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glenview's Hometown Newspaper GlenviewLantern.com • October 19, 2017 • Vol. 7 No. 2 • $1<br />

A Publication<br />

Glenview residents travel to Libertyville to support<br />

diabetes research, Page 3<br />

Glenbrook South’s Joe Shapiro (left) and first-year GBS boys basketball coach<br />

Phil Ralston participate in the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation One Walk<br />

in Libertyville on Oct. 1. Inset: GBS sophomore Lee Farkas and freshman Maddie<br />

Kapsimallis organized the Titan Nation participants that raised more than $10,000 at<br />

the event. PHOTOS SUBMITTED<br />

The dark<br />

side of<br />

history<br />

Hebson explores<br />

the tragic side of<br />

Glenview’s aviation<br />

history, Page 14<br />

Not so slick Bank robber<br />

captured after crashing getaway vehicle<br />

in Glenview, Page 10<br />

Fun for all 22CM’s Active Aging<br />

Expo proves growing up doesn’t always<br />

mean slowing down, Page 21


2 | October 19, 2017 | The glenview lantern calendar<br />

glenviewlantern.com<br />

In this week’s<br />

lantern<br />

Police Reports6<br />

Pet of the Week8<br />

Editorial17<br />

Puzzles20<br />

Faith22<br />

Dining Out25<br />

Home of the Week26<br />

Athlete of the Week29<br />

The Glenview<br />

Lantern<br />

ph: 847.272.4565<br />

fx: 847.272.4648<br />

Editor<br />

Chris Pullam, x10<br />

chris@glenviewlantern.com<br />

assistant editor<br />

Michal Dwojak, x26<br />

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

Sales director<br />

Gail Eisenberg, x13<br />

g.eisenberg@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 />

Megan Bernard, x24<br />

megan@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.GlenviewLantern.com<br />

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

circulation inquiries<br />

circulation@22ndcenturymedia.com<br />

The Glenview Lantern (USPS# 14130)<br />

is published weekly by 22nd Century Media,<br />

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

Periodical Postage Paid at Northbrook, IL<br />

and at additional mailing offices.<br />

POSTMASTER: Send address changes to:<br />

The Glenview Lantern, 60 Revere Dr., Ste.<br />

888, Northbrook, IL 60062<br />

Published by<br />

www.22ndcenturymedia.com<br />

Michal Dwojak<br />

Assistant Editor<br />

Thursday<br />

OLPH Holly Fair<br />

1-9:30 p.m. Oct. 19, and 9<br />

a.m.-4 p.m. Friday, Oct. 20,<br />

1776 Glenview Road. Explore<br />

more than 45 booths<br />

of one-of-a-kind gift items<br />

and trend-setting accessories<br />

for women, men, children<br />

and homes. Shop new<br />

and exciting vendors among<br />

Holly Fair favorites; dine<br />

at the Candy Cane Café<br />

featuring lunch, snacks and<br />

drinks; walk the Cookie<br />

Walk, featuring cookies,<br />

breads and other holiday<br />

treats; and win exciting<br />

prizes from the vendors. For<br />

more information, email olphhollyfair@gmail.com<br />

or<br />

visit www.facebook.com/<br />

olphhollyfair.<br />

Friday<br />

Oktoberfest<br />

Noon-2 p.m. Oct. 20,<br />

Park Center, 2400 Chestnut<br />

Ave. Join for an afternoon<br />

of German fare and<br />

fun. Brats, chicken, sauerkraut,<br />

German potato salad<br />

and a tasty dessert will be<br />

served. Enjoy a cash bar,<br />

raffle prizes and the sounds<br />

of the Die Musikmeisters<br />

German band. Advance<br />

registration is required.<br />

For more information, call<br />

(847) 724-4793.<br />

Halloween Spooktacular<br />

5:30-8 p.m. Oct. 20,<br />

Park Center, 2400 Chestnut<br />

Ave. Join for a familyfriendly<br />

indoor Halloween<br />

party for ages 2-10. The<br />

fun includes inflatables,<br />

entertainment, face painting,<br />

tattoos, creepy crafts,<br />

ghoulish games, snacks<br />

and other goodies. Parents<br />

must accompany their children.<br />

Tickets are $10, but<br />

children under 2 are free.<br />

For more information, visit<br />

glenviewparks.org.<br />

SATURDAY<br />

Oak-tober Tree Trot<br />

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

21, The Grove, 1421 Milwaukee<br />

Ave. Join for a<br />

trail walk that will focus<br />

on the trees of The Grove<br />

and learn about some of<br />

the trees that are native to<br />

Illinois from the Village of<br />

Glenview’s Robyn Flakne.<br />

This is a free event; however<br />

registration is requested.<br />

For more information, call<br />

(847) 299-6096 or visit<br />

glenviewparks.org.<br />

sunday<br />

Glenview Concert Band<br />

2;3:30 p.m. Oct. 22,<br />

Lakeview Room, 2400<br />

Chestnut Ave. Join for an<br />

afternoon filled with music<br />

by the Glenview Concert<br />

Band. Doors open at 1 p.m.<br />

and light refreshments will<br />

be served. Tickets are $3<br />

and are available at the<br />

door. For more information,<br />

call (847) 724-4793<br />

or visit glenviewparks.org.<br />

monday<br />

Family Storytime<br />

6:30-7 p.m. Oct. 23,<br />

Glenview Public Library,<br />

1930 Glenview Road. Enjoy<br />

books, music, stories<br />

and fun with the lively<br />

Youth Services Librarian<br />

while making new friends<br />

in a welcoming setting.<br />

Please note that tickets are<br />

required and will be given<br />

out 20 minutes prior to<br />

each session. Preference is<br />

given to Glenview Public<br />

Library cardholders. For<br />

more information, visit<br />

glenviewpl.org.<br />

TUESDAY<br />

Cooking Up Ideas<br />

6-8 p.m. Oct. 24, The<br />

Cafe at the Glenview Park<br />

Golf Club, 800 Shermer<br />

Road. Enjoy up to six<br />

different bourbons in a<br />

station-style tasting from<br />

America’s heartland. Each<br />

fine bourbon whiskey will<br />

be paired with delectable<br />

food. The fee is $70 per<br />

person. For more information,<br />

visit golfglenview.<br />

com or call (847) 724-<br />

0250.<br />

wednesday<br />

Heroes on the Air<br />

7-8 p.m. Oct. 25, Glenview<br />

Public Library, 1930<br />

Glenview Road. Remember<br />

the comic book heroes<br />

of yesterday? Orphan Annie,<br />

Superman, Flash Gordon<br />

and others leapt from<br />

the comic book pages to<br />

the living room radio as<br />

families gathered together<br />

to share their adventures.<br />

Steve Darnall, host of the<br />

popular “Those Were The<br />

Days” radio program, will<br />

bring to life some of our<br />

favorite characters from<br />

the golden age of radio.<br />

For more information, call<br />

(847) 729-7500 x7600 or<br />

visit glenviewpl.org.<br />

thursday<br />

Third Annual Halloween<br />

Party<br />

6-8:30 p.m. Oct. 26,<br />

City Kid Theater, 1008<br />

Church St. Come join the<br />

fun with pizza, treats, karaoke<br />

and a costume contest.<br />

The event is for ages<br />

3-12, and tickets are $10<br />

per child. For more information<br />

or to register, visit<br />

citykidtheatre.com or call<br />

(847) 529-2324.<br />

Animal Costume Contest<br />

6-7 p.m. Oct. 26, Bentley’s<br />

Pet Stuff, 69 Waukegan<br />

Road. Pet lovers are<br />

invited to bring their furry<br />

friends to this costume<br />

contest, with first-place<br />

winning a gift basket<br />

worth $100. For more information,<br />

call (847) 729-<br />

7297.<br />

UPCOMING<br />

A Family Halloween<br />

4-7 p.m. Sunday, Oct.<br />

29, Historic Wagner Farm,<br />

1510 Wagner Road. Enjoy<br />

all kinds of spooky<br />

shenanigans as Historic<br />

Wagner Farm celebrates<br />

Halloween. Wear favorite<br />

costumes to this kid-friendly<br />

bash that includes a<br />

haunted barn, wagon rides,<br />

pumpkin games and more<br />

ghoulish fun. Harvest treats<br />

and snacks will be available<br />

to purchase. Children<br />

under 2 are free of charge.<br />

For more information, visit<br />

glenviewparks.org.<br />

Halloween Monster Mash<br />

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

Oct. 30, Park Center, 2400<br />

Chestnut Ave. Join for a<br />

free afternoon event with<br />

Steve Frenzel, of Marquee<br />

Film Talks. Steve<br />

will highlight and discuss<br />

movie clips that feature<br />

Dracula, Wolfman, Frankenstein<br />

and more villains<br />

in this celebration of classic<br />

movie monsters. Halloween<br />

refreshments will<br />

be served, and costumes<br />

are encouraged. Advanced<br />

registration is required.<br />

For more information, call<br />

(847) 724-4793.<br />

State of the Village<br />

Address<br />

8–9 a.m. Wednesday,<br />

Nov. 1, Glenview Public<br />

Library, 1930 Glenview<br />

Road. Village President<br />

Jim Patterson will give<br />

an overview of major issues<br />

facing Glenview,<br />

and discuss the challenges<br />

and opportunities that lie<br />

ahead. At the end, time<br />

will be allotted for questions.<br />

For more information<br />

or to register, call<br />

(708) 724-0900.<br />

Holiday in the Park and<br />

Parade<br />

4 p.m. Saturday, Nov.<br />

25. Join the kickoff to the<br />

holiday season with this<br />

annual event. Follow the<br />

parade down Glenview<br />

Road from Our Lady of<br />

Perpetual Help Church going<br />

west to Jackman Park.<br />

Festivities in the park include<br />

a visit with Santa,<br />

hay rides, a train ride, carolers,<br />

cookies, hot chocolate<br />

and popcorn. For more<br />

information, visit www.<br />

glenviewchamber.com.<br />

ONGOING<br />

Laughter Group<br />

7 p.m. every Wednesday,<br />

Glenbrook Hospital,<br />

2180 Pfingsten Road. The<br />

group is free of charge to<br />

anyone who is interested<br />

in benefiting from laughter.<br />

For more information,<br />

call (847) 624-0988.<br />

Jazz Jam<br />

Every Sunday night<br />

from 7-10 p.m. at Glenview<br />

Grind featuring Rajiv<br />

Halim. All instrumentalists<br />

and vocalists are welcome<br />

to join in. The event is<br />

sponsored by Terra Sounds<br />

School of Music and Arts.<br />

There is a bring your own<br />

beer policy. For more information,<br />

call (847) 729-<br />

0111.<br />

SCORE Business Mentoring<br />

Join from 1-3 p.m. on the<br />

second and fourth Tuesday<br />

of the month at Glenview<br />

State Bank or 5-7 p.m. on<br />

the third Tuesday of the<br />

month at the Glenview<br />

Public Library to take<br />

part in a one-hour, oneon-one<br />

mentoring session<br />

with a SCORE counselor.<br />

SCORE is comprised of<br />

retired senior executives<br />

and business owners who<br />

can help entrepreneurs on<br />

a variety of issues.<br />

To submit an item for the<br />

community calendar, contact<br />

Editor Chris Pullam at<br />

Chris@GlenviewLantern.<br />

com or (847) 272-4565 ext.<br />

10. Entries are due by noon<br />

on the Thursday prior to<br />

publication date.


glenviewlantern.com news<br />

the glenview lantern | October 19, 2017 | 3<br />

Glenview community<br />

rallies to fight diabetes<br />

Michal Dwojak<br />

Assistant Editor<br />

Maddie Kapsimallis felt<br />

connected with her community<br />

as she traversed the<br />

paths of the Juvenile Diabetes<br />

Research Foundation<br />

One Walk on Oct. 1.<br />

The event was held in<br />

Libertyville, but the Glenview<br />

community made<br />

the trip north to join thousands<br />

of others in raising<br />

money for those affected<br />

by Type 1 Diabetes. Kapsimallis,<br />

who has the disease,<br />

spent a lot of time<br />

preparing for the walk,<br />

and the support justified<br />

her hard work.<br />

“It was really nice to<br />

see all the people who donated,”<br />

Kapsimallis said.<br />

“It was inspiring how<br />

people donated and came<br />

to walk.”<br />

This was the second<br />

year that Kapsimallis and<br />

Lee Farkas, both students<br />

at Glenbrook South, led<br />

the way for Glenview’s<br />

Titan Nation, which<br />

raised more than $10,000<br />

for medical research with<br />

help of more than 60<br />

friends and family members.<br />

Kapsimallis, a freshman,<br />

and Farkas, a sophomore,<br />

combined forces<br />

last year to generate as<br />

many donations as possible.<br />

After being diagnosed<br />

with diabetes a couple<br />

years ago, Kapsimallis<br />

started raising money for<br />

the cause by going door to<br />

door in her own neighborhood.<br />

“It’s important because<br />

it makes me feel like I can<br />

talk to people about it and<br />

The Glenbrook South boys basketball team helped<br />

raise money during the Juvenile Diabetes Research<br />

Foundation One Walk in Libertyville on Oct. 1. PHOTO<br />

SUBMITTED<br />

understand,” Kapsimallis<br />

said. “It’s not just me<br />

fighting it by myself.”<br />

Farkas started his campaign<br />

as part of his Bar<br />

Mitzvah project when he<br />

turned 13.<br />

“I think it’s important<br />

because people might realize<br />

that they can help<br />

make a difference in the<br />

future,” Farkas said. “It’s<br />

good for people to do<br />

that.”<br />

Type 1 Diabetes causes<br />

the pancreas to stop producing<br />

insulin — a hormone<br />

essential to turning<br />

food into energy. Diabetics<br />

must constantly monitor<br />

their blood-sugar level;<br />

inject or infuse insulin<br />

through shots or pumps;<br />

and carefully balance<br />

their doses with their eating<br />

and activity.<br />

The process is particularly<br />

challenging for athletes,<br />

so the GBS basketball<br />

program got involved<br />

with this year’s initiative<br />

through GoingBeyond-<br />

Sports, a Titan Booster<br />

Club initiative that encourages<br />

athletic teams to<br />

undertake meaningful service<br />

projects. Both Kapsimallis<br />

and Farkas play<br />

basketball at GBS, which<br />

is why it made sense for<br />

the programs to get involved.<br />

“It was good that we all<br />

came together and did it,”<br />

Farkas said.<br />

The joint project, called<br />

Titan Nation, has raised<br />

more than $55,000 in<br />

the past two years and<br />

is ready to expand even<br />

further. The students and<br />

their parents have decided<br />

to expand beyond athletics<br />

to include the entire<br />

school as more and more<br />

people are affected by the<br />

disease, but Kapsimallis<br />

will worry about that effort<br />

when the time comes.<br />

For now, she will simply<br />

enjoy the support she has<br />

received and the work that<br />

she has put in.<br />

“It means a lot to raise<br />

all this money,” Kapsimallis<br />

said. “A lot of other<br />

kids have this disease<br />

around the world.”<br />

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4 | October 19, 2017 | The glenview lantern glenview<br />

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6 | October 19, 2017 | The glenview lantern News<br />

glenviewlantern.com<br />

Police Reports<br />

Two men involved in altercation after wind causes car damage<br />

A man was “chest<br />

bumped” by another man<br />

after accidentally damaging<br />

his vehicle at 3:48 p.m.<br />

on Oct. 7 in the 2500 block<br />

of Waukegan Road.<br />

According to the Glenview<br />

Police Department,<br />

the two men were parked<br />

next to each other when<br />

the wind caused the first<br />

man’s door to hit the adjacent<br />

vehicle. The second<br />

man was upset and allegedly<br />

bumped the first man.<br />

There were no further<br />

charges.<br />

In other police news:<br />

Oct. 10<br />

• Tyler Kilpatrick, 28, of<br />

Glenview, was charged<br />

with theft at 6:21 p.m. in<br />

the 1800 block of George<br />

Court.<br />

• Daniel Murillo, 19, of<br />

Mount Prospect, was<br />

charged with theft at 1<br />

p.m. in the 2700 block of<br />

Pfingsten Road.<br />

Oct. 8<br />

• Sam Melody, 21, of<br />

Schiller Park, was charged<br />

with harassment through<br />

electronic communications<br />

at 12:11 a.m. in the<br />

9800 block of Milwaukee<br />

Avenue.<br />

• Armaan Hemani, 20, of<br />

Northbrook, was charged<br />

with speeding (99 mph in<br />

a 45 mph zone) and operating<br />

an uninsured motor<br />

vehicle at 1:47 a.m. in the<br />

3800 block of East Lake<br />

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• Preston Smoot, 24, of<br />

Glenview, was charged<br />

with driving under the<br />

influence of alcohol and<br />

driving under the influence<br />

of alcohol BAC over .08 at<br />

8:32 p.m. in the 1300 block<br />

of Patriot Boulevard.<br />

• Tyler Kilpatrick, 28, of<br />

Glenview, was charged<br />

with theft at 9:28 p.m. in<br />

the 1800 block of George<br />

Court.<br />

Oct. 7<br />

• Tyler Kilpatrick, 28, of<br />

Glenview, was charged<br />

with theft at 3:02 p.m. in<br />

the 1800 block of George<br />

Court.<br />

• Julio Lopez-Aguilar, 27,<br />

of Chicago, was charged<br />

with leaving the scene<br />

of an accident, no valid<br />

driver’s license and operating<br />

an uninsured motor<br />

vehicle at 3:56 p.m. in the<br />

3300 block of East Lake<br />

Avenue.<br />

• Ten juveniles dressed<br />

in animal costumes left<br />

a store without paying<br />

at 7:34 p.m. in the 2100<br />

block of Willow Road. The<br />

reported loss is $80.<br />

Oct. 6<br />

• Daniel Chin, 48, of<br />

Skokie, was charged with<br />

driving with a suspended<br />

driver’s license at 7:12<br />

p.m. in the 2700 block of<br />

East Lake Avenue.<br />

• Two 17-year-old juveniles<br />

were issued village<br />

ordinance citations after<br />

stealing merchandise<br />

at 2:13 p.m. in the 1900<br />

block of Tower Drive.<br />

There is no reported loss.<br />

• A telephone account was<br />

fraudulently opened using<br />

a resident’s name at 3:07<br />

p.m. The reported loss is<br />

$600.<br />

• The rear-passenger<br />

fender of a car was keyed<br />

at 6:26 p.m. in the 1600<br />

block of Magnolia Street.<br />

The reported loss is $200.<br />

• An employee touched a<br />

coworker’s buttocks with<br />

his hand at 8:46 p.m. in the<br />

2300 block of Patriot Boulevard.<br />

Oct. 5<br />

• Robert Jabaay, 41, of<br />

New Lenox, was charged<br />

with theft at 10:59 a.m. in<br />

the 1000 block of Harlem<br />

Avenue.<br />

• A bottle of alcohol was<br />

stolen at 10:25 a.m. in the<br />

500 block of Milwaukee<br />

Avenue. The reported loss<br />

is $129.<br />

• Someone attempted to<br />

steal bottles of alcohol<br />

but stopped when he realized<br />

he was being watched<br />

at 12:19 p.m. in the 1400<br />

block of Waukegan Road.<br />

• A customer threatened to<br />

hurt an employee at 3:21<br />

p.m. in the 2100 block of<br />

Pfingsten Road.<br />

• Personal items were stolen<br />

during a ruse at 3:36<br />

p.m. in the 2300 block of<br />

Mohawk Lane. The reported<br />

loss is more than<br />

$5,000.<br />

Oct. 4<br />

• A basket of merchandise<br />

was stolen at 11:10 a.m. in<br />

the 1400 block of Waukegan<br />

Road. The reported loss<br />

is $800.<br />

• A bail of cardboard was<br />

stolen at 11 a.m. in the<br />

1400 block of Waukegan<br />

Road. The reported loss is<br />

$300.<br />

• Jewelry, which was being<br />

held for safekeeping,<br />

wasn’t returned at 2:04<br />

p.m. in the 3600 block of<br />

Keenan Lane. The reported<br />

loss is $1,000.<br />

• A wallet was stolen at<br />

4:19 p.m. in the 2600<br />

block of Lehigh Avenue.<br />

The reported loss is $300.<br />

• A vehicle was stolen at<br />

11:08 p.m. in the 3500<br />

block of Milwaukee Avenue.<br />

Oct. 3<br />

• A man and woman were<br />

arguing at 5:36 p.m. in the<br />

2400 block of Ravine Way.<br />

• A man was sent away<br />

after he rang a doorbell<br />

repeatedly at 7:52 p.m. in<br />

the 3600 block of Keenan<br />

Lane.<br />

Oct. 2<br />

• Someone pounded on a<br />

drive-up window at 3:23<br />

a.m. in the 9800 block of<br />

Milwaukee Avenue.<br />

• Playground equipment<br />

was tagged with graffiti<br />

at 11:03 a.m. in the 1500<br />

block of Forest Drive. The<br />

reported loss is $100.<br />

• A resident’s garage was<br />

entered without permission<br />

at 12:21 p.m. in the<br />

4500 block of Jenna Road.<br />

• Tools and bikes were stolen<br />

from a garage at 1:07<br />

p.m. in the 1600 block of<br />

Hawthorne Lane. The reported<br />

loss is $660.<br />

• An iPad was stolen from<br />

a residence at 1:49 p.m. in<br />

the 3200 block of Milwaukee<br />

Avenue. The reported<br />

loss is $400.<br />

• Allegra, Nexium and other<br />

pharmaceuticals were<br />

stolen at 3:57 p.m. in the<br />

100 block of Waukegan<br />

Road. The reported loss is<br />

$1,500.<br />

EDITOR’S NOTE: The<br />

Glenview Lantern’s Police<br />

Reports are compiled from<br />

official reports found on<br />

file at the Glenview Police<br />

Department headquarters in<br />

Glenview. Individuals named<br />

in these reports are considered<br />

innocent of all charges<br />

until proven guilty in a court<br />

of law.


glenviewlantern.com glenview<br />

the glenview lantern | October 19, 2017 | 7<br />

IT’S NO BULL!<br />

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8 | October 19, 2017 | The glenview lantern News<br />

glenviewlantern.com<br />

Lloyd<br />

The Graham family, of<br />

Glenview<br />

This is our wonderful<br />

cat, Lloyd. He just<br />

turned 18 last week.<br />

He came for a short<br />

visit about 10 years<br />

ago and is still here.<br />

This is now his forever<br />

home.<br />

He loves to sit with<br />

me on the patio as<br />

we watch and photograph the birds that come to<br />

the feeders in the backyard.<br />

HELP! The Glenview Lantern is in search of more pets. To<br />

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

chris@glenviewlantern.com or 60 Revere Drive Suite 888.<br />

Northbrook, IL 60062<br />

The North Shore’s<br />

Rug Cleaning Experts<br />

Any Size Area Rug<br />

$1.50 per square foot<br />

Cash & carry price. $1.75/SF for pick up & delivery. Minimums apply.<br />

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

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Bank robber crashes getaway vehicle in Glenview<br />

Martin Carlino<br />

Contributing Editor<br />

Your Post-Acute Leader<br />

Alan H. Vasquez, 46, of<br />

Chicago, robbed the Associated<br />

Bank branch located<br />

at 34354 North US Highway<br />

45 in Third Lake at approximately<br />

3:10 p.m. on<br />

Oct. 10, per an FBI criminal<br />

complaint filed Oct. 11.<br />

Per the Lake County<br />

Sheriff’s Department, immediately<br />

after the robbery,<br />

bank employees contacted<br />

the police and provided a<br />

description of the getaway<br />

vehicle. At approximately<br />

3:21 p.m., a Lake County<br />

sheriff’s deputy observed a<br />

white Nissan Altima traveling<br />

south on US Highway<br />

45 near Peterson road in<br />

Libertyville, approximately<br />

three miles south of the<br />

bank, per the complaint.<br />

Authorities believed the<br />

vehicle matched the provided<br />

description and attempted<br />

to conduct a traffic<br />

stop. The Nissan Altima<br />

did not stop and began to<br />

drive erratically down the<br />

highway.<br />

According to the Lake<br />

County sheriff’s deputy,<br />

several unmarked police<br />

cars responded to the incident<br />

and followed the vehicle<br />

onto I-294, where it exited<br />

the I-294 southbound<br />

at Glenview’s Willow Road<br />

exit. The vehicle then attempted<br />

to pass another<br />

vehicle near a toll plaza,<br />

but officers observed the<br />

Altima hit a concrete median<br />

and then the vehicle<br />

it had attempted to pass. At<br />

this point, the vehicle was<br />

disabled and Lake County<br />

officers approached and arrested<br />

Vasquez.<br />

Per law enforcement officers,<br />

a plastic bag was<br />

found in the vehicle. It contained<br />

U.S. currency that<br />

was packaged in two banded<br />

bundles of $100 bills<br />

totaling $2,000 and three<br />

banded bundles of $5 bills<br />

totaling $750. Additionally,<br />

the bag contained $1,101 in<br />

various loose bills. The total<br />

amount of money recovered<br />

from the white plastic<br />

bag was $3,851 — the<br />

same amount that had been<br />

stolen from the bank.<br />

The banded bundles<br />

were stamped with the<br />

words “Associated Bank,<br />

third lake branch 171.”<br />

According to an account<br />

from a teller at the bank,<br />

Vasquez — a 5-foot-8,<br />

Hispanic male weighing<br />

approximately 280 pounds<br />

with black hair — reached<br />

the window and verbally<br />

stated, “This is a robbery.<br />

Put the money in the bag.”<br />

He then removed the<br />

money from the teller’s<br />

drawer, left the bank and<br />

proceeded to the getaway<br />

vehicle.<br />

When you rehabilitate at an Alden<br />

Post-Acute Rehabilitation Care Center,<br />

we help you restore functionality so<br />

you can get back on your feet, and<br />

home, as quickly as possible.<br />

Call us at 1-800-291-5900 or visit www.TheAldenNetwork.com<br />

From The Village<br />

Downtown train station<br />

work<br />

Construction crews<br />

are replacing the heating-<br />

and air-conditioning<br />

systems for the south half<br />

of the downtown Glenview<br />

Metra train station<br />

this week. The work will<br />

not disrupt train traffic,<br />

but will cause an increase<br />

in activity in and around<br />

the building during<br />

the week.<br />

Speak up about streets<br />

Have a comment about<br />

the condition of your street<br />

or other Village infrastructure?<br />

Attend an informal<br />

open house from 4:30-6:30<br />

p.m. on Thursday, Oct. 19,<br />

at Village Hall, 2500 East<br />

Lake Ave.<br />

Input is being taken on<br />

the 2018-2022 Capital Improvement<br />

Program as part<br />

of the Village’s 2018 budget<br />

process.<br />

If you can’t make the<br />

open house, comments can<br />

also be made by calling<br />

the Community Development<br />

Department at (847)<br />

904-4340.<br />

The program will be the<br />

topic of the Glenview Village<br />

Board’s next budget<br />

workshop at 7 p.m. Thursday,<br />

Oct. 26, at Village Hall.<br />

Kids Care Food Drive<br />

The students of school<br />

districts 34 and 30 and<br />

Our Lady of Perpetual<br />

Help School are collecting<br />

food items and donations<br />

in conjunction with Character<br />

Counts! Week to be<br />

donated to the Northfield<br />

Township Food Pantry.<br />

Drop boxes will be<br />

located at the schools<br />

through Friday, Oct. 20.<br />

A list of needed items<br />

and other information can<br />

be found on the CHAR-<br />

ACTER Counts! in Glenview<br />

website.<br />

Compiled from the E-Glenview<br />

newsletter.


glenviewlantern.com glenview<br />

the glenview lantern | October 19, 2017 | 9<br />

You Know at Least 5 Agents<br />

THINK ABOUT IT: a neighbor, a friend from high school, a parent from your carpool,<br />

your mom’s bridge partner, or even that really nice person in your workout class<br />

but what makes an agent stand out?<br />

AN INTERVIEW WITH<br />

Hayley Westhoff (City Residential Expert), Pam MacPherson and Lori Hooten (Suburban<br />

Residential Experts) from the MacPherson Westhoff Group - an @properties real estate<br />

team that strives to be “Your Urban to Suburban Concierge”<br />

WHY DO YOU THINK YOUR GROUP HAS HAD SUCH SUCCESS IN SUCH A SHORT<br />

AMOUNT OF TIME?<br />

“I think our fresh, young, and aggressive marketing approach captures today’s buyers and<br />

sellers. Today’s buyers are high tech and market savvy and they want agents that are the<br />

same. We reach them on every online platform and chat group, but also thru our referrals<br />

and large network. Naturally with 7 people on our team, our network is 7 times larger than<br />

a single agent working alone. We also have phenomenal communication and follow-up to<br />

stay on-top of the immediacy of today’s buyers and sellers needs.” -Hayley<br />

HOW DID THE URBAN TO SUBURB CONCIERGE CONCEPT COME ABOUT?<br />

“We found that hundreds of young professionals that originally moved to Chicago for its<br />

urban flare and exciting nightlife are now starting families and needing agents to help<br />

them research the suburbs. The MacPherson Westhoff Group is a group of educated and<br />

market savvy agents that specialize in different neighborhoods throughout Chicago and<br />

the North shore. Our agents work together to help sell our clients homes in the city and<br />

then I work with Pam to bring them to the suburbs so the MacPherson Westhoff team<br />

can help them find the best suburban neighborhood and property that fits their needs.”<br />

-Hayley<br />

WHY TEAM UP VS BEING INDIVIDUAL AGENTS?<br />

“My whole life I have been on a team from playing Volleyball at GBS and then at Duke<br />

University, and I have seen the benefits of teamwork in every aspect of my life. When doing<br />

comparative market analysis reports we always have multiple agents do them separately<br />

and then come together to discuss and challenge each other with our reasoning. When we<br />

work together we not only support each other but we compete to make each other better<br />

and therefore we are a stronger united force for our clients.” -Pam<br />

Maral Binnebose<br />

Bought & Sold with Lori Hooten - 2312 Robincrest<br />

Scott & Laura Namovicz<br />

Bought & Sold with Pam MacPherson<br />

WHY IS YOUR TEAM CONCEPT HELPFUL TO <strong>GL</strong>ENVIEW SELLERS?<br />

“With 7 agents on our team, we have an internal network and knowledge base of what<br />

listings we have coming up in the suburbs which means our suburban listings can be<br />

marketed to our city buyers even before they are officially on the market. This concept<br />

keeps our listings first and foremost on the minds of our vast buyer base.”-Lori<br />

NO LOCKBOXES?<br />

“The MacPherson Westhoff Group doesn’t believe in lockboxes. We believe that our clients<br />

hire us for our sales ability and we want to be there for every showing to point out features<br />

and upgrades or be able to explain any questions or concerns. We have knowledge of the<br />

property history and area features and want to be a source of information IN PERSON for<br />

potential buyers. When we are there on-site thru showings we can learn more about the<br />

type of buyer that is requesting showings, any feedback can be expanded upon, and a<br />

personal connection can be made with the buyers agent which helps start the transaction<br />

communication out smoothly.” -Pam<br />

Anthony & Hannah Frei<br />

Property Listed by Pam MacPherson - 2911 Jerrie<br />

Colleen Brennan bought with Natalie Dietz<br />

Also Pictured: Matt Brennan & James Ziegler<br />

PAM MACPHERSON 847.508.8048 | PMACPHERSON@ATPROPERTIES.COM<br />

MacWestRealEstate.com


10 | October 19, 2017 | The glenview lantern News<br />

glenviewlantern.com<br />

New name.<br />

Same commitment<br />

to you.<br />

The PrivateBank<br />

is now CIBC.<br />

For over 150 years, CIBC has put clients and<br />

communities first - just like The PrivateBank.<br />

As CIBC, we remain dedicated to you. Because<br />

what matters most to you, matters to us.<br />

Visit us at cibc.com/US.<br />

THE <strong>GL</strong>ENCOE ANCHOR<br />

Principal moves office<br />

to roof after crushing<br />

fundraiser goal<br />

The roof, the roof, the<br />

roof is ... Principal Fink’s<br />

office?<br />

On Thursday, Oct. 12,<br />

there was a rare sight at<br />

Sacred Heart School in<br />

Winnetka. Principal Kristen<br />

Fink worked from the<br />

school roof as a result of<br />

the students surpassing the<br />

$25,000 goal for inaugural<br />

Boosterthon fundraiser.<br />

“We wanted to make it a<br />

fun thing,” Fink said about<br />

the first-time fundraiser.<br />

“The kids were so excited<br />

about it. They didn’t stop<br />

asking me when I was going<br />

to be up there. They<br />

couldn’t wait to see me on<br />

the roof.”<br />

Boosterthon began in<br />

September with a pep rally<br />

introducing the students to<br />

the fundraising program<br />

(www.funrun.com). Each<br />

student was to fundraise<br />

$250 for the school in<br />

pledges before the Sept. 28<br />

fun run at Sacred Heart.<br />

During the two weeks<br />

leading up to the special<br />

run, the Boosterthon team<br />

taught character lessons<br />

and held team huddles<br />

while teachers rewarded<br />

students for helping the<br />

school. There were also<br />

daily pledging updates and<br />

challenges, such as “get<br />

pledge from out of state<br />

tonight,” Fink said, to get<br />

the students excited.<br />

If the students met their<br />

total goal of $25,000,<br />

which they did, they were<br />

promised an incentive —<br />

Principal Fink would do<br />

something fun. Students<br />

voted on ideas like throwing<br />

pies in her face, having<br />

her wear a funny outfit and<br />

riding a tricycle around the<br />

school all day, taping her to<br />

a pole, and working from<br />

the school roof one day.<br />

Reporting by Megan Bernard,<br />

Contributing Editor.<br />

Full story at GlencoeAnchor.<br />

com.<br />

THE WINNETKA CURRENT<br />

Winnetka memorial receives<br />

national recognition,<br />

restoration funding<br />

A main feature of Winnetka’s<br />

Village Green is<br />

the Cenotaph Memorial,<br />

which honors the village’s<br />

citizens who have died in<br />

battle. Now, in this 100th<br />

anniversary year of U.S.<br />

entry into World War I,<br />

the memorial is receiving<br />

some national recognition.<br />

The Cenotaph Memorial<br />

was recently selected as a<br />

WWI Centennial Memorial<br />

in the 100 Cities/100 Memorials<br />

initiative, which<br />

is a cooperative venture<br />

between the World War I<br />

Centennial Commission<br />

and the Chicago-based<br />

Pritzker Military Library to<br />

honor sites associated with<br />

the battle once known as<br />

“The Great War.”<br />

“The Winnetka WWI<br />

Memorial is a significant<br />

and powerful memorial<br />

to the men from Winnetka<br />

who died during the<br />

Great War and to those<br />

who served,” said Kenneth<br />

Clarke, the president<br />

and CEO of the Pritzker<br />

Military Museum and<br />

Library, in a statement.<br />

“The fact that the memorial<br />

is still a focal point of<br />

the town’s culture and the<br />

unique relief sculpture of<br />

doughboys depicted on the<br />

memorial are some of the<br />

reasons it was selected.”<br />

As of now, 50 sites in<br />

28 states were selected for<br />

the honor, with Winnetka’s<br />

memorial being one of six<br />

receiving the honor in Illinois,<br />

according to the<br />

World War I Commission<br />

website.<br />

“I think it is more important<br />

to have the recognition<br />

of this memorial<br />

and the veterans and all<br />

the veterans from Winnetka<br />

who have served,” said<br />

Phil Hoza, a spokesman of<br />

the local Veterans of Foreign<br />

Wars post, which applied<br />

for the honor.<br />

Reporting by Daniel I. Dorfman,<br />

Freelance Reporter.<br />

Full story at WinnetkaCurrent.com.<br />

Please see nfyn, 17<br />

Schedule a Tour Today<br />

847.480.1020<br />

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The CIBC logo is a registered trademark of CIBC, used under license. © 2017 CIBC Bank USA.<br />

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glenviewlantern.com glenview<br />

the glenview lantern | October 19, 2017 | 11<br />

JAMESONSIR.COM | EVANSTON 847.869.7300 | CHICAGO 312.751.0300 | WINNETKA 847.716.5152<br />

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• Combined 48 Years of Experience<br />

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Sotheby’s International Realty and the Sotheby’s International Realty logo are registered (or unregistered) service marks used with permission. Sotheby’s International Realty Affiliates LLC fully supports the principles<br />

of the Fair Housing Act and the Equal Opportunity Act. Each Office Is Independently Owned And Operated. If your property is listed with a real estate broker, please disregard. It is not our intention to solicit the<br />

offerings of other real estate brokers. We are happy to work with them and cooperate fully. Although information, including measurements, has been obtained from sources deemed reliable, accuracy is not guaranteed.<br />

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This exceptional and spacious 15 Room, 6 bedroom<br />

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60 BRENTWOOD, <strong>GL</strong>ENCOE $975,000 3029 IROQUOIS, WILMETTE $875,000<br />

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The lot is over half an acre, East of Sheridan, and set on<br />

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This spacious 4 Br, 2 ½ bath home has a huge white<br />

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| EVANSTON 847.869.7300 | CHICAGO 312.751.0300 | WINNETKA 847.716.5152<br />

ted nash john nash • 3rd Generation Realtors who grew up<br />

Sotheby’s International Realty And The Sotheby’s International Realty Logo Are 312.505.1959<br />

Registered (Or Unregistered) 847.338.2756 Service Marks Used in With Wilmette Permission. Each Office Is Independently Owned<br />

And Operated. Although information, including measurements, has been obtained from sources deemed reliable, accuracy is not guaranteed.


12 | October 19, 2017 | The glenview lantern glenview<br />

glenviewlantern.com<br />

Healthcare for what’s next.<br />

The best overall care starts<br />

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At NorthShore, we’re personalizing your care on a whole new level, by integrating genetics as part of each patient’s<br />

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To learn more, call (847) 570-GENE or visit northshore.org/advancedprimarycare<br />

Medical Group


glenviewlantern.com glenview<br />

the glenview lantern | October 19, 2017 | 13<br />

15 Old Green Bay Road, Winnetka • $2,895,000<br />

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14 | October 19, 2017 | The glenview lantern News<br />

glenviewlantern.com<br />

Adventures in Glenview<br />

Glenview’s history of air tragedies<br />

Denny Hebson<br />

Contributing Columnist<br />

Glenview resident<br />

If you’ve recently<br />

moved to Glenview,<br />

you might not realize<br />

that we once had an airport<br />

in our backyard. From<br />

1929-1995, The Glen was<br />

first the Curtiss Reynolds<br />

Airfield and then the Glenview<br />

Naval Air Station.<br />

It meant our town had<br />

its share of plane crashes,<br />

something most suburbs<br />

would never experience.<br />

Here are a few of the<br />

stories.<br />

In the 1930s, the Curtiss<br />

Airfield attracted thousands<br />

of people by holding<br />

air races. They were kind<br />

of like an Indy 500 in the<br />

sky. Planes raced in loops<br />

around pylons at more than<br />

200 miles per hour.<br />

One entrant at the International<br />

Air Races in 1933<br />

was Florence Klingensmith,<br />

a gutsy 29-year-old<br />

and one of the pioneers in<br />

womens aviation. She was<br />

the only female entrant in<br />

the race.<br />

About two-thirds of<br />

the way through the race,<br />

the fabric ripped from her<br />

plane’s wing.<br />

She veered off the course<br />

and tried to hold steady, but<br />

crashed into the Swainwood<br />

nursery near Shermer<br />

and Glenview roads. She<br />

was killed instantly.<br />

Officials used her death<br />

as an excuse to ban women<br />

from racing, although any<br />

pilot would have crashed<br />

in that circumstance. Amelia<br />

Earhart eventually got<br />

the ban overturned.<br />

The most tragic accident<br />

occurred on July 8, 1968,<br />

when a navy jet crashed<br />

into a house on Swainwood<br />

Drive. Thirteen-year-old<br />

Cindy Masters, who was<br />

watching TV in the den,<br />

was killed. Her mom was<br />

mowing the lawn at the<br />

time.<br />

“Cindy’s in the house,”<br />

her mother screamed<br />

in front of the burning<br />

structure. Neighbors who<br />

tried to rescue the girl<br />

were knocked back by the<br />

intensity of the flames.<br />

The pilot thought he<br />

might be able to miss the<br />

house if he dropped his<br />

two full fuel tanks, but<br />

knew that could burn down<br />

the whole neighborhood.<br />

He ejected seconds before<br />

the crash. His parachute<br />

didn’t fully open and he<br />

landed in a tree.<br />

When they lowered him<br />

down, he asked, “Did I hit<br />

a house?”<br />

Cindy Masters would be<br />

62 today.<br />

In 1978, a British Vulcan<br />

bomber, in town for the<br />

Chicago Air and Water<br />

Show, lost power and<br />

crashed into the dump on<br />

Willow Road (now Willowhill<br />

Golf Course). All<br />

four crew members died.<br />

Eyewitnesses said the pilot<br />

seemed to swerve into<br />

the dump to avoid hitting<br />

Maple School and nearby<br />

homes.<br />

In 1991, the pilot of a<br />

small military plane did<br />

something similar. And<br />

even more miraculous.<br />

George Sullivan and<br />

two crew members were<br />

approaching the Naval Air<br />

Station when their plane<br />

suddenly fell. As the plane<br />

plummeted toward Dewes<br />

Street, Sullivan managed<br />

to turn the wings in “knifeblade”<br />

fashion, or perpendicular<br />

to the street, before<br />

the plane hit the ground.<br />

There was a fireball<br />

as tall as the trees. The<br />

landing gear went through<br />

someone’s front window.<br />

The engine landed in a<br />

driveway. The three crewmen<br />

were killed.<br />

Yet no one on the<br />

ground was even injured.<br />

George Sullivan’s lastsecond<br />

maneuver averted a<br />

major tragedy.<br />

“I find it hard to believe<br />

that the plane got here,” said<br />

the air station commander<br />

as he surveyed the wreckage<br />

and looked up at the<br />

untouched trees. “I have no<br />

idea if the pilot guided it in.”<br />

But he did. And he saved<br />

Dewes Street.<br />

There is a memorial to<br />

Sullivan and the crew in<br />

downtown Glenview.<br />

Have suggestions for a future<br />

Adventures of Glenview entry?<br />

Shoot Denny an email at<br />

dennyhebsonjr@gmail.com.<br />

Uh-oh!<br />

They’re back.<br />

Our BEST ARTISTS (from the<br />

1st grade through the 8th) are at<br />

it again, painting scary windows<br />

around Glenview. So prepare<br />

yourself. Bring a bodyguard.<br />

Then visit these brave chamber<br />

members, who’ve donated their<br />

space.<br />

Baird & Warner<br />

Bentley’s Pet Stuff<br />

Carillon Vision<br />

Care<br />

Chiro One<br />

Caldwell Banker<br />

CrossFit Impact<br />

Curragh Irish Pub<br />

Dance & Music<br />

Academy<br />

Eco Gym<br />

European Wax<br />

Fonseca Martial<br />

Arts<br />

Gerber Collusion<br />

Glenbrook<br />

Remodeling<br />

Glenview Car<br />

Wash<br />

Harley Davidson<br />

Chicago<br />

Heinen’s Grocery<br />

Store<br />

Lifesource<br />

The Chicago<br />

Lighthouse<br />

Mathnasium<br />

Oil Lamp Theater<br />

Orange Theory<br />

Printwell Printing<br />

Pure Barre Glenview<br />

Renewal by<br />

Anderson<br />

Spenga<br />

Sweet Ali’s Gluten<br />

Free Bakery<br />

Ten Ninety Brewery<br />

Thybony<br />

Viccino’s Pizza<br />

@ Properties<br />

And remember our courageous sponsors:<br />

Carillon Vision Care. Glenview Car Wash,<br />

Printwell Printing, House of Wax Day Spa,<br />

@ Properties


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the glenview lantern | October 19, 2017 | 15<br />

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Saturday, October 21 &<br />

Sunday, October 22 · 12 - 4 PM<br />

TEL 847.234.1800 kelmscottpark .COM


16 | October 19, 2017 | The glenview lantern glenview<br />

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glenviewlantern.com sound off<br />

the glenview lantern | October 19, 2017 | 17<br />

Social snapshot<br />

Top Web Stories<br />

From GlenviewLantern.com,<br />

as of Oct. 16.<br />

1. Cancer diagnoses inspires month-long<br />

fundraiser at GBS<br />

2. Athlete of the Week: 10 Questions with<br />

Kate Gregory<br />

3. From The Editor: A nightmare on<br />

Glenview Road<br />

4. Bank robber flees scene, crashes<br />

getaway vehicle on I-294 near Glenview<br />

5. Merlo’s celebrates five years in Highland<br />

Park<br />

Become a member: GlenviewLantern.com/Plus<br />

From The Editor<br />

A nightmare on Glenview Road: Revised<br />

CHRIS PULLAM<br />

chris@glenviewlantern.com<br />

I<br />

underestimated you,<br />

Glenview.<br />

Last week in this<br />

space, I asked residents<br />

for tips on finding the best<br />

Halloween decorations in<br />

town. That, apparently,<br />

was a mistake.<br />

Since then, my email<br />

has been swamped with<br />

ledes. While that sounds<br />

like a good thing, it has<br />

quickly become impossible<br />

for me to actually<br />

visit every household I’ve<br />

been invited to. I’ll still<br />

try my darndest (don’t fret<br />

if I’ve yet to reply to your<br />

email), but I’m going to<br />

need a little bit more help<br />

in order to pull off the<br />

best Halloween coverage<br />

ever — and some of this<br />

coverage might actually<br />

need to involve social media,<br />

since I could fill about<br />

three issues with the ledes<br />

I’ve already received.<br />

So here’s my compromise:<br />

I’ll still drive around<br />

town with a map of all the<br />

locales you’ve pitched,<br />

but I’d also like residents<br />

to start sending me photos<br />

of their own decorations.<br />

Do that, and I’ll make sure<br />

to post them on Facebook<br />

and Twitter right away so<br />

people have a chance to<br />

come check them out inperson<br />

before all the ghosts<br />

and ghouls are replaced<br />

with turkeys and gourds.<br />

I’ll include your address<br />

and a write-up, if you’d<br />

like, but that’s completely<br />

up to you. All I absolutely<br />

need is your last name and<br />

a photo (or a few, since<br />

social media knows no<br />

bounds).<br />

Also, don’t forget about<br />

our annual Great Pumpkin<br />

Contest, where The<br />

Glenview Lantern judges<br />

the best and most creative<br />

autumn art sculpted into<br />

your jack-o’-lanterns.<br />

There is no limit to<br />

what your pumpkin can<br />

be. The only restriction is<br />

that the pumpkin must reside<br />

in Glenview and must<br />

be decorated this year.<br />

To accommodate those<br />

who save pumpkin-carving<br />

festivities for All Hallow’s<br />

Eve, the deadline for the<br />

photos is noon Tuesday,<br />

Nov. 1. You have another<br />

two weeks to buy your<br />

pumpkin, come up with<br />

your creatively creepy composition,<br />

take a picture and<br />

send it in to The Lantern.<br />

Include your first and<br />

last name, as well as a<br />

phone number and address.<br />

The winner will<br />

receive a spooky surprise<br />

from a local retailer<br />

and the creation will be<br />

printed in the Nov. 9 issue<br />

of the newspaper.<br />

Send entries to Editor<br />

Chris Pullam at chris@<br />

GlenviewLantern.com.<br />

Glenbrook South posted this photo of a<br />

student participating in its Geometry in<br />

Construction class.<br />

Like The Glenview Lantern: facebook.com/glenviewlantern<br />

Be sure to stop by @HistoricWF for your<br />

apples, pumpkins and fall decorations!<br />

@HistoricWF tweeted on Oct. 11.<br />

Follow The Glenview Lantern: @glenviewlantern<br />

go figure<br />

10,000<br />

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

Titan Nation raised<br />

more than $10,000<br />

for medical research,<br />

Page 3<br />

nfyn<br />

From Page 10<br />

THE HIGHLAND PARK LANDMARK<br />

Highland Park to consider<br />

country club for new<br />

senior center<br />

Officials from the Park<br />

District of Highland Park<br />

and City sat down for a<br />

joint meeting to discuss<br />

the future of operations at<br />

the country club — which<br />

the City owns and the park<br />

district leases — on Oct.<br />

9 at a committee of the<br />

whole meeting.<br />

“We have now looked<br />

at the country club as an<br />

alternative location for<br />

senior services versus the<br />

library and it is the consensus<br />

— not officially<br />

but it’s the consensus of<br />

this council — that we<br />

are going to continue to<br />

pursue moving senior services<br />

to the country club<br />

building,” Mayor Nancy<br />

Rotering announced. A<br />

report from Williams<br />

Architects regarding the<br />

space and accessibility<br />

needs of the country club<br />

is now expected in late<br />

November.<br />

The future of golf at the<br />

country club, however, is<br />

questionable.<br />

The Park District requested<br />

City approval to<br />

begin planning a $1.5-million<br />

investment into the<br />

land — making it an open<br />

green space with walking<br />

trails and naturalized habitats.<br />

Reporting by Margaret Tazioli,<br />

Freelance Reporter. Full<br />

story at HPLandmark.com.<br />

THE LAKE FOREST LEADER<br />

State school funding<br />

steady for current year,<br />

could change next year<br />

Lake Forest High<br />

School District 115 Chief<br />

Operating Officer Jennifer<br />

Hermes reported State<br />

funding to schools has resumed<br />

and the district is<br />

starting to see payments<br />

during the Lake Forest<br />

High School District 115<br />

Board of Education meeting<br />

on Tuesday, Oct. 10.<br />

“I’m happy to note we<br />

have really started to see<br />

some payments come<br />

through,” she said.<br />

Board Member Sally<br />

Davis expanded on that<br />

with a report from a<br />

school-funding meeting<br />

she attended with State<br />

Senator Dan McConchie<br />

of the 26th Legislative<br />

District and other Illinois<br />

school district representatives.<br />

The Evidence Based<br />

Funding for Student Success<br />

Act was passed on<br />

Aug. 31 with McConchie<br />

as one of the sponsors. It<br />

holds payment amounts<br />

steady to districts for<br />

the current school year.<br />

However, all districts<br />

will be assessed with new<br />

amounts to be assigned in<br />

the spring.<br />

Reporting by Katie Copenhaver,<br />

Freelance Reporter.<br />

Full story at LakeForestLeader.com.<br />

The Glenview<br />

Lantern<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 as<br />

a whole. The Glenview Lantern<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 Glenview Lantern<br />

reserves the right to edit letters.<br />

Letters become property of The<br />

Glenview Lantern. Letters that<br />

are published do not reflect<br />

the thoughts and views of The<br />

Glenview Lantern. Letters can<br />

be mailed to: The Glenview<br />

Lantern, 60 Revere Drive ST<br />

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

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

to chris@glenviewlantern.com.<br />

www.glenviewlantern.com


18 | October 19, 2017 | The glenview lantern glenview<br />

glenviewlantern.com<br />

Join us for a day of<br />

FREE family fun!<br />

OCTOBER 22<br />

10AM – 2PM<br />

BERNARD WEINGER JCC<br />

NORTHBROOK<br />

Experience Marvin Lustbader Center<br />

for Health, Wellness and Fitness.<br />

Tour our preschool program.<br />

Explore the Jewish holidays through food.<br />

Play Gaga with our camp staff.<br />

Enjoy open swim, games,<br />

and so much more!<br />

jccchicago.org/FamilyFunDay<br />

JCC Chicago is a non-profit organization inspired by Jewish values, bridging traditions and generations to create a more vibrant,<br />

connected community. JCC is a partner with the Jewish United Fund in serving our community. ©2017 JCC Chicago CW057s


the glenview lantern | October 19, 2017 | GlenviewLantern.com<br />

Servicing appetites<br />

Winnetka gas station-turnedrestaurant<br />

satisfies appetites, Page 25<br />

Active Aging Expo keeps life moving, Page 21<br />

Main: Christie Reyes dances a traditional hula during 22nd Century Media’s Active Aging Expo Saturday, Oct. 14, at the Hilton Chicago Northbrook. Bottom Left:<br />

Tiffany George (right), of Bellicon Studo, shows attendee Kris Ignatius how to use one of her company’s trampolines. Bottom Middle: More than 200 people attended<br />

the expo. Bottom Right: Shannon Petal, of the Pain Relief Institute, massages an attendee. Photos by Eric DeGrechie/22nd Century Media


20 | October 19, 2017 | The glenview lantern puzzles<br />

glenviewlantern.com<br />

north shore puzzler CROSSWORD & Sudoku<br />

Glencoe, Glenview, Highland Park, Highwood, Northbrook, Wilmette, Kenilworth, Winnetka, Northfield, Lake Forest and Lake Bluff<br />

Crossword by Myles Mellor and Cindy LaFleur<br />

Across<br />

1. Door latch<br />

5. Balloon-bursting<br />

sounds<br />

9. The __ and<br />

Scratchy show<br />

14. Famous office<br />

15. Something in the<br />

air<br />

16. Painful sensation<br />

17. Diving position<br />

18. Recipe directive<br />

19. College bigwigs<br />

20. TV series set in<br />

Winnetka<br />

23. Cartridge contents<br />

24. Caddie’s offering<br />

25. It’s lent for support<br />

27. Tedious<br />

31. Handle clumsily<br />

32. Fox Series “___!<br />

The Cat”<br />

35. Religious scroll<br />

36. For ever<br />

39. Overly concerned<br />

with fine print<br />

40. “Brown-eyed<br />

girl” singer, Morrison<br />

41. Kind of chop<br />

42. Seize on its way<br />

45. West Pointer<br />

46. Society page<br />

word<br />

47. Shakespeare’s<br />

“over there”<br />

48. Dangerous job in<br />

Madrid<br />

49. Animal house<br />

50. Stuffed chicken<br />

52. “To ___ is human<br />

...”<br />

54. Architect of the<br />

Writers Theater<br />

Building in Glencoe<br />

60. Stay clear of<br />

62. Printer ink color<br />

63. Inventor’s need<br />

64. Japanese-American<br />

65. Hindu princess<br />

66. Wild hog<br />

67. Bonnie’s companion<br />

68. Four stringed<br />

instruments<br />

69. Notice<br />

Down<br />

1. A Pueblo people<br />

2. Gung ho<br />

3. “The Open Window”<br />

author<br />

4. Appealed<br />

5. Tart or pie<br />

6. Surpass in performance<br />

7. Protein particle<br />

8. Hindu clothing<br />

9. Common contraction<br />

10. Churchill’s “___<br />

Finest Hour”<br />

11. Ocean Spray’s<br />

___-Apple juice<br />

12. Forewarn<br />

13. You betcha!<br />

21. Almost upon us<br />

22. Floor it<br />

26. Beard on barley<br />

27. Grease spot<br />

28. Metric unit<br />

29. Sermonize<br />

30. Broad valley<br />

31. Cooped (up)<br />

32. Throw off<br />

33. Church official<br />

34. Environmental<br />

treaty<br />

36. Still<br />

37. Keg spigot<br />

38. Door position<br />

43. Kind of flour<br />

44. And, if, or but,<br />

abbr.<br />

45. Shoreline indentation<br />

48. Court contest<br />

49. Removed the<br />

moisture<br />

50. River craft<br />

51. Cockeyed<br />

52. The dark force<br />

53. Optimistic<br />

55. Unbleached linen<br />

color<br />

56. Ridicule<br />

57. Busy activities<br />

58. Lowest tide<br />

59. Indiana city<br />

60. Army Nurse Corp.<br />

(abr.)<br />

61. “Live and Let<br />

___”<br />

<strong>GL</strong>ENVIEW<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 />

■6 ■ p.m. Friday, Oct.<br />

20: Family Night and<br />

Karaoke<br />

■10 ■ a.m. Saturday,<br />

Oct. 21: Piper Phillips<br />

Acoustic<br />

■8 ■ p.m. Saturday, Oct.<br />

21: Kyle Walz<br />

■10 ■ a.m. Sunday, Oct.<br />

22: Owen Hemming<br />

■Noon, ■ Sunday, Oct.<br />

22: Sean Heffernan<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 ■ Nov. 19: ‘Par<br />

for the Corpse’<br />

LAKE BLUFF<br />

Lake Bluff Brewing<br />

Company<br />

(16 E. Scranton Ave.<br />

(224) 544-5179)<br />

■8:30 ■ p.m. Thursday,<br />

Oct. 26: Spooky<br />

Movie Night<br />

NORTHBROOK<br />

Pinstripes<br />

(1150 Willow Road,<br />

(847) 480-2323)<br />

■From ■ open until close<br />

all week: bowling and<br />

bocce<br />

<strong>GL</strong>ENCOE<br />

Writers Theatre<br />

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

242-6000)<br />

■Through ■ Dec. 17:<br />

‘Quixote: On the Conquest<br />

of Self’<br />

WILMETTE<br />

The Rock House<br />

(1150 Central Ave.<br />

(847) 256-7625)<br />

■7 ■ p.m. Thursday, Oct.<br />

19: Comedy Showcase<br />

Night<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


glenviewlantern.com life & arts<br />

the glenview lantern | October 19, 2017 | 21<br />

Active Aging Expo<br />

promotes staying busy<br />

Eric DeGrechie<br />

Managing Editor<br />

Rain can sometimes<br />

bring things to a halt.<br />

While it stormed outside,<br />

the weather couldn’t<br />

dampen the spirits inside<br />

at 22nd Century Media’s<br />

Active Aging Expo Saturday,<br />

Oct. 14, at the Hilton<br />

Chicago Northbrook.<br />

“People seem to be really<br />

engaged this year and<br />

are learning about what<br />

our vendors have to offer,”<br />

said Heather Warthen,<br />

chief events officer<br />

of 22nd Century Media.<br />

“That was great to see.”<br />

The fourth annual expo<br />

offered free admission<br />

to the event and featured<br />

more than 25 vendor<br />

booths, as well as speaker<br />

sessions and free gift bags.<br />

“I actually just found<br />

out about it today. It’s been<br />

very enjoyable,” Pam Nestel,<br />

of Lake Forest, said.<br />

“I’m going to use some the<br />

information now and in the<br />

future.”<br />

The Family Odyssey, a<br />

custom travel agency in<br />

Northfield, was at the expo<br />

for the first time. Owner<br />

Mike Kohler said his company<br />

appeals to older generations.<br />

“We specialize mainly<br />

in trips to Europe and Central<br />

America. It usually<br />

takes a couple weeks to<br />

sit down with the families<br />

and figure out exactly what<br />

they want. We’ll then put it<br />

all together,” Kohler said.<br />

“We get a lot of grandparents<br />

that like to put together<br />

the trips not just for their<br />

kids, but for the grandkids,<br />

especially.”<br />

Lake Forest Hearing,<br />

also making it to the expo<br />

for the first time, opened<br />

its doors in 2012. Founded<br />

by Dr. Lori Halvorson,<br />

the company believes<br />

hearing aids can improve<br />

quality of life and she<br />

was very pleased to meet<br />

so many attendees interested<br />

in her company’s<br />

services.<br />

“We energize ears so<br />

people can mingle with the<br />

ones they love,” Halvorson<br />

said.<br />

There was plenty of mingling<br />

going on throughout<br />

the expo. The bingo room<br />

was a popular destination<br />

as winners cashed in on<br />

a bevy of prizes available<br />

from local businesses.<br />

The Hickory Room was<br />

the spot to go for several<br />

popular stage presentations,<br />

sponsored by The<br />

Alden Network, and even<br />

a how-to hula demonstration.<br />

Halau Hula O Puanani,<br />

based in Chicago,<br />

taught attendees how to<br />

hula. According to dancer<br />

Christine Reyes, the group<br />

had been featured on “The<br />

Steve Harvey Show.”<br />

“You can definitely use<br />

the hula for fitness. In that<br />

respect, it’s good for your<br />

older generation,” Reyes<br />

said. “It’s good for the<br />

mind and fun.”<br />

Award-winning author<br />

Patricia McClure discussed<br />

her book, “Losing a<br />

Hero to Alzheimer’s: The<br />

Story of Pearl.” McClure<br />

has been on a fall book<br />

tour in Chicagoland to<br />

help raise awareness about<br />

the disease while giving<br />

advice from a caregiver’s<br />

perspective.<br />

“We really appreciate<br />

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Active Aging - An Expo<br />

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• A Place For Mom<br />

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• Covenant Village<br />

• Dee-Signed Programs<br />

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• Terry Anderson,<br />

Berkshire Hathaway<br />

Home Services Koenig<br />

Rubloff Realty Group<br />

• The Exercise Coach<br />

in this weather,” Warthen<br />

said. “We really enjoy<br />

doing these for the community<br />

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glenviewlantern.com glenview<br />

the glenview lantern | October 19, 2017 | 23<br />

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24 | October 19, 2017 | The glenview lantern glenview<br />

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glenviewlantern.com dining out<br />

the glenview lantern | October 19, 2017 | 25<br />

Former service station<br />

turns into Winnetka eatery<br />

Jacqueline Glosniak<br />

Contributing Editor<br />

Restaurants are one of<br />

those businesses that can<br />

seemingly pop up anywhere<br />

— inside airports,<br />

within the nooks of gentrifying<br />

neighborhoods or<br />

on the streets with food<br />

trucks.<br />

In Winnetka, one eatery<br />

is taking the dining experience<br />

to a new, unique level<br />

— opening up in the spot<br />

of a former car-service station.<br />

Fred’s Garage, located<br />

in the heart of Winnetka<br />

at 574 Green Bay Road,<br />

opened its doors Sept. 28<br />

after more than a year of<br />

planning and preparations.<br />

For 42 years, the site was<br />

home to Fred’s Mobil service<br />

station, servicing vehicles<br />

for Winnetkans and<br />

hundreds of others across<br />

the North Shore. The station<br />

owner, Fred Majewski,<br />

died in January of 2015<br />

at age 73.<br />

Now, instead of gas,<br />

locals are guzzling down<br />

local craft beers and<br />

American comfort foods at<br />

Fred’s.<br />

The restaurant was the<br />

concept of Kenilworth<br />

resident Alfred Stepan,<br />

who purchased the land<br />

in March of 2016 and envisioned<br />

a repurposing of<br />

the former service station.<br />

Renovation of the grounds<br />

included gutting the building,<br />

removing underground<br />

tanks and adding a<br />

900-square-foot addition,<br />

all while including two<br />

functional garage doors<br />

for open-air dining and an<br />

outdoor patio space reminiscent<br />

of a gas-station<br />

canopy.<br />

When our editorial team<br />

visited Fred’s, we began<br />

The griddle burger ($15) at Fred’s Garage features a<br />

juicy double-beef patty with melted American cheese,<br />

lettuce, tomato, onion and remoulade sauce. MICHAEL<br />

WOJTYCHIW/22ND CENTURY MEDIA<br />

with starters Hokey Poke<br />

($14) and pork meatballs<br />

($10). The Hokey<br />

Poke features tuna with<br />

sweet soy sauce, radishes,<br />

compressed cucumbers,<br />

avocado, pickled Fresno<br />

chiles, puffed forbidden<br />

rice and wontons served<br />

with homemade tortilla<br />

chips. The pork meatballs<br />

includes a generous helping<br />

of three pork meatballs<br />

drenched with Pantesco<br />

sauce, homemade giardiniera,<br />

shaved Parmesan<br />

and a side of crispy baguettes.<br />

Next up was the hearty<br />

garbage salad ($14) with<br />

lettuce, capicola, crispy<br />

salami croutons, Kalamata<br />

olives, cherry tomatoes,<br />

shaved onion, pickled banana<br />

peppers, green beans,<br />

shaved Parmesan and havarti<br />

tossed in a herb vinaigrette<br />

dressing. The salad<br />

could be a filling meal on<br />

its own.<br />

The griddle burger ($15)<br />

features a juicy double<br />

beef patty with melted<br />

American cheese, lettuce,<br />

tomato, onion, remoulade<br />

sauce and a pickle all atop<br />

a brioche bun and served<br />

with hand-cut, lightly salted<br />

fries.<br />

Finally, we tried the<br />

Fred’s Garage<br />

574 Green Bay Road,<br />

Winnetka<br />

(847) 496-3733<br />

fredswinnetka.com<br />

4:30-11 p.m. Monday-<br />

Thursday<br />

4:30 p.m.-midnight<br />

Friday-Saturday<br />

4:30-9 p.m. Sunday<br />

meatloaf ($20) and the<br />

fried chicken and biscuits<br />

($20). The meatloaf<br />

features two helpings of<br />

bacon-wrapped beef with<br />

wasabi potato puree, oyster<br />

mushrooms and glazed<br />

vegetables. The fried<br />

chicken and biscuits was a<br />

filling plate of half a chicken<br />

with chorizo gravy burn<br />

honey drizzle — that marinates<br />

for two days — and<br />

buttermilk biscuits.<br />

While Fred’s is only<br />

serving dinner for now as<br />

it works on getting off the<br />

ground running, the leadership<br />

team remains excited<br />

for what the future holds.<br />

“On the culinary end, I<br />

just hope that we can please<br />

people and give them what<br />

they want,” Luth said.<br />

“I’m glad we’re open,”<br />

Gale said. “We’ve had a<br />

great few couple of weeks.<br />

I think it’s a great space.”<br />

EMERALD


26 | October 19, 2017 | The glenview lantern real estate<br />

glenviewlantern.com<br />

sponsored content<br />

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Aug. 8<br />

• 3832 Glenview Road, Glenview,<br />

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Hoffmeister, $470,000<br />

Aug. 2<br />

• 1129 Golfview Road, Glenview,<br />

60025-3169 - Thomas E. Bentel<br />

to Evan A. Clark, Robyn C. Clark,<br />

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• 1619 Marie Lane, Glenview,<br />

60025-1244 - Devon Bank trustee<br />

to Bill G. Tziavaras, Dionaura E.<br />

Tziavaras, $514,000<br />

• 211 Elm St., Glenview,<br />

60025-4908 - Heidi M. Rauh<br />

to Tony Kochuparambil, Deirdre<br />

Kochuparambil, $1,040,000<br />

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• 1805 Wildberry Drive D,<br />

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Trust to Anne Spiteri, $565,000<br />

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Mcelvania Tekippe, $660,000<br />

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60025-2760 - John J. Decosmo to<br />

Sean Darke, Kelly Darke, $640,000<br />

• 3930 Chester Drive, Glenview,<br />

60026-1045 - Susana Avakyan<br />

to Joseph J. Falzone Jr., Christina<br />

Falzone, $613,500<br />

July 28<br />

• 1659 Winnetka Road, Glenview,<br />

60025-1823 - Pbg Properties LLC to<br />

Allen Chen, Jia Hui Wong, $354,500<br />

• 2001 Ammer Ridge Court 101,<br />

Glenview, 60025-1874 - Hek<br />

Properties LLC-2001 to Elizabeth M.<br />

Rolander, $245,000<br />

• 2626 W Lake Ave., Glenview,<br />

60026-8038 - Suk Jin Yoon to Anna K.<br />

Dabrowska, Nazar Suschko, $652,500<br />

• 306 Rollwind Road, Glenview,<br />

60025-5141 - Gayle D. Price trustee<br />

to Erin Lamba, Nathan Lamba,<br />

$640,000<br />

• 3195 Coral Lane, Glenview,<br />

60026-6802 - Thomas Buhrmann to<br />

Julia Y. Kim, $475,000<br />

• 605 Waukegan Road 2h, Glenview,<br />

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An additional room currently used as<br />

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Asking price: $674,000<br />

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To see your home featured as Home<br />

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the glenview lantern | October 19, 2017 | 27<br />

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glenviewlantern.com sports<br />

the glenview lantern | October 19, 2017 | 29<br />

Athlete of the Week<br />

10 Questions<br />

with Maggie Hines<br />

The Loyola senior is the<br />

lone senior on the varsity<br />

girls tennis team this year.<br />

What’s one item on<br />

your bucket list?<br />

I’ve always wanted to<br />

go to Australia. I feel like<br />

it’d be really cool to see<br />

the Great Barrier Reef. It’d<br />

be a really cool vacation.<br />

If you could go<br />

anywhere, where<br />

would it be?<br />

Along with Australia,<br />

Fiji.<br />

What’s the best part<br />

about playing tennis?<br />

I really love being on a<br />

team. I’ve really bonded<br />

with the girls and some of<br />

them are my best friends.<br />

Especially playing doubles.<br />

I really like the team<br />

aspect.<br />

What’s the hardest<br />

part about playing<br />

tennis?<br />

When I’m playing singles,<br />

it’s all you out there.<br />

You have to rely on yourself<br />

only.<br />

If you could play<br />

another sport, what<br />

would it be and why?<br />

Volleyball. I used to<br />

play it in grade school and<br />

it was a lot of fun. I don’t<br />

really like contact sports.<br />

If you were on a<br />

deserted island, what<br />

or who would you<br />

bring with you?<br />

I would bring some<br />

books and things to do, because<br />

I really love reading.<br />

I’d bring some of my best<br />

friends to keep me company<br />

because they always<br />

make me laugh and have<br />

fun.<br />

What’s one thing<br />

people don’t know<br />

about you?<br />

I’m a lefty. It’s pretty<br />

unique and helpful with<br />

tennis. Also, I’m a really<br />

big cat person. I have two<br />

cats and I just really like<br />

cats.<br />

What’s the best part<br />

about being a Loyola<br />

athlete?<br />

I feel like the Loyola<br />

community is really supportive.<br />

They really support<br />

the athletes. Like last<br />

week, we had a big prep<br />

rally and all the captains<br />

of the sports got to run<br />

22nd Century Media File Photo<br />

out and the whole school<br />

cheered for us and that was<br />

a blast. Every day on the<br />

announcements, they announce<br />

the teams that won<br />

and the matches won. The<br />

community supports athletes<br />

and it’s really great to<br />

have that.<br />

If you had one<br />

superpower, what<br />

would it be?<br />

Telekinesis. It’d be cool<br />

to move stuff with my<br />

mind and then I could be<br />

super lazy and stay in bed<br />

or the couch and be able to<br />

move things or grab things<br />

without having to get up.<br />

What’s your favorite<br />

restaurant on the<br />

North Shore?<br />

I really love Cozy Noodles<br />

in downtown Evanston.<br />

I always get the crazy<br />

noodles with chicken.<br />

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30 | October 19, 2017 | The glenview lantern sports<br />

glenviewlantern.com<br />

Junior Titans Corner<br />

Flyweights post first<br />

shutout for fourth win<br />

Coach Talk<br />

Pressure moments<br />

Staff report<br />

Here are the summaries<br />

of the five levels of Jr. Titans<br />

games in Week 5.<br />

Bantamweight: Evanston<br />

32, Jr. Titans 6<br />

The Jr. Titans were defeated<br />

32-6 by Evanston.<br />

Glenview’s only score<br />

came on a 40-yard fumble<br />

recovery by Miles Canning.<br />

The Jr. Titans were<br />

able to move the ball offensively<br />

but weren’t able<br />

to capitalize and put it in<br />

the end zone. Quarterback<br />

Quinn Conway did an impressive<br />

job of running<br />

the two-minute drill in the<br />

fourth quarter, resulting<br />

in a couple completions<br />

for first downs, as well as<br />

scrambling for another.<br />

Jake Shellenbarger also<br />

pitched in on the drive<br />

with impressive runs up<br />

the middle. During one<br />

play, he dragged defenders<br />

for a first down to keep the<br />

drive alive.<br />

Flyweight: Jr. Titans 26,<br />

Vernon Hills 0<br />

The Jr. Titans improved<br />

their record to 4-1 with a<br />

win over the Vernon Hills<br />

Cougars. Drew MacPherson<br />

scored on the opening<br />

kickoff and followed<br />

that up with a pick-six on<br />

the Cougars’ first possession.<br />

With the two quick<br />

scores, the Jr. Titans didn’t<br />

look back on their way to<br />

a convincing 26-0 victory.<br />

The Jr. Titan offensive line<br />

of Zach Oldham, Ragnor<br />

Kaage, Daniel Kornfeld<br />

and Daniel Mirza provided<br />

QB Brady Ondrula with<br />

enough time to complete<br />

passes to a variety of receivers,<br />

including Owen<br />

Lewis, Landon Hooten<br />

and Tyrone Cotton. Ondrula<br />

threw touchdowns<br />

to Luke Gorski and Louis<br />

Schreiber. Vernon Hills<br />

didn’t fare much better<br />

against a very tough Jr. Titan<br />

defense. Alex Herlitz,<br />

Parker Gates and Teddy<br />

Sobecks each tackled Cougar<br />

runners behind the line<br />

of scrimmage and safety<br />

Emmit Cozad led a tenacious<br />

Jr. Titan secondary<br />

that prevented the Cougars<br />

from completing a pass the<br />

entire afternoon.<br />

Middleweight: Northbrook<br />

19, Jr. Titans 13<br />

The Jr. Titans played<br />

Northbrook again, but<br />

could not avenge last<br />

week’s loss. The offensive<br />

line, consisting of Patrick<br />

Benedict, Ryan Peters,<br />

Jake Rueckert, Will Carlson<br />

and Christian Tirado,<br />

fought hard to provide<br />

blocks for running backs<br />

Preston Shute and Dom<br />

Rejkiewicz and fullbacks<br />

Gavin Reis and Dennis<br />

Poulopoulos, but they<br />

could not put the ball in the<br />

end zone. The highlight of<br />

the game was a 95-yard<br />

punt return for a touchdown<br />

by Daniel DeVine.<br />

The game went into double<br />

overtime and the Jr. Titans<br />

scored via a recovered<br />

fumble in the end zone by<br />

Patrick Benedict. Linebackers<br />

Jack Bauer and<br />

Nate Canning and tackle<br />

Davis Gapp held Northbrook’s<br />

offense in check,<br />

but in the end the Jr. Titans<br />

were scarred by multiple<br />

penalties that ultimately<br />

cost them the game in the<br />

double OT 19-13 thriller.<br />

Lightweight: Evanston 18,<br />

Jr. Titans 0<br />

The Jr. Titans lost a<br />

tough game to the Evanston<br />

Wildkits with a final<br />

score of 18-0.<br />

Heavyweight: Jr. Titans<br />

38, Northbrook 0<br />

On the second play of<br />

the game, the Jr. Titans<br />

jumped out to an 8–0 lead<br />

when QB James Sherman<br />

hit Will Collins on a 20-<br />

yard TD pass. From there,<br />

the offensive line took<br />

control. Offensive linemen<br />

Ben Shellenbarger (Player<br />

of the Week), Tom Corbett,<br />

Alex Knezivich, Mazeed<br />

Soyege, Ryan Cunningham,<br />

Ryan Taylor and<br />

Henry Hutchings paved the<br />

way for touchdown runs by<br />

Jack Downing, Matt Burda,<br />

Griffin Dahiya and Patrick<br />

Downing.<br />

On the other side of the<br />

ball, the defense pitched<br />

its first shut out of the year.<br />

Nic Swanson led the way<br />

with multiple tackles. Also<br />

contributing were Dahiya,<br />

Carmelo Livatino, Corbett,<br />

Burda, Jamison Eigel,<br />

Danny Leibrandt and Alex<br />

Gates. Everyone contributed<br />

in the 38-0 shutout.<br />

visit us online at <strong>GL</strong>ENVIEWLANTERN.com<br />

Jon ‘Coach’ Cohn<br />

Contributing Columnist<br />

Glenview Resident<br />

at the season’s end<br />

Over the next couple<br />

weeks, many of<br />

our local high<br />

school athletes will compete<br />

in playoff competition.<br />

It’s the culmination<br />

of a long season and all the<br />

hard work that has been<br />

put in. In almost all instances,<br />

the games and the<br />

matches are one and done,<br />

meaning one loss and the<br />

season is over.<br />

This creates pressure of<br />

the greatest variety, knowing<br />

that one slip or failed<br />

execution could be fatal to<br />

the team’s chances of advancing.<br />

It’s these pressure<br />

moments that often make<br />

sports so compelling.<br />

In today’s column, we<br />

take a look at some of<br />

the most pressure-packed<br />

moments. For purposes of<br />

brevity, we’ll stick to just<br />

the currently ongoing fall<br />

sports.<br />

• Girls tennis: It’s the<br />

final point. You’re on the<br />

brink of elimination but<br />

you miss your first serve.<br />

Now, on your final serve,<br />

the usually routine motion<br />

suddenly becomes<br />

anything but. It’s the state<br />

tournament. If you miss,<br />

the match and season are<br />

over. That’s fingernailbiting<br />

pressure, no doubt.<br />

• Soccer: You know<br />

where we have to go for<br />

soccer’s most pressurepacked<br />

moments, right?<br />

The overtime shootout.<br />

Both teams have played<br />

to a tie through regulation<br />

and overtime. Now<br />

it’s down to a five-player<br />

shootout to determine<br />

which team moves on<br />

and which team ends its<br />

season. The shooter is<br />

expected to score. The<br />

pressure is on him more<br />

than the goalie. You’re<br />

standing out their all<br />

by your lonesome, with<br />

your teammates watching<br />

intensely from the center<br />

line. You miss? Game<br />

and season over. That, my<br />

friends, is the very definition<br />

of pressure.<br />

• Swimming: It’s the<br />

state-qualifier in the<br />

100-meter sprint race. The<br />

start is all important. The<br />

moment on the starting<br />

block between “set” and<br />

the gun? It lasts just a few<br />

moments, but the intensity<br />

is palatable. You can feel it<br />

through the silence of the<br />

pool. If you dive too early,<br />

you’re disqualified. If you<br />

get off too late, it’s hard<br />

to catch up during such a<br />

short race. Hushed silence<br />

deliciously ferments the<br />

moment. You can almost<br />

taste the tension.<br />

• Football: How about<br />

an extra point or field<br />

goal at the end to win it.<br />

The long, bruising playoff<br />

game comes down to one<br />

kick. The entire crowd is<br />

watching intently. There’s<br />

pressure on the kicker,<br />

no doubt, but I think the<br />

greatest pressure is on<br />

the long-snapper and<br />

the holder. They have to<br />

execute perfectly. One slip<br />

up and season is over. For<br />

high school athletes that<br />

long snap and hold, it’s<br />

far from automatic, but<br />

here it must be performed<br />

precisely under the greatest<br />

of pressure.<br />

• Golf: After two long<br />

days on the course, it<br />

comes down to one final<br />

putt to get your team or<br />

yourself downstate. It’s<br />

the culmination of your<br />

dream. All is quiet as<br />

you stand over a 12-foot<br />

putt. All eyes watching.<br />

It’s just you, your putter,<br />

a little white ball and a<br />

hole that suddenly seems<br />

even smaller than usual.<br />

Just take a deep breath,<br />

concentrate and try not to<br />

get the yips as you start to<br />

swing. Now that’s pressure<br />

personified.<br />

The above, folks, are<br />

just a few examples of<br />

what can happen under the<br />

scrutiny of high-schoolstate-tournament,<br />

do-or-die<br />

competition.<br />

In the coming days, let’s<br />

get out and cheer on our<br />

young athletes in their final<br />

moments. Hopefully —<br />

win, lose or draw — we<br />

can all appreciate the great<br />

stress under which they<br />

perform.<br />

Cohn has a new book published<br />

called “Stuff People<br />

Might Want To Know,” available<br />

at Amazon.com or any<br />

local bookstores. He can be<br />

reached at jcsportsandtees@<br />

aol.com.


glenviewlantern.com sports<br />

the glenview lantern | October 19, 2017 | 31<br />

Girls Tennis<br />

Vaisanen, Fradin, Oldham advance to state tourney<br />

Neil Milbert<br />

Freelance Reporter<br />

Nine teams were represented<br />

in the sectional<br />

that began on Friday, Oct.<br />

13, at Glenbrook North,<br />

but torrential rain forced<br />

a change in venue to the<br />

nearby Glenbrook Racquet<br />

Club for the indoor conclusion<br />

of the tournament<br />

on Saturday, Oct. 14.<br />

Deerfield won the<br />

team competition with 29<br />

points, followed by GBN<br />

with 24 and Glenbrook<br />

South with 20. The first-,<br />

second-, third- and fourthplace<br />

finishers in singles<br />

and doubles advanced to<br />

the state tournament.<br />

For the Titans, that included<br />

one singles players<br />

and one doubles team.<br />

GBS sophomore Vanessa<br />

Vaisanen, the No. 4<br />

seed in singles, dominated<br />

the court during the early<br />

phases of the tournament,<br />

downing Maine West junior<br />

Diane Nguyen 6-0,<br />

6-0 in the second round<br />

and Fenton senior Julia<br />

Gainski 6-3, 6-1 in the<br />

quarterfinals. Then she met<br />

No. 2-seeded GBN junior<br />

Grace Chatas, who made it<br />

to the state tournament her<br />

freshman year but failed to<br />

qualify as a sophomore, in<br />

the semifinal.<br />

Chatas defeated Vaisanen<br />

6-4, 6-0 en route to<br />

a second-place finish.<br />

“Every time I get to<br />

play someone who is [as]<br />

talented [as Vaisanen] it’s<br />

a good opportunity to improve,”<br />

Chatas said. “She<br />

had me running and I had<br />

her running.”<br />

After losing to Chatas,<br />

Vaisanen was defeated<br />

by No. 3-seeded Maine<br />

West junior Maja Kozerski<br />

6-4, 6-2 in the third-place<br />

match.<br />

“It was her third match<br />

of the day,” said GBS<br />

coach Stephanie Mats.<br />

“She was tired.”<br />

The Titans also had their<br />

fourth-place doubles team<br />

of junior Jamie Fradin and<br />

senior Kendall Oldham<br />

earn the right to move on<br />

to the state tournament.<br />

Playing as the No.<br />

6 seed, they gave No.<br />

2-seeded Deerfield seniors<br />

Jamie Jones and Danielle<br />

Hulsey some stiff competition<br />

in the semifinals<br />

before losing 6-2, 5-7,<br />

7-5. They then defaulted<br />

to No. 5-seeded Deerfield<br />

seniors Maddie Ofner and<br />

Molly Krugman in the<br />

third-place match because<br />

Fradin became ill after the<br />

semifinal.<br />

“I think she was dehydrated<br />

and it was very,<br />

very tough on her,” Mats<br />

said. “The important thing<br />

is she made it to state and<br />

now it’s important that<br />

she’s healthy for state.”<br />

Fradin and Oldham<br />

reached the state tournament<br />

by blanking Addison<br />

Glenbrook South sophomore Vanessa Vaisanen<br />

competes in the Glenbrook North Sectional on<br />

Saturday, Oct. 14, at Glenbrook Racquet Club. Sarah<br />

Haider/ 22nd Century Media<br />

Trail seniors Angela Addante<br />

and Destiny Reyes<br />

6-0, 6-0 in the second<br />

round and defeating GBN<br />

senior Melissa Goldin and<br />

sophomore Lara Pick 2-6,<br />

6-1, 6-2 in the quarterfinals.<br />

Football<br />

Titans fall to 5-3 with homecoming game on horizon<br />

Neil Milbert<br />

Freelance Reporter<br />

Glenbrook South traveled<br />

to Evanston on Friday,<br />

Oct. 13, to meet a<br />

football team fighting to<br />

stay in the hunt for the<br />

playoffs.<br />

When the Titans left<br />

Evanston, both teams<br />

were in the same position<br />

with an at-large bid.<br />

As a result of the Wildkits’<br />

45-20 victory, both<br />

teams have 5-3 overall<br />

records and 2-2 composites<br />

in the Central Suburban<br />

League’s South Division.<br />

Both teams will<br />

need to win a sixth game<br />

to guarantee a spot in the<br />

playoffs, but both will<br />

most likely qualify with<br />

five wins based on their<br />

strength of schedules.<br />

GBS will be at home<br />

against New Trier (5-3,<br />

3-1) while Evanston will<br />

play host to Niles North<br />

(2-6, 0-4) to end the season.<br />

“We had to win this<br />

game,” said quarterback<br />

Drew Dawkins after the<br />

Wildkits regrouped following<br />

back-to-back losses<br />

to defending 8A state<br />

champion Maine South<br />

(56-14) and New Trier<br />

(27-17). “We have to win<br />

out so we can make the<br />

playoffs.”<br />

If the Wildkits continue<br />

playing the way they did<br />

against the Titans, they<br />

could create some havoc<br />

in the playoffs.<br />

“They’ve got a lot of<br />

skill players that’s for<br />

sure,” GBS coach Dave<br />

Schoenwetter said after<br />

his team lost its secondstraight<br />

game for the first<br />

time this season. “The difference<br />

was a lot of big<br />

plays on their side and not<br />

a lot on our side.”<br />

Dawkins and junior<br />

running back/defensive<br />

back Malik Ross repeatedly<br />

made big plays.<br />

Dawkins teamed with<br />

Ross on touchdown pass<br />

plays covering 55 and 48<br />

yards, and threw 14 yards<br />

to Michael Axelrood for<br />

another TD. In addition,<br />

he went on touchdown<br />

runs of 80 and 13 yards.<br />

The other Evanston touchdown<br />

came on sophomore<br />

star Qunadre Nicholson’s<br />

38-yard run.<br />

Ross also made a huge<br />

impact on defense by intercepting<br />

two passes<br />

within less than a minute<br />

in the second quarter and<br />

picking off another in the<br />

fourth quarter. The first<br />

and third interceptions<br />

prefaced the touchdown<br />

runs by Dawkins and<br />

the second led to Charlie<br />

Lindland’s 34-yard field<br />

goal.<br />

“We wanted to score<br />

quickly, which we did,”<br />

Ross said.<br />

In surging to a 31-6<br />

first half lead, the Wildkits<br />

hit GBS with touchdowns<br />

on their first four<br />

possessions and the field<br />

goal came on their fifth<br />

possession.<br />

Ben Hides scored for<br />

the Titans on a 7-yard run<br />

in the first quarter and on<br />

a 37-yard pass from Jeff<br />

Chrones in the fourth<br />

quarter. Their other touchdown<br />

came in the third<br />

quarter on a 2-yard run<br />

by Saontae Garner, who<br />

was their most effective<br />

rusher.<br />

“I think I was a little<br />

hesitant in the first quarter,”<br />

Garner said. “I need<br />

to focus on having a better<br />

first half in our next game,<br />

which is so crucial.”<br />

This was the second<br />

time this season that<br />

Hides tallied two TDs. He<br />

also had a pair in the victory<br />

over Niles North.<br />

“Last year I was a backup<br />

and didn’t get a lot of<br />

experience,” the senior<br />

said. “I worked really<br />

hard in the offseason.”<br />

Last year by this time,<br />

South’s playoff hopes<br />

were long gone.<br />

“It has been a big turnaround<br />

from last year<br />

when we were 1-8 — this<br />

year starting out 5-1,”<br />

Chrones said. “Tonight it<br />

took a turn for the worse.<br />

We’ll have to rebound<br />

against New Trier.”<br />

In Schoenwetter’s opinion,<br />

inability to generate<br />

a consistent ground<br />

attack was the biggest<br />

problem.<br />

“We’ve got three guys<br />

who can run the ball (Garner,<br />

Hides and Jack Jerfita),”<br />

he said. “I thought our<br />

offensive line did a decent<br />

job, but we didn’t get our<br />

run game going the way<br />

we needed to. We’ve got to<br />

keep moving the chains.<br />

“We’ve taken a step<br />

forward from last year.<br />

Teams like this, we want<br />

to be able to compete<br />

with. Tonight we didn’t. It<br />

gives us another sense of<br />

what we need to do.”


32 | October 19, 2017 | The glenview lantern Glenview<br />

glenviewlantern.com<br />

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glenviewlantern.com sports<br />

the glenview lantern | October 19, 2017 | 33<br />

Girls Golf<br />

Boys Golf<br />

Grier fights back on second<br />

day to tie for 14th at state<br />

Glenbrook South freshman Maria Perakis competes during the IHSA State<br />

Tournament on Saturday, Oct. 14, in Forsyth. Douglas Cottle/Photo News<br />

Freshman Perakis steals<br />

show at state tourney<br />

Chris Pullam, Editor<br />

Going into the 2017 season,<br />

Glenbrook South senior Sophia<br />

Lau and junior Hanna Tanaka<br />

seemed poised to dominate at the<br />

state tournament after finishing<br />

19th and 35th, respectively, the<br />

previous fall. GBS freshman Maria<br />

Perakis who stole the show Friday-Saturday,<br />

Oct. 13-14, at Hickory<br />

Point Golf Course in Forsyth.<br />

Perakis ended the weekend in a<br />

four-way tie for 19th with a 152.<br />

Tanaka shot a 155 (30th) and Lau<br />

shot a 164 (61st).<br />

Perakis shot a 74, good for a<br />

piece of eighth place, on the first<br />

day but fell a few slots after finishing<br />

the second day with a 78. Lau<br />

also slipped a little on the second<br />

day, carding an 81 followed by an<br />

83.<br />

Tanaka, however, trended upward<br />

throughout the tournament,<br />

carding an 80 on Day 1 and a 75<br />

on Day 2.<br />

The threesome led the Titans,<br />

who qualified as a team for the<br />

state tournament, throughout the<br />

postseason. GBS finished third<br />

at the Glenbrook North Regional<br />

on Oct. 4 at Sportsman’s Country<br />

Club thanks, in large part, to Perakis’<br />

77 (tied for third), Lau’s 78 and<br />

Tanaka’s 80. The next week, on<br />

Oct. 9, Tanaka led the Titans during<br />

the sectional with a 71 while<br />

Perakis and Lau finished with a 75<br />

and 78, respectively.<br />

Three other golfers — sophomore<br />

Ysabella Arrojo, freshman Olivia<br />

DeMattia and junior Katherine<br />

— rounded out the playoff contingent.<br />

Only Lau will graduate from<br />

the program at the end of the year.<br />

Michal Dwojak, Assistant Editor<br />

Jack Grier didn’t waver<br />

when faced with adversity.<br />

The Glenbrook South golfer<br />

was what his head coach considered<br />

to be his most consistent<br />

player all season, and when<br />

the senior faced adversity after<br />

his first round at the IHSA state<br />

tournament, he fought back to<br />

finish tied 14th, leading to a<br />

moment head coach Stephen<br />

Gale could only admire.<br />

“It’s exciting to just get to<br />

the state tournament, it’s a treat<br />

to be there with the best golfers<br />

in the state,” Gale said. “It<br />

was really rewarding to see an<br />

18-year-old make judgements<br />

like that, to develop and blossom<br />

like that.”<br />

Grier’s performance started<br />

off strong when he finished<br />

with a plus-1 score after going<br />

through the first in, which<br />

was the back nine. But the senior<br />

struggled in his next nine<br />

when he got on the “bogey<br />

train” as Gale called it and finished<br />

plus-6 to finish with a<br />

first day score of 79, which tied<br />

him for 44th in the tournament.<br />

The comeback began on the<br />

second day when he parred on<br />

his first nine — the back nine<br />

again — before he birdied three<br />

times and after he had two eagle<br />

opportunities that ended with<br />

birdies. Grier finished with a<br />

second-day score of 70 — tied<br />

for third-best on the day — and<br />

a total score of 149 to finish the<br />

comeback.<br />

“It was very impressive, he<br />

had a great round,” Gale said.<br />

“I really liked the way that he<br />

rallied.”<br />

Grier’s performance wasn’t<br />

surprsing for the head coach,<br />

though. The GBS golf program<br />

has a competitive system<br />

where each golfer must earn his<br />

place at golf tournaments with<br />

Glenbrook South’s Jack Grier chips the ball during the IHSA<br />

State Tournament on Saturday, Oct. 14, in Bloomington. CLARK<br />

BROOKS/PHOTONEWS MEDIA<br />

strong practices. According to<br />

Gale, Grier competed in every<br />

tournament during the season<br />

and always showed the determination<br />

necessary to compete<br />

at the highest level, which led<br />

to such a strong performance at<br />

the state tournament.<br />

“You could always count on<br />

Jack,” Gale said. “He really led<br />

by what he was doing. He really<br />

helped bring his teammates<br />

together because of that.”<br />

The senior qualified for the<br />

state tournament after being one<br />

of three Titans to qualify for sectionals.<br />

Junior Jack Upperman<br />

and sophomore Aaron Chong<br />

both qualified for sectionals after<br />

a strong performance, but<br />

failed to make the final cut.<br />

GBS failed to return to the<br />

state tournament after an appearance<br />

last season. The Titans<br />

failed to qualify after a<br />

difficult regional where the<br />

team had to compete against<br />

area rivals Loyola and Glenbrook<br />

North, which according<br />

to Gale is one of the strongest<br />

areas of golf in the state.<br />

Although the team didn’t<br />

reach its goal of advancing<br />

past the regional, Gale is proud<br />

of what his team accomplished<br />

this season and what’s next for<br />

his Titans team.<br />

“We had a fairly successful<br />

season,” Gale said. “It’s a really<br />

competitive area in the state<br />

for golf. You have to be on top<br />

of your game to advance. Good<br />

year, great kids and very competitive<br />

all season.”


34 | October 19, 2017 | The glenview lantern sports<br />

glenviewlantern.com<br />

Loyola clinches conference title with win<br />

Chris Walker<br />

Freelance Reporter<br />

Having won 10 state<br />

championships, one<br />

wouldn’t think that there<br />

would be a team out there<br />

that has owned Providence.<br />

But, then there’s<br />

Loyola.<br />

The Ramblers continued<br />

their dominance over<br />

the Celtics on Friday<br />

night in New Lenox, beating<br />

them for the eighth<br />

consecutive year, 28-3,<br />

and in doing so guaranteeing<br />

at least a share<br />

of the Chicago Catholic<br />

Blue title.<br />

Providence (5-3, 2-1)<br />

hasn’t beaten Loyola<br />

since a 10-3 victory in<br />

2009. Since that game,<br />

they’ve been outscored by<br />

the Ramblers, 233-74.<br />

It took a little while for<br />

Loyola’s offense to kick<br />

into gear on Friday, but<br />

once they started clicking<br />

the Ramblers were able to<br />

pretty much put away the<br />

Celtics by halftime.<br />

Hamid Bullie’s 1-yard<br />

run with 3:50 left in the<br />

first quarter gave the<br />

Ramblers a 7-0 lead.<br />

The Celtics lit up the<br />

scoreboard for the first<br />

and only time of the night<br />

on Eduardo Favela’s 46-<br />

yard field goal just 11<br />

seconds into the second<br />

quarter.<br />

That field goal may<br />

have closed Providence’s<br />

deficit but the Ramblers<br />

closed the first half with<br />

three touchdowns to turn a<br />

7-3 game into a 28-3 one.<br />

Loyola quarterback<br />

Quinn Boyle (13 for 22,<br />

255 yards, 3 TDs) and<br />

wide receiver Rory Boos<br />

gave the Providence secondary<br />

all sorts of trouble.<br />

The duo connected on a<br />

52-yard touchdown pass<br />

and a 66-yard touchdown<br />

pass on consecutive plays<br />

late in the second quarter.<br />

The Ramblers then<br />

closed the half with 28<br />

seconds left when Boyle<br />

found Noah Jones for<br />

a 10-yard touchdown<br />

pass, which seemingly<br />

drained any hopes Providence<br />

had in upsetting the<br />

Ramblers.<br />

“They’re too good of<br />

a team to give them big<br />

plays and easy touchdowns,”<br />

Providence coach<br />

Mark Coglianese said.<br />

“When you hit big pass<br />

plays like that, it makes<br />

life a lot easier. Our big<br />

concern was their quarterback<br />

and his scrambling<br />

ability. We pretty much<br />

stopped that, but they took<br />

advantage of the long pass<br />

opportunities.”<br />

Boos continues to impress<br />

this fall and gives<br />

a loaded Loyola team yet<br />

another offensive weapon.<br />

“He’s got lateral quickness<br />

and acceleration,”<br />

Loyola coach John Holecek.<br />

“He’s long. He’s a<br />

special athlete. I just wish<br />

we could put some weight<br />

on him.”<br />

While Jones has slowly<br />

come back from an injury,<br />

he looks to be back, and<br />

along with Boos, and a<br />

potent rushing game, the<br />

Ramblers look destined<br />

for another deep playoff<br />

run and perhaps a state<br />

title.<br />

“We get two of those<br />

guys who can break defenses<br />

down deep,” Holecek<br />

said. “It’s going to<br />

cause some problems for<br />

opposing defenses. (Boos)<br />

is speedy fast and Noah<br />

Jones, who we’re getting<br />

back, can do exactly the<br />

same thing.”<br />

Loyola’s Quinn Boyle tries to evade two Providence defenders Friday, Oct. 13, in New Lenox. photos by Adam<br />

Jomant/22nd Century Media<br />

And they’re the latest<br />

to punish the Celtics who<br />

saw their five-game winning<br />

streak snapped.<br />

“Loyola is a great team<br />

like always and we have<br />

to learn from this,” Coglianese<br />

said. “We have a big<br />

one with Mount Carmel at<br />

Gately next week and our<br />

main goals are still intact.”<br />

De’Shon Gavin led the<br />

Celtics with 96 yards on<br />

15 carries while quarterback<br />

Caden Kalinowski<br />

was constantly under<br />

pressure and completed<br />

only 6 of 16 passes for 60<br />

yards while getting picked<br />

off twice.<br />

Loyola concludes the<br />

regular season next Saturday<br />

as a struggling Brother<br />

Rice (2-6) team comes<br />

to Wilmette.<br />

Rory Boos runs with the football.


glenviewlantern.com sports<br />

the glenview lantern | October 19, 2017 | 35<br />

22nd century media file photo<br />

1st-and-3<br />

STARS OF THE WEEK<br />

1. Ben Hides (above).<br />

The GBS running<br />

back scored two<br />

touchdowns, a<br />

7-yard run and a<br />

37-yard reception,<br />

in the Titans’ loss<br />

at Evanston.<br />

2. Jack Grier. South’s<br />

lead golfer fought<br />

back in the second<br />

round of the state<br />

tournament to<br />

finish tied for 14th<br />

place.<br />

3. Maria Perakis.<br />

The GBS freshman<br />

golfer ended the<br />

weekend in a fourway<br />

tie for 19th<br />

with a 152 at the<br />

state tournament.<br />

Rank and file<br />

1. Loyola Academy<br />

It was the Boyle-to-<br />

Boos show in the Ramblers’<br />

win over Providence. The<br />

duo connected on a 52-yard<br />

touchdown pass and a 66-yard<br />

touchdown pass on consecutive<br />

plays late in the second<br />

quarter in the win and Boyle<br />

added one more scoring throw<br />

to Noah Jones. The win clinches<br />

at least a share of the Catholic<br />

League Blue title, the third<br />

consecutive year the Ramblers<br />

have won the conference crown.<br />

2. Glenbrook South<br />

After a fast start this<br />

season, GBS looks to<br />

have hit a wall, as the Titans<br />

dropped consecutive games for<br />

the first time this season after being<br />

routed by Evanston, 45-20 on<br />

Friday. Ben Hides scored twice<br />

and Savontae Garner once as the<br />

Titans rushing attack led the way<br />

Top teams in 22nd Century Media’s coverage area<br />

PRESSBOX PICKS<br />

Game of the Week:<br />

• New Trier (5-3) at Glenbrook South (5-3)<br />

Other matchups:<br />

• Loyola (7-1) hosts Brother Rice (2-6)<br />

• Glenbrook North (4-4) at Vernon Hills (2-6)<br />

• Highland Park (4-4) at Maine East (1-7)<br />

• Lake Forest (4-4) at Waukegan (0-8)<br />

• Lake Forest Academy (5-1) at Alden-Hebron<br />

(4-4)<br />

• Warren (5-3) at Stevenson (6-2)<br />

45-15<br />

again but it wasn’t enough to pull<br />

out a win. New Trier stands in<br />

the way of six wins and a higher<br />

seed in the playoffs.<br />

3. New Trier<br />

It was a rough day for<br />

the Trevians, as Maine<br />

South came to Northfield and<br />

routed the host team, not allowing<br />

a touchdown until late<br />

in the game. The Hawks got<br />

revenge from last year’s game<br />

when New Trier snapped Maine<br />

South’s 77-game winning streak<br />

that went back to 2000. The Trevians<br />

look to rebound against<br />

GBS this week.<br />

4. Highland Park<br />

The Giants saw their<br />

four-game winning streak<br />

come to a close at the hands of<br />

Maine West, but it was a dogfight<br />

until the end. Second-half turnovers<br />

weren’t the Giants’ friend,<br />

JOE COUGHLIN |<br />

Publisher<br />

• New Trier 35-28. Big game.<br />

Both teams want a better<br />

playoff matchup. The Trevs<br />

get it.<br />

• Loyola<br />

• Glenbrook North<br />

• Highland Park<br />

• Lake Forest<br />

• Lake Forest Academy<br />

• Stevenson<br />

38-22<br />

ERIN REDMOND |<br />

Freelance Reporter<br />

• New Trier 21-3. The Trevs have<br />

found their rhythm and are too<br />

hot to stop right now. The Titans<br />

will have a tough time with<br />

this one.<br />

• Loyola<br />

• Glenbrook North<br />

• Highland Park<br />

• Lake Forest<br />

• Lake Forest Academy<br />

• Stevenson<br />

as they committed three of them<br />

in the final two quarters.<br />

5. Glenbrook North<br />

After taking a 10-8 lead<br />

into the half, Deerfield<br />

shut down the Spartan offense,<br />

allowing only one touchdown in<br />

the second half, with five minutes<br />

to go. But by then it was too little,<br />

too late and Deerfield held on for<br />

the win. Deerfield’s conversion of<br />

two GBN second-half turnovers<br />

into points helped seal the deal.<br />

6. Lake Forest<br />

The Scouts got what<br />

they needed: a win to get<br />

them to the .500 mark, at 4-4. The<br />

win sets the team up nicely for a<br />

chance at a playoff berth if it defeats<br />

winless Waukegan this week.<br />

The Scouts picked up the win by<br />

scoring 35 points, their largest<br />

scoring output since Week 1’s 38<br />

points against Glenbard East.<br />

42-18<br />

Michal Dwojak |<br />

Assistant Editor<br />

• Glenbrook South 24, New Trier<br />

21. The Titans squeeze out a<br />

win close at home in the final<br />

minutes.<br />

• Loyola<br />

• Glenbrook North<br />

• Highland Park<br />

• Lake Forest<br />

• Lake Forest Academy<br />

• Stevenson<br />

46-14<br />

This Week In...<br />

Titans Varsity Athletics<br />

FOOTBALL<br />

■Oct. ■ 20 - hosts New Trier, 7:30 p.m.<br />

FIELD HOCKEY<br />

■Oct. ■ 21 - at Elite 8, TBA<br />

■Oct. ■ 26 - hosts State Semifinals, 5 p.m.<br />

■Oct. ■ 26 - hosts State Semifinals, 7 p.m.<br />

GIRLS TENNIS<br />

■Oct. ■ 19 - at IHSA State, TBA<br />

■Oct. ■ 20 - at IHSA State, TBA<br />

■Oct. ■ 21 - at IHSA State, TBA<br />

GIRLS VOLLEYBALL<br />

■Oct. ■ 20 - at Lake Park Invite, 4:30 p.m.<br />

■Oct. ■ 21 - at Lake Park Invite, 9 a.m.<br />

■Oct. ■ 23 - at IHSA Regional, TBA<br />

■Oct. ■ 24 - at IHSA Regional, TBA<br />

■Oct. ■ 25 - at IHSA Regional, TBA<br />

■Oct. ■ 26 - at IHSA Regional, TBA<br />

GIRLS SWIMMING<br />

■Oct. ■ 20 - hosts Evanston, 5:30 p.m.<br />

GIRLS CROSS-COUNTRY<br />

■Oct. ■ 21 - at IHSA Regional, 10 a.m.<br />

BOYS CROSS-COUNTRY<br />

■Oct. ■ 21 - at IHSA Regional, 11 a.m.<br />

BOYS SOCCER<br />

■Oct. ■ 21 - hosts IHSA Regional, 11 a.m.<br />

MICHAEL WOJTYCHIW |<br />

Sports Editor<br />

• New Trier 35, Glenbrook South<br />

24. Both teams struggled last<br />

week but the Trevs bounce back<br />

on the road.<br />

• Loyola<br />

• Glenbrook North<br />

• Highland Park<br />

• Lake Forest<br />

• Lake Forest Academy<br />

• Stevenson<br />

44-16<br />

MARTIN CARLINO |<br />

Contributing Editor<br />

• Glenbrook South 24, New Trier<br />

23. The Titans top the Trevs on<br />

a late TD to prevail in this CSL<br />

South showdown.<br />

• Loyola<br />

• Glenbrook North<br />

• Highland Park<br />

• Lake Forest<br />

• Lake Forest Academy<br />

• Stevenson<br />

Listen Up<br />

“I really liked the way he rallied.”<br />

Stephen Gale — The GBS boys golf coach on Jack Grier<br />

and his strong second round at the state tournament<br />

that helped him finish 14th in the state.<br />

tunE in<br />

What to watch this week<br />

The GBS football team ends the regular season and<br />

tries to improve its playoff seeding on Friday, Oct. 20.<br />

7:30 p.m. at GBS.<br />

Index<br />

33 - Boys and Girls Golf<br />

29 - AOTW<br />

Fastbreak is compiled by Assistant Editor<br />

Michal Dwojak. Send any questions or comments<br />

to m.dwojak@22ndcenturymedia.com


the glenview lantern | October 19, 2017 | GlenviewLantern.com<br />

Outmatched again<br />

Titans lose second straight<br />

against Evanston, Page 31<br />

State bound<br />

Three Titans qualify for<br />

state finals, Page 31<br />

Loyola wins third straight conference title after win<br />

over Providence, Page 34<br />

Rambler players<br />

celebrate after<br />

a touchdown in<br />

Loyola’s 28-3 win<br />

over Providence<br />

on Friday, Oct.<br />

13, in New Lenox.<br />

Adam Jomant/22nd<br />

Century Media<br />

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