nwht_2017-03-23

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Teacher layoffs D-155 to make cuts because of declining enrollment / A4 SPORTS

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Amy Grant talks fan base, Crystal Lake concert / Inside

BACK IN BUSINESS

After 14 years of vacancy, manufacturer coming to Motorola campus / A3 2017 Early Bird

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Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Thursday, March 23, 2017

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TODAY’S TALKER

Facebook rape stirs questions The daily about witnessing crimes online TWEET @NWHerald

By MICHAEL TARM The Associated Press

CHICAGO – The case of a 15-year-old Chicago girl who authorities said was raped while about 40 people watched on Facebook raises questions that have come up before in other attacks: What’s the obligation of bystanders who see a crime unfolding? And why do they not intervene? None of those who watched the sexual assault involving five or six men or boys called police. The girl knows at least one of her attackers, and investigators reported making good progress toward identifying the others. A closer look at what laws in the U.S. say about people who witness crimes:

THE LAW IN GENERAL

There is no all-encompassing legal obligation in the U.S. that a bystander who sees an act of violence must intervene or call police. But there are exceptions to that idea, dubbed the no-duty rule. Many states have laws requiring intervention when the victim of an ongoing attack is a child. The relationship of the witness to the victim also is a factor in assessing criminal or civil liability: Bosses may have a duty to intervene on behalf of employees, teachers for students and spouses for spouses. Other countries enshrine the principle that you must intervene into writing. The charter of human rights and freedoms in the Canadian province of Quebec says “every person must come to the aid of anyone whose life is in peril, either personally or calling for aid, by giving him the necessary and immediate physical assistance, unless it involves danger to himself or a third person, or he has another valid reason.”

A LONG HISTORY

The legal and ethical questions surrounding when and under what circumstances someone must help date back to ancient times. The biblical parable of the good Samaritan tells of a man who is beaten and robbed, then left wounded by the roadside. A Levite and a priest walk by, offering no assistance. A Samaritan eventually stops to care for the man. Some state laws that spell out witness obligations and liabilities are called good Samaritan laws. They also are sometimes referred to as

CONTACT US Do you have a news tip or story idea? Call us at 815-459-4122 or email us at tips@ nwherald.com.

WHERE IT’S AT

duty-to-rescue laws and duty-to-report laws. Among the best known recent instances of witness inaction happened in 1964, when Kitty Genovese was fatally stabbed outside her New York City apartment. Reports at the time alleged that dozens of witnesses saw the attack or heard the young woman scream but did nothing. The slaying focused a national spotlight on the obligations of witnesses to a crime, although those initial accounts later were called into question.

“@illinoispolicy @illnewsnetwork @nwherald Totally dissolve all pension and retirement systems. Only way to legislatively save the state.” @swizze_gfrank

Gary Frank

STATES WITH LAWS

Some states require some level of intervention, even if only a 911 call, including California and Wisconsin. In Texas, it is a Class A misdemeanor not to immediately report an offense in which someone could be seriously hurt or killed. Massachusetts law requires, among other things, that people who witness a crime have full knowledge that what they are seeing is a crime.

THE INTERNET

Few if any states have amended their laws to incorporate the phenomena of witnessing crimes online, said Eugene Volokh, a law professor at UCLA who has studied the issue. In theory, he said, laws that apply to in-person witnesses could be applied to social media witnesses. But a major complicating factor is whether internet witnesses can accurately assess what they see on their screens. “It’s even harder to determine if a crime is real or not,” he said. Most internet users are used to seeing odd or surreal depictions and manipulated videos. Some state laws that make witnesses liable require that they were actually at the scene of the crime. That could not apply to someone watching from miles away.

THE CHICAGO CASE

Investigators in the Chicago sex assault know the number of Facebook viewers because the count was posted with the video. To find out who they were, however, investigators would have to subpoena Facebook and show proof of a direct link to the crime, police said. Jeffrey Urdangen, a professor at Northwestern University’s law school, said it is not illegal to watch such a video or to fail to report it to police.

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The daily

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“I imagine they are starting small and growing from there. To fill those buildings from nothing would be nuts. Unless you are moving a whole company to this location. 100 is better than 0” Maggie Buchar

on the company that bought the former Motorola regional headquarters in Harvard.

The daily

DIGIT

$1.2M

The amount Crystal Lake-based Community High School District 155 said it will save with layoffs or hours reductions for 10 fulltime and five part-time teachers. See story on page A4.

ON THE COVER

Edward Harvard Holdings LLC bought the former Motorola building in Harvard last year, and plans to manufacture smartphones at the site. See story on page A3.

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

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Accuracy is important to the Northwest Herald, and we want to correct mistakes promptly. Please call errors to our attention by phone, 815-4594122; email, tips@nwherald.com; or fax, 815-459-5640.


A CLOSER LOOK

3

Company plans to make smartphones at former Motorola campus By BRITTANY KEEPERMAN

bkeeperman@shawmedia.com HARVARD – A smartphone maker plans to hire about 100 employees as it prepares to begin manufacturing at the long-vacant former Motorola campus in Harvard. Edward Harvard Holdings LLC, which owns the 1.52 million-squarefoot building at 2001 N. Division St., is asking for economic incentives for the $32 million project. It would bring 100 temporary construction jobs and 100 permanent jobs to the area, said Charles Eldredge, who heads the Harvard-Woodstock enterprise zone. He said the company’s application for incentives was incomplete. “They state manufacturing, distribution, training and marketing [jobs] but don’t specify further,” he said. “They anticipate completing the project this year.” The company’s application said it will make smartphones and have distribution, a research and development center, customer support, engineering services, telecommunications operations and a training center on the campus. The application gave an estimated completion date of May. Edward Harvard Holdings LLC, based in Michigan, bought the property online for $9.3 million in April 2016. The campus includes four multistory buildings, two heliports and other amenities such as an auditorium, biking and walking trails and a fitness center. Xiao Hua Gong is listed as the sole manager of Edward Harvard Holdings LLC, according to state records. Two people listed on the enterprise zone application were not immediately available for comment Wednesday. Motorola built the $100 million corporate campus in 1997. It was expected to bring an economic boom to Harvard. The state of Illinois contributed $30 million for infrastructure around the plant. At its peak, the facility employed 5,000 people. However, Motorola closed the plant after only five years in operation. At the time of its closing, the facility employed 1,200. About 600 of those employees found work at other Motorola facilities. The campus has been vacant since 2003. For more than a decade, residents have speculated on what would be-

Shaw Media file photos

Edward Harvard Holdings LLC bought the former Motorola regional headquarters building in an online auction last year. The site is 1.52 million square feet and has sat vacant since 2003. The opening bid for the site, which includes four multistory buildings, two heliports and other amenities, started at $2.7 million. The new company plans to manufacture smartphones, and looks to bring 100 permanent jobs to the area.

“It is clear that things have been happening as activity and parking lot maintenance has been observed for several weeks. When the city has concrete information to share, we will.” Michael Kelly Harvard mayor

come of the site. In 2003, a developer wanted to turn the plant into a water park and amusement center, but those plans fell through in 2004. Florida-based Optima International

bought the property for nearly $17 ity, manufacturing plant or Departmillion in 2008. ment of Homeland Security office. It failed to find a tenant even Over the years, the maintenance at though the property was marketed as a potential prison, educational facilSee SMARTPHONES, page A7

Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Thursday, March 23, 2017

MANUFACTURER MOVES IN


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Thursday, March 23, 2017

4

LOCAL NEWS

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LOCAL DEATHS OBITUARIES ON PAGES A12-13

Melissa Bryce-Wade 38 John Michael Ferrero Jr. 78, Crystal Lake Richard H. Glawe 85, McHenry Jean Marie Hackler 60, formerly of Algonquin Sigmund Morvaji 79, formerly of Crystal Lake Lois A. Parisek 87, Huntley Steven Bruce Schweikert 70

Hannah Prokop – hprokop@shawmedia.com

District 155 Assistant Superintendent of Human Resources Randy Davis addresses the school board on Tuesday regarding teacher layoffs for the district.

Mark Steagall 66

District 155 to lay off teachers

Nancy Lou Waugaman 70

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“This is a shocking experience. It’s the first time we’ve [cut] tenured staff in the district’s history.”

By HANNAH PROKOP

hprokop@shawmedia.com CRYSTAL LAKE – Declining enrollment in Crystal Lake-based Community High School District 155 has prompted the district to lay off or reduce hours for 10 fulltime and five part-time teachers. The move is expected to save the district about $1.2 million, and help offset a projected $1.6 million deficit in the district’s budget for the upcoming fiscal year, Superintendent Johnnie Thomas said. “The district is experiencing declining enrollment, and we will continue to, as mandated by the board, find the most ap-

Devin Hester, District 155 Education Association president propriate ways to balance the budget and account for that decrease in enrollment,” Thomas said. The final budget hearing will take place in July or August. Assistant Superintendent of Human Resources Randy Davis said 6,245 students are enrolled in the district this school year, and 6,030 will be enrolled for the 2017-18

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WEATHER

5

High pressure will continue to shift east across the Great Lakes. This will result in more seasonable temperatures as winds shift out of the southeast. Showers are possible by the evening hours. Breezy and warm conditions will arrive Friday as southwest winds increase. Periods of showers and isolated storms are likely Friday night through Monday.

TODAY

FRIDAY

44 40

70 48

Cloudy and warmer; Mostly cloudy, breezy few showers late and warm

SATURDAY

SUNDAY

MONDAY

TUESDAY

WEDNESDAY

Cloudy, mild with periods of rain

Cloudy, mild with periods of rain

Cloudy and mild with showers

Partly sunny and cooler

Mostly sunny and more seasonable

59 50

58 49

Lake Geneva

46/42

Galena

Freeport

45/42

44/42

Belvidere

46/43

Rockford

UV INDEX

8 am 10 am Noon 2 pm 4 pm 6 pm 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.

AIR QUALITY TODAY Main offender ................. particulates

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

48/45

First

Full

Last

Mar 27

Apr 3

Apr 11

Apr 19

47/44

Chicago

49/48

Aurora

47/46

Orland Park 48/46 Hammond

48/46

Joliet

47/45

48/46

Michigan City

47/44

Gary

50/49 Valparaiso

Ottawa

49/47

48/46

49/47

Kankakee

53/47

FOX RIVER STAGES

NATIONAL WEATHER

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

Algonquin Burlington, WI Fox Lake McHenry Montgomery New Munster, WI Nippersink Lake Waukesha

3 11 -4 13 11 -6

1.49 7.35 2.79 1.73 11.69 7.38 2.78 3.59

+0.03 -0.08 -0.02 -0.06 +0.02 -0.06 none -0.02

WEATHER HISTORY Record floods hit the Midwest on March 23, 1913, with major rainstorms adding to snowmelt. This prompted the federal government’s first widespread flood control projects. Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.

The tilt of the Earth’s axis and the Earth’s movement around the sun.

New

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

Evanston

Oak Park

48/46

La Salle Kewanee

48/45

St. Charles

47/46

49/46

Arlington Heights Elgin

44/40

Sandwich

Davenport

50 33

A:

MOON PHASES

45/43

48/45

44/40

Rock Falls

seasons?

Sunrise today .......................... 6:51 a.m. Sunset today ........................... 7:09 p.m. Moonrise today ........................ 4:15 a.m. Moonset today ......................... 2:31 p.m. Sunrise tomorrow .................... 6:50 a.m. Sunset tomorrow ..................... 7:10 p.m. Moonrise tomorrow ................. 4:55 a.m. Moonset tomorrow .................. 3:33 p.m.

Waukegan

Crystal Lake

DeKalb

48/45

48/43

WEATHER TRIVIA™ Q: What is the cause of the four

SUN AND MOON

47/43

46/44

Clinton

44/42

McHenry

Hampshire Dixon

Statistics through 4 p.m. yesterday

46/42

52 36

Kenosha

44/40

Savanna

ALMANAC

Harvard

49/45

49/44

TEMPERATURES High ................................................... 37° Low ................................................... 29° Normal high ....................................... 49° Normal low ........................................ 31° Record high .......................... 83° in 2012 Record low ........................... -1° in 1888 Peak wind .......................... NE at 20 mph PRECIPITATION 24 hours through 4 p.m. yest............0.00” Month to date ................................. 1.01” Normal month to date ..................... 1.72” Year to date .................................... 5.40” Normal year to date ........................ 5.24”

58 45

NATIONAL CITIES City

Anchorage Atlanta Baltimore Boston Buffalo Charlotte Chicago Dallas Denver Detroit Honolulu

Today Hi Lo W

32 62 48 37 39 57 49 84 73 43 85

12 47 32 26 30 36 48 66 31 37 72

s pc s s s pc c pc c pc c

Forecasts and graphics, except WFLD forecasts, provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2017

WORLD CITIES Friday Hi Lo W

32 71 60 45 54 67 71 80 48 66 85

14 56 49 40 44 49 48 54 26 49 71

s pc pc sh r pc c t sf c pc

City

Houston Kansas City Las Vegas Los Angeles Louisville Miami Minneapolis New Orleans New York City Seattle Wash., DC

Today Hi Lo W

85 75 73 69 64 80 44 81 43 56 49

67 55 53 51 54 68 36 67 33 45 35

pc sh pc s pc t r pc s r s

Friday Hi Lo W

80 71 77 69 71 78 47 79 51 53 63

64 47 60 54 59 69 33 68 46 43 52

t t pc pc pc sh r pc c r pc

City

Athens Baghdad Bangkok Beijing Berlin Buenos Aires Cairo Hong Kong Istanbul Kabul London

Today Hi Lo W

69 72 95 53 47 76 78 77 59 63 53

50 53 78 36 36 61 57 67 45 40 44

pc r pc c pc pc s pc s s pc

Friday Hi Lo W

70 70 93 46 54 79 76 76 58 63 56

51 53 80 32 33 62 55 68 43 45 41

s pc pc r pc pc s pc c pc pc

City

Madrid Manila Mexico City Moscow New Delhi Paris Rio de Janeiro Rome Seoul Tokyo Toronto

Today Hi Lo W

48 93 80 48 97 55 82 63 57 55 37

30 77 50 31 68 40 68 48 33 41 30

t pc s s pc t pc pc pc c pc

Friday Hi Lo W

52 94 82 45 95 58 84 67 56 53 54

34 76 52 25 67 44 70 50 35 41 38

t pc pc c pc c s pc pc pc r

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

Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Thursday, March 23, 2017

SEVEN-DAYFORECAST FORECAST MCHENRY COUNTY SEVEN-DAY FORFOR McHENRY COUNTY


*Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Thursday, March 23, 2017

|LOCAL NEWS

6

McHenry mayor candidates have opposing views on reserve fund By NATE LINHART

nlinhart@shawmedia.com McHENRY – Tax reduction and the city’s reserve fund continue to be a key topic in the race for McHenry mayor. Running for McHenry mayor are local business owner Wayne Jett and former mayor Steve Cuda, who previously served two terms as mayor from 1993 to 2001. The winner of the election will succeed outgoing Mayor Susan Low. At the Northwest Herald’s editorial board interview with the candidates Wednesday, Cuda and Jett had opposing views about how to try and save money for residents. “If you go over our budget, it’s a balanced budget – plain and simple,” Jett said. “I think the city has done a good job keeping [the tax levy] flat, and decreasing it by 3 percent the last three months I think is enough, considering the fact that we have $45 million in roadways that need to get done,” Jett said. However, Cuda disagreed with his opponent regarding the budget. “The city is not operating on a balanced budget, the city is operating at a surplus, and it’s a significant sur-

• TEACHERS

Continued from page A4 enrollment decreased, over the next few years the district’s reserves would shrink by about $26 million. Thomas noted that there are outstanding factors not included in that projection, such as unknowns from the state. “It’s always easy to maintain staff, and spend additional deficit money and take it out of your savings account,” Board President Ted Wagner said to the board Tuesday. “But it’s not going to get any better. As a matter of fact, it’s going to get worse.” Wagner said this is something future boards will need to address immediately. At Tuesday’s meeting, the board approved an increase in registration and athletic fees over the next three years to help bring in revenue. “We’re not just looking to cut, we’re looking to find money as well in ways that are appropriate,” Jeremy Davis said. When the public hearing on the layoffs came, there was no public comment. However, during the general public comment section held

On the Web: To see videos of the

plus,” Cuda said. Cuda brought up how the city’s reserve fund, which is used in case of emergencies, is at $7.5 million. Cuda’s plan is to give some of that money back. “That (money) should be more than sufficient to cover any shortfall in revenues that we receive from the state,” Cuda said. Cuda said his campaign has been focused on reducing the city’s share of the real estate taxes by 10 percent. As for his opponent, Jett said he also agrees that property taxes are too high, but lowering them would require a long-term plan to avoid cuts in services and reductions in infrastructure investments. “There’s major concerns on my behalf as far as cutting city tax,” Jett said. “We need to invest in our infrastructure,” Jett said. “Without us investing in our infrastructure and our community at a higher rate, we can’t expect

businesses to invest in their properties and their businesses as well.” Jett said he wants to put a plan in place to address city road repair issues and drainage improvements, as one reason for not lowering the city tax right now is the flooding problems with Lakeland Park subdivision, which has a long history of having drainage problems. “With a state with no budget and a deathly downturn where the state has no funding, I think it’d be putting the city in a financial situation in years to come if you start cutting half a million each year out of the budget if you don’t have the sales revenue to offset that,” Jett said. Cuda said he recently talked to a 77-year-old McHenry resident who has commercial properties in McHenry County and is leaving the city because he’s not willing to pay high real estate taxes. Hearing similar stories from local residents, Cuda said he believes reducing real estate taxes should be a priority. “A $500,000 decrease in the amount collected per real estate taxes is not going to break the budget (and) is not going to curtail any services that we provide,” Cuda said.

toward the beginning of the meeting some urged the school board to reconsider the firing of Prairie Ridge boys basketball coach Corky Card. A couple speakers also mentioned dissatisfaction with the recent efficiency study by MGT Consulting Group and the teacher layoffs. As far as which teachers are cut, district attorney Steve Richart said the law dictates who the district has to select when there is an economic reduction in force. “So once you make the budgetary determination, ‘yes we need to reduce,’ then we can’t go in and select who gets cut,” Richart said. Wagner and trustees Ann Somers, Amy Blazier and Gary Oberg voted “yes” for the layoffs of teachers, while trustees Rosemary Kurtz, Adam Guss and Dave Secrest voted “no.” A separate vote for the reduction in hours of a teacher also was passed with Wagner, Somers, Guss and Oberg voting “yes,” Secrest abstaining and Kurtz and Blazier voting “no.” “I just think teachers are more important that anybody, except the students themselves,” Kurtz said. “And I hope that we will reconsider [cutting]

teachers and look at administration.” Wagner responded saying “administrative issues” also are being looked at. Devin Hester, president of the District 155 Education Association, told the Northwest Herald he was “saddened” and “disheartened” for his colleagues. “This is a shocking experience,” Hester said. “It’s the first time we’ve [cut] tenured staff in the district’s history.” Hester said the teachers union has plans to meet with the district to bargain the reduction in force and the effect of the reduction in force. “And during that session, or those sessions if it takes more than one, we will get all of this information we need to understand the situation,” Hester said. “And then we’d be better able to answer the question, ‘Was this justified?’ ” That bargaining session won’t happen until after spring break, Hester said. “We are going to do everything in our power to educate ourselves and advocate for [the teachers] as far as our contract allows us to,” Hester said.

n

McHenry mayoral candidates meeting with the Northwest Herald editorial board, visit Facebook. com/nwherald.

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Continued from page A3 the property was sporadic and, for a time, it appeared the building would be left to rot. At one point, ComEd sued Optima over an outstanding $545,000 electric bill. The amount of incentives Edward Harvard could get from the enterprise zone will depend on the scope of work it actually completes. The application said the company plans to spend $17 million on remodeling and another $15 million on equipment. Enterprise zone incentives allow companies to do things such as not pay sales tax on building materials for construction and get abatements on property taxes. “I simply don’t know whether that’s a guess on their part or if they actually have contracts,” Eldredge said. “The application is incomplete. I will know more once I have a complete application.” City officials said they haven’t heard from the company directly. When Edward Harvard bought the campus last year, city officials were told the company planned to use it but didn’t provide specifics as to the number of jobs that it might bring to the area. The company doesn’t need approv-

Shaw Media file photo

The former Motorola building sits empty off Route 14 in Harvard in 2010. Edward Harvard Holdings LLC bought the site in an online auction last year, and plans to bring 100 jobs to the area. al from the city to begin manufacturing, City Administrator Dave Nelson said. “We’re kind of in the dark” about the company’s plans for the building, said Alderman Bob O’Halloran, who represents the 3rd Ward. He said he’d seen improvements to the outside of the building since Edward Harvard bought it.

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“The city has not yet seen the application nor have we spoken directly with the company, so we are unable to confirm any details,” Mayor Michael Kelly in a social media post. “It is clear that things have been happening as activity and parking lot maintenance has been observed for several weeks. When the city has concrete information to share, we will.”

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• Thursday, March 23, 2017

Motorola builds $100 million corporate campus in Harvard. In March, Motorola closes the plant. In July, a developer agrees to buy the property with plans to turn the vacant building into an indoor water park. In August, the water park deal falls apart. Florida-based Optima International buys the property for $16.75 million. Trucking company Navistar considered relocating its center of operations to the campus. According to the McHenry County Treasurer’s Office, Optima International fails to pay its tax bill and owes more than $329,000 in property taxes. The electricity on the property is turned off in the spring. In May, ComEd sues the owners of the corporate campus, alleging that Optima Ventures had accumulated $545,816 in unpaid electric bills as of April. A private equity group in Chicago secures a tax lien on the property in the fall. An unnamed bidder buys the former Motorola campus for $9.3 million in an online auction house by Ten-X. com in April. In March, a smartphone maker prepares to begin manufacturing at the long-vacant campus. Property owner Edward Harvard Holdings LLC asks the Harvard-Woodstock enterprise zone for economic incentives for the $32 million project.

• SMARTPHONES

A CLOSER LOOK | Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

Timeline of Motorola campus in Harvard


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Thursday, March 23, 2017

|LOCAL NEWS

8

Fox River Grove to start developing downtown By HANNAH PROKOP

hprokop@shawmedia.com FOX RIVER GROVE – Fox River Grove trustees recently approved a $250 million plan to redevelop part of the village’s downtown. The entire development – which will include about 500 apartments, 100,000 square feet of commercial and retail space and a hotel and marina – will be broken up into four phases, with the first one starting this fall, village officials said. The development spans over about 46 acres on both sides of Route 14 as it nears the river, according to an agreement with the developer. At Thursday’s Village Board meeting, trustees unanimously approved a redevelopment agreement with developer Grove Residences LLC and a special use permit for the first phase of the project, Village Administrator Derek Soderholm said. “It’s excellent to have the agreement approved,” Village President Robert Nunamaker said. “And I really have to say that our trustees are sophisticated people that understand the complexities of these deals, and that really is so important.”

Rendering provided by Gart Partners LLC

Three apartment buildings with 300 units will be built as part of phase one of a $250 million downtown redevelopment plan in Fox River Grove. Above is a rendering of one of the apartment buildings. Phase one will include three apartment buildings with up to 300 units, according to the agreement. The development is estimated to cost about $60 million, Nunamaker said. The apartments will be located in several lots southwest of Route 14 on both sides of Algonquin Road, documents show. Nunamaker said the space currently holds three commercial establishments and four aging apartment buildings. Soderholm said construction on phase one is expected to start in the fall and will take a year to finish. Phase two will include at least 70,000

square feet of commercial space, phase three will include no more than 200 apartments, and phase four will be developed with retail uses and/or a hotel and marina, according to the agreement. In September 2015, the village closed its downtown tax increment financing district, which was established in 2012, and opened a new one, which stretches from Opartny Drive toward the river and south of Route 14. The TIF is expected to be worth about $8.8 million, Nunamaker said, and will be used by the developer for land acquisition and other developments to the sites. About $2 million in

impact fees will be paid to other taxing bodies in the village, Nunamaker said, including the library district, school districts and fire protection district. Once one phase has received a final certificate of completion from the village, the developer will have 180 days to start the permit process for the next phase, under terms of the agreement. “It puts some time restriction on it to keep the development moving,” Soderholm said. “And if there is lag, then the village at that time can choose to provide more time or move on to other potential ways to complete the project.”

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WEST DUNDEE – Spring Hill Mall will soon house a store from one of the world’s largest fashion retailers. H&M has secured a new location at Spring Hill Mall, 1072 Spring Hill Mall, West Dundee, as one of 19 locations in the state, according to a post on the mall’s Facebook page. The store will open its doors at noon Thursday. The 21,000-square-foot store will hire about 20 employees. H&M offers clothing for women, men and teens with a separate “shop in shop” section for accessories. The location also will carry the H&M Kids collection for newborns through 14 years old. “H&M has experienced a warm welcome from customers and fans in Illinois and is happy to continue to expand its store and employee count in the state,” said Patrick Shaner, U.S.

Shaw Media file photo

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• Thursday, March 23, 2017

H&M is coming to Spring Hill Mall in West Dundee, and it’s celebrating its grand opening Thursday. The store offers clothing for women, men, teens and kids.

jreiland@shawmedia.com

ALGONQUIN – Most Chicago-area Pie Five Pizza locations have closed, including the one in Algonquin, a spokeswoman for the company said. “We made the very difficult, but operationally necessary decision to focus development on our growing markets,” spokeswoman Jami Zimmerman said in a statement. “It was truly in the best interest of the brand, our franchisees, shareholders and other team members.” Zimmerman said the Chicago area had seven total closings, but the Schaumburg restaurant remains open. Pie Five Pizza opened in June 2015 at its Algonquin location, 776 S. Randall Road. Pie Five Pizza uses a custom-designed oven to make personalized pies for customers in 145 seconds. Customers can pick any of the company’s 28 toppings and choose from a selection of four different crusts and seven sauces to make their custom pizza – all for $6.99. Zimmerman said the company still is planning to open 40 new Pie Five Pizza locations this year. The Texas-based company has 98 locations in 24 states, according to its website.

9

LOCAL NEWS | Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

Fast-fashion retailer H&M coming to Spring Hill Mall

Pie Five Pizza closes Algonquin, other Chicago-area locations


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Thursday, March 23, 2017

10

State gives layoff notices to 124 prison nurses By JOHN O’CONNOR The Associated Press

SPRINGFIELD – Gov. Bruce Rauner’s administration has told 124 prison nurses that their jobs are being privatized, a move their union blasted as retaliation for its rejection of a contract offer last year. The nurses include 17 at Stateville Correctional Center in Crest Hill. Nurses stationed at 12 state prisons will be dismissed June 15, two days after the contract nurses are hired, according to a letter obtained by The Associated Press that the prison system’s labor chief sent this week to the Illinois Nurses Association. Alice Johnson, the association’s executive director, noted the notice came just days after the union filed an unfair labor practices complaint with state regulators, claiming the first-term Republican governor has reneged on his obligation to negotiate contract terms in good faith. She said members overwhelmingly rejected a tentative agreement last spring and Rauner is retaliating. “It’s an attempt to bully and intimidate the nurses, and it’s not going to work,” Johnson told the AP. She said the move is particularly troublesome because of a nationwide

I w il l b e here to greet you!

shortage of nurses that forces Illinois prison nurses to sometimes work 80hour weeks while vacant positions go unfilled. Nicole Wilson, spokeswoman for the Department of Corrections, said privatizing the posts would save $8 million a year and “streamline the delivery of medical services.” Medical care vendor Wexford Health Sources provides the rest of the prison network’s nurses. “Wexford is prepared to hire most of the nurses who will be impacted by the layoff,” Wilson said. “The department will work with those who wish to remain employed with the state and will ... identify nursing vacancies within other state agencies.” Johnson, however, said the administration’s statement that nurses will be hired by Wexford is “an assumption that they’re making.” Nurses that are hired by Wexford stand to lose benefits, she said. Valerie Hofbauer, a nurse at Stateville, said nurses had heard talk of privatization plans but thought there would be negotiations before the administration moved forward. “A lot of us are very upset about that,” Hofbauer said. “Some of the nurses I work with are very close to retirement.” Rauner, a private equity investor

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serving in public office for the first time, campaigned on cutting off union power in a solidly Democratic state and has clashed repeatedly with organized labor. He is engaged in a long court and public relations battle with the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, whose 38,000 members have authorized a strike, if necessary, for the first time in the union’s 40-year history. The Illinois Nurses Association represents 3,500 nurses statewide, including 1,200 Illinois government employees. Johnson noted that Wexford has been the subject of dozens of federal lawsuits alleging substandard care. She argued that a private contractor’s nurses aren’t subject to the same supervisory oversight as a government worker. And she said a private contractor’s profit motive could interfere with decisions about staffing and quality of care. Nationally, studies show a large pool of nurses is ready to retire in the next five years. At the same time, prison populations are aging and care is becoming more specialized.

Shaw Media Reporter Bob Okon contributed to this story.

LOCAL BRIEF Police: Man injured after car hits rail in Marengo

MARENGO – A single-vehicle crash near Marengo sent one person to the hospital Tuesday evening, a police official said. McHenry County Sheriff’s Deputy Tim Creighton said crews responded about 6:48 p.m. for the report of a single-vehicle crash at Route 20 and West Union Road in Marengo. Creighton said a 2008 Mazda was traveling west on West Union Road when the sun “blinded him” and he missed the stop sign. The vehicle struck a guardrail. The driver, a 38-year-old man from Union, was taken by the Marengo Rescue Squad to Centegra Hospital – Huntley, Creighton said. He was the only person in the vehicle. The Union man was cited for disobeying a stop sign and operating an uninsured vehicle, he said. – Northwest Herald

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12

OBITUARIES MELISSA BRYCE-WADE

his wife and surrounding adults. Open visitation will be at Davenport Family Funeral Home, Crystal Lake, on Friday, March 24, 3 to 9:00 p.m. and Saturday, March 25, 9:00 to 10:00 a.m. followed by a 10:30 a.m. Funeral Mass at St. Thomas the Apostle Catholic Church, Crystal Lake. Interment at Windridge Memorial Park, Cary.

Melissa Bryce-Wade, 38, of Chicago, passed away at home on March 19. Melissa was born in Park Ridge and was the beloved daughter of Judith Rumoro and William Bryce, and beloved stepdaughter of Lewis Coghill. Melissa is survived by her parents; stepfather; children, Anthony, Nicholas, Vincent, and Benicio; and siblings, Jennifer, William, and Lewis. She is preceded in death by her sons, Sebastian and Joshua. A visitation will be held on Friday, March 24, RICHARD H. GLAWE 2017, from 4 to 9:00 p.m. at Willow Funeral Born: May 3, 1931; in Cary, IL Home, 1415 W. Algonquin Road, Algonquin. Died: March 22, 2017; in Fox Lake, IL Services will be held at the funeral home on Saturday, March 25, 2017, from 10:00 a.m. to Richard H. “Shorty” Glawe, 12:00 p.m. age 85, of McHenry, passed In lieu of flowers, the family requests that away Wednesday, March 22, donations be made to the Epilepsy Foundain Fox Lake, surrounded by tion of Greater Chicago, 17 N. State St. #650, his loving family. Chicago, IL 60602. He was born in Cary on For more information, please call (847) 458May 3, 1931, the son of Charles H. and Amelia 1700, or visit www.willowfh.com. (nee Benhart) Glawe. On December 1, 1951, he married the love of his life, Delores E. Fiene at St. Paul, in Mount Prospect, IL. Richard was JOHN MICHAEL FERRERO JR. very active in the church, a lifetime member of Born: January 28, 1939 the VFW in Woodstock, and a proud Memorial Died: March 19, 2017 Day parade Marshal. He was a “do-er” and a great handyman. John Michael Ferrero Jr., 78, Richard was a connoisseur of John Deere of Crystal Lake, IL, born on collectibles and a proud owner of a 1937 John January 28, 1939, in Chicago Deere. He enjoyed square dancing, bowling, to John M. and Mary Frances and pinochle, but most of all he loved his (nee Leslie/Chester) Ferrero family and being a grandfather. and left us on March 19. Richard is survived by his wife of 65 years, John graduated from St. Delores; and their children, Marla K. (Jeffrey Patrick HS ’57 then Loyola S.) Foerster of McHenry, Warren R. (Brenda University (Chicago) ’66. John G.) Glawe of Johnsburg; grandchildren, married Lois B. (nee Galizia) Benjamin (Sylvia) Foerster, Eryn Glawe, on June 26, 1965, and enjoyed Meghan (Brian) Laine, Jaison (Nicole) Glawe; 51 years together. great-grandchildren, Hailey Laine, Randall They were blessed with four precious Laine, William Foerster; sister-in-law, Frieda children, Christine (Scott) Craig, John M. Oehlenking; and many nieces and nephews. (Karen Burgess) Ferrero III, Jean-Marie Richard was preceded in death by his par(Tom) Brickey, and Scott Ferrero; adored ents, Charles and Amelia Glawe; Violet, Edna, grandfather to Lauren, Nathaniel, Katherine, Carl; and two baby twin brothers. and Victoria Craig; Annette, Hope, Hadley, Visitation will take place on Friday, March and Skyler Ferrero; Amelia, Grace, Joel, and 24, from 4 until 8:00 p.m. at Colonial FuGwyneth Brickey; loved brother of the late neral Home, 591 Ridgeview Drive, McHenry. Patricia (Bob) Stanton, the late Theresa Visitation will continue on Saturday, March Pryor, and Bernadette (John) Gordon; dear 25, from 10 until time of service at 11:00 uncle to Jessica (Robert) Mihm, and many a.m. at Zion Lutheran Church, 4206 W. Elm other nieces and nephews; brother-in-law St., McHenry. Interment will be at McHenry to Dolores (Ted), Alice (Bob), and the late County Memorial Park. Norman (Ellen). In lieu of flowers, memorials in Richard’s John, an extremely caring and generous man, name may be made to VFW Post 5040, 201 will be missed by his fishing buddy, Ted, and Main St., Woodstock, IL, 60098, Paradise the rest of his family and friends. As the proud Park, 16 Lilac Ave, Fox Lake, IL 60020, or Zion Lutheran Music Ministry, 4206 W Elm St., owner of Ferrero Brothers Inc., he traveled McHenry, IL, 60050. the world buying, selling and repairing offset For more information visit www.colonialmprinting equipment. His favorite pastime was chasing his children, grandchildren, nieces and chenry.com or contact the funeral home at nephews whenever possible, thereby irritating 815-385-0063.

JEAN MARIE HACKLER

LOIS A. PARISEK

Jean M. Hackler, 60, of Walland, TN, passed away on Wednesday, March 15, at her home. She was born on December 30, 1956, in Chicago to Russell and Marlys Bennett. She lived in Algonquin, IL, before moving to Walland, TN. Jean was an insurance underwriter for 35 years for Protective Life Insurance Co. She loved family, the outdoors, her cats, and bicycle riding. She is survived by her husband, Michael of 31 years; her sons, David (Kim) Dick, Michael Williams, James (Heidi) Hackler, and Jason Hackler; her grandsons, David James and Zackary; her parents, Russell and Marlys(Steinbronn) Bennett; her sister Susan (Jeff) Frasher; brother, James (Paulette) Bennett; and several nieces and nephew. A memorial gathering will be held from 11:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m., Saturday, April 15, at Smith Funeral Home, 1402 Tuckaleechee Pike, Maryville, TN, 37803. For more information call the funeral home at 865-983-1000. In leiu of flowers, memorials may be made to the Susan B Komen Foundation.

Lois A. “Boots” Parisek, 87, of Huntley passed away Saturday, March 18, at Alden Terrace in McHenry. She was born February 22, 1930, in Elgin, the daughter of Albert and Kathryn (Range) Boncosky. On Oct. 2, 1953, she married Raymond Frank Parisek, celebrating over 50 years of marriage. A lifetime resident of Huntley, she enjoyed bookkeeping for Marlowe Feed & Hatchery, for over 50 years, D & Z Transfer and many small businesses. She was a secretary/treasurer for the Huntley Park District for many years, made an “Honorary Commissioner,” and had “Parisek Park” named for her and husband Frank’s years of service to the park district. She was a lifelong member of the First Congregational Church of Huntley where she served as a treasurer, on many committees and a choir and bell choir member and director. She sang for many weddings, special occasions and with the Continentals Dance Band. She was a member of the Huntley American Legion and volunteered for Little League, Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts to mention a few. She always said she had a great life, great husband, great family, great friends, great jobs, great doctors, an abundance of love and laughter and God’s love. Surviving are her children, Mitch (Kate) of Woodstock, Janis (Dave) Tures of Marengo, Steve of Huntley, Mary Parisek of Woodstock; grandchildren, Abby (Kevin) Hess, Tyler & Samantha Parisek, Tracy Tures of Woodstock, Rachel (John) MacKenzie of Harvard, Christopher (Alicia) Ruemelin of Peoria, Zachary (Melissa) Ruemelin of L.I.T.H, Jacob Ruemelin of Marengo; great grandchildren, Harper Hess, Addilyn MacKenzie, Cadence Burger, Stella Wilson; and sister, Betty Zirk. She was preceded in death by her parents; husband; 2 sisters; and many wonderful relatives and friends. The family would like to thank Dr. Aslam Zahir and Dr. Nathan Kakish for decades of exceptional care, also Centegra Memorial Hospital 2 East and Alden Terrace Nursing Home Unit 500 nurses and staff for their compassionate, loving care during the final weeks of her life. The Memorial Service will be 4:00 p.m on Sunday, March 26, at the First Congregational Church, 11628 E. Main St. in Huntley. Visitation will be prior to services at the church from 1 to 4:00 p.m. In lieu of flowers, memorials in her name may be directed to the church or the American Legion in Huntley. The James A. O’Connor Funeral Home in Huntley is assisting the family. For info (847)669-5111 or visit www.jamesaoconnorfuneralhome.com.

Born: December 30, 1956 Died: March 15, 2017

SIGMUND MORVAJI

Born: September 29, 1937; in Cleveland, OH Died: March 20, 2017; in Springfield, IL Sigmund Morvaji, 79, of Rochester, formerly of Crystal Lake, IL, passed away on Monday, March 20, at St. Joseph’s Home in Springfield. Sigmund was born on September 29, 1937, in Cleveland, OH, the son of Zsigmund and Mary Mikus Morvaji. He married Eleanor Gundersen on May 14, 1966. He served in the U.S. Navy Reserve for several years and attended Ohio State University. He enjoyed gardening, photography, and playing tennis. He was preceded in death by his parents. He is survived by his wife, Eleanor; daughters, Ann (Del) Repenski, and Karen (Jeff) Milnes; son, Daniel (Jennifer) Morvaji; four grandchildren Ally, Jacob, Violet, and Josie; brother, Robert Morvaji; sister, Marlene Ford; and several nieces and nephews. Family services will be held on Friday, March 24, 2017 at Wilson Park Funeral Home in Rochester, IL. Memorial contributions may be made to St. Joseph’s Home. Wilson Park Funeral Home, 200 E. Main St., Rochester, IL 62563 is in charge of arrangements. Visit our online obituary at www.parkfuneralhomesinc.com.

Born: February 22, 1930; in Elgin, IL Died: March 18, 2017 in McHenry, IL

• Continued on page A13


• Continued from page A12 Born: July 16, 1946; in Berwyn, IL Died: March 18, 2017; in Naperville, IL

John Michael Ferrero Jr.: The visitation will be from 3 to 9 p.m. Friday, March 24, and from 9 to 10 a.m. Saturday, March 25, at Davenport Family Funeral Home, Crystal Lake. The Mass will be celebrated at 10:30 a.m. Saturday, March 25, at St. Thomas the Apostle Catholic Church, Crystal Lake. Interment will be in Windridge Memorial Park, Cary. Joyce E. Fish: The visitation will be from 5 to 8 p.m. with the funeral at 7 p.m. Thursday, March 23, at Colonial Funeral Home, 591 Ridgeview Drive, McHenry. For information, call the funeral home at 815-385-0063. Velda Gannon: The visitation will be from 9 a.m. until the 10:30 a.m. service Saturday, March 25, at the First United Methodist Church, 201 W. South St., Woodstock. Interment will follow in McHenry County Memorial Park Cemetery, Woodstock. For information, call 815-338-1710. Richard H. Glawe: The visitation will be from 4 to 8 p.m. Friday, March 24, at Colonial Funeral Home, 591 Ridgeview Drive, McHenry, and will continue from 10 a.m. until the 11 a.m. service Saturday, March 25, at Zion Lutheran Church, 4206 W. Elm St., McHenry. Interment will be in McHenry County Memorial Park. Jean Marie Hackler: The memorial service will be from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday, April 15, at Smith Funeral Home, 1402 Tuckaleechee Pike, Maryville, Tennessee. John A. Haseman: The visitation will be from 10 a.m. until the 11 a.m. funeral service

Saturday, March 25, at St. John Lutheran Church, 1100 Linneman Road, Mount Prospect. For information, call Friedrichs Funeral Home at 847-255-7800. William M. Hauri Jr.: The memorial service will be at 1 p.m. Sunday, March 26, at McCullom Lake Hunt Club, 10603 Okeson Road, Hebron. For information, call Colonial Funeral Home and Crematory at 815-385-0063. Madeline Ann Hayden: The visitation will be from 9 to 11 a.m. Friday, April 7, at St. Mary’s Catholic Church, 312 Lincoln Ave., Woodstock. A funeral service will follow. Bernadette A. Knaeble: The visitation will be from 9 to 10:30 a.m. Thursday, March 23, at Davenport Family Funeral Home, 419 Terra Cotta Ave., Crystal Lake. Burial will be in Crystal Lake Memorial Park. Nancy L. Lundin: The visitation will be from 11 a.m. until the 11:30 a.m. service Saturday, March 25, at the First Presbyterian Church, 7100 Harvard Hills Road, Harvard. Christopher J. McKee, Sr.: The memorial will be from 9:30 a.m. until the 10:15 a.m. prayer service Thursday, March 23, at James A. O’Connor Funeral Home, 11603 E. Main St., Huntley. The Mass will be celebrated at 11 a.m. Thursday, March 23, at Sacred Heart Catholic Church, 323 Taylor St., Marengo. Interment will be in Sacred Heart Cemetery, Marengo. Robert J. Nehrlich: The visitation will be from 1 to 5 p.m. Saturday, May 6, at Colonial Funeral Home and Crematory, 591 Ridgeview

Woodstock, IL, Christopher (Debra) Cannon of Rockford, IL, and Patrick Cannon and his Born: November 19, 1950 fiancé Jamie Mohrman of New Castle, PA; Died: March 18, 2017 two sisters, Barbara (Derwood) Hapbell of Ridgeley, WV, and Lisa (Jim) Driver of Mark Steagall, aged 66, passed away peacefully March 18, 2017, admiring the Springfield, TN’ and eight grandchildren, beauty and serenity of a setting sun while Bethany, Dylan, Ryan, Christopher, Jonain the company of a dear friend, Cindy, in than, Abby, Matthew, and Cameron. There Florida. are also a number of nieces, nephews, and Born November 19, 1950, to Dorothy and cousins who will always remember her as Stan Steagall, Mark, and brothers, Scott NANCY LOU WAUGAMAN “Aunt Nanny”. and Craig enjoyed a wonderful childhood Born: October 5, 1946 Friends will be received at the Smith Fuin Woodstock, IL; inspired by the devotion Died: March 20, 2017 neral Home, 310 W. Neshannock Ave, New of a father who wished a better life for his Wilmington, PA on Friday, March24, 2017 three sons. Nancy Lou Waugaman, 70, from 4:00 to 7:00 PM. Mark continued that tradition through of Buckwalter Road, New Funeral services will be Saturday, March the devotion and love he gave his own Wilmington, PA, Shenango 25, 2017 at 11:00am at the funeral home children; Sergio Steagall (Colorado Springs, Twp., Mercer County, died as with Rev. Rebecca Rosengarth officiating. CO) and wife Keely Steagall; Stanley Steaa result of a fire at her resiInterment will follow at Fair Oaks Cemegall (Pueblo, Mexico); and Carol Ann Steadence on March 20, 2017. tery, New Wilmington, PA. gall Lakey (Kansas City, MO) and husband Born in Cumberland, Jared Lakey. They will cherish their father’s Maryland, Oct. 5, 1946 to the late William memory, and take pride in the happiness Thomas and Virginia Cleo Smith Lease, they brought to Mark’s life. How to submit she married William James (Bill) WauA proud grandfather, Mark also leaves behind his beautiful granddaughter, Emma gaman Oct. 6, 1979, and he survives at the Send obituary information to obits@ residence. Jane Lakey (Kansas City, MO). nwherald.com or call 815-526-4438. She was a 1964 graduate of Allegany One of Marks lasting contributions was Notices are accepted until 3 p.m. for his enthusiasm and professionalism in the High School in Cumberland, Maryland. the next day’s edition. Obituaries also Nancy formerly worked at Giant Eagle as classroom; teaching Spanish in various appear online at NWHerald.com/obits, a cashier and was raised Catholic. school districts in McHenry County. In where you may sign the guest book, Survivors include her husband, Bill; one addition to being an avid golfer, father send flowers or make a memorial daughter, Kellie (Jack) Spears of Lakemoor, and grandfather, Mark is counted among donation. the diehard Cubs fans who got to witness IL; three sons, Steven (Kelly) Whitacre of

FUNERAL ARRANGEMENTS Gertrude Baumann: The celebration of her life will be at 1 p.m. Saturday, March 25, at Harvard Sportsmen’s Club in Harvard. Interment will be in St. Joseph’s Cemetery in Harvard. Nancy M. Berg: The memorial gathering will be at noon April 22, at the home of Pam and Dan Sorenson, 6514 Greenwood Road, Wonder Lake. Melissa Bryce-Wade: The visitation will be from 4 to 9 p.m. Friday, March 24, at Willow Funeral Home, 1415 W. Algonquin Road, Algonquin. The service will be from 10 a.m. to noon Saturday, March 25, at the funeral home. Edwin W. Carlson: The celebration of life luncheon will be from 1 to 4 p.m. Sunday, March 26, at Randall Oaks Golf Club, 4101 Binnie Road, West Dundee. April D. Clatch: The funeral service will be at 11 a.m. Thursday, March 23, at DeFiore-Jorgensen Funeral & Cremation Service, 10763 Dundee Road, Huntley. Burial will be later in Windridge Cemetery, Cary. Call 847-5158772 for information. Delbert Cunningham: The visitation will be from 10 a.m. until the 1 p.m. service Saturday, March 25, at Toynton’s Walworth Funeral Home, 328 Kenosha St., Walworth, Wisconsin. For information, call 262-275-2171. Melissa D. Darling-Kruchunas: The visitation will be from 2 p.m. until the 4 p.m. prayer service Sunday, March 26, at Anderson Funeral and Cremation Services, 218 W. Hurlbut Ave., Belvidere.

Drive, McHenry. Steven Michael Ohrwall: The funeral service will be at 11:30 a.m. Saturday, March 25, in McHenry County Memorial Park, 11301 Lake Ave., Woodstock. Lois A. Parisek: The visitation will be from 1 p.m. until the 4 p.m. service Sunday, March 26, at the First Congregational Church, 11628 E. Main St., Huntley. Lawrence E. Rosenbarski: The visitation will be from 3 to 9 p.m. Friday, March 24, at Friedrichs Funeral Home, 320 W. Central Road at Northwest Highway, Mount Prospect. The funeral service will be at 8:30 a.m. Saturday, March 25, at the funeral home. The Mass will be celebrated at 9:30 a.m. at St. Stephen Church. Interment will be in All Saints Cemetery. For information, call 847-255-7800. Steven Bruce Schweikert: The service will be at noon Thursday, March 30, in Windridge Memorial Park and Nature Sanctuary, 7014 S. Rawson Bridge Road, Cary. Gary Charles Weightman: The celebration of his life will be from 2 to 4 p.m. Sunday, March 26, at the Kloshe Illahee Clubhouse, 2500 S. 370th St., Federal Way, Washington. Albina Y. Weincouff: The visitation will be from 10 a.m. until the 11 a.m. funeral Mass celebration Thursday, March 23, at St. Bede Catholic Church, 36455 N. Wilson Road, Ingleside. Interment will be in Woodland Cemetery in McHenry. For information, call Justen Funeral Home and Crematory at 815385-2400.

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• Thursday, March 23, 2017

Steven Bruce Schweikert, 70, of Yorkville, Illinois passed away on March 18, 2017, at Edward Hospital in Naperville, Illinois. The funeral services will be held at 12:00 PM on March 30, 2017, at the Windridge Memorial Park and Nature Sanctuary in Cary, Illinois (7014 S. Rawson Bridge Rd., Cary, IL). There will be no visitation. Steve was born in Berwyn, Illinois, on July 16, 1946, the son of Clarence and Agnes Schweikert. Steve was married to Bonnie Schweikert (Burri) on April 2, 1966; they were married for 50 years. Steve is survived by his wife, Bonnie Schweikert; his two children, Steve M. Schweikert (Jeri), Julie K. Guidry (Bret); his four grandchildren, Benjamin and Caroline Schweikert and Andrew and Jackson Guidry; as well as his sister-in-law, Margo Schweikert of Woodstock, IL; as well as her children Keith, Dale, Sandy, and Wendy. He was preceded in death by his parents, Clarence and Agnes Schweikert; as well as his brother, Robert Schweikert (Linda); and his brother, Donald Schweikert. In lieu of flowers, memorial donations can be made to the National Pancreatic Cancer Foundation, or text HOPE4PC34 to 71777.

the crowning glory of a World Series and realize a lifelong dream in the process. Mark leaves behind his two brothers, Craig and Scott; his loving step-mother, Gene Steagall; and his five step-sisters. A celebration of Mark’s life is planned for the future and the date will be shared with all those who wish to raise a toast to Mark.

OBITUARIES | Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

STEVEN BRUCE SCHWEIKERT

MARK STEAGALL


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Thursday, March 23, 2017

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NEIGHBORS Crystal Lake

THINGS TO DO IN & AROUND McHENRY COUNTY

1

‘THE NORMAL HEART’

WHEN: 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. March 23 WHERE: The Black Box Theatre at McHenry County College, 8900 Route 14, Crystal Lake COST & INFO: Tony Award-winning drama about public and private indifference to the AIDS plague and one man’s lonely fight to awaken the world to the crisis. Cost: $15 for public, $10 for MCC students, faculty/staff, alumni and senior citizens. Information: Jay Geller at 815-455-8746, jgeller@mchenry.edu

2

QUEEN ELIZABETH II

WHEN: 7 to 8:30 p.m. March 23 WHERE: McHenry Public Library, 809 Front St., McHenry COST & INFO: Historian Jim Gibbons will discuss the life and reign of Queen Elizabeth II, the longest ruling monarch in the world. Free. Information: 815-385-0036 or http:// mchenrylibrary.org/

3

TOASTMASTERS CLUB MEETING

WHEN: 7 to 8:30 p.m. March 23 WHERE: Panera, 730 Route 14, Fox River Grove COST & INFO: Find your voice and build confidence in a friendly and supportive environment. Free. Information: 847-975-0601, jimaka71@ gmail.com or http://carygrove. toastmastersclubs.org.

ARTS EDUCATION OUTREACH – Raue Center For The Arts receives a contribution from Nicor Gas to benefit Raue Center’s Mission Imagination arts education outreach program. Mission Imagination offers a variety of popular and kid-friendly shows each year and has served more than 400,000 students. This season’s Mission Imagination shows include “Everybody’s Hero: The Jackie Robinson Story,” “Biscuit,” “Monster Who Ate My Peas” and more. For information, visit www.rauecenter.org/mission-imagination. Pictured (from left) are James Knight, Raue Center economic development manager; Chuck Stevens, Raue Center Board chairman emeritus; Mike Johnson, Nicor Gas director of regional operations; Dave Pietryla, Nicor Gas manager of community relations and economic development; Stacy Paller, Nicor Gas meter reading field supervisor; and Tim Paul, Raue Center board president.

Crystal Lake

Wonder Lake

Registration open for upcoming home-selling course

Ski team kicks off annual flower sale

Learn how to make the right decisions regarding home selling during an continuing education class offered by McHenry County College. The class meets from 6:30 to 8:20 p.m. March 27 in Room A102. Learn step-by-step instructions on preparing a home for today’s competitive market, determining current home values, home staging, advertising that really works,

The Wonder Lake Ski Team is hosting its annual spring flower sale fundraiser. Plants will be available for pickup from noon to 6 p.m. May 10 at 8009 White Oaks Road, Wonder Lake. Visit www. wonderlakeskiteam.org to download an order form with the full list of plants available for purchase. Drop off completed forms with payment at Wonder Foods, or mail to P.O. Box 518, Wonder Lake 60097 by April 23. Checks should be made payable to Wonder Lake Water Ski Show Team or WLWSSTO. For information, call Jen Blaksley at 815-378-0238.

and holding a successful open house. Disclosures, the residential real estate contract and how to handle inspections also will be included. The cost is $19. When registering, use course code NFM S59 001. To register, call the MCC Registration Office at 815-455-8588. For information, call Tracy Berry at 815-455-8758 or Claudia Terrones at 815-455-8782.

COMMUNITY

CALENDAR March 23

• 7:30 a.m. – Crystal Clear Toastmasters, Panera Bread, 6000 Route 14, Crystal Lake. Find your voice, build confidence, and improve communication and leadership skills in a supportive environment. From 7:30 to 8:45 a.m. on the second, fourth or fifth Thursday of the month. Cost: Free. Information: 815-451-9376, k_avallon@yahoo.com and www.crystal-

cleartoastmasters.org. • 9:15 a.m. to 2 p.m. – AARP Free Tax Help for Seniors, Heartland Bank and Trust Company, 12101 Regency Square Parkway, Huntley. By appointment only. Appointments must be made in person. • 2 to 3:30 p.m. – Beginning Word 2013, Crystal Lake Public Library, 126 W. Paddock St., Crystal Lake. Introduction to Microsoft Word 2013’s most popular features. Registration required. Cost: Free. Information: 815-459-1687 or www.clpl.org. • 7 to 8 p.m. – Anime & Manga Club: Japanese Culture, McHenry Public Library, 809 Front St., McHenry. Learn about Japanese keigo, or polite forms of address, and apply it to characters in an anime. Cosplay is

welcome. Free. Information: 815-385-0036, mplyps@mchenrylibrary.org or http://mchenrylibrary.org/. • 6 to 7 p.m. – Beginning tai chi and meditation, First Congregational Church, 461 Pierson St., Crystal Lake. Combination of movement and meditation that provides a gentle, full body workout while strengthening the mind, body and spirit connection. For adults 18 years and older. Cost: $5 a person per class, cash or check only. Information: lyn@dailyharmony-mae.com or http://dailyharmony-mae.com.

Have an event to share? Submit your information online at PlanitNorthwest.com. Photos may be emailed to neighbors@nwherald.com.


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Newspaper Enterprise Association TODAY – If you choose to help others, you’ll gain respect, confidence and satisfaction. Your ability to put people at ease will encourage them to give you the assistance you require to get things done. Do your best to nurture important partnerships, and strive to keep balance and equality when dealing with others. ARIES (March 21-April 19) – A little charm and a whole lot of compassion will help you complete pending projects and resolve problems or uncertainties you face. Romance and personal improvements are favored. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) – Putting pressure on someone who opposes you will help

you get your way if you do so in a persuasive manner. You might need to offer an incentive to push matters along quickly. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) – Do what’s best for yourself and aim to improve how you present your personality and abilities. Love and romance are encouraged, and partnerships can be formed. CANCER (June 21-July 22) – Look inward and consider what you can do to make personal improvements. A better health routine or more nutritious diet will do you good. Avoid excessive behavior and overindulgence. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) – Partnerships, meetings and collaboration look promising. Your experience, knowledge and desire to get ahead will lead to an opportunity that is too good to refuse. Don’t let an emotional

situation stifle your productivity. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) – You can negotiate a deal or make alterations to your living arrangements, but don’t go overboard when it comes to spending or you will end up stressed and frustrated. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) – Children, friends and loved ones will play important roles in the way you respond to your current personal situation. Draw strength and courage from the wisdom being offered you. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) – Chill out and do something creative. Work toward a goal that requires only your input. Don’t take risks or get involved in an emotional battle. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) – If you share your feelings with someone you love, it will lead to plans that will improve your

standard of living and boost a personal relationship. Commitment and romance look promising. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) – A conversation will be misleading. If you are uncertain regarding what’s expected of you or the cost involved, ask questions and get answers in writing. Protect your assets and ideas. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) – You’ve got spunk, but that doesn’t mean you should get into an emotional spat. Let bygones be bygones and go about your business. The sweetest revenge is your own success. PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) – A persuasive approach when dealing with others will help you get what you want. If you express your desires colorfully, you’ll attract interest. Put a little muscle behind your intentions.

• Thursday, March 23, 2017

HOROSCOPE

15

TELEVISION | Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

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(CC) The Last Word The 11th Hour Hardball Chris The Rachel Maddow Show (CC) The Last Word Hardball With Chris Matthews (N) All In With Chris Hayes (N) (CC) The Rachel Maddow Show (N) (MSNBC) For the Record With Greta (N) Wild ’n Out Wild ’n Out Nick Cannon: Wild ’n Out Wild ’n Out Friends (CC) Friends (CC) Friends (CC) Wild ’n Out (MTV) Friends (CC) Movie: ›› “Like Mike” (2002) Lil’ Bow Wow. Magic sneakers propel an orphan to a slot in the NBA. (NICK) Henry Danger Henry Danger Hunter Street Thundermans Movie: ›› “Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles” (2014) Megan Fox, Will Arnett. ’ (CC) Full House ’ Friends (CC) Friends (CC) Friends (CC) (:33) Friends ’ Fresh Prince Fresh Prince Cops “Get Off My Cops “Indianapo- Cops “Atlanta” Cops “Atlanta” Cops Car-theft Cops “Bad Girls Cops ’ (CC) Cops “Atlanta” Cops ’ (CC) Campus PD ’ Campus PD ’ Cops A traffic Cops A cyclist Campus PD ’ Campus PD ’ Cops “One (SPIKE) Roof” (CC) stop gone awry. takes a spill. ’ (CC) suspect; assault. 11” ’ (CC) (CC) (CC) (CC) Headlight” ’ lis” ’ (CC) ’ (CC) ’ (CC) ’ (CC) (4:45) Movie: ›› “Quarantine” (2008, Horror) Jen- (:17) Movie: ›› “Untraceable” (2008, Suspense) Movie: ›› “The Edge” (1997) Anthony Hopkins, Alec Baldwin. A plane Movie: “Northmen: A Viking Saga” (2014, Adven- (:40) Movie: ›› “The Lonely Guy” (1984, Comedy) (STZENC) Steve Martin, Charles Grodin. (CC) ture) Tom Hopper, Ryan Kwanten. ’ (CC) nifer Carpenter, Steve Harris. ’ (CC) Diane Lane, Billy Burke, Colin Hanks. ’ (CC) crash strands two rivals in the Alaskan wilderness. ’ (CC) (4:00) Movie: ››› “The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian” (2008, Movie: ›› “The Da Vinci Code” (2006, Mystery) Tom Hanks, Audrey Tautou, Ian McKellen. A religious mys- Movie: ›› “Dredd” (2012, Action) Karl Urban, Olivia Thirlby, Lena Movie: ›› “Warm Bodies” (2013) (SYFY) Children’s) Georgie Henley, Skandar Keynes. (CC) tery could rock foundations of Christianity. (CC) Headey. A futuristic cop acts as judge, jury and executioner. (CC) Nicholas Hoult. (CC) “Thing From Movie: ›››› “Casablanca” (1942, Drama) Humphrey Bogart. Nazis, Movie: ›› “Gojira” (1954, Science Fiction) Takashi Shimura, Momoko Movie: ›››› “King Kong” (1933, Adventure) Fay Wray. Captive gigan- Movie: ››› “Invasion of the Body Snatchers” (TCM) Another World” intrigue and romance clash at a Moroccan nightclub. (CC) (DVS) Kochi. 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(CC) (DVS) Movie: ›› “Percy Jackson & the Olympians: The Lightning Thief” Law & Order “Absentia” ’ Andy Griffith Andy Griffith Andy Griffith Andy Griffith (:12) The Andy Griffith Show Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond King of Queens King of Queens King of Queens King of Queens Love-Raymond Love-Raymond (TVL) Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Colony “Lost Boy” The Green Zone (:02) Law & Order: Special Victims (:02) Law & Order: Special Victims (12:02) Colony “Lost Boy” The (USA) Green Zone is attacked. is attacked. (N) Unit “Learning Curve” ’ Unit “Father’s Shadow” ’ “Devastating Story” ’ “Granting Immunity” ’ “Townhouse Incident” ’ A murky date-rape case. ’ (VH1) (3:30) Movie: ›› “Life” (1999) Movie: ›› “Tommy Boy” (1995, Comedy) Chris Farley, David Spade. ’ (CC) Movie: ›› “The Longest Yard” (2005, Comedy) Adam Sandler, Chris Rock. ’ (CC) Movie: ›››› “Pulp Fiction” (1994) John Travolta. ’ (CC) Inside March Conan Actor Matt LeBlanc. (CC) (:15) 2017 NCAA Basketball Tournament: Regional Semifinal: Teams TBA. (N) (CC) (:45) 2017 NCAA Basketball Tournament: Regional Semifinal: Teams TBA. (N) (Live) (CC) (WTBS) NCAA Tip-Off (CC) 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 VICE News To- Movie ››› “Mad Max: Fury Road” (2015) Tom Hardy. Mad Max must Big Little Lies Celeste meets with Crashing “Par- UConn: March Movie “Cries From Syria” (2017) Narrated by Helen Mirren. The humani(4:55) Movie ››› “Rabbit Hole” (2010, Drama) (HBO) to Madness night (N) (CC) outrun a warlord and his men in a desert chase. ’ ‘R’ (CC) Dr. Reisman. (CC) ents” ’ (CC) tarian crisis and civil war in Syria. (Subtitled-English) ’ ‘NR’ Nicole Kidman. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) Movie ››› “Pale Rider” (1985, Western) Clint Eastwood. Gold prospec- Movie ››› “Hellboy II: The Golden Army” (2008) Ron Perlman. Hell- Movie ›› “The Other Side of the Door” (2016, Hor- (:40) Movie ›› “Constantine” (2005) Keanu Reeves. A man who sees (:45) Movie (MAX) “Legend” ‘R’ demons helps a policewoman probe her sister’s death. ‘R’ (CC) tors are harassed by a corrupt power baron. ’ ‘R’ (CC) boy and his team battle an underworld prince. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) ror) Sarah Wayne Callies. ’ ‘R’ (CC) Billions “Currency” An anxious Homeland “Sock Homeland “Sock Puppets” Carrie Gigolos “Gigo- Dark Net “Pro- The Circus: (3:55) Movie ››› “No Country for Movie ›› “Secret in Their Eyes” (2015) Chiwetel Ejiofor. An FBI agent Billions “Currency” An anxious (SHOW) Puppets” insider. ’ (CC) insider. ’ (CC) catches a break. ’ (CC) loan” ’ (CC) voke” ’ (CC) Inside Old Men” (2007) ’ ‘R’ (CC) probes the murder of a colleague’s daughter. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) (3:30) Movie (:20) Movie “Gringo: The Dangerous Life of John Movie ››› “Gangs of New York” (2002, Historical Drama) Leonardo DiCaprio, Daniel Day-Lewis, Cameron Movie › “Paranoia” (2013, Suspense) Liam Hemsworth. A young man Movie “Spoonful of Sex” (2016, (TMC) “The Next Hit” McAfee” (2016, Documentary) ’ ‘NR’ (CC) Adult) Julia Ann. ’ ‘NR’ (CC) Diaz. A man vows vengeance on the gangster who killed his father. ’ ‘R’ (CC) must become a corporate spy to save his job. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) ^ WBBM


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Thursday, March 23, 2017

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STATE

Rauner seeks prison watchtower cameras By JOHN O’CONNOR The Associated Press

SPRINGFIELD – Gov. Bruce Rauner wants to replace guards in watchtowers with closed-circuit cameras at nearly two dozen lower-security Illinois prisons, an effort to cut expenses for a cashstrapped state that has gone two years without a budget. The administration is projecting $4 million in annual savings through reduced overtime pay and “more efficient management strategies,” Rauner spokeswoman Eleni Demertzis said. No security guards will be laid off, corrections department spokeswoman Nicole Wilson said. Such a proposal has encountered mixed results in other states. Michigan and Pennsylvania prison officials said they abandoned round-the-clock tower staffing in the past decade without layoffs. Wisconsin eliminated 60 guard tower positions in 2015, transferring the officers working there to other posts. The Republican governor’s office didn’t provide specifics on the change, which would affect the state’s 23 minimum- and medium-security facilities. The four maximum-security prisons would retain full tower staffing. Of the 11,000 union workers employed by the corrections department, about 6,000 are security workers. Officials had discussed with the union the idea of using high-tech cameras to en-

ILLINOIS ROUNDUP

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News from across the state

Lawsuit: Chicago violates law by destroying 911 tapes

CHICAGO – A group of Chicago civil rights lawyers has filed a lawsuit alleging that the city’s policy of destroying 911 recordings after 30 days violates state law. The Chicago Civil Rights Project filed the lawsuit Tuesday in Cook County Circuit Court, arguing that the city illegally deleted the recordings “for administrative convenience,” unless there was a notice to preserve specific recordings. The suit said the practice makes it difficult to obtain evidence because 30 days often isn’t enough time for attorneys to know whether such records are relevant. “Balanced against the financial, let alone human, cost of just one wrongful convic-

AP file photo

This July 25, 2011, file photo shows the Hill Correctional Center in Galesburg. Gov. Bruce Rauner wants to replace guards in state prison watchtowers with security cameras. Rauner’s budget office estimates the cost savings at $4 million in the next budget year. hance security, but a union leader said he’s wary of removing people from the lookout points. “There’s a whole range of things that a tower person can do,” said Eddie Caumiant, regional director of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees Council 31. “They can see very clearly exactly what’s going on in a situation in the yard, they can anticipate what will

happen, and they can see things that are out of range of the officers on the ground.” A high-profile escape in 2014 from a prison in Ionia, Michigan, sparked a debate about whether replacing tower guards with cameras hampers safety. Convicted murderer Michael David Elliott was armed with a box cutter when he escaped the camera-secured prison, carjacked a woman and drove to Indi-

tion, it is unconscionable that the city refuses to preserve this evidence,” attorney and group co-founder Nick Albukerk said. The city’s 30-day system dates back to when calls were stored on tape and overwritten, instead of being electronically stored. The lawsuit seeks a court order to halt the destruction of recordings, arguing that a digital upgrade for up to 20 years of storage would cost the city less than $10,000.

in prison when he’s sentenced June 30. In a statement Tuesday, Acting U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Illinois Joel Levin said illegal gun sales pose “a tremendous danger to the community.” The U.S. Attorney’s Office said Thomas’ arrest was part of a larger investigation that removed more than 100 guns from Chicago streets.

ana before he was recaptured the next day. “His escape would have been seen by an officer in a gun tower 20 feet away, but the tower was unstaffed,” said Anita Lloyd, spokeswoman for the Michigan Corrections Organization, the union representing state prison security staffers. But Michigan Corrections Department spokesman Chris Gautz said that tower had never been staffed at that time of day since the prison opened in 1987. Officers inside the prison who weren’t keeping tabs on Elliot were to blame for his breakout, he said. Rauner, a private equity investor when he took office in 2015, campaigned on curbing union power in a solidly Democratic state and has clashed repeatedly with organized labor. He is locked in a legal and public-opinion battle with AFSCME, whose 38,000 members have authorized a strike, if necessary, for the first time in its 40year history. The Republican governor and Democratic-controlled Legislature have clashed over how to reduce a multibillion-dollar deficit and $13 billion pile of overdue bills. Wisconsin saved $5.7 million in two years by reducing overnight staffing at guard towers, corrections spokesman Tristan Cook said. He said replacement security was added, but he declined to say whether cameras are part of it.

work, equipment and installation for the project. The company’s spokesman said the panels will offset between 18 percent and 36 percent of the district’s energy costs. That could translate into $50,000 in savings each year.

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Adler Planetarium hosting ‘Hidden Figures’ events

CHICAGO – A Chicago museum and planetarium are teaming up to host three days of events inspired by the WAUKEGAN – Solar panels in‘Batman’ pleads guilty to stories portrayed in the Oscar-nominated brokering illegal gun sales stalled at seven Waukegan public schools movie “Hidden Figures.” CHICAGO – A Chicago man has are now generating power. The events started Wednesday and pleaded guilty to federal charges that The Chicago Tribune reported that nearly include programming focused on science, he brokered 77 illegal gun transactions, 2,200 rooftop panels are up and running technology and math. The Adler Planetarsometimes selling weapons that had been this week. Final touches are being made ium and the DuSable Museum of African stolen or had obliterated serial numbers. on monitors for each school’s lobby show- American History are hosting the event. John Thomas pleaded guilty to two ing how energy is generated. The event ends Saturday and includes a free student screening of the movie based counts of being a felon in possession of a The panels can generate up to 681 kilofirearm and one count of dealing firearms watts of energy – enough energy to power on the untold story of the three black women mathematicians who worked at without a license. 540 homes. NASA during the space race. The 33-year-old convicted felon – also A New Jersey-based firm called NRG known as “Batman” – faces up to 25 years Energy donated the design, engineering – Wire reports

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Solar panels at Waukegan schools generating energy


NATION&WORLD

17

ILLINOIS LOTTERY

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MEGA MILLIONS

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NATION & WORLD BRIEFS Trump lawyers ask court to willing to use his megaphone and move on travel ban appeal practiced counter-punch against

RICHMOND, Va. – Donald Trump’s administration is asking a U.S. court to quickly hear its appeal of a ruling that blocked the president’s revised travel ban. Lawyers for the president filed a brief with the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Virginia on Wednesday. In it, they argue that the matter is one of national importance and should be reviewed as soon as possible. They want the court to set an expedited schedule for filing briefs and to hold oral arguments at the earliest opportunity. Courts in Maryland and Hawaii earlier this month blocked the revised ban, which would temporarily ban travel to the U.S. from six predominantly Muslim countries.

Police secure the area on the south side of Westminster Bridge on Wednesday close to the Houses of Parliament in London. The leader of Britain’s House of Commons said a man has been shot by police at Parliament.

his allies. But the vote comes as Trump’s poll numbers have slouched and his White House is consumed with damaging distractions.

Bill bars discrimination of climate change doubters

AUGUSTA, Maine – Maine laws protect people from discrimination based on factors such as race, disabilities and sexual orientation, and a Republican lawmaker wants to add a person’s beliefs about climate change to that list. Rep. Larry Lockman has introduced a bill that would limit the attorney general’s ability to investigate or prosecute people based on their political speech, including their views on climate Rebelling GOP lawmakers change. It also would prohibit the state from discriminating risk Trump’s wrath in buying goods or services or NEW YORK – Hard-line House awarding grants or contracts Republicans considering voting against the House GOP health bill based on a person’s “climate change policy preferences.” are bracing for payback from a Lockman, an independent busipresident who claims his favorite biblical passage is “an eye for an ness consultant from Amherst, eye.” Many appear ready to risk it. said he believes it’s an open The scheduled roll call vote for question whether human activity the bill backed by President Don- is the primary cause of climate ald Trump is a crucial first test of change. Peer-reviewed studies, science whether Republicans are willing to defy the White House and face organizations and climate the wrath of a president who has scientists say that the world is warming from man-made forces. bragged about never forgetting – Wire reports a slight. Trump has shown he’s

AP photo

5 dead in attack at British Parliament By JILL LAWLESS, PAISLEY DODDS ley said police believed there Tower were to be dimmed in was only one attacker, “but solidarity with London. and DANICA KIRKA The Associated Press

LONDON – A knife-wielding man went on a deadly rampage in the heart of Britain’s seat of power Wednesday, plowing a car into pedestrians on London’s Westminster Bridge before stabbing a police officer to death inside the gates of Parliament. Five people were killed, including the assailant, and 40 others were injured in what Prime Minister Theresa May condemned as a “sick and depraved terrorist attack.” Lawmakers, lords, staff and visitors were locked down after the man was shot and killed by police within the perimeter of Parliament, just yards from entrances to the building itself and in the shadow of the iconic Big Ben clock tower. A doctor who treated the wounded from the bridge said some had “catastrophic” injuries. Three police officers, several French teenagers on a school trip, two Romanian tourists and five South Korean visitors were among the injured. Police said they were treating the attack as terrorism. There was no immediate claim of responsibility. Metropolitan Police counterterrorism chief Mark Row-

it would be foolish to be overconfident early on.” He said an unarmed policeman, three civilian pedestrians and the attacker died. Forty others, including three police officers, were injured. Islamic extremism was suspected in the attack, Rowley said, adding that authorities believe they know the assailant’s identity but would not reveal it while the investigation was ongoing. The threat level for international terrorism in the U.K. was already listed at severe, meaning an attack was “highly likely.” Speaking outside 10 Downing St. after chairing a meeting of government’s emergency committee, COBRA, May said that level would not change. She said attempts to defeat British values of democracy and freedom through terrorism would fail. “Tomorrow morning, Parliament will meet as normal,” she said. Londoners and visitors “will all move forward together, never giving in to terror and never allowing the voices of hate and evil to drive us apart.” U.S. President Donald Trump was among world leaders offering condolences, and in Paris, the lights of the Eiffel

London has been a target for terrorism many times over past decades. Just this weekend, hundreds of armed police took part in an exercise simulating a “marauding” terrorist attack on the River Thames. Wednesday was the anniversary of suicide bombings in the Brussels airport and subway that killed 32 people last year, and the latest events echoed recent vehicle attacks in Berlin and Nice, France. In the House of Commons, legislators were holding a series of votes on pensions when deputy Speaker Lindsay Hoyle announced that the sitting was being suspended and told lawmakers not to leave. Parliament was locked down for several hours, and the adjoining Westminster subway station was shuttered. Conservative lawmaker Tobias Ellwood, whose brother was killed in the Bali terror attack in 2002, performed first aid on the wounded police officer, who later died. About 10 yards away lay the assailant. “I tried to stem the flow of blood and give mouth to mouth while waiting for the medics to arrive but I think he had lost too much blood,” Ellwood said. “He had multiple wounds, under the arm and in the back.”

Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Thursday, March 23, 2017

LOTTERY


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Thursday, March 23, 2017

| NATION&WORLD

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Trump campaign chief linked to Putin interests By JEFF HORWITZ and CHAD DAY The Associated Press

WASHINGTON – President Donald Trump’s former campaign chairman, Paul Manafort, secretly worked for a Russian billionaire to advance the interests of Vladimir Putin a decade ago and proposed an ambitious political strategy to undermine anti-Russian opposition across former Soviet republics, The Associated Press has learned. The White House on Wednesday acknowledged the AP’s revelations had “started to catch a lot of buzz” but brushed them aside, although some members of Congress expressed alarm. Manafort’s activities appeared to contradict previous assertions by the Trump administration and Manafort that he never worked for Russian interests. Manafort proposed in confidential strategy plans as early as June 2005 that he would influence politics, business dealings and news coverage inside the U.S., Europe and the former Soviet republics to benefit the Putin government, even as U.S.-Russia relations under Republican President George W. Bush grew worse. Manafort pitched the plans to Russian aluminum magnate Oleg Deripaska, a close Putin ally with whom he eventually signed a $10 million annual contract beginning in 2006, according to interviews with several people familiar with payments to Manafort and business records obtained by the AP. Manafort and Deripaska maintained a business relationship until at least 2009, one person familiar with the work said. “We are now of the belief that this model can greatly benefit the Putin Government if employed at the cor-

AP file photo

Then-Trump campaign manager Paul Manafort stands between then-Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump and his daughter Ivanka Trump on July 21 during a walkthrough at the Republican National Convention in Cleveland. rect levels with the appropriate commitment to success,” Manafort wrote in the 2005 memo to Deripaska. The effort, Manafort wrote, “will be offering a great service that can re-focus, both internally and externally, the policies of the Putin government.” White House spokesman Sean Spicer indicated Wednesday that Trump had not been aware of Manafort’s work on behalf of Deripaska. “To suggest that the president knew who his clients were from 10 years ago is a bit insane,” Spicer said. He noted the AP’s reporting “has started to catch a lot of buzz” but said Manafort’s work occurred long before he became Trump’s campaign chairman. “I don’t know what he got paid to do,” Spicer said, adding, “There’s no

suggestion he did anything improper.” Manafort’s plans were laid out in documents obtained by the AP that included strategy memoranda and records showing international wire transfers for millions of dollars. How much work Manafort performed under the contract was unclear. The disclosures come as Trump campaign advisers are the subject of an FBI investigation and two congressional inquiries. Investigators are reviewing whether the Trump campaign and its associates coordinated with Moscow to meddle in the 2016 presidential campaign, an allegation that Manafort has dismissed as politically motivated. Manafort confirmed in a statement to the AP that he worked for Deripaska in various countries, but said the work

was being unfairly cast as “inappropriate or nefarious” as part of a “smear campaign.” “I worked with Oleg Deripaska almost a decade ago representing him on business and personal matters in countries where he had investments,” Manafort said. “My work for Mr. Deripaska did not involve representing Russia’s political interests.” Meanwhile, Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., called the disclosures “serious stuff” and more evidence that an independent congressional committee should investigate the Trump administration. “Other shoes will drop,” McCain said. His Republican colleague, Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, another frequent Trump critic, called the disclosures “something that needs to be looked at.” “I don’t know if he violated the Foreign Agent Registration Act, but it’s something I think we all need to know more about,” said Graham, referring to a U.S. law that requires people who lobby on behalf of foreign political leaders or parties to provide detailed reports about their actions to the government. Deripaska became one of Russia’s wealthiest men under Putin, buying assets abroad in ways widely perceived to benefit the Kremlin’s interests. U.S. diplomatic notes from 2006 described Deripaska as “among the 2-3 oligarchs Putin turns to on a regular basis” and “a more-or-less permanent fixture on Putin’s trips abroad.” Democrats on the House intelligence committee said the new revelations will feature in their congressional investigations. Rep. Eric Swalwell, D-Calif., said on MSNBC that Manafort should appear before that committee, and he raised the specter of a subpoena should Manafort not come on his own.

Supreme Court bolsters rights of learning-disabled students By SAM HANANEL

The Associated Press WASHINGTON – A unanimous Supreme Court on Wednesday bolstered the rights of millions of learning-disabled students in a ruling that requires public schools to offer special education programs that meet higher standards. The court struck down a lower standard endorsed by President Donald Trump’s nominee to the high court. Chief Justice John John Roberts Roberts said that it is not enough for school districts to get by with minimal instruction for special-needs children. The school programs must be

designed to let students make progress in light of their disabilities. The ruling quickly led to tough questions at the confirmation hearing of Supreme Court nominee Neil Gorsuch. Democratic Sen. Dick Durbin of Illinois said the high court had just tossed out a standard that Gorsuch himself had used in a similar case that lowered the bar for educational achievement. In its ruling, the Supreme Court sided with parents of an autistic teen in Colorado who said their public school did not do enough to help their son make progress. They sought reimbursement for the cost of sending him to private school. The case helps clarify the scope of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, a federal law that requires a

“free and appropriate public education” for disabled students. Lower courts said even programs with minimal benefits can satisfy the law. Roberts said the law requires an educational program “reasonably calculated to enable a child to make progress appropriate in light of the child’s circumstances.” He did not elaborate on what that progress should look like, saying it depends on the “unique circumstances” of each child. He added that there also should be deference to school officials. “When all is said and done, a student offered an educational program providing merely more than de minimis progress from year to year can hardly be said to have been offered an education at all,” Roberts said. “For children

with disabilities, receiving instruction that aims so low would be tantamount to sitting idly awaiting the time when they were old enough to drop out.” At Gorsuch’s hearing, Durbin said the nominee had gone beyond the standards of his own appeals court by adding the word “merely” in his 2008 opinion approving the “de minimis” – or minimum – standard for special needs education. Durbin suggested that Gorsuch had lowered the bar even more. Gorsuch, handed a copy of the ruling during a break on the third day of his hearings, noted that his panel reached its decision unanimously based on a 10-year-old precedent. Durbin also said Gorsuch had ruled against disabled students in eight out of 10 cases dealing with the IDEA.


U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson (right) passes behind Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi as he walks to the podium Wednesday to speak at the Meeting of the Ministers of the Global Coalition on the Defeat of ISIS at the State Department in Washington.

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U.S. tells allies to do more amid new assault against IS By MATTHEW LEE

The Associated Press

• Thursday, March 23, 2017

WASHINGTON – Declaring the Islamic State group’s destruction its top Middle East priority, the Trump administration on Wednesday urged coalition partners to contribute more to forces who are retaking Iraq’s second largest city and readying an assault on the extremists’ self-declared Syrian capital. There was no apparent announcement of a new overall strategy, however. Addressing top diplomats of the 68-nation coalition, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson called for new ideas to expand the fight against IS in the Iraqi city of Mosul and accelerate the campaign to chase militants from Raqqa, Syria, while preparing for the complex humanitarian and political consequences of both efforts. Yet Tillerson did not propose, at least in his public remarks, a new approach, beyond noting the increased U.S. military role in each country. As the officials were meeting at the State Department in Washington, the Pentagon announced that it provided an airlift for Syrian fighters taking part in an offensive west of Raqqa, in an escalation of U.S. involvement. At least one country participating in the meeting, France, voiced frustration that Tillerson and other U.S. officials had not offered specifics. “I recognize there are many pressing challenges in the Middle East, but defeating ISIS is the United States number one goal in the region,” Tillerson said. “As we’ve said before, when everything is a priority, nothing is a priority. We must continue to keep our focus on the most urgent matter at hand.” Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Ababi said victory finally was within reach. “We are at the stage of completely decimating Daesh,” al-Abadi said, using the Arabic acronym for IS. Nothing Tillerson outlined departed significantly from the Obama administration’s strategy, which focused on using local forces to retake territory along with efforts to disrupt IS recruitment

and financing, and the blueprint of the multilateral effort seemed unchanged. French Foreign Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault said he was disappointed the U.S. hasn’t outlined a more detailed plan, particularly for Raqqa’s future. He said he understood Trump’s administration still was formulating policy, explaining that he will be more concerned if decisions aren’t made before the end of April. “We are expecting some further clarity from the U.S.,” he told reporters, citing France’s desire for the city to be run by moderate opponents of Syrian President Bashar Assad and not the country’s Russian-backed government. He also wants to hear what America seeks from U.N.-led talks on a broader political settlement to the six-year civil war between Assad’s military and various rebel groups. Tactics for fighting the Islamic State are complicated in Syria, where a partnership with Kurdish militants has prompted difficult discussions with Turkey, which sees them as a national security threat. The Pentagon made clear that in Wednesday’s offensive near Raqqa, U.S. forces still were in a support role. Tillerson said the United States would play its part and pay its fair share of the overall operation. But he said other nations, particularly those which have faced IS or IS-inspired attacks, must contribute more militarily or financially. He said increased intelligence and information sharing could overcome traditional rivalries between different agencies and governments, and advocated an enhanced online effort to halt the spread of extremist views, especially as the Islamic State group loses ground in Iraq and Syria. Although Tillerson alluded to the intensified campaign, he said the Trump administration still was refining its strategy. As a candidate, Trump spoke broadly about radical changes to the approach adopted by then-President Barack Obama. As a president, Trump has moved more cautiously.

NATION&WORLD | Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

AP photo


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Thursdday, March 23, 2017

20

OPINIONS

NORTHWEST HERALD EDITORIAL BOARD:

Kevin Lyons

Brett Rowland

Valerie Katzenstein

John Sahly

Kyle Nabors

ANOTHER VIEW

Get house in order

Seventeen minutes. That is a shockingly long time for an intruder to roam undetected on the grounds of the White House while the president is inside the executive mansion. Fortunately, the intruder March 10 was carrying nothing more lethal than two cans of pepper spray. But how could such a breach of security have occurred? Secret Service officials owe an answer. And while they are at it, they also might explain why they initially tried to minimize the seriousness of the incident. The security failure, in which a 26-year-old California man with a history of mental illness pierced the outer perimeter of the White House near the Treasury Department, renews questions about the Secret Service’s ability to protect the country’s leaders and facilities. A series of embarrassments, including a 2014 incident in which an intruder with a knife managed to get into the White House before being tackled by an off-duty agent in the East Room, brought the agency under scrutiny. Thsat caused an overhaul of management that supposedly tightened protections. That makes this latest incident, along with the theft of an agent’s laptop containing sensitive information about Trump Tower, all the more troubling. “I worry this is the worst one yet ... it scares me,” said Jason Chaffetz, R-Utah, chairman of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform. Chaffetz, describing a surveillance video viewed by the committee Monday in a closed-door briefing, detailed how the intruder cleared a fence and ground barriers, lingered on the south portico of the White House, moved through the south garden and peered in several windows before being apprehended. Only after Chaffetz raised questions did the Secret Service release a timeline of events disclosing that agents failed to detect the intruder for 17 minutes. A spokesman for the agency declined to comment when we asked why the agency had not been more forthcoming, a lapse particularly pronounced in light of President Donald Trump’s (clearly premature) compliment about them doing a “fantastic job” in this case. The Secret Service urgently needs to get its house in order. The agency is without a permanent director after the retirement of Joseph Clancy. In choosing a replacement, Trump would do well to take to heart recommendations about the need for someone from outside the agency to bring a fresh eye to its operation.

– The Washington Post

THE FIRST

AMENDMENT

ANOTHER VIEW

King’s hate an opportunity for GOP

Rep. Steve King’s rampant racism is an opportunity for Iowa Republicans and the party at large. Exorcise the nationalist bent before it’s too late. The House should make an example of King, and Iowa GOP should be actively seeking a candidate to oust him in next year’s primary. King’s Sunday tweet, in support of a right-wing Dutch nationalist, Geert Wilders, laid bare that which has infected the party of Lincoln for far too long. “Wilders understands that culture and demographics are our destiny. We can’t restore our civilization with somebody else’s babies,” King tweeted, a direct shot at Muslim refugees and their children. King has made a career out of nibbling the edges of white supremacy. Such inflammatory speech is what gets him on national TV talk shows. He’s not serving Iowa’s 4th Congressional District. And thanks to his lust for attention, King serves as a self-appointed representative for Iowa. It’s through his actions that the nation sees us. Many prominent Republicans

rightly decried King’s initial statement. They no doubt fumed as he went on CNN and doubled-down. “First of all, I do not agree with Congressman King’s statement. We are a nation of immigrants, and diversity is the strength of any nation and any community,” Iowa GOP Chairman Jeff Kaufmann said in a statement. Kaufmann took an even harder swing at former KKK Grand Wizard David Duke, who was, unsurprisingly, overjoyed by King’s declaration. “Regarding David Duke, his words and sentiments are absolute garbage. He is not welcome in our wonderful state,” Kaufmann said. Gov. Terry Branstad and governor-in-waiting Kim Reynolds correctly smacked King for his outright bigotry. Strong words are welcome. But action is necessary. Unchecked, this strain of right-wing nationalism will consume the party. It’s already threatening political orders throughout the West, the very civilization that King claims he wants to save. Like so many others, King is obviously emboldened by the rise of President Donald Trump.

He’s dropped the thin veil that had cloaked his prejudice. Trump might not like to admit it, but the go-to dog whistles that propelled his campaign spoke directly to the hard right’s notion of racial purity and a civilization under siege from the others. That’s why Duke and his ilk are suddenly relevant again. It’s why Jews are suddenly under threat. This is not the rhetoric of your father’s GOP, the party of reason and Reagan. It is, however, the same disgusting drivel that was thrown at Irish, Polish and Italian immigrants a century ago. It’s fear and weakness masquerading as strength. King should be censured in the House. His bigotry is protected speech. But the First Amendment does not shield him from professional consequences. And next year, King should face a strong opponent in the GOP primary, one with full backing of the state party. King’s breed of hate-filled nationalism is a threat to the GOP. But it’s also an opportunity to rebuke such gutlessness in the strongest possible terms.

Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.

– The Quad-City Times


By MICHAEL GREEN

Special to the Washington Post

toward North Korea: that all options, including military and even nuclear options, will be considered, as necessary, to deter attacks on our homeland or allies. Tillerson was also right to state that 20 years of diplomacy with North Korea has “failed,” particularly after Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi declared two weeks ago that the U.S. and North Korea were like “two accelerating trains coming toward each other” and proposed a new diplomatic approach based on a U.S. freeze of military exercises in exchange for a North Korean freeze of missile tests. This was a ludicrous proposal on several levels – not least because of the alleged moral equivalency between the U.S. and North Korea and China’s own effort to bow out of the problem. Tillerson minced no words in putting Beijing on notice that China needs to step up. • Japan and nuclear weapons. In an interview with the Independent Journal Review, Tillerson hinted that, in light of North Korea’s repeated missile tests, Japan might need to develop nuclear weapons down the road. If the intent was to pressure China to exert greater pressure on Pyongyang, then waving the “nuclear Japan” warning will not work. It would be much more effective simply to demonstrate that

North Korean actions are enhancing strategic trust and solidarity with U.S. allies – a geopolitical trend that can help shake Beijing out of its complacency on North Korea. In any case, the answer was ambiguous enough that it will have little impact on China, North Korea or Japan for now. Overall, Tillerson sent the message he needed in order to gain some traction on North Korea. The confusion that has emerged over his intentions has more to do with the Trump administration as a whole than with his own performance. President Trump vowed as a candidate to make unpredictability a hallmark of his foreign policy, and he has shifted positions on fundamental questions, such as whether the U.S. will defend allies or maintain the one-China commitment that the past six presidents made the basis for U.S.-China relations. Tillerson hit the right tone, but U.S. foreign policy needs an effective chorus backing him up in Washington.

• Michael Green, senior vice president for Asia at the Center for Strategic and International Studies and associate professor at Georgetown University, is author of “By More Than Providence: Grand Strategy and American Power in the Asia Pacific Since 1783.”

IT’S YOUR WRITE Cosler for mayor

To the Editor: I’m writing to ask you to endorse Jim Cosler for mayor of Cary. He has integrity and the economic interests and welfare of its residents in mind and not his own agenda. He is upfront about what is happening in the community and advocates transparency where as his opponent does not. Jim Cosler listens to the concerns of the residents who voted him in to do just that. Pedcor was pretty much a done deal (but for some variance issues) before the community had any idea what was happening. Not every deal that comes to Cary is good for Cary and Jim recognizes this and resists those deals that are not to Cary’s benefit. Cary needs a mayor who is fair, honest, fiscally responsible, transparent and one who can restore community trust. I urge you to endorse Jim Cosler for mayor of Cary. Elizabeth Knepper Cary

Dawson has wisdom

To the Editor: Ralph Dawson is a smart and wise Crystal Lake councilman whose good judgment has served us well. After retiring, he was elected to the City Council based on his reputation as an ethical, smart businessman. I can attest to Ralph’s dedication to good government and transparency because I was on the zoning board for 20 years. I observed how conscientiously he listened to our homeowners when developers threatened their property rights. He was fair and made good decisions that benefited the whole town. Ralph is running for re-election. Remember “local government, including school boards, touch our lives more closely than any other taxing body.” Based on his record, you can trust Ralph Dawson. Vote to re-elect him to the city council April 4.

Rosemary Kurtz Crystal Lake

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. Election-related letters are limited to 150 words. The deadline for submitting election-related letters is March 24. All

Library board must stop

To the Editor: Dear Crystal Lake Library Board members: Your referendum in November lost so why are you still purchasing properties surrounding the library? The voters have told you in no uncertain terms they do not want or need a new, extremely expensive library. The money just isn’t there in our budgets for your unreasonable wants. You have not been truthful or open in these dealings. You have paid far more than what these properties are actually

letters are subject to editing for length 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

worth. You are going behind taxpayers backs buying them and even are planning to purchase more properties without the taxpayers OK. This needs to stop. You are wasting our money and mismanaging the library. You should all resign. The library board should be made up of elected members, not appointed members. The taxpayers should have a say on who gets to be a member of the board and for how long. You answer to us, end of story. Kim Maselbas Crystal Lake

• Thursday, March 23, 2017

Secretary of State Rex Tillerson raised eyebrows with several of his statements in Asia last week, but in general he struck the right tone – even if it requires a bit of historical and policy context to understand why. Here’s a report card on the secretary’s trip: • “Mutual respect” and “win-win solutions.”In Beijing, Tillerson parroted the Chinese when he said that U.S.-China relations should be built on “nonconfrontation, no conflict, mutual respect and always searching for win-win solutions.” As a general rule, it is not a good idea for senior U.S. officials to repeat such Chinese formulations nearly word for word, since they will be interpreted in China based on the official narrative of the Communist Party. But this was a minor mistake compared with the Obama administration’s 2013 embrace of Chinese President Xi Jinping’s proposal for a “new model of great power relations” between Beijing and Washington. That six-character Chinese phrase cast the U.S. and China as the two powers that should decide the future of Asia, implicitly downgrading U.S. allies and partners such as Japan and India to second-tier status. In

contrast, Tillerson’s use of mundane Chinese Foreign Ministry rhetoric described a bilateral process and did not place China in a privileged position over democratic U.S. allies. Still, in the future, the secretary will want to find his own words to characterize relations with China, which – as he pointed out in other parts of his public remarks – are highly competitive but do hold the potential for greater cooperation. • “All options are on the table “ with North Korea. Tillerson also took a bit of heat for this statement at his Seoul news conference Friday. But this is exactly the warning that a Hillary Clinton or Jeb Bush administration would probably be sending right now. Over the past year, Pyongyang has raced toward its goal of fielding an intercontinental ballistic missile capable of striking the continental U.S. with a nuclear warhead. It has deployed hundreds of missiles capable of reaching Japan, South Korea and U.S. bases on Guam and showed a willingness to employ biological or chemical weapons when it allegedly ordered the assassination of Kim Jong Un’s half brother in Malaysia using VX nerve agent. The U.S. is unlikely to choose a preemptive military strike, but it is critical at this moment to reiterate long-standing U.S. policy

OPINIONS | Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

A report card on Tillerson’s trip to Asia

21


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Thursday, March 23, 2017

22

BUSINESS

Sears notes ‘substantial doubt’ about future By ANNE D’INNOCENZIO and HANNAH WEIKEL The Associated Press

NEW YORK – Sears, a back-to-school shopping destination for generations of kids, has said that after years of losing money there is “substantial doubt” it will be able to keep its doors open. But it also insisted that its actions to turn around its business should help reduce that risk. It still was a dramatic acknowledgment from the chain that owns Sears and Kmart stores, which has long held fast to its stance that a turnaround is possible, even as many of its shoppers have moved on to Wal-Mart, Target or Amazon. Sears has survived of late, mainly with millions in loans funneled through the hedge fund of Chairman and CEO Edward Lampert, but with sales fading, it is burning through cash. Sears Holdings Corp. said late Tuesday it lost more than $2 billion last year, and its historical operating results indicated doubt about the future of the company that started in the 1880s as a mail-order catalog business. At a largely empty Sears store in St. Paul, Minnesota, where the available parking far outstripped the number of cars in the lot, 85-year-old Jack Walsh and his 82-year-old wife, Mary Ann, said they have shopped at Sears their entire lives, buying items from curtains and window treatments to tires and tools. “I bought my tools from Sears, and I’ve still got them,” Jack Walsh said.

AP photo

Sears signage is shown Wednesday on its department store in Brooklyn’s Flatbush neighborhood in New York. Sears, once the monolith of American retail, said that there is “substantial doubt” that it will be able to keep its doors open. The company known for DieHard batteries and Kenmore appliances has been selling assets, most recently its Craftsman tool brand. But it said pension agreements may prevent the sale of more businesses, potentially leading to a shortfall in funding. “It’s a sad story. This is the place that created the first direct-to-consumer retail, the first modern department store. It stood like the Colossus over the American retail landscape,” said Craig Johnson, president of Customer Growth Partners, a retail consulting firm. “But it’s been underinvested and bled dry.” Company shares, which hit an alltime low last month, tumbled more

than 13 percent Wednesday. Sears tried to soothe investors’ fears, saying in a post on its site that it remains focused on “executing our transformation plan” and that news reports miss the full disclosure that it’s highlighting actions to reduce risks. It also said that the comments made in the filing were in line with “regulatory standards.” Lampert combined Sears and Kmart in 2005, about two years after he helped bring Kmart out of bankruptcy. He pledged to return Sears to greatness, leveraging its best-known brands and its vast holdings of land, and more recently planned to entice customers with its loyalty program. The company, which employs 140,000 people, announced

in January that it would close 108 additional Kmart and 42 more Sears locations, and unveiled yet another restructuring plan in February aimed at cutting costs and reconfiguring debts to give itself more breathing room. But it has to get more people through the doors or shopping online for what it’s selling. Sears, like many department stores, has been thwarted by a new consumer that has ripped up the decades-old playbook that the industry has relied upon. A plethora of new online players also have revolutionized the market. Sears has upped its presence online but is having a hard time disguising its age. Its stores are in need of a major refresh as rivals such as Wal-Mart and Target invest heavily to revitalize stores. Sales at established Sears and Kmart locations dropped 10.3 percent in the final quarter of 2016. Industry analysts have placed the staggering sums of money that Sears is losing beside the limited number of assets it has left to sell, and believe the storied retailer may have reached the point of no return. The company has lost $10.4 billion since 2011, the last year that it made a profit. Excluding charges that can be listed as one-time events, the loss is $4.57 billion, said Ken Perkins, who heads the research firm Retail Metrics LLC, but how the losses are stacked no longer seems to matter. “They’re past the tipping point,” Perkins said. “This is a symbolic acknowledgment of the end of Sears of what we know it to be.”

THE MARKETS

THE STOCKS Stock

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Abbott Labs AbbVie AGL Resources Allstate Alphabet American Airlines Apple AptarGroup Arch Dan AT&T Bank of America Bank of Montreal Baxter Berry Plastics Boeing Caterpillar CME Group Coca-Cola Comcast

44.81 65.52 65.97 81.38 829.59 40.35 141.42 76.85 45.61 41.65 22.94 73.86 51.79 48.17 176.98 92.43 119.33 42.38 37.04

Change

0.01 0.17 0.00 -0.31 -0.87 -0.07 1.58 0.08 0.66 -0.43 -0.08 0.04 0.39 -0.24 1.02 0.00 -0.95 -0.12 -0.03

Stock

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Dean Foods Dow Chemical Exelon Exxon Facebook Ford General Electric General Motors Home Depot IBM ITW JPMorganChase Kellogg Kohl’s Kraft Heinz Company Live Nation McDonald’s Medtronic Microsoft

19.09 62.79 36.30 81.76 139.59 11.77 29.53 34.39 147.36 174.78 133.85 87.53 72.71 37.73 92.29 28.75 129.10 81.00 65.03

-0.16 -0.29 0.34 -0.07 1.08 0.05 0.14 -0.16 0.75 0.90 0.37 0.14 -0.89 0.09 0.39 -0.20 0.58 0.31 0.82

Modine Moto Solutions Netflix Office Depot Pepsi Pulte Homes Sears Holdings Snap-On Southwest Air. Supervalu Target Tesla Motors Twitter United Contint. Visa Wal-Mart Walgreen Waste Mgmt. Wintrust Fincl.

11.20 83.59 142.65 4.41 112.02 23.37 7.98 167.18 52.46 3.34 53.58 255.01 14.98 66.95 88.52 70.25 83.03 72.65 67.09

0.10 -0.17 0.23 -0.07 0.25 -0.03 -1.12 -2.37 0.58 -0.01 0.19 4.33 0.44 1.67 0.46 0.35 -0.18 0.13 -0.28

COMMODITIES

-6.71

20,661.30

+27.82

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+4.43

2,348.45

OIL

$48.04

a barrel UNCH

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1249.70 UNCH 17.578 UNCH 2.6305 UNCH

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Wheat Soybean Corn Rough Rice

422.25 999.75 358.75 9.78

UNCH UNCH UNCH UNCH

Livestock

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Live cattle Lean hogs Feeder cattle

122.45 UNCH 68.15 UNCH 136.35 UNCH

Business news tip? Email business@nwherald.com or stay connected on Facebook at facebook.com/nwherald or follow us on Twitter @nwherald.

Change


THINGS

WORTH TALKIN’ ABOUT

THURSDAY, M A RC H 23 , 2017

NEW YORK – ABC News’ Diane Sawyer is reprising her interview with Caitlyn Jenner, with the former Olympic gold medalist slated to talk about her first couple of years of life as a woman. The former Bruce Jenner spoke to Sawyer in a 2015 special that reached 17.1 million viewers and won a DuPont-Columbia journalism award. Jenner has a book, “The Secrets of My Life,” that is to be released four days after her new interview with Sawyer airs. The “20/20” special is scheduled for April 21.

BUZZWORTHY

Chuck Berry’s final studio album to be released in June

AP photo

Umbrellas are placed over the statue of the Beatles during a photocall Wednesday on Liverpool’s waterfront in Liverpool, England. The city of Liverpool is getting set to celebrate the half-centenary of “Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band,” one of the most influential albums by local heroes The Beatles.

Liverpool plans extravaganza for 50 years of ‘Sgt. Pepper’ LONDON – It was 50 years ago today – almost – that Sgt. Pepper taught the band to play. The English city of Liverpool is getting set to celebrate the half-centenary of “Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band,” one of the most influential albums by local heroes The Beatles. The city announced Wednesday that it has commissioned 13 artists to create works based on the album’s 13 tracks. They include choreographer Mark Morris’ dance tribute to the title song, cabaret artist Meow Meow’s “outlandish procession” based on “Lovely Rita” and a mural by U.S. artist Judy Chicago inspired by “Fixing a Hole.” There also will be a singalong by 64 choirs of the jaunty “When I’m Sixty-Four.” The works will have their world premieres between May 25 and June 16 at venues across Liverpool. On June 1 – the anniversary of the album’s release – the city will host a fireworks extravaganza by French pyrotechnic artist Christophe Berthonneau. By the second half of the 1960s, The Beatles had tired of touring. They played their last live concert in August 1966 and devoted their energies and creativity to the studio. “Sgt. Pepper” was recorded at London’s Abbey Road studios over five month in late 1966 and early 1967, and released June 1, 1967. Incorporating technological innovation and diverse musical influences – including Indian classical, English music hall and trippy psychedelia – it topped the charts in Britain and the U.S. and was instantly hailed as a rock ’n’ roll landmark.

company hopes it made Rowling proud with the flavor.

ST. LOUIS – Chuck Berry’s final studio album will be released June 16. The album, titled “CHUCK,” was announced in October, five months before the rock pioneer’s death Saturday at age 90. “CHUCK” is Berry’s first album since 1979’s “Rock It.” Dualtone Records said eight of the 10 new recordings were written by Berry, who worked on the album until 2014. Dualtone said he continued to oversee production and enlisted his family and a friend to help complete it. In addition to Berry’s children and grandson, the album features performances by Nathaniel Rateliff and Rage Against the Machine’s Tom Morello.

Chance the Rapper to play Lollapalooza in Chicago

Butterbeer ice cream to hit shelves for Harry Potter fans

MINNEAPOLIS – The late Minnesota author Vince Flynn’s counterterrorism operative Mitch Rapp is coming to the big screen in September. CBS Films and Lionsgate announced Wednesday that “American Assassin,” based on Flynn’s best-seller, will hit theaters Sept. 15 nationwide and in North America. “American Assassin” stars Dylan O’Brien as Rapp and Michael Keaton as his mentor, Stan Hurley. Sanaa Lathan plays Deputy CIA Director Irene Kennedy, who pairs Rapp and Hurley on an investigation into attacks on military and civilian targets. That leads to Rapp and Hurley teaming up with a Turkish agent to prevent a world war from erupting in the Middle East.

ORWIGSBURG, Pa. – A Pennsylvania ice cream maker is courting Harry Potter fans with a new flavor based on Hogwarts’ favorite drink, “butterbeer.” Yuengling’s Ice Cream noted that J.K. Rowling once described butterbeer as tasting “a little bit like less sickly butterscotch.” With that in mind, Yuengling’s said the new butterbeer variety combines buttercream and butterscotch ice cream. Yuengling’s said “the result is magical decadence that will transport you to another place and time.” President David Yuengling said the

CHICAGO – Grammy-winning artist Chance the Rapper is planning a return to his hometown of Chicago this summer to headline the Lollapalooza music festival. Other headliners announced Wednesday morning on Lollapalooza’s website include The Killers, Lorde, Arcade Fire, Muse and blink-182. The four-day festival will run from Aug. 3 to 6 in Chicago’s lakefront Grant Park. Lollapalooza called Chance the Rapper’s headlining act a “hero’s homecoming.” He’ll top the festival’s Saturday lineup.

‘American Assassin’ Flynn movie to debut Sept. 15

TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS Comedian Marty Allen of Allen and Rossi is 95. Singer Ric Ocasek of The Cars is 68. Singer Chaka Khan is 64. Actress Amanda Plummer is 60. Actress Catherine Keener is 58. Actress Hope Davis (“About Schmidt”) is 53. Actor Richard Grieco is 52. Country drummer Kevin Griffin of Yankee Grey is 52. Singer-keyboardist Damon Albarn of Blur is 49. Drummer John Humphrey of The Nixons is 47. Bandleader Reggie Watts (“The Late Late Show with James Corden”) is 45. Actor Randall Park (“The Interview,” “Fresh Off The Boat”) is 43. Actress Michelle Monaghan is 41. Actress Keri Russell is 41. Gossip blogger Perez Hilton is 39. Singer Paul Martin of Marshall Dyllon is 39.

23 Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Thursday, March 23, 2017

DIANE SAWYER REPRISING CAITLYN JENNER INTERVIEW


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Thursday, March 23, 2017

24

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

• Thursday, March 23, 2017

Soup to Nutz

Crankshaft

25


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Thursday, March 23, 2017

| FUN & GAMES

26 Alzheimer’s patients often get pneumonia Dear Doctor: I understand that Alzheimer’s disease causes memory loss and leads to dementia. But when someone has Alzheimer’s, what is the actual cause of death? Dear Reader: Alzheimer’s disease is a progressive disease of the brain in which dementia is the most noticeable of numerous symptoms. Changes within the tissues of the brain slowly destroy vital connections between different regions of the brain, and between the brain and the body. The result is that Alzheimer’s disease is the fifth-leading cause of death among adults 65 years and older, and is the sixth-leading cause of death for all adults nationwide. The disease first was identified in 1906 by Dr. Alois Alzheimer, who connected a patient’s dementia to certain physical abnormalities he found when he examined her brain after her death. But the human brain is so intricate and Alzheimer’s itself is so complex that more than a century later, scientists still are working to discover both the cause of, and a cure for, the disease. Although each case of Alzheimer’s is different, researchers have identified three general stages of the disease. In the first stage, symptoms of cognitive impairment, such as memory loss or confusion, have either not yet appeared or are quite mild. However, significant changes are taking place within the brain, including nerve death, tissue loss and the buildup of abnormal clumps and tangles of protein. These changes lead to the second stage of the disease, during which symptoms become more pronounced. Patients begin to experience significant memory loss, confusion, impaired reasoning, poor spatial skills and a loss of language. By the final stage of Alzheimer’s, the brain has shrunk dramatically. Patients no longer can communicate, are unable to recognize faces, even of family members and loved ones,

SUDOKU

ASK THE DOCTORS Elizabeth Ko and Eve Glazier and are unable to care for themselves. Patients with advanced-stage Alzheimer’s need 24-hour supervision and help with personal hygiene, dressing and eating. Changes in brain function make it increasingly difficult for them to move about, sit up and even swallow. This leads to complications such as bedsores, skin infections, blood clots and sepsis. Injuries from falls are common. Difficulty in swallowing makes eating and drinking an ongoing challenge, and can lead to weight loss, malnutrition and dehydration. The most common cause of death among Alzheimer’s patients is aspiration pneumonia. This happens when, due to difficulty in swallowing caused by the disease, an individual inadvertently inhales food particles, liquid or even gastric fluids. Because our mouths and throats contain numerous bacteria, these are carried deep into the lungs. There they multiply and grow, which leads to pneumonia. Due to the impaired immune systems of Alzheimer’s patients, pneumonia is often fatal. It’s important to remember that Alzheimer’s patients often are elderly and thus may have a range of medical conditions associated with advancing age. These include stroke, cancer, heart disease, diabetes and hypertension, any of which can cause death, whether or not Alzheimer’s is present. • Eve Glazier, M.D., MBA, is an internist and assistant professor of medicine at UCLA Health. Elizabeth Ko, M.D., is an internist and primary care physician at UCLA Health.

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


14 Shoots in the jungle

35 Feature of this puzzle that’s “fixed” by a 16 Composer literal reading of Zimmer with four four squares Grammys 39 Worry for the superstitious 17 Provoke 15 Abbr. on a ticket

18 Grunts

42 The rest

20 Cockpit reading: Abbr.

44 Ill, in Lille

28 Show

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66 Nevertheless

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2 Tickets are found on it 3 Left out

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PUZZLE BY KEITH REDWINE

4 “Modern Family” 27 Animal found in network the La Brea Tar 5 Stir up Pits 6 Coddle, with “on” 30 Ski area locales: 7 Gig need Abbr. 8 Displace 31 Needing salt, 9 Religion with maybe public shrines

46 Cabinet 37 Five-time department Grammy-winning duo from the 47 Feature of a 2010s credit card 38 Abbr. in a military 48 Gave lip title 52 “Suds” 39 Extorted from 54 Mil. danger 40 Result of war 56 Butter substitute 41 Like malamutes 59 Snack, say 43 Small moral 61 Word after a misgiving number in a score 45 Senate staffer

T U N A

S A I L

R I O T

10 Villain S 11 Give plenty P R 12 Pakistan and India, e.g. Y 13 Claim

34 Civil war locale beginning in 2011

19 Really go out of one’s way? A N 22 Bile N 25 Hungarian’s A neighbor

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.

T R O Y

B B E A R

A U MP P R O O T

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R A T N E A D N G O D C O U C T S O F C F E S E

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H A B A R A I T S S E D H R F I A L T G A G S E T T D I E E N R S O A I W N

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

M A M M O T H

E C H O

65 Cubs’ home

1 University of Maine mascot

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE M A C S

64 Old ___

3

14

53

53 Leak source

2

63 A good one gets you on a list, briefly

67 Thick-___ shoes

45 It’s a matter of taste 21 Book after Exod. 49 Longtime 23 Erstwhile Notre Dame coach 24 Some campus Parseghian marchers, briefly 50 Solvent 26 Overdo it, in a way 51 Pan-___

S T R I P E

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

10 Body of water near Georgia

A R D B O O C I T L E C RM I O T C A S Y T A E I N I D E E E R D G Y

confused. When someone’s words and actions don’t match, something is wrong. If Noah had been honest, you would have had your chance with him. I vote for letting him go because you want more than he’s apparently able to give. If you do, it may hurt for a while, but it will make it easier for you to find someone who can love you back. Dear Abby: We recently lost one of our cherished pets, our oldest cat, Mandy. We never had children, so our pets ARE our children. I get that people who have never had pets don’t understand the joy and unconditional love they can bring. But I don’t understand why people we thought were close to us haven’t acknowledged our loss in any way. Some of them have – or had – pets at one time. A few did send cards or emails, and they were so appreciated. Their kindness will never be forgotten. Mandy wasn’t sickly. She just stopped eating one day. When we took her to the vet a few days after trying everything we could think of, the diagnosis was kidney cancer. A couple of days later, we had to make the heartbreaking decision to put her to sleep. My question is, am I expecting too much of people? After all, you wouldn’t ignore the death of a human child. I’m not only disappointed but resentful that these so-called friends and family don’t seem to care. I suppose to some Mandy was “just a cat.” But to us, she was our beloved furry child, and we are devastated. Please inform people that a kind word or short note would mean the world to people like us who are suffering real grief. – Deeply Grieving in Illinois Dear Deeply Grieving: Please let me offer my condolences for the loss of Mandy. I know from personal experience what you are going through, and it is very painful. That’s why I’m reminding readers that when they hear of someone losing a beloved pet, the kindest thing one can do is to offer sympathy with a phone call, an email or a card. Believe me, the effort WILL be appreciated and never forgotten.

7 Where Schwarzenegger was born: Abbr.

A L A S K A N

Emotions Dear Jumbled: I don’t blame you for feeling

1 Menu holder at many a cafe

1

36 It will put you to sleep

• Thursday, March 23, 2017

I have known this guy “Noah” for six years. We’re mostly just friends with benefits, but I’ve always had deeper feelings for him. I always wanted to see where things could go between us, so I mentioned it to him. He told me that if he didn’t already have a girlfriend, he would have dated me. So when they broke up, I waited patiently. I continued being a good friend to Noah, giving him advice and putting my own feelings off to the side. Then just when I felt us getting to another level in our relationship, he told me he had another girlfriend and we needed to stop. I would never sleep with a guy who is with someone else. I’m not that type of girl. What should I do? I’m confused and hurt at the same time. Should I bring up my feelings again? Just let him go? Or should I keep him in my life, but in a friend-only way? – Jumbled

29 1984 movie with 55 Film studio a 100% positive once owned by rating on Rotten Howard Hughes Tomatoes, with 57 Take advantage “The” of 32 Hanoi holiday 58 Maumee River 33 End of an outlet address 60 Go by 34 French 62 “Gosh!” possessive

C A R N A G E

DEAR ABBY Jeanne Phillips

ACROSS

B M A I L E D

Dear Abby:

27

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD

FUN & GAMES | Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

Friend with benefits a big disappointment


| NORTHWEST HERALD

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Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Thursday, March 23, 2017

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SPORTS

A HEAD ABOVE Joe Stevenson: Krutwig the best post player ever in McHenry County / 2

DAILY PULLOUT SECTION Thursday, March 23, 2017 • NWHerald.com

Jacobs’ Cameron Krutwig shoots over Hononegah’s Max Miller in the second half of a Class 4A Elgin Sectional semifinal March 8 at Elgin High School. H. Rick Bamman – hbamman@shawmedia.com


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Thursday, March 23, 2017

| SPORTS

2

THE DAILY

FEED

Tweets from last night

Area’s best big man ever

Krutwig leaves an incredible legacy behind at Jacobs Congratulations to Paige Gieseke (St.Francis) and Allison Michalski (Benedictine) for your college signings today. – @goDCHSathletics Congratulations to former JHS Girls Basketball Coach Nancy Fahey for being named the Head Coach at U of I! #SKYHAWKPRIDE @McHenryCoSports – @JHSSkyhawks (Story on page 3)

Mark your calendars ... BATTLE OF THE SEXES released Sept 22 starring Emma Stone & @SteveCarell @billievsbobby – @BillieJeanKing Follow our writers on Twitter: Kyle Nabors – @KyleNabors Joe Stevenson – @NWH_JoePrepZone Sean Hammond – @sean_hammond Alex Kantecki – @akantecki John Wilkinson – @jwilks26

What to watch NCAA tournament, Michigan vs. Oregon, 6 p.m., CBS Michigan and Oregon open Sweet 16 play, followed by Gonzaga vs. West Virginia (6:39 p.m. on TBS), Purdue vs. Kansas (8:39 p.m., CBS) and Arizona vs. Xavier (9:09 p.m., TBS).

Lopez, Ibaka suspended by NBA The Bulls’ Robin Lopez and Toronto’s Serge Ibaka both have been suspended one game without pay by the NBA for fighting. Lopez and Ibaka threw punches at one another during the Bulls-Raptors game Tuesday. Lopez was barred from the Bulls’ home game with Detroit on Wednesday.

Trying to figure out the best part of Cameron Krutwig’s game is like selecting a favorite among your children. Occasionally, coaches will talk about players’ skills in terms of adding tools. The Jacobs senior’s toolbox is full. He is a classic, back-to-the-basket post playPREP ZONE er, a bit of a throwJoe back. In an Stevenson era when almost everybody wants to play from the outside in, he loved to play from the inside out. Krutwig’s career ended March 14 at the Class 4A Sears Centre Arena Supersectional in Hoffman Estates. The Golden Eagles lost a gut-wrenching 36-35 overtime game to Fremd, which moved on to the Final Four in Peoria on Friday and Saturday. It could just as easily have been Jacobs advancing, although Fremd made some crucial plays and fewer mistakes in the final minutes. Any way you cut it, the 6-foot-9 left-hander leaves an incredible legacy in this area for big men as he heads to Loyola next year. Simply, he leaves as the best post player ever in McHenry County. Which of his tools is the best? Krutwig’s footwork is so impeccable, someone could use him for a video on post play. If there weren’t youth coaches instructing their post players to watch Krutwig set up on the low block, there should have been. He was masterful at catching the ball in rhythm, feet ready for a pivot and move to the hoop. He demonstrated a relentless pursuit of missed shots. When that ball went up, it usually was Krutwig’s to get. One of the best moves he used was when a rebound kicked longer than expected as he was moving toward the basket. He was adept at getting a hand on the ball just enough to tip it in the direction he was moving and grab it. Krutwig is no skywalker, but he is a formidable shot blocker who rarely got himself into foul trouble. It was interesting to see how long it took, usually one or two quarters, before opponents would dribble toward the basket, remember who was lurking underneath and decide not to tempt fate. Perhaps Krutwig’s best attribute is his passing ability. Few high school big men have been better. Krutwig normally drew a lot of attention,

Shaw Media file photo

Jacobs forward Cameron Krutwig (center) is double teamed by a pair of Larkin defenders in the first quarter of the Class 4A Elgin Sectional final March 10 at Elgin High School. Jacobs won, 62-39. Krutwig finished with 20 points, 17 rebounds and 11 blocks. which was fine with him. He’d just whip a pass from the post to a wideopen teammate spotted up behind the 3-point arc. And then there were the outlet passes, where Krutwig would grab a defensive rebound and chuck a one-handed bounce pass to a teammate racing toward the other basket. In which cases, he’d add another rebound and assist to his total in one swoop. Those were things that could be measured. The immeasurables might have been just as important. Krutwig possesses a high basketball IQ, and started becoming a leader his sophomore season. There is no doubt the Eagles were his team the past two years. “It’s pretty remarkable what he’s been able to do,” Eagles coach Jimmy Roberts said. “There’s been a lot of good players through here, and it’s been a really good basketball program for a long time, and nobody knows the history more than he does.” Krutwig finished his career with 1,528 points, No. 4 on Jacobs’ list behind Johnny Moran, Eric Vierneisel and Mark Slimko, and just ahead of his brother, Conrad Krutwig. He also grabbed 1,258 career rebounds, which puts him ninth on the IHSA list, according to ihsa.org. His 448 rebounds this season rank 12th for a single season. And providing nice symmetry for his résumé, he had 245 career blocked shots and 240 assists. There was no better example of what Krutwig could do than the Elgin Sectional championship game. Krutwig almost had a triple-double at halftime. He was one assist short of a

quadruple-double for the game. Krutwig came out and took control from the outset of that game. Larkin didn’t have a chance that night, as Jacobs won its first sectional championship, 62-39, in school history. “He was good, man. He was really good,” Larkin coach Deryn Carter said that night. “We didn’t need to see him to find that out.” Roberts thought Larkin having 6-10 Jalen Shaw helped Krutwig, who didn’t see the normal double teams and had more room to operate that game. “You saw him tonight,” Roberts said after that game. “If there’s a better player in the state of Illinois playing tonight … there might be one as good, but I don’t know if there’s one better. And he continues to step up in big, big situations.” Krutwig would be the first to say it wasn’t just him. Starters Nik Balkcom, Ryan Phillips, Cooper Schwartz and Mason Materna did their jobs defending, hitting outside shots, rebounding and setting up Krutwig. But they also would say everything started with the big guy. So which of Krutwig’s tools is his best? It might be impossible to answer. Or maybe, the best part of Krutwig is this: The Eagles were 93-29 with three regional championships in his four seasons. So although he is terrific at scoring, rebounding, defending and passing, most importantly, he was great at winning.

• Joe Stevenson is a senior sports writer for the Northwest Herald. He can be reached by email at joestevenson@ shawmedia.com. You also can follow him on Twitter @nwh_JoePrepZone.


ILLINOIS WOMEN’S BASKETBALL

By SEAN HAMMOND

shammond@shawmedia.com

Photo courtesy of Illinois athletic director Josh Whitman via Twitter

Illinois athletic director Josh Whitman introduces former Johnsburg girls basketball coach Nancy Fahey as Illinois women’s basketball coach. played for Fahey. “She was easy to talk to, easy to get along with.” Fahey played point guard at Wisconsin and graduated in 1981. She took over at Johnsburg not long afterward. At Washington-St. Louis, she won four straight D-III national championships from 1998 to 2001, including backto-back 30-0 seasons in 1998-99 and 1999-00. She led the Bears to a fifth title in 2009-10. Her

Bears team finished as national runner-up four times. She is the fastest coach in NCAA women’s basketball history to reach 600 wins and has won 737 total games. During the championship streak in the late ’90s, Fahey led the Bears to 81 consecutive wins, which at the time was an NCAA women’s basketball record. That streak has since been surpassed by Connecticut.

ful,” Toussaint said. “She’s always been receptive and remembered who we were. It’s just exciting – kind of neat.” Fahey takes over the Illinois job from Matt Bollant, who coached the Illini for five seasons. Fahey’s new team includes Huntley alumna Ali Andrews, who finished her freshman season for the Illini after a record-setting career with the Red Raiders. “Ultimately, we want every little girl, when she is growing up, to dream about Illinois as a place they want to play college basketball,” Fahey said in a statement. “The cornerstone for the success I have experienced in the past has always revolved around the players.” She was the first D-III coach or player inducted into the Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame. Hauck, who went on to play at Lewis, is not surprised by her former high school coach’s success. “She had a lot of enthusiasm for the game itself, and I think she really got you fired up,” Hauck said. “You could tell she loved the game.”

GIRLS SOCCER: CARY-GROVE 5, ELK GROVE 0

Trojans take 3rd in season-opening tourney OUTSIDE THE BOX SCORE q UNSUNG HERO

Sofie Immens

Cary-Grove, sr., D

Immens looped the ball into the back corner of the net from just outside the penalty box to give the Trojans a 2-0 lead in the 28th minute. Two minutes later, she connected with junior Teagan Jones for C-G’s third goal.

11

q THE NUMBER Goals for Cary-Grove in three games

q AND ANOTHER THING ...

C-G sophomore Maddie Jannusch hustled back on defense and stopped a point-blank shot by Elk Grove’s Emma Slattery in the 24th minute to keep the Grenadiers off the scoreboard. She later scored the Trojans’ fifth and final goal on a set piece from 20 yards out in the second half.

By ALEX KANTECKI

akantecki@shawmedia.com ELK GROVE – After forgoing her sophomore season to play year-round for her club soccer team, Sockers FC Chicago in Palatine, Cary-Grove forward and Purdue commit Teagan Jones is happy to be back. On Wednesday, the dynamic junior gave C-G the early lead, later adding an assist and a second goal for the Trojans in a 5-0 win over Elk Grove in the Elk Grove Tournament third-place game at Robert E. Haskell Memorial Stadium. The Trojans (2-1) opened the six-team tournament with a 6-0 win over Montini last week before falling to Downers Grove North, 1-0, on Monday to finish third. “I’m just excited to play with all of my friends again,” said Jones, who also scored twice in C-G’s win over Montini. “I really enjoy playing for my school. I think it’s cool to be a part of a team with your friends and represent

something from your hometown.” “It’s definitely a bonus,” Trojans coach Ray Krystal said about having Jones back. “It’s definitely a positive, and I’m not just talking about what she can do for us on the field. It’s also her personality and what she brings as a teammate. There are positives all around.” Jones had a hand in the Trojans’ first three goals. After coming close to scoring with her outside foot in the opening five minutes and putting three shots on goal in the first 10, Jones had a shot inside the box deflect off Elk Grove goalkeeper Rachel Kandefer and trickle into the back of the net in the 18th minute. “Kelly (Stayart) played me the ball, which was spot on,” Jones said. “I saw her coming out, and had to make the quick decision to hit it over or do I try to take it in. I hit it over her, and it kind of back-spinned in.” Senior Sofie Immens looped the ball into the back right corner of the net in the 28th minute to give the Trojans a

2-0 lead. She then found Jones in the 30th to put the Trojans up by three. “It’s good to get in some early games before the season gets going, and get the team dynamic back,” Immens said. “It’s good to get back and figure out how to play with each other again. We still have some work to do, but it’s a good start for us. We play for each other; we don’t play for ourselves.” The Trojans would have had to come back from an early deficit if not for a spectacular save by senior goalkeeper Miranda Malone in the seventh minute. Malone punched a booming shot by Elk Grove’s Megan Murray off the crossbar, and then wisely jumped on the rebound. In the 37th, Stayart knocked in a one-timer off the lower left post (assisted by Izzy Robinson), giving the Trojans a 4-0 lead at half. Maddie Jannusch gave C-G the fifth goal on a set piece, curving the ball off the left post from 20 yards out and beating Elk Grove’s wall of defenders.

• Thursday, March 23, 2017

When University of Illinois athletic director Josh Whitman introduced Nancy Fahey as the new Illini women’s basketball coach, Whitman was hiring a winner. Fahey has won five NCAA Division III national championships at Washington University in St. Louis. Whitman also was hiring a coach who started her career in McHenry County. Fahey (pronounced: FAY) coached girls basketball at Johnsburg for four seasons from 1982 to 1986. Her first team in 1982-83 went 5-17. By her third and fourth seasons, the Skyhawks won 20 games each year and back-to-back regional titles. She was named coach of the year by the Northwest Herald in 1986. Fahey jumped from Johnsburg to Washington-St. Louis in 1986, and remained with the Bears for 31 years. “She was a great coach,” said Theresa Hauck, a 1984 Johnsburg graduate who

Whitman spent two years as Fahey’s boss when he was the AD at Washington-St. Louis before taking the same position at Illinois in 2016. “Nancy Fahey is a born leader,” Whitman said in a statement released by Illinois. “She is among the best basketball coaches I have ever seen. I could not be more excited for her to lead our Fighting Illini program.” Mike Toussaint is the boys basketball coach at Johnsburg, but also coached the girls from 2000 to ’11. He graduated from Johnsburg in 1986 and remembers Fahey. “She was a good coach,” Toussaint said. “She had a good reputation. She has had a lot of success at Washington. I was surprised to see her leave.” When Toussaint coached the Skyhawks girls team to a regional title in 2004-05, it was Johnsburg’s first regional crown since Fahey’s 1985-86 team. Toussaint communicated with Fahey on occasion when Johnsburg players were interested in playing college ball. “She’s always really help-

SPORTS | Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

Illini hire former Johnsburg coach

3


* Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Thursday, March 23, 2017

| SPORTS

4 PREP ROUNDUP

CUBS

Woodstock Ex-Cub GM Green dead at 82 Was one of the rallies past most influential in Guilford executives team history NORTHWEST HERALD

The Woodstock baseball team scored eight runs in the final two innings to come from behind and beat Guilford, 10-3, Wednesday in Rockford. The Blue Streaks (2-0) scored 10 consecutive runs after trailing by three runs early. Jacob Waryck hit a double and drove in two runs. Josh Turner hit a double and drew two walks, scoring one run. Evan Geske went 2 for 5 with a double and an RBI. Woodstock drew 11 walks. Turner threw six innings and earned the win. He allowed three runs – two earned– struck out eight and walked three. Palatine 11, Prairie Ridge 1 (5 inn.): At Palatine, the Wolves mustered only four hits in a blowout loss to Palatine. Ryan Schmit went 2 for 2 for Prairie Ridge (2-2) with a double and a run scored. On the mound, Robbie Masini picked up the loss after throwing three innings and allowing four runs – three earned. He struck out two.

SOFTBALL Crystal Lake South 19, Boylan 5 (6 inn.): At

Rockford, Emily Sulikowski recorded four hits for South. Sulikowski hit two triples and drove in two runs, scoring two more herself. Sam Schettl went 2 for 4 with two runs scored and two RBIs. Christina Toniolo went 3 for 5 with a triple, two runs scored and an RBI. Chloe Skorija pitched all six innings for the Gators, allowing five unearned runs and three hits. She struck out four and walked two. Woodstock 17, Alden-Hebron 1 (5 inn.): At Hebron, Woodstock scored 11 runs in the top of the first on its way to a win over Alden-Hebron. The Blue Streaks hit four home runs. Julia Vosburgh hit two home runs and drove in six runs. Abby Primus and Jocelyn Eisenmenger each hit a home run. Five Streaks pitchers held Alden-Hebron hitless. Eisenmenger started the game and struck out four batters in 12/3 innings in the circle.

GIRLS SOCCER Dundee-Crown 3, Montini 0: At the Elk Grove

tournament in Elk Grove, goalkeeper Diana Santillan-Ceja and the Chargers defense shut out Montini. The Chargers’ Katelyn Skibinski scored two goals, and Braylin Mensik added a late score. D-C improved to 1-3-0. Woodstock North 6, Zion-Benton 0: In Woodstock, Taylor Prerost and Daniela Miranda each scored two goals for Woodstock North in a win over Zion-Benton. The Thunder (2-0-0) also recorded goals from Lauren Kunke and Dulce Olivar-Lopez.

By GORDON WITTENMYER gwittenmyer@suntimes.com

MESA, Ariz. – A lot has been made for good reason the past few years about a culture change in the Cubs’ organization, leading to last year’s historic title. But 30 years earlier, Dallas Green looked like he was about to pull off the same sea change in the organization – Theo before Theo. “Dallas came in and totally changed the Cubs culture in that first year in 1982,” said Hall of Famer Ryne Sandberg, who was handpicked from Green’s old organization in Philadelphia to be one of the first key young players acquired by that new regime. “Dallas was instrumental in really my whole baseball career,” Sandberg said. “That was a huge opportunity and a huge break for me. … I definitely went and made the most of that opportunity.” One of the most influential baseball executives in Cubs history, Green died Wednesday at age 82 after battling health issues in recent years. “Very sad news,” said Sandberg, who had stayed in touch with Green and anticipated calling him again soon. Green took the Cubs to the postseason for the first time since 1945 by assembling a star-studded team in 1984, acquiring Sandberg, Dennis Eckersley and Rick Sutcliffe. This was four years after he led the Philadelphia Phillies to their first World Series title in 1980. The Sporting News named him its executive of the year, but by 1987 Green was fired after years of feuding with executives at the Tribune Co., which owned the team. “The guy at the Tribune was a [fool],” he said of John Madigan during a conversation with the Sun-Times in 2013. “And I had no business getting fired. Those guys were a year away yet, but we knew where we were, and we knew what we had done, and we knew the kind of talent we had. “But corporate people eventual-

AP file photo

Former Cubs general manager Dallas Green signs autographs in 2010. Green died Wednesday at age 82.

“Dallas came in and totally changed the Cubs culture in that first year in 1982. Dallas was instrumental in really my whole baseball career. That was a huge opportunity and a huge break for me. … I definitely went and made the most of that opportunity.” Ryne Sandberg Cubs Hall of Famer

ly learn to talk the lingo. And once they learn how to talk the lingo, they think they know baseball.” Green won quickly at the big league level, but it was the rebuilding of the farm system and acquisitions of young players such as Sandberg that might have had the lasting affect – with Greg Maddux, Joe Girardi, Rafael Palmeiro, Shawon Dunston and Mark Grace among his draft picks. “We probably did it too quick,” he told the Sun-Times, referring to the sudden expectations and impatience 1984 created. “He had a vision, and he knew what was going to happen,” said Cubs bench coach Dave Martinez, who was drafted under Green in 1983 and for a while was part of the young core that returned to the playoffs in 1989. “He was trying to build an organization from within, and he really did that. In ’89, all those guys that were there were still some of his guys.”

Said Sandberg: “He should have been part of ‘89, and, who knows, maybe many more (playoff) years after that.” Five years after Green was fired, Maddux was allowed to depart for free agency despite offering compromises to stay. “With Greg being [Green’s] guy, yeah, I believe that would have turned out differently,” Sandberg said. Green’s legacy also includes vigorous efforts to get lights installed at Wrigley Field after the Cubs were denied home-field advantage in the 1984 playoffs because of the day-baseball limitation. The lights went in the season after he was fired. In January 2011, he was devastated by the tragic death of a granddaughter. Green’s son John’s 9-year-old daughter, Christina, was one of six people killed in the Arizona shooting that critically injured Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords. “Baseball helped me cope,” Mr. Green said later, according to the Philadelphia Inquirer. “You sink yourself into your work.” Green also managed the New York Yankees and New York Mets. He most recently worked as a special advisor to the Phillies. As a player, Green was a spot starter and reliever with the Phillies, Mets and Washington Senators. A 6-foot-5, hard-throwing right-hander, Green went 20-22 with a 4.26 ERA during a major-league career that stretched from 1960-67. “I was a 20-game winner,” he liked to say. “It just took me five years to do it.”


CUBS SPRING TRAINING: ANALYSIS By GORDON WITTENMYER

Reds 5, Cubs 2 (5 inn.) (Goodyear, Ariz.)

attitude was part of what the Boston expatriates in the Cubs’ front office knew they were buying when they signed the player they drafted for the Red Sox in 2002. “When we signed Jon to a six-year deal, certainly we were excited about all six years on the deal,” general manager Jed Hoyer said. “But already sitting here after Year 2, he’s been exactly what we wanted. We wanted a guy that had the makeup to pitch in huge games, and he did that.” That included an award for the National League Championship Series co-MVP and the New York baseball writers’ award for overall postseason MVP. Consider that in two postseasons with the Cubs, Lester has pitched 492/3 innings over nine starts and the relief appearance, with a 2.17 ERA. Scherzer? He made two first-round playoff starts last year without a win. “There’s no way we’re world champions without Jon Lester,” Hoyer said. “That was the crux of the presentation that we gave him going back to [the free agency courtship]. The crux of it was, ‘You were able to be a part of it in Boston. Come be a part of this in Chicago.’ And he was incredibly excited about that, and he delivered.”

WHITE SOX SPRING TRAINING

‘Leury Legend’ good bet to make Opening Day roster A’s 5, Sox 3 (Glendale, Ariz.) GONZALEZ HIT HARD, NOT PLEASED Although he finished with 21/3 scoreless innings Wednesday, right-hander Miguel Gonzalez didn’t brush off his start (41/3, nine hits, four runs) as just getting his spring work in. “I’m not a power pitcher,” Gonzalez said. “I’ve got to throw strikes and minimize damage. That didn’t happen the first two innings.” Gonzalez, who pitched for Mexico in the WBC, said he felt good in the bullpen, but his split-finger pitch failed him in the game, he said. It was a contrast to James Shields the night before, who said he felt lost in the bullpen before throwing six scoreless innings. After Gonzalez, relievers Cory Luebke, Jake Petricka, Zach Putnam and Aaron Bummer did not allow an earned run. ON DECK Reds vs. Sox, 3:05 p.m. Thursday in Glendale, Arizona, Bronson Arroyo vs. Jose Quintana – Daryl Van Schouwen

By DARYL VAN SCHOUWEN dvanschouwen@suntimes.com

GLENDALE, Ariz. – Basketball is not a big deal in Leury Garcia’s native country, so let’s cut him some slack for not knowing who Larry Bird is. But he should know. When Garcia, who has been up and down with the Sox from Triple-A Charlotte since 2013, first joined the Sox in 2013, coach Joe McEwing playfully began calling him “Larry Legend,” after the NBA great. “Larry Legend, yeah,” Garcia said Wednesday, smiling. “As soon as I got here, he gave me that nickname. I don’t know where that came from but ...” In the course of the conversation about Bird, teammate Todd Frazier, passing by, provided helpful hand signals to Garcia, who is from the Dominican Republic. “Number 33?” Garcia asked. Bingo. “Thanks, Fraz,” Garcia said. “Legend” might be a stretch for one who is fighting for a spot on the Opening Day roster. But Garcia is versatile, therefore valuable, and appears to stand a good chance. The only posi-

tions he hasn’t played in the majors are first base and catcher. He even pitched a couple games in a pinch. “It has helped me a lot,” Garcia said. “They can put me in the lineup wherever they need me to play.” Garcia is having a good spring, 15 for 45 (.333) with four doubles, two walks and two stolen bases in two attempts. A switch-hitter, he can play center field and all over the infield. Manager Rick Renteria said he is comLeury Garcia fortable playing Garcia anywhere he has played. “Leury has shown pretty solid defensive prowess at all of them and kind of transitions very easily,” Renteria said. Burdi sticks around: The Sox aren’t rushing their top prospects to the major leagues, including Zack Burdi, although the hard-throwing 2016 firstround draft pick survived the roster cuts that included pitchers Reynaldo Lopez, Lucas Giolito, Carson Fulmer and Michael Kopech. Burdi hop-scotched from Single-A Winston-Salem to Double-A Birming-

ham to Triple-A Charlotte in one season after being selected in the first round (26th overall) in the 2016 draft. “It’s a little different with a reliever,” general manager Rick Hahn said. “You’re asking a little bit less of him. We’re able to get him consistent work here while at the same time getting our own major league starters ready. So there’s still an opportunity for Zack to perform, and he’s benefiting from being in this environment while working with [pitching coach Don Cooper], so he’ll stick around for a little while longer.” “I’m not too worried about where I start off or end up,” Burdi said. “It’s a process. You have to just keep growing day by day and not let all the outside noise affect you. It’s easy to let that happen when there is so much hype around the young group here. All the guys have done a good job blocking it out and going about their business.” Burdi will make his 10th appearance Thursday against the Reds. He has pitched well, with three earned runs allowed on four hits over 10 innings (2.70 ERA) with 12 strikeouts and four walks.

• Thursday, March 23, 2017

Lester was one of many players who affected that organizational breakthrough the past two seasons. MESA, Ariz. – Two years into a sixJust imagine if he does anything SCHWARBER BIG AND SMALL year, nine-figure contract, the Cubs close this year to what he did last Cubs leadoff man Kyle Schwarber led off already have gotten their money’s year – 19-5, 2.44 ERA, runner-up finish Wednesday night’s game against the Reds worth out of Jon Lester. to Scherzer in the Cy Young voting All $155 million worth the past two with a bunt single against former Cub Scott and a 3-1, 2.02 ERA surge through the years alone? postseason over five starts and a Game Feldman. And then in the fifth, his one-out, Believe it. If he took two-run homer off Feldman cut into the Reds’ 7 World Series relief appearance. the next four years Never mind anything he might con5-0 lead. It was his third homer of the spring. off, it still might make tribute on the backside of the contract LESTER SHARP him the best value if he stays healthy. Jon Lester got six innings of work on the from a free-agent class “You’ve kind of accomplished – no, other side of camp against Oakland A’s minor two winters ago that not kind of – we accomplished what included 2016 National leaguers, looking a little sharper than his previI came here to do,” Lester, 33, said Jon Lester League Cy Award win- ous outing. “It was a lot better,” he said. “I talked after an 86-pitch effort in a six-inning about getting my heater back, as far as the angle start on the minor league side of camp ner Max Scherzer. and location. Today was just better all the way The Cubs won’t go that far. And Wednesday (efficient enough that Lester certainly doesn’t believe it. around. Better consistency with everything.” outs were added to some innings so he But the Cubs went from 73 wins could get his prescribed work). and a vision before Lester’s signing to ON DECK “That was the main reason why Cubs at D’backs, 3:10 p.m. Thursday in 200 wins the past two regular seasons Theo wanted me to get here, and I Scottsdale, Arizona, cubs.com audio, Jake and winning five of six postseason wanted to come here,” added Lester, series – including the season Cub fans Arrieta vs. Zack Greinke who has one more spring start before – Gordon Wittenmyer pitching the season opener April 2 have waited 108 years to see and that the business department might spend in St. Louis. “Now the hard part is almost as much time cashing in on. that you don’t get complacent. That’s lion deal would pay off with individWhen the Cubs signed their first where you still have to do your work ual player value for eight years. But nine-figure player – Alfonso Soriano and still put your time and all that everybody involved counted on the after a last-place finish in 2007 – novalue paying off on the front end with other stuff to be ready to pitch.” body believed that eight-year, $136 mil- a championship that never came. The work ethic and now-do-it-again gwittnemyer@suntimes.com

SPORTS | Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

Lester: Best in (free agent) class after 2 years?

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|SPORTS

6


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Thursday, March 23, 2017

| SPORTS

8

MIDWEST REGIONAL MICHIGAN vs. OREGON AT KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI No. 7 seed Michigan (26-11) vs. No. 3 seed Oregon (31-5), 6:09 p.m. CBS Bottom line: Michigan has won seven in a row and 12 of its past 14 after knocking out secondseeded Louisville in the second round. The Wolverines have been a tournament darling since they escaped tragedy during an aborted takeoff on their way to the Big Ten tournament. Oregon has withstood the loss of big man Chris Boucher to a season-ending knee injury in the Pac-12 semifinals to make the Sweet 16 for a second year in a row. All about Walton: When Michigan lost at home to Ohio State in early February, coach John Beilein said the mood around the team was “lower than low.” He demanded that everyone give just a little more effort. Derrick Walton Jr. took it to heart and has carried the team during its run. In the past six games, he’s averaging 19.7 points, 7.0 assists and 5.2 rebounds and shooting 41.7 percent from behind the 3-point line. Going for 32: The Ducks would set the school record for wins if they beat Michigan. Oregon, Kansas and Villanova are the only three teams in the nation to have won 30 games each of the past two seasons. He said it: “We have all been rooting for them to win until now, because obviously we want to win. We’ve all been cheering them on. We understand that going through a thing like that can really bring a lot of heart and passion out of people.” – Oregon forward Jordan Bell, on Michigan’s run since the plane mishap. Did you know? Michigan is 4-0 all-time against Oregon. The Wolverines won the most recent meeting, 70-63, in a Thanksgiving tournament in 2014.

PURDUE vs. KANSAS No. 4 seed Purdue (27-7) vs. No. 1 Kansas (30-4), 8:39 p.m., CBS Bottom line: Kansas ran roughshod through UC Davis and Michigan State to reach the Sweet 16, which will be played about 40 miles from its campus in Lawrence. These Jayhawks are a departure from coach Bill Self’s typical teams in that they use a four-guard lineup, led by standout Frank Mason III and star freshman Josh Jackson. Purdue will counter with a whole lot of size, led by 6-foot-9, 250-pound sophomore Caleb Swanigan and 7-footer Isaac Haas. The Boilermakers had a first-round tussle with Vermont before fending off another Big 12 foe, Iowa State, to reach the regional semifinals. Fabulous freshman: Jackson has sent his NBA draft stock soaring with two exemplary games in the NCAA tournament, likely locking up a spot in the lottery if he departs after this season. Purdue also has a key freshman in guard Carsen Edwards, who averages more than 10 points coming off the bench. Home sweet home: The Jayhawks will have a massive home-court advantage at Sprint Center, and it has generally paid off – they’re 34-7 in the building. But their last game in Kansas City was a loss to TCU in the Big 12 quarterfinals, when Jackson was serving a one-game suspension. Size pays off: Purdue hopes to use its size advantage against Kansas, which has struggled with teams that can dominate the paint. Swanigan is the first Big Ten player since Evan Turner in 2010 to lead the league in scoring and rebounding, and he has a nation-leading 28 double-doubles this season. Did you know? The Jayhawks are 2-1 against Purdue in the NCAA tournament, losing in 1994 and winning the next two meetings, including the 2012 regional in Omaha, Nebraska. Their series dates to 1948, when the teams split a home-and-home series. – The Associated Press

SWEET 16 GUIDE

Top NCAA matchups, players and story lines By JOHN MARSHALL The Associated Press

The NCAA tournament’s first weekend closed with a flourish, a Sunday full of scintillating games after three days of good-not-alwaysgreat basketball. That put the madness back in March and should carry over into a regional round filled with great matchups and big-name programs. Here’s a rundown of the top games, players, coaches and interesting story lines for the Sweet 16:

TOP GAMES UCLA vs. Kentucky, South Region; Friday, Memphis. Blue bloods in Bluff City. NBA draft picks everywhere. Rematch game. Coach Cal headed back to Memphis. Yeah, don’t miss this.

Gonzaga vs. West Virginia, West Region; Thursday, San Jose. A great con-

trast in styles between the smothering defense of the Mountaineers and the offensive firepower of the Zags.

Kansas vs. Purdue, Midwest Region; Thursday, Kansas City. The Jayhawks

have all those athletes. The Boilermakers have Mr. Double-Double Caleb Swanigan. The game will be just down the road from Lawrence, so expect the Sprint Center to be rocking.

Xavier vs. Arizona, West Region; Thursday, San Jose. Wildcats coach

WEST VIRGINIA vs. GONZAGA AT SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA No. 4 seed West Virginia (28-8) vs. No. 1 seed Gonzaga (34-1), 6:39 p.m., TBS Bottom line: The Bulldogs make their eighth Sweet 16 appearance during a run of 19 straight tournament trips. They have lost in five of the previous seven trips and still are seeking the first Final Four in school history. The Mountaineers seek their third trip to the regional final since a runner-up appearance with Jerry West in 1959. No need to sweat: With 29 wins by double digits and 13 by at least 30 points, Gonzaga has breezed through most games with little drama at the end. They did have to hold off Northwestern in a 79-73 win in the second round last week, and probably will have even more tough tests the rest of the way. Giant slayers: The Mountaineers became the first team in five years to beat the No. 1 (Baylor) and No. 2 (Kansas) teams in the AP poll during

Sean Miller against protegé Chris Mack in the Sweet 16 for the second time in three years. We’ll take it.

Wisconsin vs. Florida, East Region; Friday, New York. The Duke-Villanova

matchup everyone wanted didn’t materialize, but the Badgers and Gators will play some high-level basketball in the Garden.

TOP PLAYERS Frank Mason III, Kansas. National

player of the year front-runner still playing like it in March.

Lonzo Ball, UCLA.

Can dominate without scoring, hits big shots when his team needs Frank Mason III them, too.

Caleb Swanigan, Purdue. Practically carried the Boilermakers past Iowa State and into the Sweet 16 on his broad shoulders. Nigel Williams-Goss, Gonzaga. The player who makes the Zags go. Dillon Brooks, Oregon. Clutch, does whatever it takes to win, even if he’s not hitting shots.

Sindarius Thornwell, South Carolina.

SEC coaches voted him the player of the year over those future NBA players at Kentucky. There’s a reason.

ANIMATED COACHES Frank Martin, South Carolina. The

Gamecocks’ unexpected run into the Sweet 16 means we get to see more

screaming, stomping and death stares from the big man in the big suit. Sean Miller, Arizona. Coaches with the intensity he played with at Pittsburgh, has yet to sweat through a shirt in this year’s tournament. Bob Huggins, West Virginia. Huggy taught Martin a thing or two about sideline vitriol, spews venom with the best of them. John Calipari, Kentucky. Coach Cal can recruit and he can shout, too. Roy Williams, North Carolina. Don’t let that Southern charm fool you. Coach Roy is a dadgum competitor.

KEY PLAYERS Josh Jackson, Kansas. Dynamic

freshman makes the highlight reels multiple times a game, makes a great tandem with Mason. Malik Monk, Kentucky. Can heat up in a hurry. Just ask North Carolina. Allonzo Trier, Arizona. The Wildcats’ go-to player at crunch time.

Justin Jackson, North Carolina.

Long, athletic, scores inside and out, carrying a big load with Joel Berry II fighting an ankle injury. Derrick Walton Jr., Michigan. He’s been a big reason for the Wolverines’ storybook postseason run. Trevon Bluiett, Xavier. Hampered by injuries earlier this season, rounding back into form at just the right time.

WEST REGIONAL the season. They won both games by at least 15 points, becoming the fourth team ever to do that. Now they get another shot at a No. 2 team with Gonzaga. Pressing need: Led by a relentless full-court press, West Virginia has forced almost as many turnovers this season (724) as it has allowed baskets made (806). Gonzaga’s season-high in turnovers (20, vs. Tennessee) is less than the average for a Mountaineers opponent (20.1 a game).

XAVIER vs. ARIZONA No. 11 seed Xavier (23-13) vs. No. 2 seed Arizona (32-4), 9:09 p.m., TBS Bottom line: Xavier is the lone double-digit seed left in a Sweet 16 filled with power programs. The Musketeers pulled off a pair of upsets to reach the regional semifinals, beating No. 6 seed Maryland and No. 3 Florida State the first weekend of the tournament. To get to the next

round, Xavier will have to beat one of the hottest teams in the bracket. Arizona earned a share of the Pac-12 regular-season title, won the Pac-12 tournament, then beat North Dakota and Saint Mary’s in the NCAA tournament. Miller and Mack: Arizona coach Sean Miller and Xavier’s Chris Mack will be facing each other in regional semifinals for the second time in three years. The two are close; Mack was an assistant under Miller and was elevated to the head coaching job when he left for Arizona. Keep an eye on: Xavier’s Trevon Bluiett and Arizona’s Lauri Markkanen. Bluiett struggled with injuries during the regular season, but has rounded back into form at the right time, leading the Musketeers into the regional semifinals despite a season-ending injury to point guard Edmond Sumner in late January. Markkanen is a difficult matchup for any team, a 7-foot freshman playing with the skills of a guard and can shoot from inside or out. – The Associated Press


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THURSDAY

FRIDAY

SUNDAY

at Florida 6 p.m. WGN, NHLN AM-720 PHILADELPHIA 7 p.m. WGN AM-890

MONDAY at Tampa Bay 6:30 p.m. CSN, NBCSN AM-720

at Milwaukee 2:30 p.m. CSN AM-890

at Arizona* 3:10 p.m.

CLEVELAND* 3:05 p.m.

CINCINNATI* 3:05 p.m. CSN, AM-670 at Colorado* 3:10 p.m.

CINCINNATI* 3:05 p.m. WGN, AM-670 SAN DIEGO* 3:05 p.m.

at Cleveland* 8:10 p.m. MLBN

CINCINNATI* 3:05 p.m. CSN

at Oakland* 3:05 p.m. CSN AM-890

at Cleveland* 3:05 p.m. AM-890

SAN FRANCISCO* 3:05 p.m. CSN+

at L.A. Dodgers* 3:05 p.m. CSN *–Spring training

Pro hockey 7:30 p.m.: Dallas at Blackhawks, CSN Pro basketball 6:30 p.m.: Toronto at Miami, NBATV Men’s basketball 6 p.m.: NCAA Division II tournament, semifinal, Fairmont St. vs. Bellarmine, CBSSN 6:09 p.m.: NCAA tournament, Sweet 16, Oregon vs. Michigan, CBS 6:39 p.m.: NCAA tournament, Sweet 16, Gonzaga vs. West Virginia, TBS 8:30 p.m.: NCAA Division II tournament, semifinal, Northwest Missouri St. vs. Lincoln Memorial, CBSSN 8:39 p.m.: NCAA tournament, Sweet 16, Kansas vs. Purdue, CBS 9:09 p.m.: NCAA tournament, Sweet 16, Arizona vs. Xavier, TBS Pro baseball Noon: Spring training, N.Y. Yankees vs. Tampa Bay, ESPN

3 p.m.: Spring training, Cincinnati vs. White Sox, CSN 6 p.m.: Spring training, L.A. Dodgers vs. Texas, ESPN Golf 9:30 a.m.: PGA Tour, Puerto Rico Open, first round, TGC 1 p.m.: PGA Tour-WGC, Dell Match Play, Day 2, TGC 7:30 p.m.: LPGA Tour, Kia Classic, first round, TGC (same-day tape) Auto racing 11 p.m.: Formula One, Australian Grand Prix, practice, NBCSN (same-day tape) Midnight (Friday): Formula One, Australian Grand Prix, second practice, NBCSN Special Olympics 5 p.m.: Special Olympics World Winter Games, ESPN2 (same-day tape) Boxing 9 p.m.: Jason Quigley vs. Glen Tapia, middleweights; Randy Caballero vs. Victor Proa, junior featherweights, ESPN2

SPORTS BRIEFS

U.S. routs Puerto Rico to win WBC the Americans’ 6-5 loss to Puerto Rico during pool play. The right-hander from behind dominant Stroman

LOS ANGELES – Marcus Stroman tossed six hitless innings, Ian Kinsler slugged a two-run homer and the United States routed Puerto Rico, 8-0, Wednesday night to win its first World Baseball Classic in four tries. Stroman dominated the tournament’s highest-scoring team. Puerto Rico lost for the first time in eight games after outscoring the opposition 55-26. The U.S. territory finished runner-up for the second time, having lost to the Dominican Republic in the 2013 final. Stroman, who was named the tournament’s MVP, avenged his shakiness in

the Toronto Blue Jays retired the side on three grounders to open the game. In all, he gave up one hit, struck out three and walked one on 73 pitches.

Central Florida beats Illinois in NIT

ORLANDO, Fla. – B.J. Taylor scored 17 points, Tacko Fall had a double-double and Central Florida held on to defeat Illinois, 68-58, Wednesday night to advance to the NIT semifinals. A.J. Davis and Matt Williams added 16 points apiece for the Knights, who play TCU on Tuesday at Madison Square Garden. – From wire reports

BETTING ODDS NBA

FAVORITE at MIAMI at BROOKLYN LA Clippers at SAN ANTONIO at PORTLAND

Thurday LINE O/U 4 (204) 4 (222) 4 (206½) 8 (199) 10½ (218½)

UNDERDOG Toronto Phoenix at DALLAS Memphis New York

COLLEGE BASKETBALL FAVORITE Kansas Michigan Gonzaga Arizona Florida Baylor

Thursday LINE 5 1 3 7½ Friday 2 3½

UNDERDOG Purdue Oregon West Virginia Xavier Wisconsin South Carolina

UCLA North Carolina

PK 7½

Kentucky Butler

NHL

FAVORITE at BLACKHAWKS at WASHINGTON at BOSTON at MONTREAL at TORONTO Pittsburgh at FLORIDA at ST. LOUIS at NASHVILLE at MINNESOTA at COLORADO at LOS ANGELES

Thursday LINE UNDERDOG -225 Dallas OFF Columbus -196 Tampa Bay -178 Carolina OFF New Jersey -133 at OTTAWA -190 Arizona -225 Vancouver -140 Calgary -196 Philadelphia OFF Edmonton -145 Winnipeg

Updated odds available at Pregame.com

LINE +205 OFF +181 +166 OFF +123 +175 +205 +130 +181 OFF +135

NBA

PREPS

WESTERN CONFERENCE

EASTERN CONFERENCE

THURSDAY Softball: Belvidere North at Marengo, Round Lake at Harvard, Rockford Boylan at Marian Central, Johnsburg at Jacobs, Huntley at Hononegah, Hampshire at Woodstock, Crystal Lake Central at Elgin, 4:30 p.m. Boys tennis: Marengo at Rockford Jefferson, Marian Centra at Hampshire Quad, 4 p.m., Woodstock North at Crystal Lake Central, 4:30 p.m. Baseball: Richmond-Burton at Crystal Lake Central, Crystal Lake South at Barrington, Huntley at St. Viator, Round Lake at Harvard, Johnsburg at Westminster Christian, Elgin at Woodstock, Grayslake Central at Richmond-Burton, 4:30 p.m. Girls soccer: Marengo at Woodstock North, Richmond-Burton at Johnsburg, Harvard at Woodstock, Marian Central at Crystal Lake South, Crystal Lake Central at Jacobs, 4:30 p.m., Dundee-Crown at Huntley, 6:30 p.m., Cary-Grove, Dundee-Crown at Elk Grove Tournament, TBA

Central Division GP W L OT Pts 73 47 20 6 100 72 44 22 6 94 72 39 28 5 83 72 36 25 11 83 73 33 33 7 73 72 29 33 10 68 72 20 49 3 43 Pacific Division GP W L OT Pts San Jose 73 42 24 7 91 Anaheim 73 39 23 11 89 Edmonton 73 39 25 9 87 Calgary 73 41 28 4 86 Los Angeles 72 34 31 7 75 Vancouver 72 29 34 9 67 Arizona 73 27 37 9 63 x-Hawks Minnesota St. Louis Nashville Winnipeg Dallas Colorado

GF 222 235 201 212 220 196 140

GA 183 180 195 202 232 233 238

x-Cleveland x-Boston Washington Toronto Atlanta Milwaukee Indiana Miami

W 46 46 43 42 37 36 36 35

L 24 26 28 29 34 35 35 36

Pct .657 .639 .606 .592 .521 .507 .507 .493

GB — 1 3½ 4½ 9½ 10½ 10½ 11½

GF 198 190 212 203 175 166 178

GA 169 181 190 197 181 211 233

Bulls Detroit Charlotte New York Philadelphia Orlando Brooklyn

34 34 32 27 26 26 14

38 38 39 44 45 46 56

.472 .472 .451 .380 .366 .361 .200

13 13 14½ 19½ 20½ 21 32

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Atlantic Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Montreal 73 41 23 9 91 200 182 Ottawa 72 40 24 8 88 191 187 Toronto 72 34 23 15 83 221 212 Boston 73 38 29 6 82 209 195 Tampa Bay 72 34 29 9 77 197 202 Florida 72 31 30 11 73 183 208 Buffalo 74 30 32 12 72 183 214 Detroit 72 29 32 11 69 180 213 Metropolitan Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA x-Washington 72 47 17 8 102 232 161 x-Pittsburgh 72 46 17 9 101 252 199 x-Columbus 72 47 19 6 100 230 169 N.Y. Rangers 74 45 25 4 94 235 195 N.Y. Islanders 72 34 26 12 80 213 220 Carolina 71 31 27 13 75 186 206 Philadelphia 72 33 31 8 74 188 216 New Jersey 72 27 33 12 66 167 211 Note: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss. x-clinched playoff spot Wednesday’s Results Toronto 5, Columbus 2 N.Y. Islanders 3, N.Y. Rangers 2 Anaheim 4, Edmonton 3 Thursday’s Games Dallas at Blackhawks, 7:30 p.m. Columbus at Washington, 6 p.m. Tampa Bay at Boston, 6 p.m. Arizona at Florida, 6:30 p.m. Carolina at Montreal, 6:30 p.m. Pittsburgh at Ottawa, 6:30 p.m. New Jersey at Toronto, 6:30 p.m. Vancouver at St. Louis, 7 p.m. Calgary at Nashville, 7 p.m. Philadelphia at Minnesota, 7 p.m. Edmonton at Colorado, 8 p.m. Winnipeg at Los Angeles, 9:30 p.m. Friday’s Games N.Y. Islanders at Pittsburgh, 6 p.m. Tampa Bay at Detroit, 6:30 p.m. San Jose at Dallas, 7:30 p.m. Winnipeg at Anaheim, 9 p.m.

WESTERN CONFERENCE Pct .803 .771 .690 .611 .597 .577 .563 .479

GB — 2½ 8 13½ 14½ 16 17 23

Portland 32 38 .457 Dallas 30 40 .429 New Orleans 30 41 .423 Minnesota 28 42 .400 Sacramento 27 44 .380 Phoenix 22 49 .310 L.A. Lakers 20 51 .282 x-clinched playoff spot z-clinched division

24½ 26½ 27 28½ 30 35 37

z-Golden State x-San Antonio x-Houston Utah L.A. Clippers Oklahoma City Memphis Denver

W 57 54 49 44 43 41 40 34

L 14 16 22 28 29 30 31 37

Wednesday’s Results Bulls 117, Detroit 95 Charlotte 109, Orlando 102 Boston 109, Indiana 100 Oklahoma City 122, Philadelphia 97 Washington 104, Atlanta 100 Denver 126, Cleveland 113 Milwaukee 116, Sacramento 98 Utah 108, New York 101 Thursday’s Games Phoenix at Brooklyn, 7:30 p.m. Toronto at Miami, 7:30 p.m. L.A. Clippers at Dallas, 8:30 p.m. Memphis at San Antonio, 8:30 p.m. New York at Portland, 10 p.m. Friday’s Games Philadelphia at Bulls, 7 p.m. Brooklyn at Washington, 6 p.m. Cleveland at Charlotte, 6 p.m. Denver at Indiana, 6 p.m. Detroit at Orlando, 6 p.m. Phoenix at Boston, 6:30 p.m. Atlanta at Milwaukee, 7 p.m. New Orleans at Houston, 7 p.m. Minnesota at L.A. Lakers, 9:30 p.m. Sacramento at Golden State, 9:30 p.m. Saturday’s Schedule No games scheduled

NCAA BASKETBALL MEN’S NCAA TOURNAMENT

EAST REGIONAL At Madison Square Garden New York Regional Semifinals Friday South Carolina (24-10) vs. Baylor (277), 6:29 p.m. Wisconsin (27-9) vs. Florida (26-8), 9 p.m. Regional Championship Sunday Semifinal winners SOUTH REGIONAL At FedEx Forum Memphis, Tenn. Regional Semifinals Friday Butler (25-8) vs. North Carolina (29-7), 6:09 p.m. Kentucky (31-5) vs. UCLA (31-4), 8:40 p.m. Regional Championship Sunday Semifinal winners MIDWEST REGIONAL At The Sprint Center Kansas City, Mo. Regional Semifinals Thursday Michigan (26-11) vs. Oregon (31-5), 6:09 p.m. Purdue (27-7) vs. Kansas (30-4), 8:40 p.m. Regional Championship Saturday Semifinal winners

WEST REGIONAL At SAP Center San Jose, Calif. Regional Semifinals Thursday Gonzaga (34-1) vs. West Virginia (28-8), 6:39 p.m. Xavier (23-13) vs. Arizona (32-4), 9:10 p.m. Regional Championship Saturday Semifinal winners

NIT

Quarterfinals Tuesday TCU 86, Richmond 68 Georgia Tech 74, Mississippi 66 Wednesday UCF 68, Illinois 58 CS Bakersfield 80, Texas-Arlington 76 Semifinals At Madison Square Garden New York Tuesday, Georgia Tech (20-15) vs. CS Bakersfield (25-9), 6 p.m. TCU (22-15) vs. UCF (24-11), 8:30 p.m. Championship Thursday, March 30 Semifinal winners, 7 p.m.

CBI

Semifinals Wednesday Coastal Carolina 89, UIC 78 Wyoming 74, Utah Valley 68 Championship Series (Best-of-3) Coastal Carolina (19-17) vs. Wyoming (21-14), sites TBD Monday: TBD Wednesday: TBD Friday, March 31: TBD

MLB SPRING TRAINING

Wednesday’s Results Cincinnati 5, Cubs 2 (5 inn.) Oakland 5, White Sox 3 Houston 8, Minnesota 4 N.Y. Yankees 7, Philadelphia 3 St. Louis 6, Washington 1 Toronto 5, Detroit 4 Miami 15, N.Y. Mets 9 Kansas City 6, San Diego 2 San Francisco 6, Milwaukee 4 Colorado 10, Cleveland 2 L.A. Angels (ss) 9, Seattle 8 Texas 7, L.A. Angels (ss) 4 Baltimore 7, Tampa Bay 4 Thursday’s Games Cincinnati vs. White Sox at Glendale, Ariz., 3:05 p.m. Cubs vs. Arizona at Scottsdale, Ariz., 3:10 p.m. Miami vs. St. Louis at Jupiter, Fla., 12:05 p.m. Minnesota vs. Philadelphia at Clearwater, Fla., 12:05 p.m. N.Y. Mets vs. Washington at West Palm Beach, Fla., 12:05 p.m. N.Y. Yankees vs. Tampa Bay at Port Charlotte, Fla., 12:05 p.m. Pittsburgh vs. Boston at Fort Myers, Fla., 12:05 p.m. Colorado vs. Cleveland at Goodyear, Ariz., 3:05 p.m. Milwaukee vs. Oakland at Mesa, Ariz., 3:05 p.m. L.A. Angels vs. San Diego at Peoria, Ariz., 3:10 p.m. Detroit vs. Atlanta at Kissimmee, Fla., 5:05 p.m. L.A. Dodgers vs. Texas at Surprise, Ariz., 6:05 p.m. Seattle vs. San Francisco at Scottsdale, Ariz., 8:05 p.m.

GOLF INTERNATIONAL FEDERATION OF PGA TOURS

WGC-DELL TECHNOLOGIES MATCH PLAY Site: Austin, Texas Course: Austin Country Club. Yardage: 7,108. Par: 71 Purse: $9.75 million. First prize: $1,660,000 TV: Wednesday-Friday, 1-7 p.m. (TGC); Saturday, 9 a.m.-1 p.m. (TGC), 1-5 p.m. (NBC). Sunday, 9 a.m.-1 p.m. (TGC), 2-6 p.m. (NBC) Defending champion: Jason Day Last WGC: Dustin Johnson won the Mexico Championship on March 5. Notes: Johnson has a chance to become the first player to sweep the four World Golf Championships. Tiger Woods, who has 18 titles in the WGCs, never won the HSBC Champions. ... Five players chose not to play because of scheduling — Henrik Stenson, Adam Scott, Justin Rose, Rickie Fowler and Adam Hadwin. That’s the most eligible players to skip Match Play since 2001, when it began Jan. 3 in Australia and 38 players chose not to play. ... This is the final week to get into the top 50 and become eligible for the Masters. Six players at Match Play are out of the top 50 and not in the Masters — Ross Fisher, Hideto Tanihara, Thongchai Jaidee, Joost Luiten, Charles Howell III and K.T. Kim. ... For the second straight year, the format will be three days of round-robin play among 16 four-man groups, with the winner advancing to knockout stages. If there is a tie in group play, it is decided by a sudden-death playoff. ... Rory McIlroy and Louis Oosthuizen are the only players to advance out of group play each of the past two years.

9

• Thursday, March 23, 2017

WHAT TO WATCH

NHL

SPORTS | Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

DALLAS 7:30 p.m. CSN AM-720

SATURDAY


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Thursday, March 23, 2017

| SPORTS

10

Paying tribute to Jerry Krause, the fisherman I was saddened to hear about the passing of Jerry Krause on Tuesday. I think it’s an appropriate time to dust off my recollections of the former Bulls general manager. In February 2000, I put in a call to the Berto Center asking whether Krause would be available to do an interview with me regarding his passion for fishing. I had heard Krause was a fisherman and thought I would try to reach him. I figured there was absolutely zero possibility that he would take time from his busy schedule to talk to me. Imagine my surprise when my phone rang 15 minutes later. I answered, and the voice on the other end said, “I’m honored that Steve Sarley would Jerry Krause be calling me. I’m a big fan. I’ve been reading your work for years and really like it.” At first I thought that I was being pranked by a friend, but Krause’s voice was unmistakable. Krause invited me to come out to the Berto Center two days later to do the interview. I arrived and was told to wait in a room where members of the media waited for practice to end and the players and coaches would become available. Guys such as Mark Giangreco, Tim Weigel and Dan Roan eyed me suspiciously. Their jaws dropped when a young lady walked in, tapped my shoulder and said, “Come with me, Steve, Jerry Krause is ready for you right now.” Krause met me with a hearty handshake and couldn’t have been any nicer. Meeting this man while standing right in front of the Bulls’ six championship trophies was a thrill of a lifetime for me. We sat on a balcony that hung off of Krause’s office that overlooked the court. We watched coach Tim Floyd run his practice and talked fishing and basketball for almost two hours. He gave me a tour of the Berto Center and the locker room and introduced me to Floyd and the players. I was walking on air. I found Krause to be open and friendly. He was called “The Sleuth” because of his secretive ways, but he was anything but close mouthed with me. He told me many behind-thescenes stories about the Bulls, and even talked about who they would draft that upcoming summer and who was in their free-agency plans for the future. I asked him whether it was legal for him to be divulging personnel matters with me, and he said, “Sure, I know I can trust you not to write or talk about any of this. You’re a fisherman. I

OUTDOORS Steve Sarley

NEWS AND NOTES New category for catch-and-release:

DNR fisheries biologists will identify the species from the photographs submitted with the application. If the biologists are unable to make a conclusive identification from the photographs, the record claim will not be considered. “Live-release records will be recognized by length only. Fish records will be determined by total length measured to the nearest quarter of an inch and to be certified, new live-release records must exceed the existing record by at least a quarter of an inch. “While it’s desirable to have witnesses to the capture of live-release fish entries, the program is honor-based, and witnesses are not mandatory. Fish survival is the highest priority. “Fish must be caught by legal angling methods and released in good condition back into the same water.” More information about the program can be found on the Wisconsin DNR website, dnr.wi.gov. I wish Illinois would consider adopting a program such as this. It gives us all something more to talk about.

The Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources has announced that it is going to create a category of record fish caught-and-released in that state. know you’re a straight shooter that I “As anglers, part of what we enjoy can trust.” I was astounded. is the thrill of the unknown – the Krause talked to me about the way thought that the fish on the end of the media and players treated him our lines could be a trophy catch or disrespectfully. He said he had an even a new record,” said Justine Hasz, impeccable reputation on a national DNR fisheries bureau director. “What basis, but locally, he was the butt of we’ve seen with musky populations in many jokes that were unfair. areas where there is a strong catchI truly felt sorry for the man. I and-release ethic is that the fish are could look into his eyes and tell he reaching larger sizes and providing was extremely bitter. It hurt him that more anglers with the experience of a his wife and kids had to pick up the lifetime. Since it can take 10 years or newspapers on an almost daily basis more for walleye to reach trophy size, to read about Krause, who the media and 15 years or more for musky, our and players liked to insult by calling new catch-and-release record option him “Crumbs” for his occasionally means Wisconsin’s legendary fish will sloppy dress. create even more memories.” I asked him about Michael Jordan The program kicks off May 6 and and why their relationship was so works this way: “After landing the fish, poor. Krause said, “Do you remember take clear, color, side-view photowhen Jordan had that broken foot in graphs. Take several photos from dif1985? He missed over 60 games. When ferent angles. One photo must clearly he was ready to come back, I wanted • Steve Sarley writes about the show the fish lying on its side with a him to sit out the rest of the season. I ruler or other measuring device placed outdoors for Shaw Media. Write to knew we weren’t going to go anywhere beside the fish with the length number him at sarfishing@yahoo.com. Steve in the playoffs and did not want to risk clearly visible. Get close enough so that does a weekly podcast about fishing Jordan re-injuring his foot. He hated called “WeFishASA.” You can find it the image fills the frame. Another phome for trying to bench him, and he at www.wefishasa.com. to must show the angler with the fish. never forgave me for that. He thought he was the boss.” SALE • SALE • SALE • SALE • SALE • SALE • SALE • SALE • SALE • SALE I asked Krause whether he would like to take Jordan out fishing for a day to show MJ that Krause could do something better than he could. He tersely said, “I wouldn’t want to spend 4419 IL Route 176, Crystal Lake (2 blks. east of Rt. 31 on Rt. 176) five minutes in a boat alone with that [expletive].” I quickly changed the subject. BRINGING THE NORTHWOODS HOME TO YOU! We talked about Krause’s passion th for fishing, the many trips he had taken and about how he thought fishing FRIDAY, MARCH 24th SATURDAY, MARCH 25th SUNDAY, MARCH 26th with someone could be an important 7 am to 7 pm 6 am to 7 pm 6 am to 5 pm part of the interviewing or scouting FISHING HOT SPOTS - 125 To Choose From process. He said, “Spend a day in a 1989 28th 2017 2017 FISHING & HUNTING LICENSES AVAILABLE boat with someone and you can learn an awful lot about their intelligence, BASS • WALLEYE • PIKE ANGLERS... We’ve Got It All! temperament and competitiveness.” I Stop in for Smokehouse Venison. Processing samples! • FREE Raffle to win a giant think he was right. flat screen TV I’ve run into Krause about every MEET THE FACTORY REPS FROM: Raffle to win St. Croix • FREE year until a couple of years ago at the rod, half-day fishing SATURDAY SATURDAY & SUNDAY ONLY: various fishing shows that come to trip and MORE St. Croix town in the winter. When he’d see me, ONLY: he’d quickly walk toward me with an • FREE Fishing line with any Diawa Lews rod & reel purchase extended hand, glad to see me. He was BERKLEY PowerBait BERKLEY Gulp! (mono only) glad to see someone who treated him $5 for $19.99 4 for $19.99 with the respect he deserved and who Plus $10 main-in rebate on both • FREE Information on Hall of Fame Angler just wanted to talk a little fishing for local fishing SPENCE PETROS a while. Saturday 11am to 2pm • FREE Coffee and Snacks Krause was a great general man• SALE ON IN-STOCK ITEMS ONLY. • NO OTHER DISCOUNTS APPLY. ager. He isn’t given enough credit for MANY 28TH ANNIVERSARY SPECIALS! First 36 kids being the architect of the Bulls’ six ages 4-12 championship teams. He deserves a accompanied by an adult receive place in the NBA Hall of Fame. He a FREE rod & reel deserves our respect and admiration. combo and a tackle box! Saturday & I was happy to have known this interSunday Only! SM-CL0407917 esting gentleman. Peace, Jerry.

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• Thursday, March 23, 2017

The Bears’ depth chart at quarterback starts with Mike Glennon and ends with Connor Shaw. So it shouldn’t be surprising that the Bears have interest in adding another quarterback. Enter Mark Sanchez. The fifth overall pick in the 2009 draft, Sanchez is set to visit the Bears on Thursday. News of the visit, which was first reported by NFL Network late Tuesday, led to a hulMark Sanchez labaloo on social media. But the addition of Sanchez or another veteran quarterback wouldn’t preclude the Bears from drafting one early in April. The Bears simply need more quarterbacks. Did you really think the Bears would be entering their offseason program with just Glennon, Shaw and a rookie-to-be-named-later at quarterback? It’s best to be deep at quarterback. Last year, the Bears started three – Jay Cutler, Brian Hoyer and Matt Barkley – during the regular season because of injuries. Shaw also broke his leg in the

preseason. Sanchez, 30, might not have turned into the franchise quarterback the Jets hoped he would be, but he still can be a serviceable backup. He has a 37-35 record in seven seasons. Experience matters for teams when looking at quarterbacks. The Bears like Shaw, but his lone NFL start came during the 2014 season with the Browns. Sanchez, meanwhile, has spent time in different offensive systems with the Jets, Eagles, Broncos and Cowboys. He would be a veteran voice in a quarterbacks room that will be one of the Bears’ youngest this season – especially if a rookie is added to it. Having played for the Jets, Sanchez could help Glennon deal with the scrutiny and pressure of being a quarterback in a major market. If the Bears draft a quarterback, Sanchez could be a valuable resource for him. Sanchez spent last season with the Cowboys, and by all accounts, he had a close relationship with quarterback Dak Prescott, the 2016 offensive rookie of the year. With Tony Romo recovering from a back injury, Sanchez was Prescott’s main mentor.

SPORTS | Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

Sanchez to get a look


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Thursday, March 23, 2017

|SPORTS

12 BULLS 117, PISTONS 95

Butler’s MO: Extend Wade’s time as a Bull By JOE COWLEY

BULLS 117, PISTONS 95

jcowley@suntimes.com CHICAGO – Dwyane Wade already is making postseason plans. They don’t involve sitting around with a soft cast on his injured right elbow, either. No, the veteran guard has told teammates – specifically Jimmy Butler – that he will do everything in his power to return to the floor and play once the regular season comes to an end, even if the dislocated right elbow isn’t 100 percent. As far as Butler’s concerned, it’s now up to him to give Wade that opportunity. “Yeah, he actually does say that: ‘Get us to the playoffs, because I’ll be able to come back, and I can play,’ ” Butler told the Sun-Times of the recent conversations he’s had with Wade. “So that’s my goal right now. Go out there and be the killer to take us to these wins.” When Wade first suffered the injury last week, he did say he would miss the rest of the regular season, but offered up no timetable beyond that. There obviously is one now. That’s why Butler continues to play with ligament dam-

DETROIT (95) Harris 6-12 1-1 14, Morris 5-12 4-5 14, Drummond 4-12 0-4 8, Smith 4-10 0-0 9, Caldwell-Pope 2-4 0-0 5, Hilliard 0-2 0-0 0, Johnson 5-10 0-0 12, Bullock 1-4 0-0 3, Baynes 1-1 2-2 4, Leuer 5-8 2-3 13, Marjanovic 3-3 1-2 7, Udrih 0-0 0-0 0, Jackson 3-10 0-0 6. Totals 39-88 1017 95. CHICAGO (117) Zipser 6-9 2-3 15, Mirotic 12-15 0-0 28, Lauvergne 7-13 2-4 17, Rondo 2-5 0-0 5, Butler 6-6 4-4 16, Portis 5-9 2-5 12, Grant 2-4 2-2 7, Carter-Williams 3-7 0-1 6, Canaan 0-1 0-0 0, Morrow 1-2 0-0 3, Valentine 3-9 0-0 8. Totals 47-80 12-19 117. Detroit Chicago

AP photo

Bulls forward Jimmy Butler strips the ball from the Pistons’ Andre Drummond as Rajon Rondo (right) helps out during the first half of Wednesday night’s game at the United Center. The Bulls won, 117-95. age in his left hand. That’s why Butler was playing like a man possessed in Wednesday’s 117-95 win over the flailing Detroit Pistons, keeping the Bulls (34-38) in striking distance of an Eastern Conference seeding. That’s why Butler was actively yelling at teammates on where they need to be on the floor, as well as letting the coaching staff know what offensive sets were working and which weren’t.

Forget the stat line, especially in the wake of continual double and triple teams Butler is getting on a nightly basis. He was all over the place defensively, not only locking down his man, but gambling on steals to try to make something happen. Butler finished the game 6 for 6 from the field with 16 points, 12 assists and five rebounds, as well as playing just less than 34 minutes in the blowout. “We’re still in this playoff talk until told otherwise,” But-

23 32

30 20 27 32

22 26

— 95 — 117

3-Point Goals–Detroit 7-20 (Johnson 2-4, Smith 1-1, Leuer 1-1, Caldwell-Pope 1-2, Harris 1-3, Bullock 1-3, Hilliard 0-1, Jackson 0-1, Morris 0-4), Chicago 11-23 (Mirotic 4-6, Valentine 2-4, Morrow 1-1, Zipser 1-2, Rondo 1-2, Lauvergne 1-3, Grant 1-3, Portis 0-1, Canaan 0-1). Fouled Out–None. Rebounds–Detroit 44 (Drummond 17), Chicago 36 (Lauvergne 7). Assists–Detroit 18 (Smith 7), Chicago 36 (Butler 12). Total Fouls–Detroit 17, Chicago 20. A–21,503 (20,917).

ler said. And Butler wants nothing more than to make sure Wade is along for that postseason ride. Further evidence of how tightly the bond between Wade and Butler has grown in only their first season together. Although the three-time AllStar wants to avoid talk of offseason decisions just yet, he did admit that he and Wade have discussed the $23.8 million player option Wade owns for the 2017-18 season. Butler reiterat-

ed that he wants Wade back for not only that season, but longer. “I still think he’s got a lot more basketball left if you ask me,” Butler said. “I think everybody knows that I really like the guy as a person. He’s taught me so much on the floor, off the floor, but that’s his decision. You’ve always got to do what’s right, and not only for him, but for his family. But that choice is weighing on him because it is a player option. “I tell D, ‘You do what you have to do.’ ” Butler also said that if Wade did opt out and left, that might change his feelings about the future of the Bulls organization, but he’s in no position to do anything about it. “It doesn’t change my mentality because I’m under contract and I can’t do anything about it,’’ Butler said. “I can only talk to him again like I did before this year (when Wade was a free agent).” Until then, his hope is more performances such as the one against the Pistons. “You lean on your obviously best players when you need them most,” coach Fred Hoiberg added of Butler. “And we needed this one in the worst way.”

BLACKHAWKS

Hawks hope hot march portends deep playoff run By MARK POTASH

mpaotash@suntimes.com Coach Joel Quenneville was hardly sounding the alarms after the Blackhawks struggled against an NHL bottom-feeder Tuesday night for the second straight game. The Hawks fell behind the upstreaming Vancouver Canucks, 4-1, in the third period and lost, 5-4, in overtime after another maddash finish to tie in regulation. On the contrary, Quenneville was adamant that this was nothing to worry about. “When you look at what we gave up, you’ll win more than 90 percent of your games,” Quenneville said. That’s a far cry from the concern Quenneville sounded a year ago in March, after a 6-2 loss to the Dallas Stars at the United Center in which the Hawks fell behind 4-0 in the first period en route to losing for the seventh time in nine games.

“We’ve got to find a way to rectify the way we play,” Quenneville said after that loss. “We’ve got to play with some urgency.” After stealing three points in backto-back games in which they trailed by two and three goals in the third period against nonplayoff teams, the Hawks are in a much better position down the stretch than they were a year ago – building momentum instead of Ryan Hartman trying to find it. They’re 8-2-1 in March. Last year they were 5-6-2. “I think the rookies can take huge credit for that,” defenseman Niklas Hjalmarsson said. “I think Hartsy (Ryan Hartman) and Schmaltzy (Nick Schmaltz) and the new guys have been playing unbelievable this year. They’ve been improving since Game 1 and just continue showing how important they are.”

Fresh legs clearly are making a difference. But arguably just as important is that the Hawks’ veteran core players might have a little more gas in the tank at this point of the season than in recent years – the reluctant benefits of a longer offseason in 2016 after losing to the St. Louis Blues in the first round of the playoffs. The Hawks were finished by April 25 last year. The previous three years they played into June – June 15 in 2015; June 1 in 2014 and June 24 in 2013, with Cup celebrations in 2013 and 2015. Entering last season, nobody in the NHL had played more games since the start of the abbreviated 2012-13 season than Brent Seabrook (357), Hjalmarsson (355) and Jonathan Toews (349). Duncan Keith (337) was tied for fourth. And Patrick Kane (324) and Marian Hossa (322) also had heavy mileage on them. It probably is not a coincidence that over the past four seasons, the Hawks are 12-13-3 (.482) in March after winning the Cup, and 17-5-2 (.750) in March

after losing in the first round. “Especially mentally. You’re better off if you have a long summer,” Hjalmarsson said. “Physically you can be fine. But it’s the mental part that’s always toughest to get back into it.” Still intent on finishing the regular season strong, the Hawks’ veterans know they’re primed for another deep run. “I think we feel pretty good about our chances in a seven-game series,” Kane said. “At the same time, we have a little bit of time left to shore up our game and make sure we’re reaching our peak headed into the playoffs.” “The last five or six games we could be little bit better, and maybe the 10 or 15 before that we were playing at a pretty high level. We [want] to get back to that and feel good about ourselves going into the playoffs. I think we have a lot of confidence in here and everyone is feeling pretty good about the group we have in here.”


NWHerald.com SECTIONS APPEAR INSIDE PAGE 17

3•23•17

POWER TWINS

CL BROTHERS WIN FILMMAKING AWARD

Wishes GRANTed

ON STAGE REVIEWS OF ‘ANY OTHER NAME,’ THEATREVOLT TRILOGY

COMING TO RAUE, CHRISTIAN CROSSOVER ICON FINDS JOY IN GROWING OLDER, MUSIC WITH MEANING

MOVIES: ELIZABETH BANKS DELIGHTS IN ‘POWER RANGERS’; ‘CHIPS’ ON BIG SCREEN


Pet of the Week NWHerald.com PlanIt Pl@y is a product of the Northwest Herald and is published each Thursday by Shaw Media, P.O. Box 250, Crystal Lake, IL 60039-0250. Periodicals and postage paid at Crystal Lake, IL 60014. Pl@y Editor Jami Kunzer 815-526-4413 jkunzer@shawmedia.com FEaturEs Editor Valerie Katzenstein 815-526-4529 vkatzenstein@shawmedia.com

JASMINE 9 YEARS 2 MONTHS OLD FEMALE DILUTE CALICO DSH

LISTING YOUR EVENT Listings are free. Include the name of the event, time, date, location, length of run, cost, phone number, email address and/ or website. Must be submitted at least one week prior to publication. Fill out the form at PlanitNorthwest.com and click on add event.

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Open Daily 7am-2pm


3•23•2017

FEATURES

4

ON THE COVER

5

CONCERTS & BANDS

6

PLANIT 10

Coming to the Raue Center for the Arts in Crystal Lake, Amy Grant, a crossover pop and Christian music sensation, said she likes to bring humor and storytelling to her concerts.

A listing of concerts and bands coming to McHenry County in the coming weeks.

There are a lot of events taking place in the county this weekend. We choose the top 10.

10

ON STAGE

13

UP CLOSE

14

MOVIES

Reviews of “Any Other Name” at the Raue, Theatrevolt’s one-act plays at Hidden Pearl Café in McHenry and Jackalope Theatre’s “The Snare” in Chicago.

Twin filmmaking duo Adrian and Andrew Nuno of Crystal Lake have won an award for their new short film.

10

A review of “Power Rangers.” Plus, Dax Shepard talks about bringing “CHiPs” to the big screen.

DEPARTMENTS Concerts & Bands.........5 Go Guide.........................8 Movies...........................14 On the Cover..................4 Planit 10..........................6 Up Close........................13

ON THE COVER Amy Grant will perform April 7 at the Raue. Photo provided

British critic and aspiring poet Edward Ballard (Greg Carere) and his wife Margaret (Michele Vazquez) appear in “Any Other Name,” an award-winning play by George Brant that’s receiving its regional premiere in a Williams Street Repertory production at the Raue Center for the Arts in Crystal Lake. Photo provided courtesy of Jennifer Heim with Jennifer Heim Photography

| Pl@y | Thursday, March 23, 2017 • NWHerald.com

CONTENTS

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NIGHTLIFE

NWHerald.com • Thursday, March 23, 2017

SOUNDS

| Pl@y |

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GET YOUR BAND FEATURED Fill out the form by clicking on NWHerald. com/forms.

AMY GRANT

Amy Grant to bring music with meaning to CL Raue

MORE SOUNDS NEWS & REVIEWS NWHerald.com

By JAMI KUNZER

jkunzer@shawmedia.com

Having grown up with her fans, Amy Grant likes to think of the concert halls she performs in as her living room. Hopefully, she said in a phone interview from Nashville, those who attend her upcoming April 7 concert at the Raue Center for the Arts in Crystal Lake will enjoy not only her music, but “walking down memory lane.” Grant’s musical career spans 30 years and several genres – from gospel to contemporary Christian music to pop. She’s know for mainstream hits, such as “Baby Baby,” “Every Heartbeat” and “That’s What Love is For,” as the first contemporary Christian artist to hit No. 1 on the pop charts and to perform at the Grammy awards. Her Christian music fans know her for top albums, such as 2013’s “How Mercy Looks from Here,” 2015’s “Be Still and Know...Hyms & Faith” and last year’s “Tennessee Christmas.” These days, she said, she’s all about emphasizing the meaning behind her music and leaving fans with a positive message. “Honestly, I’m trying to see the good in things,” she said. “That’s really how I use my energy in life, and it comes out in my songwriting. “I’m a big believer in the thought that how you frame an experience has everything with how you experience it. If something happens, you can go, ‘Oh no, poor me,’ or you can go, ‘Wow, I’m about

to get a new tool in my kit, and won’t this be an adventure.’ ” She prefers more of an acoustic concert in which she can respond to the energy of the crowd and tell stories. Only a limited number of single seats remain for her upcoming Crystal Lake show, set for 8 p.m. April 7 at the Raue, 26 N. Williams St. Tickets start at $65 at 815-356-9212 or www. rauecenter.org. At age 56, Grant said she’s found herself involved in more workshops and speaking events. “I feel like in a way, it’s some about the music, but it’s as much about a way to live,” she said. She and her husband, country singer Vince Gill, are known for their philanthropy. In 2005, Grant hosted the NBC reality television show, “Three Wishes,” in which she and a team of helpers made wishes come true for small-town residents. The show was canceled at the end of its first season because of high production costs. “It was the most exhausting thing I ever did and the most exhilarating,” Grant said of the experience. “I cried when it was over. What I loved about it was everything was a possibility. ... It really fed into the truth that I believe exists that we have everything we need if we just connect the dots between us, that we could all lead a more fulfilled life.” Though, she said, Gill teased throughout the show they were going to go broke because she wanted to help everyone. “I learned a lot of lessons about healthy

WHEN: 8 to 10 p.m. April 7 WHERE: Raue Center for the Arts, 26 N. Williams St., Crystal Lake COST & INFO: Grant became the first artist in Christian music to have a platinum record and went on to become a crossover sensation. Tickets start at $65 (additional fees apply). Only limited single seats available. Information: 815-356-9212 or http://rauecenter.org/upcoming-events/amy-grant/. boundaries,” she said. She’s also learned lessons from her mother, who died in 2011, that she’s passed along to her own children – the youngest recently turning 16 years old – and to others as well, especially women. When she was younger and had acne, her mother would tell her to relax, that a woman’s most beautiful years are ages 35 to 45, when you’re confident, wiser and vibrant. Any time you can look at life as the best days are ahead, “you’re whetting your appetite for more,” Grant said. “I want to encourage other women to say, ‘You’re not your aging face,’ ” she said. “You are so much more than you were at 25, so much wiser than you were at 32, so much more to offer at 55 than you did at 40.” So much in life revolves around the dollar, she said, it’s easy to think material things are needed to make you feel good about yourself. Recently having cleaned out her closet, she said she found shorts that probably are 20 years old. “I’m not trying to be the worst fashion plate ever, but we’re all so much more than what we have on and what our faith looks like … I use music and, hopefully, laughter and stories to make people look at themselves with fresh eyes, to think ‘whatever I’m in the middle of, this is good,’ ” she said. “Music should make you feel better.”


The following are upcoming concerts and bands scheduled in the area.

OPEN MIC, 7 to 11 p.m. March 24, Stage Left Café, 125 W. Van Buren St., Woodstock. Presented by Off Square Music on the second and fourth Fridays of the month. Performers invited to play 15-minute slots. To sign up, call 815-338-5164 or email offsquare@gmail. com. The featured performer, Mike Maxa on March 24, is on from 8:30 to 9 p.m. Cost: $3 suggested donation. Information: www.offsquaremusic.org. FRIDAY JACKSON, 9 p.m. March 24, Bowl-Hi Lanes, 10520 Route 47, Huntley. Free. Information: 847669-5114 or alysiagivens22@gmail.com. HILLYBILLY ROCKSTARZ, 9 p.m. March 25, Bowl-Hi Lanes, 10520 Route 47, Huntley. A Chicago country band playing Top 40 and classic country. Free. Information: 847-669-5114 or alysiagivens22@ gmail.com. SAM ZUIDEMA OF BLACK CAT BONE, 8 to 10 p.m. March 25, Duke’s Alehouse and Kitchen, 110 N. Main St., Crystal Lake. Free. Information: http:// thedukeabides.com/events/. MURIEL ANDERSON BENEFIT CONCERT, 8 to 10 p.m. March 25, Unity Spiritual Center of Woodstock, 225 W. Calhoun, Woodstock. Anderson, one of the world’s foremost fingerstyle guitarists and harp-guitarists, will perform to raise money for Free Guitars for Future Stars, which works to supply free guitars and guitar lessons to children, ages 10 through 17, from lower-income McHenry County families. Anderson also will host a guitar clinic at 11 a.m. March 26 at Stage Left Café in Woodstock. The cost for the concert and clinic is $40. Concert tickets cost $25, while the clinic only costs $20 a person. Tickets and information: 815-975-7989, scottn728@comcast.net, https://ticketbud.com/events/f219f846-e72111e6-ab4f-c3e5841c3211 or www.facebook.com/ events/1535851366443569/. PATIO DADDY-O, 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. March 25, Hickory Lodge, 3018 Hickory Drive, McCullom Lake. Featuring classic rock. Free. For Patio Daddy-O bookings, call 224-622-0472 or email tonyclavesilla@ yahoo.com. “SUMMER OF LOVE,” 2 p.m. March 26, Unity Spiritual Center of Woodstock, 225 W. Calhoun St., Woodstock. A sixth annual invitational concert presented by Woodstock Folk Festival featuring the iconic songs of 1967 filtered through the musical lenses of some of Illinois’ best musicians. Performers include Tricia Alexander, Guyz With Bad Eyez (Merv Collins and Don Humbertson), Megon McDonough, Raspberry Atomic Clock (Dean Milano and Russ Ward), Stage Leftovers (Pete Jonsson, Brian Murphy, Laurel Palma, Joe Pesz, Rich Prezioso and Les Urban), Thrice Nice (Sharon Arnold, Annemarie Serra, Diane Ward), and the Ukulele Superhero Club (Amy Beth Dorothy Biris, Helen Lindquist, Laurel Palma, Annemarie Serra, Cassandra Vohs-Demann). Funds raised will benefit the 32nd annual Woodstock Folk Festival, scheduled for July 16 on the Woodstock Square. Suggested donation: $10. Information: 815-3382080 or www.woodstockfolkfestival.org. NASHVILLE ELECTRIC COMPANY, 9 p.m. April 1, Bowl-Hi Lanes, 10520 Route 47, Huntley. A country party band. Free. Information: 847-669-5114 or oralysiagivens22@gmail.com. SWELL SUBURBIA, 9 to 10 p.m. April 1, Duke’s Alehouse and Kitchen, 110 N. Main St., Crystal

REGIONAL ARCADA THEATRE, 105 E. Main St., St. Charles. Schedule: 7 p.m. March 23, “40s Night at the Arcada” with a performance by Rosie & the Rivets; 8 p.m. March 24, Come Clean Tour featuring Puddle of Mudd, Saving Able & Tantric; 8 p.m. March 25 & 7 p.m. March 26, UFO with Saxon & special guest James Nichols; 8 p.m. March 31, Anthrax. Ticket prices vary per event. Tickets and information: 630-962-7000 or www.arcadalive.com. HANS AND THE HORMONES, 9:30 p.m. March 25 & April 1, Waterfront Restaurant & Bar at the Abbey, 269 Fontana Blvd., Fontana, Wisconsin. Playing cover pop/dance music from the ’80s to current. Information: 815-385-7273, hansmast@att.net or find Hans and the Hormones on Facebook.

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| Pl@y | Thursday, March 23, 2017 • NWHerald.com

McHENRY COUNTY

Lake. An American alternative rock band based in Chicago. Formed in 2007, featuring singer-songwriter Ben Abney, Paul Goodenough on drums and bassist Justin Ferwerda. Information: http:// thedukeabides.com/events/. AMY GRANT, 8 to 10 p.m. April 7, Raue Center for the Arts, 26 N. Williams St., Crystal Lake. Grant became the first artist in Christian music to have a platinum record, and went on to become a crossover sensation. Tickets start at $65 (additional fees apply). Only a limited number of single seats available. Information: 815-356-9212 or http:// rauecenter.org/upcoming-events/amy-grant/. BACK COUNTRY ROADS, 9 p.m. April 7, Bowl-Hi Lanes, 10520 Route 47, Huntley. A top 40 country cover band. Free. Information: 847-669-5114 or oralysiagivens22@gmail.com. BIG RICHARDS, 9 p.m. April 8, Bowl-Hi Lanes, 10520 Route 47, Huntley. Playing rock and alternative with a few country and pop tunes thrown in. Free. Information: 847-669-5114 or oralysiagivens22@gmail.com. MOUNTAIN HOEDOWN WITH THE GEORGIA RAE FAMILY BAND, 8 p.m. April 8, Stage Left Café, 125 W. Van Buren St., Woodstock. A fundraising event hosted by the Friends of the Opera House. With a progressive sound inspired by a mix of Americana, bluegrass, contemporary folk rock, even a little swing, the Georgia Rae Family Band delivers a sound that’s fresh but familiar and youthfully evolving. Seating is limited, and each ticket includes one free drink. Tickets: $25 all seats. Tickets and information: www.woodstockoperahouse.com. SESSIONS JAZZ QUARTET, 3 to 4:30 p.m. April 9, McHenry County College Luecht Conference Center, 8900 Route 14, Crystal Lake. Pianist Al Skaronea returns with his sons and friends for an afternoon of jazz and more. Free. Information: 815479-7814 or www.mchenry.edu/artevents. VOICES IN HARMONY 30TH ANNIVERSARY CONCERT, 4 p.m. April 9, Raue Center for the Arts, 26 N. Williams St., Crystal Lake. Voices in Harmony celebrates three decades of making music, featuring the world-premiere performance of “Reflections,” composed by Tom Vos in honor of the anniversary. Winds Off the Lake Woodwind Quartet also will be performing, both with the choir and solo pieces. Tickets: $20 adults, $15 seniors and students. Tickets and information: 815-356-9212 or https:// rauecenter.ticketforce.com. JIMMY NICK SOLO SHOW, 9 p.m. April 13, Duke’s Alehouse and Kitchen, 110 N. Main St., Crystal Lake. An old-fashioned, guitar-slinging blues prodigy. Information: http://thedukeabides.com/ events/.

PETER YARROW WHEN: 7 p.m. April 13 WHERE: Raue Center for the Arts, 26. N. Williams St., Crystal Lake COST & INFO: Best known for his work as one-third of the legendary pop folk trio Peter, Paul & Mary, Yarrow’s career spans more than four decades as he’s used his talent to convey a message of humanity and caring through music. Yarrow penned some of Peter, Paul & Mary’s most iconic songs, such as “Puff, the Magic Dragon,” “Day is Done,” “Light One Candle” and “The Great Mandala.” Tickets start at $32 at the Box Office, 815-356-9212 or www.rauecenter.org.

Presents

Friday March 31, April 7 & 14 at 8:00 PM Saturday April 1, 8* & 15 at 8:00 PM Sunday April 2 & 9 at 3:00 PM *Additional matinee at 2:00 PM on Saturday April 8th

INDIVIDUAL TICKET PRICE IS $24 INCLUDING $3.00 OPERA HOUSE SURCHARGE $21 FOR STUDENTS & SENIORS

Book By Patricia Resnick Music and Lyrics By Dolly Parton

Based on the 20th Century Fox Picture Originally produced on Broadway by Robert Greenblatt, April 2009

9 to 5, The Musical is presented through special arrangement with Music Theatre International (MTI). All authorized performance materials are also supplied by MTI.

WOODSTOCK OPERA HOUSE 121 VAN BUREN STREET • WOODSTOCK, IL 60098 VISIT WWW.WOODSTOCKOPERAHOUSE.COM FOR MORE INFORMATION SM-CL0417617

815-338-5300

PG-13 www.MTIShows.com


EVENTS

NWHerald.com • Thursday, March 23, 2017

| Pl@y |

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GS 10 THIN TO DO OUND R A & N I UNTY O C Y R McHEN

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“SUMMER OF LOVE”

“4TH FRIDAYS” AT THE STARLINE

WHEN: 6 to 9 p.m. March 24 WHERE: The Starline Factory, 300 W. Front St., Harvard COST and INFO: A monthly art event held in a renovated, historic factory with a juried mixed art exhibit, photo contest, featured solo artist exhibit, open artist studios, people’s choice voting and live music on four stages by Rob Anderlik (above), Natalie Whalen, Andrew Sedlak Duo and The Shufflers. Cost: $10 cash at the door. Children ages 17 and younger free when accompanied by an adult. Information: 815-347-8535, nancy@nancymerkling.com or www.nancymerkling.com/4th-fridays-at-the-starline.

2

WHEN: 2 p.m. March 26 WHERE: Unity Spiritual Center of Woodstock, 225 W. Calhoun St., Woodstock COST and INFO: A sixth annual invitational concert presented by Woodstock Folk Festival featuring iconic songs of 1967. Performers include Tricia Alexander, Guyz With Bad Eyez (Merv Collins and Don Humbertson), Megon McDonough, Raspberry Atomic Clock (Dean Milano and Russ Ward), Stage Leftovers (Pete Jonsson, Brian Murphy, Laurel Palma, Joe Pesz, Rich Prezioso and Les Urban), Thrice Nice (Sharon Arnold, Annemarie Serra, Diane Ward) and the Ukulele Superhero Club (Amy Beth Dorothy Biris, Helen Lindquist, Laurel Palma, Annemarie Serra, Cassandra Vohs-Demann). Funds raised will benefit the 32nd annual Woodstock Folk Festival, scheduled for July 16 on the Woodstock Square. Suggested donation: $10. Information: 815-338-2080 or www.woodstockfolkfestival.org.

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“BORN BRITISH, DIED AMERICAN . . . REFLECTIONS!”

WHEN: 3 p.m. March 26 WHERE: Historic Hain House, 149 Hilltop Drive, Lake in the Hills COST and INFO: Eavesdrop on Dr. Benjamin Franklin (played by Thomas Kelecius of Lake in the Hills, who also wrote the production) and his daughter, Sally, as they work on his autobiography. The Historic Hain House transforms into Dr. Franklin’s study. Seating is limited. Reservations recommended at 847-567-54767 or 847-658-5103. Ticket: $12.50 each or two for $20. Information: www.bornbritishdiedamerican.com.

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CREATIVE ARTS STUDENT ART SHOW

WHEN: 5 to 8 p.m. March 24 WHERE: Dole Mansion at Lakeside Arts Park, 401 Country Club Road, Crystal Lake COST and INFO: See student art in a display and enjoy making art on the spot at several interactive art stations. Free. Donations of $5 accepted at the door for Dole Mansion restoration or Sage Gallery for Creative Arts art studio programs. Information: 815-219-9243 or www. creativeartsinc.org.

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MURIEL ANDERSON BENEFIT CONCERT

WHEN: 8 to 10 p.m. March 25 WHERE: Unity Spiritual Center of Woodstock, 225 W. Calhoun, Woodstock COST and INFO: Anderson, one of the world’s foremost finger style guitarists and harp-guitarists, will perform to raise money for Free Guitars for Future Stars, which supplies free guitars and lessons to children, ages 10-17, from lower-income McHenry County families. Anderson also will host a clinic at 11 a.m. March 26 at Stage Left Café in Woodstock. The cost for the concert and clinic is $40. Concert tickets cost $25, while the clinic only costs $20 a person. Tickets and information: 815-975-7989, Scottn728@comcast.net or https://ticketbud.com/events/f219f846-e721-11e6-ab4fc3e5841c3211.


“WOMEN”

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| Pl@y | Thursday, March 23, 2017 • NWHerald.com

WHEN: Through April 8 WHERE: McHenry County College Art Galleries One and Two, 8900 Route 14, Crystal Lake COST and INFO: An exhibition hosted by the college in celebration of Women’s History Month. The exhibition features 22 works focusing on women subjects from the college’s Portrait in Print Collection. The women subjects are accomplished and influential women, including writers, poets, artists, singers, dancers, a social activist, a scientist and a queen. Among them is Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec’s “At the Renaissance: Sarah Bernhardt in ‘Phedre.’ ” (right). Gallery hours: 8 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. Monday through Thursday, 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Friday, 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday, closed Sunday. Information: 815-455-8785 or www.mchenry. edu/artgallery.

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“QUEEN OF THE SUN: WHAT ARE THE BEES TELLING US”

WHEN: 7 to 9 p.m. March 24 WHERE: Tree of Life Unitarian Universalist Congregation, 5603 Bull Valley Road, McHenry COST and INFO: Green Sanctuary film series screening of a profound, alternative look at the global bee crisis from Taggart Siegel, director of the acclaimed documentary “The Real Dirt on Farmer John.” Free. Information: 815-322-2464 or www.treeoflifeuu.org.

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WSR LAB SERIES: “MECHANICS OF LOVE”

WHEN: 7 to 9:30 p.m. March 27 WHERE: Raue Center For The Arts, 26 N. Williams St., Crystal Lake COST and INFO: A fanciful romantic comedy by Dipika Guha. The Williams Street Rep Lab Series showcases new scripts. Free. Information: 815-3569212 or http://wsrep.org/index.php/whats-on/labseries/the-mechanics-of-love/.

OPEN MIC

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WHEN: 7 to 11 p.m. March 24 WHERE: Stage Left Café, 125 W. Van Buren St., Woodstock COST and INFO: Presented by Off Square Music on the second and fourth Fridays of the month. Performers invited to play 15-minute slots. To sign up, call 815-338-5164 or email offsquare@gmail. com. The featured performer, Mike Maxa on March 24, is on from 8:30 to 9 p.m. Cost: $3 suggested donation. Information: www.offsquaremusic.org.

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FREE FAMILY OPEN SWIM

WHEN: 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. March 24 WHERE: Dolphin Swim Club of Crystal Lake, 825 Munshaw Lane, Crystal Lake COST and INFO: A free community event hosted by Dolphin Swim Club. Enjoy two 91-degree salt water pools and the popular dolphin slide. All families need an adult present in the water with their children. Families may bring their own water toys and small inflatables from home. Information: 847-854-1300 or find Dolphin Swim Club of Crystal Lake on Facebook.

GET LISTED! Listings are free. Include the name of the event, time, date, location, length of run, cost, phone number, email address and/or website. Must be submitted at least one week prior to publication. Fill out the form at PlanitNorthwest.com and click on add event.

PET ADOPTION APRIL 1, 2017 11am – 2pm

NATURE’S FEED

2440 Westward Dr., Unit C • Spring Grove, IL 60081

YOUR NATURAL SOURCE FOR PET FOOD, DOG TRAINING & MORE!

SM-CL0408429

Located next to the Spring Grove Post Office.

(PH) 815-675-2008

WWW.NATURESFEED.NET

Read all about it

Sunday

Fashion Home Decorating Gardening Announcements and more!


EVENTS

McHENRY COUNTY

NWHerald.com • Thursday, March 23, 2017

GO GUIDE

| Pl@y |

8

ONGOING

A LOOK AT AREA EVENTS OVER THE NEXT COUPLE OF WEEKS

LIVE PRO WRESTLING, 7:30 to 10 p.m. every Saturday, Premier Studio, 1230 Davis Road, Woodstock. Tickets: $10 adults general or $12 ringside, $5 children age 12 and younger. Information: 847-347-6632 or www.premierprowrestling.com. “THE NORMAL HEART,” through March 25, McHenry County College Black Box Theatre, 8900 Route 14, Crystal Lake. Tony Award-winning play by Larry Kramer about public and private indifference to the AIDS plague and one man’s lonely fight to awaken the world to the crisis. Presented by McHenry County College as part of its 50th anniversary season. Directed by Jay Geller. This play contains adult language and subject matter. Schedule: 7:30 p.m. March 23-25. Tickets: $15; $10 students, alumni, MCC employees and seniors. Reservations and information: 815-455-8746 or jgeller@mchenry.edu. “REFLECTIONS AND PERSPECTIVES,” through March 26, Hidden Pearl Café, 1208 N. Green St., McHenry. Featuring a collection of plays by Carl Zeitler presented by Theatrevolt. Plays are entitled “A Smattering of Perspective,” “Wedded Bliss...or Not” and “And Then What?” Schedule: 7 p.m. March 25 and 2 p.m. March 26. Tickets: $15 general admission. A portion of the proceeds will benefit Hidden Pearl Cafe as they move to their new location. Information: 815-322-9765, https://allevents.in/ mchenry or find Theatrevolt on Facebook. “ANY OTHER NAME,” through April 2, Raue Center for the Arts, 26 N. Williams St., Crystal Lake. LAB Series selection presented by Williams Street Repertory. This is a dark comedy (or light tragedy) about poetry, madness and identity theft in Victorian England. Schedule: 8 p.m. March 24-25 and 31 and April 1; 3 p.m. March 25-26 and April 2. Tickets: $32.50 to $38.50. Tickets and information: 815-356-9212 or https://rauecenter. ticketforce.com. “WOMEN,” through April 8, McHenry County College Art Galleries, 8900 Route 14, Crystal Lake. A celebration of Women’s History Month, the exhibition features 22 works focusing on women subjects from the college’s Portrait in Print Collection. Gallery hours: 8 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. Monday through Thursday, 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Friday, 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday, closed Sunday. Information: 815-455-8785 or www.mchenry. edu/artgallery. “BREAKER, BREAKER,” through April 20, Woodstock Courthouse Satellite Gallery, 101 N. Johnson St., Woodstock. A student painting exhibition hosted by McHenry County College and curated by Matt Irie, instructor of art at MCC. “Breaker, Breaker” is the CB (Citizens Band) slang announcing one’s intention to “break” into a conversation. The exhibit attempts to break into the conversation of contemporary painting. Gallery hours: 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Thursday through Saturday and noon to 5 p.m. Sunday. Information: Matt Irie, 815-455-8552 or mirie@mchenry.edu.

MARCH 24

GET YOUR EVENT LISTED Fill out the form at PlanitNorthwest.com.

MIXED MEDIA & COLLAGE ADULT WORKSHOP, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. March 24-26, Amber’s Art Place, 9243 S. Route 31, Lake in the Hills. A three-day workshop with nationally known artist Laura-Lein Svencner. Learn to compose works of art emphasized with the use of color, texture and imagery. Cost: $300. Registration and information: 815-404-6520 or www.ambersartplace.com.

“9 TO 5: THE MUSICAL” WHEN: March 31-April 9 WHERE: Woodstock Opera House, 121 Van Buren St., Woodstock COST & INFO: Presented by Woodstock Musical Theatre Company. Schedule: 8 p.m. March 31-April 1, April

7-8 & 14-15; 2 p.m. April 2, 8 & 9. Tickets: $24 adults, $21 students and seniors. Tickets and information: 815338-5300 or www.woodstockoperahouse.com. CREATIVE ARTS STUDENT ART SHOW, 5 to 8 p.m. March 24, Dole Mansion at Lakeside Arts Park, 401 Country Club Road, Crystal Lake. Student art on display, along with the chance to make art at interactive art stations. Free. Donations of $5 accepted at the door. Information: 815-219-9243 or www.creativeartsinc.org. “4TH FRIDAYS” AT THE STARLINE, 6 to 9 p.m. March 24, The Starline Factory, 300 W. Front St., Harvard. A monthly art event featuring exhibits, open artist studios and live music. Cost: $10 cash at the door. Children ages 17 and younger free when accompanied by an adult. Information: 815347-8535, nancy@nancymerkling.com or www. nancymerkling.com/4th-fridays-at-the-starline. “QUEEN OF THE SUN: WHAT ARE THE BEES TELLING US,” 7 to 9 p.m. March 24, Tree of Life Unitarian Universalist Congregation, 5603 Bull Valley Road, McHenry. Green Sanctuary film series screening of an alternative look at the global bee crisis from Taggart Siegel, director of the acclaimed documentary “The Real Dirt on Farmer John.” Free. Information: 815-322-2464 or www. treeoflifeuu.org.

daughter, Sally, as they work on his autobiography. Seating is limited. Reservations recommended at 847-567-54767 or 847-658-5103. Ticket: $12.50 each or two for $20. Information: www.bornbritishdiedamerican.com. SALSA SUNDAYS, 3 to 7 p.m. March 26, Cinnamon’s DanceWorks, 2025 E. Algonquin Road, Algonquin. Learn to salsa in a welcoming environment. Lessons at 3 p.m., dance the dance at 4 p.m. and Sunday social at 5 p.m. Appetizers and nonalcoholic beverages are included. Cost: $15 a class, $5 discount for couples. Information: Cinnamon Trammell, 224-333-0822 or www.cinnamondanceworks.com.

MARCH 27 WILLIAMS STREET REP LAB SERIES: “MECHANICS OF LOVE” BY DIPIKA GUHA, 7 to 9:30 p.m. March 27, Raue Center for the Arts, 26 N. Williams St., Crystal Lake. A fanciful romantic comedy. Free. Information: 815-356-9212 or http://wsrep.org/index.php/whats-on/lab-series/themechanics-of-love/.

MARCH 28

GEOCACHING MERIT BADGE WORKSHOP, 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. March 28, The Nature Center, Crystal Lake. For ages 10-17. Boy Scouts will gain knowledge on how to use a JOE DIAMOND STUDIO SERIES: THE 13TH HOUR, 7 to 8 GPS properly to find a geocache. Open to all Boy Scouts p.m. March 25, Joe Diamond Studio Series, 401 Country Club Tenderfoot and above. Cost: $20. Information: www. Road, Crystal Lake. Diamond hosts a journey through the crystallakeparks.org. unknown. The details of this new psychic show are being kept a secret. Only 13 people admitted per show. Tickets: $25 to $90. Tickets and information: 815-347-5481 or www. MARCH 31 joediamondlive.com/studioseries. ART FOR THE PAWS 2017, 9 a.m. March 31 to 9 p.m. April 22, Helping Paws Animal Shelter, 2500 Harding Lane, MARCH 26 Woodstock. A community outreach project and fundraiser to help raise awareness for the arts while benefiting Helping BIRD WALK, 8 a.m. March 26, McHenry Dam, McHenry Paws animal shelter. Donated art will be available for sale Dam Road, off River Road, McHenry. Walk is about 2 via an online auction. Reception from 7 to 9 p.m. April 22 at miles and is led by McHenry County Audubon members. Mixin Mingle, 124 Cass St., Woodstock. Bids start at $25 for Bring binoculars and field guides or borrow from the each piece of art, and bidding can go up by $5 increments. leaders. Free. Registration required. Information: 815Reception admission is $5 a person, with light appetizers 344-1294 or dnr.volobog@illinois.gov. and drinks served. Information: 815-338-4400 or www. “BORN BRITISH, DIED AMERICAN . . . REFLECTIONS!”, 3 helpingpaws.net. p.m. March 26, Historic Hain House, 149 Hilltop Drive, Lake Continued on page 9 in the Hills. Eavesdrop on Dr. Benjamin Franklin and his

MARCH 25


APRIL 1 CRYSTAL LAKE HOME & BUSINESS EXPO, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. April 1 and 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. April 2, Crystal Lake South High School, 1200 S. McHenry Ave. More than 120 local businesses and organizations represented. Hosted by the Crystal Lake Chamber of Commerce. Free. Information: www.clchamber.com BREAKFAST WITH THE BUNNY, 9 to 10 a.m. April 1, Community Center, 255 Briargate Road, Cary. A breakfast buffet and seasonal activities hosted by the Cary Park District. Each child and family will have an opportunity to visit with the bunny after breakfast. Cost: $12 residents, $18 nonresidents. Registration and information: 847-639-6100 or www.carypark.com. BREAKFAST WITH THE BUNNY, 9:30 to 11 a.m. April 1 & 8, Park Place Banquets, 406 W. Woodstock St., Crystal Lake. Breakfast buffet hosted by the Crystal Lake Park District. The bunny will be available for pictures with the children. All children must be accompanied by an adult. Tickets: $12 a person, free for children age 2 and younger. Register by March 28 at www. crystallakeparks.org or at the Crystal Lake Park District Administration Building, 1 E. Crystal Lake Ave., program code 231819-02. Information: 815-477-5871. MOM AND ME MAD HATTER TEA PARTY, 10:30 a.m. April 1, LaBahn-Hain House, 149 Hilltop Drive, Lake in the Hills. For moms, grandmothers or any female caregivers and daughters. Create a keepsake craft to take home. Menu will include cucumber dill sandwiches, turkey and cheese wraps, creamy berry sandwiches, mini desserts and various hot teas. Registration required. Cost: $15 residents, $18 nonresidents. Registration and information: www.lith.org. FIRST SATURDAY AT COLONEL PALMER HOUSE, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. April 1, Colonel Palmer House, 660 E. Terra Cotta Ave., Crystal Lake. For Scouts and those interested in becoming Scouts. Camp Life will feature ’60s era Scoutcraft activities, hands-on demonstrations and the history of local Scouting. Free. Information: www.crystallakeparks.org.

APRIL 2 PRINCESS AND SUPERHEROES, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. April 2, Volo Auto Museum, 27582 Volo Village Road, Volo. Annual event featuring costumed characters from princesses to superheroes and everything in-between. Plus, an unveiling of the museum’s newest exhibit – Batman’s Tumbler (subject to change as the Tumbler is under restoration). Children ages 12 and younger dressed in costume get in free. Princesses from Fairytale Birthday Co. will be available from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Other characters include volunteers from Costumers with a Cause. Information: www.volocars. com or 815-385-3644.

APRIL 3 “ROCKFORD’S CAMP GRANT AND WORLD WAR I,” 7 p.m. April 3, McHenry County Historical Society Museum, 6422 Main St., Union. Terry Dyer, a recognized scholar and lecturer on Camp Grant, will discuss the 1917 origins of the massive national Army Training Center, named for Ulysses S. Grant, that operated until 1946. Tickets: $10 donation. Tickets and information: 815-923-2267 or www.gothistory.org.

APRIL 7 1ST FRIDAY ART SHOW, 5 to 8 p.m. April 7, Lakeside Legacy Arts Park, 401 Country Club Road, Crystal Lake. The chance to view art, meet artists and buy original works. The Dole Gallery will feature “Round and Round,” a performance and fiber art installation by artist Johana Moscoso. This solo exhibition celebrates her family’s migrations to the United States and reflects on gender and labor. Admission: $5 suggested donation. Cash bar. Information: 815-455-8000 or www.lakesideartspark.org.

APRIL 8 GARDENFEST 2017, 7:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. April 8, McHenry County College, 8900 Route 14, Crystal Lake. Sponsored by McHenry County College and the University of Illinois Extension McHenry County Master Gardeners. Includes a keynote address, “Garden Renovations for Any Size Landscape,” with Melinda Myers, a nationally known gardening expert, TV/radio host, author and columnist, along with more than 30 other breakout sessions. Cost: $45 (includes lunch) before March 28, $50 on the day of conference. Tickets and information: www.mchenry.edu/gardenfest or call 815-479-7570. 7TH ANNUAL HEAVENLY CHOCOLATE FEST, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. April 8, Congregational Church of Algonquin, 109 Washington St., Algonquin. Area vendors offering chocolate-related products and services, such as chocolate facials, chocolate pottery and more on two floors. Free admission. Information: 847-658-5308 or www.algonquinucc.org. ALGONQUIN EGG HUNT, 10 to 11 a.m. April 8, Towne Park, 100 Jefferson St., Algonquin. Open to children up to age 12 and hosted by the village of Algonquin with 10,000 eggs. All children will be grouped by age and must be accompanied by an adult. Bring a basket. No registration required. Free. Information: 847-658-2716 or https://rec.algonquin.org. EASTER EGG HUNT & PANCAKE BREAKFAST, 10 a.m. to noon April 8, Village Hall, 600 Harvest Gate, Lake in the Hills. Free egg hunt hosted by the village

of Lake in the Hills for children through age 10. Bring a basket. Following the hunt is an all-you-can-eat pancake breakfast, crafts and chance to meet and take photos with the bunny. Cost: $10 resident adults, $11 nonresident adults, $5 resident children ages 4-15, $6 nonresident children, free for children 3 and younger. Register for breakfast by March 31. Information: 847960-7460 or www.lith.org. “RISE UP WITH JESUS,” 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. April 8, Christ United Methodist Church, 9009 W. Algonquin Road, Algonquin. Easter event for families to explore details about Jesus’ resurrection and journey through activities. Free. Registration is appreciated. Information: 847-669-90009 or www.gocumc.org. EASTER EGG HUNT, 10:30 a.m April 8, Living Waters Lutheran Church, 1808 Miller Road, Crystal Lake. Featuring more than 4,000 Easter eggs and a visit from the Easter Bunny. Hunts will be divided by ageappropriate groups. Treats, prizes, basket giveaways. Free. Information: 815-455-2424 or www.livingwaterschurch.com. EASTER FUN, 10 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. and 12:30 p.m. to 2 p.m. April 8, Nick’s Pizza & Pub, 856 Pyott Road, Crystal Lake. The Easter Bunny is coming to Nick’s. There will be an egg scavenger hunt, activities, visits with the bunny and more. Bring a camera. Tickets: $11.95 a child includes one child’s meal. Space is limited. Easter Fun also is scheduled for 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. April 9 at Nick’s Pizza & Pub, 990 S. Randall Road, Elgin. Tickets and information: 815-356-5550 or www.nickspizzapub.com/2017/easter-bunny-coming-nicks-pizza-pub. ASSISI ANIMAL FOUNDATION’S ANNUAL FASHION SHOW LUNCHEON BENEFIT, 12:30 p.m. April 8, Crystal Lake Country Club, 721 Country Club Road, Crystal Lake. Fundraiser featuring Nancy Loo from WGN TV News Channel 9. The event includes a gourmet luncheon, fashions by Chico’s, raffles and prizes. Proceeds will go to the operation of the no-kill shelter. Tickets: $40. Doors open at 11:30 a.m. Tickets and information: 815-455-9411 or www.assisi.org. “HAMILTON’S WOMEN,” 1 to 3 p.m. April 8, Harvard Diggins Library, 900 E. McKinley St., Harvard. Actress and scholar Leslie Goddard brings these women to life as they discuss their complicated relationships with Hamilton. You don’t need to have seen the musical “Hamilton” to enjoy this, but if you have, it’ll bring the history behind the show alive. Free, all ages. Information: 815-943-4671, leticiag@ harvard-diggins.org or www.facebook.com/ events/237730453344067/. JON LOVITZ, 8 to 10 p.m. April 8, Raue Center for the Arts, 26 N. Williams St., Crystal Lake. Lovitz, a comedian, actor and singer, is best known as a cast member of “Saturday Night Live.” Tickets: $35-$45. Tickets and information: 815-356-9212 or https:// rauecenter.ticketforce.com.

APRIL 10 SECOND MONDAY FILM CLUB: “DARK HORSE,” 1 & 7 p.m. April 10, Classic Cinemas Woodstock Theatre, 209 Main St. The club gives movie fans the chance to see art, foreign, classic and documentary films on the second Monday of each month. “Dark Horse” is based on the true story of a barmaid in a poor Welsh mining village who convinces some of her fellow residents to pool their resources to compete in the “sport of Kings” with a racehorse they would breed and raise. Tickets: $6 for matinee and seniors, $8 for evening show. Tickets and information: 815-338-8555 or www. classiccinemas.com.

REGIONAL MARCH 31

FLASHLIGHT EGG HUNT, 8 to 9 p.m. March 31, Hart’s Woods Park, 814 Hart Road, Round Lake. The Easter Bunny is making a nighttime delivery of goodies and treats. Hot chocolate and cookies served after the hunt. Dress for the weather as this event will be held outdoors. For ages 9 to 12. Cost: $5. Information: www.rlapd.org.

APRIL 1 EASTER EGG HUNT, 1 to 3 p.m. April 1, St. Peter Lutheran Church, 18N377 Galligan Road, Gilberts. Along with a hunt will be a petting zoo and raffle prizes. Free. Information: 847-428-4054 or staff@ sonshinechristianprek.org. EGG SCRAMBLE, 10 to 11:30 a.m. April 1, Sports Center, 2004 Municipal Way, Round Lake Beach. Featuring demo classes, pictures with Mr. Bunny, crafts and egg hunts. Pre-register to reserve your spot. Egg hunt bags will be provided to each child. Cost: $1 a child. All proceeds will benefit the FUNds for Recreation Scholarship Program. Hunt for ages 3 to 4 from 10 to 10:30 am; ages 5 to 6 from 10:30 to 11 a.m.; ages 7 to 8 from 11 to 11:30 a.m. Information: www.rlapd.org.

APRIL 8 RUSSELL HUSTLE, 10 a.m. April 8, 980 Park Ave., Genoa. The 5K trail run winds through scenic tall grass prairie and woods. A 2K fun run on a wooded trail will follow at 11 a.m.. Cost: $25 for the 5K, $15 for the 2K. Race-day registration begins at 8 a.m. Information: bridoering@hotmail.com or http://trailrunner.com/

Born British, Died American... Reflections! Performance

SUNDAY MARCH 26TH 3PM

- A Theatrical Play “Born British, Died American”

Travel back in time and eavesdrop on Ben Franklin and his daughter as they work on his memoirs.

Historic Hain House 149 Hilltop Lake in the Hills, IL 847-567-5476 Tickets: $12.50 ea or 2/$20

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| Pl@y | Thursday, March 23, 2017 • NWHerald.com

“A VAUDEVILLE FIASCO,” 8 p.m. March 31, April 1, 7 & 8, The Other Side, 93 E. Berkshire Drive, Unit G, Crystal Lake. A new musical comedy created and collaboratively authored by Kellee and Sophia Stall, with writing support from local filmmaker Marty McGinley. Featuring local actors and musicians, the show is about nine zany characters who compete in a live variety show. A fundraiser for The Other Side, a nonprofit sober living community serving recovering addicts. Doors open at 7 p.m. each performance night with live gypsy jazz music by Of Wire and Wood and Vaudevillian-inspired entrees and desserts catered by “For the Food of it!” The play is appropriate for ages 10 and older. The March 31 show is sold out. Tickets: $15 in advance at www.inhabittheater.com or $20 at the door. For information on The Other Side, visit http:// the-other-side.org/.

MEET PAPA SMURF, noon to 4 p.m. April 2, Classic Cinemas Cinema 12 Theatre, 100 LW Besinger Drive, Carpentersville. With “The Smurfs: The Lost Village” opening April 7, Papa Smurf will make an appearance. Bring your camera. Free. Information: www.classiccinemas.com. VIRGINIA’S CHALLENGE LUNCHEON, 1 to 4 p.m. April 2, Dusty’s Pizza, 7613 Howe Road, Wonder Lake. Help Virginia Hartung raise funds for the Neighbors Food Pantry of Wonder Lake in honor of her 98th birthday on April 21. A volunteer of the pantry for more than 10 years, Hartung has set a fundraising goal every year around her birthday for the past several years. The pantry will receive 10 percent of all food sales during the event. The entire Dusty’s menu will be available, along with a $5 hot dog special for that day only. Also includes a silent auction, including White Sox and Rockford Ice Hog tickets. Information: 815-355-5459, contact@wlfoodpantry.com or www.facebook.com/ wlfoodpantry.

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NIGHTLIFE

‘Memorable theater’

NWHerald.com • Thursday, March 23, 2017

ON STAGE

| Pl@y |

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READ MORE STAGE NEWS AT NWHERALD. COM

William Street Rep’s ‘Any Other Name’ boasts stellar cast REVIEWS Paul Lockwood

To what lengths would you go if you were the proverbial starving artist? What if you also had a spouse depending on you? Would you compromise your morals, lie or commit a crime? That’s the predicament faced by British critic and aspiring poet Edward Ballard (Greg Carere) in “Any Other Name,” an award-winning play by George Brant that’s receiving its regional premiere in a Williams Street Repertory production at the Raue Center for the Arts in Crystal Lake. And the suspense of this wry thriller is in how those questions will be answered by Edward and his American wife, Margaret (Michele Vazquez). Director Brad Raimondo’s perfectly cast play has only two other characters: acclaimed poet John Clark (James Knight), who’s been in a dungeon-like Victorian England asylum for years, committed there by his since deceased wife; and publisher Andrew Maddock (Frank Gaughan), a cagey and cautious businessman whose company used to print Clark’s poems, but who never actually met Clark in his preinsanity days. As the play begins, Ballard has tracked down Clark, a poet whose first book did very well, but whose second book of verse was less appreciated by the critics and readers. Clark now believes himself to be William Shakespeare. Visiting Clark in what is the equivalent of a prison cell, Ballard gets him talking about Clark’s poetry and where a rumored third book of poems – as good as or better than the first – might be. Once Ballard worms his way into the good graces of “Shakespeare,” who seems to recall having met “Clark” at one point, he gets the information about where the poems are hidden, and we’re off and running with a well-crafted plot, the twists of which I will not reveal. Carere, an actor with New York credits who’s making his WSR debut, delivers a performance in which all of his reactions – from love to compassion to resignation to envy – feel genuine. Appearing in every scene in this two-act play, Ballard is a quasi-villain whose motivations and actions lead the audience to detest what he’s doing, while also pitying him for both the circumstances in which he finds himself and the limited options to survival.

British critic and aspiring poet Edward Ballard (Greg Carere) and his wife Margaret (Michele Vazquez) appear in “Any Other Name.” Photo provided courtesy of Jennifer Heim with Jennifer Heim Photography

“ANY OTHER NAME”

WHEN: March 17 through April 2 WHERE: Raue Center for the Arts, 26 N. Williams St., Crystal Lake. COST and INFO: Schedule: 8 p.m. March 24-25, 31 and April 1; 3 p.m. March 25-26 and April 2. Tickets: $32.50 to $38.50. Tickets and information: 815-356-9212 or https://rauecenter.ticketforce.com. WSR will transfer the show to Chicago’s Theater Wit, 1229 W. Belmont Ave., Chicago, where “Any Other Name” will run from April 21 through April 30. Vazquez, a WSR member who’s worked a lot with new plays (e.g., the Raue’s LAB Series), plays a character who was wooed by Ballard’s poems years ago; as Margaret says, they were “intoxicating – I was drunk on them.” That was then. Now, she’s trying her best to be encouraging to Ballard as he promises her, “I shall give you the poet you deserve.” Vazquez’s transformation of Margaret from a supportive, if worried, wife into something else is reason alone to see “Any Other Name.” Knight, who’s had major roles in WSR’s “A Streetcar Named Desire” and “Death of a Salesman” in recent years, truly embodies Clark. That’s the case from his first appearance on stage, writing frantically on the floor of his horrible cell dressed in rags, to his palpable hunger for simple things like bread and paper, to his inability to realize who he really is. All of us in the audience – seated on stage mere

feet away – sympathize with the depths to which this “Peasant Poet” has fallen. Last, but by no means least, Gaughan, an original WSR member making his 19th appearance on the Raue stage, earns the applause his scenes as Maddock brought on opening night. Maddock is a businessman who knows a lot about how to make money and how to motivate others to do what he suggests, no matter how unsavory those actions may be. After his first appearance, the audience was ready and eager to smile whenever Gaughan was in a scene. Intrigued? Two advisories if you’re going to the show: • There’s no late seating for this production because of the configuration of the stage, so make sure you arrive early. • The play runs through April 2 at the Raue, but it’ll be transferring to Chicago’s Theater Wit April 21-30. My suggestion: see “Any Other Name” here first so you can brag to your Chicago friends about the quality of what’s coming. This production merges a fascinating script with four outstanding actors, and the result is memorable theater.

• Paul Lockwood is past president of TownSquare Players (TSP) and an occasional community theater actor, appearing in more 30 plays, musicals and revues since he and his wife moved to Woodstock in 2001. Recent shows include “A Christmas Carol” (2014, 2016), “Into the Woods” and “The Drowsy Chaperone,” all at the Woodstock Opera House, where he’ll be in “9 to 5: The Musical,” opening March 31. He’s also performed in dramatic readings at Le Petit Marché (Get LIT[erary]) and at the Raue Center for the Arts (Williams St. Repertory LAB Series).


Photo provided courtesy of Joel Maisonet

Jackalope Theatre’s ‘The Snare’ fascinates, but is a bit repetitive REVIEWS

“THE SNARE”

Mary Beth Euker

WHEN: Through April 1 WHERE: Broadway Armory Park, 5917 N. Broadway, Chicago COST & INFO: A world premiere presented by Jackalope Theatre Company. Ruth is your average eighth-grader, keeping busy with homework, vying to be captain of her basketball team, and trying to be more like her babysitter. When Ruth mentions at the dinner table that the Devil has been talking to her, her pastor mom and family struggle to help Ruth fight something only she can see. In this world premiere play about faith, doubt, and growing up, the question is: who will you believe? Tickets cost $25. Tickets and information: www.jackalopetheatre.org.

“The battleline between good and evil runs through the heart of every man.” – Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn “The Snare,” in a world debut, by Samantha Beach, is playing at Jackalope Theatre through April 1. The interplay of good and evil is well played out in this family of four onstage at Chicago Armory Park on Broadway. The pathway to the actual theater in this beautiful, vintage venue is decompressing and enveloping. Once upstairs, you find yourself tucked into a voyeuristic set that is designed realistically by Ashley Woods. It is the perfect venue for this piece. It’s as if someone cut a large dollhouse in half and you can eerily look in on the residents in their mixed-up, chopped-up dichotomy of a life. The dialogue in “The Snare” is well written and credible. It is a story that sets forth a modern day struggle, not just between good and evil, but the further reaches of the spectrum, God and the Devil. The messages and themes are many, perhaps a few too many. Stronger focus by this author on one or two conflicts would be sufficient. The minor frays are unnecessary and dilute the power of the main message. In addition, while the family of actors is fascinating to watch, the show is a bit too long and repetitive. The audience should be able to savor the tasty parts of the show. All of the actors do a phenomenal job of delivering the dialogue with accuracy and rapid fire style. A mountain of lines to learn along with cues and blocking could not have been an easy task. The action rarely stops and neither does the slow ebb of character development. The standouts are Sloane, the family nanny and confidant played with realistic precision by Paloma

Nozicka, and Ruth, the eighth-grade daughter who is hearing the Devil’s voice inside her. Ruth is played by Caroline Heffernan with teen angst and confusion and the push and pull that a teen surfaces with daily. At times, it causes you to question whether the Devil actually is speaking to her or she simply is weathering her teen years poorly. The technical aspects of the show, including sound and lighting, help to bring you into the lives of the family so you can enjoy the back and forth of the dialogue, much like the basketball scenes, which were so beautifully and accurately written you feel as if you are at the actual game. Jackalope is a daring theater company that has launched many edgy productions and will continue to do so. It is one to continue to enjoy and watch. Catch yourself in “The Snare.”

CARY COUNTRY CLUB NOW OPEN ON FRIDAYS

THIS WEEKS SPECIAL

Shrimp Linguini with Salad Bar $15.99

All You Can Eat Friday Fish Fry

Haddock, Baked, Fried or Combo with Choice of Potato and Salad Bar

$12.99 Buy any 2 dinners and get $5.00 off All Fridays in March 2017 with this coupon

CARY COUNTRY CLUB

2400 Grove Lane, Cary

847-639-9494 for Reservations

• Mary Beth Euker is a co-founder of Cricket Theatre Company in Lake Zurich and has been in several local community theater productions in Woodstock and Skokie. SM-CL0407780

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| Pl@y | Thursday, March 23, 2017 • NWHerald.com

‘Dichotomy of a life’

Cyd Blakewell and Paloma Nozicka appear in “The Snare,” a world premiere by Jackalope Theatre Company.


NWHerald.com • Thursday, March 23, 2017

| Pl@y |

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Get drawn into Theatrevolt trilogy REVIEWS Paul Lockwood “Reflections & Perspectives,” the Theatrevolt production playing through next weekend in downtown McHenry, is an all-encompassing title for three short plays by suburban playwright Carl Zeitler. In the intimate surroundings of the Hidden Pearl Café, you can’t resist being drawn into each of the slice-of-life one-act plays. All three make you think, laugh or both. Add in the guitar and vocal music of Danny Mitchell, featured before the show and during the transitions between plays, and you get the feeling this Hidden Pearl performance will be, well, a gem. Are all three shows – none of them lasting more than 15 minutes or so – gems in this setting? Not entirely, but they each have definite appeal. Let me explain. “Wedded Bliss… Or Not” was my favorite of the three on opening night Saturday. Donny (Tim Vance) is a Bears fan settling in to watch his beloved team on TV on a fall Sunday afternoon. His wife, Lisa (Trace Gamache), has other plans for the next quarter-hour. She wants Donny to join her in answering a five-question magazine survey that should result in a rating for their marriage. Donny knows this is treacherous territory, but faced with the choice of a brief detour from the game to complete the survey or a long “field trip” to Crate & Barrel, he takes the poll, which includes the nowin question “What do you think was most memorable about our first kiss?” Vance and Gamache have fun with this scenario, and you believe their relationship. That helps them get the most laughs of the evening, including Lisa’s response after one particularly creative, but wrong answer: “I don’t know whether to laugh, throw up or submit it for publication.” A blind date at a restaurant on a Friday night is the setting for the second play, “A Smattering of Perspective,” starring Lynn Sciaraffa (director of all three one-acts) and Jim Pierce as the ill-fated couple who’ve been fixed up and Joshua Szeszol as their inattentive waiter. The framing device used for this play is that Sloan (Sciaraffa’s character) and Pierce (the character played coincidentally by Pierce) are shown individually talking on their smartphones to the friends who set them up,

“REFLECTIONS AND PERSPECTIVES” WHEN: 7 p.m. March 25 & 2 p.m. March 26 WHERE: Hidden Pearl Café, 1208 N. Green St., McHenry COST & INFO: Featuring a collection of plays by Carl Zeitler presented by Theatrevolt. Plays are entitled “A Smattering of Perspective,” “Wedded Bliss...or Not” and “And Then What?” Tickets: $15 general admission. A portion of the proceeds will benefit Hidden Pearl Café as it moves to a new location. Information: 815-322-9765, https://allevents.in/mchenry or find Theatrevolt on Facebook.

Photos provided

CLOCKWISE FROM LEFT: Jim Pierce (from left), Joshua Szeszol and Lynn Sciaraffa of Woodstock appear in “A Smattering of Perspective.” Tim Vance and Trace Gamache will find happiness or heartache in “Wedded Bliss...Or Not.” Regina Belt-Daniels and Vance will explore the afterlife in “And Then What?” each giving a very different account of the date. We then flash back to some of their date, such as the early part of the evening when he quotes “Star Trek” and she’s hung up on reality TV shows of all kinds. Not as many laughs here, but we all can relate to the awkwardness of a first date, let alone a blind date. Sciaraffa and Pierce’s characters don’t have much chemistry together, but that makes sense: they wouldn’t. At one point, a character says this date “had trainwreck written all over it.” Whether the two can salvage the date kept my interest. The final play, “And Then What?,” takes place in what appears to be a doctor’s waiting room area, except we soon find out both Charles (Tim Vance) and Christine (Regina Belt-Daniels) are dead. So is this a waystation on the way to heaven or to another location? “The

Host” (Steve Morris) isn’t saying. We do know some time has passed since each of them died, since each heard voices at their own funeral service. As Charles and Christine chat, they get to know each other well and their chemistry is apparent. “And then what?” is asked multiple times during the play; it’s also an appropriate question on my mind at the end, because I wanted to know more about these characters, where they truly were, and whether they’d have a chance to continue their new friendship. Note: There was one prop that took me out of this “reality” – an issue of Reminiscing magazine that was supposed to be a Life magazine about Pearl Harbor. The “Reflections & Perspectives” performances partially are benefitting the Hidden Pearl as it prepares to move out of its current location. So this is a

perfect opportunity to show support for theater on a real shoestring. Just take an hour or so out of your weekend and enjoy some humorous, thoughtful entertainment in a unique coffeehouse environment.

• Paul Lockwood is past president of TownSquare Players (TSP) and an occasional community theater actor, appearing in more than 30 plays, musicals and revues since he and his wife moved to Woodstock in 2001. Recent shows include “A Christmas Carol” (2014, 2016), “Into the Woods” and “The Drowsy Chaperone,” all at the Woodstock Opera House, where he’ll be in “9 to 5, The Musical,” opening March 31. He’s also performed in dramatic readings at Le Petit Marché (Get LIT[erary]) and at the Raue Center for the Arts (Williams Street Repertory LAB Series).


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Award-winning duo

Crystal Lake twin filmmakers earn accolades for short drama

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By JAMI KUNZER

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Already an award-winning filmmaking duo, Crystal Lake twins Adrian and Andrew Nuno are at it again. The latest honor for the two McHenry County College graduates, who now both are studying communications and media at DePaul University in Chicago, comes from the IndieFEST Film Awards. Their short film, “Don’t Be Afraid,” has been honored with an Award of Recognition. The 6-minute film, set in Crystal Lake and available on YouTube.com, centers on a young woman coming to terms with her future on the night before her senior year of college begins. “It was one of those stories that kind of popped into Andrew’s head one night,” said Adrian, who was the film’s editor, co-producer and director of photography. Along with writing the film, Andrew was co-producer. The two have formed the film company Diginamic Productions, and the company’s Facebook page also has a link to the film. “The central idea I was dealing with was the idea of loss,” Andrew said. “Especially in regards to the future, whenever we encounter loss, it definitely has its way of making us feel uncertain. I wanted to use the idea of loss in the context of a girl about to start her senior year of college. She’s not sure what’s going to happen when she enters the real world.” Receiving entries from throughout the world, the California-based IndieFEST Film Awards recognizes film, television, videography and new media professionals, with entries judged by professionals in the film and television industry. Past high-profile winners have

Adrian and Andrew Nuno

included Liam Neeson, as the narrator of “Live They Nature, A Path Appears” documentary featuring George Clooney and Blake Lively; “Radical Grace,” executive produced by Susan Sarandon; and “Touched with Fire,” starring Katie Holmes. “From the very beginning, our goal was to tell a story that was hopeful, thought-provoking, but, most of all, real. And this story had the right combination of all those qualities,” Adrian said. The two intend to enter the film in other contests. A film they created while attending MCC, “Before I Go,” won Best Feature at the 2016 Lucent Film Fest & Awards, based in San Antonio, Texas. That film – a 1-hour, 2-minute drama about a collage-age man who learns he has cancer as a result of the Hepatitis B virus – was created using a found footage format, a type of format typically used in horror and science

fiction films, such as “The Blair Witch Project.” The twins say they are drawn to suburban settings at night, the type of setting portrayed in “Don’t Be Afraid,” which stars Dylan Eddy and Olivia Jensen, both of Crystal Lake. Gannon Smith worked on the sound mix for the film. “I’ve always viewed night almost like a character in itself,” Andrew said. “You have to play with so many colors, so many kinds of things, lighting-wise.” With films always in the works, the duo’s next project is a dramatic comedy with a working title of “Little Things.” With an idea conceived by Andrew and written by Lauryn Lugo of Crystal Lake, the longer film deals with suicide. After DePaul, the twins say they likely will move to Austin, Texas, which has an emerging indie film scene.

| Pl@y | Thursday, March 23, 2017 • NWHerald.com

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A scene from the short film, “Don’t Be Afraid,” starring Dylan Eddy and Olivia Jensen, both of Crystal Lake.


OPENING FRIDAY

NIGHTLIFE

NWHerald.com • Thursday, March 23, 2017

MOVIES

| Pl@y |

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In this image released by Lionsgate, Naomi Scott (from left), RJ Cyler, Dacre Montgomery, Ludi Lin and Becky G appear in a scene from “Power Rangers.” AP photo

READ MORE MOVIE REVIEWS ON OUR WEBSITE

‘Power Rangers’ reboot is cheesy, self-serious

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The new movies “Life,” (above) and “CHIPS” also are scheduled for release Friday. Find more reviews online at NWHerald.com.

By LINDSEY BAHR The Associated Press

There’s a question every piece of intellectual property needs to ask itself before a new version is made: How seriously should we treat the source material? There’s no right answer. There’ve been successful versions of both. Irreverent and meta takes on dated or impossible material have worked (usually thanks to Phil Lord and Chris Miller) as have deathly serious interpretations. In the case of “Power Rangers,” that cheesy Saturday morning show that cobbled together shameless merchandising goals, dubbed Japanese action footage and sanitized high school shenanigans, they went mostly serious. And it might not have been the best call for a story that still involves a villain named Rita Repulsa who wanders around town eating gold. But we’ll get to her later. Even with such campy morsels to play with, the vibe director Dean Israelite seems to be going for is “Friday Night Lights” meets “Fantastic Four,” which actually isn’t totally awful at the beginning as we meet the five high school students destined to wield their newly found superpowers to save the world. There’s the star football player, Ja-

“POWER RANGERS” STARRING: Dacre Montgomery, Naomi Scott, RJ Cyler PLOT: A group of high-school kids, who are infused with unique superpowers, harness their abilities in order to save the world. RATED: PG-13 for sequences of sci-fi violence, action and destruction, language, and for some crude humor RUNNING TIME: 2 hours, 4 minutes son (Dacre Montgomery), who’s rebelling against his good-boy image; the once-popular girl Kimberly (Naomi Scott, who looks like a combination of Sarah Michelle Gellar and Emma Roberts); the “on-the-spectrum” Billy (RJ Cyler); the mysterious new girl Trini (Becky G.); and the adventurous Zack (Ludi Lin). They’re angsty teens with secrets and zero perspective so imagine how weird things get when they all happen to be hanging out one night in a restricted mining area, stumble upon some jewels, get into a would-be fatal car crash and wake up with the ability to crush iPhones and scale mountains. It’s hard to muck up the excitement of testing out your newfound superpowers, but then the ridiculous plot has to kick in (and all the requisite origin story clichés) and you can see

the film struggling to maintain its straight face while Bryan Cranston’s pin art face bellows at the Rangers and Elizabeth Banks’ Rita Repulsa devours every piece of gold she can find. Banks actually is fairly fun in the part – she snivels and sneers with campy glee under the pounds of zombie makeup as she fiendishly terrorizes some engagement ring shoppers at a jewelry store like she’s the only one who understands what movie she’s in. But good lord does this film overstay its very conditional welcome. Israelite, who also made the occasionally riveting found-footage, time-travel pic “Project Almanac,” gives the images some grit and visual interest, but the story just spends too much time on the maudlin coming-of-age and teambuilding. A little less therapy and a little more action would have gone a long way in the mushy middle section. By the time the Power Rangers figure out how to morph, you’re already looking for a way to morph out of the theater, which is a shame because for whatever it’s worth, the cheesiest, most Power Rangers-y moments are saved for the final battle. Much like the teens at the center, “Power Rangers” goes through some awkward growing pains in real time trying to figure out what movie it wants to be or even should be.


This Week’s PlanitSave.com

AP photo

‘CHiPs’ TV fans poised to hate ‘CHIPS’ movie Hardcore “CHiPs” fans hate it, and the real California Highway Patrol seems not quite sure what to make of it. But Larry Wilcox, who rode his motorcycle to everlasting fame in the old “CHiPs” TV series, says, for now, he’ll give the benefit of the doubt to “CHIPS,” the forthcoming film based loosely – very loosely – on the show that made him and Erik Estrada two of the biggest stars of the 1970s and early ’80s. “I have not seen the film, but the trailers looked like a soft-porn version of ‘Dumb and Dumber,’ ” Wilcox said recently. “However, I hear the actors are both very talented and funny, so maybe it all works.” Fans of the original “CHiPs,” still widely seen in reruns and on DVD, are far less forgiving. They’ve been posting angry messages all over the internet since the first trailers for the R-rated action comedy emerged, calling it garbage and disrespectful to police officers. In a lengthy “open letter” to Dax Shepard, Sue Walsh of New York accuses the film’s writer, director and costar of mocking the original show with a ridiculous remake filled with nudity, penis jokes and raunchy bathroom humor. (She left out big-breasted women, but they’re in there, too.) “ ‘CHiPs’ was not just a ’70s cop show. It wasn’t Shakespeare, no, but it did and does mean a whole lot to a whole lot of people,” said Walsh, who is organizing a 40th anniversary reunion of the show this fall most of the original cast is expected to attend. To understand why fans are so upset, one must remember what a gentle, family-oriented show “CHiPs” was. CHP Sgt. Jon Baker (played by Wilcox) and his partner, Estrada’s Officer Frank “Ponch” Poncherello, were hunky young straight-arrow cops cruising sun-splashed, surprisingly uncrowded LA freeways on their motorcycles when not cracking jokes or flirting

McHenry 815-385-2011

“CHIPS” STARRING: Michael Peña, Dax Shepard, Jessica McNamee PLOT: A rookie officer is teamed with a hardened pro at the California Highway Patrol, though the newbie soon learns his partner is really an undercover Fed investigating a heist that may involve some crooked cops. RATED: R for crude sexual content, graphic nudity, pervasive language, some violence and drug use TIME: 1 hour, 40 minutes harmlessly with cute female sheriff’s deputies. To the thump of a persistent disco track, Baker and Ponch kept busy rescuing people from cars, occasionally solving folks’ personal problems and frequently chasing down miscreants without ever drawing their weapons. “I know that there are people that grew up watching ‘CHiPs,’ and that was part of the reason they decided to join the department,” CHP spokeswoman Fran Clader said. In the film version, however, Shepard and Michael Mena’s Baker and Ponch are anything but straight arrows. They accidentally destroy vehicles, cause fiery crashes, blow stuff up and sometimes shoot the wrong people. “I understand it’s a broad comedy,” Clader said. The CHP did grant the producers some technical assistance, for which the agency was reimbursed. But there’s also this disclaimer at the beginning of “CHIPS”: “This film is not endorsed by the California Highway Patrol. At all.” And sharp-eyed fans will notice the title punctuation of “CHIPS” was changed from the original “CHiPs,” further distancing the film from the department. Estrada, who has a cameo, did not respond to multiple phone and email messages. But in a video clip from a recent premiere, he described it as “a movie you have to view with your adult sense of humor.”

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| Pl@y | Thursday, March 23, 2017 • NWHerald.com

Dax Shepard (left) and Michael Pena appear in “CHIPS.”


NWHerald.com • Thursday, March 23, 2017

| Pl@y |

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WEEKEND SHOWTIMES

The following are showtimes for March 24-26 unless otherwise noted.

“BEAUTY AND THE BEAST”

AMC Lake in the Hills 12 – March 24: 2D: 10:30, 11:00 a.m., 12:00, 1:30, 3:00, 3:30, 4:30, 7:30, 9:00, 10:00 p.m.; 3D: 11:30 a.m., 12:30, 2:30, 5:30, 6:30, 8:30, 9:30 p.m.; March 25: SENSORY FRIENDLY FILM SHOWING: 11:00 a.m. 2D: 10:30, 12:00, 1:30, 3:00, 3:30, 4:30, 7:30, 9:00, 10:00 p.m.; 3D: 11:30 a.m., 12:30, 2:30, 5:30, 6:30, 8:30, 9:30 p.m.; March 26: 2D: 10:30, 11:00 a.m., 12:00, 1:30, 3:00, 3:30, 4:30, 7:30, 9:00, 10:00 p.m.; 3D: 11:30 a.m., 12:30, 2:15, 5:15, 6:30, 8:15, 9:30 p.m. Classic Cinemas Carpentersville – 2D: 10:20, 11:00, 11:40 a.m., 1:00, 1:40, 2:20, 4:20, 5:00, 6:20, 7:00, 7:40, 9:00, 9:40, 10:20 p.m.; 3D: 3:40 p.m. Classic Cinemas Woodstock – March 24: 11:00, 11:40 a.m., 1:00, 1:40, 2:20, 3:40, 4:20, 5:00, 6:20, 7:00, 7:40, 9:00, 9:40, 10:20 p.m.; March 25-26: extra 10:20 a.m. showing; March 26: extra 10:20 a.m. showing, but no 10:20 p.m. showing Regal Cinemas – March 24: 2D: 10:00, 11:00 a.m., 12:00, 12:15, 12:50, 2:10, 3:10, 3:50, 5:10, 6:10, 7:00, 8:10, 9:10, 10:00, 11:10 p.m.; 3D: 11:30 a.m., 1:30, 2:40, 4:30, 5:40, 7:30, 8:40, 10:30 p.m.; March 25-26: No 2D 10:00 a.m. and 12:15 p.m. showings

“THE BELKO EXPERIMENT”

AMC Lake in the Hills 12 – 5:30, 7:45, 10:30 p.m. Classic Cinemas Carpentersville – 11:30 a.m., 1:30, 3:30, 5:30, 7:30, 9:30 p.m.

“CHIPS”

AMC Lake in the Hills 12 – 11:45 a.m., 2:15, 4:45, 8:00, 10:30 p.m. Classic Cinemas Carpentersville – 10:20 a.m., 12:35, 2:50, 5:05, 7:20, 9:35 p.m. Classic Cinemas Woodstock – March 24: 12:35, 2:50, 5:05, 7:20, 9:35 p.m.; March 25-26: extra 10:20 a.m. showing Regal Cinemas – 12:10, 3:00, 5:30, 8:20, 11:00 p.m.

“GET OUT”

AMC Lake in the Hills 12 – 2:50, 5:20, 7:50, 10:20 p.m. Classic Cinemas Carpentersville – 12:20, 2:40, 5:00, 7:20, 9:40 p.m. Regal Cinemas – March 24 & 26: 11:40 a.m., 2:50, 5:50, 8:30, 11:05 p.m.; March 25: no 2:50 p.m. showing

“KONG: SKULL ISLAND”

AMC Lake in the Hills 12 – 11:50 a.m., 1:50, 4:40, 7:40, 10:30 p.m. Classic Cinemas Carpentersville – 10:45, 11:45 a.m., 1:20, 2:20, 3:55, 4:55, 6:30, 7:30, 9:05, 10:05 p.m.

Whether a large wedding or intimate party, this historic home has the ideal amenities to fit your needs.

Classic Cinemas Woodstock – 11:25 a.m., 2:00, 4:35, 7:10, 9:45 p.m. Regal Cinemas – 2D: 11:20 a.m., 3:20, 6:20 p.m.; 3D: 10:55 p.m.

“THE LAST WORD”

Regal Cinemas – 12:30, 3:30, 6:50, 10:10 p.m.

“THE LEGO BATMAN MOVIE”

AMC Lake in the Hills 12 – 11:15 a.m., 3:00, 6:20 p.m. Regal Cinemas – 11:20 a.m., 2:00, 4:40, 7:20 p.m.

“LIFE”

AMC Lake in the Hills 12 – March 24-25: 11:10 a.m., 1:45, 4:20, 7:00, 9:40 p.m.; March 26: 11:10 a.m., 1:45, 4:20, 7:15, 10:30 p.m. Classic Cinemas Carpentersville – 10:20 a.m., 12:40, 3:00, 5:20, 7:40, 10:00 p.m. Classic Cinemas Woodstock – March 24: 12:40, 3:00, 5:20, 7:40, 10:00 p.m.; March 25-26: extra 10:20 a.m. showing Regal Cinemas – 11:10, 11:50 a.m., 1:50, 2:30, 4:50, 5:20, 7:40, 8:00, 10:15, 10:40 p.m.

“LOGAN”

AMC Lake in the Hills 12 – 1:00, 4:10, 7:20, 9:00 p.m. Classic Cinemas Carpentersville – 10:20

a.m., 1:15, 4:10, 7:05, 10:00 p.m. Classic Cinemas Woodstock – March 24: 1:15, 4:10, 7:05, 10:00 p.m.; March 25-26: extra 10:20 a.m. showing Regal Cinemas – March 24 & 26: 11:15 a.m., 1:00, 4:20, 7:50, 9:20 p.m.; March 25: 11:15 a.m., 2:35, 7:50, 9:20 p.m.

“THE METROPOLITAN OPERA: IDOMENEO”

Regal Cinemas – March 25 only: 11:55 a.m.

“POWER RANGERS”

AMC Lake in the Hills 12 – March 24-25: 11:00 a.m., 2:00, 5:00, 7:15, 10:10, 10:30 p.m.; March 26: 11:00 a.m., 2:00, 5:00, 7:00, 9:45, 10:15 p.m. Classic Cinemas Carpentersville – 10:20, 11:10 a.m., 1:00, 1:50, 3:40, 4:30, 6:20, 7:10, 9:00, 9:50 p.m. Classic Cinemas Woodstock – 10:50 a.m., 1:30, 4:10, 6:50, 9:30 p.m. Regal Cinemas – 12:40, 1:10, 3:40, 4:10, 6:40, 7:10, 9:50, 10:20 p.m.

“THE SHACK”

AMC Lake in the Hills 12 – 11:20 a.m., 2:20, 5:30 p.m. Regal Cinemas –9:30 p.m.

“SLAMMA JAMMA”

Regal Cinemas – 2:20, 5:15, 8:05, 10:45 p.m.

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Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Thursday, March 23, 2017 •

CLASSIFIED 17

Check off your backyard bucket list: seed, weed and feed

(BPT) - From Sunday picnics and impromptu barbecues to games of catch, make your lawn center stage this spring. Everyone longs for a lush, green lawn, but many homeowners aren’t sure how to achieve it. In fact, although 81 percent of Americans do their own lawn care, 69 percent say their lawns could be better, and nearly a third aren’t sure how to grow a healthy lawn, according to a survey by the National Association of Landscape Professionals. A strong, green lawn can give back to you in so many ways and getting there is easier than you think. The lawn health experts at Scotts(R) say the keys to a great lawn are seed, weed and feed. Seed Did winter do a number on your lawn? Heavy foot traffic, plows, snow shovels and salt can damage your turf, and after the first melt visible dirt spots and dead zones may appear. When spring temperatures reach 60 degrees or higher, seeds will germinate best and it’s time to repair winter damage. Patch and repair your lawn to fill in bare spots, help crowd out weeds and strengthen your grass to help withstand heat and drought. Start by removing debris and dead grass in the surrounding area, and loosen hard soil, this will help grass seedlings take root.

Evenly apply a quality seed, like Scotts(R) EZ Seed(R), so the bare area is mostly covered, but bare ground is still visible. Be sure to only apply the recommended amount so that seedlings have enough space to access water and nutrients. Scotts(R) EZ Seed(R) is a combination of fertilizer, grass seed and super absorbent mulch that is guaranteed to grow grass anywhere with proper care,

whether on a hill or slope, or in a densely-shaded area. Weed Preserve your healthy and beautiful lawn by keeping it free of weeds. Common weeds like dandelions and clover can choke out healthy grass. Therefore, it’s important to address weeds in spring so they won’t have a chance to thrive in summer. Removing weeds can be a challenge, especially if any roots are left behind as they can quickly grow into a new plant. Get rid of weeds by using a weed-control product like the improved Scotts(R) Turf Builder(R) Weed & Feed. It is formulated with up

to two times more powerful control of dandelions and clover compared to the previous formula, so it kills weeds and feeds grass to make it green and thick. Feed Continuing to feed your established lawn is critical to its nutrition and overall success. Your lawn requires feeding about every six weeks, and its nutritional needs will vary throughout the season. Choosing the right food at the right time can help ensure your lawn stays thick and green all spring and summer. For example, if your yard needs a boost towards the end of spring use Scotts(R) Green Max(RM) Lawn Food, it provides

your lawn with essential nutrients, like iron, that give grass its rich green color in just three days. No two lawns are alike. A number of factors including where you live or whether you have a sunny or shady backyard affect how to treat your grass. Not sure which products are right? Download the MyLawn app from Scotts(R) for a personalized care plan that will help you achieve your desired results. To make the most out of your green space, visit www.scotts. com for inspiration and information on lawn care products.


18 CLASSIFIED • Thursday, March 23, 2017

• Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

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Maples at the Sonatas | Woodstock, IL (815) 334-0340 | WilcoxCommunities.com

REAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS ALGONQUIN $136,500, 2313 Dawson Ln, Algonquin 60102-5986, 19-32-181-030-0000, Alexis Rachwalski To Melissa Daich, December 30 $204,000, 2111 Cumberland Pkwy, Algonquin 601024202, 19-35-453-002-0000, James C Dayton To Deborah Bond, December 16 $160,000, 5 Clara Ct, Algonquin 60102-6848, 19-30-326-017-0000, Fannie Mae To Ankur N Patel & Bhumikbaen Patel, March 7 $287,000, 285 Aberdeen Dr, Algonquin 60102-1734, 1929-480-017-0000, Glenn J Reidel To Bonnie Strejc & Eric Strejc, November 30 $119,000, 1130 Prairie Dr, Algonquin 60102-4250, 1935-252-008-0000, Basner Trust To Leonardo Ruiz & Maria Erendida Lopez, November 30 $140,000, 1909 Ozark Pkwy, Algonquin 60102-4264, 19-35-454-033-0000, Ryan Shaner To Anthony M Pratola Sr, December 19 $210,000, 1153 Holly Ln, Algonquin 60102-1973, 19-28-382-018-0000, William A Dennis To Jenna Hans, December 27 $291,500, 460 Tuscany Dr, Algonquin 60102-6217, 1826-479-007-0000, Michael P Hernon To Michael Gomolsi & Jacquelyn Gomolsi, March 3 $210,000, 1320 Yellowstone Pkwy, Algonquin 601025422, 19-35-401-037-0000, Anthony M Mensik To Milton Vazquez, December 30 $119,000, 1130 Prairie Dr, Algonquin 60102-4250, 19-35-252-008-0000, Joseph Sanchez To Leonardo Ruiz & Maria Erendida Lopez, November 30 $245,000, 710 Fairfield Ln, Algonquin 60102-4301, 1932-227-009-0000, Michael P Bobek To Evelio Montesinos, January 3 $310,000, 519 N Harrison St, Algonquin 60102-2438, 19-27-384-005-0000, Rosebud Holdings Llc To Salvatoere Prato Jr, January 4

$165,000, 9 Grandview Ct, Algonquin 60102-1993, 19-28-302-182-0000, Magdalena Kikolska To Angelika B Walker, February 23 $247,000, 2019 Clematis Dr, Algonquin 60102-4236, 19-35-206-002-0000, Patrick M Reilly To Anyn E Osorto, March 1 $238,000, 4320 Whitehall Ln, Algonquin 60102-6292, 18-25-351-096-0000, Susan M Potter To Robin Queenan, March 3 $189,000, 56 Kelsey Ct, Algonquin 60102-6810, 19-30403-086-0000, Patrick C Pendleton To Daniel Palubicki, March 3 $219,000, 1720 Thorneapple Ln, Algonquin 601023934, 19-35-178-022-0000, Brian C Padley To Alec F Ponce, March 6 $305,000, 2031 Tunbridge Trl, Algonquin 60102-6023, 19-32-326-032-0000, John K Larson To Christophr Bernard Bailey, December 28 $335,000, 3798 Monterey Cir, Algonquin 60102-6342, 18-36-377-021-0000, William Ryan Homes Inc To Jose Bustos & Jessica Bustos, January 4 $153,000, 124 Mohawk Trl, Algonquin 60102-1832, 19-26-155-008-0000, Reimagined Property Llc To Sahid Bibriescas Chaves & Yassel J Ascencio, January 3 $300,000, 195 Lake Dr S, Algonquin 60102-1730, 19-29402-008-0000, Matthew Bevenino To Angela M Zera & Anthony Y Atamian, March 2 $152,500, 246 Grandview Ct, Algonquin 60102-1992, 19-28-302-093-0000, Keith M Marc To Blake R Regan & Vicotria L Irwin, January 5 BARRINGTON $720,000, 212 Braeburn Rd, Barrington 60010-9661, 20-30-100-108-0000, David Phillips To James S Gineris & Glenna J Gineris, November 28

CARY $160,000, 727 Cimarron Dr, Cary 60013-3361, 19-11482-007-0000, Us Bank Na To Anna Paice, March 3 $199,000, 340 Haber Rd, Cary 60013-3224, 19-14-408005-0000, Thomas Shukas To Derrick Ross & Olimpia Jaret Ross, February 23 $390,000, 7215 Horseshoe Ct, Cary 60013-6323, 20-08-128-015-0000, Jeffry T Vaughn To David R Cooke & Deborah S Cooke, December 1 $352,000, 1300 Mulberry Ln, Cary 60013-1853, 19-14101-001-0000, Larry L Wellendort To Joseph A Butsci & Virgaina M Butsci, January 5 $120,000, 176 Detroit St 3, Cary 60013-6608, 20-18352-003-0000, E W O Ltd To John Lichtenberger & Mary Lichtenberger, January 4 $122,500, 154 Ross Ave, Cary 60013-2809, 20-18-152026-0000, David A Janssen To Bradley G Moberg & Maria D Moberg, January 3 $445,000, 316 Sterling Cir, Cary 60013-1508, 19-01452-014-0000, Mark Hornok To Daniel A Mendro & Jana L Mendro, January 3 $239,000, 359 Hillhurst Dr, Cary 60013-2292, 20-07460-008-0000, Lou Lago To Marty J Curtis, March 6 $140,500, 1341 New Haven Dr, Cary 60013-1805, 19-11303-020-0000, Yaseen M Ali To Alex B Water, January 3 $133,500, 6514 Pheasant Trl, Cary 60013-1334, 19-01258-007-0000, Hsbc Bank Usa To Maria Del Rosario Silva, December 30 $129,500, 10 Silver Tree Cir, Cary 60013-1554, 19-12103-142-0000, North Shore Holdings Ltd To Alexandra J Kane, December 28 $153,000, 466 New Haven Dr, Cary 60013-1811, 19-11304-019-0000, Eric J Greeiss To Anna Wesolik, December 28 $210,000, 2805 Killarney Dr, Cary 60013-1531, 19-01183-004-0000, Ryan A Lamm To Pennie Davis, December 21

$152,000, 457 W Margaret Ter, Cary 60013-2161, 19-12329-006-0000, Kelbry Properties Llc To Nathan C Popp, December 20 $170,000, 445 E Marquette Ave, Cary 60013, 2018-377-001-0000, Fuchs Trust To Wiilmar Cummings, December 21 $193,000, 846 Pin Oak Cir, Cary 60013-1687, 20-07327-024-0000, Debra F Roti To Kimberly Basso Guerentz, December 20 $138,000, 360 New Haven Dr, Cary 60013-1812, 19-11355-007-0000, Jeanette M Prestia To Jaroslaw Zawartka, December 20 $241,500, 420 Moraine Hill Dr, Cary 60013-3128, 20-07376-008-0000, Roger Masscy To Jeremy David Brizzi Iii, December 19 $225,000, 323 Bryan Dr, Cary 60013-3116, 20-07-458001-0000, Ross T Liggett To Bonaldi Kresanto, December 15 $122,500, 16 Forest Ln, Cary 60013-1523, 19-12-103136-0000, Roberta J Smith To Gilberto Conde & Amanda Rigsby, March 7 $153,000, 596 New Haven Dr, Cary 60013-1807, 1911-304-006-0000, William Harkin To Robert Johnson & Melanie Johnson, March 3 $407,500, 3 Walnut Ridge Ct, Cary 60013-1623, 19-12253-020-0041, Ridgefiel Homes Llc To Adam Hansen & Ashley Hansen, March 6 $199,000, 40 W Margaret Ter, Cary 60013-2154, 1912-428-024-0000, Kohlhass Trust To Kyle Smith & Sarah Smith, November 28 $202,000, 721 Big Sky Trl, Cary 60013-1953, 19-11-481022-0000, Us Bank Na To Lou Fraterrigo & Jacqueline Talach, March 2 CRYSTAL LAKE $139,500, 448 Berkshire Dr, Crystal Lake 60014-7400, 19-07-277-034-0000, Wendy Sass To Cody J Belcher,


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Thursday, March 23, 2017 •

CLASSIFIED 19

REAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS December 19 $279,000, 239 Foxford Dr, Crystal Lake 60014, 20-06326-004-0000, Timothy F Guest To Matthew Wegrzyn & Athena Loukopoulos, March 6 $210,000, 570 Kimer Ct, Crystal Lake 60012-3360, 14-29-353-012-0000, Schaffer Trust To Christopher H Daly & Allison Daly, March 6 $193,000, 743 Regency Park Dr, Crystal Lake 600148592, 19-18-126-049-0000, Leila Bauer To James G Daleo & Beth R Daleo, March 3 $264,000, 17778 Thomasville Ln, Crystal Lake 60014, 19-19-151-009-0000, Kristie O Scarpelli To Todd A Steelmach & Anne L Parnzan, March 3 $522,500, 3714 Church Hill Ln, Crystal Lake 600146524, 19-02-101-012-0000, Michael Reitcheck To Darrell Huotari & Ashley Huotari, March 3 $155,000, 2663 Granite Ct, Crystal Lake 60012-2607, 14-16-431-034-0000, Nancy Eksrone To Michael Boho & Anne Boho, March 3 $180,000, 4606 Orchard Ln, Crystal Lake 60014-4515, 14-34-328-007-0000, Rogeris Holdings Inc To Matthew B Ohrem & Deborah F Ohrem, March 3 $126,000, 459 Windham Cove Dr, Crystal Lake 600142734, 19-18-281-001-0000, Francis P Manzo Jr Estate To John Micek, December 19 $205,000, 413 Kelly Ln, Crystal Lake 60012-3767, 14-34-129-001-0000, Bank Of New York Mellon Ttee To Mohamed Noorullah & Sumaiya Noorullah, February 23 $174,000, 94 Cedar Dr, Crystal Lake 60014-5010, 18-01133-003-0000, Scott Sosnowski To Christpher M Moody, December 20 $310,000, 650 Woodland Dr, Crystal Lake 60014-5215, 19-06-204-002-0000, Danielle L Cretton To Christopher J Clark, December 20 $342,000, 3708 E Crystal Lake Ave, Crystal Lake 60014-4788, 14-35-379-015-0000, Keith A Baldwin To Jeffrey Henriksen, December 20 $172,000, 1108 Cedar Crest Dr, Crystal Lake 600146945, 18-12-400-012-0000, Joseph K Rickard To Jonathan Louis Barthii, December 21 $110,000, 4409 Bay View Dr, Crystal Lake 60014-2535, 15-30-254-020-0000, Mchenry Savings Bank To Michael E Swanson, December 22 $134,000, 55 John St, Crystal Lake 60014-6219, 1904-126-027-0000, Patricia D Gabl To Chester John Bolck, December 23 $142,000, 1635 Penny Ln, Crystal Lake 60014-2711, 19-19-229-002-0000, Terry L Easler To Janet Mclain, December 28 $440,000, 3111 Kristen Trl, Crystal Lake 60012-1344, 14-22-101-003-0000, Joha Ross To Kenneth K Hopp & Joyce H Hopp, March 3 $184,000, 866 Stonebridge Ln, Crystal Lake 600141817, 19-18-106-028-0000, Anita Kuetemeyer To Thomas M Artinghelli & Janet M Baldacci, November 28 $364,500, 6201 N Wyndwood Dr, Crystal Lake 600144756, 19-02-126-004-0000, Terry M Mueller To Thomas Daurio & Suzannie Daurio, December 1 $255,000, 1210 Manchester Dr, Crystal Lake 600141814, 19-18-152-002-0000, James E Polizzi To Evgeni Petrov & Biser E Petrov, March 2 $235,000, 3215 Running Iron Dr, Crystal Lake 60012, 14-17-480-014-0000, Rocco Laudadio To David Zumbrunn & Debbie Zumbrunn, March 3 $280,000, 50 N Virginia St, Crystal Lake 60014-4126, 09-35-132-011-0000, James E Miller Iii To Katherine Holt & Kurt M Diehl, December 1 $180,000, 145 Dole Ave, Crystal Lake 60014-5838, 19-06-286-002-0000, Christina Koeng To Max C O Neil & Marybeth Flores, November 30 $325,000, 151 Center St, Crystal Lake 60014-4347, 14-32-380-006-0000, Jseph M Saban To Steven Jacobson & Riffannie Jacobson, November 28 $200,000, 80 Lincoln Pkwy, Crystal Lake 60014-4222, 14-32-351-030-0000, Rodney Foote To Natalie L Hartman & Thomas N Hartman, November 28 $129,000, 1625 Penny Ln A, Crystal Lake 60014-1063, 19-19-229-005-0000, James K Fagan To Ruth Alison Easler, December 27 $298,500, 3219 Jasmine Ct, Crystal Lake 60012-1233,

14-20-226-007-0000, Michael Todd Headrick To Michael G Szafranski & Nancy E Atkinson, January 3 $276,500, 1807 Kings Gate Ln, Crystal Lake 600142906, 18-24-254-023-0000, Saleem Mohammed To Jonathan S Koivun & Julie L Draffkorn, March 6 $180,000, 1620 Yellowstone Cir, Crystal Lake 600148906, 19-18-453-026-0000, Michael Kelleher To Gerardo E Munoz & Ana M Munoz, January 3 $281,000, 272 S Mchenry Ave, Crystal Lake 600146047, 19-05-301-006-0000, Gary J Rupe To Joseph C Shilkus & Courtney E Shilkus, January 3 $172,000, 4227 White Ash Rd, Crystal Lake 600144619, 14-34-476-003-0000, Jay Armstong To Tawnia Lee & Andrew Lee, November 23 $187,000, 826 Dartmoor Dr, Crystal Lake 60014-8443, 19-07-376-002-0000, Meaghan Newhart To Jeremy R Dyson & Sarah A Dyson, March 7 $185,000, 1021 Waterford Cut, Crystal Lake 600148873, 18-13-204-010-0000, Edin Mehanovic To Nicholas Karpinski & Ashley Getz, December 1 $380,000, 8310 Ackman Rd, Crystal Lake 60014-8518, 18-13-300-041-0000, Lessner Trust To Thomas C Stumo & Jennifer I Stumo, December 1 $106,000, 7214 Cowlin St, Crystal Lake 60014-8117, 1910-127-006-0000, Erika M Krueger To Steve Theofanous & Fano Theofanous, December 1 $165,000, 1370 Parkridge Ct, Crystal Lake 60014-8693, 19-18-406-027-0000, Artur D Pakrovsky To Daniel J Wichtendhl & Minika F Wichtendhl, November 28 $155,000, 262 Uteg St, Crystal Lake 60014-7202, 1905-331-011-0000, Dale Hughes To Gary L Bakley, March 2 $178,000, 1001 Ridgewood Ln, Crystal Lake 600148381, 18-12-476-020-0000, Jason R Cipri To Sebastian Knapik, December 29 $158,000, 757 Golden Oak Cir, Crystal Lake 60014-1711, 19-10-176-046-0000, Elaine Filter To Nancy Ekstrom, March 8 $195,000, 6418 Martin St, Crystal Lake 60014-4960, 18-02-277-030-0000, Elizabeth Ann Goy To Ryan J Frank, March 7 $95,000, 520 Eagle St, Crystal Lake 60014-5737, 1906-278-009-0000, Christina Diaz To Robert W Stephens, March 6 $127,500, 5024 Meadowlark Ct, Crystal Lake 600123306, 14-29-453-026-0000, Mchenry County Sheriff To Sharon Dorwaldt, February 23 $177,000, 966 Aberdeen Dr, Crystal Lake 60014-7861, 19-08-380-010-0000, Re Inveswtore Inc To Candace Lynne Hager, January 5 $192,500, 400 Linn Ave, Crystal Lake 60014-7109, 1905-308-014-0000, Fern Pfeiffer To Antonio Oritz Alvarez, December 30 $182,000, 279 Paymoth Lane, Crystal Lake 60014, 19-08-152-015-0000, Halper Trust To Mark A Niemann, December 30 $117,000, 4602 Strong Rd, Crystal Lake 60014-4528, 14-34-329-015-0000, Bank Of America Na To Maria Estrada, December 30 $131,000, 3312 Il Route 176, Crystal Lake 60014-2144, 14-26-401-006-0000, Us Bank Na Trustee To Rostlaw Semrad, December 30 $135,000, 4904 State St, Crystal Lake 60014-8157, 1910-101-033-0000, Foster Trust To Alejandro Mora Gnzalez, December 29 $160,000, 6414 W Hillside Rd, Crystal Lake 600123224, 14-29-253-040-0000, Karen Hautzinger To Charles J Benish, December 30 $93,000, 1636 Marguerite St, Crystal Lake 600142528, 15-30-179-021-0000, Beal Bank Ssb To Juan Rivera, February 23 $200,000, 1537 Candlewood Dr 1537, Crystal Lake 60014-8962, 19-18-377-006-0000, Thomas M Artinghelli To Jared Hamm, March 7 FOX RIVER GROVE $280,000, 254 Yorkshire Dr, Fox River Grove 600211882, 20-20-152-021-0000, Michael Mcmorris To Kyle C Mcmanaway & Kimberly Gaconis, March 3 $139,000, 1121 Hillcrest Ave, Fox River Grove 600211510, 20-19-180-005-0000, Jory K Schmitt To Larryf E

Carlson, December 22 $83,500, 1227 Lincoln Ave, Fox River Grove 600211521, 20-19-177-041-0000, Eric Hartman To Mike Olsen, December 29 $80,000, 2313 Fairview Ave, Fox River Grove 600211628, 19-24-435-016-0000, Beverly Logan To Ryan J Wulf, December 27 HARVARD $55,000, 455 Andrea Ct, Harvard 60033-7806, 06-02156-039-0000, Bmo Harris Bank Na To Antonio Maciel & Norma Maciel, March 2 $82,500, 206 E Roosevelt St, Harvard 60033-1732, 01-35-231-008-0000, Blackhawk Bank To Lynnea Joy Stec, March 2 $148,000, 1501 Pheasant Run Rd, Harvard 60033-1850, 01-25-351-008-0000, Victor Linares To Jared Bauman & Jessica Bauman, November 30 $110,000, 546 Timber Dr, Harvard 60033-7821, 0602-157-083-0000, Timothy Scholl To Abigale Hainzinger, March 1 $123,000, 1210 Willow Ln, Harvard 60033-3707, 01-27429-018-0000, David E Hutton To Esther Tellez, January 4 $146,000, 307 W Burbank St, Harvard 60033-2117, 01-35-252-005-0000, Dominic Hoffman To Jeffrey M Bale, December 27 $110,000, 904 Garfield St, Harvard 60033-2208, 01-35237-006-0000, Andrew Raach To Angelica Y Balderrama, December 22 $140,000, 709 Joanne Ln, Harvard 60033-7841, 06-02-104-015-0000, Ronald J Britton To Raeanna Sova, December 19 $87,000, 557 Sandy Ct, Harvard 60033-7803, 06-02156-154-0000, Fannie Mae To Linda A Roman, December 29 HEBRON $140,000, 13302 Thayer Rd, Hebron 60034-9644, 0331-400-007-0000, Thomas R Hansen To David Rossman & Tatlor Rossman, March 2 $350,000, 13503 Obrien Rd, Hebron 60034-8941, 03-30-200-001-0000, Harvard State Bank To Deborah L Steiner, December 22 $65,000, 11828 Prairie Ave, Hebron 60034-8876, 03-16-103-027-0000, Benjamin J Quint To Tina Stalker, December 20 HUNTLEY $397,000, 10303 Clearwater Way, Huntley 60142, 1727-201-023-0000, Development Llc To Edward Hadzima & Hellen Hadzima, November 28 $310,000, 9809 Fairfield Rd, Huntley 60142-2424, 18-21-428-020-0000, Federal Home Loan Mtg Corp To Courtney Palmer, December 29 $186,500, 9810 Williams Dr, Huntley 60142-6035, 1821-303-031-0000, Linda L Wilson To Roy A Claudio, March 6 $200,000, 13431 Nealy Rd, Huntley 60142-6308, 1831-403-020-0000, Emmy Gedeit To Patrick R Mckibben & Petra F Mckibben, November 30 $272,000, 11823 Hawley Ln, Huntley 60142-6002, 1821-177-003-0000, Douglas Mastellis To Dana M Wimberly, March 2 $215,000, 10770 Shenandoah Dr, Huntley 60142-6767, 18-34-330-010-0000, Brian Earnest To Jolene Horn, March 3 $385,000, 10298 Lenox Ct, Huntley 60142-4073, 18-27102-012-0000, Lan S Spencer To Karen R Early, March 3 $130,000, 11510 Algonquin Rd D, Huntley 60142-7181, 18-28-251-039-0000, Wells Fargo Bank Trustee To James P Goebbert, December 15 $593,000, 16312 Meriel Way, Huntley 60142, 17-27204-017-0000, 316 Development Llc To Mario Giannoni & Patricia Giannoni, January 3 $330,000, 11725 Richmond Ln, Huntley 60142-7045, 1832-401-009-0000, Drh Cambridge Homes Inc To Joseph Maxwell Iii, December 15 $365,500, 11795 Richmond Ln, Huntley 60142-7045, 1832-405-023-0000, Drh Cambridge Homes Inc To Harsal S Maheswarti, December 16

$320,000, 6415 Suttondale Rd, Huntley 60142-9593, 18-04-176-013-0000, Pamela Swiderski To Nathan Hart & Teresa Hart, November 23 $339,500, 8999 Sawyer St, Huntley 60142-0117, 18-17479-010-0000, Calatlantic Group Inc To Julie M Jenkins & David J Pease, March 7 $170,000, 13498 Lehigh St, Huntley 60142-6303, 18-31-458-006-0000, Gloria J Gergits To Douglas Kritz & Douglas Kritz, March 3 $255,000, 13133 W Stcneerdge Ln, Huntley 60142, 18-31-428-079-0000, Daane Trust To Charles M Bacon & Katileen L Bacon, March 6 $195,000, 9866 Cummings St, Huntley 60142-6039, 1821-352-004-0000, Calatlantic Group Inc To Allen Shawil & Silvana Younan Shawil, March 1 $322,000, 11745 Richmond Ln, Huntley 60142-7045, 18-32-405-026-0000, Drh Cambridge Homes Inc To Trvor P Scott & Brittney A Scott, March 2 $220,000, 9860 Cummings St, Huntley 60142-6039, 18-21-352-004-0000, Calatlantic Group Inc To Judith C Krawczyk, December 19 $155,000, 11602 Grand Canyon Ave, Huntley 601426702, 18-34-304-008-0000, Michael Sylvestger To Leslie Paszternak, December 22 $202,000, 9868 Cummings St, Huntley 60142-6039, 18-21-352-004-0000, Calatlantic Group Inc To Marjorie L Carpenter, December 23 $275,000, 8879 Sawyer St, Huntley 60142-0110, 18-17476-005-0000, Calatlantic Group Inc To Steven Sampson, December 23 $245,500, 11236 Fleetwood St, Huntley 60142-8208, 13-10-452-015-0000, Elizabeth M Koehler To David Johnson, December 28 $237,000, 11236 Fleetwood St, Huntley 60142-8208, 18-34-203-011-0000, David W Johnson To Kelli Carleton, December 28 $174,000, 10059 Cummings St, Huntley 60142-6033, 18-21-355-001-0000, Joseph D Mabbott To Theresa Ann Wrich, December 20 $186,000, 9830 Cummings St, Huntley 60142-6039, 18-21-352-002-0000, Calatlantic Group Inc To Shahla Desnavi & Sajida Desnavi, March 1 $194,500, 9882 Cummings St, Huntley 60142-6039, 18-21-352-005-0000, Calatlantic Group Inc To Tamiko Toni Gonzalez, December 19 $221,500, 6220 Crescent Dr, Huntley 60142-9749, 1805-177-004-0000, Suzanne K Musgrave Estate To Nancy A Hanson, December 30 $350,000, 14016 Harmony Rd, Huntley 60142-9203, 18-31-100-002-0000, Allen Trust To Joseph J Pawlowie & Julie E Pawlowie, January 3 $349,500, 8909 Sawyer St, Huntley 60142-0117, 18-17-479-001-0000, Calatlantic Group Inc To Steven P Goodwin & Sara A Goodwin, January 4 $182,500, 10091 Cummings St, Huntley 60142-6033, 18-21-351-015-0000, Calatlantic Group Inc To Thomas Jack Schroeder, March 1 $284,000, 12263 Winne Ln, Huntley 60142-0119, 18-17-428-009-0000, Calatlantic Group Inc To Nicolette J Deckert & Jake G Deckert, January 4 $257,500, 11405 Kingsbury Rd, Huntley 60142-2430, 1821-401-023-0000, Tushar M Govani To Staci L Mcmahan, December 29 $305,000, 10716 Wheatlands Way, Huntley 601424011, 18-27-326-004-0000, Joseph Buedel To David Prose, February 23 $217,000, 13495 Honeysuckle Dr, Huntley 601427771, 18-31-452-072-0000, Dennis D Pelc To Jon J Kipp, December 29 $298,000, 11361 Greenway Dr, Huntley 60142-7792, 18-32-101-002-0000, Hartleb Trust To Nancy Desch, December 29 $215,000, 11565 Lancaster St, Huntley 60142-6795, 1834-253-015-0000, Jason R Pierchalski To Madelyn Cumbo, December 27 $282,000, 12235 Ferris Ln, Huntley 60142-0130, 18-17477-011-0000, Calatlantic Group Inc To James R Lemberg Jr & Toni Lynn Lemberg, January 4


20 CLASSIFIED • Thursday, March 23, 2017

• Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

REAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS ISLAND LAKE $112,000, 3730 Linden Dr, Island Lake 60042-9650, 15-19-429-001-0000, Thomas A Bickner To Matthew A Gecan, December 22 $118,000, 653 Yale Ln, Island Lake 60042-9150, 1520-159-007-0000, Rockland Llc To Stephanie Calvillo, December 22 $297,000, 115 Highland Ct, Island Lake 60042-9623, 1520-432-021-0000, Thomas Trust To Claire Antene, March 8 $122,500, 3348 York Ln, Island Lake 60042-9128, 15-19283-015-0000, Kenneth Doner To Glenda Jean Georgoulis, December 16 $350,000, 1845 Walnut Glen Blvd, Island Lake 60042, 15-08-477-007-0000, William Ryan Homes Inc To Sam Boye & Grace Boye, January 4 $135,000, 735 Dartmouth Dr, Island Lake 60042-9133, 15-20-305-013-0000, Nicole Allard To Thomas Fiscus, December 21 JOHNSBURG $242,500, 3416 Cardington Way, Johnsburg 600519626, 10-18-453-017-0000, Gary W Pack To Robert Opsal & Joann Opsal, March 2 $320,500, 3205 Talismon Ln, Johnsburg 60051-7700, 09-23-229-007-0000, Klm Builders Inc To Jerry M Nichols & Jodie L Nichols, March 3 $67,000, 3302 Cove Ct, Johnsburg 60051, 09-13-405005-0000, James M Kasowig To Nicholas Accettura & Jamie Accettura, March 2 $285,000, 806 River Terrace Dr, Johnsburg 600519502, 10-08-351-004-0000, Frances Clarkson To Mark Autschback, December 15 $140,000, 2008 Church St, Johnsburg 60051-6306, 1018-102-005-0000, John Norris To Saraj E Nauer, January 4 $147,000, 1401 Terrace Ave, Johnsburg 60051-5709, 1007-405-012-0000, Initial Realty Services Inc To Brittney N Schuh, December 20 $122,000, 1702 Grandview Dr, Johnsburg 600516114, 10-07-328-019-0000, John M Shea To Brandon R Schroeder, March 2 $265,000, 3210 Chellington Dr, Johnsburg 600519506, 10-18-451-009-0000, Baumann Trust To Michael A Baumann, December 20 $316,000, 1906 Heather Ln, Johnsburg 60051-5251, 09-01-479-003-0000, Lance Baumgarten To Mira W Williams, December 19 $237,000, 5715 Saddle Rdg, Johnsburg 60051-4234, 10-06-153-001-0000, Fannie Mae To James R Williams & Denise Williams, March 7 $685,000, 4303 Farmington Ln, Johnsburg 60051-5131, 09-12-351-001-0000, Sjoerdsma Trust To Christopher Kahlmorgan, December 28 $177,000, 2802 Payton Xing, Johnsburg 60051, 09-23202-041-0000, Sarah Foster To Bonnie Gofron, December 21 LAKE IN THE HILLS $209,000, 5553 Danbury Cir, Lake In The Hills 601566376, 18-15-376-009-0000, Krueger Properties Llc To Rodney Rogalski, December 23 $228,500, 3070 Baldwin Ln, Lake In The Hills 601566716, 18-14-354-001-0000, Adam L Hauschild To Berrnfan S Bailey, December 30 $74,000, 1361 Cunat Ct 2b, Lake In The Hills 601566121, 19-21-153-011-0000, Jennifer Bywalec To Brbara Diliisio, March 2 $155,000, 4300 Larkspur Ln, Lake In The Hills 601564645, 18-24-303-007-0000, Panek Trust To Ezequiel Diaz & Sonia Cedillo, February 23 $215,000, 3220 Banbury Ln, Lake In The Hills 601566359, 18-15-427-018-0000, King Trust To Christopher William King, December 28 $260,000, 16 Westminster Ct, Lake In The Hills 601565538, 18-23-276-038-0000, Kenneth G Madziarek To James J Hurley & Shelley Hurley, January 3 $161,000, 17 Sierra Ct, Lake In The Hills 60156-4919, 19-28-252-071-0000, Steven R Dessent To Eric Morris & Kylie Dean, March 7

$260,000, 4415 Coyote Lakes Cir, Lake In The Hills 60156-6507, 18-25-151-022-0000, Citizens Bank N A To Bruce Hamilton, March 3 $274,500, 1136 Ridgewood Cir, Lake In The Hills 601565927, 19-19-303-004-0000, Capital One Na To Omar Sheriff & Rameez Sheriff, January 3 $155,000, 23 Hilltop Dr, Lake In The Hills 60156-1160, 19-29-280-011-0000, Jaime Cuevas Rivera To Eric Witt, December 30 $64,000, 1363 Cunat Ct 3g, Lake In The Hills 601566117, 19-21-153-026-0000, Series 4 Ofhalihan Series To Bhshyam Gopaul & Pamela Gopaul, March 3 $236,000, 3871 Willow View Dr, Lake In The Hills 60156, 18-24-453-056-0000, Patricia A Wurm To Kelly M Weidmer, December 27 $219,000, 1290 Wexford Ln, Lake In The Hills 60013, 1823-152-016-0000, Thomas J Miszczak To Joshua Nelson, March 2 $115,000, 96 Polaris Dr, Lake In The Hills 60156-5630, 19-19-483-027-0000, James R Lemberg To James W Bradnt, December 21 $232,000, 381 Hiawatha Dr, Lake In The Hills 601561400, 19-28-102-005-0000, Domminic V Martino To Valentine Ramos, December 29 $250,000, 4600 Barharbor Dr, Lake In The Hills 601561085, 18-23-404-006-0000, Edith Boda To Roma Lesypov & Yaliia Haiduk, March 3 $160,500, 962 Viewpoint Dr, Lake In The Hills 601564910, 19-28-252-038-0000, Julie L Shalk To Michael J Powell, March 3 $212,000, 861 Provence Pl, Lake In The Hills 601565638, 18-23-376-011-0000, Fannie Mae To John A Maloney Iv & Katherine A Davis, March 6 $280,000, 3311 Banford Cir, Lake In The Hills 601566341, 18-14-327-002-0000, John M Gillcspie To Renata Magiera & George Magiera, March 2 $175,000, 2112 Claremont Ln, Lake In The Hills 60156-6405, 18-22-179-007-0000, David Albers To Cruz Banuelos & Danielle Becker, March 6 $76,000, 1110 Spruce St, Lake In The Hills 60156-3319, 19-20-334-008-0000, Home State Bank To Russell Plocke & Dolores Plocke, March 1 $150,000, 763 Dogwood Ln, Lake In The Hills 601564650, 18-24-301-025-0000, Robert Idrizi To Grzegorz Matyja & Anna Matyja, March 3 $165,000, 3975 Springlake Dr, Lake In The Hills 601564611, 18-24-327-015-0000, Temaine Brown To Primrose Brown, December 16 $110,000, 12 Gail Ct, Lake In The Hills 60156, 19-28202-021-0000, Mohammad Ikramuddin To Muzaffar A Shaikh, December 29 $162,000, 219 Plum St, Lake In The Hills 60156-3326, 19-20-401-010-0000, Barbara A Burchert To Jason Gransden & Jennifer Gransden, January 5 $262,000, 3356 Sonoma Cir, Lake In The Hills 601566738, 18-15-301-052-0000, Andrew Sylthe To Jim E Dubberlhe & Theresa Dubberlhe, March 7 $172,000, 104 Hickory Rd, Lake In The Hills 60156-1378, 19-29-276-001-0000, Don A Mastri To Kevin Callahan & Michelle Kurzhal, March 3 $270,000, 2170 Litchfield Ln, Lake In The Hills 601565702, 18-23-177-005-0000, Scott Wintersteen To Henndily Bahuto, December 16 $163,500, 201 Wedgewood Cir, Lake In The Hills 601566271, 18-26-381-018-0000, Jeffrey M Littledale To Joselern Alicriana, December 16 $55,000, 1363 Cunat Ct, Lake In The Hills 60156-6117, 19-21-153-022-0000, Jessica J Hembrey To Janette L Herron & Daniel S Herron, March 3 $150,000, 820 Navajo Dr, Lake In The Hills 60156-1551, 19-28-128-011-0000, Fannie Mae To Damien Lovich & Leea Lovich, March 6 LAKEMOOR $174,000, 525 S Sheridan Rd, Lakemoor 60051-3277, 15-05-284-027-0000, Edward P Minor To Alex T Barrie, March 2 MARENGO $190,000, 1002 Ruth Ct, Marengo 60152-3363, 16-01-

102-009-0000, Jeffrey R Jaeger To Benjamin G Fabrizius, December 21 $207,000, 815 Doral Dr, Marengo 60152-3367, 16-01105-002-0000, Mtthew Chrbak To Kevin E Johnston & Susanne M Johnston, March 2 $169,000, 530 5th Ave, Marengo 60152-2300, 11-25-329-002-0000, Michael J Zont To Michael Freier, December 29 $97,500, 821 Village Cir, Marengo 60152-3637, 11-25481-023-0000, Mlp Llc To Alicia T Pfeiffer, March 3 $275,000, 8517 S Il Route 23, Marengo 60152-9318, 16-14-100-006-0000, James J Hare To James J Hare Iii, December 27 $149,000, 560 Park Dr, Marengo 60152-2974, 11-35329-010-0000, Susan Mackay Forand To Mark Hansen, December 21 $200,000, 3203 Edwards St, Marengo 60152-8011, 11-23-201-011-0000, Pnc Bank Nation To Matthew D Feltman, March 2 MCHENRY $179,000, 2406 Macarthur Dr, Mchenry 60050-3481, 09-21-431-021-0000, Scarlett Trust To Alfred P Kopczyk & Susan N Kopczyk, December 1 $166,500, 2814 N Baycliff Dr, Mchenry 60050-2617, 09-24-128-009-0000, Christiana Trust Trustee To Ronald James Drewas & Ronald Lamson Drewas, January 3 $200,000, 2005 Birch Ln, Mchenry 60051-2687, 09-26202-005-0000, Katherine M Reeves To Carl E Stwart Jr & Stephnie L Stwart, December 1 $286,000, 6615 Waterford Dr, Mchenry 60050-8043, 09-32-376-012-0000, Mighui Zou To Fidel A Sanchez & Christina M Sanchez, November 30 $128,000, 5103 W Shore Dr, Mchenry 60050-3506, 09-28-232-007-0000, Dennis S Storlie To John Johnson & Joanne Johnson, March 3 $143,000, 3805 Main St, Mchenry 60050-5240, 09-35103-006-0000, Speciale Trust To Matie Ackerman & John Lantvit, March 3 $296,500, 3623 Elmshire Dr, Mchenry 60051-6210, 0911-129-007-0000, Casa Investing Llc To Jeremy T Jfisher & Therea C Jfisher, March 2 $290,000, 6418 Ojibwa Ln, Mchenry 60050-7461, 0929-403-021-0000, Lawrence A Clark To Renee Kenyon & James Kenyon, March 6 $56,500, 4408 W Shamrock Ln 3a, Mchenry 600500707, 14-03-452-013-0000, D&m 2023 Llc To Adam Kern & Cheryl Kern, November 30 $295,000, 2315 N Elmkirk Park, Mchenry 60051-6299, 09-36-455-004-0000, Robert J Nowicki To Nicholas Frank Valenziano & Teri Lea Valenziano, March 2 $143,000, 1113 Draper Rd 3 2, Mchenry 60050-7202, 09-33-158-018-0000, Amanda R Dawson To Cody J Scillufo & Kaitlyn A Awe, March 3 $198,000, 6501 Midleton Ln, Mchenry 60050-8058, 09-32-252-008-0000, Aaito Trust To Brian J Aalto & Sarash Aalto, March 3 $107,000, 5217 Parkway West, Mchenry 60050, 0922-127-039-0000, Bruce A Walter Jr To Bruce Walter & Sharon D Walter, March 3 $118,000, 3803 W Kane Ave, Mchenry 60050-5526, 09-35-177-005-0000, Hometown Ltd To Clinton Filichia & Lisa Filichia, March 3 $129,000, 5007 W Ashland Dr, Mchenry 600505104, 09-34-355-003-0000, Ronald G Wagner To Roxie Lomonaco & Jason Lomonaco, March 3 RICHMOND $393,500, 9821 Falcon Dr, Richmond 60071-9030, 04-15-201-014-0000, Tara J Hartig To Christopher Meyer & Teri Meyer, February 23 SPRING GROVE $369,500, 3696 Magnolia Dr, Spring Grove 600818632, 04-11-376-006-0000, Fifth Third Mortgage Co To John Woods & Mary Woods, November 30 $290,000, 10902 Michigan Dr, Spring Grove 600818490, 05-07-231-002-0000, Arthur F Kraft To Daniel J Sorensen & Nicole Sorensen, March 2 $285,000, 3911 Ridge Rd, Spring Grove 60081-8337,

04-26-354-005-0000, Donna Nicosia To Keith E Hoovis & Kathleen A Hoovis, January 5 $413,000, 9300 Champion Ct, Spring Grove 600818747, 04-13-300-026-0000, David Williams To Keith Slove & Patricia Slove, February 23 $249,500, 9419 Martin Dr, Spring Grove 60081-8708, 04-13-301-004-0000, National Residential Nominee S To Scott A Sembach & Kateleen J Sembach, November 30 $281,500, 2412 Fox Bluff Ln, Spring Grove 60081-8054, 04-12-401-004-0000, Lawrence A Lawniczak To Kenneth W Barkulis & Tina L Barkulis, January 3 VILLAGE OF LAKEWOOD $428,500, 6620 Woodland Hills Dr, Village Of Lakewood 60014-4859, 18-03-402-003-0000, Taylor Morrison Illinois Inc To David R Rserue & Joelle W Rserue, March 6 WONDER LAKE $71,500, 3409 E Wonder Lake Rd, Wonder Lake 600978611, 09-18-335-010-0000, Andrew Van Treeck To Rosa Esmeralda Vela De Quintanal & Jaime Quintanal Rojas, March 3 $133,500, 7706 Oak Dr, Wonder Lake 60097-8113, 09-06-329-026-0000, Brett Everett To Adam L Trersure & Kristen E Trersure, March 6 $140,000, 8108 Highview Dr, Wonder Lake 600978521, 08-24-247-002-0000, Daniel Sorensen To Joshua P Timlick & Erin R Timlick, March 3 $220,000, 9105 Red Barn Dr, Wonder Lake 60097-8188, 08-14-426-018-0000, Chicago Title Land Trust Co To Michsael Orlak & Michelle Orlak, December 1 WOODSTOCK $163,000, 967 West Ave, Woodstock 60098-2278, 13-06-179-001-0000, Miljak Trust To Hugo Garcia Alcocer & Norma Garcia, January 4 $365,000, 8327 Mason Hill Rd, Woodstock 600987950, 13-12-400-020-0000, Haughton Trust To Victor Rice & Donna S Rice, January 4 $173,000, 600 W South St, Woodstock 60098-3602, 13-07-201-014-0000, Anke J Dougherty To Mark Joseph O Donnell & Lauren M O Donnell, November 30 $228,000, 8923 Robin Hill Dr, Woodstock 60098-7803, 13-24-102-004-0000, Paul L Weyna To Adam Jonathon Behrns & Kristin Taylor Behrns, November 28 $170,000, 430 Meadow Ave, Woodstock 60098-2459, 08-32-351-020-0000, Elizabeth Zegers To Kevin Sauer & Brittany D Sauer, March 2 $149,000, 4108 S Country Club Rd, Woodstock 600988024, 13-24-476-009-0000, Robert G Daughtry To Tabitha Swiderek & Brooke Greer, November 28 $177,000, 1640 Wicker St, Woodstock 60098-2421, 08-32-304-016-0000, Lexi A Disselhorst To Brent Nelson & Nicolette Nelson, February 23 $135,000, 122 Stewart Ave, Woodstock 60098-3843, 13-08-151-007-0000, Hometown Ltd To Kenneth Schultz & Paulette Schultz, November 29 $120,000, 716 Amsterdam St, Woodstock 60098-2307, 13-06-279-004-0000, Craig H Grant To Kirk P Muraski & Nancy E Muraski, February 23 $360,000, 1375 Westwood Trl, Woodstock 600987006, 12-12-201-020-0000, Harvard State Bank Trustee To Randall L Knyon & Gina M Knyon, March 6 $125,000, 131 Peachtree Ln, Woodstock 60098-2552, 08-32-180-026-0000, House Account Llc To Douglas E Schumacher & Samantha L Schumacher, December 1 $177,000, 240 Verbena Ln, Woodstock 60098-4188, 13-08-354-017-0000, Suzanne K Vermeer To Jose Esparza & Silvia Marcia, March 2 $188,000, 1527 Fox Sedge Trl, Woodstock 60098-9224, 13-21-131-013-0000, Elizabeth M Rodgers To Ian S Fischer & April L Fischer, December 1 $270,500, 649 Verdi St, Woodstock 60098-8023, 08-29-482-011-0000, Calatlantic Group Llc To Jordan A Freeze & Richard A Lund, January 4


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Thursday, March 23, 2017 •

CLASSIFIED 21

Only $258,500!

432 Farnsworth Circle Port Barrington SPRAWLING RANCH • AMENITIES GALORE

3104 Turnberry Drive, McHenry. 2,670 Square-Foot Ranch, all Above Grade. Additional finished living space in basement, with Play Room, Media Room, Workout and/or Recreation Area, 4th Bedroom, and Full Bathroom. Open Floor Plan, Vaulted Ceilings, Fireplace, on Main Level. Master Bedroom with Huge Walk-In Closet. New Bamboo Flooring, New Granite Counter Tops, abundant Maple Cabinets. Formal Living-Room/Office with Bay Window. Enclosed Back Porch, Large Rear Deck, Fenced Yard with Sprinkler System. Oversized Attached 3+Car Garage with Concrete Circular Driveway. Located on 1/2+ Acre (two lots). Lovely location among well-cared-for homes. Close to Everything. $299,900.

TNT Realty, Inc. Toni Favia

800-761-1331

SPACIOUS HOME, GREAT FOR ENTERTAINING! 4 BR, 3 1/2 bath two story home with finished english basement! Great location, close to Fox River Forest Preserve for hiking, fishing, etc. All ready for it’s new owners! See photos & more at:

432Farnsworth.C21.com

Roberts & Andrews 815-405-2194 More Info at www.McHenryHomes.com

Sandy Etten SM-CL0417833

FEATURED LISTINGS Crystal Lake

Port Barrington

Crystal Lake

$255,000 SAY YES TO THIS ADDRESS! Contemporary home with 3 bedrooms, 3 full baths, full basement, sunroom with fireplace, open upstairs hallway, 2 car garage. Sits on a generous, wooded lot for privacy. This is the one for you! MLS#09497750 CENTURY 21 Roberts & Andrews

Deer Park

$619,900 ONE-OWNER DREAM HOME! Stately & spacious brick & cedar home with 5 bedrooms (2 master suites), 5.5 baths, full basement, family room with fireplace. Volume ceilings, hardwood floors, custom finishes throughout. On a 1.75 acre lot. A 10+! MLS#09499725 CENTURY 21 Roberts & Andrews

Lake In The Hills

Mchenry

Mchenry

Port Barrington

Jean Botts/Pat Maggio

847-212-7140

$275,000 PRIVATE SANCTUARY-LIKE! 4 large bedrooms, 2.5 bathrooms. Sunny formal living & dining rooms, large kitchen with breakfast nook, room for everyone to gather! 1.37 wooded acres on a crystal clear pond! Spotless home that you’ll love! MLS#09562216 CENTURY 21 Roberts & Andrews Sandy A Etten

815-344-1033

Pam Wagner/Maureen Forgette

847-745-9101

$329,900 ONE OWNER CUSTOM HOME! This much loved 2 story home has so much appeal outside & inside! Highlights include: 4 bedrooms, 2 full & 2 half baths, full basement, 2 fireplaces, 3 car garage. Sits on 2 manicured acres in Woodcreek. A 10! MLS#09508997 CENTURY 21 Roberts & Andrews Sandy Etten

815-405-2194

$234,900 MAKE THIS ONE YOURS! 3 bedrooms, 3.5 baths, & 2 car garage. Finished basement with dry bar and full bath. 1st level family room, separate breakfast area, vaulted ceilings, & hardwood floors. MLS#09569267

Jean Botts

CENTURY 21 Roberts & Andrews

815-344-1033

$258,500 THE SEARCH STOPS HERE! Attractive 2 story in “Riverwalk.” Three/four bedrooms, 3.5 baths, English basement, family room with fireplace, kitchen with breakfast room, master suite with private bath, rec room with dry bar. Come see your new home! MLS#09508470 CENTURY 21 Roberts & Andrews Sandy Etten

815-405-2194


22 CLASSIFIED • Thursday, March 23, 2017

• Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

Spring Grove

Commercial - Algonquin

Spring Grove

$261,900 MUST SEE TO BELIEVE! Gorgeous ranch with huge open floor plan. 3 bedrooms, 3 bathrooms, & 2 car garage. Completely remodeled kitchen, new appliances, counter tops, and cabinets. Brand new master bath with walk-in shower. Don’t miss this one! MLS#09568944 CENTURY 21 Roberts & Andrews

$369,000 BETTER THAN NEW! Gorgeous ranch in “Forest Ridge.” Highlights: 3/4 bedrooms, 3.5 baths, English basement, fireplace, eat-in kitchen, separate dining room, movie room, screened porch, 3 car garage, custom shed. Picturesque lot! Don’t wait! MLS#09357234 CENTURY 21 Roberts & Andrews

$149,900 SYMPHONY MEADOWS! Spacious townhome with 2 bedrooms, 2.5 baths, English basement, 2 car garage, loft, open living/dining area, family room, second floor laundry and much more! Neutral decor makes this unit very appealing and move-in-ready! MLS#09490912 CENTURY 21 Roberts & Andrews

Woodstock

Woodstock

Woodstock

Christine Hauck

815-344-1033

$195900 Step into spring... with this 3 br, 2-1/2 bth home located in Woodstock. 2nd floor laundry, master br bath, generous sized rooms in a great location. Big back yard, 2 car garage, just waiting for new owners. Can close quickly. Coldwell Banker Honig-Bell

Kitty Zriny

815-790-7857

COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL

COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL

COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL

COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL

Linda Bykowski/Maureen Forgette

815-482-2069

Volo

Sandy Etten

815-405-2194

$246,900 EASIER LIFESTYLE INCLUDED! Buy this lovely ranch in the Maples At The Sonatas and snow removal, lawn care and even window cleaning will be done for you! You can relax and enjoy the clubhouse & pool! Home has 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, 2 car garage & more.. MLS#09389404 CENTURY 21 Roberts & Andrews

$349,000 BEST BUY IN THE AREA! If you want a deal, here it is! This home offers plenty of living space, 4 bedrooms, 2.5 baths, partial basement, 3 fireplaces, heated sunroom, master bedroom with bath, 2 car garage. Sits on 4.3 acres, enjoy peace & quiet! MLS#09371558 CENTURY 21 Roberts & Andrews

Algonquin

Federal Fair Housing law prohibits discrimination based on race, color, sex, handicap, familial status, national origin or religion in connection with the rental or sale of real estate. The Northwest Herald does not knowlingly accept advertising in violation of these laws.

Pam Wagner/Maureen Forgette

847-745-9101

L

A I C

R E M

M O C

COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL

Spring Grove

$115,000 WAITING FOR YOUR BUSINESS! Completely built-out end unit condo waiting for your business. Great all brick construction in fountain square complex. Kitchen/break area, large bath, separate storage room, office and large reception area. MLS#09488765 CENTURY 21 Roberts & Andrews

Jean Botts

Hope Ball

815-344-1033

847-477-3503

EQUAL HOUSING

OPPORTUNITY

For Better or For Worse

AUTOCAD DRAFTER

A large commercial sheet metal and roofing contractor located in McHenry, that Is seeking a candidate for an immediate, full time position of AutoCAD Drafter. Candidates must have a minimum of 3 years experience with Auto CAD design and be proficient in AutoCAD LT or higher, Microsoft Word, Excel and Adobe Acrobat. Attention to detail with strong work ethic / self motivated & possess excellent communication / organizational skills. Ability to read, print and sort blueprints and specifications, complete submittals, and knowledge of construction details and LEED information is beneficial. We are an Equal Opportunity Employer & offer a full benefit package that includes 401(k) and health insurance.

Email resume to: HR@snogem.com

CUSTODIANS - Seeking 2nd shift (3pm - 11pm) substitute custodians to work 40 hours per week on a temporary basis. $13.98/hr. Apply at: www.d155.org

Education

INFANT TODDLER TEACHER & TEACHER AIDES

Sunshine Early Learning Center, Lake in the Hills Call 847-854-1418 – ask for Jackie

FABRICATOR / WELDER

Brake, Roller, Shear, Mill, Lathe and TIG Welding S.S. polished sheet metal experience preferred but willing to train. Must have valid D.L. Excellent Benefits. Fax: 847-381-7688 or email: sales@lakeprocess.com

RECRUIT LOCAL!

Target your recruitment message close to home or reach our entire area. For more information, call 877-264-2527 or email: helpwanted@shawsuburban.com

Food Service

BARTENDERS HOST(ESS) BUSSERS

RUNNERS SERVERS DATA ENTRY

Call 847-526-9993 ask for Lisa or walk in to apply: Docks Bar & Grill, 313 E. Liberty St, Wauconda

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


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Thursday, March 23, 2017 • Food Service

Cat - Grey, Young Female

Retreat House in Barrington has openings for:

WAIT STAFF & DISHWASHER Starting pay $10-$12 per hour. Full Time & Part Time needed. Experience welcome but will train. Call for more information 815-276-7109 or fill out application at ceresfood.com

Janitor

Professional Janitor / Driver

Growing injection-molding company has an immediate opening for a Professional Janitor / Driver.

Responsibilities include: cleaning facility and running errands in company vehicle. Must be a responsible and energetic individual with a valid driver's license and good driving record. Excellent pay, great benefit package and opportunity for advancement. EOE

Apply in person:

Chemtech Plastics, Inc.

765 Church Road, Elgin, IL 60123 or email: jobs@chemtechplastics.com

KNAACK IS HIRING ASSEMBLERS!

WOODWORKING Door fabricator. Hardware machining.

Router & beam saw experience a plus. Benefits. First shift. Accurate Shielding, Cary. Call 847-639-5533

Mathews Company in Crystal Lake has an immediate need for a Maintenance Technician to be responsible for all maintenance work at our manufacturing facility, which includes the installation, repair, wiring and upkeep of a variety of machines, fixtures, building equipment, process controls, circuits and alarms. Competitive wages and benefits available.

Visit www.mathewscompany.com/careers for more information and to apply.

Cat “Maxie” Gray

Hotel

HOUSEKEEPERS NEEDED Comfort Inn of Crystal Lake is seeking to fill full & part time positions.

Must be over 21. Experience preferred but not necessary, will train. Must be able to work weekends.

Please apply in person: 595 E. Tracy Trail, Crystal Lake. No phone calls please.

MAINTENANCE TECHNICIAN - FULL TIME

MAINTENANCE TECHNICIAN

OFFICE HELP – Part Time

Assist w/ secretarial, A/P, deliver bids etc. for union mason contractor. MS Word and Excel exp. required. 16-25 hours per week. $10-$15/hr dep. on exp. Call: 815-477-0123

Oh, most beautiful flower of Mt. Carmel fruitful vine, splendor of Heaven, Blessed Mother of the Very shy, microchip, lost February 1st Son of God. Immaculate Virgin, assist me in my Fox River Dr., Harvest Glen area, Cary. necessity. Oh star of the sea, help me and show REWARD! 84 7-639-9504 me here you are my Mother. Oh Holy Mary, Mother of God Queen of Heaven and Earth, I Spare tire cover lost in Home Depot lot in humbly beseech you from the bottom of my heart Crystal Lake. Reward, no questions asked. to succor me in my necessity 847-639-9310 (make request). There are none which can withstand your power. O Mary conceived without sin pray for us who Diamond ring found 3/16 at TLC Laundromat have recourse to thee. 540 E. Terra Cotta Ave, Crystal Lake. Given to (three times) worker on duty around 3pm, call to identify. Holy Mary, I place this prayer in your hands 815 455 5145 times) If you lost something in Lowe's parking lot in Say this prayer for(three three consecutive days and Algonquin, call to describe it. 815-385-4503 then you must publish and it will be granted to you.

TABBY CAT

PEST CONTROL TECHNICIAN

Start Part Time with potential to Full Time. Experience preferred, but not required. Must have valid drivers license with good driving record. Minimum age 21. Call 815-814-2880 Armns Pest Management, Crystal Lake

Don't worry about rain! With our

Manufacturing

Crystal Lake Manufacturer looking to hire for the following positions:

Assemblers (1st and 2nd shift) Maintenance Technicians (2nd and 3rd shift) CNC Salvagnini Operators for punching and forming

equipment. Experience a plus. (2nd and 3rd shift)

TEACHER - PART TIME

Early Childhood Teacher needed for a growing daycare center in Marengo. Applicants must have at minimum an Associate's Degree in Early Childhood Education or Child Development. Hours are Monday through Friday from 12 PM-6:15 PM.

Please contact Jennifer Haas at 815-482-6290 for more information.

Competitive pay and benefits. Please include the job you are applying for in your response.

Fax Resume to: 815-459-4741 or email: Knaack.HRMail@wernerco.com Manufacturing

LIGHT MANUFACTURING

Protective Apparel Manufacturer is seeking a full-time individual for our Silk Screening Department. Manufacturing experience a plus, but not required. Excellent benefits. Hours Monday through Thursday 7:30am to 4:30pm, Friday 7:30am to 3:30pm. Apply in person, no phone calls please.

Standard Safety Equipment Company 1407 Ridgeview Drive, McHenry, IL 60050

Northwest Herald Classified It works.

Call today to place your ad

877-264-2527

(Never Known to Fail)

CLERICAL POSITION

or emailing henniej@wernerco.com.

Email resume to gardenplace@pedcor.net

PRAYER to the BLESSED VIRGIN

Seasonal, part-time position taking applications for utility assistance program. Job is seasonal and part-time. www.mchenrycountyhousing.org EO/AAE

Do you know how to use hand tools? We have a job for you! KNAACK in Crystal Lake is seeking full time, long term assemblers. 1st & 2nd Shift. Pay:$12-12.50/hr. Prev. manufacturing exp. Pref'd. Start your career by calling Emily at 815-356-4634, texting #PutMeToWork to 815-788-8556

Garden Place Apartments in Cary, IL. is seeking a full-time Maintenance Technician. This position maintains the physical needs of the property which includes service requests as well as following the preventative maintenance schedule for the property.

Declawed, was lost Friday, March 17 near Ridgewood Drive and Dean St in Woodstock. Call please if found, family is heartbroken! 815-403-5843

CLASSIFIED 23

MAILBOX & POST SALES & INSTALLATION 815-653-7095 ~ 815-341-7822 www.mailboxpostman.com

Kathy's Office & Home Cleaning Service

Licensed, Bonded, Insured.

815-355-5297

POLISH LADY Will Clean Your Home/Office

FREE ESTIMATES, Great Ref. 224-858-4515

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 *within 4 weeks of original sale date. Ask your representative for details.

Grateful Thanks J.A. LOCAL DRIVERS WANTED! Be your own boss. Flexible hours. Unlimited earning potential Must be 21 with valid U.S. driver's license, insurance & reliable vehicle. Call 855-401-1161

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


24 CLASSIFIED • Thursday, March 23, 2017 BRIDGE by Phillip Alder

• Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com NEW YEAR, NEW AVIATION CAREER GET FAA CERTIFICATION TRAINING. FINANCIAL AID IF QUALIFIED CAREER PLACEMENT ASSISTANCE. CALLING AIM 800-481-8312. Old slot machines wanted by collector. Also buying neon signs and 40's and 50's juke boxes! Any condition! Fast cash pick-up! Call Mark 314-707-0184

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.

READER NOTICE:

Shelley Winters, who won two Oscars, said, “I did a picture in England one winter and it was so cold I almost got married.” Presumably she had become used to Los Angeles temperatures, although she was born in Saint Louis and raised in Brooklyn, where it can get much colder than England. Top bridge players picture where the missing key cards might be located. They assume the worst and try to find a line of play or defense to end the deal without frostbite. What should South have done in this deal after West led the club jack? North used a Texas transfer to make his partner the declarer in four hearts. (A Texas transfer announces either game-only or serious-slam interest. With a slam-invitational hand and at least a six-card major, North would have transferred at the two-level, then jumped to game.) Note that in this deal, the transfer did its job. Four hearts by North is defeated if East leads the spade queen, which would have been his most likely start. South won the first trick and cashed the heart king, expecting to be playing for an overtrick. West’s club discard was a blow. Could declarer survive if East did not have the spade ace? South pictured one possibility. He drew a second round of trumps, cashed the diamond king, played a diamond to his ace, ruffed a diamond, returned to his hand with a club and led his last diamond. When West followed suit, declarer did not ruff; instead, he discarded a spade from the dummy. West then had either to lead away from his spade ace or to concede a ruff-and-sluff.

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.

“CLIP N SAVE”

MCHENRY ESTATE SALE

41st ANNUAL CONSIGNMENT AUCTION

Sat & Sun, March 25 & 26 9am - 4pm

LOCATION: To Be held at the Boone County Fairgrounds 8791 IL. Rt. 76, Belvidere, Illinois 61008

#'s at 8am

PRAIRIE GRANGE

SATURDAY, APRIL 8TH, 2017 9:30 A.M. Sharp

Cash & Credit Card Only (CC Over $50, No AMEX)

1 mile north of Belvidere, IL

PRAIRIE GRANGE, SPONSOR

SALE MANAGER: John Henninger 815-509-9227

Always a huge sale. Way too much to advertise. Bring your trucks & trailers & tell your friends! Auctioneers: Al & John Henninger, Lyle Lee, Bob Goad, Jeff Marrs, Kris Bryan, Kenny Freeman & John Edwards NOTE: Check in time as follows: Thursday, April 6th from 9-6, Friday, April 7th from 9-4. NO SATURDAY MORNING ENTRIES!

Quality Maple & Oak Furniture, Very Nice Poker Table (Pedestal) w/ 6 Chairs, Large LCD TVs, Near-New Nespresso Coffee Machine & Many New-in-Box Coffee Capsules, Horizon Compact Evolve Treadmill (Used maybe 20 times), King Size Sleep Number Bed, Wine Refrigerator, Leather Furniture, Crystal, Lladros & Other Figurines, Antiques & Vintage, Pine Lingerie Chest, Large Desk,...Lots More!

PUBLIC AUCTION

SATURDAY, MARCH 25TH, 2017 RUNNING 2 RINGS

Lunch by: Relish the Dog

9:00 A.M.

Comfort Station Available

LOCATION: BOONE CO. FAIRGROUNDS, 8791 RT. 76 BELVIDERE, IL. 61008

Located in the Goat Barn near south end. Plenty of parking. Dress Accordingly!

ANTIQUES, COLLECTIBLES, HOUSEHOLD, YARD, TOOL & VEHICLE

(Vehicle to be sold at 11:00 Sharp! 2006 Chev Impala) Owners: R. Squire, C. Reamer, C. Anderson, D. Fisher, S. Jordan, L. Erickson & B. Fidder Terms: Cash or checks w/proper I.D. Visa, Mastercard & Discover accepted. 9% Buyers Premium w/ 4% discount for cash or check. No property to be removed until settled for. All items sold “AS IS”. Number system will be used. Must have driver's license for registration. Not responsible for accidents or items after purchase. Announcements day of sale prevail over written material.

Images & list of items:

IronHorseEstateSales.com

Crystal Lake Moving Sale Thur, Fri, Sat, Sun 10-4 960 Boxwood Lots of furniture and household items

AUCTION

CHRIS MCKEE 815-245-1835

22609 Kishwaukee Valley Rd, Marengo, IL Located 4 mi. N. of Marengo or 7 mi. S. of Harvard on Rt. 23 to Kishwaukee Valley Rd., then W. 1½ mi.

Belvidere, IL 61008 815-988-0249 cell AUCTIONEERS: LYLE LEE IL. State License #440.000200/ WI # 2863-52 JEFF MARRS # 441-001813 CLERKS & CASHIERS: LEE AUCTION SERVICE Visit our website: www.leeauctionservice.com & Auction Zip

FRIDAY, MARCH 31, 2017 - 11:00 AM REASON: Health TRACTORS & COMBINE: I.H. 5088 w/ 18.4x38 duals, wts., & quick hitch, major overhaul 500 hrs. ago (6413 Hrs.); I.H. 986 w/ 18.4x38 duals, wts., new clutch & TA fall 2015 (6100 Hrs.); Case 350 utility tractor w/ wts.; J.D. 9500 combine w/ chaff spreader, hopper ext., Ag Leader monitor, many updates, SN HO9500X632123 (3649 sep./5234 engine hrs.); J.D. 643 6RN corn hd.; J.D. 920-20' grain hd.; J.D. 953A 6RN grain hd. (new parts); EZ Trail head cart. FARM MACHINERY: Kinze 2600 12RN no-till carousel style planter w/precision corn meters, dry fert., & Kinze KM3000 monitor w/radar; 12 bean boxes; Case/I.H. SBX 530 sm. square baler w/N.H. 72 thrower (same as N.H. 570); N.H. H7220-9' Mow Max Discbine w/rubber rolls; N.H. 258 Rolabar hay rake; 2- Meyer 9x20 basket racks on Kory gears w/ unloaders; Meyer 9x18 basket rack on Kory gear; 2-9x16 basket racks on Kory gears; 60' & 20' elevators w/elec. motors; Kinze 400 grain cart; Kewanee 390-25' soil finisher w/harrow; Brent 440 grav. wagon w/tarp, brakes, & hyd. fert. auger; 2 grav. wagons w/ fert. augers (older); DMI 3200-13 shank 3 pt. anhyd. appl. w/ monitor; 500 gal. trail sprayer w/60' booms; J.D. 8256RN cult.; J.D. 27-6R stalk chopper; Bush Hog 7 shank disc chisel; J.D. 4-18 semi mt. plow; 24' drag w/ cart. GRAIN TRUCK, GRAIN TRAILER, CORN BINDER, TOOLS, & MISC.: '75 I.H. 1700 gas grain truck w/newer Scott 15' grain box & tarp (65,276 miles); '95 Wilson 40' alum. hopper btm. grain trailer; M.C. PTO corn binder w/bundle carrier; Winpower 3 pt. alternator; Knaack job box; Nilfisk heated pressure washer; air powered semi bumper jack; 50 plastic pallets; wagon load of small tools & misc. TO BE SOLD BY NEIGHBORS: J.D. 4840 w/ power shift, 3 pt., wts., cast iron duals (7375 hrs, 1 owner); Blumhardt 1000 gal. sprayer w/ 60' booms, Blumhardt monitor, & Trimble EZ Guide 250; J.D. 348 baler w/ 40 thrower & joy stick controls; J.D. 230-27' disc; J.D. 722-30' soil finisher w/spring tooth harrow; Brillion 5 shank compaction commander ripper; J.D. 712- 11 shank disc chisel w/ DMI leveler; J.D. 6RN cult. See our website for pictures: www.stadeauction.com TERMS: Cash or check. NO BUYER'S FEE. Illinois Licensed Auctioneers: Bill Stade #441000774 608-585-2431 Mike Stade #441001194 920-699-4580 Pete Stade #441002282 920-674-3236 Clerk: Ron Lipinsky Cashier: Tom Stade

The Bill Stade Auction Co.

N1797 Cty. Rd. K, Sharon, WI 53585

262-736-4141

Northwest Herald Classified 877-264-2527 www.NWHerald.com/classified

MCHENRY – 4711 OAKWOOD DR, UNIT 2 ESTATE SALE

Thursday 3/23, Friday 3/24 & Saturday 3/25 9am to 3pm Everything must go. Lots of kitchen things, glass ware, furniture

Advertise here for a successful garage sale!

We are At Your Service!

Free firewood – Hickory, you haul 815-236-4697

The Northwest Herald reaches 137,000 adult readers in print every week, and 259,000 unique visitors on NWHerald.com every month.

Dishwasher - White

Kitchen Sink, Stainless Steel, Exc Cond! 2 Porcelain Sinks, with faucets attached. Excellent condition, $200 for all. 815-236-0410

Call to advertise in the At Your Service directory.

877-264-2527

classified@shawsuburban.com

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

Call 877-264-2527

c

Shallow well pump with pressure tank. For house or river use. Like new condition. $95 /obo 815-344-4238 Lighted Curio Cabinet – Walnut finish, mirrored

back panel, clear glass front & sides, 2 glass shelves & lower enclosed strorage $125 815-354-9752

Like New Kitchen Set – 42” round table w/leaf, 6 chairs, matching 2 drawer cabinet, coffee & end table. $250 for all, will seperate. 815-759-9948 Place your Classified ad online 24/7 at: www.NWHerald.com/PlaceAnAd


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Thursday, March 23, 2017 •

ANCHOR CONSTRUCTION Since 77'

FOUNDATIONS GARAGE SLABS / DRIVEWAYS PATIOS/ WALKS / STOOPS REPLACEMENTS

An Affordable Electrician

JM SEAMLESS GUTTERS

• Seamless Gutters 5” & 6” • Leaf Protection w/Different Styles Avail. • Soffit & Fascia • Aluminum Wrap Free Estimates

815-404-9749

Fully Insured

Fully Insured

815-482-9542 (McHenry)

Free Estimates

S&W Furniture Refinishing ✦

PATIO DOOR REPAIR COMPANY

CLOUDY DOOR & WINDOW GLASS REPLACEMENT We Custom Build Sliding Door & Window Screens We Replace Roller's - Tracks Handles Weatherstripping

815 - 814 – 1480 www.PatioDoorRepairCompany.com

PLANT RESCUE SINCE 1996

Many People Still Cut Their Lawn - We Do The Rest •Shrubbery & Small Tree Trimming •Weeding Landscape Beds •Annual, Perennial Planting & Mulch •Maintenance Programs •Curb Appeal

"We don't cut lawns" Need Help Rebuilding, Repairing or Replanting? Check out the

At Your Service Directory Northwest Herald Classified

224-577-8080 TEXT ALERTS Sign up for TextAlerts to receive up-to-date news, weather, prep sports, coupons and more sent directly to your cell phone! Register for FREE today at

NWHerald.com

CLASSIFIED 25


26 CLASSIFIED • Thursday, March 23, 2017

• Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

CESAR'S LAWN & LANDSCAPING Spring Clean-Up

Lawn Maintenance & Mowing Mulch - Patios - Paver Repair - Fire Pits

847-489-1529 or 815-560-3373 Email; cesar_maya0927@yahoo.com

GREEN SEASON LANDSCAPING

NEWBERG STORAGE INC.

Spring / Fall Clean-Up Lawn Mowing - Mulch - Tree Cutting Patios & Retaining Walls 815-403-5068 marcomercado 1986@gmail.com

815-547-4072

Easy & Secure 24hr. Access

NJE LANDSCAPING INC.

10X10 = $55/mo. 10X20 = $75/mo. 10X15 = $65/mo. 10X25 = $85/mo. 10X17 = $70/mo. 10X30 = $110/mo.

LAWN CARE & MAINTENANCE

Seasonal Clean-Ups Patios / Walkways / Retaining Walls Mulching Lawn Installation Much More !! Fully Insured

6845 Belford Ind. Drive Belvidere, Illinois

Westside Stump Removal

708 – 603 – 9141 call Noe

Fully Insured / Free Estimates

Residential & Subcontracting “No Job Too Small, We Grind Them All”

www.njelandscapinginc.com

(815) 345 -1580

ORTIZ LANDSCAPING ★ SPRING CLEAN-UP ★

Mulch Brick Patios Tree Removal Maintenance Work Insured.

815-355-2121

email: amulfoortiz99@gmail.com

STEVE'S PAINTING SERVICE

Fully Insured Cedar Staining - Decks Refinished INTERIOR - EXTERIOR 2 Story Foyers New Construction – Re-Paints

815-451-3788

Free Estimates

Find the help you need

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

At Your Service In print daily Online 24/7

GOD BLESS AMERICA

IL LIC# 104.016428

Honesty Value Quality

Lic./Insured

•Roofing •Siding •Gutters •Tuckpointing •Immediate Expert Repairs ~ Call for Spring Specials ~

815-669-5070 Free Estimates

BBB - A+

Follow the Northwest Herald on Twitter. McHenry County area breaking news, entertainment news, feature stories and more! @NWHerald

40 Yrs. Experience ~ Owner on Every Job-Site √ Seasoned Firewood $95/face cord √ Tree Removals √ Tree Trimming √ Lot Clearing √ Stump Grinding √ New Tree Installation Price Guarante Senior/Military Discounts Licensed • Insured • Free Estimates 24 Hours 847-973-8722

www.abilitysaffordabletreeservice.com


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Thursday, March 23, 2017 • Like new white wooden desk ,4 drawers, 2 book cases, $15 ea., other items avaiiable. 815-759-9948

MASSAGE RECLINING CHAIR

Black Leather-Like New. Premier Health Products (PHP) Paid $2295. Asking $500 O.B.O. Call: 815-575-0758 Lve. Msg. DON'T NEED IT? SELL IT FAST!

NJE TREE SERVICE

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

TREE & STUMP REMOVAL TRIMMING – PRUNING PLANTING

Trees ✦ Delivered & Installed Evergreens 6'-8' $250 Evergreens, 9-12' $350 Shade Trees, 3-4” $350 815-378-1868

CRAFTSMAN TOOLS - CAPRON

CLASSIFIED 27

Rigid portable pipe vice w/24” & 18”

pipe wrench & ratchet pipe threader, w/die set $65 /obo 815-344-4238

AREA RUG 9'4” x 8'

Gold, Wool, Good Condition! $100/obo. 815-893-4345 Stay connected with Northwest Herald facebook.com/nwherald.com Twitter: @nwherald

All new, less than retail! 815-236-2205

Fully Insured

708-603-9141

www.njelandscapinginc.com

POWER

Tree & Stump Removal, Inc. ALSO

Mulch & Firewood 815-943-6960

Fully Insured 24 Hour Emergency Cell 815-236-5944

*Trimming & Removal *Specializing Large & Dangerous Trees *Storm Damage *Lot Clearing *Stump Grinding *Pruning

ANDERSON BMW

REICHERT CHEVROLET

BULL VALLEY FORD

RAY CHRYSLER DODGE JEEP RAM

888/682-4485

815/338-2780

800/407-0223

847/587-3800

360 N. Rte. 31 • Crystal Lake, IL

www.andersoncars.com

2145 S. Eastwood Dr. • Woodstock, IL

www.reichertautos.com

BILL JACOBS BMW

www.billjacobs.com

KNAUZ BMW 847/604-5000

888/800-6100

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

5404 S. Rt. 31 • Crystal Lake, IL

www.clcjd.com

FENZEL MOTOR SALES

206 S. State Street • Hampshire, IL

847/683-2424

GURNEE CHRYSLER JEEP DODGE RAM 888/471-1219

www.gurneedodge.com

CRYSTAL LAKE CHRYSLER JEEP DODGE RAM

www.motorwerks.com

888/800-6100

TOM PECK FORD

5404 S. Rt. 31 • Crystal Lake, IL

847/683-2424

Route 31, between Crystal Lake & McHenry

GURNEE CHRYSLER JEEP DODGE RAM

www.garylangauto.com

888/471-1219

815/385-2100

7255 Grand Avenue • Gurnee, IL

REICHERT BUICK

www.gurneedodge.com

2525 E. Main Street • St. Charles, IL

630/584-1800

www.zimmermanford.com

GARY LANG CADILLAC

Route 31, between Crystal Lake & McHenry

GARY LANG GMC

Route 31, between Crystal Lake & McHenry

815/385-2100

www.garylangauto.com

800/935-5913

www.motorwerks.com

O’HARE HONDA

River Rd & Oakton, • Des Plaines, IL

815/385-2100

www.garylangauto.com

MOTOR WERKS CADILLAC 200 N. Cook St. • Barrington, IL

800/935-5923

www.motorwerks.com

815/385-7220

847/587-3800

www.raychryslerdodgejeepram.com

SUNNYSIDE COMPANY CHRYSLER DODGE JEEP RAM

5220 W. Northwest Highway Crystal Lake, IL

815/459-4000

www.martin-chevy.com

RAY CHEVROLET

39 N. Rte. 12 • Fox Lake, IL

847/587-3300

www.raychevrolet.com

RAYMOND CHEVROLET

118 Route 173 • Antioch, IL

847/395-3600

www.raymondchevrolet.com

224/603-8611

5404 S. Rt. 31 • Crystal Lake, IL

www.clcjd.com

GURNEE CHRYSLER JEEP DODGE RAM

www.raychryslerdodgejeepram.com

SUNNYSIDE COMPANY CHRYSLER DODGE JEEP RAM Route 120 • McHenry, IL

815/385-7220

www.sunnysidecompany.com

1119 S. Milwaukee Ave.• Libertyville, IL

847/816-6660

www.libertyvillemitsubishi.com

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

BILL JACOBS LAND ROVER HINSDALE 300 East Ogden Ave. • Hinsdale, IL

888/204-0042

MOTOR WERKS CERTIFIED OUTLET Late Model Luxury Pre-Owned Vehicles

LAND ROVER LAKE BLUFF

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

847/604-8100

www.motorwerks.com

www.billjacobs.com

LAND ROVER HOFFMAN ESTATES

800/935-5909

PRE-OWNED KNAUZ NORTH

866/346-0211

771 S. Randall Rd. • Algonquin, IL

866/469-0114

INFINITI OF HOFFMAN ESTATES

1075 W. Golf Rd. Hoffman Estates, IL

815/385-2000

www.steves-auto-sales.com

847/838-4444

847/741-2100

www.elgintoyota.com

PAULY TOYOTA

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

815/459-7100 or 847/658-9050 www.paulytoyota.com

360 N. Rt. 31 • Crystal Lake, IL

www.andersoncars.com

BILL JACOBS VOLKSWAGEN

2211 Aurora Avenue • Naperville, IL

800/720-7036

www.billjacobs.com

BARRINGTON VOLVO

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

360 N. Rt. 31 • Crystal Lake, IL

888/682-4485

www.andersoncars.com

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

888/800-6100

MERCEDES-BENZ OF ST. CHARLES

409 Skokie Valley Hwy • Lake Bluff, IL

www.gurneedodge.com

1200 E. Chicago St. Elgin, IL

“Home of the $1,995 Specials”

ANDERSON MAZDA

888/800-6100

888/471-1219

ELGIN TOYOTA

www.motorwerks.com

www.st-charles.mercedesdealer.com

7255 Grand Avenue • Gurnee, IL

www.EvanstonSubaru.com

800/935-5909

877/226-5099

GURNEE CHRYSLER JEEP DODGE RAM

847/869-5700

888/682-4485

BUSS FORD LINCOLN

CRYSTAL LAKE CHRYSLER JEEP DODGE RAM www.clcjd.com

3340 Oakton St., Skokie, IL

ANDERSON VOLKSWAGEN

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

225 N. Randall Road • St. Charles, IL

5404 S. Rt. 31 • Crystal Lake, IL

www.garylangauto.com

www.knauznorth.com

STEVE’S AUTO SALES

888/280-6844

www.infinitihoffman.com

815/385-2100

2950 N. Skokie Hwy • North Chicago, IL

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

www.rosenrosenrosen.com

www.motorwerks.com

Route 31, between Crystal Lake & McHenry

www.motorwerks.com

847/235-8300

MOTOR WERKS INFINITI

GARY LANG SUBARU

EVANSTON SUBARU IN SKOKIE

landroverhoffman.com

www.gurneedodge.com

847/587-3800

LIBERTYVILLE MITSUBISHI

ROSEN HYUNDAI

888/471-1219

23 N US Highway • Fox Lake, IL

www.garylangauto.com

1051 W. Higgins • Hoffman Estates, IL

www.elginhyundai.com

815/459-7100 or 847/658-9050

815/385-2100

847/888-8222

7255 Grand Avenue • Gurnee, IL

RAY CHRYSLER DODGE JEEP RAM

Route 31, between Crystal Lake & McHenry

800/935-5913

www.knauzlandrover.com 881 E. Chicago St. • Elgin, IL

GARY LANG MITSUBISHI

119 Route 173 • Antioch, IL

375 Skokie Valley Hwy • Lake Bluff, IL

ELGIN HYUNDAI

815/385-7220

847/604-5050

RAYMOND KIA

800/935-5913

888/800-6100

MARTIN CHEVROLET

www.arlingtonkia.com

Barrington & Dundee Rds. Barrington, IL

770 Dundee Ave. (Rt. 25) • Dundee, IL

www.piemontechevy.com

847/202-3900

busslincolnmchenry.com

www.garylangauto.com

847/426-2000

1400 E. Dundee Rd., Palatine, IL

Route 120 • McHenry, IL

CRYSTAL LAKE CHRYSLER JEEP DODGE RAM

AL PIEMONTE CHEVROLET

ARLINGTON KIA IN PALATINE

www.sunnysidecompany.com

GARY LANG CHEVROLET

815/385-2100

GARY LANG KIA

1107 S Rt. 31 between Crystal Lake and McHenry

111 S. Rte 31 • McHenry, IL

815/385-7220

Route 31, between Crystal Lake & McHenry

www.oharehonda.com

Route 120 • McHenry, IL

www.sunnysidecompany.com

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

MOTOR WERKS HONDA Barrington & Dundee Rds. Barrington, IL

SUNNYSIDE COMPANY CHRYSLER DODGE JEEP RAM

PAULY SCION

www.raymondkia.com

www.raychryslerdodgejeepram.com

www.sunnysidecompany.com 23 N US Highway • Fox Lake, IL

www.Knauz-mini.com

www.garylangauto.com

847/587-3800

Route 120 • McHenry, IL

409A Skokie Valley Hwy • Lake Bluff, IL

815/385-7220

815/385-2100

www.reichertautos.com

SUNNYSIDE COMPANY CHRYSLER DODGE JEEP RAM

Route 120 • McHenry, IL

www.sunnysidecompany.com

ZIMMERMAN FORD

RAY CHRYSLER DODGE JEEP RAM 888/538-4492 23 N US Highway • Fox Lake, IL

800/295-0166

SUNNYSIDE COMPANY www.billjacobs.com CHRYSLER DODGE JEEP RAM KNAUZ MINI

www.TomPeckFord.com

2145 S. Eastwood Dr. • Woodstock, IL

815/338-2780

www.raychryslerdodgejeepram.com

BILL JACOBS MINI

1564 W. Ogden Ave. • Naperville, IL

847/669-6060

www.clcjd.com

206 S. State Street • Hampshire, IL

23 N US Highway • Fox Lake, IL

13900 Automall Dr. • Huntley, IL

FENZEL MOTOR SALES GARY LANG BUICK

Turn those unwanted items into cash. Sell them in the Classifieds! They may be just the thing someone else is looking for.

www.bussford.com

7255 Grand Avenue • Gurnee, IL

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

800/935-5909

BUSS FORD

815/385-2000

CRYSTAL LAKE CHRYSLER JEEP DODGE RAM

407 Skokie Valley Hwy. • Lake Bluff, IL

www.bullvalleyford.com 111 S. Rte 31 • McHenry, IL

1564 W. Ogden Ave. • Naperville, IL

800/731-5824

1460 S. Eastwood Dr. • Woodstock, IL

KNAUZ CONTINENTAL AUTOS 847/234-1700

www.Knauzcontinentalauto.com

www.clcjd.com

FENZEL MOTOR SALES

206 S. State Street • Hampshire, IL

847/683-2424

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

888/471-1219

www.gurneedodge.com

RAY CHRYSLER DODGE JEEP RAM 23 N US Highway • Fox Lake, IL

847/587-3800

www.raychryslerdodgejeepram.com

847/381-9400


28 CLASSIFIED • Thursday, March 23, 2017

• Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

Custom smoking pipes made from marbled walnut w/copper bowls, handmade, many sizes

2004 Ford F250XLT 4x4 Diesel Crew Cab

Ashes

and styles. Starting @ $12 708-363-2004 Display Case- Holds 6 firearms, locking/sliding glass doors, & a storage drawer, all w/ a furniture finish $150 815-354-9752

8' bed 165K, great cond! $7200 847-809-6809

Casey

★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★

CLASSICS WANTED

Ashes, 7 year old female, Gray DMH Looking for someone who will never let me forget what really matters. Like good health, plenty of exercise, and lots of love.

www.helpingpaws.net 815-338-4400

Kittens - approx 3 months old. FREE to a loving family/home 847-658-4467 Casey, 1 year old male, Medium Mixed Breed. When I'm in the thick of it all, it can be easy to lose sight of what's important. Remember about not seeing the forest for the trees!

www.helpingpaws.net 815-338-4400 Tootsie

Donations Welcomed

Antique and Modern Guns

CAR, TRUCK, SUV

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

815-575-5153

Vintage Arms of Illinois

www.vintagearms.com Mike@vintagearms.com 847-548-0433

www.helpingpaws.net 815-338-4400 More people read the Northwest Herald each day than all other papers combined in McHenry County! Powered by:

1996 Cadillac Deville exceptionally clean,

69,700k. New brakes. Fla car, no rust, new tires. $3800/obo

815-761-4983

2005 Saturn ION Silver, Auto, 67K Miles

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

1 owner, exc cond, $5600/obo. 847-658-1781 2014 Chevy Cruise - White, Man Trans, 1.4 EcoTurbo, 41K, 1 owner, prfct cond, $9000. 847-652-2495 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

847-997-6106

★★ ★★ ★★★ ★★ ★★

MOTORCYCLES WANTED

$400 - $2000

WANTED TO BUY: Vintage or New, Cameras.

Appraisal, Consignment & FFL transfer services

or

MOST CASH

“don't wait....call 2day”!!

WE BUY GUNS

Will pay extra for Honda, Toyota & Nissan.

815-814-1964

WILL BEAT ANY QUOTE GIVEN!!

815-353-7668

All type: Modern, Military, Collectible, Antique & Sporting Single piece or collections, Cash Paid, Discrete legal transactions

Will beat anyone's price by $300.

★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★

A-1 AUTO

815-385-1227

Antiques, Video Games, Outboard motors, Fishing Gear, Motorcycles or Mopeds, Chainsaws, Tools etc. Cash on the spot. Cell: 815-322-6383

Share your photos with McHenry County!

Restored or Unrestored Cars & Vintage Motorcycles Domestic / Import Cars: Mercedes, Porsche, Corvette, Ferrari's, Jaguars, Muscle Cars, Mustang & Mopars, $$ Top $$ all makes, Etc.

Lab Puppies - AKC, Male, Yellow & Black

First Shots, $500/ea.

Lionel & American Flyer Trains

Tootsie, 1 ½ year old female, Jack Russell mix. If I don't grab the reins and take responsibility for my actions, all the advice in the world won't help me succeed.

I BUY CARS, TRUCKS, VANS & SUVs 1990 & Newer

55 Gallon Aquarium Set-Up

Complete with fish, $75.00 Crystal Lake Area 608-450-0556

★★ ★★ ★★★ ★★ ★★

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


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Thursday, March 23, 2017 • Crystal Lake Mature Person, Furnished Bedroom Lake Privileges, $550/mo + ref.

With storage, laundry and parking, $875/mo. 847-401-3242

815-404-1326

CLASSIFIED 29

McHenry 2BR, 2BA Condo, Garage, Great Area With conservation behind, 1st floor, $105,500. FSBO By Appt. 815-344-4410 or 815-353-4252 Northwest Herald. Giving you more!

Our Great Garage Sale Guarantee!

Woodstock - 3BR, 2BA, Appliances, Garage $1100/mo.

Woodstock 1 Bedroom, Net $685

Klemme R. E. 815-236-6361

RENT TO BUY

All appl, A/C, balcony, on site laundry - no pets except companion/service animals permitted under fair housing laws.

847-382-2313 - 708-204-3823 woodstocknorthwestapartments.com Northwest Herald Classified It works.

Having a Birthday, Anniversary, Graduation or Event Coming Up? Share It With Everyone by Placing a HAPPY AD! Northwest Herald Classified 877-264-2527 www.NWHerald.com

815-814-6004

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

MARENGO/HARVARD OLBRICH ROAD

10 ACRES, Zoned AG, 21 year old 2.5 story home needs updating. 12 rooms, 5 baths, 6 fireplaces, 3924 sq ft + 1521 sq ft ground level in-law apartment. 4 car garage, dormers with studio apartments, Florida room/whirlpool, 3 decks, 2 ponds, 35x104 pole building, part heated Port Barrington- Is Lk area. Roommate to share with offices and bath, 3 stall barn. I have Home fully furnished house $800/mo util incl. 847-639-7162 Inspection Report. Market Value $352,000, Follow the Northwest Herald on Twitter. Bank Appraisal as is and Shown $260,000. McHenry County area breaking news,

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

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.

Gary Swift Berkshire Hathaway Starck Realty McHenryCountyRentToOwnHomes.com

entertainment news, feature stories and more!

@NWHerald

Need customers? We've got them! Advertise in print and online for one low price.

Call Classified today!

Cash Buyers Only, Must Close 30 Days

$230,000/FIRM, BY OWNER 815-568-0008

877-264-2527

West Harbor Residences At Reva Bay Be In Your New Home by Spring! Units are completed and ready for you. Boating season is near! West Harbor Residences at Reva Bay is a brand new apartment community in beautiful Fox Lake, IL. 5 minutes from Metra station. Shopping and entertainment is just minutes away. Residence is 2 bedrooms with 2 baths in a spacious 1,250 square feet. Larger unit also has dining room and guest bath. All new stainless steel appliances with washer/dryer included. Balconies, patios, covered and open parking. Boat slips available right at your back door. Additional storage available. Monthly rent begins at $1,425.

Northwest Herald

Check rates daily at http://nwherald.interest.com Institution

4.046% Town & Country Mortgage

30yr Fixed APR

30 yr Fixed

Product

Rate: 4.000

20 yr fixed

3.750 0.000 $907

20% 3.813

Points: 0.000 15 yr fixed

3.250 0.000 $907

20% 3.330

10 yr fixed

3.125 0.000 $907

20% 3.241 www.tcmortgageservices.com

Fees: $907

% Down: 20%

Rate: 4.000

4.020% Gateway Capital Mortgage Inc.

West Harbor Residences at Reva Bay 8300 Reva Bay Lane Fox Lake, IL 60020 Phone: 630-835-4287 Email: westharborppm@gmail.com

30 yr APR

30yr Fixed APR

Rate

Points

Fees

% Down

APR

Phone Number / Website

NMLS # / License #

NMLS# 221739

847-757-5075

MB.6759601

Float Down Available on All Products!

15 yr fixed

Points: 0.000 5/1 ARM

3.250 0.000 $50

5% 3.254

3.125 0.000 $75

5% 3.740

NMLS# 246585

888-595-7339

Fees: $395

30 yr jumbo

4.500 0.000 $25

20% 4.505 www.gwcmortgage.com

% Down: 5%

30 yr FHA

3.875 0.000 $50

3.5% 3.877

LIC# 6760411

LENDERS, TO PARTICIPATE IN THIS AD CALL BANKRATE.COM @ 800-509-4636 Legend: The rate and annual percentage rate (APR) are effective as of 3/20/17. © 2017 Bankrate, LLC. http://www.interest.com. The APR may increase after consummation and may vary. Payments do not include amounts for taxes and insurance. The fees set forth for each advertisement above may be charged to open the plan (A) Mortgage Banker, (B) Mortgage Broker, (C) Bank, (D) S & L, (E) Credit Union, (BA) indicates Licensed Mortgage Banker, NYS Banking Dept., (BR) indicates Registered Mortgage Broker, NYS Banking Dept., (loans arranged through third parties). “Call for Rates” means actual rates were not available at press time. All rates are quoted on a minimum FICO score of 740. Illinois Mortgage Licensee. Conventional loans are based on loan amounts of $165,000. Jumbo loans are based on loan amounts of $424,101. Points quoted include discount and/or origination. Lock Days: 30-60. Annual percentage rates (APRs) are based on fully indexed rates for adjustable rate mortgages (ARMs). The APR on your specific loan may differ from the sample used. Fees reflect charges relative to the APR. If your down payment is less than 20% of the home’s value, you will be subject to private mortgage insurance, or PMI. FHA Mortgages include both UFMIP and MIP fees based on a loan amount of $165,000 with 5% down payment. VA Mortgages include funding fees based on a loan amount of $165,000 with 5% down payment. Bankrate, LLC. does not guarantee the accuracy of the information appearing above or the availability of rates and fees in this table. All rates, fees and other information are subject to change without notice. Bankrate, LLC. does not own any financial institutions. Some or all of the companies appearing in this table pay a fee to appear in this table. If you are seeking a mortgage in excess of $424,100, recent legislation may enable lenders in certain locations to provide rates that are different from those shown in the table above. Sample Repayment Terms – ex. 360 monthly payments of $5.29 per $1,000 borrowed ex. 180 monthly payments of $7.56 per $1,000 borrowed. We recommend that you contact your lender directly to determine what rates may be available to you. To appear in this table, call 800-509-4636. To report any inaccuracies, call 888-509-4636. • http://nwherald.interest.com


30 CLASSIFIED • Thursday, March 23, 2017 FORECLOSURE PUBLICATION NOTICE

PUBLIC NOTICE STATE OF ILLINOIS, COUNTY OF MCHENRY In the Circuit Court for the Twenty-Second Judicial Circuit, McHenry County, Illinois. Golden Eagle Distributing Corporation, Plaintiff vs. Edward J. Zawilla, Jr., et al., Defendants, No. 16 CH 948. The requisite affidavit for publication having been filed, notice is hereby given you, Unknown Owners and Non-Record Claimants, defendants in the above entitled suit, that the said suit has been commenced in the Circuit Court for the Twenty-Second Judicial Circuit, McHenry County, by the said plaintiff against you and other defendants, praying for the foreclosure of a certain Judgment Lien upon the premises described as follows, to-wit: Part of the Southwest ¼ of the Northwest ¼ of Section 36: commencing at the West quarter corner of said Section 36; thence northerly along the West line of said Southwest ¼ of the Northwest ¼, 465 feet; thence easterly parallel to the South line of said Southwest ¼ of the Northwest ¼, 30 feet to the East line of Rose Farm Road and the place of beginning; thence northerly parallel to the West line of said Southwest ¼ of the Northwest ¼, 345 feet; thence easterly parallel to the South line of said Southwest ¼ of the Northwest ¼, 770 feet; thence southerly parallel to the West line of said Southwest ¼ of the Northwest ¼, 345 feet; thence westerly parallel to the South line of said Southwest ¼ of the Northwest ¼, 770 feet to the place of beginning, in Township 45 North, Range 6, East of the Third Principal Meridian, in McHenry County, Illinois. PIN#: 07-36-100-013-0000 Commonly known as: 704 North Rose Farm Road, Woodstock, Illinois. Recorded in the office of the Recorder of McHenry County, IL, as Document No. 2016R0002058. Notice is also hereby given you that the said Complaint prays for other relief; that summons was duly issued out of said Court, as provided by law, and that the said suit is now pending. Now, therefore, unless you, the said above named defendants, file your answer to the Complaint in the said suit or otherwise make your appearance therein, in the office of the Clerk of the Circuit Court for the Twenty-Second Judicial Circuit, McHenry County, 2200 North Seminary Avenue, Woodstock, Illinois, on or before April 16, 2017, default may be entered against you at any time after that day and a Judgment entered in accordance with the prayer of said Complaint. (Published in the Northwest Herald March 16, 23, 30, 2017) 1354197

The requisite affidavit for publication having been filed, notice is hereby given you, Defendant(s) in the above entitled suit, that the said suit has been commenced in the McHenry County Circuit Court, Woodstock, Illinois, by the Plaintiffs against you and other defendants, praying for the foreclosure of a certain Mortgage conveying the premises described as follows, to-wit: LOT 20 IN BLOCK 5 IN LAKE IN THE HILLS ESTATES UNIT NO. 3, A SUBDIVISION OF PART OF THE SOUTH HALF OF SECTION 20, TOWNSHIP 43 NORTH, RANGE 8 EAST OF THE THIRD PRINCIPAL MERIDIAN, ACCORDING TO THE PLAT THEREOF RECORDED JULY 22, 1948 AS DOCUMENT NO. 212938, IN BOX 10 OF PLATS, PAGE 97 IN MCHENRY COUNTY, ILLINOIS. PIN: 19-20-452-007 Common Address: 1112 Birch Street, Lake in the Hills, IL 60156 and which said Mortgage was entered into by BMO HARRIS BANK N.A., as successor in interest to HARRIS N.A. as the Mortgagee in the amount of $61,275.00 and recorded in the Office of the Recorder of Deeds of McHenry County, Illinois, as Document Number 2013R0016330. And for such other relief prayed; that summons was duly issued out of the said McHenry County Circuit Court against you as provided by law, and that the said suit is now pending. NOW THEREFORE, UNLESS YOU, the said above defendant(s), file your answer to the complaint in this case or otherwise file your appearance in the Office of the Clerk of McHenry County, located at 2200 N. Seminary Avenue, Illinois, on or Woodstock, before the 20th day of April, 2017, a default may be entered against you at any time after that day and a decree entered in accordance with the prayer of said complaint. YOU ARE FURTHER ADVISED THAT THE TIME IN WHICH THE SUBJECT REAL ESTATE MAY BE REDEEMED FROM FORECLOSURE, PURSUANT TO LAW, COMMENCE TO RUN WITH THE FIRST DATE OF PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE. Dated: 03/08/2017, Illinois /s/ Katherine M. Keefe Clerk of McHenry County Illinois /s/ Gabriella R. Comstock KEOGH & MOODY, P.C. Gabriella R. Comstock Keough & Moody, P.C. Attorney Number 6236880 114 East Van Buren Naperville, IL 60540 (630) 369-2700 grc@kmlegal.com (Published in the Northwest Herald 16, 23, 30, 2017) 1354767

• Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com

agains y filed within six months from the date of first publication. Any claim not filed within six months from the date of first publication or claims not filed within three months from the date of mailing or delivery of Notice to Creditor, whichever is later, shall be barred. Claims may be filed in the office of the Clerk of Circuit Court at the McHenry County Government Center, 2200 North Seminary Avenue, Woodstock, Illinois, 60098, or with the representative or both. Copies of claiims filed with the Clerk must be mailed or delivered to the representative and to his attorney within ten days after it has been filed. /s/ Katherine M. Keefe Clerk of the Circuit Court (Published in the Northwest Herald, on March 16, 23, 30, 2017) 1354548

PUBLIC NOTICE

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE 22ND JUDICIAL CIRCUIT MCHENRY COUNTY, ILLINOIS STATE BANK, Plaintiff, vs. RICHARD E. BREITENFIELD, JR., not individually, but in his capacity as Guardian for RUTH BREITENFIELD; STATE OF ILLINOIS DEPARTMENT OF HEALTHCARE AND FAMILY SERVICES; JHC LLC D/B/A ACQUISITION, OMNICARE OF NORTHERN ILLINOIS; BLUE WORLD POOLS, INC.; RICHARD E. BREITENFIELD, JR.; HOMEOWNERS ASSOCIATION, if any; UNKNOWN OWNERS and NON-RECORD LIEN CLAIMANTS, Defendants. No. 17CHOO0193 PUBLICATION NOTICE The requisite Affidavit having been duly filed herein, NOTICE IS HEREIN GIVEN YOU, RICHARD E. BREITENFIELD, JR., not individually, but in his capacity as Guardian for RUTH BREITENFIELD; STATE OF ILLINOIS DEPARTMENT OF HEALTHCARE AND FAMILY SERVICES; JHC ACQUISITION, LLC D/B/A OMNICARE OF NORTHERN ILLINOIS; BLUE WORLD POOLS, INC.; RICHARD E. BREITENFIELD, JR.; HOMEOWNERS ASSOCIATION, if any; UNKNOWN OWNERS and NON-RECORDLIEN CLAIMANTS, Defendants in the above-entitled action, that an action is now pending in this Court as shown above, wherein the Plaintiff seeks to foreclose a mortgage made to STATE BANK, with respect to the following described real estate: THE SOUTHWESTERLY HALF OF LOTS 7 AND 8 IN BLOCK 46 IN HARVARD EXTENSION, A SUBDIVISION OF PART OF THE WEST HALF PUBLIC NOTICE OF THE SOUTHEAST QUARTER AND IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE EAST HALF OF THE SOUTHOF THE TWENTY-SECOND WEST QUARTER OF SECTION 35, JUDICAL CIRCUIT ALL IN TOWNSHIP 46 NORTH, MCHENRY COUNTY RANGE 5 EAST OF THE THIRD IN THE MATTER OF PRINCIPAL MERIDIAN, ACCORDING THE ESTATE OF TO THE PLAT THEREOF RECORDED DANIEL HORENBERGER JANUARY 3, 1865, IN BOOK 35 Deceased. OF DEEDS, PAGE 125 IN CASE NO. 16 PR 368 MCHENRY COUNTY, ILLINOIS. CLAIM NOTICE PROPERTY INDEX NUMBER: Notice is given of the death of: 01-35-378-006 PUBLIC NOTICE DANIEL HORENBERGER Commonly known as: IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR of: WILLCOX, AZ 306 SOUTH PAGE STREET, THE TWENTY-SECOND Letters of Office were issued on: HARVARD, ILLINOIS 60033 JUDICIAL CIRCUIT 12/2/2016 NOW, THEREFORE, you are further MCHENRY COUNTY, ILLINOIS to: notified to file your appearance in BMO HARRIS N.A., NORA L. STAUBER the Office of the Clerk of the Court Plaintiff, 1004 N. TAYLOR above stated on or before April 13, v. MARENGO, IL 60152 2017 and if you fail to do so or do WHITNEY F. GAGEN, UNKNOWN not otherwise make your appearOWNERS AND NON-RECORD whose attorney is: FILLER & ASSOCIATES ance on or before said date, this CLAIMANTS, 3901 N. IL RTE 23 cause may be heard and judgment Defendant(s). P.O. BOX 115 entered as prayed for in said Case Number 17 CH 184 MARENGO, IL 60152 Complaint without further notice. 1112 Birch Street Claims against the estate may be IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF, I have Lake in the Hills,, IL 60156

ing: Document No. 2010R001059 Clerk of the Circuit Court, 22nd Judicial Circuit, McHenry County, Illinois /s/ Katherine M. Keefe 03/15/2017 Michael G. Cortina Amber L. Bishop SmithAmundsen, LLC Attorney for Crystal Lake Bank & Trust Co., N.A. 2460 Lake Shore Drive, Woodstock, Illinois 60098 (815) 337-4900 Telephone (815) 337-4910 Facsimile mcortina@salawus.com abishop@salawus.com ARDC No. 6255782 ARDC No. 6309698 (Published in the Northwest Herald (Published in the Northwest Herald on March 23, 30, April 6, 2017) on March 23, 30, April 6, 2017) 1391060 1390994

hereunto set my hand and affixed the seal of said Court at my office in Woodstock, Illinois, this 4TH day of April, 2017. /s/ Katherine M Keefe Clerk of the Circuit Court McHenry County, Illinois 03/15/2017 FRANKS, GERKIN & McKENNA, P.C. Our File No. 110.943 Attorney for Plaintiffs 19333 E. Grant Hwy. PO Box 5 Marengo, IL 60152 (815) 923-2107

PUBLIC NOTICE

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE 22nd JUDICIAL CIRCUIT MCHENRY COUNTY, ILLINOIS CRYSTAL LAKE BANK & TRUST COMPANY, N.A., Plaintiff, vs. JENNIE L. BYE, deceased, THE ESTATE OF JENNIE L. BYE, CONNIE L. BYE, Independent Executor of the ESTATE OF JENNIE L. BYE, TAYLOR L. BYE, Heir at Law and Legatee under the Will of Jennie L. Bye, CAMDEN B. QUIROS, a Minor, Heir at Law and Legatee under the Will of Jennie L. Bye, ASCENSIONPOINT RECOVERY SERVICES, LLC, ON BEHALF OF SYNCHRONY BANK (CARE CREDIT CORE DENTAL), Claimant against the Estate of Jennie L. Bye, UNKNOWN HEIRS AND LEGATEES OF THE ESTATE OF JENNIE L. BYE, UNKNOWN OWNERS & NON-RECORD CLAIMANTS, Defendants. Case No. 17 CH000194 NOTICE OF MORTGAGE FORECLOSURE (FOR PUBLICATION) NOTICE is given to Jennie L. Bye, deceased, Unknown Heirs and Legatees of Jennie L. Bye, deceased, and Unknown Owners and Non-record Claimants of the following-described real estate, that the above-entitled mortgage foreclosure action has been commenced and is now pending, and the day on or after which a default may be entered against said Defendants is 4-27-2017, 2017. 1) The title of the couli, the title of the case, the name of the first named plaintiff and the first named defendant, and the number of the case are identified above. 2) The name of the title holder of record is: The Estate of Jennie L. Bye, deceased. 3) A legal description of the real estate sufficient to identify it with reasonable certainty is as follows: LOT 3 IN BLOCK 1 IN J.H. GRACY'S ADDITION TO WOODSTOCK, BEING A SUBDIVISION OF PART OF LOT 11 OF THE ASSESSOR'S PLAT OF PART OF THE NORTHEAST QUARTER OF SECTION 5, TOWNSHIP 44 NORTH, RANGE 7 EAST OF THE THIRD PRINCIPAL MERIDIAN, ACCORDING TO THE PLAT THEREOF RECORDED JUNE 3, 1905 AS DOCUMENT NO. 1685, IN BOOK 2 OF PLATS, PAGE 66, IN MCHENRY COUNTY, ILLINOIS. 4) Common address or location of mortgaged property is 360 McHenry Ave., Woodstock, IL 60098; Permanent Index Number is 13-05-256-003. 5) An identification of the mortgage sought to be foreclosed is as follows: a. Name of mortgagee: Crystal Lake Bank & Trust Company, N.A. b. Name of Lien: Mortgage c. Date of mortgage: March 2, 2010 d. Name of mortgagor: Jennie L. Bye e. Date and place of recording: March 4, 2010 McHenry County Recorder's Office f. Identification of recording:

ing: Document No. 2010R001057 Clerk of the Circuit Court, 22nd Judicial Circuit, McHenry County, Illinois /s/ Katherine M. Keefe 03/15/2017 Michael G. Cortina Amber L. Bishop SmithAmundsen, LLC Attorney for Crystal Lake Bank & Trust Co., N.A. 2460 Lake Shore Drive, Woodstock, Illinois 60098 (815) 337-4900 Telephone (815) 337-4910 Facsimile mcortina@salawus.com abishop@salawus.com ARDC No. 6255782 ARDC No. 6309698 (Published in the Northwest Herald on March 23, 30, April 6, 2017) 1391013

PUBLIC NOTICE

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE 22nd JUDICIAL CIRCUIT MCHENRY COUNTY, ILLINOIS CRYSTAL LAKE BANK & TRUST COMPANY, N.A., Plaintiff, vs. JENNIE L. BYE, deceased, THE ESTATE OF JENNIE L. BYE, CONNIE L. BYE, Independent Executor of the ESTATE OF JENNIE L. BYE, TAYLOR L. BYE, Heir at Law and Legatee under the Will of Jennie L. Bye, CAMDEN B. QUIROS, a Minor, Heir at Law and Legatee under the Will of Jennie L. Bye, ASCENSIONPOINT RECOVERY SERVICES, LLC, ON BEHALF OF SYNCHRONY BANK (CARE CREDIT CORE DENTAL), Claimant against the Estate of Jennie L. Bye, UNKNOWN HEIRS AND LEGATEES OF THE ESTATE OF JENNIE L. BYE, COBBLESTONE TOWNHOMES ASSOCIATION, UNKNOWN OWNERS & NONRECORD CLAIMANTS, Defendants. Case No. 17 CH000195 NOTICE OF MORTGAGE FORECLOSURE (FOR PUBLICATION) NOTICE is given to Jennie L. Bye, deceased, Unknown Heirs and Legatees of Jennie L. Bye, deceased, and Unknown Owners and Non-record Claimants of the following-described real estate, that the above-entitled mortgage foreclosure action hasbeen commenced and is now pending, and the day on or after which a default may be entered against said Defendants is 4-27-2017. 1) The title of the court, the title of the case, the name of the first named plaintiff and the first named defendant, and the number of the case are identified above. 2) The name of the title holder of record is: The Estate of Jennie L. Bye, deceased. 3) A legal description of the real estate sufficient to identify it with reasonable certainty is as follows: LOT 12 IN COBBLESTONE TOWNHOMES UNIT ONE, BEING A SUBDIVISION IN THE SOUTHWEST QUARTER OF SECTION 16, TOWNSHIP 44 NORTH, RANGE 7 EAST OF THE THIRD PRINCIPAL MERIDIAN, ACCORDING TO THE PLAT THEREOF RECORDED MAY 22, 1986 AS DOCUMENT NUMBER 941441, IN MCHENRY COUNTY, ILLINOIS. 4) Common address or location of mortgaged property is 2333 Linden Dr., Woodstock, IL 60098; Permanent Index Number is 13-16-303-019. 5) An identification of the mortgage sought to be foreclosed is as follows: a. Name of mortgagee: Crystal Lake Bank & Trust Company, N.A. b. Name of Lien: Mortgage c. Date of mortgage: March 2, 2010 d. Name of mortgagor: Jennie L. Bye e. Date and place of recording: March 4, 2010 McHenry County Recorder's Office f. Identification of recording:

PUBLIC NOTICE IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE 22ND JUDICIAL CIRCUIT MC HENRY COUNTY WOODSTOCK, ILLINOIS CitiMortgage, Inc. PLAINTIFF Vs. Unknown Heirs and Legatees of Janet R. Mendoza; CitiBank, N.A. successor by merger to CitiBank (South Dakota), N.A.; Townhomes of Pinegrove Condominium Association; Unknown Owners and Nonrecord Claimants; Richard Kuhn, as Special Representative for Janet R. Mendoza (deceased) DEFENDANTS 17 CH 00097 NOTICE BY PUBLICATION NOTICE IS GIVEN TO YOU: Unknown Heirs and Legatees of Janet R. Mendoza Unknown Owners and Nonrecord Claimants That this case has been commenced in this Court against you and other defendants, praying for the foreclosure of a certain Mortgage conveying the premises described as follows, to-wit: COMMONLY KNOWN AS: 422 Lincoln Avenue Unit #F Fox River Grove, IL 60021 and which said Mortgage was made by: Janet R. Mendoza executed the mortgage, however this individual is deceased and is not named as a defendant in this lawsuit the Mortgagor(s), to Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. as Nominee for Citibank, N.A., as Mortgagee, and recorded in the Office of the Recorder of Deeds of McHenry County, Illinois, as Document No. 2013R0021111; and for other relief; that summons was duly issued out of said Court against you as provided by law and that the said suit is now pending. NOW, THEREFORE, UNLESS YOU file your answer or otherwise file your appearance in this case in the Office of the Clerk of this Court, Katherine M. Keefe Clerk of the Circuit Court 2200 N. Seminary Woodstock, IL 60098 on or before April 10, 2017 A DEFAULT MAY BE ENTERED AGAINST YOU AT ANY TIME AFTER THAT DAY AND A JUDGMENT MAY BE ENTERED IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE PRAYER OF SAID COMPLAINT. CODILIS & ASSOCIATES, P.C. Attorneys for Plaintiff 15W030 North Frontage Road, Suite 100 Burr Ridge, IL 60527 (630) 794-5300 DuPage # 15170 Winnebago # 531 Our File No. 14-16-15506 NOTE: This law firm is a debt collector. I715779

PUBLIC NOTICE IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE 22ND JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, ILLINOIS McHENRY COUNTY JUVENILE DIVISION IN THE INTEREST OF Blake Savage a minor. Case No.: 17JA000001 NOTICE BY PUBLICATION Joshua A. Savage, and any unknown Fathers and to All Whom It May Concern: Take notice that on the 10th day of January, 2007, an abuse and neglect petition was filed under the Juvenile Court Act by ASSISTANT STATE'S ATTORNEY, in the circuit court of McHenry county entitled 'In the interest of Blake Savage, a minor', and that in the courtroom of Judge Christopher Harmon, or any judge sitting in his stead in Room 101 of the McHenry County Government Center, Woodstock, Illinois, the 13th day of April, 2017 at the hour of 9:00 AM, or as soon thereafter as this cause may be heard, an adjudicatory hearing will be held upon the petition to have the child declared to be a ward of the court under that Act. THE COURT HAS AUTHORITY IN THIS PROCEEDING TO TAKE FROM YOU THE CUSTODY AND GUARDIANSHIP OF THE MINOR, TO TERMINATE YOUR PARENTAL RIGHTS, AND TO APPONT A GUARDIAN WITH POWER TO CONSENT TO ADOPTION. YOU MAY LOSE ALL PARENTAL RIGHTS TO YOUR CHILD. IF THE PETITION REQUESTS OF YOUR THE TERMINATION PARENTAL RIGHTS, AND THE APPOINTMENT OF A GUARDIAN WITH POWER TO CONSENT TO ADOPTION, YOU MAY LOSE ALL PARENTAL RIGHTS TO THE CHILD. UNLESS YOU APPEAR, you will not be entitled to further written notices or publication notices of the proceedings in this case, including the filing ofan amended petition or a motion to terminate parental rights. Now, unless you appear at the hearing and show cause against the petition, the allegations of the petition may stand admitted as against you and each of you, and an order of judgment entered. March 17, 2017 /s/ Katherine M. Keefe (Clerk of the Circuit Court)

ag y filed within six months from the date of first publication. Any claim not filed within six months from the date of first publication or claims not filed within three months from the date of mailing or delivery of Notice to Creditor, whichever is later, shall be barred. Claims may be filed in the office of the Clerk of Circuit Court at the McHenry County Government Center, 2200 North Seminary Woodstock, Illinois, Avenue, 60098, or with the representative, or both. Copies of claims filed with the Clerk must be mailed or delivered to the representative and to his attorney within ten days after it has been filed. /s/ Katherine M. Keefe Clerk of the Circuit Court (Published in the Northwest Herald March 9,16,23, 2017) 1271572

PUBLIC NOTICE

STATE OF ILLINOIS IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE TWENTY-SECOND JUDICALCIRCUIT MCHENRY COUNTY-IN PROBATE In the Matter of the Estate of: DOROTHEA H GATES Deceased Case No. 17 PR 91 CLAIM NOTICE Notice is given of the death of: DOROTHEA H GATES of: WOODSTOCK, IL Letters of office were issued on: 3/14/2017 to: Representitive: JUDY ANN NULLE 305 48TH AVE BELLWOOD, IL 60104 whose attorney is : HAMER SCHUH & CUDA 101 EVAN BUREN ST WOODSTOCK, IL 60098 Claims against the estate may be filed within six months from the date of first publication. Any claim notfiled within six months from the date of first publication or claims not filed within three months from the date of mailing or delivery of Notice to Creditor, whichever is later, shall be barred. Claims may be filed in the office of the Clerk of Circuit Court at the McHenry County Government Center, 2200 North Seminary Avenue, Woodstock, Illinois, 60098, or with the representative, or both. Copies of claims filed with the Clerk must be mailed or delivered to the representative and to his attorney within ten days after it has been filed. /s/ Katherine M. Keefe (Published in the Northwest Clerk of the Circuit Court Herald on March 23, 2017) (Published in the Northwest Herald 1391044 on March 23, 30, April 6, 2017) 1355442 PUBLIC NOTICE STATE OF ILLINOIS PUBLIC NOTICE IN THE CIRCUIT COURT Notice is hereby given to the ownOF THE TWENTY -SECOND ers, lienholders, and other interestJUDICAL CIRCUIT ed parties that the following deMCHENRY COUNTY -IN PROBATE scribed abandoned vehicle will be In the Matter of the Estate of sold at auction for cash to the highJILL IRENE FOX est bidder at 10:00 AM on April 4th Deceased 2017 at 641 Joliet St. dyer IN Case No. 17PR000066 46311: 2002 Pontiac Sunfire VIN CLAIM NOTICE 1G2JB124227411547. Seller reNotice is given of the death of: serves the right to reject any bid and the right to bid. JILL IRENE FOX (Published in the Northwest Herald, of: WONDER LAKE, IL March 23, 30, April 6, 2017) Letters of office were issued on: 1268392 2/28/2017 to: Representitive: PUBLIC NOTICE BETH ANN BLAKE Notice is hereby given to the own509 W BREED ST ers, lienholders, and other CHILTON, Wl 53014 interested parties that the following whose attorney is: described abandoned vehicle will CAMPION CURRAN LAMB & be sold at auction for cash to the CUNABAUGH highest bidder at 10:00 AM on 8600 ROUTE 14 SUITE 201 April 4th 2017 4TH 2017 at 641 (Published in the Northwest CRYSTAL LAKE, IL 60014 Joliet St. Dyer IN 46311: 1998 Herald March 9, 16, 23, 2017) Claims against the estate may be Oldsmobile Eighty Eight VIN


Northwest Herald / NWHerald.com • Thursday, March 23, 2017 • Eighty Eight 1G3HN52K0W4818250. Seller reserves the right to reject any bid and the right to bid. (Published in the Northwest Herald, March 23, 30, April 6, 2017) 1390289

PUBLIC NOTICE

NOTICE TO BIDDERS FOR ASPHALT MATERIAL BID The Village of Algonquin is now accepting sealed bid proposals for the Asphalt Material Bid. Bids will be accepted until 10:15am CST on April 6, 2017 at the William J. Ganek Municipal Center, 2200 Harnish Drive, Algonquin, Illinois, 60102 c/o Michelle Weber. Time and Place of Bid Opening Notice is hereby given that the Village of Algonquin, Illinois, will receive sealed bids at the William J. Ganek Municipal Center, 2200 Harnish Drive, Algonquin, Illinois 60102 until 10:15am CST on April 6, 2017 for Asphalt Material Bid, at which time the bids will be publicly opened and read. Bid will be awarded to the lowest responsible bidder determined in the exclusive discretion of the Village Board of Trustees. Description of Work The Work is called Asphalt Material Bid and shall consist of unit price costs for HMA Surface Course Mix "D" N50 and HMA Binder Course IL-19.0, N50. Availability of Contract Documents Electronic copies of Asphalt Material Bid Specifications, and Contract Documents may be obtained for free online at www.algonquin.org (at top of page click on "Business" & select "Bids & RFP's", the project will be listed near the bottom of the page). A compact disc of the information may also be obtained at the Village of Algonquin, Office of the Village Clerk, Ganek Municipal Center, 2200 Harnish Drive, Algonquin, Illinois 60102 upon receipt of a $10.00 non-refundable deposit. If mailing is requested an additional $5.00 deposit will be required. Bid Security A proposal guaranty in the proper amount, as specified in BLRS Special Provision for Bidding Requirements and Conditions for Material Proposals, will be required. Bid Bonds will not be allowed as a proposal guaranty. Submission Format Bids shall be made on the forms furnished by the Village and shall be submitted no later than the specified closing time in an opaque sealed envelope addressed to: Village of Algonquin, attention: Deputy Clerk, 2200 Harnish Drive, Algonquin, IL 60102. Envelopes should be clearly marked, "Sealed Bid - Asphalt Material Bid ". The bids will be opened at this location and read aloud. The Village of Algonquin reserves the right to reject any or all parts thereof, or waive any formality or technical errors, and to make the award in the best interest of the Village. Public Works This contract calls for the construction of a "public works," within the meaning of the Illinois Prevailing Wage Act, 821 ILCS 130/.01 et seq. ("the Act"). The Act requires contractors and subcontractors to pay laborers, workers and mechanics performing services on public works projects no less than current "prevailing rate of wages" (hourly cash wages plus amount for fringe benefits) in the county where the work is performed. The Illinois Department of Labor publishes the prevailing wage rates on its website http://www.state.il.us/

agency/idol/rates/rates.HTM. The Illinois Department of Labor revises the prevailing wage rates and the contractor/subcontractor has an obligation to check the Illinois Department of Labor website for revisions to prevailing wage rates. For information regarding current prevailing wage rates, please refer to the Illinois Department of Labor's website. All contractors and subcontractors rendering services under this contract must comply with all requirements of the Act, including by not limited to, all wage requirements and notice and record keeping duties." Each bidder shall adopt a written sexual harassment policy in compliance with ILCS 5/2-105 (1992). Bidder agrees to comply with Substance Abuse Prevention on Public Works Projects Act, 820 ILCS265/1 et seq. (2008). As required by the Act, the Bidder agrees to file with the Village, prior to commencing work, its written substance abuse prevention program. It is the responsibility of the vendor/contractor/subcontractor to comply with all applicable provisions of FOIA. The regulations of the State of Illinois Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) 5 ILCS 140, apply to all records of the vendor/contractor/subcontractor pertaining to this authorization or contract. When requested by the Village of Algonquin, the vendor/contractor is required to provide all records requested within no more than three (3) business days, at no cost to the Village of Algonquin. Questions All questions regarding this project should be directed to Lee Fell, Christopher Burke Engineering 847-823-0500 By: Tim Schloneger, Village Manager (Published in the Northwest Herald March 22, 23, 2017) 1390611

PUBLIC NOTICE

NOTICE TO BIDDERS FOR CONCRETE MATERIAL BID The Village of Algonquin is now accepting sealed bid proposals for the Concrete Material Bid. Bids will be accepted until 10:30am CST on April 6, 2017 at the William J. Ganek Municipal Center, 2200 Harnish Drive, Algonquin, Illinois, 60102 c/o Michelle Weber. Time and Place of Bid Opening Notice is hereby given that the Village of Algonquin, Illinois, will receive sealed bids at the William J. Ganek Municipal Center, 2200 Harnish Drive, Algonquin, Illinois 60102 until 10:30 am CST on April 6, 2017 for Concrete Material Bid, at which time the bids will be publicly opened and read. Bid will be awarded to the lowest responsible bidder determined in the exclusive discretion of the Village Board of Trustees. Description of Work The Work is called Concrete Material Bid and shall consist of unit price costs for Class SI Concrete. Availability of Contract Documents Electronic copies of Concrete Material Bid Specifications, and Contract Documents may be obtained for free online at www.algonquin.org (at top of page click on "Business" & select "Bids & RFP's", the project will be listed near the bottom of the page). A compact disc of the information may also be obtained at the Village of Algonquin, Office of the Village Clerk, Ganek Municipal Center, 2200 Harnish Drive, Algonquin, Illinois 60102 upon receipt of a $10.00

upon eceip non-refundable deposit. If mailing is requested an additional $5.00 deposit will be required. Bid Security A proposal guaranty in the proper amount, as specified in BLRS Special Provision for Bidding Requirements and Conditions for Material Proposals, will be required. Bid Bonds will not be allowed as a proposal guaranty. Submission Format Bids shall be made on the forms furnished by the Village and shall be submitted no later than the specified closing time in an opaque sealed envelope addressed to: Village of Algonquin, attention: Deputy Clerk, 2200 Harnish Drive, Algonquin, IL 60102. Envelopes should be clearly marked, "Sealed Bid - Concrete Material Bid". The bids will be opened at this location and read aloud. The Village of Algonquin reserves the right to reject any or all parts thereof, or waive any formality or technical errors, and to make the award in the best interest of the Village. Public Works This contract calls for the construction of a "public works," within the meaning of the Illinois Prevailing Wage Act, 821 ILCS 130/.01 et seq. ("the Act"). The Act requires contractors and subcontractors to pay laborers, workers and mechanics performing services on public works projects no less than current "prevailing rate of wages" (hourly cash wages plus amount for fringe benefits) in the county where the work is performed. The Illinois Department of Labor publishes the prevailing wage rates on its website http://www.state.il.us/agency/idol/ rates/rates.HTM. The Illinois Department of Labor revises the prevailing wage rates and the contractor/ subcontractor has an obligation to check the Illinois Department of Labor website for revisions to prevailing wage rates. For information regarding current prevailing wage rates, please refer to the Illinois Department of Labor's website. All contractors and subcontractors rendering services under this contract must comply with all requirements of the Act, including by not limited to, all wage requirements and notice and record keeping duties." Each bidder shall adopt a written sexual harassment policy in compliance with ILCS 5/2-105 (1992). Bidder agrees to comply with Substance Abuse Prevention on Public Works Projects Act, 820 ILCS265/1 et seq. (2008). As required by the Act, the Bidder agrees to file with the Village, prior to commencing work, its written abuse prevention substance program. It is the responsibility of the vendor/contractor/subcontractor to comply with all applicable provisions of FOIA. The regulations of the State of Illinois Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) 5 ILCS 140, apply to all records of the vendor/contractor/subcontractor pertaining to this authorization or contract. When requested by the Village of Algonquin, the vendor/ contractor is required to provide all records requested within no more than three (3) business days, at no cost to the Village of Algonquin. Questions All questions regarding this project should be directed to Lee Fell, Christopher Burke Engineering 847-823-0500 By: Tim Schloneger, Village Manager (Published in the Northwest Herald March 22, 23, 2017) 1390595 McHenryCountySports.com is McHenry County Sports

PUBLIC NOTICE

BEFORE THE PLANNING AND ZONING COMMISSION OF THE VILLAGE OF ALGONQUIN IN THE MATTER OF THE APPLICATION OF SPECTRUM ACQUISITION ALGONQUIN, LLC. LEGAL NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING Notice is hereby given in compliance with the Zoning Ordinance of the Village of Algonquin, Illinois, that a public hearing will be held before the Planning and Zoning Commission of the Village of Algonquin upon the application of Spectrum Acquisition Algonquin, LLC., relating to the real property legally described on Exhibit A attached hereto, commonly known as: approximately 30.3 acres of vacant land located on the south side of Harnish Drive, west of Randall Road Property Index Number (PIN): 19-31-400-025 This application is filed for the following purposes: (i) Annexation, Preliminary PUD approval and Final Plat of Subdivision for the entire property; (ii) On the proposed Lot 1, zoning upon Annexation to B-1 PUD, Special Use to permit development of a senior living facility; (iii) On the proposed Lots 2 and 3, zoning upon Annexation to R1e, PUD for residential use; All pursuant to Section Numbers 21.01, 21.09, 21.11, 21.12 and 21.18 of the Algonquin Zoning Ordinance. A public hearing before the Planning and Zoning Commission on the said application will be held at 7:30 PM. on APRIL 10, 2017 at the William J. Ganek Municipal Center, 2200 Harnish Drive, Algonquin, Illinois, at which time and place any person present may speak on these matters. /s/ Planning and Zoning Commission Village of Algonquin EXHIBIT A Legal Description of Property. THAT PART OF THE NORTH 1/2 OF THE SOUTHEAST 1/4 OF SECTION 31, TOWNSHIP 43 NORTH, RANGE 8 EAST OF THE THIRD PRINCIPAL MERIDIAN, DESCRIBED AS FOLBEGINNING AT THE LOWS: SOUTHWEST CORNER OF SAID NORTH 1/2; THENCE NORTH 1 DEGREE 42 MINUTES 19 SECONDS EAST ALONG THE WEST LINE OF SAID NORTH 1/2, 1284.19 FEET TO THE SOUTH LINE OF HARNISH DRIVE AS DEDICATED BY DOCUMENT NUMBER 1998R0075129; THENCE SOUTH 89 DEGREES 48 MINUTES 16 SECONDS EAST ALONG SAID SOUTH LINE, 657.00 FEET; THENCE SOUTH 0 DEGREES 11 MINUTES 44 SECONDS WEST, 303.00 FEET; THENCE SOUTH 89 DEGREES 48 MINUTES 16 SECONDS EAST, 660.00 FEET; THENCE SOUTH 0 DEGREES 11 MINUTES 44 SECONDS WEST, 980.70 FEET TO THE SOUTH LINE OF THE NORTH 1/2, BEING ALSO THE NORTH LINE OF MILLBROOK TOWNHOMES AS PLATTED BY DOCUMENT 2003R0078555

DOCUMENT 2003R0078555; THENCE NORTH 89 DEGREES 48 MINUTES 05 SECONDS WEST ALONG THE NORTH LINE OF SAID MILLBROOK TOWNHOMES, 1350.83 FEET TO THE POINT OF BEGINNING, IN MCHENRY COUNTY, ILLINOIS.EXCEPTING THEREFROM THE FOLLOWING DESCRIBED PARCEL: THAT PART OF THE NORTH 1/2 OF THE SOUTHEAST 1/4 OF SECTION 31, TOWNSHIP 43 NORTH, RANGE 8 EAST OF THE THIRD PRINCIPAL MERIDIAN DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS: COMMENCING AT THE SOUTHWEST CORNER OF SAID NORTH HALF; THENCE NORTH 1 DEGREE 42 MINUTES 19 SECONDS EAST ALONG THE WEST LINE OF SAID NORTH HALF, 1284.19 FEET TO THE SOUTH LINE OF HARNISH DRIVE AS DEDICATED BY DOCUMENT 1999R0075129; THENCE SOUTH 89 DEGREES 48 MINUTES 16 SECONDS EAST ALONG SAID SOUTH LINE, 657.00 FEET; THENCE SOUTH 0 DEGREES 11 MINUTES 44 SECONDS EAST, 303.00 FEET FOR A POINT OF BEGINNING; THENCE SOUTH 89 DEGREES 48 MINUTES 16 SECONDS EAST, 660.00 FEET; THENCE SOUTH 0 DEGREES 11 MINUTES 44 SECONDS WEST, 339.97 FEET; THENCE NORTH 89 DEGREES 48 MINUTES 16 SECONDS WEST, 461.72 FEET; THENCE NORTHWESTERLY ALONG A CIRCULAR CURVE HAVING A RADIUS OF 150.00 FEET CONCAVE TO THE SOUTHWEST, THE CHORD OF WHICH BEARS NORTH 20 DEGREES 20 MINUTES 02SECONDS WEST, 107.49 FEET; THENCE NORTH 40 DEGREES 51 MINUTES 48SECONDS WEST, 189.53 FEET; THENCE NORTHWESTERLY ALONG A CIRCULAR CURVE HAVING A RADIUS OF 150.00 FEET CONCAVE TO THE NORTHEAST, THE CHORD OF WHICH BEARS NORTH 20 DEGREES 20 MINUTES 02 SECONDS WEST, 107.49 FEET TO THE POINT OF BEGINNING IN MCHENRY COUNTY, ILLINOIS. (Published in the Northwest Herald on March 23, 2017)1390371

PUBLIC NOTICE STATE OF ILLINOIS IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE 22nd JUDICIAL CIRCUIT McHENRY COUNTY IN THE MATTER OF THE PETITION OF Austin Fiore a Minor by Brittney Scaletta Parent or Gudian FOR CHANGE OF NAME Case Number 17 MR 168 NOTICE OF PUBLICATION (MINOR) Public notice is hereby given that on April 26, 2017, at 9:00 a.m. in courtroom 204 of the McHenry

PUBLIC NOTICE

PUBLIC NOTICE: PI Telecom Infrastructure V, LLC proposes to build a 125-foot monopole communications tower (130-foot overall height). Anticipated lighting application is medium intensity dual red/white strobes if required. The Site location is 4727 W. Crystal Lake Road, McHenry County, Illinois 60050 Latitude: 42-20-03.8 N, Longitude: 88-17-15.2 W. The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Antenna Structure Registration (ASR, Form 854) filing number is A1066460. ENVIRONMENTAL EFFECTS - Interested persons may review the application (www.fcc.gov/asr/applications) by entering the filing number. Environmental concerns may be raised by filing a Request for Environmental Review (www.fcc.gov/asr/environmentalrequest) and online filings are strongly encouraged. The mailing address to file a paper copy is: FCC Requests for Environmental Review, Attn: Ramon Williams, 445 12th Street SW, Washington, DC 20554. (Published in the Northwest Herald on March 23, 2017) 1355734

y County Government Center there will be a hearing on my Petition located at: praying for the change of a minor's 216 N HUNTINGTON DR name from Austin Fiore to that of MCHENRY, IL 60050 Austin Scaletta pursuant to the Illinois Compiled Statutes on Dated March 10, 2017 Change of Names. /s/ Mary E. McClellan /s/ Brittney Scaletta McHenry County Clerk Petitioner (Published in the Northwest Herald (Published in the Northwest Herald on March 16, 23, 30, 2017) on March 9, 16, 23, 2017) 1354382 1271566

PUBLIC NOTICE ASSUMED NAME PUBLICATION NOTICE Public Notice is hereby given that on March 10, 2017, a certificate was filed in the Office of the County Clerk of McHenry County, Illinois, setting forth the names and post-office address of all of the persons owning, conducting and transacting the business known as MARTIN DESIGN & IRRIGATION CONSULTING

PUBLIC NOTICE

CLASSIFIED 31 2903 Kama Ave Mchenry, IL 60050 Dated March 8, 2017 /s/ Mary E. McClellan McHenry County Clerk (Published in the Northwest Herald on March 23, 30, April 6, 2017) 1390236

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ASSUMED NAME PUBLICATION NOTICE Public Notice is hereby given that on March 8, 2017, a certificate was filed in the Office of the County Clerk of McHenry County, Illinois, setting forth the names and post-office address of all of the persons owning, conducting and transacting the business known as

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PUBLIC NOTICE

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF COOK COUNTY, ILLINOIS COUNTY DEPARTMENT, LAW DIVISION THE DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, FOR AND ON BEHALF OF THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, Plaintiff, v. ALEJANDRO NAVARRO; MARIA PAPPAS, as Cook County Treasurer and Ex-Officio Cook County Collector; UNKNOWN OWNERS; and NON-RECORD CLAIMANTS, Defendants. Case No. 2017 L 050112 Condemnation Parcel Nos. OL70114 & OL70114TE Job No. R-90-011-14 JURY DEMAND

PUBLICATION NOTICE The requisite affidavit for publication having been filed, notice is hereby given to you, ALEJANDRO NAVARRO; UNKNOWN OWNERS and NON-RECORD CLAIMANTS in this cause, that the Department of Transportation of the State of Illinois has filed a Complaint for Condemnation in the Circuit Court of Cook County, Illinois, for condemnation pursuant to the eminent domain laws of the State of Illinois, of the lands and premises in the Complaint situated in Cook County, State of Illinois, to wit: Exhibit A That part of lots 28 and 27 (except the South 8 feet) in block 139 in Harvey, a subdivision of the East ½ of the Northeast quarter of section 18, township 36 North, range 14, East of the third principal meridian, according to the Plat thereof, recorded March 26, 1891 as document number 1439583 in Cook County, Illinois, bearings and distances based on the Illinois state plane coordinate system, East zone, NAD 83(2011 adjustment), with a combined factor of 0.99998346, being bounded as follows: Beginning at the Northwest corner of said lot 28; thence North 89 degrees 30 minutes 52 seconds East,2.42 feet; thence South 00 degrees 35 minutes 02 seconds West, 42.00 feet to the North line of said South 8 feet of lot 27; thence South 89 degrees 30 minutes 52 seconds West, 1.64 feet to the East right of way line of Wood street; thence North 00 degrees 29 minutes 11 seconds West along said East right of way line, 42.00 feet to the point of beginning. Said parcel contains 87 square feet, or 0.002 acres more or less. Exhibit B That part of lots 28 and 27 (except the South 8 feet) in block 139 in Harvey, a subdivision of the East 1/2of the Northeast quarter of section 18, township 36 North, range 14, East of the third principal meridian, according to the Plat thereof, recorded March 26, 1891 as document number 1439583 in Cook County, Illinois, bearings and distances based on the Illinois state plane coordinate system, East zone, NAD 83(2011 adjustment), with a combined factor of 0.99998346, being bounded as follows: Commencing at the Northwest corner of said lot 28; thence North 89 degrees 30 minutes 52 seconds East along the North line of said lot 28, 2.42 feet to the point of beginning; thence North 89 degrees 30 minutes 52 seconds East continuing along said North line, 13.58 feet; thence South 00 degrees 29minutes 11 seconds East, 14.38 feet; thence South 89 degrees 30 minutes 49 seconds West, 2.71 feet; thence South 00 degrees 20 minutes 47 seconds East 5.30 feet; thence South 89 degrees 30 minutes 49 seconds West, 2.27 feet; thence South 00 degrees 29 minutes 11 seconds East, 22.32 feet to the North line of said South 8.00 feet of lot 27; thence North 89 degrees 30 minutes 52 seconds East, 9.36 feet; thence North 00 degrees 35 minutes 02 seconds East, 42 .00 feet to the point of beginning. Said parcel contains 479 square feet, or 0.011 acres more or less. Summons was duly issued out of said Court against you as provided by law and such cause is now pending. The aforesaid Complaint for Condemnation is for the ascertainment of the just compensation to be paid to the owner or owners and other interested parties for the acquisition of fee simple title to Parcel No. 0L70114, and a temporary easement across and upon Parcel No. 0L70114TE, as described in Exhibits A and B hereto, in connection with the improvement of Wood Street, in Cook County, Illinois. NOW THEREFORE, unless you, the above-named defendants, file your appearance in this cause, in the office of the Clerk of the Circuit Court of the County Department - Law Division,Cook County, 69 West Washington, Chicago, Illinois, on or before the 23rd day of April, 2017, default may be entered against you at any time after that day, or the case may be tried at any time after said date, and a judgment entered in accordance with the prayer of said complaint. /s/ Dorothy Brown Clerk of the Circuit Court of Cook County, illinois (Published in the Northwest Herald on March 23, 2017) 1355777


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