 2 1 0 0 1 0 1 2 0 0 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 7 5

0 6

E–Owings (3), Herrmann (1). DP–Arizona 1, Chicago 1. LOB–Arizona 6, Chicago 8. 2B–Goldschmidt (8), Bryant (11), Rizzo (11), La Stella (8), Russell (7), J.Baez (5). Arizona Bradley L,2-1 Barrett Curtis Bracho Chicago Lackey W,6-2 Warren H,5 Strop H,11 Grimm

IP

H

R

6 1

4 0 1 2

1 0 2 3

1 0 2 2

2 1 0 0

10 2 0 1

62/3

5 0 0 1

0 0 0 0

0 0 0 0

2 0 0 0

9 0 1 2

2/3 1/3 1/3

ER BB SO

The Cubs, who had taken the lead on Anthony Rizzo’s RBI double in the sixth inning, tacked on five more runs in the eighth. With two outs, Addison Russell, who entered the game in the seventh as a defensive replacement, laced a two-run double down the third-base line. Javy Baez, who had struck out three times, followed with a two-run double. When center fielder Chris Owings – who had misplayed Rizzo’s double – made a throw that ended up in the stands, the miscue allowed Baez to score and the Cubs to finish what Lackey had started. “It’s unbelievable,” Rizzo said of the starting pitching. “They give us a chance to win all the time.” Lackey just happened to be the latest chance. Again, he delivered. Lynchpin indeed.

‘IT’S BASEBALL’

Rizzo refuses to give in to frustration when would-be hits fall prey to an opposHBP–by Curtis (Bryant), by Bracho (Fowler). WP– ing defense that shifts to guard against Bracho. Umpires–Home, Hunter Wendelstedt; First, Scott Rizzo’s strengths. Barry; Second, Tripp Gibson; Third, Gabe Morales. By Maddon’s math, Rizzo – who was T–3:00. A–38,813 (41,072). hitting .239 before Friday game – would be hitting 25 to 30 points higher if not for ey said. “You expect something positive the way teams defend against him. and to find a way to win.” So when Rizzo laced a liner up the 1 1

middle in the first inning after Kris Bryant had doubled – only to have a wellplaced defender turn it into a groundout – Rizzo could only shake his head. “You get taught to hit the ball up the middle your whole life,” Rizzo said. “So you hit the ball up the middle and there’s a guy standing there. What are you going to do about it?” On Friday, Rizzo responded. When Rizzo saw Owings misplay his sixth-inning double, he admitted to being surprised at how things played out. “It’s baseball,” he said. “They said it evens out.”

RONDON READY

After struggling with back stiffness this week that kept him from pitching, closer Hector Rondon was not only prepared to pitch Friday, but was on the verge of being ready. After Pedro Strop worked a scoreless eighth inning with the Cubs leading 1-0, Rondon began to warm up in the bullpen expecting to get a chance at his 10th save. But when Baez lined a two-run double to center field, Rondon sat down, understanding he would no longer be needed. Justin Grimm instead worked the ninth and closed out the victory.


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Saturday, June 4, 2016

| SPORTS

14 GOLF ROUNDUP

SPORTS BRIEFS

Steele, Kuchar share Memorial lead The ASSOCIATED PRESS

DUBLIN, Ohio – Two matches at home against Phil Mickelson made Brendan Steele feel inadequate. Two rounds at the Memorial gave him a share of the lead. Steele put in a little more work and it paid off over two days in soft conditions at Muirfield Village. He had a 5-under-par 67 on Friday and was tied for the lead with past Memorial champion Matt Kuchar (66) going into a wide-open weekend. Steele, whose only PGA Tour victory was in his rookie season five years ago, took the past two weeks off to attend a wedding, go fishing with his father and venture over to San Diego to play a few games with Mickelson at The Bridges at Rancho Santa Fe. Steele lost 2 and 1 on the first day, 5 and 4 on the second. He made a quick fix with swing coach Rick Smith, had time for a few more tweaks, and he took that straight to the course for solid play over the past two days. And while there was nothing at stake, he has Mickelson by five shots at the moment. Steele and Kuchar were at 12-under 132. The scoring was so good, however, that the cut was at 2-under 142, the lowest since Jack Nicklaus started this tournament in 1976. Jordan Spieth for a brief moment looked as though he might be on the wrong side of it when he opened with two bogeys in four holes. He made six birdies over his last 12 holes for a 68 to at least stay in range, six shots behind at the halfway point. Rory McIlroy shot a 66, playing the last seven holes in even par. Jason Day was thrilled with a 71 because he lost his swing and figured it should have been something in the upper 70s. Emiliano Grillo feasted on the fast greens for a 66 and was one shot behind with Gary Woodland, who has quietly gone about rounds of 68-65. That included a shot into 3 feet for eagle on the par-5 15th. Dustin Johnson, who opened with a 64, had a pair of bogeys on the back nine that slowed him, and he took a double bogey on the par-4 sixth hole. It led to a 71, although he was only three shots behind.

Sky defeat Mystics by 26; winning streak stands at 3

ROSEMONT – Elena Delle Donne had 18 points, six rebounds and six assists, and the Sky built a 24-point halftime lead in a 98-72 victory over the Washington Mystics on Friday night. Cappie Pondexter added 16 points for the Sky (4-4). The Sky went on a 14-3 run in the first quarter for a 22-9 lead and led by double figures the rest of the game. The Sky held a 60-36 lead at halftime behind 10 points apiece from Delle Donne and Jessica Breland. The Sky made 24 of 38 field goals (63 percent) and hit all 10 of their free-throw attempts in the half. Atlanta cut it to 80-67 with 5:56 left in the fourth quarter. The Sky answered with a 9-0 run, capped by Pondexter’s 3-pointer. Allie Quigley added 16 points in 19 minutes to help the Sky win their third straight game.

Keselowski leads Team Penske sweep with Pocono pole

AP photo

Brendan Steele watches his putt on the eighth hole during the second round of the Memorial on Friday in Dublin, Ohio. Steele is tied for the lead with Matt Kuchar.

2014, had a 66. Nordqvist bogeyed Nos. 11 and 12, the second and third holes of her round, then birdied nine of the last 12 holes. The Swede twice made four straight birdies – on Nos. 16-1 and 6-9. Miyazato and Reto were paired together in the afternoon. Haru Nomura, a two-time winner this year, was a stroke back along with Casey Grice and Catriona Matthew. Lewis had five birdies in a bogey-free round to join Beatriz Recari, Jodi Ewart Shadoff, Maude-Aimee Leblanc, Christel Boeljon, Katherine Kirk, Stephanie Meadow and Amelia Lewis at 66. Down to sixth in the world, the 31-year-old Lewis is winless in 49 starts LPGA TOUR since taking the North Texas LPGA ShopRiteLPGA Classic: At Galloway Shootout in June 2014 for her 11th Township, New Jersey, Anna Nord- LPGA Tour victory. She tied for second qvist and Stacy Lewis know their way three weeks ago in Alabama, her 10th around the Donald Ross-designed Bay runner-up finish during the drought Course at Stockton Seaview. and her 23rd overall. Nordqvist opened her title defense with a 7-under 64 for a share of the lead PGA TOUR CHAMPIONS with Ai Miyazato and Paula Reto. LewPrincipal Charity Classic: At Des is, the tournament winner in 2012 and Moines, Iowa, John Inman shot a 7-un-

der 65 at the Wakonda Club to take a two-stroke lead. It’s the first time Inman, a two-time winner on the PGA Tour, has led after the opening round on the 50-and-over tour. The milestone round came three days after he won a qualifying event at a nearby course. Tom Lehman was tied for second with Todd Hamilton, Gary Hallberg, Mike Goodes and John Riegger. Miguel Angel Jimenez opened with a 68 in his first start in the event. John Daly, also making his Des Moines debut, had a 74.

EUROPEAN PGA TOUR Nordea Masters: At Stockholm, En-

gland’s Matthew Fitzpatrick shot a 5-under 65 to open a three-shot lead after the second round. Fitzpatrick had an 11-under 133 total at Bro Hof Slott. He won the British Masters in November. English countrymen Ross Fisher (68) and Andrew Johnston (69) were tied for second with Belgium’s Nicolas Colsaerts (66), Sweden’s Alexander Bjork (68) and Scotland’s Scott Henry (69).

LONG POND, Pa. – Brad Keselowski has the best start at Pocono for a race he can’t wait to finish. Win or lose – and, yes, Keselowski wants to win even with a Chase berth in the bag – the end of the race means the 2012 Sprint Cup champion is one week closer to NASCAR’s version of the playoffs. With the summer racing season just heating up, Keselowski already is antsy for September. “I am ready to go run for the championship right now,” he said. Up first, trying to win his second career race at Pocono Raceway. Keselowski led a Team Penske first-row sweep with his first pole of the season, turning a lap of 181.726 mph on Friday to just edge teammate Joey Logano.

Colombia scores 2 first-half goals, tops U.S. in Copa opener

SANTA CLARA, Calif. – Cristian Zapata scored his first international goal, James Rodriguez added a 42nd-minute penalty kick and Colombia beat the United States, 2-0, Friday night in the opener of the Copa America. U.S. coach Jurgen Klinsmann spoke about the importance of a strong showing in this special edition 100th anniversary Copa to create buzz for a potential 2026 World Cup bid. Instead, the 31st-ranked Americans began the biggest tournament at home since the 1994 World Cup with a dud as FIFA President Gianni Infantino watched among the announced sellout crowd of 67,439.

– The Associated Press


FRENCH OPEN

Friday in Paris

Williams to face Muguruza in French final By HOWARD FENDRICH The Associated Press

PARIS – Two years ago at the French Open, Serena Williams was stunned in the second round by a 20-year-old opponent participating in only her 13th match at a major tournament. That 6-2, 6-2 loss to Garbine Muguruza was, and remains to this day, the most lopsided defeat of Williams’ 338-match Grand Slam career. So guess who the No. 1-ranked Williams will face in the final at Roland Garros on Saturday as she attempts to earn her 22nd major championship and equal Steffi Graf’s Open-era record? Muguruza, of course.

Since that setback, Williams has won 47 of 50 matches at majors, collecting four trophies along the way to boost her total to 21. Only Graf and Margaret Court, with 24, own more. Williams moved one victory from Slam title No. 22 – including her second in a row at the French Open – by getting past a poor start and beating Kiki Bertens, 7-6 (7), 6-4, in the semifinals Friday. The No. 4-seeded Muguruza advanced by eliminating 2011 U.S. Open champion Sam Stosur, 6-2, 6-4. It’s also a rematch of last year’s Wimbledon final, which Williams won in straight sets. On Friday, the women’s semifinals were played simultaneously in front of similarly empty stadiums, Williams

FIVE-DAY PLANNER TEAM

vs. Bertens at Court Philippe Chatrier, Muguruza vs. Stosur at Court Suzanne Lenglen, where tickets were available for $22. Afterward, in the men’s semifinals, No. 1 Novak Djokovic neared his fourth straight Grand Slam title – and first at the French Open – by topping No. 13 Dominic Thiem, 6-2, 6-1, 6-4, and No. 2 Andy Murray defeated defending champion Stan Wawrinka, 6-4, 6-2, 4-6, 6-2, to become the first British man in the final in Paris since 1937. Because repeated rain sabotaged the schedule and eliminated the usual rest time at a major, Saturday will be Williams’ fourth consecutive day on court, and Muguruza’s third. Williams also acknowledged having “some issues” with a leg muscle, although she would not elaborate.

NBA

SATURDAY

SUNDAY

MONDAY

TUESDAY

WEDNESDAY

ARIZONA 1:20 p.m. WGN AM-670

ARIZONA 1:20 p.m. CSN AM-670

at Philadelphia 6:05 p.m. CSN AM-670

at Philadelphia 6:05 p.m. WGN AM-670

at Philadelphia 12:05 p.m. CSN AM-670

at Detroit 3:10 p.m. CSN AM-890

at Detroit 12:10 p.m. WGN AM-890

WASHINGTON 7:10 p.m. CSN AM-890

WASHINGTON 7:10 p.m. CSN AM-890

NBA FINALS

NATIONAL LEAGUE

(Best-of-7; x-if necessary) Golden State 1, Cleveland 0 Thursday: Golden State 104, Cleveland 89 Sunday: Cleveland at Golden State, 7 p.m. Wednesday: Golden State at Cleveland, 8 p.m. Friday, June 10: Golden State at Cleveland, 8 p.m. x-Monday, June 13: Cleveland at Golden State, 8 p.m.

NHL

WHAT TO WATCH SATURDAY Auto racing 8 a.m.: NASCAR, Xfinity Series, Pocono Green 250, qualifying, at Long Pond, Pa., FS1 10:30 a.m.: NASCAR, Sprint Cup Series, Axalta We Paint Winners 400, final practice, at Long Pond, Pa., FS1 11:30 a.m.: IMSA Series, Weathertech Sportscar Championship, Chevrolet Sports Car Classic, at Detroit, FS1 Noon: NASCAR, Xfinity Series, Pocono Green 250, at Long Pond, Pa., FOX 2:30 p.m.: IndyCar Series, Chevrolet Dual in Detroit Race 1, at Detroit, ABC Boxing 9:30 p.m.: Francisco Vargas vs. Orlando Salido, for Vargas’ WBC World super featherweight title; Julian Ramirez vs. Abraham Lopez, for the vacant NABA featherweight title, at Carson, Calif., HBO 10 p.m.: Premier Champions, Bryant Perrella vs. David Grayton, welterweights, at Montreal, ESPN College baseball 11 a.m.: NCAA Division I, Regionals, game and site TBA, ESPN2 College softball 11 a.m.: NCAA World Series, Game 7, at Oklahoma City, ESPN 1:30 p.m.: NCAA World Series, Game 8, at Oklahoma City, ESPN 6 p.m.: NCAA World Series, Game 9, at Oklahoma City, ESPN2 8:30 p.m.: NCAA World Series, Game 10, at Oklahoma City, ESPN2 Drag racing 1:30 p.m.: NHRA, New England Nationals, qualifying, at Epping, N.H., FS1 Extreme sports 11 a.m.: X Games, Skateboard Street Women & BMX Park finals, at Austin, Texas, ABC 5 p.m.: X Games, Skateboard Street Men, BMX Big Air & Moto X Best Trick finals, at Austin, Texas, ESPN Golf 6:30 a.m.: European PGA Tour, Nordea Masters, third round, at Stockholm, GOLF

MLB

11:30 a.m.: PGA Tour, The Memorial Tournament, third round, at Dublin, Ohio, GOLF 2 p.m.: PGA Tour, Memorial Tournament, third round, at Dublin, Ohio, CBS 2 p.m.: LPGA Tour, ShopRite Classic, second round, at Galloway, N.J., GOLF 4 p.m.: Champions Tour, Principal Charity Classic, second round, at Des Moines, Iowa, GOLF Pro baseball 1 p.m.: Arizona at Cubs, MLB 3:10 pm.: White Sox at Detroit, CSN 3 p.m.: Tampa Bay at Minnesota, FS1 6 p.m.: Regional coverage, San Francisco at St. Louis, N.Y. Yankees at Baltimore or Kansas City at Cleveland, FOX 9 p.m.: Atlanta at L.A. Dodgers OR Colorado at San Diego, MLB Mixed martial arts 7 p.m.: UFC 199, prelims, at Los Angeles, FS1 Motor sports 3 p.m.: Lucus Oil Pro Motocross, Thunder Valley National, at Lakewood, Colo., NBCSN Pro hockey 7 p.m.: Stanley Cup, final, Game 3, Pittsburgh at San Jose, NBC Rugby 1 p.m.: Penn Mutual Collegiate Championship, pool play, at Chester, Pa., NBCSN 3 p.m.: Penn Mutual Collegiate Championship, pool play, at Chester, Pa., NBC Soccer 2 p.m.: Men, national teams, International friendly, France vs. Scotland, at Metz, France, ESPN2 4 p.m.: Men, 2016 Copa America Centenario, group stage, Costa Rica vs. Paraguay, at Orlando, Fla., FOX 6:30 p.m.: Men, 2016 Copa America Centenario, group stage, Haiti vs. Peru, at Seattle, FS2 9 p.m.: Men, 2016 Copa America Centenario, group stage, Brazil vs. Ecuador, at Pasadena, Calif., FS1 Tennis 8 a.m.: French Open, women’s final, at Paris, NBC Track & field 4 p.m.: American Track League meet, at Atlanta, ESPN2

STANLEY CUP FINAL (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) Pittsburgh 2, San Jose 0 Monday: Pittsburgh 3, San Jose 2 Wednesday: Pittsburgh 2, San Jose 1 (OT) Saturday: Pittsburgh at San Jose, 7 p.m. Monday: Pittsburgh at San Jose, 7 p.m. x-Thursday: San Jose at Pittsburgh, 7 p.m. x-Sunday, June 12: Pittsburgh at San Jose, 7 p.m. x-Wednesday, June 15: San Jose at Pittsburgh, 7 p.m.

WNBA EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlanta Sky New York Indiana Washington Connecticut

W 6 4 3 3 2 1

L 1 4 3 4 6 6

Pct .857 .500 .500 .429 .250 .143

WESTERN CONFERENCE Los Angeles Minnesota Dallas Phoenix Seattle San Antonio

W 6 6 3 2 2 1

L 0 0 3 4 4 4

Pct 1.000 1.000 .500 .333 .333 .200

GB — 2½ 2½ 3 4½ 5 GB — — 3 4 4 4½

Friday’s Games Sky 98, Washington 72 Atlanta 83, Connecticut 77 New York 91, Indiana 59 Phoenix at Seattle (n) Saturday’s Games Los Angeles at San Antonio, 7 p.m. Dallas at Minnesota, 7 p.m. Sunday’s Games Indiana at Connecticut, 2 p.m. Washington at Atlanta, 2 p.m. New York at Seattle, 6 p.m.

Central Division W L Pct GB Cubs 38 15 .717 — Pittsburgh 29 25 .537 9½ St. Louis 28 27 .509 11 Milwaukee 25 30 .455 14 Cincinnati 20 35 .364 19 East Division W L Pct GB Washington 33 22 .600 — New York 30 23 .566 2 Miami 29 26 .527 4 Philadelphia 27 28 .491 6 Atlanta 16 37 .302 16 West Division W L Pct GB San Francisco 35 22 .614 — Los Angeles 28 27 .509 6 Colorado 24 29 .453 9 Arizona 24 33 .421 11 San Diego 21 34 .382 13 Friday’s Results Cubs 6, Arizona 0 L.A. Angels 9, Pittsburgh 2 Philadelphia 6, Milwaukee 3 Cincinnati 7, Washington 2 N.Y. Mets 6, Miami 2 San Francisco 5, St. Louis 1 Atlanta at L.A. Dodgers (n) Colorado at San Diego (n) Saturday’s Games Arizona (Escobar 0-1) at Cubs (Hammel 6-1), 1:20 p.m. Milwaukee (Guerra 3-1) at Philadelphia (Hellickson 4-3), 2:05 p.m. L.A. Angels (Tropeano 3-2) at Pittsburgh (Locke 4-3), 3:05 p.m. N.Y. Mets (Colon 4-3) at Miami (Nicolino 2-3), 3:10 p.m. Washington (Strasburg 9-0) at Cincinnati (Straily 3-2), 3:10 p.m. San Francisco (Samardzija 7-3) at St. Louis (Wacha 2-6), 6:15 p.m. Atlanta (Foltynewicz 2-2) at L.A. Dodgers (Kershaw 7-1), 9:10 p.m. Colorado (Bettis 4-4) at San Diego (Cashner 2-5), 9:10 p.m.

AMERICAN LEAGUE

Central Division W L Pct GB 30 24 .556 — 29 24 .547 ½ 29 26 .527 1½ 26 28 .481 4 16 38 .296 14 East Division W L Pct GB Baltimore 31 22 .585 — Boston 32 23 .582 — Toronto 30 26 .536 2½ New York 25 29 .463 6½ Tampa Bay 23 30 .434 8 West Division W L Pct GB Texas 32 22 .593 — Seattle 31 23 .574 1 Houston 26 30 .464 7 Los Angeles 25 29 .463 7 Oakland 25 30 .455 7½ Friday’s Results Detroit 10, White Sox 3 Baltimore 6, N.Y. Yankees 5 L.A. Angels 9, Pittsburgh 2 Cleveland 6, Kansas City 1 Toronto 5, Boston 2 Texas 7, Seattle 3 Houston 12, Oakland 2 Tampa Bay 4, Minnesota 2 Saturday’s Games White Sox (Sale 9-1) at Detroit (Pelfrey 0-5), 3:10 p.m. L.A. Angels (Tropeano 3-2) at Pittsburgh (Locke 4-3), 3:05 p.m. Toronto (Stroman 5-1) at Boston (Wright 5-4), 3:05 p.m. Oakland (Hill 8-3) at Houston (McHugh 5-4), 3:10 p.m. Tampa Bay (Andriese 3-0) at Minnesota (Santana 1-4), 3:10 p.m. Kansas City (Kennedy 4-3) at Cleveland (Tomlin 7-1), 6:15 p.m. N.Y. Yankees (Nova 3-3) at Baltimore (Wilson 2-4), 6:15 p.m. Seattle (Karns 5-1) at Texas (Perez 3-4), 8:05 p.m. Kansas City Cleveland White Sox Detroit Minnesota

MLS EASTERN CONFERENCE

W Philadelphia 6 New York 6 Montreal 5 New York City FC 4 Toronto FC 4 D.C. United 4 Orlando City 3 New England 3 Columbus 3 Fire 2

L 3 7 4 5 5 6 3 4 5 5

T 5 1 4 6 4 4 7 7 5 5

Pts 23 19 19 18 16 16 16 16 14 11

GF 21 24 22 22 14 14 23 19 18 10

WESTERN CONFERENCE Colorado FC Dallas Real Salt Lake Vancouver Los Angeles San Jose

W 8 8 7 6 5 5

L 2 4 4 6 2 4

T 4 4 2 3 6 5

Pts 28 28 23 21 21 20

GF 17 24 23 23 27 16

GA 16 20 20 29 15 16 21 25 21 14 GA 10 22 21 25 16 16

Portland Sporting KC Seattle Houston

5 5 5 3

6 8 7 7

4 3 1 4

19 18 16 13

23 14 13 20

Note: Three points for victory, one point for tie.

25 18 15 22

Thursday’s Results Real Salt Lake 3, New York City FC 2 Houston 1, FC Dallas 1, tie Sporting Kansas City 0, Los Angeles 0, tie Saturday, June 18 Fire at Colorado, 8 p.m. Philadelphia at New York FC, noon New England at Vancouver, 6 p.m. Los Angeles at Toronto FC, 6:30 p.m. San Jose at Orlando City, 6:30 p.m. Montreal at Columbus, 6:30 p.m. D.C. United at Houston, 8 p.m. Portland at Real Salt Lake, 9 p.m.

• Saturday, June 4, 2016

– The Associated Press

15

SPORTS | Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

PARIS – A look at Day 13 of the French Open on Friday: Weather: Cloudy. High of 57 degrees Men’s semifinals: No. 1 Novak Djokovic beat No. 13 Dominic Thiem, No. 2 Andy Murray beat No. 3 Stan Wawrinka. Women’s semifinals: No. 1 Serena Williams beat Kiki Bertens, No. 4 Garbine Muguruza beat No. 21 Sam Stosur. Stat of the Day: 47 – Number of years since a man won four consecutive Grand Slam titles, something Djokovic needs one more victory to accomplish. Quote of the Day: “It was a really unbelievable lesson for me. It propelled me to many, many, many wins after that.” – Williams, speaking about the most lopsided Grand Slam loss of her career, 6-2, 6-2, against Muguruza in the 2014 French Open. On court Saturday in the women’s final: Williams vs. Muguruza.


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Saturday, June 4, 2016

| SPORTS

16 NBA FINALS

Livingston, backups bring best in Game 1 By JANIE McCAULEY The Associated Press

AP photo

Warriors guard Shaun Livingston shoots against Cavaliers guard Iman Shumpert during the first half of Game 1 of the NBA Finals on Thursday in Oakland, Calif. The Warriors won, 104-89, behind Livingston’s 20 points.

OAKLAND, Calif. – Shaun Livingston put up almost 100 free throws at the end of Friday’s NBA Finals practice, and that is somewhere around his norm. Cleveland might have built the most expensive roster in the NBA. Way out West, Golden State developed arguably the league’s deepest and best bench with a group of hard-nosed guys like Livingston eager to take the pressure off starters Stephen Curry, Klay Thompson and Draymond Green whenever their names are called. Or downright outplay the first unit when necessary on the biggest stage. This close-knit band of backups regularly discusses how dependable they must be, telling each other to stay ready for any role. “When you see a guy down, you make sure you pick him up and when you see a guy up make sure you keep him level-headed because, you never know what’s going to be next in this game,” Marreese Speights said Friday. “When we’re at the gym, it’s, ‘Come on, let’s go get some shots,’ or hanging out on the

Next

NBA Finals: Game 2, Cleveland at Golden State, 7 p.m. Sunday, ABC road we sit down and talk about it, ‘We need each and every one of these players on this team to win another championship.’ Lunch, dinner, brunch, all that, we talk.” The reliable reserves did just that in a 104-89 Game 1 Finals win Thursday night, and the Cavaliers have to be at least a little bit concerned going into Sunday’s Game 2 knowing the Splash Brothers of Curry and Thompson will start sinking shots again soon enough. Livingston played almost 27 minutes in the opener of the rematch with his former Cleveland team and made 8 of 10 shots on the way to a postseason career-best 20 points. Leandro Barbosa made all five of his shots for 11 points, and 2015 Finals MVP Andre Iguodala contributed 12 points, seven rebounds and six assists. Back to the drawing board for LeBron James and the Cavs to stop Golden State’s bench.

Livingston is the one who nine years ago almost needed his left leg amputated after a gruesome knee injury. His comeback from that frightening 2007 fall suffered while with the Clippers has inspired Coach of the Year Steve Kerr. Going for a layup, the guard’s leg buckled backward, parallel to the court, when he fell in a freak accident. He screamed and writhed in agony. Livingston tore three major knee ligaments, as well as his lateral meniscus, then required extensive surgery. It was during his time with Cleveland at the end of the 2012-13 season that Livingston began to truly trust his body again. It was a long road emotionally and physically to reach that point, so much so that Livingston said it was “almost like I was a retired player.” Now, he’s on the court at Oracle Arena all smiles and gearing up for more in Game 2 when he gets his chance. Free throw after free throw. “Shaun shoots the most. That’s how he keeps his rhythm,” Kerr said. “I think part of that is his injury history. He can’t afford to put a lot of wear and tear on his legs by shooting a ton of jump shots, so he shoots a ton of free throws.”

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