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The Daily Sentinel from Woodstock, Illinois • Page 10

Location:
Woodstock, Illinois
Issue Date:
Page:
10
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Page 10 Woodstock (III.) Daily Sentinel Friday. March 23, 1 984 Obituaries Police. Beat She was employed by Windridge cemetery and McHenry County Memorial Park cemetery. Survivors include four daughters, Connie Kiest, Woodstock, Susan Maxwell, Olympia, Vicki Whaples, Tucson, and Cindy Hayes, Thousand Oaks, and six grandchildren. Friends may call Saturday in the Kahle-Moore funeral home, Gary, where funeral services will be conducted at 2 pjn.

Saturday. Burial will be in Windridge cemetery, Cary. Memorials may be made to the charity of your choice. Memorial may be made in his name to the Pediatric Unit of Rush Presbyterian St. Luke's Medical Center, Chicago.

Arrangements were made by the Ehbrn-Adams funeral, home, Richmond. Shirley Wilbraham WOODSTOCK Shirley C. Wilbraham, 62, of Woodstock, died Wednesday, March 21, in Harvard Hospital. She was born April 14, 1921, in South Falls, Ontario, Canada, daughter of George and Alma Swayme. CL man arrested Michael Inger, 26, 7209 Huntley Road, Crystal Lake, was arrested by sheriffs police for criminal damage to property under $300 and possession of a firearm without a required owner's identification card.

Gary Donnelly, 8618 Lakeview St, Crystal Lake, told police his dog returned from an outing with a limp. A veternarian discovered the animal had been shot with a .22 caliber bullet. Witnesses reported seeing Inger shoot the animaL Inger told police the dog was consistently in his garbage. Bond is set at 82,000 for a April 12 court appearance. Car windows broken Kevin Stott, Wonder Lake, reported to' sheriffs police that while attending a party on Ridgeway Road in Ringwood, someone broke two of his car windows while the Vehicle was parked along the road.

Friends may call 6-9 p.m. Sunday in the Fredrick funeral home, Hampshire, and from 11:30 a.m. to time of service Monday in the church. Memorial may be made to the church. Anders M.

Swanson RICHMOND Anders M. Swan-son, 6 -months, died Wednesday, March 21, in Rush Presbyterian St. Luke's Medical Center, Chicago. He was born September 1,1983, in Woodstock, son of Scott and Amy Shephard Swanson. In addition to his parents, he is survived by a sister, Marta; paternal grandparents, Roy and Valerie Swanson, Lake Villa; maternal grandparents, Gene and Melva Shephard, Alexandria, paternal grandmother, Gerda Swanson, Gray slake; maternal grandmother, Elinor Martinsen, Chicago; Maternal great-grandparents John and Rose Reise, Tomahawk, Wis.

Memorial services will be conducted by the Rev. Terry Dufur at 1 p.m. Sunday in Grace Lutheran Church, Richmond. Burial will be private. Edith town-Hampshire Anders Swanson-Richmond Shirley Wilbraham-Woodstock Edith Stoxen HAMPSHIRE Edith Stoxen, 90, Belvidere, formerly of Hampshire, died Wednesday, March 21, in Nor-thwood Health Care Center, Belvidere.

She was born June 3, 1893, in Burlington Township, daughter of Carl and Louise Spaar Roth. On June 14, 1919, in Hampshire, she married Harry Stoxen, who preceded her in death Nov. 12, 1959. She was a member of St. John's United Church of Christ, Harmony.

She is survived by a son, Donald, Hampshire; five grandchildren, and two great-grandchildren. In addition to her husband, she was preceded in death by her parents; a son, Kenneth; five brothers and five sisters. Funeral services will be conducted by the Rev. Phillip Van Wynen at 1:30 p.m. Monday in St.

John's United Church of Christ, Harmony. Burial will be in Harmony cemetery. Walk set for April 29 Court dumps waste site for EPA rules sna fu WOODSTOCK The Walk for Woodstock, sponsored annually by the Woodstock Backers Club, will be held this year on April 29. The walk has received the first permit issued by the Village of Bull Valley under its new parade ordinance. Last year's walk-a-thon raised more than $35,000 for District 200 extracurricular and athletic programs.

In a new twist, the Backers are in the preliminary planning stages of offering a hotline to call in on a type of telethon. The Backers hope to use the Woodstock High School number, 338-1370. broke the law and. violated principles of administrative procedure by taking evidence in support of the permit outside the public-hearing process. The Pollution Control Board and the state appeals court upheld the decision to award the permit In addition to throwing out the permit, the justices also endorsed the attorney general's right to intervene in such cases.

The appeals court dismissed his appeal, saying be did not have standing in the case. "As chief legal officer of this state, he has the duty and authority to represent the interests of the people insure a healthful environment wrote Justice William Clark. Hartigan said the ruling "recognized the strong public policy on landfill permit applications and the broad rights given to opponents of hazardous waste landfill applicants." "No longer will EPA landfill permit decisions be allowed to be made on material not exposed to public examination," Hartigan said. By William C. Strong Associated Press writer SPRINGFIELD The Illinois Supreme Court today dumped a permit allowing operation of a hazardous waste landfill in LaSalle County, saying the state Environmental Protection Agency failed to follow the rules for granting such permits.

The ruling was immediately praised by Attorney General Neil Har-tigan, who had challenged the permit, as "a landmark decision which has the immediate effect of removing a serious threat to the health and welfare of the people of LaSalle County." The case now goes back to the state agency, which was instructed by the court to hold new hearings. The state EPA in late 1980 issued the permit to Pioneer Processing, Inc. for operation of a 177-acre hazardous waste site near the village of Naplate, on the outskirts of Ottawa. Hartigan had argued the IEPA ON-TV offers amnesty to area video pirates The company plans to begin using the device Tuesday and plans to use both approaches at a later date in its market in Los Angeles and Miami. a pay-mibscription net-work, fcroadcastsMts signal -on a UHF-band channel in the Chicago-area and the picture is scrambled unless a decoding box has been installed.

Using unauthorized equipment to unscramble the signal violates both state and federal law, Hauver said. ON-TV already is suing manufacturers and distributors of the illegal decoders, he added. The Selective Scrambling System also will allow ON-TV officials to broadcast into the homes of those individuals with illegal equipment without disturbing the broadcast being seen by legitimate subscribers, said Hauver. ON-TV plans to send a message to those pirating its programs that will say, in part: "We are well aware that in all probability you are normally a law-abiding citizen; however, by possessing an unauthorized decoder box you are, whether you realize it nr not, a criminal." By the Associated Press CHICAGO In a two-pronged approach to scramble the conscience as well as the television sets of video pirates in market, a national pay-television network will introduce a 30-day amnesty program in conjunction with a new, sophisticated jamming device. ON-TV has about 85,000 customers in the Chicago area and General Manager Kent Hauver estimates there may be more than 10,000 people watching the broadcast using unauthorized equipment to unscramble the signal.

The company will offer amnesty to individuals without fear of legal retribution and will not charge anyone turning in an illegal decoder a one-time hookup fee if they decide to become subscribers, he said. "It's better for all concerned if we can bring these people into the circle of legitimate subscribers," he added. To those who refuse the carrot of amnesty, ON-TV will employ the stick of the Selective Scrambling System, a sophisticated new jamming device developed by its parent company, Oak Industries. DAVID WARREN Primitive Instinct! Call (815)3384600 to subscribe, to the Woodstock Daily Sentinel! Bold, dramatic, untamed. Adven fr Ml turous dressing from David Warren mm Tree bark black on taupe.

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Pages Available:
110,085
Years Available:
1922-1985