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Kane County CHRONICLE MONDAY, APRIL 22, 2013 | KCCHRONICLE.COM POINT TAKEN LOCAL SCHOOLS COMPETE AT ST. CHARLES EAST TOURNAMENT PAGE 4. Jeff Krage for Shaw Media Wheaton Academy’s Alex Renn waits to hit a return during the tennis tournament Saturday at St. Charles East. LOOKING FORWARD THE WEATHER State of the Village set in North Aurora NORTH AURORA – North Aurora president Dale Berman will speak at the 2013 State of the Village set for 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at Oak Street Restaurant, 945 Oak St. in North Aurora. Open to the public. For information, visit AuroraChamber.com or call 630-256-3180. ‘The Wiz’ at St. Charles East ST. CHARLES – St. Charles East High School will present “The Wiz” at 7:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday and at 2 p.m. Sunday at the Norris Cultural Arts Center, 1040 Dunham Road, St. Charles. Tickets are available at the door. The cost is $7 for adults and $5 for students and seniors. Today Mostly cloudy, slight chance of showers. Tuesday Showers and thunderstorms likely. High 63 Low 47 High 55 Low 35

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Kane County

CHRONICLEMONDAY, APRIL 22, 2013 | KCCHRONICLE.COM

POINTTAKEN

LOCAL SCHOOLS COMPETE AT ST. CHARLES EAST TOURNAMENT PAGE 4.Jeff Krage for Shaw Media

Wheaton Academy’s Alex Renn waits to hit a return during the tennis tournament Saturday at St. Charles East.

LOOKING FORWARD THE WEATHER

State of the Village set in North AuroraNORTH AURORA – North Aurora president Dale Berman will speak

at the 2013 State of the Village set for 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.

Wednesday at Oak Street Restaurant, 945 Oak St. in North Aurora.

Open to the public. For information, visit AuroraChamber.com or

call 630-256-3180.

‘The Wiz’ at St. Charles EastST. CHARLES – St. Charles East High School will present “The Wiz”

at 7:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday and at 2 p.m. Sunday at the Norris

Cultural Arts Center, 1040 Dunham Road, St. Charles. Tickets are

available at the door. The cost is $7 for adults and $5 for students

and seniors.

Today

Mostly cloudy, slight chance

of showers.

Tuesday

Showers and thunderstorms

likely.

High 63

Low 47

High 55

Low 35

KaneCountyChronicle/KCChronicle.com

•Monday,April22,2013|LOC

ALNEWS

2 OUT AND ABOUT

Cougars plan pitch, hit and run competitionGENEVA – The Kane County Cougars will host a Major League

Baseball Pitch, Hit & Run competition, presented by Scotts,from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. May 4 at Fifth Third Bank Ballpark,34W002 Cherry Lane, Geneva. The event is free for area youthsbetween the age of 7 and 14 (age is determined as of July 17).All participants must provide a copy of a valid birth certificatefor age verification, as well as fill out a registration/waiverform. There is no advance registration. Also that morning, theCougars will be offering a free youth baseball/softball clinic ledby Cougars players that is open to the public. The event willbe from 9:30 until 11 a.m. that morning. No RSVP is necessary;interested attendees are encouraged to bring a glove and batand can arrive through the stadium’s Gate 3 entrance begin-ning at 9 a.m. that morning. For information, call 630-232-8811.

Arbor Day festival in St. CharlesST. CHARLES – St. Charles’ annual Arbor Day event featuring

live music, a tree raffle and tree care demonstrations is setfor 4 p.m. Friday at Lincoln Park, which is at Fourth Street andRoute 64 in St. Charles. Children in the fifth grade and youngermay enter an art contest. Draw or create artwork all abouttrees. Sixth-graders through adults may enter a writing con-test. The subject is “trees in my life” and essays should be nomore than 300 words. Winners will receive a prize and specialrecognition at the Arbor Day festivities. Winning submissionswill be displayed at the St. Charles Municipal Building throughApril.

Two Guys and Free Spaghetti in St. CharlesST. CHARLES – Two Guys and Free Spaghetti will provide

a homemade spaghetti and meatballs dinner with beverage,salad, garlic bread and homemade dessert to anyone whoattends the event from 5 to 7 p.m. Sunday at St. CharlesEpiscopal Church, 994 N. Fifth Ave. (Route 25), in St. Charles.There will be special entertainment from The Need to Be SeenRadio Troupe, performing old-time radio comedies. Carryoutis available, and the building is handicapped accessible. Forinformation, call Joe at 630-890-658.

Get ready for Spring-tastic Extravaganza in GenevaGENEVA – A Spring-tastic Extravaganza is set from 2 to 4

p.m. May 4, at Going to My Happy Place Yoga/World MartialArts Academy USA, 316 Anderson Blvd., Geneva. The event fea-tures food, refreshments, health consultations, chair massage,acupuncture for weight loss, eyebrow threading, fashion styl-ing tips, individual yoga and martial art consultations, bags/accessories and prizes. Admission is free. For information, visitwww.GoingToMyHappyPlace.com or call 630-402-0033.

Bird walk set for Nelson Lake in MayBATAVIA – A bird walk is set for 8 a.m. May 11, at Nelson

Lake/Dick Young Forest Preserve, which is on Nelson LakeRoad, south of Main Street and west of Randall Road, in Bata-via. Participants should meet in the parking lot by the silo, onNelson Lake Road. The public is invited. For information, call630-896-3219.

Have news to share?To submit news to the Kane County Chronicle, send a news

release to [email protected] sure to include the time, the date and the place, as well as

contact information.

Earth Day event drawscrowd at Peck FarmPark

By NICOLE [email protected]

GENEVA – Carolyn Burn-ham told people who stoppedby her booth Saturday thatbuying bottled water costs2,000 times what people pay toget water out of the their tap.

Burnham, a volunteerwith the Batavia Environ-mental Commission, admin-istered a water taste test atan Earth Day event at PeckFarm Park in Geneva. Peo-ple could sample regular tapwater, filtered tap water andbottled water.

Isaac Orcutt of Elburntasted the three samples andfound out his favorite samplewas plain tap water.

“I think they’re tryingto raise awareness that bot-tled water is really bad andthat the water in the bottle isbad,” he said.

The water taste test wasjust one of the many activi-ties offered Saturday hostedby Geneva’s Natural Resourc-es Committee and the parkdistrict’s Peck Farm Park.

Isaac Orcutt, along withhis wife, Michelle and their6-month-old baby, Nolan, alsohad a chance to get rid of anold television at Saturday’sevent, which offered electron-ics recycling.

“We’re getting more intotrying to pay attention to

what we’re doing and whatwe’re eating,” he said.

Jay Womack, chair ofthe Natural Resources Com-mittee of Geneva, said theevent offers people a chanceto learn more about sustain-ability, pick up a free tomatoplant or buy a sapling to plantlater.

Several booths were setup, including a bicycle tune-up booth and children’s yogademonstrations. Ann Droverand Nancy Goodfellow, bothpart of the Green Sanctuaryorganization with the Uni-tarian Universalist Societyof Geneva, were selling re-us-able packaging made of clothto use in place of wrapping

paper.“It’s better for the environ-

ment,” Drover said. “You’renot throwing it into a landfillafter you use it.”

Womack pointed out manyother activities related toEarth Day, which is Monday.He said families could en-joy drawing with chalk andlearning about solar panels.People could also purchase arain barrel or compost bin.

“We just want people torecognize that even the littlestthing matters,” he said. “It allcounts. … It’s all about choic-es. You can make a choicethat’s good for the earth andpeople recognize they havethe ability to change.”

Geneva teen wins Congressional art eventKANE COUNTY [email protected]

BATAVIA – U.S. Rep. Ran-dy Hultgren, R-Winfield, an-nounced that Avie Church-well, a junior from GenevaHigh School, was selected asthe winner of this year’s 14thDistrict Congressional ArtCompetition, according to anews release.

“I’d like to thank all of thestudents for participating inthis year’s competition andI’m pleased to congratulateAvie Churchwell for her win-ning entry,” Hultgren said,according to the release. “I

continue to be impressed bythe ability and creativity ofthe students in our area andlook forward to seeing Avie’swork displayed at the U.S.Capitol.”

Churchwell’s submission,“Tea Party for One,” was se-lected by a panel of three localjudges from among 19 entriessubmitted by area high schoolstudents.

The portrait will hang inthe U.S. Capitol in Washing-ton, D.C. for one year. Church-well received a roundtripticket to Washington D.C.compliments of SouthwestAirlines to attend the official

ceremony honoring Congres-sional Art Competition win-ners from across the countrylater this spring.

H u l t g r e n p r e s e n t e dChurchwell with a certificateand ribbon at a reception Fri-day at Water Street Studios inBatavia.

The Congressional ArtCompetition was created in1982 as an opportunity toshowcase the talent of highschool students and acknowl-edge gifted young artists.Hundreds of thousands of lo-cal high school students havebeen able to participate overthe past three-plus decades.

Nicole Weskerna – [email protected]

Emma Williams, teacher and sponsor for Geneva High School’s Envi-ronmental Club, draws with chalk at an Earth Day event Saturday inGeneva.

By ASHLEY [email protected]

MAPLE PARK – CarsonKing, a 9-year-old from SugarGrove, didn’t have any art-work displayed in Sunday’sKaneland Community FineArts Festival, but that didn’tdampen his enthusiasm forthe activities he did get todo, particularly the potterywheel.

The John Shields Elemen-tary School fourth-graderonly watched someone use thepottery wheel at last year’sfestival, his mother Lisa Kingsaid.

“He’s so excited to do this,”she said, watching him moldthe spinning clay.

Held at Kaneland HighSchool, the 14th annual Kane-land Community Fine ArtsFestival also featured liveperformances; visual artistswhose focuses included wa-tercolors, fiber felt work andjewelry; and artwork fromcurrent and former students.

Seated at a table near theauditorium, 2010 graduateMegan Cline displayed someof her prints. The junior at theSchool of the Art Institute ofChicago is majoring in finearts with a concentration inprintmaking, although shealso draws, sculpts and paints,she said.

The Kaneland festival wasthe first such art festival shehas participated in, she said.

In the arts pavilion, linesfor caricatures and silhou-ettes kept artists’ pencils and– in the case of the latter – scis-sors busy.

Artist in residence EricNye also drew a crowd withhis interactive paintings. Vis-itors were welcome to turn thepaintings’ moveable pieces,which were mostly arrangedin 3-by-3 or 4-by-4 grids. Be-cause each piece had threesides, there were thousandsof ways any single paintingcould look.

Nye, 41, also displayedartwork from the KanelandSchool District 302 studentshe talked to as the artist inresidence. He spoke aboutwhat it’s like to a be a work-ing artist, he said, adding hetold them they shouldn’t wor-

ry if every piece isn’t a mas-terpiece.

“You can always make an-other one,” he said.

Nye plans to incorporatethe artwork the childrenmade, which included sets ofblocks inspired by his inter-

active paintings, into a piecefor the district office, Nyesaid. Seeing the students’ en-thusiasm and the momentsthat the lightbulb went off intheir eyes made Nye proud tobe a part of the program, hesaid.

LOCALNEW

S|Kane

County

Chronicle

/KCChronicle.com

•Monday,A

pril22,2013

3

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Crowd gets hands-on with art at festivalMAPLE PARK

Photos by Ashley Rhodebeck – [email protected]

Carson King, a 9-year-old John Shields Elementary School fourth-grad-er from Sugar Grove, experiments at the pottery wheel Sunday duringthe 14th annual Kaneland Community Fine Arts Festival at KanelandHigh School.

LEFT: Ten-year-old Lily Karl of Elburn poses for Michael Ganser as hecreates a silhouette of her.

KaneCountyChronicle/KCChronicle.com

•Monday,April22,2013|S

PORTS

4 ST. CHARLES EAST INVITATIONAL

East’s Koenen, Bowman keep racking up winsBy DENNIS D. [email protected]

ST. CHARLES – Therewas a lot of chatter aroundthe St. Charles East BoysTennis Invitational Satur-day.

Some of it was typicalshouts of encouragementfrom spectators: “That a wayJason!” or “Let’s go Nick.”

But there also was someheated discussions betweenplayers, including an un-pleasant exchange betweenSt. Charles East standoutJasper Koenen and Liber-tyville’s Ben VanDixhorn inthe No. 1 singles match.

“Everybody knows thatwas my point!” VanDixhornshouted at Koenen near theend of the first set, whichVanDixhorn won, 6-2.

Afterward, Koenen wasapologetic about his role inthe misunderstanding.

“I had called a ball outright here and he didn’t hearme,” Koenen explained. “Iwas more upset with the wayI was playing and so that an-ger I kind of took out on him.… It was just the moment. Iwas disappointed in how Iwas playing. I felt bad that Iput my anger on him.”

Koenen regrouped andwon the second set, 6-3, forc-ing a race to 10 points in thethird-set tiebreaker, whichhe won, 10-6.

“I came out really slow,”said Koenen, who improvedto 15-0 on the season. “I justcame out not moving my feet,not hitting the ball right. … Ihung in there with not greattennis in the second set, buttowards the end of the sec-ond set and the third set, Iplayed some of my best ten-nis.”

Koenen said he had neverplayed VanDixhorn before,but the two know each oth-er well from having playedin some of the same tourna-ments.

Koenen gave VanDixhorncredit for playing well.

“That was my first oppo-nent that’s really pushed methis season,” said Koenen,who breezed to the finalsby not losing a single gamein his first two matches.“That’s the first set I’ve lost

this season. That’s what Ineed. I need someone to kindof push me.”

Koenen said teammateJustin Bowman providesthat sort of tough competi-tion in practice.

Bowman, also 15-0 on the

season, cruised to the cham-pionship at No. 2 singles bydefeating Libertyville’s EricKlein, 6-0, 6-0.

“Justin would be a No.1 on a ton of teams,“ Eastcoach Rob Livermore said.“He knows that, so he always

focuses on keeping his levelof play as high as possible inall of his matches.”

Koenen and Bowman’s ti-tles helped the Saints finishsecond to Libertyville in theteam standings.

The Wildcats swept to

victory in all three doublesdivisions, though their No. 1doubles team of Jack Spring-gate and Scott Daluga had torally to defeat Nick Huangand Ryan Doeckel of Geneva,5-7, 6-1, 10-8.

“I’m not upset becauseI’ve never been to the finalsin this tournament before,so that alone is a victory,”Doeckel said. “But they werea beatable team.”

They looked especiallybeatable after Daluga begancramping up severely at thebeginning of the second set,but he gutted out the rest ofthe match, which seemed togive the Libertyville duo anemotional lift.

“We, unfortunately, didnot have enough momentumand energy,” Huang said.“It kind of was a snowballeffect and they really gottheir energy in the secondset and it carried over intothe tiebreak. Unfortunately,that’s why we lost by such asmall margin because theywere more motivated thanwe were.”

Wheaton Academy’s bestfinish was a fourth placeresult for sophomore ChrisJones at No. 2 singles.

Jeff Krage for Shaw Media

St. Charles East’s Jasper Koenen hits a return during Saturday’s St. Charles East Invitational in St. Charles.

Jeff Krage for Shaw Media

Geneva’s Brad Burgess hits a return during a match Saturday at the St. Charles East Invitational.

SPORTS|Kane

County

Chronicle

/KCChronicle.com

•Monday,A

pril22,2013

5LOOKING FORWARD: THIS WEEK AHEAD

IN KANE COUNTY CHRONICLE SPORTS

TODAYBaseball: Batavia at St. Charles East, 4:30 p.m.; York at St. Charles

North, 4:30 p.m.; Aurora Christian atMarmion, 4:30 p.m.; AuroraCentral Catholic at Chicago Christian, 4:30 p.m.; Burlington Centralat Hampshire, 4:30 p.m.; St. Francis at Montini, 4:30 p.m.; MarianCentral Catholic atWheaton Academy, 4:30 p.m.Softball: St. Charles East at Elgin, 4:30 p.m.; Guerin Prep at Rosary,

4:30 p.m.; Aurora Central Catholic at Chicago Christian, 4:30 p.m.;Wheaton Academy at St. Edward, 4:30 p.m.Girls soccer: St. Charles North at Plainfield North, 6:15 p.m.; Im-

maculate Conception at Aurora Central Catholic, 4:30 p.m.; WheatonAcademy atMontini, 4:30 p.m.Boys track: Burlington Central at Burlington Central Triangular

Meet, 4:30 p.m.Girls track and field: Rosary, St. Francis at RosaryMeet, 4:30 p.m.;

Burlington Central at Burlington Central Triangular Meet, 4:30 p.m.Boys tennis:West Chicago at St. Francis, 4:30 p.m.Boys volleyball: Streamwood at Geneva, 6 p.m.; Joliet Catholic at

St. Francis, 6 p.m.; York atWheaton Academy, 5:30 p.m.Girls badminton: St. Charles East at Metea Valley, 4:15 p.m.Boyswater polo: Glenbrook North at St. Charles East, 6 p.m.Girls water polo: St. Charles East at Schaumburg, 6 p.m.; Conant

at St. Charles North, 6 p.m.

PREP SCHEDULE

TuesdayCoverage of today’s Batavia-St. Charles East baseball game.Thematchup is one of numerousmakeup games scheduled for the

week after a flurry of weather-related postponements last week.

ThursdayFeature on Batavia thrower Sebastian Vermaas.After a short lull, Vermaas has helped return the Bulldogs’

throwing program to prominence in the Upstate Eight Confer-ence.

SaturdayCoverage of Friday night’s Kane County Girls Track Meet,

featuring all the Tri-Cities teams as well as competition from thesurrounding area.This year’s meet will be hosted by Geneva High School. UEC

Indoor champion St. Charles East will be among the favorites atthe meet.

SOFTBALL: WAUBONSIE VALLEY 5, GENEVA 4

Vikings tumble againstWarriors

COUGARS 7-4, RIVER BANDITS 3-3

Cougars snare doubleheader sweepBy VINNIE DUBER

[email protected]

GENEVA – The Quad Cit-ies River Bandits were a bigreason the Cougars startedwith an underwhelming 4-8record, dealing Kane Countyfive of those eight losses.

But after another bout ofnasty April weather forcedthe postponement of Friday’sscheduled contest between thetwo Midwest League rivals,the Cougars struck back in abig way.

The Cougars swept a dou-bleheader with the River Ban-dits on Saturday, taking Game1, 7-3, and winning Game 2, 4-3.

The pair of wins gave theCougars a series victory afterQuad Cities’ win on Thursday.

“It was a big step for usright there coming back andwinning two and getting theseries and getting a little mo-mentum finally,” managerMark Johnson said. “The kidswere excited, and it showed.They played with some enthu-siasm and caught the ball and

threw strikes. Hopefully we’llkeep swinging the bats well.”

The Cougars got every-thing they needed Saturdayat Fifth Third Bank Ballpark,including quality startingpitching, timely hitting and awhole bunch of runs.

Rock Shoulders was theday’s offensive star, going 5for 6 with two doubles, twohome runs, a walk, four RBIsand three runs scored.

His performance powereda Cougars offense that piledup 11 runs on 19 hits over thecourse of two seven-inninggames.

“Wow,” Johnson said ofShoulders’ impressive day atthe plate. “He’s just been kill-ing the ball. He’s been thatsolidifier in the middle of thelineup that kind of protectsthe other guys that have beenstruggling a little bit. Nowsome of the guys are swing-ing with him, and they’re put-ting it together. It’s showing.When they all start clicking,it’s going to be pretty [darn]fun.”

Click they did in Game 1as Kane County roughed upQuad Cities starting pitcherBrian Holmes for five runs inthe first three innings. A four-run third sent Holmes pack-ing before the second out wasrecorded.

Cougars starter PierceJohnson turned in his bestouting of the young season af-ter going 11 days since his laststart thanks to various weath-er-related cancelations.

The right-hander went fiveinnings Saturday, allowingone unearned run on threehits and striking out six enroute to his first win of theyear.

Game 2 was a tighter con-test, as the teams went back-and-forth, though the Cougarspicked up some clutch hittingwhen Marco Hernandez deliv-ered an RBI single to break a3-all tie in the bottom of thesixth.

It was the type of clutchhit manager Johnson said theteam has been lacking in theseason’s early going.

By JAY [email protected]

GENEVA – Geneva softballcoach Greg Dierks lugged thememory of a blown, late leadagainst Waubsonsie Valleylast year into Saturday’s latestmeeting with the Warriors.

In last year’s game, theWarriors rallied to a win be-cause of some well-placed,bloop hits in the seventh in-ning.

“That one bugged me untiltoday,” Dierks said. “Now I’vegot a new one.”

While Saturday’s 5-4 lossto the Warriors representedprogress relative to how theVikings have played lately,it still was bothersome, espe-cially considering how wellthe Vikings played most of thegame.

Geneva (3-9, 1-6 UpstateEight Conference River) wascoming off a 15-0 embarrass-ment against Metea Valley itslast time out.

“I told them afterwards[Saturday] that we have to find

some confidence out of the factthat we did so many thingswell today and carry that over,and just keep working throughthe things that didn’t go wellfor us,” Dierks said.

Geneva led Waubonsie (11-2, 6-1 UEC Valley), 4-2, withtwo outs and nobody on basefor the Warriors in the top ofthe sixth inning when defen-sive disaster struck.

On consecutive plays, Vi-kings pitcher Haley Orwiginduced ground balls to thirdbase, both of which Vikingsthird baseman Kirsten Sear-cy fielded cleanly. But, onboth occasions, first basemanJordyn Schmidt was unableto snag Searcy’s seeminglyon-target pegs, prolonging theinning.

The Warriors made theVikings pay. With runnersat second and third, Waubon-sie junior Melaina Koulossmacked a two-run single toright field, and took secondbase when the ball was mis-handled in the outfield. SeniorErin Hohman then singled to

left field to score what turnedout to be the winning run.

The Vikings rallied from a2-0 deficit by scoring four runsin the fourth off Warriors start-er Jordan Kurth. Geneva cen-ter fielder Bridget Weitzel start-ed the inning with a double andfreshman Emily Plocinski,sophomore Madison Keith andjunior Jenelle Reilly added hitsas part of the outburst.

The Vikings’ mid-game mo-mentum arguably started withthe final play of the top of thefourth, when a strong throwfrom Keith in left field to Reil-ly behind the plate beat Wau-bonsie’s Meghan Grannan,who was attempting to scoreon a sacrifice fly.

The Warriors also encoun-tered offensive frustration inthe top of the third, when lead-off hitter Amanda Lack’s driveto left-center field bounced offthe very top of the wall backonto the outfield. Lack endedup being stranded.

It seemed like it might bethat kind of day for Warriorscoach Aly Kelley’s team.

KaneCountyChronicle/KCChronicle.com

•Monday,April22,2013|C

OMICS

6Arlo & Janis

Big Nate

Crankshaft

Stone Soup

Dilbert

Garfield

Get Fuzzy is on vacation. Please enjoy this strip from Feb. 15, 2011.

The Pajama Diaries

Pearls Before Swine

Rose Is Rose

COMICSANDADVICE|

Kane

County

Chronicle

/KCChronicle.com

•Monday,A

pril22,2013

7Beetle Bailey

Blondie

The Born Loser

The Argyle Sweater Real Life Adventures

Momwants ex towatch son’s practice

Dear Abby: My 14-year-oldson, “Nils,” recently joineda sport he really enjoys. Hisstepdad and I are at everypractice, helping the coachesand coaching my son along.

Nils recently commentedto me that he would like it ifhis father could come and seehim practice. I took it uponmyself, as I usually do, to callmy ex, “John,” and suggesthe make an appearancebecause it would make ourson happy.

My husband, who hasbeen a wonderful stepdad toNils for 13 years now, toldme I should leave it alone.He said if John was a “real”father, he would just show upwithout being asked.

When things like thishappen, should I leave italone, or should I ask Johnto be involved more than hetries to be? I tell my ex aboutall of our son’s activities andsometimes he just doesn’tshow. – Trying To Be A GoodMom

Dear Trying:Not knowingyour former husband, I can’tguess his reason for not com-ing to your son’s practices,particularly if he said he wasgoing to attend. John maybe irresponsible, or he mayhave unforeseen schedulingconflicts. By telling himabout your son’s activitiesand letting him know hispresence is wanted, you havedone your job as a conscien-tious mother. At 14, Nils isold enough to also call hisfather and invite him. Therest is up to your ex.

Dear Abby: In reference tothe letter from the man whowas constantly setting off“gaydar” alarms in females(March 10), I would like toshare my experience.

I dated and then marrieda man who incorrectly set offMY “gaydar.” It had nothingto do with his mannerisms,his speech or appearance.It was his extreme personalinsecurity regarding datingand making friends. In ad-dition, “Mr. Not-Gay” couldneither read nor write, whichcaused even more emotionalinsecurity.

After we had been

married 10 years he becamephysically disabled and wehad to move. No one in ournew city took him for gay,even without me and withouta wedding ring on him. Hedivorced me at 62 becausethe 30-something home-careaides looked better, but that’sanother story. – Marcia InPennsylvania

Dear Marcia: I hope youwill write again and tell usthe rest of the story, as I’msure I’m not the only personwho would be interestedin reading it. I agree thatindividuals who are uncom-fortable with themselvessometimes emit vibes thatmake others uncomfortablebecause I have experiencedit. But this subject doeshighlight the absurdity ofgay stereotypes. Because aman is slight, soft-spokenand a meticulous dresserdoes not mean he is gay, anymore than it means a manwho is fat, sloppy and loud isstraight.

Dear Abby: I have been see-ing “Duane” for two months.He’s kind, good-looking, suc-cessful, smart and fun. He’salso apparently quite proudof his astonishingly hairychest because he alwayswears his shirts unbuttonednearly to his navel. Whenwe’re in public, you can seepeople react. Sometimes theypoint and whisper.

I gently raised the issue,but he didn’t seem to think itwas a big deal. I like him, butI’m embarrassed sometimes.Any thoughts? – Blushing InSan Francisco

Dear Blushing: Yes. Yourfriend is suffering fromoverexposure. When strang-ers point and whisper, whatthey’re saying is usually nocompliment. Because Duane’sdecolletage embarrasses you,give him a choice: Button upor mow the “lawn.”

• Write Dear Abby atwww.dearabby.com.

JeannePhillips

DEAR ABBY

KaneCountyChronicle/KCChronicle.com

•Monday,April22,2013|P

UZZLES

8

Opener’s rebid pavesthe auction’s path

BRIDGE by Phillip Alder

Ben Hecht, who was knownas the Shakespeare of Holly-wood, said, “Trying to determinewhat is going on in the world byreading newspapers is like tryingto tell the time by watching thesecond hand of a clock.”

When a player makes hissecond bid, he should give moreinformation about the distribu-tion and strength of his handthan he supplied with his initialcall. Let’s look at the opener’schoices this week after partnerhas responded at the one-level.What should South rebid in thisdeal?

This is the basic theory: Ifhe makes a minimum rebid, heshows minimum count, some-times 12-14 points; at other timesit will be 12-16 (or an unexciting17). If opener makes a jump rebid,he guarantees extra strength,15-17 or (17-plus) 18-20. Also, if hebids a new suit at the two-level,he indicates at least five cards inhis first suit. Bidding a suit forthe second time promises at leastsix. And no-trump specifies abalanced hand.

Here, South should rebid twono-trump, showing (a good 17) or18 or 19 (or a bad 20). This rebiddoes not deny a four-card majorand is in principle game-forcing.

Against three no-trump, Westleads the heart jack. South haseight top tricks: two spades,three hearts, one diamond andtwo clubs. His best chance isa 3-2 diamond split. However,dummy is short of entries. Theright play is to win trick one andduck (lose) a diamond. Declarerwins the second heart and ducksanother diamond. He takes thenext (heart) play by East, leadshis last diamond to dummy’s ace,and cashes the two remainingwinners in the suit, giving him 10tricks in all.

CROSSWORD

CELEBRITY CIPHER

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THE RAIN TO STOP!”Photo By: Susan

Monday

April 22, 2013

JOB FAIRThursday, April 25 1pm-4pm

Expanding and seeking customer-focused applicantsto provide community-based services to individualswith physical, intellectual disabilities and behavioralhealth issues. Positions available in Kane & Kendallcounties.

DSP - Behavior Support - Aurora (FT)DSP - Rehabilitation Instructor - Aurora (FT)Case Manager QIDP - Aurora (FT)Direct Support Person (DSP) -

Aurora & Tri-Cities (FT & PT)DSP - House Manager - Aurora (FT)Case Manager MHP - Aurora (PT)Mental Health Professional - Aurora (FT)

Contact Elizabeth at 630-966-4028to schedule an interview. Walk-ins welcome!

Association for Individual Development309 W. New Indian Trail Court, Aurora, IL 60506

www.the-association.org

Vintage Watches – Elgin,Bulova,Benrus, Walthan, Wyler10KGF – Some Windup – SomeNeed New Battery – Negotiable

$200 630-587-6620

FIELD POSITION – PART TIMESeeking a part time person who iscapable of reading building plansand who is able to sketch a homein our computer system. Knowl-edge of Apex Draw program a plus!This person will also transfer build-ing square footage into ourdatabase, field measure homes,additions, decks, etc. and take pic-tures of homes and download pho-tos to our database. We provide atownship vehicle. A good drivingrecord a must! Person must beavailable at least one day duringthe week to pull building plans atseveral municipalities. Eveningsand/or weekends is also ok in addi-tion to the one weekday. This posi-tion is for about 10 hours per weekbut will begin at additional hoursper week. Contact Tammy at:[email protected]

TV CABINET/ARMOIREFrench Provincial by Tom Price.

22”x42”x82”, very good condition.Originally $2400, asking $299.

630-587-8388

MEDIA CONSOLECrate Barrel, color Espresso,

48x19x20, $100/obo.630-677-1477

UMBRELLA9 ft, all weather poly, brown &

white weave, excellent condition!$40. 630-677-1477

Dryer ~ Maytag AtlantisOversize cap, Intellidry, 240 VoltElectric, $130. 630-277-1602

1980 MGB 2 DR Roadster Limited.Black convertible softtop, beige in-terior. 4 cylinder engine, 4-speed

manual transmission, AM/FMStereo, CD player, MG Limited Magwheels, rear luggage rack. 70,951miles. Best Offer 630/643/4634.

HousekeepingSodexo is currently seekingFT/PT Housekeepers and Super-visors to clean Health and Fit-ness Centers in Crystal Lake, ILand Huntley, IL. Candidatesmust have commercial clean-ing experience. Must be able towork between 9pm & 5am.

Interested candidates may call815-334-3947.

Sodexo will require abackground check and drugscreen for these positions.

EOE, M/F/D/V

HOUSEKEEPINGAIDE

DeKalb County Rehab &Nursing Center has a fulltime position available inour Housekeeping Depart-ment. Experience preferred.Starting wage is $8.25 perhour. No phone calls please.

Must be dependableExcellent benefitsEvery other weekendUniform allowance

Attendance incentive

Apply at:

DeKalb County Rehab& Nursing Center

2600 North Annie Glidden RdDeKalb, Illinois 60115

EOE

RECEPTIONISTDeKalb County Rehab &Nursing Center has a parttime Receptionist positionavailable. Monday-FridayEvening Shift, every otherweekend Day Shift & addi-tional miscellaneous hoursas needed. Word & Excelknowledge helpful. Startingwage is $8.91 per hour.

Apply at:

DeKalb County Rehab& Nursing Center

2600 North Annie Glidden RdDeKalb, Illinois 60115

EOE

RECEPTIONISTFriendly Sugar Grove Dental Of-fice is seeking a PT, long termReceptionist. Prefer mature, de-tail oriented, responsible, orga-nized individual to become apart of our already wonderfulteam.

Please contact Laura630-466-4511

RADIO / PHONO CONSOLEVintage 40's, great condition $295.

630-406-6783

Vintage Zenith 40's Radio/PhonoConsole, great condition $295.630-406-6783

BOOKCASE ~ HANDCRAFTEDLarge, oak with a sewing center.

MUST SEE! $395.630-406-6783

CAMERA - NIKON N4004 35mmcamera with leather case & carryingbag. $100. 630-406-6783

! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! !

I BUYCARS,

TRUCKS,VANS &SUVs

1990 & Newer

Will beat anyone'sprice by

$300.

Will pay extra forHonda, Toyota & Nissan

815-814-1964or

815-814-1224

! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! !

HOUSE SITTING. A mature womanwith an 8 lb dog would like to dohouse & pet sitting in exchange for

rent. Reliable with references.Helen: 630-263-3132

BOBCAT TIRES - New! 10-16.5 12ply Brand New Samson Skid steerBobcat pavement tires 12 ply $210ea. Other sizes of skidsteer tiresavailable! 815-895-0244www.gearworkstire.com

BOBCAT TIRES - New! 12-16.5 12ply Brand New Samson Skid steerBobcat tires 10 ply $170 ea. Othersizes of skidsteer tires available!

815-895-0244www.gearworkstire.com

Cub 8.3-24 R-1 tires w/tubes New8 ply R-1 tires and tubes $385 pr.New! Petlas brand. All other sizesof farm tires avail! 815-895-0244

www.gearworkstire.com

TIRES - New 27x850-15 Skidsteertires. Samson Skid Steer SidewinderMudder XHD 10 ply tires. $115 ea.Other sizes of skidsteer tires avail-able! 815-895-0244

www.gearworkstire.com

Record collection. 78 LP records.800 total. Old and new. Make of-

fer 847-515-8012 Cash only.

Dryer. Maytag. Gas. White.Great condition. $299.

630-973-3528

Refrigerator – Kenmore Elite –White – 3 Door – 25cu.ft. - GoodCondition $399 630-208-0073

DRAFTING TABLETilting, height adjustable with

drafting machine, $35.630-879-3192

DRUM SET - Mapex 7 piece. Goodcondition. $199. 630-443-0732

Double Oven Stove. Maytag GeminiSeries. White. Electric. 30”W.

$375. 630-262-1338

Mower – Craftsman – Push6.25h.p. - Hi-Wheels – 22” -

Mulch Or Discharge – Like New -$55 630-232-0183 AM

Riding Mower – Snapper – 11hp– 28”cut – 5 Speed – Rear Bagger– New Battery – Tuned – Very clean

$250 630-232-0183 AM

House Manager/QIDPProvide supervisory & casemanagement for staff and indi-viduals with developmental dis-abilities. Strong leadership, or-ganization, communication andMicrosoft Office skills. Must beQIDP qualified. See our websitefor more opportunities.

Apply on our website,www.ohinc.org or in-person at

Opportunity House,202 Lucas St., Sycamore, IL,

815-895-5108 EOE

2003 Corvette Convertible50th Anniversary, red w/tan top,1 owner, 14,500 miles, asking

$30,000 630-377-5477

2005 Cadillac SRX. Fully loaded;“Cherry” inside & out; “Grandpa”

driven; Garage kept; 35K mi;$16,500. Call 630-584-8060

MOTORCYCLE JACKETBlack Leather, Size Mens Medium.

Good Condition $45630-464-7049 St. Charles

PLANT STAND - Shadow Box, WallShelves and Country Cabinet AllWood and Excellent Condition $10Each. 630-464-7049 St. Charles

Star Wars Action Figures$7 & Up.

[email protected]

NESTLE DRIVERS WANTEDNestle Transportation is looking forprofessional Class A CDL driverswith 2 years tractor-trailer experi-ence in our DeKalb, IL location.Nestle offers a sign on bonus andcompetitive wages plus a full benefitpackage including medical, dental,vision, 401K, company pension,safety bonus, and frequent hometime.Contact Renee at 815-754-2607or apply at nestlelogisticsjobs.com

BMX BIKE, GT FRAMEOdyssey pedals and fork, primo.30” sprocket. 20” wheels & more.

$150/obo. 630-761-8572 Lv Msg

Buying? Selling?Renting? Hiring?

To place an ad,call 877-264-2527

Kane County Chronicle Classified

Send your ClassifiedAdvertising 24/7 to:

Email: [email protected]

Fax: 815-477-8898

or online at:www.KCChronicle.com

Send your ClassifiedAdvertising 24/7 to:

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Fax: 815-477-8898

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Everyday inKane County Chronicle Classified

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CLASSIFIED Kane County Chronicle / kcchronicle.comPage 10 • Monday, April 22, 2013

AT YOUR

Visit the Local Business Directory online

at KCChronicle.com/localbusiness

Call to advertise 877-264-2527

YOUR SERVICE✶

!

!!

In print daily

Online 24/7

STUMPGRINDINGANY SIZEFree Estimates

Fully Insured

Certified Arborist

Bill's Services630-205-8667

DECKSUNLIMITED

Over 1,000 Built28 Years Experience

! Custom Decks! Wheelchair Ramps! Swimming Pools! Power Washing

& Staining! Stairs/Teardowns

“Let Me Deck You”Michael

815-393-3514

* * * * *

STAMPED CONCRETE

630-553-3070

We Accept All Major

Credit Cards

JOBS

ANNOUNCEMENTS

STUFF

VEHICLES

REAL ESTATE

SERVICES

Kane County ChronicleClassified

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Have a news tipor story idea?

Call us at 630-845-5355or email

[email protected]

Gilberts 900 Sq Ft$700/mo incl utilities & parking.

847-732-5893

A-1 AUTO

Will BUYUR

USEDCAR, TRUCK, SUV,

MOST CASHWILL BEAT ANYQUOTE GIVEN!!$400 - $2000

“don't wait....call 2day”!!

* 815-575-5153 *

1984 Catalina Capri, 14.2' sail-boat w/E-Z loader boat trailer; cen-

terboard, tiller steering, riggedw/two sails. $500.

630-643-4634.

ELBURN 2BR CONDO STYLEAppliances, W/D, A/C, extra storage.

No pets, $875/mo, utilities incl.815-375-0132

Geneva ~ 2BR. Walk to train.Fireplace, sunroom. W/D.

$1100/mo. Available in 2 wks.630-640-9688

GENEVA: Large 2 bdrm,1 bath,c/a, cable ready, pool, parking,free heat, gas & water. Starting

at $875. 630-208-8503.

Sandwich. Spacious 3BR, 2.5BA,2 car garage. Full bsmnt. Large

fenced yard. Close to town.No pets. Avail now. $1200/mo.

815-519-9585

BATAVIA1 BR starting at $800-$8402 BR starting at $980-$10003 BR TH starting at $1275

630-879-8300

Call to advertise815-455-4800

AIRLINES ARE HIRING Train forhands on Aviation Maintenance

Career. FAA approved program. Fi-nancial aid if qualified Housing

available. CALL Aviation Instituteof Maintenance 800-481-8312

America s Best Buy! 20 Acres-Only$99/mo! $0 Down, No Credit

Checks, MONEY BACK GUARAN-TEE Owner Financing. West TexasBeautiful Mountain Views! Free Col-

or Brochure 1-800-755-8953www.sunsetranches.com

DISH Network Starting at$19.99/month (for 12 mos.) &High Speed Internet starting at

$14.95/month (where available).SAVE! Ask About SAME DAY

Installation! CALL Now!1-800-357-7024

GORDON TRUCKING CDL-ADrivers Needed! Up to $4,000

SIGN ON BONUS! Home WeeklyAvailable! Up to .46 cpm w/10years exp. Benefits, 401k, EOE,No East Coast. Call 7 days/wk!TeamGTI.com 888-653-3304

Online Auctions Everyday Vehicles;Trucks; Trailers; Tractors; Golf Carts;

ATV s; Motorcycles; Mowers &Landscape Equip.; Tools; Boats;Bikes; Computers; Coins; Guns;

Jewelry; Misc. www.ObenaufAuc-tionsOnLine.com 847-489-1820Round Lake, IL #444.000105

DIRT BIKES2008 Kawasaki KLX 140 $1400,2006 Kawasaki KLX 125 $1100,2007 Shoreline 3 bike trailer $800.All 3 for $2600. 815-756-1509

DEKALB ~ 2 BEDROOM1BA, W/D, C/A, 1 car garage,

deck. No pets/smkg. $825/mo +util. Agent Owned 815-739-1888

NORTH AURORA FSBO $150K3BR Tri-Level, all appliances stay.

Nice yard. Call 630-355-4456 M-F8a-4p or cell, 630-201-0815

St. CharlesOff/Ware Space

1,568sf - 19,000sf.Docks/Drive-Ins

Aggressive Move-In Package630-355-8094

www.mustangconstruction.com

PEPPER VALLEYAPARTMENTS

2 BDRM ~ 2 BATH$1020 - $1030

Fireplace, heat, gas, water incl.A/C, D/W, disposal, microwave,blinds, patios, clubhouse, pool.

Garages available, small pets OK.

630-232-7226

2001 Class A FleetwoodSouthwind 36 ft Class A RV—

Great condition49,400 miles, fuel type gas,Ford super duty chassis, FordTriton V10 gas engine, 4pt lev-eling, 5.5 generator, 2 roof A/C,2 slideouts, lthr seats, Queenbed, 10.8 cubic ft 2-door refrig-erator/freezer, 3 burner stove topw/Magic Chef oven, Convectionmicro, patio awning, tow hitch.$38,000 Call Jim Peterson

815-758-1845

COUNTRY VIEW APARTMENTS1 & 2 bd apts available. $550-$625 Clean Quiet country setting,close to downtown Genoa. Lots ofupdates. Call 815-784-4606

Batavia/Elburn Farmette 2BRupper, country kitchen w/skylight

cathedral ceilings, 2 decks, all utilsincl., $1200/mo. 630-306-3163

ST. CHARLES 1st MO FREE!Lrg 1BR $769, Lrg 2BR from

$829/mo. Incl heat, water, cook-ing gas, Appliances & laundry.

630-584-1685

St. Charles - Newly Renovated1BR $650 and 2BR $850.NO PETS! 630-841-0590

St. Charles Hunt Club: 2BR, 2BA,all appl., A/C, heated garage,

secure building, avail 6/1, no pets$1200+sec. 630-584-0768

St. Charles $$ 2020 Dean St. $$SteD2-E Over 2000 sq ft.

$279,000. Your Choic R. E.Services. Marie 630-567-3300

Buying? Selling?Renting? Hiring?

To place an ad,call 877-264-2527

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Fax: 815-477-8898

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CLASSIFIEDKane County Chronicle / kcchronicle.com Monday, April 22, 2013 • Page 11

ANDERSON BMW360 N. Rte. 31 • Crystal Lake, IL

888/682-4485www.andersoncars.com

MOTOR WERKS BMWBarrington & Dundee Rds. • Barrington, IL

800/935-5913www.motorwerks.com

KNAUZ BMW407 Skokie Valley Hwy • Lake Bluff, IL

847-604-5000www.KnauzBMW.com

AUTO GROUP - GARY LANG

BUICKRoute 31, between Crystal Lake & McHenry

888/794-5502www.garylangauto.com

REICHERT BUICK2145 S. Eastwood Dr. • Woodstock, IL

815/338-2780www.reichertautos.com

AUTO GROUP - GARY LANG

CADILLACRoute 31, between Crystal Lake &

McHenry

888/794-5502www.garylangauto.com

MOTOR WERKS CADILLAC200 N. Cook St. • Barrington, IL

800/935-5923www.motorwerks.com

AUTO GROUP - GARY LANG

CHEVROLETRoute 31, between Crystal Lake

& McHenry

888/794-5502www.garylangauto.com

AL PIEMONTE CHEVROLET770 Dundee Ave. (Rt. 25) • Dundee, IL

847/426-2000

www.piemontegroup.com

MARTIN CHEVROLET5220 Northwest Highway

Crystal Lake, IL

815-459-4000www.martin-chevy.com

RAY CHEVROLET39 N. Rte. 12 • Fox Lake, IL

847/587-3300www.raychevrolet.com

RAYMOND CHEVROLET118 Route 173 • Antioch, IL

(866) 561-8676www.raymondchevrolet.com

REICHERT CHEVROLET2145 S. Eastwood Dr. • Woodstock, IL

815/338-2780www.reichertautos.com

ST. CHARLES CHRYSLERDODGE JEEP1611 East Main Street • St. Charles, IL

(630) 513-5353www.stcharlescdj.com

ANTIOCH CHRYSLERDODGE JEEP105 Rt. 173 Antioch, IL

800-628-6087www.antiochfivestar.com

CRYSTAL LAKE CHRYSLER5404 S. Rt. 31 • Crystal Lake, IL

888/800-6100www.clcjd.com

FENZEL MOTOR SALES206 S. State Street • Hampshire, IL

847/683-2424

GREGORY CHRYSLER130 Cedar Ave. • Lake Villa, IL

847/356-2530www.gregoryautogroup.com

SUNNYSIDE COMPANYCHRYSLER DODGERoute 120 • McHenry, IL

815/385-7220www.sunnysidecompany.com

ST. CHARLES CHRYSLERDODGE JEEP1611 East Main Street • St. Charles, IL

(630) 513-5353www.stcharlescdj.com

ANTIOCH CHRYSLER

DODGE JEEP105 Rt. 173 Antioch, IL

800-628-6087www.antiochfivestar.com

CRYSTAL LAKE DODGE5404 S. Rt. 31 • Crystal Lake, IL

888/800-6100www.clcjd.com

BULL VALLEY FORD/

MERCURY1460 S. Eastwood Dr. • Woodstock, IL

800/407-0223www.bullvalleyford.com

BUSS FORD111 S. Rte 31 • McHenry, IL

815/385-2000www.bussford.com

SPRING HILL FORD800 Dundee Ave. • East Dundee, IL

888/600-8053www.springhillford.com

TOM PECK FORD13900 Auto Mall Dr. • Huntley, IL

847/669-6060www.TomPeckFord.com

ZIMMERMAN FORD2525 E. Main Street

St. Charles, IL 60174

630/584-1800www.zimmermanford.com

AUTO GROUP - GARY LANG

GMCRoute 31, between Crystal Lake &

McHenry

888/794-5502www.garylangauto.com

MOTOR WERKS HONDABarrington & Dundee Rds.

Barrington, IL

800-935-5913www.motorwerks.com

O’HARE HONDARiver Rd & Oakton, • Des Plaines, IL

888-538-4492www.oharehonda.comCALL FOR THE LOWEST PRICES IN CHICAGOLAND

GREGORY HYUNDAI490 Skokie Valley Road • Highland

Park, IL

847/831-5980www.gregoryautogroup.com

KNAUZ HYUNDAI775 Rockland Road • Lake Bluff IL 60044

(Routes 41 & 176 in the Knauz Autopark)

847-234-2800www.knauzhyundai.com

O’HARE HYUNDAIRiver Rd & Oakton, • Des Plaines, IL

888-553-9036www.oharehyundai.comCALL FOR THE LOWEST PRICES IN CHICAGOLAND

ROSEN HYUNDAI771 S. Randall Rd. • Algonquin, IL

866/469-0114www.rosenrosenrosen.com

MOTOR WERKS INFINITIBarrington & Dundee Rds. • Barrington, IL

800-935-5913www.motorwerks.com

ST. CHARLES CHRYSLERDODGE JEEP1611 East Main Street • St. Charles, IL

(630) 513-5353www.stcharlescdj.com

ANTIOCH CHRYSLERDODGE JEEP105 Rt. 173 • Antioch, IL

800-628-6087www.antiochfivestar.com

CRYSTAL LAKE JEEP5404 S. Rt. 31 • Crystal Lake, IL

888/800-6100www.clcjd.com

GREGORY JEEP130 Cedar Ave. • Lake Villa, IL

847/356-2530www.gregoryautogroup.com

AUTO GROUP -GARY LANG KIA1107 S Rt. 31 between Crystal Lakeand McHenry

866-480-9527www.garylangauto.com

ARLINGTON KIAIN PALATINE1400 E. Dundee Rd., Palatine, IL

847/202-3900www.arlingtonkia.com

CLASSIC KIA425 N. Green Bay Rd.Waukegan/Gurnee, IL

847-CLASSIC (252-7742)www.classicdealergroup.com

LIBERTY KIA920 S. Milwaukee Ave. • Libertyville, IL

847-680-8000www.libertyautoplaza.com

RAYMOND KIA119 Route 173 • Antioch

(224) 603-8611www.raymondkia.com

Land Rover Lake Bluff375 Skokie Valley Hwy • Lake Bluff, IL

847-604-8100www.knauzlandrover.com

BUSS FORDLINCOLN MERCURY111 S. Rte 31 • McHenry, IL

815/385-2000

ANDERSON MAZDA360 N. Rt. 31 • Crystal Lake, IL

888/682-4485www.andersoncars.com

BIGGERS MAZDA1320 East Chicago StreetThe Mazda Machine on Rt. 19, Elgin, IL

847/628-6000

KNAUZ CONTINENTALAUTOS409 Skokie Valley Hwy • Lake Bluff, IL

847-234-1700www.Knauzcontinentalauto.com

MERCEDES-BENZOF ST. CHARLES225 N. Randall Road, St. Charles

877/226-5099www.st-charles.mercedesdealer.com

BULL VALLEY FORD/MERCURY1460 S. Eastwood Dr. • Woodstock, IL

800/407-0223www.bullvalleyford.com

BUSS FORD LINCOLN MERCURY111 S. Rte 31 • McHenry, IL

815/385-2000

KNAUZ MINI409A Skokie Valley Hwy • Lake Bluff, IL

847-604-5050www.Knauz-mini.com

AUTO GROUP -GARY LANG MITSUBISHIRoute 31, between Crystal Lake & McHenry

888-794-5502www.garylangauto.com

LIBERTYVILLE MITSUBISHI1119 S. Milwaukee Ave., Libertyville, IL

847/816-6660www.libertyvillemitsubishi.com

LIBERTY NISSAN920 S. Milwaukee Ave. • Libertyville, IL

847-680-8000www.libertyautoplaza.com

MOTOR WERKS PORCHEBarrington & Dundee Rds., Barrington, IL

800/935-5913www.motorwerks.com

MOTOR WERKS SAAB200 N. Cook Street • Barrington, IL

800/935-5393www.motorwerks.com

KNAUZ NORTH2950 N. Skokie Hwy • North Chicago, IL

847-235-3800www.knauznorth.com

PAULY SCION1035 S. Rt. 31, One Mile South of Rt. 14Crystal Lake, IL

815/459-7100 or 847/658-9050

AUTO GROUP -GARY LANG SUBARURoute 31, between Crystal Lake &McHenry

888/794-5502www.garylangauto.com

RAY SUZUKI23 N. Route 12 • Fox Lake

888/446-8743847/587-3300www.raysuzuki.com

PAULY TOYOTA1035 S. Rt. 31, One Mile South of Rt. 14Crystal Lake, IL

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

CLASSIC TOYOTA/SCION515 N. Green Bay Rd.Waukegan/Gurnee, IL

847-CLASSIC (252-7742)www.classicdealergroup.com

ANDERSON VOLKSWAGEN360 N. Rt. 31 • Crystal Lake, IL

888/682-4485www.andersoncars.com

GURNEE VOLKSWAGEN6301 Grand Avenue • Gurnee, IL

847-855-1500www.GurneeVW.com

LIBERTY VOLKSWAGEN920 S. Milwaukee Ave. • Libertyville, IL

847-680-8000www.libertyautoplaza.com

BARRINGTON VOLVO300 N. Hough (Rt. 59) • Barrington, IL

847/381-9400

PRE-OWNED