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®<br />

BALLOT INSIDE THIS ISSUE<br />

VOTE FOR YOUR FAVORITE LOCAL BUSINESSES!<br />

Glencoe’s Hometown Newspaper GlencoeAnchor.com • February 16, 2017 • Vol. 3 No. 24 • $1<br />

A<br />

Publication<br />

,LLC<br />

Over four decades, now-retired<br />

executive VP and director helped<br />

grow the Chicago Botanic Garden<br />

of today, Page 3<br />

Illustration by Nancy Burgan/22nd Century Media<br />

Time to<br />

talk<br />

Family Service<br />

of Glencoe<br />

to launch<br />

new senior<br />

initiative<br />

including<br />

one-on-one<br />

interviews,<br />

Page 4<br />

Setting up camp<br />

22CM’s upcoming Camp Expo to offer tips<br />

on the coming camp season, Page 8<br />

Thinking green Recent talks<br />

engage community about climate change,<br />

local native plants, Page 10


2 | February 16, 2017 | The glencoe anchor calendar<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

In this week’s<br />

anchor<br />

Police Reports........................6<br />

Pet of the Week........................8<br />

Editorial......................................13<br />

Puzzles18<br />

Faith ............................................20<br />

Dining Out22<br />

Home of the Week23<br />

Athlete of the Week26<br />

The Glencoe<br />

Anchor<br />

Editor<br />

Fouad Egbaria, x35<br />

fouad@glencoeanchor.com<br />

sports Editor<br />

Michael Wojtychiw, x25<br />

m.wojtychiw@22ndcenturymedia.com<br />

Sales director<br />

John Zeddies, x12<br />

j.zeddies@22ndcenturymedia.com<br />

real estate sales<br />

Elizabeth Fritz, x19<br />

e.fritz@22ndcenturymedia.com<br />

Classified sales,<br />

Recruitment Advertising<br />

Jess Nemec, 708.326.9170, x46<br />

j.nemec@22ndcenturymedia.com<br />

Legal Notices<br />

Jeff Schouten, 708.326.9170, x51<br />

j.schouten@22ndcenturymedia.com<br />

PUBLISHER<br />

Joe Coughlin, x16<br />

j.coughlin@22ndcenturymedia.com<br />

Managing Editor<br />

Eric DeGrechie, x23<br />

eric@wilmettebeacon.com<br />

AssT. Managing Editor<br />

Fouad Egbaria, x35<br />

fouad@glencoeanchor.com<br />

President<br />

Andrew Nicks<br />

a.nicks@22ndcenturymedia.com<br />

EDITORIAL DESIGN DIRECTOR<br />

Nancy Burgan, 708.326.9170, x30<br />

n.burgan@22ndcenturymedia.com<br />

22 nd Century Media<br />

60 Revere Drive Suite 888<br />

Northbrook, IL 60062<br />

www.GlencoeAnchor.com<br />

Chemical- free printing on 30% recycled paper<br />

circulation inquiries<br />

circulation@22ndcenturymedia.com<br />

The Glencoe Anchor is published weekly by 22nd<br />

Century Media, LLC, 60 Revere Dr. Ste. 888,<br />

Northbrook, IL 60062.<br />

Application to Mail Periodical Postage Prices<br />

is pending at Northbrook, IL and additional<br />

mailing offices.<br />

POSTMASTER: send address changes to<br />

The Glencoe Anchor 60 Revere Dr Ste. 888<br />

Northbrook, IL 60062<br />

Published by<br />

ph: 847.272.4565<br />

fx: 847.272.4648<br />

www.22ndcenturymedia.com<br />

THURSDAY<br />

Curtain Call Club<br />

4:15-5 p.m., Feb. 16,<br />

Glencoe Public Library,<br />

Hammond Room, 320<br />

Park Ave. Explore theater<br />

through improv games<br />

and drama and writing<br />

activities. Registration required.<br />

Recommended for<br />

students in third grade and<br />

older.<br />

FRIDAY<br />

Preschool Day Off —<br />

Things That Go<br />

9 a.m.-1 p.m., Feb. 17,<br />

Takiff Center, 999 Green<br />

Bay Road. Cars, trucks,<br />

trains and planes! Join<br />

for a fun transportationthemed<br />

day full of stories,<br />

art, music and games. Cost<br />

to attend is $40 for residents.<br />

SUNDAY<br />

Trail Marker Trees<br />

2 p.m., Feb. 19, Glencoe<br />

Public Library, 320<br />

Park Ave. America’s first<br />

road signs were created<br />

by Native Americans, who<br />

would shape trees into distinctive<br />

forms to help them<br />

navigate the wilderness.<br />

This program will be presented<br />

by Dennis Downes,<br />

a nationally known artist<br />

whose 30-year study<br />

of marker trees forms the<br />

basis of his book, Native<br />

American Trail Marker<br />

Trees: Marking Paths<br />

through the Wilderness.<br />

The discussion will include<br />

historical images<br />

and information discovered<br />

since the book’s 2011<br />

publication. This program<br />

is cosponsored by the<br />

Friends of the Green Bay<br />

Trail and is suitable for<br />

adults and families with<br />

older (grade 3 and up)<br />

children.<br />

MONDAY<br />

Book Babies<br />

10 a.m., Feb. 20, Glencoe<br />

Public Library, Hammond<br />

Room, 320 Park<br />

Ave. Introduce your baby<br />

to the library with stories,<br />

songs, and active play<br />

designed to teach infants<br />

and toddlers their first literacy<br />

skills. Older siblings<br />

are welcome. Ages 0-18<br />

months with parent or<br />

caregiver.<br />

Rock and Read<br />

11-11:30 a.m., Feb.<br />

20, Glencoe Public Library,<br />

Hammond Room,<br />

320 Park Ave. Go back<br />

to school with Monday<br />

stories for a slightly older<br />

crowd. Listen to books,<br />

move to the beat and more<br />

at this active storytime.<br />

Ages 18 months-3 with<br />

parent or caregiver.<br />

TUESDAY<br />

Technology Tuesday<br />

1-2:30 p.m., Feb. 21,<br />

Glencoe Public Library,<br />

Hammond Room, 320<br />

Park Ave. Online privacy<br />

is becoming a major issue<br />

as companies like<br />

Google and Facebook are<br />

increasingly mining personal<br />

data for advertising<br />

and other purposes.<br />

How much information<br />

are you willing to give<br />

up in order to get a more<br />

personalized online experience?<br />

And how can<br />

you control what is being<br />

collected? That will be<br />

the topic of this Online<br />

Privacy Class. Technology<br />

Tuesdays is taught<br />

by Mike Gershbein and<br />

is open to all ages and<br />

skills, although a basic<br />

knowledge of computers<br />

is required. Each class<br />

will last 1.5 hours.<br />

Mad Science! Forces<br />

4:14-5 p.m., Feb. 21,<br />

Glencoe Public Library,<br />

Hammond Room. Staff<br />

from Mad Science of<br />

Northern Illinois will lead<br />

explorations of a different<br />

science topic each class.<br />

Registration required. For<br />

grades K-2.<br />

Special Projects and<br />

Facilities Committee<br />

meeting<br />

7-9 p.m., Feb. 21, Takiff<br />

Center, 999 Green Bay<br />

Road. The Glencoe Park<br />

District’s Special Projects<br />

and Facilities Committee<br />

will convene for its regular<br />

monthly meeting.<br />

Free Library Talk<br />

2 p.m., Feb. 21, Chicago<br />

Botanic Garden, Lenhardt<br />

Library, Regenstein<br />

Center, 1000 Lake Cook<br />

Road. Join us for a free<br />

lecture on the Lenhardt<br />

Library’s rare book exhibition<br />

Orchidpalooza:<br />

Illustrated Orchid Varieties.<br />

Orchidpalooza:<br />

Illustrated Orchid Varieties<br />

rare book exhibition<br />

features five oversized,<br />

chromolithographs<br />

from Frederick Sander’s<br />

Reichenbachia: Orchids<br />

Illustrated and Described,<br />

published in 1895. These<br />

unique proof impressions<br />

are unsigned, untitled,<br />

and unnumbered, and<br />

were likely intended for<br />

a third series of this work<br />

on orchids that was never<br />

issued.<br />

THURSDAY<br />

Paint Your Own<br />

Masterpiece<br />

6:30-8:30 p.m., Feb.<br />

23, Glencoe Public Library,<br />

320 Park Ave. No<br />

art experience whatsoever<br />

is necessary to join<br />

us for a fun, artist-led<br />

evening involving acrylic<br />

paints, a 16”x20” canvas,<br />

and your creativity.<br />

Step-by-step guidance<br />

will be provided by Pinot’s<br />

Palette in Glenview<br />

staff. Be sure to wear<br />

clothing that can handle<br />

the possibility of a few<br />

paint splashes. Registration<br />

is required and<br />

space is limited! Glencoe<br />

residents have priority.<br />

This two-hour event is<br />

for adults. Registration<br />

is open.<br />

UPCOMING<br />

Teen Ice Night<br />

6:30 p.m., Feb. 24,<br />

Watts Ice Center, 305 Randolph<br />

St. Join for an evening<br />

of fun at the Watts Ice<br />

Center. Participants will<br />

enjoy pizza, hot chocolate,<br />

s’mores by the fire, games,<br />

and ice skating. Admission<br />

for pass holders is $5, daily<br />

admission for non-pass<br />

holders is $15. Skate rentals<br />

available.<br />

Glencoe Historical Society<br />

Annual Dinner<br />

6 p.m., Feb. 25, North<br />

Shore United Methodist<br />

Church, 213 Hazel Ave.<br />

Join for the Glencoe Historical<br />

Society’s annual<br />

dinner and 80th birthday<br />

celebration. There will<br />

be cocktails and a dinner<br />

buffet, plus a Mardi Gras<br />

parade at 8 p.m. and special<br />

announcements about<br />

future Glencoe Historical<br />

Society projects. Purchase<br />

tickets online at www.<br />

glencoehistory.org. For additional<br />

information, call<br />

(847) 835-0040.<br />

North Shore Camp Expo<br />

10 a.m.-2 p.m. Saturday,<br />

Feb. 25, Sunset Ridge<br />

School, 525 Sunset Ridge<br />

Road, Northfield. Join<br />

22nd Century Media, publisher<br />

of The Glencoe Anchor,<br />

for this third annual<br />

free event that will feature<br />

information and personnel<br />

from more than 40 camps<br />

and businesses. There will<br />

also be a balloon artist,<br />

face painting, cotton candy,<br />

a make-your-own-trailmix<br />

bar station and more.<br />

For more information, call<br />

(847) 272-4565 or visit<br />

www.22ndcenturymedia.<br />

com/camp.<br />

Glencoe Park Board<br />

Meeting<br />

7 p.m., Feb. 28, Takiff<br />

Center, 999 Green Bay<br />

Road. The Glencoe Park<br />

Board will convene for its<br />

regular monthly meeting.<br />

Public Meeting on<br />

Lakefront Park<br />

6:30 p.m., March 2,<br />

Takiff Center, 999 Green<br />

Bay Road. The Glencoe<br />

Park Board has scheduled<br />

a public meeting on Lakefront<br />

Park.<br />

ONGOING<br />

Orchid Show<br />

10 a.m.-4 p.m., Feb.<br />

11-March 26, Chicago<br />

Botanic Garden, 1000<br />

Lake Cook Road. Escape<br />

from winter at the Chicago<br />

Botanic Garden’s Orchid<br />

Show. This year, at<br />

the Garden’s biggest flower<br />

show of the year, the<br />

Garden will take a playful<br />

look at orchids and popular<br />

culture.<br />

Ongoing Meditation Dropin<br />

Series<br />

9:30-10:30 a.m., Fridays,<br />

Takiff Center, 999<br />

Green Bay Road. Discover<br />

the true expression of<br />

self through meditation<br />

and group discussion.<br />

Led by FSG’s Chuck<br />

Hutchcraft, LCSW, ordained<br />

Zen Buddhist<br />

priest and mindfulness<br />

teacher, these drop-in<br />

sessions will help individuals<br />

learn inner balance<br />

and realize natural<br />

self-assurance.<br />

North Shore Chess Club<br />

7-9 p.m., Thursdays,<br />

Starbucks, 347 Park<br />

Ave., Glencoe. The North<br />

Shore Chess Club meets<br />

with players at all levels<br />

of chess skill, beginner,<br />

intermediate, advanced.<br />

For more information,<br />

email guntherrice@<br />

gmail.com.<br />

To submit an item for the<br />

community calendar, contact<br />

Editor Fouad Egbaria at<br />

fouad@glencoeanchor.com.<br />

Entries are due by noon on<br />

the Thursday prior to publication<br />

date.


glencoeanchor.com news<br />

the glencoe anchor | February 16, 2017 | 3<br />

Planting the seeds<br />

Retiring exec. VP<br />

and director grew<br />

Botanic Garden<br />

from its roots up<br />

Fouad Egbaria, Editor<br />

Kris Jarantoski worked<br />

to clear 40<br />

years of<br />

memories<br />

from his<br />

Chicago Botanic<br />

Garden<br />

office the<br />

afternoon Jarantoski<br />

of Feb. 7. A<br />

few stray papers sat on his<br />

mostly cleared desk like<br />

wayward tumbleweeds and<br />

the walls were largely bare.<br />

His second-floor office<br />

in the Barbara Carr Administrative<br />

Center offered a<br />

gray view of the outdoors,<br />

where fog loomed over<br />

bare, skeletal trees. That<br />

imagery, however, juxtaposed<br />

diametrically with<br />

four decades of vibrant<br />

growth at the garden, much<br />

of which is attributable to<br />

Jarantoski’s direction.<br />

Jarantoski, the garden’s<br />

executive vice president<br />

and director, retired 40<br />

years after getting his start<br />

as an assistant horticulturist<br />

in 1977. Feb. 8 was his<br />

last day.<br />

“So much has happened,”<br />

Jarantoski said.<br />

“Sometimes a week seems<br />

like a year, we pack so<br />

much into it. You look<br />

around at all the gardens<br />

and everything that’s been<br />

done, it’s quite amazing.”<br />

The garden has eclipsed<br />

the 1-million-visitor mark<br />

in each of the last four<br />

years, drawing visitors<br />

from all over to its 27 distinct<br />

gardens and four natural<br />

areas on its 385-acre<br />

“I guess I came here more for not<br />

what it was, but for the promise<br />

of what it could be someday.”<br />

-Kris Jarantoski— former Chicago Botanic<br />

Garden executive vice president and director<br />

on taking a job at the garden in 1977, five years<br />

after it opened<br />

campus.<br />

It wasn’t always this<br />

way, though.<br />

“Actually, I visited here<br />

with a friend about six<br />

months before I started<br />

working here and we got<br />

out of the car in the parking<br />

lot and it was so bad<br />

we got back in the car and<br />

drove away,” Jarantoski<br />

said, laughing.<br />

Founded in 1972, the<br />

garden was very “raw”<br />

then, he said, noting some<br />

weeds even dwarfed<br />

shrubs in size. Six months<br />

after that visit, he accepted<br />

a job offer at the garden.<br />

“I guess I came here<br />

more for not what it was,<br />

but for the promise of<br />

what it could be someday,”<br />

he said. “[I] was right at<br />

the ground level. ... They<br />

had big ideas of what they<br />

wanted to be. They wanted<br />

to be one of the great botanic<br />

gardens. You know<br />

Chicago always has been<br />

bigger than life — let’s do<br />

it right, let’s do it big.”<br />

But before he could even<br />

get to the ground level, the<br />

seeds for his career had to<br />

be planted.<br />

Growing up in Milwaukee,<br />

he enjoyed helping<br />

his parents tend to their<br />

home gardens.<br />

“We always had gardens<br />

at home,” he said. “Vegetable<br />

gardens, perennial<br />

gardens, flower gardens.<br />

We had a woods and a<br />

river across the street that I<br />

played in all the time.”<br />

On trips to the Boerner<br />

Botanical Gardens as a<br />

youth, he was routinely<br />

blown away by the big trees.<br />

“It was bigger than anything.<br />

... It was gorgeous,”<br />

he said.<br />

His family also lived not<br />

far from the domes of the<br />

Mitchell Park Horticultural<br />

Conservatory. He joked<br />

that he once told his mother<br />

he wasn’t sure how he<br />

ended up in the field that<br />

became his career. That<br />

answer was obvious to her<br />

— whenever he fussed as a<br />

baby, they’d bring him into<br />

nature and let him gaze at<br />

the trees and other plants.<br />

Although he fostered<br />

an early love for the natural<br />

world, he started his<br />

college career as a music<br />

education major at the<br />

University of Wisconsin-<br />

Milwaukee. He has played<br />

as a church organist for a<br />

total of 19 years at numerous<br />

churches, including<br />

his family church, St. Rita<br />

in West Allis, Wis.<br />

He changed keys, however,<br />

when he took an urban<br />

botany elective course<br />

as a sophomore.<br />

“I said ‘You know, I like<br />

the landscape plants, I like<br />

the trees, shrubs, flowers. I<br />

really don’t like the algae<br />

and fungae and stuff like<br />

Kris Jarantoski (right) pictured with Japanese bonsai master Susumu Nakamura in<br />

2000 when Nakamura made a significant gift of bonsai to the garden. Photo Submitted<br />

that,’” he said. “And [the<br />

teacher] says ‘So you like<br />

horticulture.’”<br />

After discussing it further,<br />

he realized he had<br />

to head to the University<br />

of Wisconsin-Madison to<br />

pursue horticultural studies.<br />

As a junior there, he<br />

began picturing a career at<br />

a big public garden.<br />

“You don’t even think<br />

‘Gee, I could make a living<br />

working at one of these<br />

places I’ve always liked,’”<br />

he said.<br />

He interned at Longwood<br />

Gardens in Kennett<br />

Square, Pa., and the Boerner<br />

Botanical Gardens.<br />

Later, he also interned at<br />

a University of Minnesota<br />

arboretum while in graduate<br />

school there.<br />

“That cemented my idea<br />

that this is what I wanted<br />

to do for my whole life,”<br />

he said.<br />

He accepted the job at the<br />

Chicago Botanic Garden,<br />

banking on its potential.<br />

The garden has come a<br />

long way since then.<br />

“The soil was so bad we<br />

were planting annuals with<br />

pick axes,” he said.<br />

After helping get a soilsample-collecting<br />

initiative<br />

off the ground, he was<br />

promoted to horticulturist.<br />

“It just went on from<br />

there,” he said. “We built<br />

garden after garden after<br />

garden.”<br />

He worked his way up,<br />

eventually being named director<br />

of the garden in 1995<br />

and executive vice president<br />

of the Chicago Horticultural<br />

Society in 2001.<br />

All the while, the garden<br />

grew and more visitors<br />

came with each passing<br />

year, he said. The staff’s<br />

growth has matched that,<br />

starting at about 30 when<br />

he joined the garden to 250<br />

year-round employees today.<br />

“We had visions and<br />

dreams but never realized<br />

it would get this great,” he<br />

said. “Our first landscape<br />

architect said ‘Build for a<br />

million visitors a year.’ We<br />

laughed at the guy, we said<br />

‘You’ve got to be crazy —<br />

a million visitors a year?’”<br />

That vision came to<br />

fruition in 2013, when the<br />

Garden drew more than 1<br />

million visitors for the first<br />

time. New attractions are<br />

sure to bring in new visitors,<br />

too, including the $28<br />

million Regenstein Learning<br />

Campus, which opened<br />

in 2016. Other projects<br />

are in the offing as well,<br />

including an eponymous<br />

Kris Jarantoski Campus.<br />

A campus bearing his<br />

name is not something he<br />

ever envisioned.<br />

“I never thought I’d be<br />

director,” he said. “I was<br />

just a plant nut. It’s a big<br />

honor, I was humbled<br />

when they even said they<br />

were going to do it.”<br />

Jarantoski will be succeeded<br />

by Fred Spicer,<br />

who most recently served<br />

15 years as director and<br />

CEO of the Birmingham<br />

(Ala.) Botanical Gardens.<br />

They’ve known each other<br />

for decades, Jarantoski<br />

said, and he’s walked the<br />

garden’s spaces with Spicer<br />

to show him how they<br />

do certain things.<br />

“The main thing is<br />

quality,” Jarantoski said.<br />

“You’ve gotta have an eye<br />

— and I think he does —<br />

you’ve gotta go out there<br />

and see the weeds. You’ve<br />

gotta see the perennial<br />

over there that’s crashed<br />

because it was raining for<br />

the last week every day.”<br />

Aside from the garden’s<br />

growth, numerous organizations<br />

have recognized<br />

Jarantoski for his eye for<br />

quality. In 2011, the Garden<br />

Club of America presented<br />

Jarantoski with its Distinguished<br />

Service Medal for<br />

outstanding service in the<br />

field of horticulture. In July<br />

2014, Jarantoski received<br />

the American Public Gardens<br />

Association’s Honorary<br />

Life Member Award,<br />

which recognizes “an enduring<br />

commitment and<br />

Please see planting, 4


4 | February 16, 2017 | The glencoe anchor news<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

Family Service of Glencoe announces new senior initiative<br />

Info from one-onone<br />

interviews to<br />

be used for future<br />

programming<br />

Fouad Egbaria, Editor<br />

Family Service of Glencoe<br />

recently<br />

announced a<br />

new initiative<br />

that will<br />

aim to create<br />

further understanding<br />

of senior life<br />

in Glencoe.<br />

Marks<br />

Hand in Hand with Our<br />

Seniors, Family Service of<br />

Glencoe’s new senior program,<br />

will be led by intern<br />

Cortney Marks and overseen<br />

by Family Service of<br />

Glencoe therapist Chuck<br />

Hutchcraft.<br />

Marks is a graduate<br />

student at Loyola University<br />

working to complete<br />

a master’s degree in social<br />

work. Al Ross, one of her<br />

Loyola professors, is the<br />

clinical director at Family<br />

Service of Glencoe. Given<br />

her previous experience<br />

working with seniors, Ross<br />

suggested she come on to<br />

participate in the new initiative<br />

led by Hutchcraft.<br />

“We have the belief that<br />

older people should have<br />

the opportunity to fully<br />

participate in all aspects<br />

of society and community<br />

life, while at the same time<br />

being able to maintain<br />

health, independence, and<br />

living in their own home<br />

in the comfort of their own<br />

community,” Marks said.<br />

In the new initiative,<br />

Marks will conduct oneon-one<br />

interviews — typically<br />

lasting an hour —<br />

with seniors in the village<br />

beginning in February and<br />

throughout the summer as<br />

needed. One-on-one interviews<br />

may take place in<br />

a resident’s home or at a<br />

public space in Glencoe.<br />

Marks said they’ve started<br />

scheduling interviews for<br />

the week of Monday, Feb.<br />

20.<br />

“I’d like to structure the<br />

interviews to get an idea<br />

of what [seniors’] life is<br />

like today, what it was like<br />

back then when they first<br />

moved to the area, what<br />

things did they have then<br />

that they don’t have now,<br />

or vice versa,” Marks said.<br />

“We really just want to get<br />

a sense of what the environment<br />

is like for them<br />

today.”<br />

In 2014, Family Service<br />

of Glencoe’s centennial<br />

year, a community needs<br />

assessment was conducted<br />

to examine community<br />

strengths and opportunity<br />

areas. The organization<br />

collected direct feedback<br />

on the emotional health<br />

and well-being of residents<br />

in order to evaluate programs,<br />

determine areas of<br />

need and opportunity. Survey<br />

respondents addressed<br />

senior issues, in particular,<br />

with 51 percent of respondents<br />

indicating that care<br />

and support for the elderly<br />

would improve quality<br />

of life in Glencoe and 40<br />

percent of respondents<br />

indicating that additional<br />

housing opportunities for<br />

seniors would improve the<br />

quality of life in Glencoe.<br />

Family Service of Glencoe<br />

plans to use the information<br />

gleaned from the<br />

interviews to develop programming<br />

that will “ensure<br />

the comfort and safety<br />

of all villagers throughout<br />

their lifespan,” according<br />

to a Family Service of<br />

Glencoe release.<br />

Those interested in<br />

participating can call the<br />

Family Service of Glencoe<br />

office at (847) 835-5111 or<br />

email info@familyserviceofglencoe.org.<br />

Family Service of Glencoe<br />

and the Glencoe Park<br />

District are cosponsoring<br />

a free spaghetti dinner for<br />

seniors at 4:30 p.m. Thursday,<br />

Feb. 23, at the Takiff<br />

Center, 999 Green Bay<br />

Road. Those interested in<br />

participating should RSVP<br />

by calling Glencoe Park<br />

District Program Manager<br />

Liz Visteen at (847) 835-<br />

7538.<br />

Planting<br />

From Page 3<br />

contribution to the organization<br />

and leadership in the<br />

field of public gardens.” In<br />

November 2014, he was<br />

awarded the 2015 Arthur<br />

Hoyt Scott Medal and<br />

Award, which recognizes an<br />

individual who has made an<br />

outstanding national contribution<br />

to the science and art<br />

of gardening.<br />

After 40 years at the<br />

Garden, Jarantoski is looking<br />

forward to life after<br />

horticulture. He ticked off<br />

activities and goals one by<br />

one, like soil samples in an<br />

inventory: volunteer at hospitals,<br />

genealogy, ceramics<br />

classes, learning languages,<br />

tai chi, travel and visits to<br />

see his other retired friends.<br />

He also plans on returning<br />

to his organ-playing<br />

days.<br />

“I will play the organ<br />

again,” he said. “I don’t<br />

know where, but I’m going<br />

to take lessons again.”<br />

1940 ELMWOOD DRIVE<br />

HIGHLAND PARK | $825,000<br />

46 INSIGNIA COURT<br />

HIGHLAND PARK | $725,000<br />

1027 GREENWOOD AVENUE<br />

DEERFIELD | $699,000<br />

Carol Ring<br />

847.909.5585<br />

Carol.Ring@CBExchange.com<br />

CarolRing.cbintouch.com<br />

We sell here.<br />

We live here.<br />

COMING SOON<br />

2590 FAIRFORD LANE<br />

NORTHBROOK | COTSWOLDS<br />

Linda Rosenbloom<br />

847.560.0433<br />

Linda.Rosenbloom@CBExchange.com<br />

LindaRosenbloom.cbintouch.com<br />

We love it here!<br />

©2017 Coldwell Banker Residential Real Estate LLC. All Rights Reserved. Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage fully supports the principles of the<br />

Fair Housing Act and the Equal Opportunity Act. Operated by a subsidiary of NRT LLC. Coldwell Banker and the Coldwell Banker Logo are registered<br />

service marks owned by Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. Real estate agents affiliated with Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage are independent<br />

contractor sales associates and are not employees of Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage.


glencoeanchor.com glencoe<br />

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6 | February 16, 2017 | The glencoe anchor news<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

Police Reports<br />

Checks forged using<br />

complainant’s information<br />

An unknown person<br />

or persons printed and<br />

forged two checks on a<br />

complainant’s account,<br />

according to a report filed<br />

10:22 a.m. Feb. 7.<br />

The forged checks<br />

amounted to more than<br />

$300.<br />

An investigation is ongoing.<br />

In other police news:<br />

Feb. 4<br />

• Pamela J. Spadino, 51,<br />

of Highland Park, was<br />

cited for speeding at<br />

4:19 p.m. at the intersection<br />

of Hohlfelder Road<br />

and Sunset Lane. Her<br />

court date was set for<br />

March 15.<br />

Feb. 1<br />

• Yuan Wei, 52, of Glencoe,<br />

was cited for improper<br />

use of registration<br />

and a registration/title violation<br />

at 3:33 a.m. at the<br />

intersection of Dundee<br />

Road and Greenwood Avenue.<br />

A court date was set<br />

for March 15.<br />

EDITOR’S NOTE: The<br />

Glencoe Anchor’s Police<br />

Reports are compiled from<br />

official reports found on<br />

file at the Glencoe Police<br />

Department headquarters in<br />

Glencoe. Individuals named<br />

in these reports are considered<br />

innocent of all charges<br />

until proven guilty in a court<br />

of law.<br />

Voting Open February 2-28<br />

Vote: www.22ndcenturymedia.com/NSchoice<br />

We want to know your favorite local businesses!<br />

Tell us your favorites in categories such as:<br />

Beauty ★ Health ★ Dining ★ Education & Camps ★ Fitness & Recreation<br />

Pets ★ Services ★ Shopping ★ Vehicles<br />

Honor your favorite local businesses by voting for them in the North Shore Choice Awards<br />

presented by 22nd Century Media.<br />

Look for the ballot in the center of this newspaper or vote online at<br />

www.22ndcenturymedia.com/nschoice starting Feb. 2.<br />

Complete at least 50 categories and be eligible for 22nd Century<br />

Media’s Southwest Choice Awards prize—one three-night trip for two<br />

(2) adults to Riu Caribe in Cancun, Mexico, courtesy of Apple Vacations.<br />

THE LAKE FOREST LEADER<br />

THE GLENCOE ANCHOR THE GLENVIEW LATERN THE WINNETKA BEACON<br />

THE NORTHBROOK TOWER TJHE WILMETTE BEACIN THE HIGHLAND PARK LANDMARK<br />

THE NORTHBROOK TOWER<br />

Sober-living facility moves<br />

forward with neutral<br />

recommendation<br />

Dozens of attendees<br />

wore green ribbons in support<br />

of Providence Farm, a<br />

sober-living facility, during<br />

the Northbrook Plan<br />

Commission meeting on<br />

Feb. 7.<br />

The facility, that if approved<br />

will be located at<br />

1620 Sunset Ridge Road,<br />

would provide a transitional<br />

home for men, ages 18-<br />

30, from Northbrook and<br />

the surrounding areas after<br />

they have completed shortterm<br />

intensive rehabilitation<br />

programs. In order for<br />

the project to go forward<br />

with development, the Village<br />

must approve two text<br />

amendments regarding<br />

zoning codes and a special<br />

permit.<br />

The request modified<br />

definitions of “community<br />

residence” and “transitional<br />

service facilities,”<br />

as well as regulations for<br />

such facilities in single<br />

family and multi-family<br />

residential districts. The<br />

special permit would allow<br />

a group home with up<br />

to 11 residents in the R-2<br />

Single-Family Residential<br />

District.<br />

The commission gave<br />

four votes in support and<br />

three votes against the facility.<br />

The review moves forward<br />

to the Village Board,<br />

with the neutral count due<br />

to the absence of two commissioners.<br />

No further<br />

public comment was accepted<br />

about this issue at<br />

the meeting.<br />

Reporting by Sarah Haider,<br />

Assistant Editor. Full story at<br />

NorthbrookTower.com.<br />

THE WINNETKA CURRENT<br />

Winnetka stormwater<br />

improvement project plans<br />

in limbo<br />

Following months at<br />

the drawing board with<br />

Strand Associates and the<br />

Cook County Forest Preserve,<br />

the Winnetka Village<br />

Council explained<br />

that they still do not have<br />

an action plan for the<br />

stormwater management<br />

and improvement project<br />

facing western and southwestern<br />

Winnetka.<br />

Trustee Chris Rintz,<br />

who led the discussion at<br />

the Village’s Feb. 7 meeting,<br />

stressed that although<br />

the team has not reached<br />

a consensus, it eliminated<br />

a handful of drafts that<br />

would not meet the community’s<br />

needs.<br />

Strand’s initial plan,<br />

presented in early 2016,<br />

targeted Cook County’s<br />

Hibbard Road Preserve,<br />

Duke Childs Field and<br />

Crow Island Woods Park<br />

as potential water storage<br />

locations. However,<br />

the project was met with<br />

strong opposition by<br />

Winnetka residents and<br />

was later dismissed by<br />

the Village. Still, Strand<br />

and the Village Council<br />

are hopeful they can use<br />

Duke Childs Field for underground<br />

water storage<br />

in their next recommendation.<br />

Reporting by Lauren Kiggins,<br />

Freelance Reporter. Full<br />

story at WinnetkaCurrent.<br />

com.<br />

THE GLENVIEW LANTERN<br />

Vacant Bess lot could<br />

expand parking options<br />

The Glenview Village<br />

Board considered an<br />

amendment to the municipal<br />

code that would<br />

allow temporary downtown<br />

parking in the former<br />

Bess Hardware lot<br />

during the board’s Feb. 7<br />

meeting.<br />

Glenview purchased the<br />

vacant property, located at<br />

1850 Glenview Road, on<br />

Jan. 25 with the intent to<br />

resell by the send of 2018.<br />

In the meantime, Village<br />

staff recommends establishing<br />

a two-hour parking<br />

restriction until the<br />

new owner commences<br />

redevelopment.<br />

The new temporary<br />

parking would include<br />

the main Bess lot and a<br />

small zone along Depot<br />

Street on the west side of<br />

the building, adding 50<br />

stalls to the downtown<br />

area. The recommendation<br />

would allow parking<br />

for a maximum of two<br />

hours between 8 a.m.-6<br />

p.m. from Monday-Saturday,<br />

without any restrictions<br />

after 6 p.m. during<br />

those days or anytime on<br />

Sundays.<br />

Reporting by Chris Pullam,<br />

Contributing Editor. Full<br />

story at GlenviewLantern.<br />

com.<br />

From the Village<br />

Historic Preservation<br />

Commission recommends<br />

landmark designation<br />

At the Feb. 7 meeting,<br />

members of the Historic<br />

Preservation Commission<br />

unanimously approved a<br />

motion to recommend to<br />

the Village Board honorary<br />

landmark designation<br />

of the home at 411 Lakeside<br />

Terrace.<br />

The commission initiated<br />

its discussion of the<br />

home at its Oct. 4 meeting<br />

prompted by a demolition<br />

inquiry. In recognition of<br />

the home’s significance,<br />

and concerned about its<br />

future, commission members<br />

agreed to nominate<br />

the home for honorary<br />

landmark designation<br />

and prepared a landmark<br />

application that was reviewed<br />

at their Dec. 6 and<br />

Jan. 3 meetings.<br />

While the honorary level<br />

of landmark designation<br />

provides limited protection<br />

for the home, the commission<br />

is hopeful that it will<br />

help to raise awareness of<br />

this significant property,<br />

which is currently for sale<br />

and being marketed as an<br />

opportunity to restore an<br />

architecturally significant<br />

home.<br />

Known historically as<br />

the Charles Henry Hermann<br />

House, for its first<br />

owner, it was designed by<br />

prominent architect Howard<br />

Van Doren Shaw and<br />

built in 1911. The home<br />

is one of 12 structures designed<br />

by Shaw located<br />

within the Village of Glencoe.<br />

Shaw is noteworthy<br />

for his design of Market<br />

Square in Lake Forest<br />

and many other large estate<br />

homes throughout the<br />

North Shore.<br />

The next Historic Preservation<br />

Commission<br />

meeting is scheduled for<br />

7:30 p.m March 7.<br />

Information compiled from<br />

weekly Village newsletter


glencoeanchor.com glencoe<br />

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yet relaxed design. Fabulous open floor plan features hardwood floors throughout, gorgeous gourmet kitchen and spacious,<br />

light-filled family room with fireplace... perfect for today’s lifestyle. Kitchen boasts large center island with reclaimed timber<br />

surface, custom cabinetry and top-of-the-line stainless steel appliances. Beautifully appointed living and dining rooms<br />

complete the 1st floor, along with a mudroom that provides convenient access to attached 2-car garage. Luxurious master<br />

suite, 3 additional bedrooms with private or Jack & Jill baths, and laundry room on 2nd floor. Beautifully finished lower level<br />

features 5th bedroom or office with full bath and wonderful entertainment/media space. Approx March 2017 completion.<br />

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Julie 773.266.9850 | Julie.Hartvigsen@cbexchange.com<br />

568 LINCOLN AVENUE | WINNETKA, IL 60093<br />

©2017 Coldwell Banker Residential Real Estate LLC. All Rights Reserved. Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage fully supports the principles of the Fair Housing Act and the Equal Opportunity Act. Operated by a subsidiary of NRT LLC. Coldwell Banker and the Coldwell Banker Logo are registered<br />

service marks owned by Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. Real estate agents affiliated with Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage are independent contractor sales associates and are not employees of Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage.


8 | February 16, 2017 | The glencoe anchor news<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

Calling all adventure seekers<br />

Hercules<br />

The Hirschfield Family<br />

My name is Hercules.<br />

I’m a 9-year-old<br />

Goldendoodle, more<br />

Golden than Doodle.<br />

No formal education,<br />

but I can sit on<br />

command if I feel like<br />

it. I love the Pup-<br />

Peroni in the bench<br />

outside Mara’s Salon.<br />

They also do a nice chicken chew. Should I jump<br />

on you when I meet you, don’t be alarmed. My<br />

therapist says I’m a pleaser. Every Halloween,<br />

my owners dress me up in a costume. (Note to<br />

all owners: we don’t “love it!” as much as you.)<br />

Thank goodness for keypads or this article would<br />

be illegible. My handwriting is terrible. (P.S. Still<br />

single, ladies!)<br />

HELP! The Glencoe Anchor is in search of more pets. To<br />

submit your own Pet of the Week, send a photo and info to<br />

fouad@glencoeanchor.com or 60 Revere Drive Suite 888.<br />

Northbrook, Ill 60062<br />

WINNER:<br />

Best Groomer in<br />

Chicagoland<br />

Pet of the Week<br />

Sponsored by<br />

Love Fur Dogs<br />

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www.LoveFurDogs.com • 69 Green Bay Rd. Glencoe, IL<br />

Dust-Free<br />

Wood Floor Refinishing<br />

with our Atomic Dust Containment System<br />

The North Shore’s wood flooring experts.<br />

Schedule a cleaning: kashianbros.com/floorcleaning<br />

1107 Greenleaf Ave, Wilmette<br />

847-865-8283 KashianBros.com<br />

22nd Century<br />

Media prepares for<br />

annual Camp Expo<br />

Jacqueline Glosniak<br />

Contributing Editor<br />

While temperatures are<br />

still hovering around the<br />

freezing mark and the sunny,<br />

dog days of summer<br />

seem like eons away, those<br />

final school projects and<br />

long vacation times will be<br />

coming up just around the<br />

corner before we know it.<br />

To help prepare North<br />

Shore families to find the<br />

best summer camps for<br />

their children, 22nd Century<br />

Media, the parent<br />

company of The Glencoe<br />

Anchor, is proud to host<br />

its third annual free Camp<br />

Expo on Saturday, Feb. 25,<br />

at Sunset Ridge School,<br />

525 Sunset Ridge Road in<br />

Northfield.<br />

The Camp Expo, sponsored<br />

by Lake Forest’s<br />

Banner Day Camp, gives<br />

various camps, from day<br />

camps to overnight camps<br />

across the Midwest, the<br />

opportunity to meet with<br />

potential campers and<br />

their families to meet with<br />

an array of area businesses<br />

catering to the needs of<br />

young adventurists.<br />

From 10 a.m.-2 p.m.,<br />

eventgoers will have the<br />

chance to visit more than<br />

40 vendor booths and<br />

participate in interactive<br />

activities designed for<br />

children of all ages. Fun<br />

activities include face<br />

painting, a balloon artist,<br />

camp games and prizes,<br />

and light refreshments.<br />

Additionally, popular<br />

Glencoe and Winnetka<br />

grocer The Grand Food<br />

Center will be sponsoring<br />

a free make-your-owntrail-mix<br />

station for kids to<br />

practice making their own<br />

Charles Jackson, of Glencoe, plays Jenga at 22nd Century Media’s Camp Expo last<br />

year. 22nd Century Media File Photo<br />

hearty camp snacks.<br />

Heather Warthen, chief<br />

operating officer for 22nd<br />

Century Media, said the<br />

company began hosting<br />

the event after discovering<br />

a need for an all-inone<br />

event to prepare North<br />

Shore families for summer<br />

break and the many local<br />

opportunities for kids.<br />

“We know that a lot of<br />

our readers themselves<br />

have attended these camps<br />

and now their kids attend<br />

the camps, so a couple of<br />

years ago, we decided that<br />

we should try it out as an<br />

expo,” Warthen said.<br />

The Camp Expo offers<br />

networking opportunities<br />

for a variety of camps<br />

serving the most seasoned<br />

of campers to the youngest<br />

tykes.<br />

“It serves as a chance for<br />

campers to meet up with<br />

their camps before camp<br />

starts in the summer, and<br />

it also gives people who<br />

have never gone to camp<br />

the chance to look for the<br />

right fit,” Warthen said.<br />

“It’s a good opportunity<br />

to ask questions and great<br />

face time with the camps,<br />

because a lot of them will<br />

have their staffers and<br />

owners themselves come<br />

out for these events.”<br />

22CM CAMP EXPO<br />

10 a.m.-2 p.m.,<br />

Saturday, Feb. 25<br />

Sunset Ridge School<br />

525 Sunset Ridge Road,<br />

Northfield<br />

(847) 272-4565<br />

www.22ndcentury<br />

media.com/camp<br />

CAMP EXPO VENDORS<br />

Day camps<br />

Actors Training Center<br />

AYSO Region 425<br />

Banner Day Camp<br />

Decoma Day Camp<br />

Discovery Day Camp<br />

Fonseca Martial Arts<br />

Galileo Innovation<br />

Camps<br />

Game On! Sports Camp<br />

4 Girls<br />

Good Times Day Camp<br />

Hoops 4 Health<br />

iD Tech Camps<br />

One in a Hundred, Inc.<br />

School of Rock<br />

Tamarak Day Camp and<br />

Country School<br />

Taste Buds Kitchen<br />

The Prepsters LLC<br />

Overnight camps<br />

Beber Camp<br />

Camp Agawak For Girls<br />

Camp Anokijig<br />

Camp Birchwood<br />

Camp Eagle Ridge<br />

Camp Jorn YMCA<br />

Camp Kodiak<br />

Camp Menominee<br />

Camp Nicolet<br />

Camp Wekeela<br />

Camp Woodland for<br />

Girls<br />

Clearwater Camp<br />

Culver Schools & Camps<br />

French Woods<br />

Performing Arts Camp<br />

Greenwoods Camp<br />

Lake of the Woods<br />

Camp<br />

Swift Nature Camp<br />

The Northwest Passage<br />

Towering Pines Camp<br />

for Boys<br />

Travel for Teens<br />

Local businesses<br />

22nd Century Media<br />

Chicagoly Magazine<br />

Eye Level Learning<br />

Center<br />

Glamour Girlz<br />

Language Stars<br />

The Grand Food Center<br />

The PlayGround Games<br />

Young Living Essential<br />

Oils


glencoeanchor.com glencoe<br />

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663 <strong>GA</strong>RLAND | WINNETKA | 5 BEDROOMS | $1,399,000<br />

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OPEN SUNDAY 2:30 - 4:30 PM<br />

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568 LINCOLN AVENUE | WINNETKA, IL 60093<br />

©2017 Coldwell Banker Residential Real Estate LLC. All Rights Reserved. Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage fully supports the principles of the Fair Housing Act and the Equal Opportunity Act. Operated by a subsidiary of NRT LLC. Coldwell Banker and the Coldwell Banker Logo are registered<br />

service marks owned by Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. Real estate agents affiliated with Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage are independent contractor sales associates and are not employees of Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage.


10 | February 16, 2017 | The glencoe anchor news<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

Local organizations co-sponsor screening of climate change doc<br />

‘Before the Flood’<br />

showing inspires<br />

viewers to think<br />

about environment<br />

Danielle Gensburg<br />

Freelance Reporter<br />

From extreme weather<br />

patterns and scarce resources<br />

to devastated ecosystems,<br />

climate change<br />

is happening and having<br />

a very real impact on<br />

communities around the<br />

world.<br />

In “Before the Flood,” a<br />

new documentary on climate<br />

change produced by<br />

Academy Award-winning<br />

actor, environmental activist<br />

Leonardo DiCaprio,<br />

climate change is shown<br />

as a problem that can be<br />

solved today if people<br />

choose to take action.<br />

Local advocacy organizations<br />

Go Green Glencoe<br />

and Grab the Wheel cosponsored<br />

a screening of<br />

the film Feb. 1 at Glencoe<br />

Union Church, allowing<br />

“You realize, especially in this<br />

very tumultuous political time,<br />

you really need to double down<br />

on something.”<br />

Lisa Fremont—Glencoe resident on tackling<br />

climate change through various advocacy efforts<br />

residents from Glencoe<br />

and surrounding communities<br />

to learn about the<br />

realities of climate change.<br />

Margie Kelly, strategic<br />

communications manager<br />

for the National Resources<br />

Defense Council, led a<br />

discussion about the film.<br />

Founded in 1970, the National<br />

Resources Defense<br />

Council is a nonprofit environmental<br />

organization<br />

made up of lawyers, scientists,<br />

policy advocates<br />

and more than 2 million<br />

members who advocate<br />

and work to protect the<br />

planet and its ecosystems.<br />

Faith in Place, Go<br />

Green Glencoe, Grab the<br />

wheel and Citizens’ Climate<br />

Lobby were some of<br />

the other nonprofit groups<br />

(in addition to the National<br />

Resources Defense<br />

Council) that attended the<br />

free film showing and set<br />

up booths with leaflets of<br />

information about their<br />

organizations.<br />

“We came here at the<br />

invitation of these community<br />

groups to show the<br />

film ‘Before the Flood’<br />

with Leonardo DiCaprio<br />

and have a conversation in<br />

the community about how<br />

people were feeling about<br />

the environment, what<br />

they felt they could do and<br />

to give them some information<br />

and tips about how<br />

they can become more engaged,”<br />

Kelly said.<br />

The documentary follows<br />

DiCaprio and his<br />

team on a journey around<br />

the world to witness the<br />

effects of climate change<br />

firsthand.<br />

“I’ve always thought<br />

that it was something<br />

that everybody should<br />

be concerned about, and<br />

I just wanted to see if I<br />

could learn anything new<br />

from the movie and meet<br />

like-minded people in the<br />

community,” Glencoe resident<br />

Aparna Jain said.<br />

Jain said she did not<br />

know about some of the<br />

statistics mentioned in<br />

the film, as well as the<br />

rate with which climate<br />

change is happening.<br />

“Sometimes it’s great to<br />

see [the effects of climate<br />

change] visualized in one<br />

place,” Jain said.<br />

Miranda Dotson, a<br />

Highland Park resident,<br />

said she has seen similar<br />

films before, but was glad<br />

she came out.<br />

“I’ve seen films like this<br />

before, so I didn’t expect<br />

to hear anything new from<br />

this, but I’m very glad<br />

that I came out tonight because<br />

just the visuals and<br />

the dialogue that Leonardo<br />

DiCaprio was having<br />

with various leaders and<br />

various people from all<br />

different walks of life was<br />

impactful,” Dotson said.<br />

“Coming from Chicago<br />

and being from a place<br />

where we have abundant<br />

resources is so rare given<br />

the script of how the rest<br />

of the world is, so it’s a reminder<br />

that I need to continue<br />

doing work.”<br />

Glencoe resident Linn<br />

Donaldson said people<br />

sometimes resist learning<br />

about climate change.<br />

“The reality is really<br />

important, and there are<br />

things we can do about<br />

it,” Donaldson said. “It’s<br />

important that we don’t<br />

just throw up our hands<br />

and hide under the bed.”<br />

Glencoe resident Lisa<br />

Fremont, a member of the<br />

Village’s Sustainability<br />

Task Force, said she was<br />

inspired by the film to<br />

make a difference.<br />

“You realize, especially<br />

in this very tumultuous<br />

political time, you really<br />

need to double down<br />

on something,” she said.<br />

“Watching the movie, it<br />

made me re-energized<br />

to do that. Seeing it and<br />

coming here tonight made<br />

me think you have to really<br />

focus on something and<br />

really put a lot of energy<br />

into it. I don’t know if I<br />

really learned anything<br />

new, but it was a new<br />

way of looking at it that<br />

opened my eyes a little bit<br />

more. It’s very sad.”<br />

Susana Figueroa, outreach<br />

director of Faith in<br />

Place in Lake County, an<br />

organization whose mission<br />

is to inspire faith in<br />

people of all religious denominations<br />

to take action<br />

and care for the earth, said<br />

that she was very aware<br />

of the problems related to<br />

climate change and that<br />

the film reaffirmed to her<br />

how important it is to connect<br />

with people and raise<br />

awareness about environmental<br />

issues.<br />

“A lot of people don’t<br />

know how important for<br />

us it is to take action,” she<br />

said. “And some people<br />

don’t know where to begin<br />

but just doing simple<br />

steps like reducing the<br />

energy that you’re using<br />

at home or getting children<br />

outdoors more or<br />

composting ... those little<br />

things that all of us can be<br />

doing make a difference.”<br />

Kelly agreed that even<br />

doing small things, like<br />

changing your light bulb<br />

and keeping your tires<br />

pumped full of air, can<br />

help by making people<br />

less dependent on overconsumption.<br />

She said being<br />

aware is a huge part of<br />

making a change.<br />

“I didn’t realize the impact<br />

of meat was so significant<br />

on energy issues,”<br />

Kelly said. “Awareness is<br />

a huge part of it. I guess<br />

the most important takeaway<br />

from the film is to do<br />

something. Pick what it is.<br />

It doesn’t have to be one<br />

size fits all. Do the thing<br />

that matters to you. Do<br />

something that’s meaningful<br />

and inspires your<br />

friends and family, communities<br />

and churches to<br />

also take action and stop<br />

denying that it’s true.”<br />

Plants of the<br />

North Shore<br />

Plants of Concern<br />

manager talks<br />

natural spaces<br />

Alexandra greenwald<br />

Freelance Reporter<br />

Rachel Goad, manager<br />

of Chicago Botanic<br />

Garden’s program Plants<br />

of Concern, addressed<br />

Friends of the Green Bay<br />

Trail members and area<br />

residents Thursday, Feb.<br />

9, at the Takiff Center. The<br />

talk was co-sponsored by<br />

the Glencoe Park District.<br />

Plants of Concern operates<br />

in 15 counties across<br />

northeastern Illinois and<br />

northwestern Indiana to<br />

monitor populations of<br />

rare and endangered native<br />

plants. The group<br />

trains volunteer “citizenscientists”<br />

to find, monitor<br />

and count these populations.<br />

This data is used<br />

to study long-term trends<br />

and develop management<br />

techniques to encourage<br />

rare plant survival.<br />

Friends of the Green<br />

Bay Trail board member<br />

Eileen Sirkin said that<br />

while the Friends’ work<br />

is focused on restoration<br />

rather than preservation<br />

of rare plants, she sees a<br />

connection between their<br />

work.<br />

“She’s going out into<br />

areas that are still the way<br />

God wanted them to be,<br />

the way they should be,<br />

and she’s trying to protect<br />

them,” Sirkin said.<br />

“We have an area that<br />

was totally trashy plants<br />

and trash, literally,” board<br />

member Jo Ann Kimzie<br />

said.<br />

“So we’ve removed all<br />

that and we’ve put in pretty<br />

common plants, really.<br />

Whatever’s native [to the<br />

area].”


glencoeanchor.com glencoe<br />

the glencoe anchor | February 16, 2017 | 11<br />

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marks owned by Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. Real estate agents affiliated with Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage are independent contractor sales associates and are not employees of Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage. * = photo has been virtually staged


12 | February 16, 2017 | The glencoe anchor glencoe<br />

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glencoeanchor.com sound off<br />

the glencoe anchor | February 16, 2017 | 13<br />

Social snapshot<br />

Become a Anchor Plus member: GlencoeAnchor.com/plus<br />

Like The Glencoe Anchor: facebook.com/GlencoeAnchor<br />

Follow The Glencoe Anchor: @GlencoeAnchor<br />

go figure<br />

Top Stories<br />

from GlencoeAnchor.com as of Feb. 13<br />

1. How We Met Contest: Shifrins take home<br />

2017 contest win<br />

2. Glencoe sister duo Carly and Martina hits<br />

the right notes nationwide<br />

3. 10 Questions with Kalani Rennoe, New<br />

Trier boys bowling<br />

4. GJHP actors get ‘All Shook Up’<br />

5. Dining Out: Gerhard’s provides elegant<br />

desserts with warm welcome<br />

New Trier High School posted this photo,<br />

writing: Some fun birthday celebrations<br />

and a Trevian sighting! Pep Club gave out<br />

freebies today at the Winnetka Campus in<br />

honor of Founders Day #hbdnt<br />

One year ago today, Writers Theatre held<br />

our official building opening—Happy first<br />

anniversary<br />

Writers Theatre, @WritersTheatre,<br />

tweeted this Feb. 8<br />

40<br />

Years<br />

An intriguing number from this week’s edition<br />

retiring Executive<br />

Vice President and<br />

Director Kris Jarantoski<br />

has worked at the<br />

Chicago Botanic Garden<br />

(read the story on Page 3)<br />

Good Day Glencoe<br />

Oh to be back home<br />

Jennifer Bennett<br />

Contributing Columnist<br />

Glencoe resident<br />

Sometimes, you don’t<br />

realize what you<br />

have until it’s gone.<br />

I remember in detail<br />

how I felt when we moved<br />

from Glencoe back to<br />

North Carolina. I spent my<br />

college years in Chapel<br />

Hill and thought moving<br />

back would just be the<br />

most wonderful thing.<br />

Raising my kids there,<br />

showing them where I<br />

went to school, revisiting<br />

my favorite restaurants and<br />

picture-perfect weather almost<br />

year-round ... the best<br />

move ever, right? Wrong!<br />

Within days of arriving<br />

in North Carolina, I was<br />

longing to be back in Glencoe.<br />

I tried to have an open<br />

mind while I familiarized<br />

myself as a mom in my<br />

new but old surroundings.<br />

However, as hard as I tried,<br />

I could not stop thinking<br />

about Glencoe.<br />

And while the North<br />

Carolina skies were sunfilled,<br />

the people were<br />

lovely and the town cute<br />

and quaint, I still longed<br />

to be back in Glencoe. We<br />

moved to North Carolina<br />

in the beginning of summer<br />

and while we visited the<br />

pools daily I could not get<br />

over the fact that at this<br />

time last year my kids and<br />

I were walking to Glencoe<br />

Beach, building sand castles<br />

and cooling off in refreshing<br />

Lake Michigan. Still, I<br />

realized I needed to make<br />

the most of this move for<br />

both my family and myself<br />

and stop living in the past.<br />

So, we immersed ourselves<br />

in all things North Carolina<br />

and got involved at the<br />

library, played at the parks,<br />

visited town often and regularly<br />

dined at old favorites.<br />

I tried, believe me, I tried to<br />

get that warm happy feeling<br />

about North Carolina again,<br />

but unfortunately it was<br />

nowhere to be found.<br />

I couldn’t stop thinking<br />

about our days back in<br />

Glencoe and how I loved<br />

being able to walk or bike<br />

everywhere. An easy walk<br />

up to Foodstuffs for a delicious<br />

sandwich topped off<br />

by a scrumptious monster<br />

bar. Or, how comfortable<br />

and secure I felt sending<br />

my oldest son up to the<br />

Grand for some forgotten<br />

tomato sauce. Or, how<br />

easy it was to get over to<br />

my kid’s schools for concerts,<br />

class parties, or the<br />

occasional sick pick-up.<br />

And, although I can’t believe<br />

I’m writing this, I do<br />

love the change of seasons<br />

(and yes, that does include<br />

the winters). I absolutely<br />

love that my kids get to go<br />

ice skating for PE class.<br />

That is just unheard of in<br />

many places. Now, don’t<br />

get me wrong, as North<br />

Carolina is absolutely<br />

beautiful and I spent many<br />

years loving life there.<br />

But at this moment in<br />

my life I am so very happy<br />

here in our wonderful little<br />

town. Needless to say, our<br />

move lasted a total of eight<br />

months and we were back<br />

in good ole Glencoe.<br />

Jennifer Bennett is a Glencoe<br />

mom who lives with her four<br />

sweet boys and her loving<br />

husband. She enjoys walking,<br />

writing, biking, baking and<br />

spending time with her family.<br />

From the Editor<br />

Hard work beats flash<br />

Fouad Egbaria<br />

fouad@glencoeanchor.com<br />

Four decades is a<br />

long time.<br />

Last week I sat<br />

down to talk to Kris<br />

Jarantoski, who worked<br />

at the Chicago Botanic<br />

Garden for 40 years, most<br />

recently as its executive<br />

vice president and director.<br />

He joined the garden<br />

as an assistant horticulturist<br />

in 1977, five years after<br />

it opened.<br />

He jokingly said that<br />

upon visiting the garden<br />

for the first time, it was<br />

kind of a “dump.”<br />

Weeds bigger than the<br />

plants that are supposed<br />

to be there? Soil so rough<br />

horticulturists were breaking<br />

it up with pick axes?<br />

Does that sound like the<br />

Chicago Botanic Garden<br />

you’ve strolled about<br />

today? Probably not.<br />

Jarantoski’s story is<br />

a one of dedication to a<br />

vision. He told me even<br />

though his first impression<br />

of the garden’s aesthetics<br />

wasn’t great, he was<br />

attracted to the idea of<br />

the place: the goals of the<br />

people there and what<br />

they thought it could<br />

be. That type is forward<br />

thinking is valuable — if<br />

people only wanted to join<br />

established ventures, then<br />

the process of innovation<br />

and creation takes a major<br />

hit.<br />

In his time at the<br />

garden, numerous garden<br />

spaces were added, taking<br />

it from the relatively small<br />

operation it was when it<br />

started to an attraction that<br />

has brought in more than<br />

1 million visitors each of<br />

the last four years. That,<br />

doesn’t happen overnight.<br />

You might read about<br />

the big price tags on some<br />

of the garden’s projects,<br />

but the truth is that any<br />

big operation, like the<br />

Chicago Botanic Garden,<br />

starts with simple, honest,<br />

hard work, guided by a<br />

vision.<br />

Jarantoski’s response,<br />

then, when I asked him<br />

about his favorite plant —<br />

arborvitae, or the “tree of<br />

life” — made sense.<br />

“It’s great year-round,”<br />

he said. “It’s serviceable.<br />

It’s not flashy, it’s not<br />

showy. It’s great.”<br />

Hard work often isn’t<br />

flashy — but it usually<br />

leads to greatness.<br />

The Glencoe<br />

Anchor<br />

Sound Off Policy<br />

Editorials and columns are the<br />

opinions of the author. Pieces<br />

from 22nd Century Media are<br />

the thoughts of the company<br />

as a whole. The Glencoe Anchor<br />

encourages readers to write<br />

letters to Sound Off. All letters<br />

must be signed, and names and<br />

hometowns will be published.<br />

We also ask that writers include<br />

their address and phone number<br />

for verification, not publication.<br />

Letters should be limited to 400<br />

words. The Glencoe Anchor reserves<br />

the right to edit letters. Letters<br />

become property of The Glencoe<br />

Anchor. Letters that are published<br />

do not reflect the thoughts and<br />

views of The Glencoe Anchor.<br />

Letters can be mailed to: The<br />

Glencoe Anchor, 60 Revere Drive<br />

ST 888, Northbrook, IL, 60062.<br />

Fax letters to (847) 272-4648 or<br />

email to fouad@glencoeanchor.<br />

com.<br />

www.glencoeanchor.com


14 | February 16, 2017 | The glencoe anchor glencoe<br />

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©2016 Coldwell Banker Residential Real Estate LLC. All Rights Reserved. Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage fully supports the principles of the Fair Housing Act and the Equal Opportunity Act. Operated by a subsidiary of NRT LLC. Coldwell Banker and the Coldwell Banker Logo are registered<br />

service marks owned by Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. Real estate agents affiliated with Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage are independent contractor sales associates and are not employees of Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage.


the glencoe anchor | February 16, 2017 | glencoeanchor.com<br />

in faith Upcoming<br />

activities in Glencoe’s faith<br />

communities, Page 20<br />

kitchen to your plate<br />

Winnetka’s Mirani’s At Home offers highquality<br />

dining for delivery, pickup, Page 22<br />

Father-daughter dance brings families<br />

together on dance floor, Page 19<br />

Lenny Feller, of<br />

Glencoe, swings his<br />

daughter Lucy, 4,<br />

during the Glencoe<br />

Park District’s Daddy<br />

Daughter Dance<br />

Sunday, Feb. 12, at the<br />

Takiff Center. Rhonda<br />

Holcomb/22nd Century<br />

Media


16 | February 16, 2017 | The glencoe anchor glencoe<br />

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Happy Hour ___________________________<br />

Hot Dogs _____________________________<br />

Ice Cream ____________________________<br />

Irish pub _____________________________<br />

Italian Restaurant ______________________<br />

Juice/Smoothies _______________________<br />

Local Diner ___________________________<br />

Mexican Restaurant ____________________<br />

New Restaurant (Feb. 2016-present) __________<br />

Outdoor Dining ________________________<br />

Pizza _______________________________<br />

Pizza - Chicago-style ___________________<br />

Pizza - Most creative ____________________<br />

Pizza - Thick Crust _____________________<br />

Pizza - Thin crust ______________________<br />

Ribs ________________________________<br />

Seafood _____________________________<br />

Soup _______________________________<br />

Sports Bar ___________________________<br />

Steakhouse __________________________<br />

Thai Restaurant _______________________<br />

EDUCATION<br />

Day Camp ___________________________<br />

Overnight Camp _______________________<br />

Preschool ____________________________<br />

Private High School _____________________<br />

Private K-8th Grade School _______________<br />

Sports Camp __________________________<br />

Tutoring Business ______________________<br />

OFFICIAL RULES<br />

SPONSOR: 22nd Century Media, 60 Revere Dr., Ste 888, Northbrook, IL 60062.<br />

NO PURCHASE NECESSARY TO ENTER: Complete a 2017 North Shore Choice Awards Official Entry Ballot in the February editions of 22nd Century Media’s North Shore publications (includes The Glencoe Anchor,<br />

The Glenview Lantern, The Highland Park Landmark, The Lake Forest Leader, The Northbrook Tower, The Wilmette Beacon and The Winnetka Current). At least 50 categories must be filled in on the Entry Ballot in<br />

order to be eligible for the Prize. Mail entries to: “North Shore Choice Awards c/o 22nd Century Media, 60 Revere Drive, Suite 888, Northbrook, IL 60062. Hand-delivered entries and online entries will be accepted. No<br />

photocopies or mechanical reproductions. The sweepstakes begins Feb. 2, 2017, and ends Feb. 28, 2017. Entries must be received by no later than 5 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 28, 2017. Sponsor is not responsible for lost,<br />

late, misdirected, mutilated, incomplete, illegible, stolen, or postage-due mail or otherwise undeliverable entries. The winner will be selected in a random drawing from all eligible entries received on or about March<br />

15, 2017. The winner will be notified by phone within 15 days of drawing. A voucher for the prize will be awarded within 30 days after the winner has been notified and chosen. For a copy of the Official Rules, send a<br />

self-addressed stamped envelope to “North Shore Choice Awards” c/o 22nd Century Media, 60 Revere Drive, Suite 888, Northbrook, IL 60062. All entries become the property of the Sponsor.<br />

CONDITIONS: Sponsor is not responsible for printing, production, typographical or other errors or omissions. Prize winner may be required to complete and return an affidavit of eligibility and liability/publicity release<br />

before receiving Prize. If affidavit and release are not returned within seven (7) days of the Prize drawing, or if the Prize winner is ineligible, the Prize may be forfeited and an alternate Prize winner may be randomly chosen<br />

from among all eligible entrants. Winner will be required to provide proof of insurance at the time of delivery. • All taxes associated with the Prize are the sole responsibility of the winner. By entering, participants<br />

agree to be bound by the official rules (and the Sponsor’s interpretation thereof) and consent to the use of their name, photograph, and/or likeness for advertising/publicity without further consideration, except where<br />

prohibited by law. Sponsor may prohibit entrants from participating in the Sweepstakes and disqualify entries if they attempt to enter the Sweepstakes through means not described in the rules, attempt to disrupt the<br />

Sweepstakes or circumvent the rules, act in an unsportsmanlike manner or with an intent to annoy or harass any other entrant or Sponsor. Sponsor reserves the right to cancel or suspend the Sweepstakes should<br />

unauthorized human intervention or other causes beyond the control of the Sponsor corrupt the administration, security, fairness, integrity, or proper operation of the Sweepstakes. In the event Sponsor terminates<br />

Sweepstakes due to unauthorized human intervention or other causes beyond the control of the Sponsor, Sponsor shall award the Prize in a random drawing of all entrants to one eligible participant, based upon the<br />

rules of eligibility. All decisions are final. • Odds of winning depend upon the number of entries received. Possible entries are unlimited in number and only one prize will be awarded. A purchase will not improve<br />

chance of winning. Prize is not transferable. No prize substitution except by Sponsor, who reserves the right to substitute a prize of equal or greater value. Each winner is responsible for all federal, state and local<br />

taxes as well as all departure taxes, insurance, fees and fuel surcharges (approximately $350-$415 per person, subject to change) will be advised by Apple Promotional Bookings and must be paid by the traveler to<br />

Apple Vacations prior to departure. These taxes include airport departure taxes, airport arrival taxes, airline fuel surcharges and tour-guard insurance.<br />

FITNESS & RECREATION<br />

Art Studio ____________________________<br />

Best Kids Birthday Party Venue ____________<br />

Best Teen Birthday Party Venue ____________<br />

Bowling Alley _________________________<br />

Country Club __________________________<br />

Dance Studio _________________________<br />

Driving Range _________________________<br />

Fitness Center/Gym _____________________<br />

Golf Course ___________________________<br />

Hotel _______________________________<br />

Live Music ___________________________<br />

Live Theater __________________________<br />

Movie Theater _________________________<br />

Music Lessons ________________________<br />

Personal Trainer _______________________<br />

Spin ________________________________<br />

Swim School _________________________<br />

Wedding Venue ________________________<br />

Weekend Destination Spot ________________<br />

Yoga ________________________________<br />

PETS<br />

Pet Boarding __________________________<br />

Pet Groomer __________________________<br />

Pet Shop ____________________________<br />

Pet Walker ___________________________<br />

Veterinarian __________________________<br />

SERvICES<br />

Architect ____________________________<br />

Auto Repair __________________________<br />

Bank _______________________________<br />

Butcher _____________________________<br />

Car Wash ____________________________<br />

All vacations are approved on a promotional basis and are subject to availability. Blackout dates do<br />

apply. Travel dates are final and will not be extended. Travel is not permitted during holiday periods<br />

including both five days prior to and after. Trips are non-transferable and cannot be exchanged for<br />

cash. Apple Vacations reserves the right to substitute the vacation with another of equal value, equal<br />

Apple rating or within the same hotel chain should any unforeseen circumstance occur. Hotel to be<br />

determined by Apple Vacations. Trips are valid for two adults ONLY per room and do not include any<br />

special promotions. NO room upgrades. Winner must be at least 21 years old or traveling with a legal<br />

guardian. Employees of participating companies and its properties, sponsors, vendors and their immediate<br />

families are not eligible to win.<br />

PRIZE: One three-night trip for two (2) adults to Riu Caribe in Cancun, Mexico, provided by Apple Vacations.<br />

The trip includes three-night accommodations, round-trip nonstop air from Chicago O’Hare,<br />

ground transfers to/from the airport and hotel, all meals and drinks in the resort and the assistance of<br />

a resort Apple Representative. Trip is valid for travel through Nov. 1, 2017. Taxes, insurance, any applicable<br />

baggage fees, and additional expenses (such as optional excursions, spa treatments, phone calls<br />

and souvenirs) are the sole responsibility of the winner. Approximate retail value of the trip is $2,000.<br />

ELIgIBILITY: Open to legal U.S. residents of Illinois, 21 years of age or older on the day of entry. At<br />

least 50 categories must be filled in on the Entry Ballot in order to eligible for the Prize. Employees<br />

of 22nd Century Media and its affiliates, subsidiaries, advertising agencies and promotional suppliers,<br />

as well as the immediate families of such employees, are not eligible. Void where prohibited or<br />

restricted by law.<br />

Carpet/Flooring ________________________<br />

Day care _____________________________<br />

Electrician ___________________________<br />

Event Planner _________________________<br />

Financial advisor _______________________<br />

Florist _______________________________<br />

Green Construction _____________________<br />

Handyman Service _____________________<br />

Heating/Cooling (HVAC) __________________<br />

Home Builder _________________________<br />

Home Improvement _____________________<br />

Insurance agent _______________________<br />

Kitchen/Bath Remodeling ________________<br />

Landscaping __________________________<br />

Law Firm ____________________________<br />

Lawn Care ___________________________<br />

Oil Change ___________________________<br />

Pest Control __________________________<br />

Photographer _________________________<br />

Plumber _____________________________<br />

Pools/Spas ___________________________<br />

Real Estate Agent ______________________<br />

Real Estate Brokerage ___________________<br />

Towing Company ______________________<br />

Travel Agency _________________________<br />

Windows/Doors _______________________<br />

SHOPPINg<br />

Antiques _____________________________<br />

Appliance Store ________________________<br />

Art Gallery ____________________________<br />

Bedding _____________________________<br />

Bike Shop ____________________________<br />

Book Store ___________________________<br />

Boutique _____________________________<br />

Bridal Shop ___________________________<br />

Children’s Clothing ______________________<br />

Consignment Shop ______________________<br />

Furniture Store ________________________<br />

Garden Center or Nursery _________________<br />

Gift Shop _____________________________<br />

Gourmet Food Market ___________________<br />

Grocery Store _________________________<br />

Jewelry Store _________________________<br />

Liquor Store ___________________________<br />

Men’s Clothing _________________________<br />

Neighborhood Shopping __________________<br />

Running Store _________________________<br />

Shoe Store ___________________________<br />

Shopping Center _______________________<br />

Tire Store ____________________________<br />

Toy Store _____________________________<br />

Women’s Clothing ______________________<br />

SPIRITS<br />

Beer Garden __________________________<br />

Brewery _____________________________<br />

Irish pub _____________________________<br />

Liquor Store ___________________________<br />

Sports Bar ____________________________<br />

vEHICLES/RECREATIONAL vEHICLES<br />

Auto Dealer - Domestic __________________<br />

Auto Dealer - Imports ____________________<br />

Motorcycle Dealer ______________________<br />

VoTE onlinE now<br />

22ndcenturymedia.com/nschoice<br />

Entry Ballot Must Be Received By<br />

5 p.m. Feb. 28, 2017<br />

At least 50 categories must be completed for ballot to be counted.<br />

Name ________________________________________ Age__________<br />

Address ____________________________________________________<br />

City _______________________________________________________<br />

State _________________________________________ Zip__________<br />

Phone _____________________________________________________<br />

E-mail _____________________________________________________<br />

Mail Entries To:<br />

“North Shore Choice Awards” • c/o 22nd Century Media<br />

60 Revere Dr., Ste 888 • Northbrook, IL 60062<br />

“A Superior Version of Chicago Style Pan Pizza” - Chicago Magazine<br />

Silopizza.com 847-234-6660<br />

THE NORTH SUBURBAN YMCA<br />

We won’t be<br />

comfortable<br />

until you are!<br />

CHOOSE<br />

THE Y<br />

• FITNESS CENTER/GYM<br />

• DANCE STUDIO • DAY CAMP<br />

• PERSONAL TRAINER • SPIN<br />

• SWIM SCHOOL • YO<strong>GA</strong><br />

Thank you for voting us<br />

“Best Heating &<br />

Cooling Company<br />

on the North Shore”<br />

...for both 2015 and 2016!<br />

847-498-8070<br />

Niles Buffalo Grove Wilmette<br />

847-892-7178 847-904-1270 847-729-7665<br />

www.bigblueswimschool.com<br />

20% off<br />

New Clients<br />

847.501.3100<br />

368 Park Avenue<br />

Glencoe, IL<br />

pascalpourelle.com<br />

thenoodlecafe.com<br />

Your Hometown Plumber<br />

847.251.2695<br />

kerriganplumbing.com LIC # 055-004527<br />

A TOP 200 SALON<br />

For Thirteen Years<br />

- Salon Today Magazine<br />

Reserve your new look today!<br />

Call 847.266.7777 or 773.388.9999<br />

gordonsalon.com<br />

Wilmette<br />

3232 Lake Ave.<br />

Highland Park<br />

653 Central Ave.<br />

Chicago<br />

3336 N. Clark St. 1992 Tower Dr.<br />

North Shore School of Dance<br />

Teaching dancers to achieve their dreams for 28 years!<br />

VISIT US AT:<br />

www.northshoredance.com<br />

505 Laurel Ave., Suite 102, Highland Park | 847.432.2060


16 | February 16, 2017 | The glencoe anchor glencoe<br />

glencoeanchor.com glencoeanchor.com glencoe<br />

the glencoe anchor | February 16, 2017 | 17<br />

SEE OUR SPECIALS: TEDDIEKOSSOF.COM/OFFERS<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

CARRIAGE HILL KENNELS<br />

Make Your<br />

SPRING BREAK<br />

Boarding<br />

Reservations!<br />

$20.00 OFF<br />

Dog Grooming & Bathing<br />

new & existing customers<br />

Must present coupon. By appt. only. Cannot be combined with any other offers. One coupon per client. Expires 2/24/17<br />

2218 Waukegan Rd., Glenview<br />

BEST GROOMING ON THE NORTH SHORE!<br />

Here’s what our clients are saying…<br />

“So gentle and loving and<br />

our poochies always look<br />

and smell great!”<br />

— Remmi & Barkley’s mom<br />

www.carriagehillkennels.com (847) 724-0270 Business Lunch _______________________ Sushi Restaurant ______________________<br />

Roofing _____________________________ Happy Hour ___________________________ 300 Happ Rd Northfield wagsonwillow.com 847.272.2918<br />

Please vote for us<br />

“Best Bedding and<br />

Furniture on the<br />

North Shore”<br />

Chicago 1925 N. Clybourn Ave.<br />

773.348.2225<br />

Northbrook 840 Willow Rd.<br />

847.205.2555<br />

Dine in, Carry out & Delivery<br />

Party Trays<br />

Party Rooms<br />

Off Premise Staffed Events<br />

Generations of made from scratch Italian family recipes!<br />

marcellos.com | 847.498.1500<br />

Please write in your favorite business<br />

in each category.<br />

At least 50 categories must be filled in to be eligible<br />

for 22nd Century Media’s North Shore Choice Awards<br />

prize - one three-night trip for two (2) adults to Riu Caribe<br />

in Cancun, Mexico, courtesy of Apple Vacations.<br />

Please see instructions and official rules below.<br />

BEAUTY<br />

Barber ______________________________<br />

Blowout _____________________________<br />

Day spa _____________________________<br />

Hair Color ____________________________<br />

Hair Salon ___________________________<br />

Make-Up Artist ________________________<br />

Mani/Pedi ____________________________<br />

Massage ____________________________<br />

Med Spa _____________________________<br />

Waxing ______________________________<br />

HEALTH<br />

Assisted Living ________________________<br />

Chiropractor __________________________<br />

Dentist ______________________________<br />

Dermatologist _________________________<br />

Emergency Room ______________________<br />

Hearing Clinic _________________________<br />

Home Health Care ______________________<br />

Hospital _____________________________<br />

Internist _____________________________<br />

Orthodontist __________________________<br />

Orthopedic ___________________________<br />

Pediatrician __________________________<br />

Physical Therapy _______________________<br />

Place to have a Baby ____________________<br />

Podiatrist ____________________________<br />

Senior Community _____________________<br />

Urgent Care __________________________<br />

Vision Center __________________________<br />

DININg<br />

Asian fusion __________________________<br />

Bakery ______________________________<br />

Barbecue ____________________________<br />

Beer Garden __________________________<br />

Breakfast ____________________________<br />

Brewery _____________________________<br />

Brunch ______________________________<br />

Buffet _______________________________<br />

Burger ______________________________<br />

Candy/Popcorn ________________________<br />

Caterer ______________________________<br />

Chicken Wings ________________________<br />

Chinese food _________________________<br />

Coffee Shop __________________________<br />

Date night spot ________________________<br />

Deli/Sub sandwiches ____________________<br />

Doughnuts ___________________________<br />

Family-owned restaurant _________________<br />

Fine Dining ___________________________<br />

Frozen Yogurt _________________________<br />

Greek Restaurant ______________________<br />

Gyros _______________________________<br />

Happy Hour ___________________________<br />

Hot Dogs _____________________________<br />

Ice Cream ____________________________<br />

Irish pub _____________________________<br />

Italian Restaurant ______________________<br />

Juice/Smoothies _______________________<br />

Local Diner ___________________________<br />

Mexican Restaurant ____________________<br />

New Restaurant (Feb. 2016-present) __________<br />

Outdoor Dining ________________________<br />

Pizza _______________________________<br />

Pizza - Chicago-style ___________________<br />

Pizza - Most creative ____________________<br />

Pizza - Thick Crust _____________________<br />

Pizza - Thin crust ______________________<br />

Ribs ________________________________<br />

Seafood _____________________________<br />

Soup _______________________________<br />

Sports Bar ___________________________<br />

Steakhouse __________________________<br />

Thai Restaurant _______________________<br />

EDUCATION<br />

Day Camp ___________________________<br />

Overnight Camp _______________________<br />

Preschool ____________________________<br />

Private High School _____________________<br />

Private K-8th Grade School _______________<br />

Sports Camp __________________________<br />

Tutoring Business ______________________<br />

OFFICIAL RULES<br />

SPONSOR: 22nd Century Media, 60 Revere Dr., Ste 888, Northbrook, IL 60062.<br />

NO PURCHASE NECESSARY TO ENTER: Complete a 2017 North Shore Choice Awards Official Entry Ballot in the February editions of 22nd Century Media’s North Shore publications (includes The Glencoe Anchor,<br />

The Glenview Lantern, The Highland Park Landmark, The Lake Forest Leader, The Northbrook Tower, The Wilmette Beacon and The Winnetka Current). At least 50 categories must be filled in on the Entry Ballot in<br />

order to be eligible for the Prize. Mail entries to: “North Shore Choice Awards c/o 22nd Century Media, 60 Revere Drive, Suite 888, Northbrook, IL 60062. Hand-delivered entries and online entries will be accepted. No<br />

photocopies or mechanical reproductions. The sweepstakes begins Feb. 2, 2017, and ends Feb. 28, 2017. Entries must be received by no later than 5 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 28, 2017. Sponsor is not responsible for lost,<br />

late, misdirected, mutilated, incomplete, illegible, stolen, or postage-due mail or otherwise undeliverable entries. The winner will be selected in a random drawing from all eligible entries received on or about March<br />

15, 2017. The winner will be notified by phone within 15 days of drawing. A voucher for the prize will be awarded within 30 days after the winner has been notified and chosen. For a copy of the Official Rules, send a<br />

self-addressed stamped envelope to “North Shore Choice Awards” c/o 22nd Century Media, 60 Revere Drive, Suite 888, Northbrook, IL 60062. All entries become the property of the Sponsor.<br />

CONDITIONS: Sponsor is not responsible for printing, production, typographical or other errors or omissions. Prize winner may be required to complete and return an affidavit of eligibility and liability/publicity release<br />

before receiving Prize. If affidavit and release are not returned within seven (7) days of the Prize drawing, or if the Prize winner is ineligible, the Prize may be forfeited and an alternate Prize winner may be randomly chosen<br />

from among all eligible entrants. Winner will be required to provide proof of insurance at the time of delivery. • All taxes associated with the Prize are the sole responsibility of the winner. By entering, participants<br />

agree to be bound by the official rules (and the Sponsor’s interpretation thereof) and consent to the use of their name, photograph, and/or likeness for advertising/publicity without further consideration, except where<br />

prohibited by law. Sponsor may prohibit entrants from participating in the Sweepstakes and disqualify entries if they attempt to enter the Sweepstakes through means not described in the rules, attempt to disrupt the<br />

Sweepstakes or circumvent the rules, act in an unsportsmanlike manner or with an intent to annoy or harass any other entrant or Sponsor. Sponsor reserves the right to cancel or suspend the Sweepstakes should<br />

unauthorized human intervention or other causes beyond the control of the Sponsor corrupt the administration, security, fairness, integrity, or proper operation of the Sweepstakes. In the event Sponsor terminates<br />

Sweepstakes due to unauthorized human intervention or other causes beyond the control of the Sponsor, Sponsor shall award the Prize in a random drawing of all entrants to one eligible participant, based upon the<br />

rules of eligibility. All decisions are final. • Odds of winning depend upon the number of entries received. Possible entries are unlimited in number and only one prize will be awarded. A purchase will not improve<br />

chance of winning. Prize is not transferable. No prize substitution except by Sponsor, who reserves the right to substitute a prize of equal or greater value. Each winner is responsible for all federal, state and local<br />

taxes as well as all departure taxes, insurance, fees and fuel surcharges (approximately $350-$415 per person, subject to change) will be advised by Apple Promotional Bookings and must be paid by the traveler to<br />

Apple Vacations prior to departure. These taxes include airport departure taxes, airport arrival taxes, airline fuel surcharges and tour-guard insurance.<br />

FITNESS & RECREATION<br />

Art Studio ____________________________<br />

Best Kids Birthday Party Venue ____________<br />

Best Teen Birthday Party Venue ____________<br />

Bowling Alley _________________________<br />

Country Club __________________________<br />

Dance Studio _________________________<br />

Driving Range _________________________<br />

Fitness Center/Gym _____________________<br />

Golf Course ___________________________<br />

Hotel _______________________________<br />

Live Music ___________________________<br />

Live Theater __________________________<br />

Movie Theater _________________________<br />

Music Lessons ________________________<br />

Personal Trainer _______________________<br />

Spin ________________________________<br />

Swim School _________________________<br />

Wedding Venue ________________________<br />

Weekend Destination Spot ________________<br />

Yoga ________________________________<br />

PETS<br />

Pet Boarding __________________________<br />

Pet Groomer __________________________<br />

Pet Shop ____________________________<br />

Pet Walker ___________________________<br />

Veterinarian __________________________<br />

SERvICES<br />

Architect ____________________________<br />

Auto Repair __________________________<br />

Bank _______________________________<br />

Butcher _____________________________<br />

Car Wash ____________________________<br />

All vacations are approved on a promotional basis and are subject to availability. Blackout dates do<br />

apply. Travel dates are final and will not be extended. Travel is not permitted during holiday periods<br />

including both five days prior to and after. Trips are non-transferable and cannot be exchanged for<br />

cash. Apple Vacations reserves the right to substitute the vacation with another of equal value, equal<br />

Apple rating or within the same hotel chain should any unforeseen circumstance occur. Hotel to be<br />

determined by Apple Vacations. Trips are valid for two adults ONLY per room and do not include any<br />

special promotions. NO room upgrades. Winner must be at least 21 years old or traveling with a legal<br />

guardian. Employees of participating companies and its properties, sponsors, vendors and their immediate<br />

families are not eligible to win.<br />

PRIZE: One three-night trip for two (2) adults to Riu Caribe in Cancun, Mexico, provided by Apple Vacations.<br />

The trip includes three-night accommodations, round-trip nonstop air from Chicago O’Hare,<br />

ground transfers to/from the airport and hotel, all meals and drinks in the resort and the assistance of<br />

a resort Apple Representative. Trip is valid for travel through Nov. 1, 2017. Taxes, insurance, any applicable<br />

baggage fees, and additional expenses (such as optional excursions, spa treatments, phone calls<br />

and souvenirs) are the sole responsibility of the winner. Approximate retail value of the trip is $2,000.<br />

ELIgIBILITY: Open to legal U.S. residents of Illinois, 21 years of age or older on the day of entry. At<br />

least 50 categories must be filled in on the Entry Ballot in order to eligible for the Prize. Employees<br />

of 22nd Century Media and its affiliates, subsidiaries, advertising agencies and promotional suppliers,<br />

as well as the immediate families of such employees, are not eligible. Void where prohibited or<br />

restricted by law.<br />

Carpet/Flooring ________________________<br />

Day care _____________________________<br />

Electrician ___________________________<br />

Event Planner _________________________<br />

Financial advisor _______________________<br />

Florist _______________________________<br />

Green Construction _____________________<br />

Handyman Service _____________________<br />

Heating/Cooling (HVAC) __________________<br />

Home Builder _________________________<br />

Home Improvement _____________________<br />

Insurance agent _______________________<br />

Kitchen/Bath Remodeling ________________<br />

Landscaping __________________________<br />

Law Firm ____________________________<br />

Lawn Care ___________________________<br />

Oil Change ___________________________<br />

Pest Control __________________________<br />

Photographer _________________________<br />

Plumber _____________________________<br />

Pools/Spas ___________________________<br />

Real Estate Agent ______________________<br />

Real Estate Brokerage ___________________<br />

Towing Company ______________________<br />

Travel Agency _________________________<br />

Windows/Doors _______________________<br />

SHOPPINg<br />

Antiques _____________________________<br />

Appliance Store ________________________<br />

Art Gallery ____________________________<br />

Bedding _____________________________<br />

Bike Shop ____________________________<br />

Book Store ___________________________<br />

Boutique _____________________________<br />

Bridal Shop ___________________________<br />

Children’s Clothing ______________________<br />

Consignment Shop ______________________<br />

Furniture Store ________________________<br />

Garden Center or Nursery _________________<br />

Gift Shop _____________________________<br />

Gourmet Food Market ___________________<br />

Grocery Store _________________________<br />

Jewelry Store _________________________<br />

Liquor Store ___________________________<br />

Men’s Clothing _________________________<br />

Neighborhood Shopping __________________<br />

Running Store _________________________<br />

Shoe Store ___________________________<br />

Shopping Center _______________________<br />

Tire Store ____________________________<br />

Toy Store _____________________________<br />

Women’s Clothing ______________________<br />

SPIRITS<br />

Beer Garden __________________________<br />

Brewery _____________________________<br />

Irish pub _____________________________<br />

Liquor Store ___________________________<br />

Sports Bar ____________________________<br />

vEHICLES/RECREATIONAL vEHICLES<br />

Auto Dealer - Domestic __________________<br />

Auto Dealer - Imports ____________________<br />

Motorcycle Dealer ______________________<br />

VoTE onlinE now<br />

22ndcenturymedia.com/nschoice<br />

Entry Ballot Must Be Received By<br />

5 p.m. Feb. 28, 2017<br />

At least 50 categories must be completed for ballot to be counted.<br />

Name ________________________________________ Age__________<br />

Address ____________________________________________________<br />

City _______________________________________________________<br />

State _________________________________________ Zip__________<br />

Phone _____________________________________________________<br />

E-mail _____________________________________________________<br />

Mail Entries To:<br />

“North Shore Choice Awards” • c/o 22nd Century Media<br />

60 Revere Dr., Ste 888 • Northbrook, IL 60062<br />

“A Superior Version of Chicago Style Pan Pizza” - Chicago Magazine<br />

Silopizza.com 847-234-6660<br />

THE NORTH SUBURBAN YMCA<br />

We won’t be<br />

comfortable<br />

until you are!<br />

CHOOSE<br />

THE Y<br />

• FITNESS CENTER/GYM<br />

• DANCE STUDIO • DAY CAMP<br />

• PERSONAL TRAINER • SPIN<br />

• SWIM SCHOOL • YO<strong>GA</strong><br />

Thank you for voting us<br />

“Best Heating &<br />

Cooling Company<br />

on the North Shore”<br />

...for both 2015 and 2016!<br />

847-498-8070<br />

Niles Buffalo Grove Wilmette<br />

847-892-7178 847-904-1270 847-729-7665<br />

www.bigblueswimschool.com<br />

20% off<br />

New Clients<br />

847.501.3100<br />

368 Park Avenue<br />

Glencoe, IL<br />

pascalpourelle.com<br />

thenoodlecafe.com<br />

Your Hometown Plumber<br />

847.251.2695<br />

kerriganplumbing.com LIC # 055-004527<br />

A TOP 200 SALON<br />

For Thirteen Years<br />

- Salon Today Magazine<br />

Reserve your new look today!<br />

Call 847.266.7777 or 773.388.9999<br />

gordonsalon.com<br />

Wilmette<br />

3232 Lake Ave.<br />

Highland Park<br />

653 Central Ave.<br />

Chicago<br />

3336 N. Clark St. 1992 Tower Dr.<br />

North Shore School of Dance<br />

Teaching dancers to achieve their dreams for 28 years!<br />

VISIT US AT:<br />

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505 Laurel Ave., Suite 102, Highland Park | 847.432.2060


18 | February 16, 2017 | The glencoe anchor puzzles<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

north shore puzzler CROSSWORD & Sudoku<br />

THE NORTH SHORE: Glencoe, Glenview, Highland Park, Northbrook, Wilmette, Kenilworth, Winnetka, Northfield, Lake Forest and Lake Bluff<br />

Crossword by Myles Mellor and Cindy LaFleur<br />

1. Dirty dog<br />

4. Smart guys?<br />

9. Edict of the czar<br />

14. Roth or traditional<br />

15. Dugout<br />

16. Kathmandu<br />

country<br />

17. Carry on<br />

19. Really pushed<br />

20. Percolate slowly<br />

21. Creamy middled<br />

cookie<br />

23. Loyola Academy<br />

field hockey<br />

player, Malley<br />

27. Tidbit<br />

32. Groupie<br />

33. Superman’s love<br />

34. Country club<br />

next to Glencoe<br />

35. Fur capitalist<br />

36. Old money from<br />

Milan<br />

37. Night breathing<br />

problem<br />

39. Drop<br />

42. Flair<br />

43. Weekly payments<br />

44. Caviar source<br />

47. Liquorish flavor<br />

48. Swear words?<br />

51. Southern ____<br />

(lovely ladies)<br />

52. Paper clip, e.g.<br />

54. Lord of the<br />

kitchen<br />

56. Hebrew month<br />

57. Smug look<br />

61. Regular customers<br />

65. Jonas Salk’s<br />

vaccine<br />

66. Back in?<br />

67. Suffix with<br />

auction<br />

68. Itsy-bitsy bits<br />

69. Milk dispenser<br />

70. Moistureless<br />

1. Way-overpriced item<br />

2. Part of the iris bordering<br />

the pupil<br />

3. Ape-man of fiction<br />

4. Get a perfect score<br />

5. Bathroom<br />

6. Directional letters<br />

7. Inquest official<br />

8. Prophet<br />

9. Release<br />

10. E or G, e.g.<br />

11. PC program<br />

12. Return envelope,<br />

abbr.<br />

13. Yore<br />

18. Washington VIP<br />

22. Ambulance abbr.<br />

24. Besides<br />

25. Golden in San<br />

Francisco<br />

26. Bovid<br />

28. Acting parts<br />

29. Burlesque bit<br />

30. Ireland, once<br />

31. Grazing ground<br />

35. Void<br />

37. Direction at sea<br />

38. Gloomy atmosphere<br />

39. Carvey or Delany<br />

40. Protection: var.<br />

41. Out of concern that<br />

42. Subside<br />

43. Got uncertain<br />

45. Sticky-toed lizards<br />

46. Bat wood<br />

48. Truly<br />

49. Vegas employee<br />

50. Kind of planetarium<br />

53. “Dig in!”<br />

55. Cream<br />

57. Upscale hotel amenity<br />

58. Wisecrack<br />

59. Union labor grp.<br />

60. Canyon feature<br />

62. “___ be great if ...”<br />

63. Rather than<br />

64. “___ any drop to<br />

drink,” Coleridge<br />

GLENCOE<br />

Writers Theatre<br />

(325 Tudor Court, (847)<br />

242-6000)<br />

■Feb. ■ 22-April 2: ‘The<br />

Scene’<br />

GLENVIEW<br />

Johnny’s Kitchen<br />

(1740 Milwaukee Ave.<br />

(847) 699-9999)<br />

■7:30 ■ p.m. every Friday<br />

and Saturday: Live<br />

Music<br />

The Rock House<br />

(1742 Glenview Road<br />

(224) 616-3062)<br />

■7:30 ■ p.m. Thursday,<br />

Feb. 16: Meir Steinberg<br />

■6 ■ p.m. Friday, Feb.<br />

17: Family Night and<br />

Karaoke<br />

■10 ■ a.m. Saturday,<br />

Feb. 18: Piper Phillips<br />

Acoustic<br />

■■8 p.m. Saturday,<br />

Feb. 18: Owen Stevenson<br />

■10 ■ a.m. Sunday, Feb.<br />

19: Owen Hemming<br />

Curragh Irish Pub<br />

(1800 Tower Drive,<br />

(847) 998-1100)<br />

■7:30 ■ p.m. every<br />

Wednesday: Trivia<br />

Oil Lamp Theater<br />

(1723 Glenview Road,<br />

(847) 834-0738)<br />

■Through ■ Feb. 26: ‘The<br />

Dining Room’<br />

LAKE FOREST<br />

The Lantern<br />

(768 Western Ave.<br />

(847) 234-9844)<br />

■6-8 ■ p.m. Sundays:<br />

Holly the Balloon<br />

Lady<br />

LAKE BLUFF<br />

Lake Bluff Brewing<br />

Company<br />

(16 E. Scranton Ave.<br />

(224) 544-5179)<br />

■7 ■ p.m. Monday, Feb.<br />

27: Trivia Night<br />

Maevery Public House<br />

(20 East Scranton Ave.<br />

(847) 604-3952)<br />

■■7:30 p.m. every<br />

third Thursday of the<br />

month: Warren Beck<br />

To place an event in The<br />

Scene, email chris@GlenviewLantern.com<br />

answers<br />

How to play Sudoku<br />

Each Sudoku puzzle consists of a 9x9 grid that<br />

has been subdivided into nine smaller grids of<br />

3x3 squares. To solve the puzzle each row, column<br />

and box must contain each of the numbers<br />

1 to 9.<br />

LEVEL: Medium<br />

Crossword by Myles Mellor and Susan Flanagan


glencoeanchor.com life & arts<br />

the glencoe anchor | February 16, 2017 | 19<br />

Fathers, daughters enjoy park district dance<br />

Hilary Anderson<br />

Freelance Reporter<br />

The evening was magical<br />

for more than 100<br />

daughters and their dads<br />

who attended the Glencoe<br />

Park District’s traditional<br />

Daddy Daughter Dance<br />

Sunday, Feb. 12, at the<br />

Takiff Center.<br />

“We look forward to this<br />

event every year,” said Liz<br />

Visteen, program manager<br />

for the Glencoe Park District.<br />

“It is heartwarming<br />

to see the dads and daughters<br />

having fun and making<br />

a cherished, forever<br />

memory.”<br />

An archway of Valentine’s<br />

red heart balloons<br />

greeted them as they entered<br />

the room. There<br />

were pink, red and white<br />

tablecloths with coordinating<br />

balloon centerpieces<br />

rising in the air. Decorations<br />

lined the walls. Pink<br />

lemonade was available to<br />

quench thirsts.<br />

The daughters were<br />

princess-like in their beautiful<br />

dresses—some long,<br />

others short and made<br />

of every kind of material<br />

imaginable. They bore<br />

colors of the rainbow and<br />

more. Some had sparkles<br />

on them.<br />

Zoe Estrada, 5, was with<br />

her dad, Mitchell. She was<br />

wearing something special.<br />

“It’s a necklace that<br />

my mom, Megan, gave<br />

me,” she said. “She wore<br />

it to her Daddy Daughter<br />

Dance a long time ago.”<br />

Caroline Alam, 4, wore<br />

a dark green dress adorned<br />

with a colorful necklace<br />

she proudly showed her<br />

friends.<br />

“This is a big night,” said<br />

her dad, Kamran Alam.<br />

“We are here to have fun<br />

with our daughters.”<br />

Alexandra Fingerman,<br />

5, couldn’t believe her<br />

eyes when she saw two of<br />

her favorite real-life princesses<br />

standing close to<br />

her — Belle from “Beauty<br />

and the Beast” and Princess<br />

Sofia from “Sofia the<br />

First.”<br />

“Alexandra has been<br />

excited for the past two<br />

weeks,” said her dad, Jeff.<br />

“We’ve been practicing<br />

our dancing.”<br />

The music played and<br />

the dads and daughters<br />

danced.<br />

Kathleen Ledinsky, 4,<br />

had barely taken off her<br />

coat when she began pulling<br />

her dad, Jay, to the<br />

dance floor.<br />

“It’s a first time for us,”<br />

he said and followed her<br />

lead.<br />

Back on the dance floor,<br />

Anna Lorenz, 3, was<br />

showing off her recently<br />

learned ballet moves to her<br />

dad, Jonathan.<br />

Meanwhile Colette Ferguson,<br />

4, and her dad,<br />

Derek, along with Emma<br />

Silver, 2, and her dad, Ari,<br />

danced as only young princesses<br />

can—doing it however<br />

they think it should be<br />

done.<br />

“This was such a nice<br />

event,” Mitchell Estrada<br />

said. “I’m glad the park<br />

district does this.”<br />

Malory Subrinsky, 7, of Northbrook is thrown into<br />

the air by her dad, Jordan, during the Glencoe Park<br />

District’s Daddy Daughter Dance Sunday, Feb. 12, at the<br />

Takiff Center. Rhonda Holcomb/22nd Century Media<br />

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20 | February 16, 2017 | The glencoe anchor faith<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

Winter<br />

reading<br />

is here.<br />

Chicagoly’s winter issue is out now.<br />

Follow up for more at Chicagolymag.com<br />

SAVE THE DATE<br />

10am - 2pm<br />

Saturday, Feb. 25th<br />

Sunset Ridge School<br />

525 Sunset Ridge Road, Northfield<br />

Activities include:<br />

• Meet with day camps, overnight camps,<br />

sports camps, arts camps and more!<br />

• Free Face Painting and Balloon Artist<br />

(10:30 am - 1:30 pm)<br />

• Free cotton candy<br />

• Games for children<br />

FREE PARKING! FREE ADMISSION!<br />

For more info: (847) 272-4565<br />

www.22ndcenturymedia.com/camp<br />

Faith briefs<br />

North Shore United Methodist Church<br />

(213 Hazel Ave.)<br />

Serve dinner to the hungry<br />

Members and friends of<br />

North Shore United Methodist<br />

Church volunteer to<br />

serve dinner in the community<br />

kitchen of A Just Harvest,<br />

7649 N. Paulina St.,<br />

Chicago (one block north<br />

of the Howard El stop).<br />

To learn about scheduled<br />

service dates or volunteer,<br />

contact the church office at<br />

(847) 835-1227 or nsumcglencoe@sbcglobal.net.<br />

Am Shalom (840 Vernon Ave.)<br />

Fanchon Simons’ Feeding<br />

the Hungry<br />

On the third Sunday of<br />

every month, volunteer<br />

members of Am Shalom<br />

gather to help at the temple’s<br />

kitchen. It just takes<br />

about an hour and is rewarding<br />

for people of any<br />

age. Questions? Call Nina<br />

Schroeder at (847) 835-<br />

7025.<br />

Glencoe Union Church (263 Park Ave.)<br />

Gentle Yoga<br />

Every Monday and<br />

Wednesday from 8:45-10<br />

a.m., GUC offers a gentle<br />

yoga class. For more information,<br />

call (847) 835-<br />

1111.<br />

St. Elisabeth’s Episcopal Church (556<br />

Vernon Ave.)<br />

Alcoholics Anonymous<br />

Meetings take place at<br />

8 p.m. on Mondays. For<br />

more information, call<br />

(847) 835-0458.<br />

St. Paul AME Church (336 Washington<br />

Ave.)<br />

Bible Study<br />

Join St. Paul for Bible<br />

Study at 7 p.m. every<br />

Wednesday.<br />

Submit information for The<br />

Anchor’s Faith page to<br />

Fouad Egbaria at fouad@<br />

glencoeanchor.com. The<br />

deadline is noon on Thursday.<br />

Questions? Call (847)<br />

272-4565 ext. 35.


glencoeanchor.com glencoe<br />

the glencoe anchor | February 16, 2017 | 21<br />

yoga strength group exercise nutrition fun<br />

JCC Chicago’s All Star Abilities is<br />

an original, peer-to-peer program focusing on<br />

fitness and wellness through a variety of activities<br />

for teens with and without disabilities.<br />

Led by JCC Chicago and Keshet professional staff.<br />

No cost to participate;<br />

all training and instruction included.<br />

Teen volunteers can earn service credit hours.<br />

Marvin Lustbader Center<br />

Bernard Weinger JCC<br />

300 Revere Drive, Northbrook<br />

Program Begins Soon!<br />

Program information at jccchicago.org/asa<br />

Supported by the Breakthrough Fund:<br />

An Innovation of the Jewish United Fund of Metropolitan Chicago.<br />

JCC Chicago is a non-profit organization inspired by Jewish values, bridging traditions and generations to create a more vibrant, connected community. JCC is a partner with the Jewish United Fund in serving our community. ©2017 JCC Chicago


22 | February 16, 2017 | The glencoe anchor dining out<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

Cuisine coming your way<br />

Mirani’s At Home<br />

offers quality food<br />

for busy eaters<br />

Jacqueline Glosniak<br />

Contributing Editor<br />

Another busy day at the<br />

office. Hours spent chauffeuring<br />

the kids back and<br />

forth. Laundry, errands<br />

and doctor appointments.<br />

For those who find<br />

themselves in a jam when<br />

it comes to preparing a delicious<br />

and unique menu<br />

for dinner, Winnetka couple<br />

Kaveh and Madeleine<br />

Mirani have just the perfect<br />

solution — a dining<br />

concept that concocts fine<br />

restaurant quality food for<br />

either deliver or pickup.<br />

The Miranis, who have<br />

owned and operated eateries<br />

in Winnetka for the past<br />

three decades, recently introduced<br />

their newest venture,<br />

Mirani’s At Home, in<br />

an effort to tap into a dining<br />

market they say exists<br />

too few and far between.<br />

“We noticed that many<br />

times, in this area — generally,<br />

this is a trend that<br />

is happening everywhere<br />

in the country — people<br />

don’t go out as much because<br />

people have children,<br />

they come home<br />

during the week and are<br />

tired, so we thought that<br />

right now, they don’t really<br />

have that much of a choice<br />

in takeout food,” he said.<br />

To understand the Miranis’<br />

passion, one must get<br />

to know the couple’s background.<br />

Kaveh, who was born<br />

in Tehran, Iran, has a<br />

doctorate in economics<br />

Finding Senior Housing<br />

can be complex, but it<br />

doesn’t have to be.<br />

“You can trust<br />

A Place for Mom<br />

to help you.”<br />

– Joan Lunden<br />

Call A Place for Mom. Our Advisors are trusted, local experts who can help<br />

you understand your options. Since 2000, we’ve helped over one million<br />

families find senior living solutions that meet their unique needs.<br />

A Free Service for Families.<br />

Call: (800) 581-1056<br />

A Place for Mom is the nation’s largest senior living referral information service. We do not own,<br />

operate, endorse or recommend any senior living community. We are paid by partner communities,<br />

so our services are completely free to families.<br />

MIRANI’S AT HOME<br />

567 B Lincoln Ave.,<br />

Winnetka<br />

www.miranisathome.<br />

com<br />

(847) 446-4646<br />

4-8 p.m. seven days a<br />

week<br />

Pre-ordered meal<br />

deliveries begin at<br />

3:30 p.m.<br />

and began his career as a<br />

university professor, and<br />

Madeleine, who hails from<br />

the Netherlands, originally<br />

worked in the field of foreign<br />

affairs as a diplomat.<br />

More than 30 years ago,<br />

when Madeleine’s parents<br />

came to visit the couple<br />

in the U.S., Madeleine<br />

said her parents remarked<br />

about how shocking it was<br />

that there was a lack of European-style<br />

coffee shops<br />

and eateries. It was at that<br />

point the Miranis decided<br />

to change the course of<br />

their careers and venture<br />

into the world of food.<br />

“So, we did research in<br />

New York and Europe, and<br />

started making the gourmet<br />

deli,” Madeleine said.<br />

“[We] felt there was a void<br />

in the market.”<br />

While Madeleine acknowledges<br />

that the hospitality<br />

scene has changed,<br />

she believes they are still<br />

venturing into a market<br />

where there is a clear need.<br />

Originally, the Miranis<br />

opened their first establishment,<br />

aptly named<br />

Mirani’s, 24 years ago on<br />

Green Bay Road as a gourmet<br />

delicatessen, French<br />

brasserie-type restaurant.<br />

“Gradually, customers<br />

that would come and take<br />

out food would say, ‘The<br />

food is so good, why not<br />

open for lunch?’” Madeleine<br />

said.<br />

Eventually, Mirani’s became<br />

more of a lunch restaurant,<br />

later expanding to<br />

a location on Elm Street in<br />

2006. There, the Miranis<br />

were able to focus on a<br />

full-fledged French bistro<br />

menu.<br />

After closing Mirani’s<br />

last year to focus on their<br />

new concept, they officially<br />

opened Mirani’s At<br />

Home on Jan. 16, offering<br />

a combination of French,<br />

Italian and other Mediterranean<br />

cuisines. Additionally,<br />

the Miranis ensure<br />

hints of their Persian and<br />

Dutch ethnic foods are<br />

also present on the menu.<br />

Diners can choose from<br />

a variety of a la carte<br />

chicken, seafood, pasta,<br />

rice and salad dishes and<br />

then stop by the business<br />

in person or place orders<br />

online or over the phone,<br />

with speedy delivery ensured<br />

within 20 minutes<br />

Mirani’s At Home’s chicken Parmigiano ($14) features<br />

breaded chicken breast atop a bed of spaghetti in marinara<br />

sauce. Chris Pullam/22nd Century Media<br />

of ordering thanks to a<br />

collaboration with Uber-<br />

RUSH. Deliveries have a<br />

$7 flat fee.<br />

With food from Mirani’s<br />

At Home, Madeleine ensures<br />

the quality of the<br />

food is just as stellar as the<br />

old Mirani’s, but with the<br />

perk of prices being drastically<br />

slashed because of<br />

less overhead.<br />

During a recent visit to<br />

Mirani’s At Home, 22nd<br />

Century Media editors<br />

chatted with the Miranis<br />

while sampling menu<br />

items.<br />

The chicken Parmigiano<br />

($12), which includes<br />

breaded chicken<br />

breast and spaghetti with<br />

marinara sauce, is a staple<br />

Italian dish. The spaghetti<br />

is lightly sauced and the<br />

thin chicken slices are not<br />

heavily breaded.<br />

The mustard crusted<br />

salmon ($15), one of the<br />

restaurant’s staple dishes,<br />

features a breaded salmon<br />

with mustard sauce served<br />

over French lentils and<br />

fresh vegetables. The outside<br />

of the fish is crunchy<br />

but has a soft and firm inside.<br />

The dish undoubtedly<br />

stands out for its mustard<br />

flavoring that’s not too<br />

strong or overwhelming<br />

for the natural flavoring of<br />

a well-cooked salmon.<br />

The Northbrook Tower<br />

Editor Matt Yan’s favorite<br />

dish was the Mediterranean<br />

chicken kebab ($11),<br />

which includes diced<br />

chicken marinated in olive<br />

oil and signature Mirani’s<br />

spices and served with<br />

grilled vegetables. Sour<br />

cherry saffron rice can<br />

also be added to the plate<br />

for $6. The chicken’s light<br />

grilling lends great balance<br />

to the uniquely cooked<br />

grains.<br />

For $17, the steak classique<br />

features thick,<br />

8-ounce cuts of prime<br />

sirloin simmered in a red<br />

wine sauce. Our portion<br />

was served with a side of<br />

bistro frites ($4), or french<br />

fries, which were not overly<br />

greasy and not salty.<br />

The fettuccine alfredo<br />

($11) noodles were perfectly<br />

cooked al dente —<br />

unlike many alfredo sauces,<br />

it was not too heavy.<br />

Shrimp can be added for<br />

an additional $4.<br />

The beet salad ($7) included<br />

greens, walnuts,<br />

blue cheese and vinaigrette<br />

dressing, a great option for<br />

vegetarians.<br />

Finally, the Kurdish red<br />

lentil soup ($5 for a small,<br />

$11 for a large) offers a<br />

hearty and warm complement<br />

to be served alongside<br />

any of the Mirani’s At<br />

Home dishes.<br />

Mirani’s At Home also<br />

accommodates orders for<br />

small or large catering<br />

events and is currently<br />

building a larger menu for<br />

corporate fine dining.


glencoeanchor.com real estate<br />

the glencoe anchor | February 16, 2017 | 23<br />

The Glencoe Anchor’s<br />

of the<br />

WEEK<br />

What: 7-bedroom, 4.2-<br />

bath home<br />

Where: 500 Greenleaf<br />

Ave., Glencoe<br />

Amenities: Picture living<br />

just blocks from the<br />

heart of Glencoe and<br />

being able to walk into<br />

town for coffee, a glass<br />

of wine, the theater,<br />

dinner, or a stroll to<br />

the beach. Imagine in<br />

summer returning home<br />

and sitting on the large<br />

front porch or in the<br />

fall lighting a fire in the<br />

screened-in back porch.<br />

In winter, invite friends or<br />

family over to this ideal<br />

home that is perfect for<br />

entertaining large or<br />

small gatherings.<br />

This stunning East<br />

Glencoe home combines<br />

old-world architecture and<br />

modern design ideal for<br />

today’s lifestyle.<br />

Masterfully renovated,<br />

there is an open floor<br />

plan rarely seen in older<br />

homes.<br />

There is a large formal<br />

living and dining room<br />

with beautiful moldings, it also has an architectural gem of a sunroom off the<br />

living room.<br />

Expansive addition provides large open family room and gourmet cooks kitchen<br />

which seamlessly blends the old and new parts of the home. Luxurious master<br />

suite with sitting room, fireplace, huge walk-in closet and bath. Third floor has<br />

three additional bedrooms, ideal for a home office and/or workout room. A<br />

pleasure to see!<br />

Asking price: $2,350,000<br />

Brought to you by:<br />

FOR ALL YOUR<br />

MORT<strong>GA</strong>GE NEEDS<br />

664 N. Western Ave., Lake Forest, IL 60045<br />

Phone: (847) 234-8484<br />

thefederalsavingsbank.com<br />

Listing agent: Laurie Gross, Coldwell Banker, (847) 337-2217, laurie.<br />

gross@cbexchange.com<br />

To see your home featured as Home of the Week, email Elizabeth Fritz<br />

at e.fritz@22ndcenturymedia.com or call (847) 272-4565 ext. 19<br />

JAN. 20<br />

• 1030 Sheridan Road, Glencoe, 60022-1255<br />

- Kenneth F. Goldstein to Bradley Levison, Carrie<br />

Herschman, $725,000<br />

The Going Rate is provided by Record Information<br />

Services, Inc. For more information,<br />

visit www.public-record.com or call (630)<br />

557-1000


24 | February 16, 2017 | The glencoe anchor classifieds<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

CLASSIFIEDS<br />

Help Wanted · Garage Sales · Automotive<br />

Real Estate · Rentals · Merchandise<br />

Help<br />

Wanted<br />

1003 Help Wanted<br />

Kenilworth Park District now hiring Co-Directors for<br />

Little Springs (3 yrs-1st grade) & Sports Plus Summer<br />

Camps (2nd-6th grade). Both positions are P/T, seasonal,<br />

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the glencoe anchor | February 16, 2017 | 25<br />

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MARCH 6, 2017<br />

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hearing istobeconducted onMonday,<br />

March 6, 2017, at 7:30 p.m.,<br />

before the Zoning Board of Appeals<br />

of the Village ofGlencoe,<br />

Cook County, Illinois, in the Council<br />

Chambers ofthe Village Hall,<br />

675 Village Court, Glencoe, Illinois,<br />

to consider an appeal of Steven<br />

and Karen Arenson from adecision<br />

bythe Building &Zoning<br />

Administrator indenying apermit<br />

for the construction of arear north<br />

side room addition on the south<br />

127.50 feet of Lots 27 to 31 both<br />

inclusive in Block 5 in Ira Brown’s<br />

Addition toGlencoe, inthe southwest<br />

1/4 ofthe southeast 1/4 of<br />

Section 7, Township 42 North,<br />

Range 12, East of the Third Principal<br />

Meridian, in Cook County, Illinois,<br />

commonly known as 353<br />

Greenwood, Glencoe, Illinois in<br />

the “R-B” Residence District (Permanent<br />

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north rear yard by 20% from 30<br />

feet to 24 feet.<br />

All persons interested are urged to<br />

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John Houde<br />

Building and Zoning Administrator<br />

February 16, 2017<br />

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26 | February 16, 2017 | The glencoe anchor sports<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

TrEvians<br />

From Page 29<br />

est of my beam.”<br />

Faulkner’s junior teammate,<br />

Rohrer, just missed<br />

securing the fifth spot in<br />

all-around—her sixth-place<br />

score of 36.2 was only .2<br />

shy of Shanahan’s score.<br />

GBS junior Bebe Haramaras<br />

came in seventh in the<br />

event (35.975), followed by<br />

New Trier freshman Maeve<br />

Murdock (35.975).<br />

Rohrer was second in<br />

parallel bars (9.35) and tied<br />

for fifth in the vault (9.35)<br />

while Murdock was fourth<br />

in the balance beam (9.375).<br />

Although Glenbrook<br />

North won’t be represented<br />

in the state tournament,<br />

the injury-plagued<br />

Spartans had a successful<br />

season, finishing second<br />

in the regional at GBS and<br />

also at the Central Suburban<br />

League North meet.<br />

“I love my team,” GBN<br />

coach Julie Holmbeck said.<br />

“I cannot say enough about<br />

what exceptional young<br />

ladies they are. They’ve<br />

jelled so well together;<br />

they’re the most close-knit<br />

group I’ve had. I’m disappointed<br />

for (senior) Alex<br />

Michalak. She made it to<br />

state as a sophomore (finishing<br />

20th on the beam).”<br />

Because of a knee injury,<br />

Michalak was sidelined for<br />

segments of the season and<br />

at the sectional she didn’t<br />

compete in the floor exercise<br />

and the vault. Her<br />

vault score of 8.9 tied her<br />

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for 12th with Faulkner and<br />

in the beam she finished<br />

19th (8.45).<br />

The best all-around<br />

performer for the Spartans<br />

was junior Kelly Lazar<br />

in 14th place (34.2). Her<br />

best event was the vault,<br />

in which she tied for ninth<br />

(9.3). Fellow junior Brittany<br />

Ulrich was eighth in<br />

the parallel bars (9.025).<br />

Holmbeck also made<br />

a point of praising Katie<br />

Brownlee, who along with<br />

Michalak was one of only<br />

two seniors on the team.<br />

“Katie has a great work<br />

ethic and she always has<br />

a smile on her face,” the<br />

GBN coach said. “She’s a<br />

solid all-arounder and she<br />

did a fine job for us in the<br />

vault this year.”<br />

Congratulations to this week’s<br />

Athlete of the Week.<br />

We’re pleased to be a<br />

sponsor of this program.<br />

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Athlete of the Week<br />

10 Questions<br />

with Lauren Kaplinsky<br />

The North Shore Country<br />

Day senior is also an<br />

All-ISL soccer player and<br />

tennis player<br />

Do you have any<br />

superstitions before,<br />

after or during a game?<br />

Before a game, I tie my<br />

left shoe before my right<br />

shoe. I always take a<br />

headband from Caroline<br />

Segal. I’ve always tied<br />

my left shoe before my<br />

right shoe, for school,<br />

for soccer games, everything.<br />

The headband thing<br />

started this season and two<br />

of our three losses have<br />

been when I didn’t take a<br />

headband from her.<br />

Is there any music that<br />

pumps you up?<br />

We’ve had the same play<br />

list since my freshman<br />

year. It starts out with rap,<br />

then goes to pop and has<br />

some country towards<br />

the end.<br />

What’s the best<br />

coaching advice you’ve<br />

ever gotten?<br />

To not let my height<br />

(5-foot-2) be the reason I<br />

can’t do something.<br />

If you could travel<br />

to one place, where<br />

would it be?<br />

Fiji. I’ve always wanted<br />

to go to Fiji and sit on<br />

the beach.<br />

If you could have<br />

dinner with three<br />

people who would<br />

they be and why?<br />

Beyonce, Michelle Obama<br />

and Shakira. Beyonce<br />

is awesome, Michelle<br />

Obama is someone I’ve<br />

always looked up to and I<br />

just love Shakira.<br />

When did you start<br />

playing basketball?<br />

I started when I was 8.<br />

My mom put me in an allboys<br />

league and the boys<br />

wouldn’t pass to me so I<br />

hated it. I quit for a couple<br />

years but started again<br />

in sixth grade and liked<br />

it again.<br />

What’s the hardest<br />

part about basketball?<br />

Working well with everybody<br />

on the court, trying<br />

to figure out everybody’s<br />

styles and how to play<br />

with that.<br />

Do you feel soccer or<br />

basketball is harder?<br />

Basketball is harder mentally<br />

and soccer is harder<br />

physically.<br />

What’s the best part<br />

about being a North<br />

Shore Country Day<br />

athlete?<br />

That I can be a three-season<br />

athlete and play club<br />

soccer at the same time.<br />

I play basketball, soccer<br />

and tennis and play for FC<br />

United’s club team.<br />

What’s your favorite<br />

moment as a North<br />

Photo Submitted<br />

Shore Country Day<br />

athlete?<br />

The sectional [semifinal]<br />

game of my sophomore<br />

year for soccer (2015 vs.<br />

St. Edward). We lost but<br />

before the game, everything<br />

that could have gone<br />

wrong went wrong. But<br />

we went to PKs and it was<br />

the best game I’ve played<br />

with my team. I forgot<br />

both my shin guards and<br />

cleats, two players on<br />

our team were coming<br />

late and they got caught<br />

in a traffic jam and one<br />

of them was our goalie<br />

and she showed up 10<br />

minutes into the game, our<br />

center mid was out of the<br />

country doing service and<br />

everything had to shift.<br />

If you were on a<br />

deserted island, what<br />

would you bring and<br />

why?<br />

Food, so I could survive.<br />

Seeds so that I could grow<br />

an apple tree.<br />

Interview by Sports Editor<br />

Michael Wojtychiw


glencoeanchor.com sports<br />

the glencoe anchor | February 16, 2017 | 27<br />

Athlete of the Year<br />

Fast start propels<br />

NT’s Kalis to award<br />

Michael Wojtychiw<br />

Sports Editor<br />

New Trier is known for<br />

having success in many<br />

sports, with many of the<br />

school’s athletes winning<br />

various awards.<br />

The Trevians added<br />

yet another local award<br />

as girls basketball player<br />

Kristie Kalis won the sixth<br />

annual 22nd Century Media<br />

Athlete of the Year<br />

contest, racking up 2,428<br />

votes to defeat fellow New<br />

Trier athlete Eden Rane, a<br />

coxswain on the Trevians<br />

crew team, who tallied<br />

1,415 votes. The contest,<br />

which ended Thursday,<br />

Feb. 9, included athletes<br />

from six schools in the<br />

22CM coverage area and<br />

14 sports, ranging from<br />

basketball to soccer to water<br />

polo.<br />

Kalis, who finished fifth<br />

in last year’s Athlete of the<br />

Year voting, led the competition<br />

from day one.<br />

“It’s a good feeling because<br />

it shows people<br />

care,” Kalis said.<br />

“You don’t really realize<br />

it while you’re playing,<br />

but after you get the recognition,<br />

you realize ‘Wow,<br />

people do watch New Trier<br />

girls basketball and know<br />

who I am,’ stuff like that.”<br />

Glenbrook North boys<br />

soccer player Seth Grossman<br />

finished third with<br />

864 votes, Loyola track/<br />

cross country’s Kathryn<br />

House took fourth with<br />

748 and Bridget McConnell<br />

took fifth with 429.<br />

The other nominees included<br />

Ryan Gattari (Lake<br />

Forest hockey), Jake Mandel<br />

(Highland Park baseball),<br />

Sam Iida (Glenbrook<br />

New Trier’s Kristie Kalis<br />

is the winner VARSITY of the VIEWS<br />

22CM Athlete of the Year<br />

contest. Varsity Views<br />

VARSITY VIEWS<br />

South boys swimming and<br />

diving), Claire Sullivan<br />

(Loyola girls gymnastics),<br />

Tom Condon (Lake Forest<br />

boys water polo), Kiley<br />

Sullivan (Glenbrook North<br />

girls soccer), David Adelstein<br />

(Highland Park baseball),<br />

Caroline Witkowski<br />

(Loyola girls tennis), Nicole<br />

Urbanowicz (New<br />

Trier girls volleyball),<br />

Olivia Peters (Glenbrook<br />

South girls soccer), Kelly<br />

Maday (New Trier girls<br />

soccer) and Chris Canning<br />

(Loyola boys diving).<br />

Kalis joins past winners<br />

Olivia Van Zelst, Loyola<br />

girls volleyball (2015);<br />

Jeannie Boehm, New Trier<br />

girls basketball (2014);<br />

Kara Lucenti, New Trier<br />

girls swimming (2013);<br />

Kerry Scafidi, New Trier<br />

gymnastics (2012) and<br />

Bo Murray, Loyola Academy<br />

hockey and baseball<br />

(2012).<br />

For her victory, Kalis<br />

will receive a prize package<br />

including a personalized<br />

sweatshirt.<br />

Girls Soccer<br />

Trevians girls soccer has impressive signing day<br />

Michael Wojtychiw<br />

Sports Editor<br />

FC United Soccer Club,<br />

a competitive youth soccer<br />

program for players 4-18<br />

years old and located in<br />

Northfield, held a ceremony<br />

to honor its 25 studentathletes<br />

that made their<br />

college commitments final<br />

by signing their National<br />

Letters of Intent Feb. 1 in<br />

Glenview.<br />

FC United boasts many<br />

North Shore athletes from<br />

schools such as New Trier,<br />

Loyola, Glenbrook South,<br />

Lake Forest, Highland<br />

Park and Glenbrook North.<br />

Recent FC United alumni<br />

include Kelly Maday, last<br />

year’s Illinois Gatorade<br />

Player of the Year, Olivia<br />

Peters, the Great Lakes Intercollegiate<br />

Athletic Conference<br />

Freshman of the<br />

Year and Maggie Washelesky,<br />

who was named<br />

to the National Soccer<br />

Coaches Association of<br />

America All-Region Second<br />

Team after her sophomore<br />

year at Carthage.<br />

This year’s signing day<br />

included 11 girls and 14<br />

boys. Eleven of the 25 are<br />

from 22nd Century Media<br />

coverage areas, including<br />

Hannah Arment, Hope<br />

Baisley, Avery Schuldt and<br />

Samantha Urban, all of<br />

whom played key roles for<br />

New Trier’s state championship<br />

team last season.<br />

After seeing Maday<br />

(Illinois), Bina Saipi<br />

(DePaul), Katie Sedara<br />

(University of Chicago),<br />

Flower Eddington (Illinois<br />

Wesleyan) and Dani<br />

Kaufman (Bucknell) sign<br />

last year, the Trevians had<br />

an additional five sign for<br />

the upcoming year.<br />

Hannah Arment signed<br />

with St. Lawrence University,<br />

a Division III school<br />

in New York. Last year,<br />

Eleven members of the FC United soccer club signed<br />

letters of intent Feb. 1 in Glenview, including New<br />

Trier’s Hannah Arment (St. Lawrence), Samantha Urban<br />

(Wisconsin), Avery Schuldt (Dartmouth) and Hope<br />

Baisley (Fordham). Michael Wojtychiw/22nd Century<br />

Media<br />

the Saints finished 9-4-4,<br />

but had made the NCAA<br />

Tournament the previous<br />

season.<br />

“I wanted to play DIII<br />

soccer so I could have<br />

a balance of soccer and<br />

school and be on the East<br />

Coast at a liberal arts<br />

school and St. Lawrence<br />

was the perfect fit,” Arment<br />

said.<br />

Baisley signed her letter<br />

of intent to play for Fordham<br />

University, a Division<br />

I school in New York<br />

and a part of the Atlantic<br />

10 Conference. The Rams<br />

lose eight players from last<br />

year’s squad that finished<br />

10-5-5 and are still looking<br />

for their first-ever invite to<br />

the NCAA Tournament.<br />

“Fordham for me was<br />

a huge family school so<br />

when I visited two summers<br />

ago and I loved the<br />

campus, I kept pursuing<br />

the school and the coach<br />

and it eventually worked<br />

out,” Baisley said. “I think<br />

I’m going to be a center<br />

midfielder, be aggressive,<br />

play fast and distribute the<br />

ball.”<br />

Schuldt made the decision<br />

to head off to the<br />

Ivy League, where she<br />

will play for Dartmouth<br />

starting this fall. Last season,<br />

Schuldt was named<br />

to girls soccer Team 22.<br />

The Big Green last made<br />

the NCAA Tournament in<br />

2005 and are looking to<br />

improve on last season’s<br />

7-7-2 record. Schuldt is<br />

the only forward in Dartmouth’s<br />

signing class of<br />

seven players.<br />

“I knew I wanted to play<br />

Division I but I wanted<br />

a really good academic<br />

school as well as a soccer<br />

school and I thought Dartmouth<br />

combined the two<br />

really well,” Schuldt said.<br />

“It gives me the best options<br />

I can have in college,<br />

like I can go abroad, which<br />

is something that was really<br />

important to me.”<br />

Urban decided to stay<br />

closer to home, signing<br />

with the University of<br />

Wisconsin of the Big Ten<br />

Conference. The Badgers<br />

are coming off of a second<br />

round NCAA Tournament<br />

appearance and boasted<br />

the top pick in this year’s<br />

National Women’s Soccer<br />

League draft — midfielder<br />

Rose Lavelle. Like Schuldt,<br />

Urban was a Team 22<br />

selection, one of four first<br />

team selections.<br />

“I always wanted to go<br />

somewhere big, somewhere<br />

that’s big on sports<br />

because I always thought<br />

that was fun, growing<br />

up and going to Big Ten<br />

games but also wanted to<br />

stay close to home, where<br />

it’s easy for my parents to<br />

come up for games,” Urban<br />

said. “Once I visited I<br />

fell in love with the school<br />

and the coaches and every<br />

school I visited after<br />

that I compared it back to<br />

Wisconsin and didn’t find<br />

anything better than that.”<br />

With Urban off to Wisconsin,<br />

a matchup with<br />

former teammate Maday is<br />

inevitable, especially since<br />

Urban is a defender who<br />

will be trying to stop Maday<br />

from scoring.<br />

“It’s going to be hard<br />

because I’m a forward and<br />

she’s a defender,” Urban<br />

said. “It’s going to be different<br />

because playing<br />

her in practice is different<br />

than in a game and probably<br />

once I step on the<br />

field I’ll act like she’s an<br />

enemy. I know the Big Ten<br />

is a tough conference and<br />

they’re a big rival so it’ll<br />

be a hard matchup.”<br />

Also signing was Natalie<br />

Laser, who is headed to<br />

the University of Southern<br />

California. The Trojans<br />

won the program’s second<br />

national title this season,<br />

finishing 19-4-2. USC became<br />

the first Pac-12 program<br />

to win two NCAA<br />

women’s soccer titles and<br />

had five players drafted in<br />

this year’s NWSL draft.<br />

The Trevians begin their<br />

quest for a fourth consecutive<br />

state title March 14 at<br />

home against Lake Zurich.


28 | February 16, 2017 | The glencoe anchor sports<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

Wrestling<br />

Trevs trio moves on to state<br />

Lowell, Tangen,<br />

Ryan advance to<br />

state finals<br />

Neil Milbert<br />

Freelance Reporter<br />

Three New Trier wrestlers<br />

— 126-pound junior<br />

Jack Tangen, 138-pound<br />

junior Patrick Ryan and<br />

195-pound senior Jake<br />

Lowell — have advanced<br />

to the state tournament at<br />

the University of Illinois’<br />

State Farm Center by virtue<br />

of their second-place<br />

finishes in the Barrington<br />

Class 3A Sectional on Saturday,<br />

Feb. 11.<br />

Tangen (33-6) lost the<br />

126-pound championship<br />

match to Libertyville<br />

New Trier’s Jack Tangen takes control in a match at the Barrington Sectional<br />

Saturday, Feb. 11. photos by carlos Alvarez/22nd Century Media<br />

freshman Danny Pucino<br />

(37-4) on an 8-5 decision<br />

after taking his two earlier<br />

matches on decisions.<br />

“Last year I was 0-2 so<br />

this year I was nervous,”<br />

Tangen said. “I had to<br />

persevere through the nervousness<br />

(to make it to the<br />

title match). I don’t think I<br />

wrestled my best (against<br />

Pucino) but I gave it my<br />

all.”<br />

Ryan (37-6) suffered<br />

an 8-6 loss by decision to<br />

Deerfield’s Kenny Kerstein<br />

(36-9) in a rematch<br />

of last year’s match for<br />

the 132-pound title. He<br />

made it to the 138-pound<br />

final via victories by technical<br />

fall and a fall in his<br />

other two matches.<br />

In the championship<br />

match, Ryan rallied after<br />

facing an 8-2 deficit going<br />

into the final period.<br />

“Letting up at the start<br />

is not a hole you can put<br />

yourself in and expect to<br />

come out on top,” Ryan<br />

said.<br />

“I’m happy I made it to<br />

the state tournament but<br />

it’s a little disappointing<br />

considering the circumstances.<br />

We’ve wrestled<br />

against one another five<br />

times in the last few years<br />

and the only times I’ve<br />

lost to him have been in<br />

the sectionals.”<br />

Lowell (17-4) lost to<br />

Warren’s undefeated Andrew<br />

Demos (40-0) on<br />

New Trier’s Jake Lowell competes against Harlem’s<br />

Dalton Hambrock.<br />

a 5-2 decision in their<br />

championship match but<br />

his disappointment over<br />

not being able to pull off<br />

an upset was offset by his<br />

satisfaction in recording<br />

an 8-4 decision over Harlem’s<br />

Dalton Hambrock<br />

(30-5) in the semifinals.<br />

“He was the guy who<br />

beat me last year in the<br />

sectionals,” Lowell said.<br />

“I thought about that<br />

match for an entire year.<br />

I knew he’s a thrower.<br />

He threw me last year so<br />

I was ready for him. He<br />

made a lastditch effort to<br />

try to take me down but I<br />

took him down.”<br />

Prior to avenging his<br />

2016 loss to Hambrock,<br />

Lowell won his quarterfinal<br />

match on a fall at 5:06.<br />

The other four Trevians<br />

who wrestled in the<br />

sectional failed to make it<br />

downstate.<br />

The best of the rest<br />

was 132-pound senior<br />

Nick Elias (33-15), who<br />

dropped to the consolation<br />

bracket after losing<br />

a quarterfinal decision.<br />

There he won on a forfeit<br />

and took a 2-1 decision<br />

before being ousted on a<br />

3-2 decision inflicted by<br />

Hononegah’s Aaron Leppert,<br />

who went on to finish<br />

fourth.<br />

New Trier 106-pound<br />

freshman Michael Mirialles<br />

(18-17) lost a major<br />

decision and then a fall;<br />

170-pound junior Russell<br />

Sanchez (26-18) lost<br />

a pair of decisions; and<br />

160-pound senior Bruno<br />

Frost (15-15) was eliminated<br />

on a pair of falls.<br />

Loyola Academy’s<br />

195-pound senior, Andrew<br />

Gonzalez (30-11),<br />

won his first match by<br />

decision before losing on<br />

a fall at the hands of the<br />

eventual champion Demos.<br />

He then won his first<br />

consolation match on a<br />

fall at 1:57 and his second<br />

on a 2-1 decision before<br />

Hambrock ousted him on<br />

a fall in the semis.<br />

The Ramblers’ other<br />

wrestler at the sectional<br />

was 126-pound sophomore<br />

Aidan McKeag (27-<br />

18), who won his first<br />

match on a major decision<br />

before suffering back-toback<br />

setbacks on falls.<br />

“Aidan qualified for the<br />

sectionals last year and<br />

this year,” Loyola coach<br />

Joe Haney said. “Next<br />

year we’re hoping to get<br />

him over the hump and<br />

make it to state.<br />

“Andrew was my biggest<br />

senior contributor.<br />

He didn’t make it to state<br />

but he reached a milestone<br />

today by winning his 30th<br />

match.”


glencoeanchor.com sports<br />

the glencoe anchor | February 16, 2017 | 29<br />

Girls Gymnastics<br />

NT goes to state with at-large bid<br />

Faulkner takes 3rd<br />

in all-around at<br />

sectional tourney<br />

NEIL MILBERT<br />

Freelance Reporter<br />

The Hartley sisters performances<br />

made the difference,<br />

enabling Glenbrook<br />

South to defeat New<br />

Trier by a margin of .175<br />

and capture the sectional<br />

championship on Feb. 6 at<br />

Stevenson.<br />

The Titans finished the<br />

meet with 145.45 points;<br />

the Trevians had 145.275;<br />

and third-place Carmel totalled<br />

144.8.<br />

Carmel senior Samantha<br />

Lococo was the allaround<br />

champion with a<br />

score of 37.525, followed<br />

by GBS senior Hannah<br />

Hartley (37.4), New Trier<br />

freshman Avery Faulkner<br />

(37.175), GBS freshman<br />

Jenna Hartley (37.075)<br />

and Mundelein senior Taylor<br />

Shanahan (36.4).<br />

The team winners in the<br />

four sectionals will advance<br />

to the state meet on<br />

Friday-Saturday, Feb. 17-<br />

18, at Palatine. There also<br />

will be four at-large teams<br />

— those emerging with<br />

the highest scores following<br />

the Stevenson, Fremd,<br />

Glenbard North and Oswego<br />

meets. The scores<br />

recorded by New Trier and<br />

Carmel at Stevenson made<br />

them at-large qualifiers.<br />

Individuals from nonqualifying<br />

teams who place<br />

in the top five in each event<br />

in the sectional will also<br />

compete in the state meet.<br />

Glenbrook North competed<br />

in the Stevenson<br />

Sectional but didn’t finish<br />

in the top five as a team<br />

and didn’t have any topfive<br />

finishers in individual<br />

events, so the Spartans’<br />

season ended at the meet<br />

while GBS and New Trier<br />

gymnasts will compete at<br />

state.<br />

“Just do your best,” GBS<br />

coach Steve Gale told his<br />

girls before the sectional.<br />

“That’s all you can do. You<br />

aren’t out to beat anyone.<br />

Don’t worry about what<br />

other teams do. Do what<br />

you can do.”<br />

With the Hartley sisters<br />

showing the way, nobody<br />

did it better than the Titans<br />

in the sectional.<br />

In the parallel bars, Hannah<br />

Hartley finished first<br />

(9.5) and Jenna Hartley<br />

finished third (9.25). In<br />

the vault, Hannah Hartley<br />

was first (9.725) and Jenna<br />

Hartley tied for fifth (9.35).<br />

In the balance beam, Hannah<br />

Hartley tied for second<br />

(9.4) and Jenna Hartley<br />

was fifth (9.275). In the<br />

floor exercise, Jenna Hartley<br />

was third (9.2), while<br />

Hannah Hartley tied for<br />

15th (8.775).<br />

“I was really proud of my<br />

floor,” Jenna Hartley said.<br />

“This is the best I’ve done<br />

all season. I knew if I stayed<br />

calm it would work out. I<br />

was calmer for this than I<br />

was for the regionals.”<br />

However, Jenna Hartley<br />

gets nervous when her big<br />

sister competes.<br />

“I can’t watch any of her<br />

routines,” she said.<br />

Hannah Hartley said<br />

she was “happy with bars<br />

and vault, upset because of<br />

my fall on floor” and “so<br />

proud” of the way her kid<br />

sister came through under<br />

pressure.<br />

Carmel and New Trier<br />

went into the meet as the<br />

teams to beat. In winning a<br />

dual meet last month, Carmel<br />

posted the top score<br />

in the state this season<br />

(149.55) while the visiting<br />

Trevians recorded the<br />

second-highest score — a<br />

school record 149.3. New<br />

Trier had edged secondplace<br />

GBS 146.25-144.725<br />

in the Central Suburban<br />

League South meet and<br />

143.2-143.7 in a dual meet<br />

at New Trier in December.<br />

Host New Trier won<br />

its regional with 147.175<br />

points while the Titans took<br />

the regional they hosted<br />

with a score of 146.4.<br />

“We had a good conference<br />

meet; we had a better<br />

regional; and, considering<br />

the competition, we had<br />

an A-minus sectional,”<br />

Gale said. “All season<br />

long we’ve been working<br />

on getting healthy [for]<br />

this time of year. Now I’ve<br />

got all my girls back, but<br />

some of them have ankles<br />

taped and get heat on their<br />

backs.”<br />

According to coach Jennifer<br />

Pistorius, New Trier<br />

went into the meet with less<br />

than 100 percent preparation<br />

because “Emma Jane<br />

(Rohrer) had back spasms<br />

and didn’t practice for two<br />

days and Avery was out all<br />

week with stomach flu and<br />

could only practice on Saturday<br />

(Feb. 4).”<br />

“We tried to do what<br />

we’ve been doing and<br />

keep everything rolling,”<br />

Pistorius said. “We certainly<br />

have the talent, but<br />

we had some bumps along<br />

the way, some extremely<br />

uncharacteristic falls.”<br />

En route to finishing third<br />

in all-around, Faulkner was<br />

second in floor exercise<br />

(9.5), tied Hannah Hartley<br />

for second in balance beam<br />

(9.4), was fourth in vault<br />

(9.375) and tied for 12th in<br />

parallel bars (8.9).<br />

“I tried my best,” the<br />

freshman said. “Floor went<br />

really well but I was proud-<br />

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30 | February 16, 2017 | The glencoe anchor sports<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

Team unity leads NT in CSL victory<br />

Michael Wojtychiw<br />

Sports Editor<br />

After losing 11 seniors from<br />

last year’s squad, New Trier<br />

came into the season seeking a<br />

new identity.<br />

As the season hits the stretch<br />

run, the team seems to have<br />

found what it was looking for.<br />

“Coming off the year last year<br />

where we had 11 seniors, ones<br />

who had been on the team for<br />

multiple years, they really defined<br />

the team for a couple years,<br />

“ New Trier coach Teri Rodgers<br />

said. “So after the season was<br />

over I told them ‘you can create<br />

whatever you want and not often<br />

do we get a blank slate and<br />

you’ve got one so take what you<br />

learned from the seniors that just<br />

left but create your own.’<br />

“They’ve defined what this<br />

team is and that’s selflessness.<br />

They’re great leaders, so inclusive,<br />

so selfless and that’s what<br />

this team is, not only personality-wise<br />

but on the court and<br />

that’s who they’ve been as leaders.<br />

It’s never been about them,<br />

it’s been about ‘us,’ and that’s<br />

how we play.”<br />

The Trevians used that cohesiveness<br />

and togetherness in<br />

helping them beat rival Maine<br />

South, 50-39, Friday, Feb. 10, on<br />

Bratschi<br />

Plumbing<br />

was<br />

established<br />

in<br />

Winnetka<br />

in 1937<br />

senior night in Winnetka.<br />

“Throughout the season,<br />

we’ve come a long way and our<br />

momentum is good right now<br />

so I think each and every game,<br />

we’re on top of everything,” NT<br />

senior Kristie Kalis said.<br />

With it being a special night<br />

for the seniors, Rodgers started<br />

players that normally wouldn’t<br />

get that opportunity, not only at<br />

the beginning of the game, but<br />

every quarter.<br />

And for the majority of the<br />

time, there was no difference in<br />

how the two units played.<br />

“The girls have really just<br />

figured it out, it’s been all them<br />

through hard work and selflessness,”<br />

Rodgers said. “Gaining<br />

experience has helped<br />

the team as well. It’s slowed<br />

down for them as they’ve become<br />

more comfortable and<br />

we’re seeing what they can<br />

really do.”<br />

Kalis, who was named to the<br />

All-CSL team along with Cate<br />

Murdock, came out almost like<br />

she had something to prove,<br />

scoring six of her team’s first<br />

16 points and helping her team<br />

jump out to a 16-11 lead that<br />

would eventually turn into a 20-<br />

16 advantage at the half.<br />

Kalis, who would finish with<br />

New Trier’s Cate Murdock dribbles up the floor during the matchup<br />

against Maine South Friday, Feb. 10, in Winnetka. Varsity Views<br />

15 points, continued her hot<br />

hand out of the break, knocking<br />

in six points in an 8-4 NT run to<br />

start the half.<br />

“I didn’t notice I was the leading<br />

scorer until after the game,<br />

but it’s all about the team because<br />

everyone is contributing,”<br />

Kalis said.<br />

After Anna Hughes got a<br />

3-pointer to give New Trier a<br />

31-22 lead with 3:18 remaining<br />

in the third quarter, a familiar<br />

theme happened to the Trevian<br />

offense: it went cold from the<br />

field. A week after having multiple<br />

scoring droughts against<br />

VARSITY VIEWS<br />

Evanston, the Trevians didn’t<br />

score after VARSITY that Hughes VIEWS basket<br />

until there were 51 seconds remaining<br />

in the quarter and Jacqueline<br />

Vinson knocked in a<br />

3-pointer. In the meantime, the<br />

Hawks had rattled off 10 consecutive<br />

points to take a 32-31 lead<br />

before Vinson’s bucket. Maine<br />

South’s Nicole Scales, an All-<br />

CSL selection, had her first and<br />

only points in that run, hitting<br />

two 3’s, the first coming with<br />

2:47 left in the quarter.<br />

“We really talked through<br />

screens and put Katy Symanietz,<br />

who’s a great defender, on<br />

her and then Maggie (Murdock)<br />

came in and guarded her, but it<br />

was just really good individual<br />

defense,” Rodgers said.<br />

Vinson’s basket triggered a<br />

9-2 run that gave the Trevians<br />

a 40-34 lead, one that would be<br />

just enough to keep the Hawks<br />

at bay, with 6:44remaining in the<br />

game.<br />

New Trier would limit any<br />

offense the Hawks would try<br />

to muster up, forcing four turnovers<br />

in the last five minutes<br />

of the game and not allowing<br />

the visitors to make a field<br />

goal for the last 5:46 of the<br />

game. The Hawks managed<br />

just two free throws in that<br />

span.<br />

“When you come here (New<br />

Trier) as a freshman, you look<br />

up to the older players but<br />

when you are the older player,<br />

it’s like a whole new world because<br />

everyone is looking at<br />

you that way,” Kalis said. “It’s<br />

emotional because you don’t<br />

want to disappoint but it always<br />

make you want to be on your ‘A’<br />

game.”<br />

Bratschi Plumbing<br />

801 Oak Street, Winnetka<br />

www.bratschiinc.com<br />

847-446-1421<br />

The Bratschi-Hoza Family is the<br />

Winnetka Historical Society<br />

Walter<br />

2017 HERITAGE AWARD recipient<br />

Bratschi,<br />

recognizing the family’s contributions<br />

c. 1909<br />

which have enriched the<br />

Village of Winnetka since 1915.<br />

Lic. 055-004615 Exterior of Bratschi Plumbing, c. 2017


glencoeanchor.com SPORTS<br />

the glencoe anchor | February 16, 2017 | 31<br />

Girls basketball<br />

After frantic finish, NSCDS secures regional title<br />

22ND CENTURY MEDIA FILE PHOTO<br />

1st-and-3<br />

Three STARS OF THE<br />

WEEK<br />

1. Evans leads Loyola<br />

to CCL semis.<br />

(ABOVE)<br />

LA’s Ramar Evans<br />

scored 49 points<br />

in three games<br />

last week, during<br />

which the team<br />

went 2-1 and<br />

advanced to the<br />

CCL tournament<br />

semifinals.<br />

2. Kristie Kalis steps<br />

up big for NT.<br />

The New Trier<br />

senior scored 15<br />

points and led the<br />

Trevians to a 50-<br />

39 win over Maine<br />

South Feb. 10 in<br />

Winnetka.<br />

3. New Trier wins<br />

Central Suburban<br />

League South<br />

swimming title.<br />

The Trevians won<br />

the CSL South<br />

meet Feb. 11<br />

at Niles West,<br />

winning five events<br />

and finishing<br />

second in four.<br />

Michael Wojtychiw<br />

Sports Editor<br />

There’s something about<br />

odd-numbered years that<br />

helps the North Shore<br />

Country Day School girls<br />

basketball program rise to<br />

a different level.<br />

The Raiders’ three regional<br />

titles had all come<br />

in odd-numbered years<br />

(2009, 2013 and 2015) and<br />

they were looking to continue<br />

the streak Thursday,<br />

Feb. 9, in their regional final<br />

game at home.<br />

Continue the streak they<br />

did, as the Raiders came<br />

back from a 31-29 deficit<br />

with under 25 seconds left<br />

to beat Schaumburg Christian<br />

34-31 in dramatic<br />

fashion.<br />

“Nobody ever thought<br />

we were out of it at all,”<br />

North Shore coach Bruce<br />

Blair said. “I think we’re<br />

quick enough, we knew we<br />

were going to get back into<br />

the press. We really didn’t<br />

shoot as well as we usually<br />

do. Caroline Segal missed<br />

a couple layups, but look<br />

at what else she did, with<br />

her defense, her steals.<br />

“We have four seniors<br />

who really, really want to<br />

win and we have a freshman<br />

who played like a senior.”<br />

After Grace Atia cut the<br />

Conquerors lead to 31-29<br />

with a free throw with 2:20<br />

remaining, she hit a jumper<br />

to tie the game with 21 seconds<br />

remaining to send the<br />

nearly standing-room-only<br />

crowd into a frenzy. Freshman<br />

Caroline Segal’s steal<br />

and immediate layup on the<br />

ensuing inbound pass gave<br />

the Raiders the 33-31 lead<br />

they wouldn’t relinquish. A<br />

Schaumburg Christian turnover<br />

and Julia Doyle free<br />

throw gave the Raiders the<br />

final winning margin.<br />

“It had been a really intense<br />

game, probably the<br />

most intense game I’ve<br />

ever played in and we<br />

were a little distraught as<br />

a team,” Segal said. “I saw<br />

when it was tied, knew that<br />

I had to go get the steal<br />

and knew I just had to get<br />

it up.”<br />

North Shore Country<br />

Day tried to use its token<br />

3-1-1 full-court press to<br />

slow down the Conquerors<br />

offense, like it did Jan. 20<br />

when the teams last met,<br />

a 46-41 NSCDS win. Unfortunately<br />

for the Raiders<br />

(20-3), Schaumburg Christian<br />

was able to often break<br />

the press but it didn’t lead<br />

the as many points as the<br />

visitors probably would<br />

have liked.<br />

“They broke it last time<br />

in the first quarter only but<br />

I think we did a better job<br />

of it tonight,” Blair said.<br />

“What they have, that a lot<br />

of the teams we don’t play<br />

have, is they have a couple<br />

kids who can throw<br />

it long and they brought<br />

two people back. We tried<br />

to get that corrected and I<br />

think a couple of our kids<br />

The North Shore Country Day School team celebrates with its regional title plaque<br />

after beating Schaumburg Christian Thursday, Feb. 9, in Winnetka. Michael<br />

Wojtychiw/22nd Century Media<br />

missed coverage.<br />

“At the same time, I<br />

think we caused a lot of<br />

trouble for them with our<br />

coverage.”<br />

While the Raiders were<br />

able to distribute the ball<br />

evenly, they were also<br />

tasked with stopping the<br />

tallest player on the court,<br />

6-foot star Bailey Cummings.<br />

Cummings led<br />

the Conquerors with 16<br />

points, 12 of which came<br />

after halftime.<br />

“She’s very good,”<br />

Blair said. “When we<br />

played them on Jan. 20,<br />

they were up seven at the<br />

end of the first quarter and<br />

we won by five. We knew<br />

that she was good and<br />

she’s even better than she<br />

looked good tonight. She<br />

can shoot the [3-pointer],<br />

make a variety of shots<br />

and our defense was designed<br />

to talk wherever<br />

she is and always have<br />

two people on her. We<br />

didn’t always do that but<br />

we did it just enough.”<br />

The comeback win was<br />

even sweeter for the Raiders<br />

who hadn’t had the<br />

services of an entire squad<br />

for the last week. Multiple<br />

players have been out sick,<br />

including Atia and point<br />

guard Lauren Kaplinsky,<br />

who Blair said was still<br />

fighting a bad chest cold.<br />

The win allows North<br />

Shore Country Day to<br />

continue its most successful<br />

season in school history.<br />

The Raiders looked<br />

to make their first sectional<br />

final appearance when<br />

they faced the winner of<br />

Walther Christian in the<br />

second game of the Harvest<br />

Christian Academy<br />

Sectional Tuesday, Feb.<br />

14 (result not in as of press<br />

time.”<br />

“It was really special we<br />

got to host the regional this<br />

year and winning it on our<br />

home court makes it more<br />

amazing,” Segal said. “The<br />

Schaumburg fans, give<br />

them a lot of cred, they<br />

were really loud but when<br />

the game got to the end,<br />

when it was getting close,<br />

our fans really stepped up,<br />

they were cheering and<br />

that’s what got us going.”<br />

Listen Up<br />

“Nobody thought we were out of it at all.”<br />

Bruce Blair — North Shore Country Day School girls<br />

basketball coach on his team’s regional final performance.<br />

The Raiders won their second regional title in three years<br />

thanks to a 34-31 win over Schaumburg Christian Feb. 9.<br />

tunE in<br />

What to watch this week<br />

GIRLS GYMNASTICS: New Trier looks to win its first<br />

state title in gymnastics.<br />

NT travels to Palatine for the IHSA state finals Feb. 17-18.<br />

Friday’s action starts at 2:15 p.m., Saturday’s at 2:05 p.m.<br />

Index<br />

29 - Girls Gymnastics<br />

26 - Athlete of the Week<br />

Fastbreak is compiled by Sports Editor Michael Wojtychiw,<br />

m.wojtychiw@22ndcenturymedia.com.


the glencoe anchor | February 16, 2017 | glencoeanchor.com<br />

champs again NSCDS wins second<br />

regional in three years, Page 31<br />

trevian triumphs NT’s Kalis<br />

wins Athlete of the Year contest, Page 27<br />

New Trier upends rival Maine South on senior night, Page 30<br />

New Trier senior Anna Hughes (14) guards Maine South’s Nicole Scales during the Trevians’ 50-39 win February, Feb. 10, in Winnetka.<br />

VARSITY VIEWs

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