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Glencoe’s Hometown Newspaper GlencoeAnchor.com • March 22, 2018 • Vol. 4 No. 29 • $1<br />

A<br />

Publication<br />

,LLC<br />

‘good to go’<br />

Large sponsor drops<br />

from Glencoe Grand<br />

Prix, but the race still on<br />

for June, Page 3<br />

Glencoe’s David<br />

Staffilino (left), 3,<br />

looks on as his<br />

sister Sophia, 6,<br />

waters the seeds<br />

she just planted at<br />

the We Care For<br />

Our World service<br />

night March 13<br />

at West School.<br />

Photos by Rhonda<br />

Holcomb/22nd<br />

Century Media<br />

voices heard<br />

Area schools host protests<br />

for National School<br />

Walkout Day, Pages 12-13<br />

Healthy bodies<br />

and minds<br />

Your guide for North<br />

Shore active aging<br />

resources, INSIDE<br />

Glencoe families put in hours worth<br />

of service for We Care for Our World<br />

project, Page 4<br />

NORTH SHORE<br />

NORTH SHORE<br />

Home & Garden Show<br />

THIS WEEKEND! v Westin Hotel v Wheeling<br />

Remodel, Repair &Beautify Your Home! ALL With One Visit!<br />

Premier Sponsor<br />

HomeShowNorthShore.com 630-953-2500


2 | March 22, 2018 | The glencoe anchor calendar<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

In this week’s<br />

anchor<br />

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

Pet of the Week........................6<br />

Editorial......................................23<br />

Puzzles22<br />

Faith ............................................27<br />

Dining Out30<br />

Home of the Week31<br />

Athlete of the Week34<br />

The Glencoe<br />

Anchor<br />

Editor<br />

Megan Bernard, x24<br />

megan@glencoeanchor.com<br />

sports Editor<br />

Michael Wojtychiw, x25<br />

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

Sales director<br />

Peter Hansen, x19<br />

p.hansen@22ndcenturymedia.com<br />

real estate sales<br />

John Zeddies, x12<br />

j.zeddies@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.GlencoeAnchor.com<br />

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

circulation inquiries<br />

circulation@22ndcenturymedia.com<br />

The Glencoe Anchor (USPS #18720) is published<br />

weekly by 22nd Century Media, LLC, 60<br />

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

Periodical paid postage at Northbrook, IL and<br />

additional mailing offices.<br />

POSTMASTER: send address changes to<br />

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

Northbrook, IL 60062<br />

Published by<br />

ph: 847.272.4565<br />

fx: 847.272.4648<br />

www.22ndcenturymedia.com<br />

SATURDAY<br />

Birds of Prey<br />

2-3 p.m. March 24,<br />

Glencoe Library, 320 Park<br />

Ave. The River Trail Nature<br />

Center will be bringing<br />

in a live bird to the library.<br />

They will also bring<br />

in bird artifacts, like feathers<br />

and bones, to demonstrate<br />

the adaptations these<br />

predators use to survive.<br />

They will discuss native<br />

hawks, owls and eagles,<br />

their vital role in our environment,<br />

and how you<br />

might observe one in your<br />

backyard. Visit www.glencoepubliclibrary.org.<br />

Northern Illinois Gesneriad<br />

Society Show and Sale<br />

March 24-25, Chicago<br />

Botanic Garden, 1000<br />

Lake Cook Road, Glencoe.<br />

The show features<br />

rare plants, artistic and<br />

educational entries, and a<br />

sale offering growing supplies<br />

and many unusual<br />

and difficult-to-find varieties.<br />

SUNDAY<br />

Teen Blockbuster Matinee<br />

and Pizza<br />

1:30 p.m. March 25,<br />

Glencoe Library, 320 Park<br />

Ave. Stuck in town for<br />

spring break and looking<br />

for something fun to do?<br />

Come for a screening of<br />

“Thor: Ragnarok” while<br />

munching on pizza and<br />

movie treats. This movie<br />

is rated PG-13 and the program<br />

is for sixth through<br />

12th grades only.<br />

All Ages Open Gym<br />

Noon-2 p.m. March<br />

25-April 1, Takiff Center,<br />

999 Green Bay Road,<br />

Glencoe. All ages open<br />

gym basketball during<br />

Spring Break.<br />

Cooking Demo<br />

2-3:30 p.m. March 25,<br />

Chicago Botanic Garden,<br />

1000 Lake Cook<br />

Road, Glencoe. Learn<br />

how to use fresh vanilla<br />

beans and vanilla paste<br />

as well as how to temper<br />

eggs. Mix and cook up a<br />

batch of crepes. Featured<br />

recipes to make and taste<br />

include pastry cream,<br />

tropical fruit crepes with<br />

vanilla bean and rum<br />

butter sauce, and grilled<br />

shrimp with vanilla lime<br />

dressing. Visit www.chicagobotanic.org.<br />

THURSDAY<br />

Post-Orchid Show Plant<br />

Sale<br />

2-4 p.m. March 29,<br />

Chicago Botanic Garden,<br />

1000 Lake Cook Road,<br />

Glencoe. The Garden<br />

Shop sells several varieties<br />

and mini-orchids,<br />

and vendors sell them at<br />

the Orchid Marketplace<br />

on weekends. Don’t miss<br />

the post-Show Plant Sale.<br />

Many of the plants featured<br />

in the Show will be<br />

for sale at bargain prices.<br />

UPCOMING<br />

Preschool Dance Party<br />

10-10:30 a.m. March<br />

30, Glencoe Library, 320<br />

Park Ave. Shake it all<br />

about at the Spring Break<br />

Preschool Dance Party.<br />

They’ll feature plenty of<br />

dance-along classics. Visit<br />

www.glencoepubliclibrary.org.<br />

Spring Egg and Doggie<br />

Treat Hunt<br />

10-11 a.m. March 31,<br />

Watts Park, Glencoe. The<br />

park district is hiding<br />

eggs filled with surprises<br />

throughout Watts Park.<br />

After the hunt, join in for<br />

crafts, games and photos<br />

with the Spring Bunny. In<br />

case of inclement weather,<br />

the egg hunt will be relocated<br />

to the Takiff Center.<br />

For special event weather<br />

information, call (847)<br />

258-9050.<br />

Escape Room<br />

2-4 p.m. March 31,<br />

Glencoe Library, 320 Park<br />

Ave. Your mission as an<br />

iSpy agent: to infiltrate<br />

enemy headquarters, steal<br />

and decode their top-secret<br />

plans, and get out. Security<br />

was tightened after<br />

your last escapade and you<br />

never know what surprises<br />

may be waiting. Disguises<br />

encouraged. More info<br />

at www.glencoepubliclibrary.org.<br />

Easter Egg Brunch<br />

9, 10 and 11 a.m., noon,<br />

and 1 p.m. April 1, Chicago<br />

Botanic Garden, 1000<br />

Lake Cook Road, Glencoe.<br />

Celebrate spring and enjoy<br />

a festive Easter brunch at<br />

the Garden in Nichols Hall<br />

at the Regenstein Center.<br />

Bring a basket and hop to<br />

the Krasberg Rose Garden<br />

after brunch, and join in<br />

the Easter egg hunt before<br />

taking a stroll to explore<br />

the vibrant colors and<br />

spring blooms. Visit www.<br />

chicagobotanic.org.<br />

Pajama Movie Night<br />

6:30 p.m. April 6, Takiff<br />

Center, 999 Green Bay<br />

Road, Glencoe. They will<br />

watch “The Incredibles”<br />

on the big screen while<br />

enjoying fresh popcorn<br />

and refreshments. All ages<br />

welcome to this familyfriendly<br />

night. Register<br />

early, registration will<br />

close when event capacity<br />

is reached. Limited day of<br />

registration may be available.<br />

Sustainable Gardening<br />

2-3 p.m. April 8, Glencoe<br />

Library, 320 Park Ave.<br />

Roy Diblik will explain<br />

his “16 Together” system,<br />

which reduces maintenance<br />

through design using<br />

combinations of 16 regionally<br />

appropriate plants<br />

with similar lifestyles.<br />

Seed Planting<br />

Noon-3 p.m. April 12,<br />

Takiff Center, 999 Green<br />

Bay Road, Glencoe. Join<br />

the park district at the<br />

Glencoe Park District<br />

Greenhouse to start their<br />

seeds. Learn how to plant<br />

all sorts of healthy organic<br />

veggies and herbs. No gardening<br />

experience needed.<br />

Meet at the greenhouse.<br />

Paint and Sip<br />

6:30-8:30 p.m. April 13,<br />

Takiff Center, 999 Green<br />

Bay Road, Glencoe. Grab<br />

a friend for an evening of<br />

painting and wine. The<br />

instructor will guide you<br />

through the process of<br />

creating your own masterpiece.<br />

No experience or<br />

supplies necessary; new<br />

and seasoned artists are<br />

welcome! BYOB. Register<br />

early, as registration will<br />

close when event capacity<br />

is reached.<br />

Exploring the VR World<br />

Noon-1:30 p.m. April<br />

14, Glencoe Library, 320<br />

Park Ave. Get an introduction<br />

to Virtual Reality,<br />

through apps and devices<br />

you can use at home. Stick<br />

around to test out the library’s<br />

VR devices. Ages<br />

18+.<br />

Spring Concert<br />

5-6 p.m. April 15, Glencoe<br />

Library, 320 Park Ave.<br />

It will feature the Dorel<br />

Ensemble. The program<br />

for this free, one-hour<br />

concert will be announced<br />

soon. The library will close<br />

at 4 p.m. and reopen at<br />

4:30 p.m. for concert seating.<br />

Hosted by the Friends<br />

of the Glencoe Public Library.<br />

Author Visit<br />

7-8 p.m. April 18, Glencoe<br />

Library, 320 Park Ave.<br />

The author of “Dear Madam<br />

President: An Open<br />

Letter to the Women Who<br />

Will Run the World,” Jennifer<br />

Palmieri will visit the<br />

library.<br />

Village Board<br />

7 p.m. April 19, Glencoe<br />

Editor’s Note:<br />

The Thursday, March<br />

22 edition of The<br />

Anchor was published<br />

before results were<br />

available for the March<br />

20 Gubernatorial<br />

Primary Election.<br />

Stories related to the<br />

election results will<br />

appear in print in the<br />

Thursday, March 29<br />

edition but can be<br />

viewed sooner at www.<br />

glencoeanchor.com.<br />

Village Hall, 675 Village<br />

Court. The Village Board<br />

meets at Village Hall in the<br />

Council Chambers located<br />

on the second floor.<br />

ONGOING<br />

The Orchid Show<br />

Feb. 10-March 25, Chicago<br />

Botanic Garden,<br />

1000 Lake Cook Road,<br />

Glencoe. Look for sunlit<br />

orchids under colorful<br />

handmade parasols, listen<br />

for the trickle of water<br />

from a bamboo spout and<br />

take in a Japanese-style<br />

dry garden surrounded by<br />

burnt cedar in the shou<br />

sugi ban tradition. The<br />

Chicago Botanic Garden’s<br />

Orchid Show is an homage<br />

to the rich culture<br />

of Asia and its stunning<br />

array of native orchids.<br />

Come see 10,000 orchids<br />

in bloom.<br />

Little Diggers<br />

Jan. 18-April 14, Chicago<br />

Botanic Garden, 1000<br />

Lake Cook Road, Glencoe.<br />

Learn about flowers,<br />

discover animals, experience<br />

the changing seasons<br />

and more. These fourclass<br />

series for children<br />

ages 2 to 4 and caregivers<br />

meet mornings, once a<br />

month.<br />

To submit an item for the<br />

community calendar, contact<br />

Editor Megan Bernard at megan@glencoeanchor.com.


glencoeanchor.com news<br />

the glencoe anchor | March 22, 2018 | 3<br />

The race must go on<br />

Glencoe Grand Prix<br />

still on for June 2<br />

after large sponsor<br />

withdrawals<br />

Megan Bernard, Editor<br />

Although “one of the<br />

biggest sponsors” withdrew<br />

from the Glencoe<br />

Grand Prix, the annual<br />

bike race isn’t hitting the<br />

brakes.<br />

The Glencoe Grand<br />

Prix, a one-day road criterium<br />

race, is scheduled<br />

this year for June 2. It is<br />

the largest fundraiser for<br />

the Glencoe Educational<br />

Foundation, which supports<br />

educational projects<br />

in Glencoe and three sister<br />

schools in Chicagoland, its<br />

website stated.<br />

The Anchor was reached<br />

by a concerned resident,<br />

who claimed the race<br />

wouldn’t continue if the<br />

lost sponsorship was not<br />

replaced immediately.<br />

After the funding loss,<br />

however, the president of<br />

the race, David Metrick,<br />

said he reached out to more<br />

than 20 existing sponsors<br />

to request higher donations<br />

and was successful.<br />

“The race was never in<br />

danger, but the sponsor did<br />

pull out at the last minute,”<br />

said Metrick, who is also<br />

the president of the Glencoe<br />

Education Foundation.<br />

“I usually make these (fundraising)<br />

calls May 1, so<br />

this year it was just pushed<br />

up earlier.<br />

“Everything will continue<br />

as normal now. We are<br />

good to go.”<br />

Ryan Aitcheson (pictured second here) positions<br />

himself behind his team mate for the last lap during the<br />

men’s pro race of the Glencoe Grand Prix in 2016. The<br />

race returns for the 12th year on June 2 in downtown<br />

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

Metrick would not confirm<br />

the lost sponsor name<br />

or reason why they withdrew<br />

for legal reasons.<br />

The 2018 Glencoe<br />

Grand Prix will be the<br />

12th annual race. Last<br />

year, world champion<br />

Chloé Dygert Owen raced<br />

in the Glencoe Grand Prix.<br />

There were two racecourses,<br />

which were identical<br />

to those used since 2015.<br />

Each course ran clockwise<br />

with the start and finish<br />

located on Vernon Avenue<br />

between Hazel Avenue and<br />

Temple Court. More info<br />

about the 2018 race has yet<br />

to be released.<br />

From the Village<br />

Metra to Adjust UP North<br />

Line Evening and Weekend<br />

Schedule<br />

On Monday, March<br />

19, Metra implemented a<br />

new schedule for evening<br />

and weekend trains on the<br />

Union Pacific North Line.<br />

The schedule change<br />

will allow for trains to<br />

operate on a single track<br />

between the Clybourn Station<br />

and Evanston during<br />

the completion of a $15.5<br />

million project to replace<br />

the bridges that carry the<br />

UP North Line over Webster<br />

Avenue and the North<br />

Branch of the Chicago<br />

River just north of Webster.<br />

Customers should be<br />

aware that as of Monday,<br />

weekday inbound Train<br />

362 will depart from<br />

Waukegan 10 minutes<br />

earlier, at 9:10 p.m., while<br />

Train 364 will depart from<br />

Waukegan 25 minutes<br />

later, at 10:05 p.m.; and<br />

Train 368 will depart from<br />

Kenosha 10 minutes later,<br />

at 11:45 p.m. Inbound<br />

weekday trains arriving<br />

at Ogilvie Transportation<br />

Center after 8 p.m. will<br />

have five minutes added to<br />

their run times.<br />

Outbound Train 301 will<br />

be renumbered to Train<br />

371 on the weekdays and<br />

will depart from Ogilvie<br />

eight minutes earlier,<br />

at 12:27 a.m. Train 369<br />

will depart from Ogilvie<br />

10 minutes later, at 11:45<br />

p.m., and trains departing<br />

from Ogilvie after 7:30<br />

p.m. will have five minutes<br />

added to their run times.<br />

On weekends, inbound<br />

Train 822 will depart<br />

from Waukegan 30 minutes<br />

later, at 5:40 p.m.<br />

on Saturday and Sunday.<br />

Outbound Train 821 will<br />

depart from Ogilvie five<br />

minutes later, at 5:15<br />

p.m., on Saturday only.<br />

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


4 | March 22, 2018 | The glencoe anchor news<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

‘It feels good to<br />

help other people’<br />

D35’s hour<br />

of service<br />

benefits several<br />

organizations<br />

Hilary Anderson<br />

Freelance Reporter<br />

now available<br />

CARPETING<br />

& RUGS<br />

featuring: Stanton, Nourison, Prestige,<br />

Antrim & Roscore<br />

930 Green Bay Rd. Winnetka, IL 60093<br />

847-446-5522 | RobertBryanHome.com<br />

Glencoe kids care about<br />

their world.<br />

On March 14, a group<br />

of Glencoe kindergarteners<br />

through fourth-graders<br />

gathered at West School<br />

and participated in an hour<br />

of service in the We Care<br />

for Our World project.<br />

They came to work but<br />

also brought with them<br />

new, packaged underwear<br />

or socks that were being<br />

collected to benefit children<br />

helped by the Cradles<br />

to Crayons organization.<br />

“Cradles to Crayons<br />

provides underserved children<br />

birth to age 12 years<br />

with essentials they need<br />

for everyday life,” said Dr.<br />

Catherine Wang, superintendent<br />

of Glencoe District<br />

35. “Among the most<br />

needed daily essentials are<br />

socks and underwear.”<br />

Some D35 staff members<br />

and some third-,<br />

fourth- and seventh-grade<br />

students previously visited<br />

the organization’s Giving<br />

Factory, where items are<br />

sorted and made ready to<br />

give to children in need.<br />

“Everyone who was at<br />

the Giving Factory learned<br />

a lot about the dignity of<br />

sharing and providing<br />

quality products to those<br />

who need them most,”<br />

said Dr. Wang. “We want<br />

to continue our support<br />

for the Cradles to Crayons<br />

Glencoe’s Harvey family (left to right) Quinn, 6, Kevin<br />

and Zoe, 9, makes a blanket for Tails of Hope at the<br />

We Care For Our World service night March 13 at West<br />

School. Photos by Rhonda Holcomb/22nd Century Media<br />

Teacher Alyson Spagnoli (left) and Elise Turner, 8, of<br />

Glencoe, decorate snack bags.<br />

organization and asked<br />

everyone to bring a new<br />

package of socks or underwear<br />

with them to this We<br />

Care for Our World event.”<br />

Students at the We Care<br />

for Our World Even participated<br />

in each of three<br />

separate service projects.<br />

One was to make snack<br />

packs to support the Night<br />

Ministry.<br />

Sophie Duffield, 10, and<br />

her twin sister, Lannie, first<br />

decorated a brown paper<br />

bag to put snacks inside.<br />

The two decorated the face<br />

of the bags with markers<br />

and colored pencils.<br />

Most important of all<br />

was a note on which each<br />

student wrote a message<br />

for the recipient.<br />

Sophie Duffield carefully<br />

wrote, “You are awesome,”<br />

at the top of the<br />

page.<br />

Lannie Duffield chose,<br />

“You are special.” Both<br />

Please see people, 6


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6 | March 22, 2018 | The glencoe anchor news<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

Jackson<br />

The Levy Family,<br />

of Glencoe<br />

Hi, my name<br />

is Jackson. I’m<br />

a 7-year-old<br />

Goldendoodle<br />

living the good<br />

life here in<br />

Glencoe. I love<br />

going for long<br />

walks, chasing<br />

squirrels and<br />

meeting new<br />

dogs and people.<br />

Sorry if I jump on you, I just get a little too excited<br />

sometimes. I will eat pretty much anything you<br />

give me or drop on the floor. I also like running on<br />

the beach but my favorite thing in the whole world<br />

is getting kisses and hugs from my family.<br />

HELP! We’re running out of pets to feature! To see your<br />

pet as Pet of the Week, send information to megan@<br />

glencoeanchor.com or 60 Revere Drive, Suite 888, Northbrook,<br />

IL 60062.<br />

WINNER:<br />

Best Groomer in<br />

Chicagoland<br />

Pet of the Week<br />

Sponsored by<br />

Love Fur Dogs<br />

police reports<br />

Thousands worth of jewelry reported stolen in Glencoe<br />

Within the last month, an unknown<br />

offender stole several pieces<br />

of jewelry from a home in the 400<br />

block of Madison Avenue in Glencoe.<br />

The theft was reported at 3:55<br />

p.m. March 7.<br />

The jewelry was worth “thousands<br />

of dollars,” according to Glencoe<br />

Public Safety.<br />

In other police news:<br />

March 11<br />

• Elias H. Rogazt, 24, of Ohio, was<br />

arrested for driving under the influence<br />

at 3:41 a.m. at the intersection<br />

of Lincoln Avenue and Valley Road.<br />

His court date is March 29.<br />

March 10<br />

• Ashley N. Schultz, 26, of Wisconsin,<br />

was arrested for driving with a<br />

suspended registration at 12:57 a.m.<br />

at the intersection of Green Bay<br />

Road and Park Avenue. Her court<br />

date is May 1.<br />

THE WILMETTE BEACON<br />

Officials: Langdon<br />

Beach may not open for<br />

swimming<br />

The conditions at Langdon<br />

Beach are worsening<br />

and the Wilmette Park<br />

District will decide in<br />

mid-April whether or not<br />

to open it as a swimming<br />

beach this summer.<br />

At the Wilmette Park<br />

Board’s Monday, March<br />

12 meeting, Superintendent<br />

of Recreation Kathy<br />

Bingham explained that<br />

the district is going to wait<br />

until after some of the<br />

March and April storms to<br />

determine the next step.<br />

“This year the conditions<br />

are very different and<br />

we’ve never seen it quite<br />

like what we have right<br />

now,” she said. “We’re going<br />

to see if we have any<br />

storms that majorly change<br />

the landscape down there.<br />

We’re definitely going to<br />

know a month from now<br />

or five weeks from now<br />

what we think we can do<br />

with that space.”<br />

If the district were to<br />

open Langdon as a swimming<br />

beach this summer,<br />

grading would need to be<br />

done in late April to create<br />

a path to walk down to the<br />

lakefront.<br />

“Traditionally towards<br />

the end of April is when<br />

we bring in the heavy machinery<br />

to do our grading<br />

March 8<br />

• Matthew F. Bradley, 38, of Winnetka,<br />

was arrested for driving with<br />

a suspended license and failing to<br />

signal at 10:13 p.m. at the intersection<br />

of Vernon and Park avenues. His<br />

court date is March 29.<br />

EDITOR’S NOTE: The Anchor’s Police<br />

Reports are compiled from official reports<br />

found on file at the Glencoe Police<br />

Department headquarters in Glencoe.<br />

Individuals named in these reports are<br />

considered innocent of all charges until<br />

proven guilty in a court of law.<br />

at the beach. Last year, we<br />

actually created a path and<br />

an area so that we could<br />

get people down there,”<br />

Bingham said.<br />

Commissioner Bryan<br />

Abbott added that residents<br />

need to be careful<br />

if they’re going to walk<br />

down to the lakefront in<br />

the beach’s current state.<br />

Reporting by Todd Marver,<br />

Freelance Reporter. Full<br />

Story at WilmetteBeacon.com.<br />

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people<br />

From Page 4<br />

girls decorated the note<br />

and added a more personal<br />

message at the bottom of<br />

the page in their beautiful<br />

cursive handwriting.<br />

The two finished and<br />

started on two more brown<br />

bags.<br />

At another table, Connor<br />

Turner, 10, began filling<br />

another paper bag.<br />

“I saw someone in Chicago<br />

who was homeless,”<br />

Turner said. “I saw him<br />

with a cardboard sign that<br />

said, ‘Please help me.’ I<br />

helped him. It feels good<br />

to help other people.”<br />

Next was planting seeds<br />

with volunteer members of<br />

the Glencoe Community<br />

Gardens, which provided a<br />

variety of seeds along with<br />

black dirt that had some<br />

fertilizer in it.<br />

“We are going to help<br />

make the world greener,”<br />

said Ben Holtzman, 8, as<br />

he made his container out<br />

of newspaper. “I planted a<br />

raspberry bush in my yard<br />

but sometimes deer come<br />

and eat the fruit right off<br />

the bush.”<br />

GCG volunteer Sheila<br />

Newman next helped students<br />

fill their containers<br />

halfway with soil and select<br />

the kind of seeds they<br />

want. GCG volunteer Zena<br />

Ronner then oversaw the<br />

watering of the seeds.<br />

“I planted hot pepper<br />

seeds in my container,”<br />

8-year-old Charlie Scher<br />

said. “My dad likes hot<br />

peppers. I wrote the name<br />

of the plant on a stick and<br />

put it in the container so<br />

we know what it is.”<br />

Glencoe’s West School<br />

will keep half of the seed<br />

containers for its gardens<br />

while the other half will<br />

go to its sister or partner<br />

school, the Andrew Cooke<br />

Magnet School in Waukegan<br />

to grow in its gardens.<br />

Next project was making<br />

blankets for Tails of<br />

Hope Animal Shelter and<br />

the Linus Project.<br />

“It is important to show<br />

our community that we<br />

care,” said Jordan Stein, 9,<br />

as he tied together the fringe<br />

pieces of a fleece blanket.<br />

“It is fun to help people.<br />

Some of the blankets<br />

also went to Project Linus<br />

to be given to children<br />

who are seriously ill, traumatized<br />

or in need.<br />

Time passed quickly.<br />

The hour was up.<br />

“Our District 35 Schools<br />

— the staff, students and<br />

their families — do care<br />

about our world and what<br />

is happening in it,” said<br />

Dr. David Rongey, principal<br />

of Glencoe’s West<br />

School as he thanked everyone<br />

for coming. “Look<br />

at the turnout of students,<br />

staff and families for this<br />

project and look at how<br />

much we accomplished in<br />

a short time.”


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8 | March 22, 2018 | The glencoe anchor news<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

Glencoe Village Board<br />

Green Bay Trail restoration<br />

to proceed following concerns<br />

Leave the<br />

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Margaret Tazioli<br />

Freelance Reporter<br />

The Green Bay Trail<br />

South of South Avenue<br />

will soon have much less<br />

buckthorn — and a much<br />

more open feel as a result.<br />

After postponing this<br />

section of the trail’s restoration<br />

project for nearly<br />

three months due to neighbor’s<br />

concerns, the Village<br />

decided to move ahead<br />

with the removal of invasive<br />

plants in the next<br />

week or so at the Village<br />

Board meeting Thursday,<br />

March 15.<br />

The Friends of the Green<br />

Bay Trail is spearheading<br />

the effort to not only<br />

remove the invasive plant<br />

species on the trail — but<br />

to replant with hardy native<br />

plants.<br />

With the help of landscape<br />

professionals, like<br />

Bob Kirschner, director<br />

of restoration at the Chicago<br />

Botanic Garden, the<br />

Friends have created a plan<br />

to place nearly $100,000<br />

worth of native plants approved<br />

for survival in the<br />

different types of soil after<br />

the buckthorn is removed.<br />

The Friends also included<br />

a non-native, but fast<br />

growing, green giant arborvitae<br />

in their plan since<br />

it can provide additional<br />

screening from Green Bay<br />

Road.<br />

As neighbors learned<br />

of the plan to continue the<br />

Friends of the Trail’s restoration<br />

work South of South<br />

Avenue, however, they became<br />

concerned.<br />

Last week, The Anchor<br />

reported a petition opposing<br />

the work circulated and<br />

was sent to the Village.<br />

Some, like Terri Atkinson,<br />

of Wentworth Avenue,<br />

are still unsatisfied<br />

with the completed work<br />

between Harbor and Scott<br />

Avenue. They’re confused<br />

why another section<br />

of the trail is beginning to<br />

receive investment when<br />

they don’t feel the first section<br />

is complete.<br />

Whether or not that section<br />

is complete is a topic<br />

of conversation that will<br />

continue through the next<br />

year, but unlike the section<br />

from Harbor to Scott, the<br />

section south of South Avenue<br />

has a plan, a budget,<br />

a timeline and partnerships<br />

with the Village and park<br />

district from the get-go. In<br />

contrast, the section from<br />

Harbor to Scott started six<br />

years ago as three volunteers<br />

tramping through the<br />

trail cutting out buckthorn<br />

in their free time.<br />

Following the Friends’<br />

community meeting in<br />

December discussing their<br />

trail restoration plan, the<br />

Village received an email<br />

from a concerned resident<br />

and set up a meeting with a<br />

couple of concerned neighbors<br />

early last month.<br />

The work of tearing<br />

out the buckthorn was set<br />

to begin in January but<br />

was postponed due to the<br />

raised concerns.<br />

The primary concerns<br />

of the 10 or so neighbors<br />

directly next to the section<br />

of the trail south of<br />

South Avenue were about<br />

their property values and<br />

privacy. The loss of vegetation<br />

will expose more<br />

of the train and more of<br />

the headlights from Green<br />

Bay Road traffic and if not<br />

completed properly, could<br />

result in a less attractive<br />

trail which would reduce<br />

the value of nearby homes,<br />

according to their petition.<br />

Kayri Havens from the<br />

Chicago Botanic Garden<br />

said it is very unlikely the<br />

work will adversely affect<br />

property values.<br />

“Plants will grow up<br />

and provide a much more<br />

beautiful and much more<br />

ecologically appropriate<br />

screen than the buckthorn<br />

does,” she said. “I think as<br />

these restorations mature,<br />

they will actually help<br />

property values.”<br />

Carl Leonard, of Ida<br />

Lane, expressed concern<br />

about the quantity of plants<br />

to be replanted.<br />

“Although we truly applaud<br />

the intent and desire<br />

to eliminate buckthorn, we<br />

feel the plan has not allocated<br />

appropriate resources<br />

to prevent the buckthorn<br />

from repopulating once its<br />

removed,” Leonard said.<br />

The Friends have, however,<br />

set up a “Trust for<br />

the Trail” with ambitious<br />

fundraising goals “to ensure<br />

future leaders will<br />

always have the resources<br />

to maintain our projects,”<br />

according to its website.<br />

After nearly two hours<br />

of conversation — including<br />

ample amounts of public<br />

comment — Trustee<br />

Gail Lissner made a motion<br />

to postpone the trail<br />

work until all concerns had<br />

more opportunity to be addressed<br />

but no one moved<br />

to second her motion. So,<br />

the work will proceed in<br />

the next 7-10 days with the<br />

beginning of buckthorn<br />

and poison ivy removal.<br />

Read the full story at<br />

GlencoeAnchor.com.


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10 | March 22, 2018 | The glencoe anchor glencoe<br />

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12 | March 22, 2018 | The glencoe anchor News<br />

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New Trier’s student-led walkout<br />

creates powerful message<br />

Megan Bernard, Editor<br />

Loud chants and colorful<br />

signs calling for change<br />

created an inspiring atmosphere<br />

March 14, at New<br />

Trier High School.<br />

Hundreds of students<br />

responded to the recent<br />

mass shooting in Parkland,<br />

Fla. by taking part of National<br />

School Walkout Day,<br />

which was hosted for 17<br />

minutes at 10 a.m. across<br />

every time zone today.<br />

To demand action<br />

against gun violence, Trevians<br />

walked out to the Winnetka<br />

Campus track and the<br />

courtyard at the Northfield<br />

Campus to protest.<br />

At Winnetka, as news<br />

helicopters idled overhead,<br />

students signed and wrote<br />

messages about gun control<br />

on a 100-foot banner<br />

and there was a station to<br />

write letters to legislators.<br />

In Northfield, the walkout<br />

had more student speakers<br />

talking about what gun<br />

control means to them. Orange<br />

streamers were provided<br />

to all students.<br />

The event, New Trier<br />

Walkout 2018, was not<br />

school-sanctioned. It was<br />

coordinated by Student Alliance<br />

after students had a<br />

“really strong response” to<br />

the February shooting, said<br />

Jacob Imber, president of<br />

Student Alliance.<br />

“It’s been really stressful,<br />

but behind this stress,<br />

there’s an important cause,”<br />

Imber said about the coordination<br />

of the event. “It’s<br />

good to know that even if<br />

planning this has been a<br />

logistical nightmare, it’s<br />

something you want to<br />

work for because it will<br />

make a difference.”<br />

Imber, along with other<br />

members of Student Alliance,<br />

met with school<br />

administrators throughout<br />

Hundreds of students protest gun violence during New<br />

Trier Walkout 2018, a student-led event, on Wednesday,<br />

March 14, at the Winnetka Campus. Courtesy of Jacob<br />

Imber/New Trier Student Alliance<br />

recent weeks to make sure<br />

the event would be “centralized<br />

and as safe as possible.”<br />

“The school has been really<br />

accommodating and<br />

allowed us the space to<br />

make this happen,” Imber<br />

said.<br />

In a letter sent to New<br />

Trier parents, administration<br />

said they expected a<br />

large number of students to<br />

participate in the walkout.<br />

Therefore, it read, “we are<br />

altering the bell schedule in<br />

order to maintain student<br />

safety, provide adequate<br />

supervision, and ensure a<br />

safe and respectful environment<br />

for all.”<br />

The schedule allowed an<br />

“open period” from 9:55-<br />

10:20 a.m., when students<br />

could choose to participate<br />

or use the period as they<br />

would for “any free period,<br />

going to areas including the<br />

library, cafeteria and student<br />

commons,” the letter<br />

read. That period was followed<br />

by a special adviser<br />

period, where teachers took<br />

attendance again.<br />

Students were not granted<br />

permission to leave<br />

campus and were expected<br />

to be in all classes the rest<br />

of the day, including the<br />

second adviser room. Media<br />

was also not permitted<br />

on school grounds.<br />

The parent letter concluded<br />

with: “We want to<br />

thank the student groups<br />

who organized this effort<br />

for their willingness<br />

to communicate with the<br />

school so we could put a<br />

plan in place that assures<br />

the safety and supervision<br />

of all students.”<br />

The letter was signed by<br />

both campus principals,<br />

Denise Dubravec (Winnetka)<br />

and Paul Waechtler<br />

(Northfield).<br />

As a result of the letter<br />

and altered class schedule,<br />

Imber said there was a lot<br />

of speculation from the student<br />

body.<br />

“It was a matter of safety.<br />

The school had to position<br />

staff around the school to<br />

make sure it was safe,” Imber<br />

said. “It’s a good thing<br />

if you think about it.”<br />

New Trier Walkout 2018<br />

gained enough momentum<br />

that students created<br />

a special website at www.<br />

ntwalkout.weebly.com<br />

and an Instagram page (@<br />

NewTrierWalkout2018) to<br />

detail the event.<br />

Amnesty International<br />

Club also sold more than<br />

800 orange walkout T-<br />

shirts to New Trier students<br />

and surrounding schools,<br />

Imber said.<br />

“It was so amazing that<br />

this branched out even beyond<br />

New Trier,” Imber<br />

said. “A lot of different<br />

pieces of the puzzle came<br />

together for this event. It<br />

was really great.”


glencoeanchor.com News<br />

the glencoe anchor | March 22, 2018 | 13<br />

NSCDS students line Green Bay Road in protest<br />

Jacqueline Glosniak<br />

Contributing Editor<br />

In a showing of solidarity<br />

with millions of students<br />

nationwide protesting<br />

gun violence exactly<br />

one month after the Marjory<br />

Stoneman Douglas<br />

High School shooting in<br />

Parkland, Fla., dozens of<br />

students and staff members<br />

from North Shore Country<br />

Day School paraded from<br />

behind the classroom walls<br />

to the front of the Winnetka<br />

campus earlier today to<br />

participate in the National<br />

School Walkout event.<br />

At 10 a.m., Middle and<br />

Upper School students<br />

marched in silence to the<br />

east end of campus on<br />

Green Bay Road, hoisting<br />

signs above their heads<br />

displaying messages including<br />

“Stop killing<br />

our generation,” “Never<br />

again,” “Am I next” and<br />

“Enough.”<br />

Following 17 minutes<br />

spent in silence to honor<br />

the 14 students and three<br />

staff members killed in<br />

last month’s massacre,<br />

students shouted chants<br />

for gun reform and safer<br />

schools as local spectators<br />

gathered nearby and<br />

drivers slowed down and<br />

beeped to express support.<br />

In a press release issued<br />

by the school on Tuesday,<br />

administrators at North<br />

Shore Country Day School<br />

acknowledged the walkout<br />

was entirely voluntary and<br />

excused students to participate<br />

in the event.<br />

Glencoe resident Jed<br />

Graboys, a junior who<br />

helped spearhead the walkout<br />

with the Community<br />

Service Club, said he and<br />

several students had been<br />

planning for the school to<br />

participate in a walkout<br />

immediately after the national<br />

movement day was<br />

announced a few weeks<br />

ago. He said in the days<br />

leading up to the walkout,<br />

students held postermaking<br />

activities and the<br />

Community Service Club<br />

led a presentation on why<br />

the protest was necessary.<br />

“Every day, policymakers<br />

make decisions that they<br />

think are the best for our<br />

country, and we as children,<br />

our generation, is unheard,”<br />

Graboys said. “But now, it’s<br />

our time to speak. Now, it’s<br />

our time to demand change,<br />

demand reform and what<br />

we want, and we have to<br />

take that opportunity. We<br />

have to use the platform<br />

we’ve been given and we<br />

have to use that platform<br />

to demand a better country,<br />

Please see NSCDS, 20<br />

A student holds a sign as drivers passing by beep<br />

their horns March 14, in part of the National School<br />

Walkout movement protesting for legislative change for<br />

gun laws and school safety. JACQUELINE GLOSNIAK/22ND<br />

CENTURY MEDIA<br />

‘Standing together and showing their support’<br />

Loyola students<br />

host walkout to call<br />

for change<br />

Michael Wojtychiw<br />

Sports Editor<br />

On Wednesday, March<br />

14, Loyola Academy, like<br />

many school across the<br />

nation, took part in the<br />

National School Walkout<br />

to bring attention to a unified<br />

call for change in the<br />

way our country addresses<br />

school safety, gun violence<br />

and adolescent mental<br />

health.<br />

At 10 a.m., students who<br />

wished to participate had<br />

two options.<br />

The first option was going<br />

to the football field,<br />

where, when entering the<br />

field, the band would play<br />

“An American Elegy,”<br />

Frank Ticheli’s 1999 musical<br />

composition dedicated<br />

to those who lost their lives<br />

at Columbine High School.<br />

Each student participating<br />

was given an orange name<br />

Assistant Principal Charles Heintz (from left to right),<br />

sophomore Ethan Torain and junior Sophia D’Agostino<br />

read the names of each Parkland victim in the pressbox<br />

of the Loyola football stadium Wednesday, March 14, in<br />

Wilmette. Diane Smutney/Loyola Academy<br />

tag with the name and age<br />

of one of the 17 victims<br />

from last month’s Parkland,<br />

Fla. massacre. After everyone<br />

entered the stadium,<br />

students stood together<br />

around the track and shared<br />

a time of quiet reflection as<br />

the football clock counted<br />

down from 17 minutes.<br />

Each minute, the name and<br />

age of one of the Parkland<br />

shooting victims was read<br />

aloud and the Loyola choir<br />

closed in song.<br />

“The process (of the<br />

walkout) started when the<br />

administration got wind<br />

that students were starting<br />

to band together and do<br />

something about what happened<br />

in Parkland,” junior<br />

Sophia D’Agostino said.<br />

“The weekend after Valentine’s<br />

Day, I, and I think<br />

Please see Loyola, 18<br />

Regina walkout promotes<br />

just and peaceful community<br />

Eric DeGrechie<br />

Managing Editor<br />

For Regina Dominican<br />

students Gillian King and<br />

Beth Gillespie, sitting idle<br />

following last month’s<br />

mass shooting in Parkland,<br />

Fla., was just not an option.<br />

“I started seeing people<br />

talking about walking<br />

out on social media and<br />

I thought we have to do<br />

this,” Gillespie said. “As<br />

students, we see school<br />

shootings a lot, but what<br />

we see after is inaction and<br />

apathy to the problem. We<br />

as students have to take this<br />

into our own hands or nothing<br />

will get done.”<br />

King, a senior from Lake<br />

Forest, and Gillespie, a junior<br />

from Chicago, led the<br />

planning of Regina’s participation<br />

in the National<br />

School Walkout Day on<br />

March 14 at the school. The<br />

student-driven exercise began<br />

at 10 a.m. and lasted<br />

for 17 minutes, one minute<br />

for each person killed at<br />

Marjory Stoneman Douglas<br />

High School on Feb. 14.<br />

“The first reaction from<br />

the school when we talked<br />

about doing something was<br />

an undoubtable yes. There<br />

was a lot of talk about exactly<br />

what could be done,”<br />

King said. “Walkouts are<br />

very important for change<br />

and solidarity. We also<br />

wanted to something to put<br />

pressure on Congress.”<br />

Students were dismissed<br />

from class to participate in<br />

four events occurring simultaneously.<br />

In the cafeteria,<br />

students wrote letters<br />

to Congress. In the chapel,<br />

students prayed, reflected<br />

and lit memorial candles.<br />

In the gymnasium, students<br />

signed cards of support for<br />

members of the Marjory<br />

Stoneman Douglas High<br />

School communities.<br />

In addition, students<br />

gathered outside on the<br />

Panther Patio, where they<br />

discussed what they were<br />

feeling about the day and<br />

held a moment of silence.<br />

Following the shooting<br />

last month in Florida, students<br />

wore red to school in<br />

honor of the fallen students.<br />

The success of that initiative<br />

helped set the stage for<br />

Wednesday’s, March 14,<br />

events.<br />

“Gillian and Beth put<br />

their passion for this issue at<br />

the forefront. One thing that<br />

always amazes me about<br />

our Regina girls is their<br />

confidence and drive,” said<br />

Eleanor Rich, an enrollment<br />

and recruitment associate at<br />

Regina. “They have an ability<br />

to really put themselves<br />

out there and do something<br />

different. They speak their<br />

minds, state their opinions,<br />

but also have that respected<br />

by the other girls in the<br />

school.”


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The property information herein is derived from various sources that may include, but not be limited to, county records and the Multiple Listing Service, and it may include approximations. Although the information is believed to be accurate, it is not warranted and you should not rely upon it without personal verification.<br />

Real estate agents affiliated with Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage are independent contractor agents and are not employees of the Company.©2018 Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage. All Rights Reserved. Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage fully supports the principles of the Fair Housing Act and the<br />

Equal Opportunity Act. Owned by asubsidiary ofNRT LLC. Coldwell Banker,the Coldwell Banker logo, Coldwell Banker Global Luxury and the Coldwell Banker Global Luxury logo are service marks registered or pending registration owned by Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC.


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The property information herein is derived from various sources that may include, but not be limited to, county records and the Multiple Listing Service, and it may include approximations. Although the information is believed to be accurate, it is not warranted and you should not rely upon<br />

it without personal verification. Real estate agents affiliated with Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage are independent contractor agents and are not employees of the Company. ©2018 Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage. All Rights Reserved. Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage<br />

fully supports the principles of the Fair Housing Act and the Equal Opportunity Act. Owned by asubsidiary of NRT LLC. Coldwell Banker and the Coldwell Banker Logo are registered service marks owned by Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC.


16 | March 22, 2018 | The glencoe anchor glencoe<br />

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• Newly renovated gem on roughly ½ acre lot with fantastic pool & golf course views.<br />

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• Stunning new kitchen with 2 islands and all the modern conveniences.<br />

• Open family room overlooking private rear & side yards.<br />

• Chic living room with fireplace and large bay window with golf course views.<br />

• Dining room has built-in bar & large storage closet for all your entertaining tools .<br />

• Master suite with new marble spa-bath, walk-in closet and golf course views.<br />

• Two large additional bedrooms on 2nd floor share generous hall bath.<br />

• First floor laundry/mud room.<br />

• Multi-purpose lower level with finished playroom, unfinished work room & plenty of storage.<br />

• 2 car attached garage.<br />

$1,345,000 www.804BOAL.COM<br />

LAURA MCCAIN<br />

c<br />

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• Fabulous East Winnetka location on a double lot.<br />

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cabinets and south-facing bay window. Large family room has easy access to yard and patio.<br />

Charming library with built-ins. Former maid’s room with full bath and closet currently used as a<br />

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• Second floor boasts spacious master bedroom with deluxe bath. Double sinks, large shower, and<br />

deep soaking tub. Large walk-in closet. Three additional second floor bedrooms and 2 baths.<br />

• Third floor has wonderful open space. A perfect bedroom suite with bedroom space, sitting area<br />

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• Newer three car garage.<br />

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the glencoe anchor | March 22, 2018 | 17<br />

177 DE WINDT | WINNETKA | $2,788,000<br />

Impressive Traditional Stone home on sought after DeWindt Road! This home has been exceptionally renovated, updated and maintained. Welcoming foyer with elegant curved<br />

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(847) 217-5146 | Dinny Dwyer<br />

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©2018 Coldwell Banker Residential Real Estate LLC. All Rights Reserved. Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage fully supports the principles of the Fair Housing Act and the Equal Opportunity Act. Operated by a subsidiary of NRT LLC. Coldwell Banker and the Coldwell Banker Logo are registered service marks<br />

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


18 | March 22, 2018 | The glencoe anchor News<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

Loyola<br />

From Page 13<br />

about 20 other students<br />

from different leadership<br />

outlets throughout school,<br />

got an email from Dr.<br />

Baal. We met three times<br />

with a group of administration,<br />

faculty members<br />

and students to discuss so<br />

many aspects about what<br />

was happening.<br />

“We really wanted to<br />

know how the school was<br />

feeling so we could unify<br />

completely, and after a<br />

few meetings, we finalized<br />

what was going to happen<br />

to try to best represent everybody<br />

at Loyola.”<br />

The second option was<br />

available to students who<br />

did not wish to participate<br />

in the walkout, but wanted<br />

to show their solidarity<br />

and unity. Approximately<br />

300 students who felt that<br />

way went to the chapel<br />

and prayed the rosary. The<br />

names of the victims were<br />

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read aloud and the service<br />

stood as a powerful collective<br />

prayer for peace, according<br />

to a press release<br />

from the school.<br />

“The environment was<br />

extremely powerful and I<br />

felt the community,” sophomore<br />

Ethan Torain said.<br />

“The main thing I recognized<br />

was the pride that<br />

the people had standing<br />

together and showing their<br />

support. I hope this made<br />

people feel more connected<br />

to the people of Parkland<br />

and helped them realize<br />

that our circumstances<br />

are somewhat similar so<br />

that they can go out and<br />

help in any way they can.”<br />

Torain was one of the<br />

students who got the ball<br />

rolling with administration<br />

by starting a petition with<br />

his classmates and presenting<br />

it to Loyola Principal<br />

Dr. Kathryn Baal.<br />

The petition gave us<br />

numbers we could show<br />

Dr. Baal and help get her<br />

support,” Torain said.<br />

<br />

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Student leaders said<br />

close to 1,000 students participated<br />

in the walkout.<br />

For some students, like<br />

sophomore Catherine<br />

Flannery, it was their<br />

Loyola education and values<br />

that prepared them for<br />

an event like the this.<br />

“My formation class, we<br />

talked about it for a whole<br />

period and my formation<br />

teacher, she did a good<br />

job of pushing everyone<br />

to think about how others<br />

may feel about the situation<br />

so that everyone can<br />

understand how the other<br />

is feeling,” Flannery said.<br />

According to the release,<br />

students who wanted to express<br />

their opinions about<br />

school safety, gun violence<br />

and/or mental health to<br />

their legislators also had<br />

the opportunity to do so by<br />

telephone or in writing.<br />

Students who did not<br />

wish to participate in the<br />

walkout also had the option<br />

to remain in their<br />

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Kids hunt for leprechauns<br />

at new park district program<br />

Jennifer Bennett<br />

Freelance Reporter<br />

Fifty little leprechauns<br />

and their families found<br />

a unique way to celebrate<br />

St. Patrick’s Day Saturday,<br />

March 17, this year.<br />

New to the Glencoe Park<br />

District, the Leprechaun<br />

House Hunt took place at<br />

the Takiff Center. Boys<br />

and girls, ages 2-6, dressed<br />

from head to toe in green,<br />

were welcomed into the<br />

St. Patrick’s Day-themed<br />

festivities with everything<br />

they needed to celebrate<br />

the holiday kiddie style.<br />

“This is the first time we<br />

decided to do a leprechaun<br />

hunt,” event coordinator<br />

Liz Visteen said. “It’s been<br />

very popular with over 50<br />

kids signing up and bringing<br />

in families. It’s been a<br />

great day. “<br />

The celebration started<br />

out with creative arts and<br />

crafts in the resource room.<br />

Guests sat at festive green<br />

clothed tables decorated<br />

with colorful markers, foam<br />

cutouts, sparkly stickers and<br />

glittered jewel shapes.<br />

Letting their imaginations<br />

run wild, children<br />

decorated leprechaun<br />

masks and treasure boxes<br />

to their hearts content,<br />

while parents visited and<br />

shared holiday plans.<br />

Glencoe father Derek<br />

Ferguson brought his two<br />

little girls to the hunt and<br />

said it was a good time.<br />

“It’s a good event for<br />

the kids and a good way to<br />

spend St. Patrick’s Day,”<br />

Ferguson said. “They like<br />

all the leprechauns and the<br />

arts and crafts were great.”<br />

As the creative portion<br />

of the event wrapped up,<br />

Visteen gathered everyone’s<br />

attention to read the<br />

St. Patrick’s Day book,<br />

John Weinlader takes a moment with his daughter<br />

Emma, 5, to talk about her shamrock a the Leprechaun<br />

House Hunt Saturday, March 17, at the Takiff Center.<br />

Photos by Jill Dunbar/22nd Century Media<br />

Glencoe’s Caroline Alam, 5, checks in her treasure<br />

chest to see what she has collected.<br />

“How to Catch a Leprechaun.”<br />

The book takes<br />

kids on an imaginary journey<br />

to the end of a rainbow.<br />

However, there is much to<br />

be learned along the way<br />

such as how to carry chocolate<br />

gold coins, and how<br />

to use a shamrock and a<br />

four-leaf Clover to catch a<br />

leprechaun. By the end of<br />

the book, listeners had all<br />

the tools they needed to try<br />

to capture their very own<br />

leprechaun.<br />

After listening to the<br />

story and being schooled<br />

on a leprechaun’s sneaky<br />

ways, kids were invited to<br />

test their knowledge and<br />

skills by going on a leprechaun<br />

house hunt.<br />

By following tiny leprechaun<br />

footprints scattered<br />

throughout the children’s<br />

wing of the park district,<br />

kids were led to pots of<br />

gold with treasures in<br />

them. Everything from<br />

leprechaun pencils, necklaces,<br />

bracelets, tattoos,<br />

buttons, rings and shamrock<br />

stickers were collected<br />

by giggling kiddos.<br />

Laughs and smiles accompanied<br />

each little leprechaun<br />

hunter, and parents<br />

quickly snapped up<br />

pictures of this irreplaceable<br />

memory.<br />

Glencoe mom Jessica<br />

Alam said it was a really<br />

fun leprechaun adventure.<br />

“We got to explore the<br />

Takiff Center looking<br />

for adventures and leprechauns,”<br />

she added.<br />

When all the lucky pots<br />

and treasures were accounted<br />

for, guests were treated<br />

to some refreshing holiday<br />

goodies. Everything from<br />

fruit juice to a variety of five<br />

different kinds of cookies<br />

were enjoyed by all.<br />

And as the program<br />

wrapped up and families<br />

journeyed on their way,<br />

they did so with a little extra<br />

luck in their day.


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the glencoe anchor | March 22, 2018 | 19<br />

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The property information herein is derived from various sources that may include, but not be limited to, county records and the Multiple Listing Service, and it may include approximations. Although the information is believed to be accurate, it is not warranted and you should not rely upon it without personal verification. Real estate agents affiliated<br />

with Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage are independent contractor agents and are not employees of the Company. ©2018 Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage. All Rights Reserved. Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage fully supports the principles of the Fair Housing Act and the Equal Opportunity Act. Owned by a subsidiary of NRT LLC.<br />

Coldwell Banker and the Coldwell Banker Logo are registered service marks owned by Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC.


20 | March 22, 2018 | The glencoe anchor school<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

Glencoe PTO launches<br />

Spring Appeal fundraiser<br />

megan bernard, Editor<br />

Glencoe District 35’s<br />

Annual Spring Appeal,<br />

“Planting Seeds of Success,”<br />

has begun, asking<br />

community members and<br />

supporters to donate for<br />

new programs at local<br />

schools.<br />

The fundraiser is open<br />

through April 13 and<br />

is hosted by the Glencoe<br />

PTO. As of press<br />

time, Monday, March 19,<br />

$14,938 has been raised of<br />

the $26,000 goal.<br />

With support of the Glencoe<br />

PTO, local children receive<br />

educational resources<br />

and experiences well beyond<br />

“the basics,” according to the<br />

PTO website.<br />

“The monetary contributions<br />

from this campaign<br />

translate into new<br />

and exciting initiatives<br />

every year,” said Andrea<br />

Rubin, one of the Spring<br />

Appeal organizers.<br />

In the 2016-17 school<br />

year, the Glencoe PTO<br />

gifted more than $110K to<br />

the district for programs,<br />

including clubs and activity<br />

Grants, iPad packs<br />

for fifth and sixth grade,<br />

mobile classroom seating<br />

and storage and tables for<br />

South and West Innovation<br />

Stations, among others.<br />

“Your gift of any size<br />

will help plant seeds of<br />

success for Glencoe’s children,”<br />

the website stated.<br />

To make a tax-deductible<br />

donation to the Glencoe<br />

PTO, visit www.glencoepto.org.<br />

As a token of gratitude,<br />

the website stated all donors<br />

will be featured on<br />

the PTO website donor<br />

recognition page. Business<br />

and corporate donations<br />

of $250-plus will be<br />

recognized in district-wide<br />

email blasts, on the Facebook<br />

page and will be<br />

offered a logo advertisement<br />

on the Glencoe PTO<br />

website, including a link<br />

to their website. Logos<br />

will remain on the website<br />

through April 13.<br />

If you have any questions,<br />

contact 2018 PTO<br />

Spring Appeal co-chairpeople<br />

Rachel Pettineo at<br />

rpettineo7580@gmail.com<br />

or Andrea Rubin at andrea.<br />

rubinsky@gmail.com.<br />

Finding the magic on stage<br />

Glencoe Junior High Project presents ‘Alice in Wonderland’<br />

Roxie Harris as<br />

White Rabbit<br />

in Glencoe<br />

Junior High<br />

Project’s “Alice<br />

in Wonderland.”<br />

The production<br />

opened 7 p.m.<br />

Friday, March 16,<br />

at Central School,<br />

620 Greenwood<br />

Ave., Glencoe.<br />

There was another<br />

performance at<br />

11 a.m. Saturday,<br />

March 17.<br />

Proceeds went to<br />

GJHP. Photos by<br />

Jill Dunbar/22nd<br />

Century Media<br />

NSCDS<br />

From Page 13<br />

to demand a safer country,<br />

to demand safer schools,<br />

safer workplaces and safer<br />

environments all around the<br />

country.”<br />

Fellow student organizer<br />

Livvy Whitmore, a<br />

junior from Wilmette, said<br />

over the past few weeks,<br />

her peers have taken further<br />

interest in the movement<br />

overall.<br />

“I think at North Shore<br />

Country Day School, there<br />

are kind of a lot of people<br />

who have this mindset<br />

that [gun violence] is not<br />

really going to happen<br />

here at North Shore itself<br />

because it’s such a great,<br />

safe school, but really, the<br />

Florida shooting has put<br />

into perspective that it really<br />

can be any of us,” she<br />

said. “We wanted to walk<br />

out to kind of showcase<br />

how much we care about<br />

it and how we really want<br />

reform and we want to be<br />

able to say that we participated<br />

in this form of activism<br />

and we did everything<br />

we could.”<br />

As for campus reactions<br />

following the event,<br />

the campus buzzed with<br />

an overall positive energy<br />

and motivation for change<br />

moving forward.<br />

English teacher and Upper<br />

School Director of Service<br />

Learning Drea Gallaga<br />

said she felt the walkout<br />

was “really great.”<br />

“Students have been taking<br />

the leadership all along<br />

and they’re just really inspiring,”<br />

she said. “Students<br />

have been energized, and I<br />

had a senior say in one of<br />

my classes that for the first<br />

time in his education, he<br />

feels a part of doing something.”<br />

Whitmore said while differing<br />

student perspectives<br />

on the issues of gun violence<br />

and school safety have been<br />

shared, the walkout sparked<br />

needed conversations.<br />

“There has been a fair<br />

amount of conversation that<br />

has come from it, and that<br />

of course includes opposing<br />

opinions, but I think that<br />

overall, it’s been positive<br />

because it’s gotten students<br />

to talk to one another,” she<br />

said.<br />

Overall, Graboys feels<br />

the movement helped open<br />

the eyes of many of his<br />

peers.<br />

“I think it inspired a lot<br />

of people, but I think it was<br />

encouraging and showed<br />

we’re all united and we’re<br />

all in this together,” he said.<br />

“I’ve been so impressed and<br />

am so grateful for the community’s<br />

acceptance and<br />

encouragement and determination<br />

to make change,<br />

create change and to come<br />

support the Parkland survivors<br />

as well as express their<br />

demand for change.”<br />

ABOVE: Actors<br />

(left to right)<br />

Jake Moskow (as<br />

Dodo Bird), Grace<br />

Traxler (Alice),<br />

Xander Schiller<br />

(Mouse) and<br />

Trenton Rothbard<br />

(Duck) in a scene.<br />

LEFT: Jake<br />

Moskow (left),<br />

as the king, and<br />

Zoe Stein, as the<br />

Queen of Hearts.


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22 | March 22, 2018 | The glencoe anchor Sound Off<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

City Girl Confessions<br />

When a country mouse heads to the city<br />

Kelly Anderson<br />

Contributing Columnist<br />

Glencoe resident<br />

Raise your hand if<br />

you are a recovering<br />

city-dweller.<br />

Don’t be afraid, there are<br />

many of us. We are the<br />

kind that long for bustling<br />

noise, lament a store closing<br />

at 5 p.m., and have a<br />

fondness for density.<br />

It’s no secret that I had<br />

to be personally dragged<br />

toward suburban living<br />

but it’s also no secret that<br />

I have grown unbelievably<br />

fond of it. However,<br />

every so often I get a<br />

chance to look back.<br />

In doing so, I catch a<br />

glimpse of what was and<br />

also what could have been<br />

if this country mouse had<br />

decided to stick it out in<br />

the city.<br />

Last weekend served<br />

up a unicorn parenting<br />

moment: the grandparents<br />

offered to take our two<br />

children for an overnight<br />

stay. My head nearly spun<br />

off of my shoulders with<br />

excitement — a night<br />

without having to rush<br />

home to relieve a babysitter?<br />

A night to make tons<br />

of plans without fretting<br />

over bed times and early<br />

rising toddlers?<br />

My husband and I<br />

immediately agreed that<br />

Chicago should be the<br />

destination. And so the<br />

elaborate plans began<br />

to fall in place when we<br />

caught the Metra for a<br />

commute into our past. As<br />

the train whooshed and<br />

the sun set, we literally<br />

and figuratively moved<br />

away from the grassy<br />

lawns and wide open<br />

space of suburbia.<br />

The evening was a<br />

happy blur. There was the<br />

frantic cab ride during<br />

rush hour, the 3-D superhero<br />

movie at the fancy<br />

dine-in theater, and dinner<br />

in the West Loop at that<br />

spot curated by that famous<br />

chef. As we sipped<br />

over-the-top cocktails<br />

(frozen sake, anyone?)<br />

and nibbled appetizers,<br />

the conversation turned<br />

contemplative. Remember<br />

our city life? Remember<br />

when this wasn’t a<br />

unicorn Saturday but an<br />

every Saturday kind of<br />

thing? Remember what<br />

life was like then?<br />

I do. I remember all of<br />

it. It was lovely. I recall<br />

that time in my life with<br />

such fondness and bliss.<br />

And yet, I confess, I<br />

want none of it back. I<br />

consider the notion of<br />

raising my kids in the city<br />

and it feels totally off,<br />

like trying to dribble a<br />

basketball underwater or<br />

wear flip-flops to shovel<br />

snow. Like a natural progression,<br />

we grew apart<br />

from Chicago when we<br />

grew from a family of two<br />

to a family of four. The<br />

whole thing is bittersweet<br />

but, truthfully, it’s more<br />

sweet than bitter.<br />

As for the energy<br />

— that’s one thing we<br />

agree to miss dearly. Our<br />

favorite part of frequenting<br />

Chicago is savoring<br />

the energy that radiates<br />

through one’s feet when<br />

one strolls the sidewalks.<br />

When you can walk<br />

among remarkable architecture,<br />

taste the best food<br />

in the world, view stirring<br />

art, cheer for incredible<br />

sports teams, and be<br />

alongside the kindest, sincerest<br />

and funniest people<br />

around. Well, that is when<br />

you thank your lucky stars<br />

to be a Midwesterner.<br />

As we Uber’d back<br />

to Glencoe (and back to<br />

reality), we wore content<br />

smiles. The merits of<br />

town vs. country have<br />

long been debated, but I<br />

know for sure that nothing<br />

is quite as satisfying<br />

as coming home.<br />

Kelly Q. Anderson is a writer,<br />

photographer and former<br />

Chicagoan. She pens blogs<br />

and books from her home in<br />

Glencoe, which she shares<br />

with her husband, son,<br />

daughter and Boston terrier.<br />

1/3 SOLD!<br />

VOLTZ &WAUKE<strong>GA</strong>N|NORTHBROOK<br />

AnetsWoods.com 847.461.9948<br />

Plans, materials, prices and specifications are based on availability and are subject to change without notice. Architectural, structural and other revisions may be made as are deemed necessarybythe developer,builder,architect or as may be required by law.Images are used<br />

for illustrative purposes only and may reflect available upgrades over standard specifications. NOTE: Window placement is determined by elevation style.


glencoeanchor.com Sound Off<br />

the glencoe anchor | March 22, 2018 | 23<br />

Social snapshot<br />

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

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

Follow The Glencoe Anchor: @GlencoeAnchor<br />

go figure<br />

Glencoe PTO posted this photo on March<br />

7 with the caption: “Girls on The Run at<br />

West School just got started for another<br />

exciting spring season. Coaches Shadel<br />

and Hoyt are going to do a beautiful job<br />

with our 3rd and 4th grade girls!”<br />

“Happy #PiDay! Planning a circular<br />

garden plot this year? Use pi! Measure the<br />

diameter of your plot. Halve this number<br />

for the radius. Grab pi (3.14) and find your<br />

square footage. Area (or square feet) = π x<br />

(radius x radius).”<br />

@ChicagoBotanic posted on March 14<br />

100K<br />

Top Stories<br />

from GlencoeAnchor.com as of March 19<br />

1. VIDEO: Hundreds of students call for<br />

action during New Trier’s walkout<br />

2. New Trier’s student-led walkout creates<br />

powerful message<br />

3. Intergenerational project connects the<br />

unlikely in Glencoe<br />

4. Loyola students host walkout to call for<br />

change<br />

5. Student Viewpoint: We should be scared<br />

of our own power<br />

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

The amount of money in native<br />

plants that will be planted along<br />

the Green Bay Trail. (See Page 8)<br />

From the Editor<br />

Kudos to<br />

you for<br />

taking<br />

a stand<br />

Megan Bernard<br />

megan@glencoeanchor.com<br />

On March 14, all of the<br />

high schools in The<br />

Glencoe Anchor’s<br />

coverage area participated<br />

National School Walkout Day.<br />

While not every single student<br />

walked out of their schools, a<br />

large percentage did take part.<br />

On my way to New Trier<br />

High School in the morning, I<br />

was coming up to North Shore<br />

Country Day School and<br />

witnessed the students pouring<br />

out of the buildings onto the<br />

sidewalks of Green Bay Road.<br />

As the students continued<br />

to line up on the sidewalk<br />

holding posters, I felt something.<br />

I honked my horn with<br />

misty eyes, I admit, in support<br />

of those kids exercising their<br />

rights and taking a stand — no<br />

matter what it was.<br />

Minutes later, I found myself<br />

at the outskirts of New Trier’s<br />

property. While no media<br />

was allowed on the grounds,<br />

I could still get a somewhat<br />

close glimpse at the school’s<br />

student-led protest. At this<br />

moment, as a news helicopter<br />

loomed overhead, I had that<br />

feeling again — pride.<br />

Congratulations to the<br />

students who led these charges<br />

and for those who participated<br />

or spoke up. No matter what<br />

your beliefs are, you did something,<br />

you acted on them.<br />

Student Viewpoint<br />

We should be scared of our own power<br />

Mia Sherin<br />

Contributing Columnist<br />

New Trier student<br />

The thought of a<br />

school shooting has<br />

always been scary.<br />

As a young kid in a<br />

lockdown drill, no one<br />

ever announced, “Yes, I<br />

welcome a shooter! Let<br />

me fend them off. I got<br />

this.” No, we all cowered<br />

in a corner, imagining the<br />

what ifs.<br />

Am I in the safest<br />

possible location? Who<br />

would be shot first? Me<br />

or the girl curled up next<br />

to me?<br />

On March 14, I was<br />

more terrified than ever.<br />

Yes, I will always be<br />

scared of a school shooting,<br />

but then, I was scared<br />

of our own potential. Or<br />

rather, not living up to it.<br />

For me, yesterday’s walkout<br />

was a wake-up call.<br />

Us teens come with an<br />

agenda. And we come in<br />

numbers.<br />

As a society, we are<br />

very critical by nature.<br />

People often see these<br />

movements as good, but<br />

flawed. As well-intentioned,<br />

but not enough.<br />

Unsurprisingly, this is a<br />

mindset many students<br />

took on after the walkout.<br />

While there was a lot of<br />

chatter flying about the<br />

school, there was one<br />

question that seemed to<br />

rise above the rest: What<br />

was our purpose?<br />

Some complained they<br />

couldn’t hear the speakers,<br />

but I would argue that<br />

listening to speeches was<br />

not our purpose. Others<br />

argued that we took no<br />

steps in changing legislation,<br />

to which I would say<br />

was also not our purpose.<br />

And finally, students said<br />

the only true change we<br />

can make is with our<br />

vote, so what good does a<br />

protest do?<br />

We come with an<br />

agenda, and we come in<br />

numbers. I believe that<br />

we marched to spread this<br />

message.<br />

I agree the most important<br />

change you can make<br />

is with your vote. But<br />

sometimes, people need to<br />

be inspired. These protests<br />

did not change legislation.<br />

They did not magically<br />

cause the NRA to cease<br />

to exist. But that was not<br />

our purpose. The purpose<br />

of the walkout was to<br />

empower our generation<br />

to be active and vote, in<br />

the hopes of voting in new<br />

politicians who are ready<br />

to make a change.<br />

The purpose was to<br />

make each and every student<br />

afraid of their own<br />

potential. Scared of their<br />

own power.<br />

While there were critics<br />

of the walkout, those that<br />

thought it was flawed<br />

or not enough, I was<br />

still proud to see overwhelming<br />

support and<br />

participation. I can see the<br />

excitement just by scrolling<br />

through my Instagram<br />

feed, which is flooded<br />

with pictures and videos<br />

from the walkout. The<br />

way these images have<br />

spread across all forms<br />

of social media only emphasizes<br />

that youth have<br />

taken over this movement.<br />

As I have said, we<br />

come in numbers, and so<br />

do our Snapchat stories.<br />

There will always be<br />

more we can do. We often<br />

take steps back as we<br />

take steps forward. This<br />

walkout was imperfect,<br />

but that does not make it<br />

any less of a success. On<br />

March 14, students across<br />

the country stood in solidarity<br />

with the students<br />

from Marjory Stoneman<br />

Douglas. We came in<br />

numbers, and we came<br />

with an agenda.<br />

Our purpose? For every<br />

single person marching,<br />

supervising or watching<br />

the videos from home<br />

to be inspired by these<br />

protests. To be inspired to<br />

vote, inspired to become<br />

educated, and empowered<br />

to stay active in politics.<br />

Because there is a lot<br />

of responsibility on our<br />

shoulders. We can make a<br />

change. And it’s terrifying.<br />

Sherin is a senior a New Trier<br />

High School in Winnetka.<br />

She is a opinions writer for<br />

New Trier News and lives in<br />

Wilmette.<br />

The Glencoe<br />

Anchor<br />

Sound Off Policy<br />

Editorials and columns are the<br />

opinions of the author. Pieces<br />

from 22nd Century Media are<br />

the thoughts of the company<br />

as a whole. The Glencoe Anchor<br />

encourages readers to write<br />

letters to Sound Off. All letters<br />

must be signed, and names and<br />

hometowns will be published.<br />

We also ask that writers include<br />

their address and phone number<br />

for verification, not publication.<br />

Letters should be limited to<br />

400 words. The Glencoe Anchor<br />

reserves the right to edit letters.<br />

Letters become property of The<br />

Glencoe Anchor. Letters that are<br />

published do not reflect the<br />

thoughts and views of The Glencoe<br />

Anchor. Letters can be mailed to:<br />

The Glencoe Anchor, 60 Revere<br />

Drive ST 888, Northbrook,<br />

IL, 60062. Fax letters to (847)<br />

272-4648 or email to megan@<br />

glencoeanchor.com.<br />

www.glencoeanchor.com


24 | March 22, 2018 | The glencoe anchor glencoe<br />

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the glencoe anchor | March 22, 2018 | glencoeanchor.com<br />

Locally made<br />

Glencoe artist shares work<br />

at Vivid Gallery, Page 29<br />

Keeping up with the times<br />

Max’s Deli strives to be ‘fun and hip’ with<br />

new menu items, Page 30<br />

Author Stuart Dybek shares his writing and work with Glencoe locals, Page 27<br />

Author Stuart Dybek meets visitors of the Glencoe<br />

Public Library on March 13 after he spoke at a special<br />

event sharing his work and fielding questions.<br />

Courtesy of Glencoe Public Library


26 | March 22, 2018 | The glencoe anchor Puzzles<br />

glencoeanchor.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 />

. “___ there?” (part of<br />

a knock-knock joke)<br />

5. Sounds of relief<br />

9. ___ Hari<br />

13. Intro to space<br />

14. Scenery<br />

16. Goons<br />

17. Neuter<br />

18. Money in Moscow<br />

19. Tachometer rdgs.<br />

20. Rights org.<br />

21. Phony<br />

23. French farce/comedy<br />

writer, Honore de<br />

___<br />

25. Kitchen meas.<br />

26. Sun, for example<br />

28. Van or san followers<br />

29. More patriotic<br />

32. Compete<br />

33. Old age<br />

34. Horoscope revelation<br />

35. Raison d’ ___<br />

37. Part of U.S.N.A.,<br />

abbr.<br />

38. Political pal<br />

39. Chemical endings<br />

40. Excessively<br />

42. Grp. concerned<br />

with curriculum<br />

43. Oblique<br />

45. Biological duct<br />

48. John Boyd __<br />

49. “... ___ quit!”<br />

(ultimatum)<br />

50. Soprano and wife<br />

of 30 down, ____<br />

Sakhnovskaya<br />

52. Upper hand<br />

56. Insignia on some<br />

fighters<br />

57. Old Italian money<br />

58. City on the Ruhr<br />

59. Croupier’s tool<br />

60. Parking space<br />

61. Dust ruffle<br />

62. Auspices<br />

63. Ben Franklin’s<br />

baby<br />

64. Thanksgiving<br />

dishes<br />

65. Bad impression?<br />

Down<br />

1. Japanese condiment<br />

2. Cool dude, 50’sstyle<br />

3. Viva voce<br />

4. Cosmonaut’s craft<br />

5. Stone fruit<br />

6. Give ___ for one’s<br />

money<br />

7. Shelves by the<br />

fireplace<br />

8. House style<br />

9. Adult filly<br />

10. Thumbs-up<br />

11. Reckless boldness<br />

12. Pack animal<br />

15. Insight<br />

22. Life saving technique<br />

24. Hand-cream additive<br />

27. Bumble __<br />

30. Performer at<br />

the Highland Park<br />

Strings 39th Season,<br />

Michael ____<br />

31. Endangered ornamental<br />

plant<br />

33. A.M.A. members<br />

34. Type of ball<br />

35. A bird’s was used<br />

in Roman augury<br />

36. Sign of sorrow<br />

38. ‘MASH’ actor<br />

39. New issue at the<br />

NYSE<br />

41. College board<br />

43. Constrictor<br />

44. Sea flock<br />

45. Looks<br />

46. Luke and Leia’s<br />

father<br />

47. Least risky<br />

51. Drawn<br />

53. Distillery items<br />

54. Marco Polo<br />

crossed it<br />

55. Starting point<br />

57. N.C.A.A.’s Fighting<br />

Tigers<br />

GLENCOE<br />

Writers Theatre<br />

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

242-6000)<br />

■Through ■ March 25: A<br />

Moon for the Misbegotten<br />

Tudor Wine Bar<br />

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

786-4267)<br />

■8 ■ p.m. Friday, April 6:<br />

Gritman & Moran Live<br />

WILMETTE<br />

The Rock House<br />

(1150 Central Ave.<br />

(847) 256-7625)<br />

■6:30 ■ p.m. Friday,<br />

March 23: Family<br />

Night + Karaoke<br />

Wilmette Theatre<br />

(1122 Central Ave.<br />

(847) 251-7424)<br />

■6:30 ■ p.m. Thursday,<br />

April 12: ‘A New Leaf’<br />

Wilmette Historical<br />

Museum<br />

(609 Ridge Road (847)<br />

853-7666)<br />

■2 ■ p.m. Sunday, April<br />

15: Lecture — Vivian<br />

Maier<br />

HIGHLAND PARK<br />

The Panda Bar<br />

(596 Elm Place, (847)<br />

433-0589)<br />

■Every ■ Friday: Live<br />

Music<br />

HIGHWOOD<br />

Buffo’s<br />

(431 Sheridan Road,<br />

(847) 432-0301)<br />

■7 ■ p.m. every Monday:<br />

Trivia<br />

GLENVIEW<br />

Johnny’s Kitchen<br />

(1740 Milwaukee Ave.<br />

(847) 699-9999)<br />

■7:30 ■ p.m. every Friday<br />

and Saturday: Live<br />

Music<br />

The Rock House<br />

(1742 Glenview Road<br />

(224) 616-3062)<br />

■6 ■ p.m. Friday, March<br />

23: Family Night and<br />

Karaoke<br />

■10 ■ a.m. Saturday,<br />

March 24: Piper Phillips<br />

Acoustic<br />

To place an event in The<br />

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

answers<br />

How to play Sudoku<br />

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

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

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

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

1 to 9.<br />

LEVEL: Medium<br />

Crossword by Myles Mellor and Susan Flanagan


glencoeanchor.com Life & Arts<br />

the glencoe anchor | March 22, 2018 | 27<br />

Author Stuart Dybek<br />

brings Chicago to Glencoe<br />

Nathan Worcester<br />

Freelance Reporter<br />

“ABSOLUTELY<br />

—Kenn Wells, former lead dancer of the English National Ballet<br />

IN THE WORLD.”<br />

Chicago author Stuart<br />

Dybek enthralled the<br />

crowd March 13 during<br />

his reading at the Glencoe<br />

Public Library.<br />

Dybek, who is the<br />

Distinguished Writer in<br />

Residence at Northwestern<br />

University, began by<br />

reading his poem “Bath”<br />

and his short story “Pet<br />

Milk.” Dybek then fielded<br />

questions and comments<br />

from the audience. The<br />

author was visiting the library<br />

for a special event.<br />

After explaining that<br />

his undergraduate students<br />

were sometimes<br />

disheartened when he<br />

edited their work, Dybek<br />

said he softened the blow<br />

by showing them the draft<br />

of a story he had submitted<br />

to The New Yorker.<br />

Legendary editor Roger<br />

Angell sent back a heavily<br />

marked-up version<br />

with an acceptance note<br />

indicating that it “needs a<br />

few moments work.”<br />

One audience member<br />

remarked that many of<br />

Dybek’s fictional stories<br />

felt autobiographical.<br />

Dybek pointed out the<br />

line separating nonfiction<br />

from fiction was often<br />

blurry for writers.<br />

“Many of my friends —<br />

and certainly me — we’re<br />

kind of fast and loose<br />

with what’s fiction and<br />

what isn’t,” Dybek said.<br />

Dybek also praised<br />

Chicago’s self-conscious<br />

development of a local<br />

literary canon throughout<br />

the past few decades.<br />

“Chicago is a city<br />

unique in the relationship<br />

it has with its writers,”<br />

Author Stuart Dybek signs copies of his books March<br />

13 at an event where he spoke to attendees of the<br />

Glencoe Public Library. Courtesy of Glencoe Public<br />

Library<br />

Dybek said. “The way<br />

England has got Keats,<br />

Shelley and Byron, Chicago’s<br />

got Algren, Bellow<br />

and Gwendolyn Brooks.”<br />

“In high schools and<br />

even junior highs now,<br />

there are these courses in<br />

Chicago literature, and<br />

the teachers are spectacular,”<br />

Dybek added. “When<br />

I grew up in Pilsen, I<br />

never got to the stack of<br />

books that would’ve told<br />

me anything about where<br />

I was living. It never occurred<br />

to me for a moment<br />

where I was living<br />

had this enormous history.<br />

And I was living up<br />

to my neck in the richness<br />

of what passes for history<br />

in the Midwest, given that<br />

we’re a young country.”<br />

Another audience<br />

member asked Dybek if<br />

he had seen a shift in the<br />

way Chicago writers handle<br />

crime, corruption and<br />

similar topics throughout<br />

the past 40 years.<br />

Please see Author, 28<br />

“A gift<br />

for this planet.”<br />

—Georgian veteran journalist<br />

Helena Apkhadze<br />

MAR 21-25<br />

Rosemont<br />

Rosemont Theatre<br />

Art That<br />

Connects Heaven and Earth<br />

“<br />

I have reviewed about 4,000 shows since 1942.<br />

None can compare to what I saw tonight.”<br />

—Richard Connema, renowned Broadway critic<br />

“There is a massive power in this<br />

that can embrace the world. It brings great hope.<br />

It is truly a touch of heaven.”<br />

—Daniel Herman, minister of Culture of the Czech Republic<br />

“Mesmerizing! I encourage everyone to see and<br />

all of us to learn from.”<br />

—Donna Karan, creator of DKNY<br />

“The greatest of the great! It must be experienced.”<br />

—Christine Walevska, “goddess of the cello”, watched Shen Yun 5 times<br />

ALL 2017 SHOWS SOLD OUT! SECURE YOUR SEATS NOW!<br />

APR 5-8<br />

Aurora<br />

Paramount Theatre<br />

APR 12-15<br />

Chicago<br />

Harris Theater<br />

888-99-SHOWS(74697)<br />

ShenYun.com/Chicago<br />

Prices: $80- $200


28 | March 22, 2018 | The glencoe anchor Faith<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

Faith Briefs<br />

North Shore Congregation Israel (1185 Sheridan<br />

Road, Glencoe)<br />

Passover Themes<br />

Join Rabbi Daniels as he explores<br />

themes of the Passover<br />

Seder in “We were Slaves. We<br />

were Freed. Let’s Eat. with Rabbi<br />

Ryan Daniels” on from 7-8:30<br />

p.m. Wednesday, March 28.<br />

Study the Talmud<br />

Come and study the Talmud<br />

with Rabbi Wendi Geffen from<br />

1-2 p.m. every Monday until<br />

May 22.<br />

Building closed<br />

The congregation will be<br />

closed Sunday, March 25.<br />

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

Ruach Choir and Shir Chadash<br />

Shabbat<br />

Shabbat services are held<br />

weekly at 6:30 p.m. and run approximately<br />

75 minutes. This<br />

Shabbat service features Am<br />

Shalom’s newest Jewish musical<br />

leaders taking center bima<br />

to help lead the congregation in<br />

worship.<br />

Feeding the Hungry<br />

On the third Sunday of every<br />

month, volunteer members of<br />

Am Shalom gather from 9-10<br />

a.m. to help at the temple’s<br />

kitchen. It just takes about an<br />

hour and is rewarding for people<br />

of any age. Questions? Call Nina<br />

Schroeder at (847) 835-7025.<br />

Annual Chocolate Seder<br />

Come join the congregation<br />

from 4-5:30 p.m. Thursday,<br />

March 22, as it has its annual<br />

Chocolate Seder, featuring chocolate<br />

in place of all the normal<br />

Seder items. One of the congregation’s<br />

best, and certainly the<br />

most delicious, youth event of<br />

the year. Open for all secondthrough<br />

fifth-graders.<br />

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

Ave.)<br />

Maundy Thursday<br />

Join the church Thursday,<br />

March 29, at 6:30 p.m. as the<br />

Lay Readers host an informal<br />

Agape (love) Supper in the Dining<br />

Room. This recalls Jesus’<br />

last meal with his friends and<br />

appeals to all ages. Children will<br />

find the food to be friendly and<br />

the symbols accessible.<br />

The Episcopal Church and<br />

#MeToo<br />

At this Forum on April 8, the<br />

church will go over the response<br />

processes already in place in the<br />

Episcopal Church for occasions<br />

of complaints of sexual harassment.<br />

This harmful phenomenon<br />

has been on the church’s radar<br />

for several decades, and the response<br />

protocols have evolved.<br />

Come and learn what is current<br />

as all renew their baptismal vow<br />

to respect the dignity of every<br />

human being. Led by Daphne<br />

Cody.<br />

Orientation to A French Dip<br />

A dozen visitors from Nantes,<br />

France will be arriving in Glencoe<br />

for an exploration of religion<br />

in America on Oct. 17-29.<br />

St. Elisabeth’s will be the hosts<br />

for this intercultural exchange.<br />

Hall Healy, Susan Newcomb and<br />

Daphne Cody will be holding two<br />

identical information sessions<br />

at 11:30 a.m. April 22 or 7:30<br />

p.m. May 1 to share the French<br />

group’s goals and interests, to<br />

offer a breakdown of tasks we<br />

need for welcoming them, and<br />

to respond to your questions. If<br />

you choose the April 22 option,<br />

France-themed coffee hour treats<br />

will be featured.<br />

Spring Plant Sale<br />

Order your annuals and see<br />

if friends and neighbors want<br />

some, too. Packets are in the<br />

back of the church and pick up<br />

is May 5.<br />

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

Palm/Passion Sunday Worship<br />

Join the church at 10 a.m.<br />

Sunday, March 25, for worship,<br />

remembering the day Jesus rode<br />

into Jerusalem to shouts of praise<br />

and waving of palm branches.<br />

The church will look ahead to the<br />

events of Good Friday and reflect<br />

on their meaning for our lives.<br />

Maundy Thursday<br />

Gather for a service at 7 p.m.<br />

Thursday, March 29, for a remembrance<br />

of the final evening<br />

Jesus, with his friends, celebrated<br />

the Passover meal. As has become<br />

tradition, the church will<br />

be hosting friends from St. Paul<br />

AME Church. A full meal will be<br />

shared along with Communion,<br />

all in the Great Hall. Meal and<br />

worship service will conclude<br />

by 8:30 p.m. This is an event for<br />

the whole family. Let the church<br />

know you’re coming: sign up<br />

during Coffee Hour or call the<br />

church office.<br />

Good Friday<br />

With readings, prayer and<br />

song, the church commemorates<br />

the suffering and death of Jesus<br />

at 7:30 p.m. March 30. This is<br />

a meditative and profoundly<br />

hopeful service. Together all remember<br />

why it is everyone calls<br />

this Friday “good.”<br />

Easter Sunrise<br />

Come celebrate Easter on<br />

Glencoe Beach at 6 a.m. April 1.<br />

Dress is casual. All will gather to<br />

read the Easter story and pray in<br />

Easter Day. Warm coffee and cocoa<br />

will be served.<br />

Easter Sunday Worship<br />

This is the most sacred Sunday<br />

of the Church year. Together, at<br />

10 a.m. April 1, the church will<br />

proclaim in word and song the<br />

Resurrection of Jesus and remember<br />

again what this means<br />

for our lives and the world. Alleluia!<br />

Christ is Risen!<br />

Request for Donations<br />

Cornerstone and First Look<br />

took on the challenge of collecting<br />

diapers, pacifiers and wipes,<br />

all to be donated to Share our<br />

Spare. They had some requests<br />

for items based on some immediate<br />

needs Chitwood’s aware<br />

of, like toddler clothing, portable<br />

cribs and strollers. Please bring<br />

any of these items to GUC and<br />

they will be delivered.<br />

Submit information for The<br />

Anchor’s Faith page to<br />

m.wojtychiw@22ndcenturymedia.<br />

com.<br />

Author<br />

From Page 27<br />

“Well, Chicago’s always been<br />

a town of realists,” said Dybek,<br />

who extended that characterization<br />

to include poets in addition<br />

to fiction writers.<br />

He added he felt he had initially<br />

attracted attention because<br />

his work blended realism<br />

with surrealism. He concluded<br />

that even after the literary experimentation<br />

that began during<br />

the 1960s, Chicago remains<br />

“essentially a realist town.”<br />

Citing Dybek’s habit of exchanging<br />

manuscripts with fellow<br />

Iowa Writers’ Workshop<br />

graduate Tracy Kidder for review,<br />

an audience member also<br />

asked Dybek if writers were<br />

generally capable of objectivity<br />

when editing other writers’<br />

work.<br />

“I think you can maybe leave<br />

your ego at the door, but you<br />

can’t leave your taste,” said<br />

Dybek, continuing that he was<br />

mindful of Kidder’s own literary<br />

tendencies when reviewing<br />

Kidder’s comments and<br />

expected that Kidder had the<br />

same mindset when reviewing<br />

Dybek’s comments.<br />

Before and after the event,<br />

attendees expressed their appreciation<br />

for Dybek’s work<br />

and the chance to hear him in<br />

Glencoe.<br />

“He’s an excellent short story<br />

writer, and it’s a great venue because<br />

we live in Glencoe,” resident<br />

Sam Evans said.<br />

“I’ve known him to be one<br />

of the premier Chicago writers<br />

as long as I can remember,”<br />

said programming and publicity<br />

librarian Grace Hayek, who<br />

arranged the reading. “By the<br />

time I was able to contact him,<br />

he said, ‘Of course I’d love to<br />

come. I love libraries.’”<br />

visit us online at GLENCOEANCHOR.com<br />

IN MEMORIAM<br />

Leslie Carlsbad<br />

Leslie Perlman,<br />

94, formerly of<br />

Glencoe, died March 9. Carlsbad<br />

was preceded in death by<br />

his parents, Max and Mollie<br />

Perlman, and sister, Eleanor<br />

Loeb. He is survived by<br />

his loving wife of 61 years,<br />

Sandra (Feiges) Perlman,<br />

sons Peter Perlman and Larry<br />

(Carol) Perlman, daughter<br />

Randi (Lee Orlov), and granddaughters<br />

Annie, Kari, Mollie<br />

and Kelsey. Carlsbad will be<br />

greatly missed by his family,<br />

friends, neighbors and special<br />

caregivers. An avid sports enthusiast,<br />

beachcomber, world<br />

traveler and an accomplished<br />

business executive, he had a<br />

life well-lived. Carlsbad was<br />

a World War II Purple Heart<br />

Army veteran. A memorial<br />

service was held at the Miramar<br />

National Cemetery, Mira<br />

Mesa, CA, on March 15. In<br />

lieu of flowers, donations may<br />

be made in Les’ honor to the<br />

Honor Flight of San Diego,<br />

the Rancho Coastal Humane<br />

Society, Encinitas, CA, or the<br />

charity of your choice.<br />

Have someone’s life you’d<br />

like to honor? Email Michael<br />

Wojtychiw at<br />

m.wojtychiw@22ndcenturymedia.<br />

com with information about a<br />

loved one who was part of the<br />

Glencoe community.


glencoeanchor.com Life & Arts<br />

the glencoe anchor | March 22, 2018 | 29<br />

Glencoe artist exhibits<br />

in Hubbard Woods<br />

Abstract paintings<br />

available to view<br />

through Saturday<br />

Submitted Content<br />

Abstract<br />

expressionist<br />

artist<br />

Warren<br />

Kaplan, of<br />

Glencoe,<br />

is showing<br />

8-12 Kaplan<br />

paintings at<br />

Vivid Art Gallery in Winnetka<br />

during the month of<br />

March.<br />

Vivid Gallery is located<br />

at 895 Green Bay<br />

Road, Winnetka, in nearby<br />

Hubbard Woods shopping<br />

district. The exhibit<br />

will be open now through<br />

March 31.<br />

The Glencoe resident’s<br />

style, reminiscent of Franz<br />

Kline and Robert Motherwell,<br />

incorporates strong<br />

elements and economy<br />

of color. Bold strokes of<br />

black and white, are layered<br />

and contrasted with<br />

brief explosions of color.<br />

The artist is guided by<br />

this simple mantra: Less is<br />

more.<br />

“I strive to tell a story<br />

using fewer words,” Kaplan<br />

said.<br />

He’s a self-taught artist,<br />

beginning his journey<br />

of artistic expression as a<br />

classical singer. For many<br />

years, his art remained<br />

private, hidden from the<br />

public, while he pursued<br />

singing opportunities.<br />

He describes himself as a<br />

“natural.” Quoting from<br />

his artist statement, “...my<br />

subconscious, my heart,<br />

my spirit guides my hand.”<br />

When speaking of the<br />

creative process used to<br />

paint his title piece for the<br />

Vivid Gallery show, #38<br />

(balance), he said, “I had a<br />

plan. A plan had me...”<br />

For more information,<br />

visit www.vividartgallery.<br />

net/artists/#/warren-kaplan<br />

or www.warrenkaplan.com/artist.html.<br />

Glencoe artist Warren Kaplan’s title piece for his show at Vivid Art Gallery in<br />

Winnetka during the month of March. Photo Submitted<br />

Glencoe band Crew to perform<br />

at Winnetka Music Festival<br />

Lineup announced<br />

for summer show<br />

Submitted Content<br />

Known for its Emerging<br />

Artist Showcase, the Winnetka<br />

Music Festival, a<br />

free home-grown festival,<br />

returns for its second year<br />

and is gaining notoriety on<br />

the national music scene<br />

for attracting renowned indie<br />

acts to perform across<br />

five stages throughout the<br />

village.<br />

This Father’s Day Weekend,<br />

June 15-16, 26 artists,<br />

including some from<br />

Glencoe, and a multitude<br />

of street buskers will converge<br />

on downtown Winnetka<br />

and bring “New music.<br />

Around every corner.”<br />

to the fans.<br />

The newly added Chicago<br />

Cubs Stage will be<br />

the setting for headliners<br />

ZZ Ward on Saturday and<br />

A Thousand Horses on Friday.<br />

Three main stages will<br />

host artists who are creating<br />

a buzz in the industry,<br />

including Low Cut Connie,<br />

ASHE, Win + Woo, Billy<br />

Strings, Andrew Belle,<br />

COBI, Motopony, and the<br />

Seratones.<br />

The Winnetka Music<br />

Festival opens Friday night,<br />

June 15, with a concert featuring<br />

four bands ranging<br />

from country to rock to<br />

EDM. Throughout the afternoon<br />

and into the night<br />

on Saturday, June 16, three<br />

main stages (BMO Harris,<br />

Fields Auto Group and The<br />

Chicago Cubs) will host a<br />

steady stream of acts who<br />

are based in such far-flung<br />

locations as Montreal, Sydney,<br />

Seattle, Nashville and<br />

LA. They will be making<br />

a stop in Winnetka interspersed<br />

among other notable<br />

appearances at such<br />

venues as SXSW, DUSK,<br />

Bonnaroo, and late-night<br />

TV.<br />

Back by popular demand,<br />

the intimate indoor<br />

venue, The lululemon/<br />

Spynergy Chapel Stage,<br />

will be the backdrop to an<br />

eclectic mix of specialty<br />

genres and acoustic sets on<br />

Saturday. One can sample<br />

the music of opera protégé<br />

Carly Meyer, the sultry<br />

sounds of JB Jazz Quartet,<br />

and Jake Allen, a supremely<br />

talented guitarist<br />

and multi-instrumentalist,<br />

amongst others.<br />

This family-friendly festival<br />

includes must-see performances<br />

at The Hudson<br />

Company Family Stage.<br />

This venue will kick off<br />

Saturday morning with a<br />

performance by The Winnetka<br />

Children’s Theatre<br />

and feature sets from The<br />

Rhythm Revolution and<br />

Nashville’s The Farmer &<br />

Adele. There will also be<br />

engaging crafts and activities<br />

for kids between sets.<br />

This year’s fest will also<br />

include acts that have ties<br />

to the North Shore – crooner<br />

James Lanman, SXSW<br />

darlings Moonrise Nation,<br />

The North 41, Hadley Kennary,<br />

and Crew, a band<br />

from Glencoe.<br />

“We’re excited to build<br />

on the excitement and successes<br />

of last year’s event<br />

and bring an expanded version<br />

of the festival to Winnetka,”<br />

said festival chairman<br />

and visionary Scott<br />

Myers. “Last year’s success<br />

proved that there is a lot of<br />

interest in a festival that<br />

brings high quality music<br />

to a great community. This<br />

year’s festival will provide<br />

even greater variety for everyone.”<br />

The Winnetka Music<br />

Festival’s new layout will<br />

bring enhancements, like<br />

additional food trucks and<br />

food courts, merchandise<br />

tables, more craft beer and<br />

wine options and an additional<br />

main stage set in the<br />

heart of Winnetka.<br />

Like last year’s inaugural<br />

festival, the artists in<br />

the 2018 lineup were exclusively<br />

curated by music<br />

industry tastemaker<br />

Val Haller, Winnetka resident<br />

and CEO/founder of<br />

valslist.com/valslistradio;<br />

a music discovery website<br />

that showcases the<br />

newest emerging artists.​<br />

Valslist is a co-producer of<br />

the fest along with Myers.<br />

The WMF was a logical<br />

next step for Val who had<br />

launched a very successful<br />

house concert series in her<br />

living room six years ago.<br />

“Executing an event of<br />

this scale and quality has<br />

only been possible through<br />

the work of many different<br />

groups,” Myers said. “The<br />

Winnetka Music Festival<br />

is truly a collaborative<br />

project of ValsList, the Village<br />

of Winnetka, the Winnetka<br />

Park District and the<br />

Chamber of Commerce, as<br />

well as local businesses and<br />

residents. Its success can<br />

be attributed to their hard<br />

work and joint efforts.”<br />

The Winnetka Music<br />

Festival is a true community<br />

effort. Volunteers and<br />

sponsors are vital to its<br />

success. For more information<br />

about the Winnetka<br />

Music Festival, including<br />

full line-up and how to get<br />

involved, visit www.winnetkamusicfestival.com.


30 | March 22, 2018 | The glencoe anchor Dining Out<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

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Max’s Deli has been a<br />

long-standing establishment<br />

in the North Shore<br />

for more than 25 years.<br />

To be successful for more<br />

years to come, its owner is<br />

revamping the menu with<br />

more health-conscious<br />

and fresh dishes for the<br />

future.<br />

Joey Morelli, a trained<br />

chef, and his brother<br />

opened up Joey’s Brickhouse<br />

in Chicago in 2004.<br />

After a seven-year run,<br />

they were ready to take<br />

over their grandfather Bernie<br />

Katz’s business, Max’s<br />

Deli, at 191 Skokie Valley<br />

Road in Highland Park.<br />

At first, like the saying<br />

goes, if it wasn’t broke,<br />

they didn’t fix it — so<br />

nothing changed menuwise<br />

at the restaurant.<br />

They did, however, eventually<br />

add a full-service<br />

bakery, so Max’s produces<br />

cupcakes, cookies, pies,<br />

bagels, bailies, among<br />

other baked goods, just<br />

behind the counter made<br />

fresh for customers.<br />

When 22nd Century<br />

Media visited last in 2015,<br />

the deli owners said they<br />

were open to new ideas<br />

and responsive to community<br />

preferences. For<br />

example, we reported that<br />

Max’s rolled out a blueberry<br />

cream cheese that<br />

they said was perfectly delicious,<br />

but the community<br />

didn’t take to it. Later, the<br />

cooks concocted a jalapeno<br />

cream cheese and it was<br />

then one of the top sellers.<br />

Now, Morelli is ready to<br />

make some more changes<br />

to better the restaurant and<br />

keep up with the times.<br />

Morelli inspires to<br />

turn his “old-school Jewish<br />

deli” into a “fun and<br />

The egg-in-the-hole bagel at Max’s Deli in Highland<br />

Park features a sunny-side up egg surrounded by a<br />

fresh bagel in a flavor of your choosing. Jacqueline<br />

Glosniak/22nd Century Media<br />

hip” eatery to welcome a<br />

younger crowd and more<br />

families, slightly changing<br />

the dynamic from the<br />

older clientele.<br />

“It’s been a process.<br />

There is nothing fun and<br />

hip about Max’s Deli because<br />

it’s been here for<br />

more than 25 years, but to<br />

evolve to the next level,<br />

we are going to have to<br />

reinvent ourselves or we’ll<br />

die,” Morelli said.<br />

The reinvention began<br />

about eight months ago,<br />

Morelli said, when he<br />

switched over the restaurant’s<br />

chicken fingers on its<br />

children’s menu by trading<br />

the “mystery meat” with<br />

tenders from Harrison’s<br />

Chicken, coating them in<br />

extra fine flour and frying<br />

them in clean canola oil.<br />

“But the kids wanted<br />

the same chicken because<br />

they were so used to it so<br />

I had some backlash,” he<br />

said. “I hesitated and got<br />

scared. A couple months<br />

later, I talked to enough<br />

customers and just said<br />

‘Screw it. If someone<br />

wants to get mad at me for<br />

this then they will have to<br />

just be mad.’”<br />

The revamping spread<br />

to other parts of the deli’s<br />

menu, including the mac<br />

’n’ cheese, which previously<br />

was shipped to the<br />

store with a pre-made<br />

cheese pouch. Now, Morelli<br />

makes the dish homemade<br />

with his own cheese<br />

sauce (quality American<br />

cheese, milk and butter)<br />

and boiled noodles.<br />

Other new items include:<br />

chicken and waffles,<br />

an egg-in-the-hole bagel,<br />

a turkey burger made<br />

from the scraps of turkey<br />

they roast in-house and a<br />

veggie burger made with<br />

12 different vegetables.<br />

There are now also a<br />

couple gluten-free menu<br />

options and a new crowdpleaser:<br />

make-your-own<br />

omelets.<br />

Looking forward, along<br />

with the reinvention, Morelli<br />

plans to host a milkshake<br />

bar in the summer<br />

for families and children.<br />

Read the full story at<br />

GlencoeAnchor.com.


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the glencoe anchor | March 22, 2018 | 31<br />

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2703 Legal<br />

Notices<br />

VILLAGE OF GLENCOE<br />

GLENCOE, ILLINOIS<br />

FENCE BOARD OF APPEALS<br />

NOTICE OF<br />

PUBLIC HEARING<br />

April 9, 2018<br />

Notice is hereby given that a public<br />

hearing is to be conducted on Monday,<br />

April 9, 2018, at 7:30 p.m.,<br />

before the Fence Board of Appeals<br />

of the Village of Glencoe, Cook<br />

County, Illinois, in the Council<br />

Chambers of the Village Hall, 675<br />

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

consider an appeal of Robert Pierre<br />

on behalf of North Shore Congregation<br />

Israel from a decision by the<br />

Community Development Administrator<br />

in denying a permit for the<br />

construction of a deer fence surrounding<br />

the community garden<br />

within the southeast portion of the<br />

property on that part of the north<br />

1/2 of the north 1/2 of Section 6,<br />

Township 42 north, range 13 east<br />

of the third principal meridian, Village<br />

of Glencoe, Cook County, Illinois,<br />

bounded and described as follows:<br />

on the west by the center line<br />

of Sheridan Road as shown on the<br />

plat of survey attached to Document<br />

No. 4284364 filed for record<br />

on November 5, 1908; on the east<br />

by the water's edge of Lake Michigan,<br />

on the north by the center line<br />

of the watercourse of a ravine; and<br />

on the south by the center line of<br />

the watercourse of a ravine - the<br />

said northerly and southerly limits<br />

of the herein before described<br />

premises with their respective<br />

western termini being more definitely<br />

describes as follows: beginning<br />

at the point of intersection of<br />

said center line of Sheridan Road<br />

and the south line of government<br />

lot 2 of the northeast 1/4 of said<br />

Section 6, thence north 20 degrees<br />

31 minutes west along said center<br />

line of Sheridan Road 86.16 feet to<br />

a point being the western terminus<br />

of said southerly limits, thence<br />

north 20 degrees 31 minutes west<br />

along said center line of Sheridan<br />

Road 615.84 feet, thence north 34<br />

degrees 48 minutes west along said<br />

center line of Sheridan Road 73.20<br />

feet to a point being the western<br />

terminus of said northerly limits;<br />

thence north 51 degrees 08 minutes<br />

east 40.10 feet, more or less, to a<br />

point on the easterly line of said<br />

Sheridan Road and on the center<br />

line of the watercourse of the<br />

northerly ravine; thence easterly<br />

along said center line of the watercourse<br />

in said northerly ravine to<br />

the water's edge of Lake Michigan<br />

following in said northerly ravine<br />

the courses and distances as shown<br />

on the said plat of survey attached<br />

to aforementioned Document No<br />

4284364; said southerly limits of<br />

the herein before described premises<br />

extending from the aforementioned<br />

western terminus of said<br />

southerly limits established as<br />

herein before provided; thence<br />

north 69 degrees 29 minutes east<br />

40.00 feet, more or less, to a point<br />

on said easterly line of Sheridan<br />

Road and on the center line of the<br />

watercourse of the southerly ra-<br />

Sheridan Road and on the center<br />

line of the watercourse of the<br />

northerly ravine; thence easterly<br />

Sell It 708.326.9170 along said center line of the watercourse<br />

in said northerly ravine to<br />

Fax It 708.326.9179 the water's edge of Lake Michigan<br />

Charge following It in said northerly Automotive ravine<br />

the courses and distances as shown<br />

DEADLINE on-<br />

the said plat of survey<br />

$52 attached<br />

4 lines/<br />

Friday at 3pm<br />

to aforementioned Document No<br />

4284364; said southerly7 limits papersof<br />

the herein before described premises<br />

extending<br />

2703<br />

from<br />

Legal<br />

the aforementioned<br />

western terminus of said<br />

southerly limits established as<br />

Notices<br />

herein before provided; thence<br />

north 69 degrees 29 minutes east<br />

40.00 feet, more or less, to a point<br />

on said easterly line of Sheridan<br />

Road and on the center line of the<br />

watercourse of the southerly ravine;<br />

thence easterly along said<br />

center line of the watercourse in<br />

said southerly ravine to the water's<br />

edge of Lake Michigan following<br />

in said southerly ravine the courses<br />

and distances as shown on the<br />

aforementioned plat of survey attached<br />

to aforesaid Document No.<br />

4284364 - containing 19.04 acres,<br />

more or less, commonly known as<br />

1185 Sheridan Road, Glencoe, Illinois<br />

in the R-A Single Family<br />

Residential Zoning District (Permanent<br />

Real Estate Index Number<br />

05-06-201-082-0000).<br />

The appeal requests that approval<br />

be granted for the following variation:<br />

1. To increase the maximum fence<br />

height within the southeast portion<br />

of the property from 6 feet to 10.64<br />

feet (at its highest point) for a deer<br />

fence surrounding the community<br />

garden.<br />

All persons interested are urged to<br />

be present and will be given an opportunity<br />

to be heard.<br />

Nathan Parch<br />

Community Development<br />

Administrator<br />

VILLAGE OF GLENCOE<br />

GLENCOE, ILLINOIS<br />

ZONING BOARD<br />

OF APPEALS<br />

NOTICE OF PUBLIC<br />

HEARING<br />

APRIL 9, 2018<br />

Notice is hereby given that a public<br />

hearing is to be conducted on Monday,<br />

April 9, 2018, at 7:30 p.m.,<br />

before the Zoning Board of Appeals<br />

of the Village of Glencoe,<br />

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

Chambers of the Village Hall,<br />

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

to consider an appeal of Alla<br />

Donin and Marian Huh from a decision<br />

by the Community Development<br />

Administrator in denying a<br />

permit for the construction of a<br />

second floor addition over the existing<br />

one story garage of their<br />

home on Lot 18 in Glencoe<br />

Woods, being a subdivision in the<br />

northeast 1/4 of the northeast 1/4<br />

of Section 12, Township 42 north,<br />

Range 12, east of the third principal<br />

meridian, according to the plat<br />

thereof recorded February 14,<br />

1927, as Document No. 9550293,<br />

in Cook County, Illinois, commonly<br />

known as 1005 Forestway<br />

Drive, Glencoe, Illinois in the R-B<br />

Single Family Residential Zoning<br />

District (Permanent Real Estate Index<br />

Number 04-12-201-009-0000).<br />

The appeal requests that approval<br />

be granted for two variations:<br />

1. To reduce by 17.5% the required<br />

south side yard setback from 10.0<br />

feet to 8.25 feet.<br />

2. For portions of the exterior wall<br />

and roof of the second floor addition<br />

to intercept the setback plane.<br />

All persons interested are urged to<br />

be present and will be given an opportunity<br />

to be heard.<br />

Nathan Parch<br />

center line of Sheridan Road 73.20<br />

feet to a point being the western home on Lot 18 in Glencoe<br />

terminus of said northerly limits; Woods, being a subdivision in the<br />

thence north 51 degrees 08 minutes northeast 1/4 of the northeast 1/4<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

east 40.10 feet, more or less, to a of Section 12, Township 42 north,<br />

Classifieds point on the easterly line of said Range 12, east of the theglencoe third princi-<br />

anchor | March 22, 2018 | 33<br />

pal meridian, according to the plat<br />

thereof recorded February 14, VILLAGE OF GLENCOE<br />

1927, as Document No. 9550293, GLENCOE, ILLINOIS<br />

in Cook County, Illinois, commonly<br />

ZONING COMMISSION<br />

known as 1005 Forestway<br />

NOTICE OF<br />

Drive, Glencoe, Illinois in the R-B PUBLIC HEARING<br />

Single Family Help Wanted Residential Zoning Real Estate April 9, Merchandise 2018<br />

District (Permanent Real Estate Index<br />

Number<br />

Notice is hereby given that a public<br />

per line $13 04-12-201-009-0000).<br />

$50hearing is to be conducted<br />

$30 on Monday,<br />

April 9, 2018, 4 lines/ at 7:30 p.m.,<br />

The appeal 4 lines/ requests that approval 7 lines/<br />

be granted 7 for papers two variations: 7 papers before the Zoning7 Commission papers of<br />

1. To reduce by 17.5% the required the Village of Glencoe, Cook<br />

south side yard setback from 10.0<br />

feet to 8.25<br />

2703<br />

feet.<br />

Legal<br />

County, Illinois, in the Council<br />

Chambers<br />

2703<br />

of the Village<br />

Legal<br />

Hall, 675<br />

2. For portions of the exterior wall Village Court, Glencoe, Illinois, to<br />

Notices<br />

and roof of the second floor addition<br />

to intercept the setback plane.<br />

All persons interested are urged to<br />

be present and will be given an opportunity<br />

to be heard.<br />

Nathan Parch<br />

Community Development<br />

Administrator<br />

VILLAGE OF GLENCOE<br />

GLENCOE, ILLINOIS<br />

ZONING BOARD<br />

OF APPEALS<br />

NOTICE OF<br />

PUBLIC HEARING<br />

APRIL 9, 2018<br />

Notice is hereby given that a public<br />

hearing is to be conducted on Monday,<br />

April 9, 2018, at 7:30 p.m.,<br />

before the Zoning Board of Appeals<br />

of the Village of Glencoe,<br />

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

Chambers of the Village Hall,<br />

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

to consider an appeal of William<br />

Gold from a decision by the<br />

Community Development Administrator<br />

in denying a permit for the<br />

construction of first floor and second<br />

floor additions to his home on<br />

Lot 15 in Lake Shore Estates Subdivision,<br />

a subdivision of Lot 1 in<br />

Melville E. Stone's Subdivision of<br />

the northeast fractional quarter of<br />

Section 6, lying north of center of<br />

ravine, together with that part of<br />

the east 9.76 acres of the south half<br />

of the northwest quarter of said<br />

Section 6 (except that part thereof,<br />

lying south of center of ravine) all<br />

in Township 42 north, range 13,<br />

east of the third principal meridian<br />

in Cook County, Illinois, commonly<br />

known as 60 Brentwood<br />

Drive, Glencoe, Illinois in the R-A<br />

Single Family Residential Zoning<br />

District (Permanent Real Estate Index<br />

Number 05-06-201-058-0000).<br />

The appeal requests that approval<br />

be granted for three variations:<br />

1. To reduce by 10.5% the required<br />

front yard setback from 50.0 feet to<br />

44.75 feet.<br />

2. To reduce by 14.0% the total required<br />

side yard setback from<br />

28.20 feet to 24.25 feet.<br />

3. For portions of the exterior wall<br />

and roof of the addition to intercept<br />

the setback plane.<br />

All persons interested are urged to<br />

be present and will be given an opportunity<br />

to be heard.<br />

Nathan Parch<br />

Community Development<br />

Administrator<br />

VILLAGE OF GLENCOE<br />

GLENCOE, ILLINOIS<br />

ZONING COMMISSION<br />

NOTICE OF<br />

PUBLIC HEARING<br />

April 9, 2018<br />

Notice is hereby given that a public<br />

hearing is to be conducted on Monday,<br />

April 9, 2018, at 7:30 p.m.,<br />

before the Zoning Commission of<br />

the Village of Glencoe, Cook<br />

County, Illinois, in the Council<br />

Chambers of the Village Hall, 675<br />

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

consider an application from David<br />

Katz on behalf of property owner<br />

Connormax LLC for a special use<br />

permit to waive the parking requirement<br />

for the commercial<br />

building at 662-666 Vernon Ave-<br />

Notices<br />

consider an application from David<br />

Katz on behalf of property owner<br />

Connormax LLC for a special use<br />

permit to waive the parking requirement<br />

for the commercial<br />

building at 662-666 Vernon Avenue<br />

related to the conversion of existing<br />

office space on the second<br />

floor to a residential apartment<br />

unit. The legal description for the<br />

property is as follows: the south 15<br />

feet of Lot 4, and the north 16 feet<br />

of the east 150 feet of Lot 5, in<br />

Block 32 in Glencoe, a subdivision<br />

of Sections 5, 6, 7, and 8 in the<br />

west 1/2 of the northeast 1/4 of<br />

Section 7, Township 42 North,<br />

Range 13, east of the third principal<br />

meridian, in Cook County, Illinois<br />

in the R-B Central Business<br />

Zoning District (Permanent Real<br />

Estate Index Number<br />

05-07-205-018-0000).<br />

The Zoning Commission will hold<br />

a public hearing to hear testimony<br />

on the application and to provide a<br />

recommendation to the Village<br />

Board. The Village Board will<br />

thereafter consider this recommendation<br />

in approving, denying, or revising<br />

the special use request.<br />

All persons interested are urged to<br />

be present and will be given an opportunity<br />

to be heard.<br />

Nathan Parch<br />

Community Development<br />

Administrator<br />

BUY IT!<br />

SELL IT!<br />

FIND IT!<br />

- IN THE -<br />

CLASSIFIEDS<br />

708.326.9170


34 | March 22, 2018 | The glencoe anchor Sports<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

POY<br />

From Page 36<br />

able to feel comfortable<br />

there and where I can be<br />

who I am and not someone<br />

somebody else wants me<br />

to be.”<br />

But before she gets ready<br />

to head off to college, she<br />

has one year to help the<br />

Ramblers continue to move<br />

further into the playoffs,<br />

something they’ve done<br />

three consecutive seasons<br />

now. The team made it to<br />

the sectional final this year,<br />

after losing in the sectional<br />

semifinal last season.<br />

Loyola has had a lot of<br />

success during her tenure,<br />

witnessed by Schoenecker<br />

picking up his 200th career<br />

victory this season and his<br />

team winning at least 20<br />

games in a season for the<br />

eighth time in his 10 years<br />

at the helm.<br />

“During practice, we<br />

work on a lot of different<br />

aspects, we start off with<br />

a ton of shooting, every<br />

single spot on the floor,”<br />

Martinez said. “We work<br />

on our defense, then our<br />

offense. It’s also very important<br />

to know about the<br />

mental aspect of the game.<br />

At the beginning of the<br />

season, we all set a goal<br />

as a team and we try to get<br />

to it and when the whole<br />

team has a goal and wants<br />

to do something, it’s easier<br />

to be on the same page.”<br />

During the first half of<br />

Loyola’s Jan. 30 contest<br />

Gear up for baseball season with the<br />

latest cleats from New Balance.<br />

Two new styles for pro performance.<br />

Vote for Athlete of the Month<br />

Help support young athletes.<br />

Vote online March 10 - 25 at:<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

against De La Salle, Martinez<br />

broke the school’s career<br />

assist record, breaking<br />

Laura Sobieszczyk’s record<br />

of 507, set in 1999. Martinez<br />

now has over 540 career<br />

assists with a year to go. At<br />

her current pace, she is sure<br />

to get into the top 20 in the<br />

state’s all-time list as of at<br />

the end of last year, Courtney<br />

Musser, a graduate of<br />

Pearl City High School, had<br />

636 career assists.<br />

“I didn’t think it (breaking<br />

the school record) was<br />

impossible, because that’s<br />

a very big aspect of my<br />

game - getting my teammates<br />

the ball,” she said.<br />

With one more year,<br />

who knows where Martinez<br />

and the Ramblers will<br />

be next season.<br />

Congratulations to this week’s<br />

Athlete of the Week.<br />

We’re pleased to be a<br />

sponsor of this program.<br />

New Balance North Shore<br />

610 Central Avenue • Port Clinton Square<br />

Downtown Highland Park<br />

847-266-8323 • Open 7 Days • ShopNewShoes.com<br />

aTHLETE OF THE wEEK<br />

10 Questions<br />

with Alaina Vivian<br />

The New Trier senior is<br />

one of only four seniors<br />

on the varsity girls water<br />

polo team.<br />

When did you start<br />

playing water polo<br />

and why?<br />

I started playing freshman<br />

year after swim season.<br />

I had been a swimmer<br />

my entire life and I was<br />

having a really bad shoulder<br />

injury, so it was best I<br />

stop swimming. I decided<br />

to play water polo in the<br />

spring and loved it.<br />

What’s your favorite<br />

part about water<br />

polo?<br />

I love the swimming<br />

aspect but love that it’s<br />

exciting, there’s action,<br />

it keeps you on your toes<br />

and is fast-paced. It’s a<br />

great game to watch and<br />

be a part of.<br />

Best part bout New<br />

Trier athlete?<br />

We have access to some<br />

great facilities and awesome<br />

coaches. It’s really<br />

fun to be part of a team at<br />

a really, really big school<br />

where there are so many<br />

kids and you get to meet so<br />

many people in that sport<br />

and others you may not<br />

have met otherwise. There<br />

are definitely many girls I<br />

never would have met if it<br />

weren’t for water polo.<br />

If you could play<br />

another sport?<br />

I always wished I was<br />

good at basketball, something<br />

where you have to be<br />

good with your hands and<br />

run fast. I just have horrible<br />

hand-eye coordination.<br />

What’s one thing<br />

people don’t know<br />

about you?<br />

I love cats. Well, my<br />

cats.<br />

What’s one thing<br />

that’s on your bucket<br />

list?<br />

I really want to travel<br />

and go to Antarctica.<br />

If you had one<br />

superpower, what<br />

would it be and why?<br />

To fly. It’d be so cool to<br />

see the world in a different<br />

perspective and be able<br />

to go anywhere whenever<br />

you please.<br />

What’s the hardest<br />

part about water<br />

polo?<br />

Being in the mindset<br />

Photo Submitted<br />

that you have to work a<br />

ton. It’s not just twice a<br />

day, it’s going to hurt and<br />

be tiring but worth it if you<br />

put in the work.<br />

If you could have<br />

dinner with anybody,<br />

who would it be and<br />

why?<br />

A poet named John Keats.<br />

He’s really old but has<br />

really good work. He’s a<br />

weird and interesting guy<br />

and since he lived so long<br />

ago, there’s not a ton we<br />

know about him. I think<br />

it’d be cool to ask him<br />

about his work, what he<br />

thinks about society in the<br />

world and what he thinks<br />

about it today.<br />

What’s the best advice<br />

you’ve ever gotten?<br />

If you’re thinking about<br />

something so much that<br />

it’s consuming you and<br />

you’re worried about it,<br />

it’s not worth it.<br />

Interview by Sports Editor<br />

Michael Wojtychiw


glencoeanchor.com Sports<br />

the glencoe anchor | March 22, 2018 | 35<br />

Girl’s Basketball Coach of the Year<br />

Lake Forest’s Wilhelm chosen for inaugural honor<br />

Brittany Kapa, Sports Editor<br />

Coaches are often the<br />

needle on a compass that<br />

points players in the right<br />

direction during a long<br />

season.<br />

They string different<br />

players, personalities and<br />

skill sets together into one<br />

cohesive unit. When done<br />

right, the season often<br />

ends in success.<br />

Kyle Wilhelm, the head<br />

coach of Lake Forest High<br />

School’s girls basketball<br />

program, guided a team<br />

punctuated by talented<br />

underclassman and players<br />

who stepped up in the<br />

wake of injury.<br />

The Scouts finished the<br />

season with a 22-10 overall<br />

record and a playoff<br />

run that ended with a loss<br />

to Lake Zurich in the regional<br />

final. Because of his<br />

efforts, the sports staff at<br />

22nd Century Media chose<br />

Wilhelm as the inaugural<br />

Coach of the Year for girls<br />

basketball.<br />

“I was not expecting<br />

this,” Wilhelm said. “I’m<br />

honored and surprised.<br />

I’m surprised in the sense<br />

that I really respect a lot<br />

of the coaches that I coach<br />

against. I see the time that<br />

everyone puts into preparing<br />

and to be named Coach<br />

of the Year is an honor.”<br />

Wilhelm, who finished<br />

his seventh year as the<br />

Scouts’ head coach, has<br />

seen his current group of<br />

players grow. The seniors<br />

came into a program that<br />

only won eight games prior<br />

to their freshman year.<br />

Lake Forest coach David Wilhelm talking to his team<br />

earlier this 2017-18 season. 22nd century media file photo<br />

In four years, the Scouts’<br />

program is a far cry from<br />

where it began — their<br />

success includes a 2017<br />

regional championship.<br />

“This group, the seniors<br />

in particular, should really<br />

be looking back on their<br />

career and the mark that<br />

they left,” Wilhelm said.<br />

“They just finished (with<br />

season) wins of 17, 13, 23<br />

and 22.”<br />

Wilhelm built his program,<br />

with assistant coach<br />

Reanna Perera, by harnessing<br />

the skills of individual<br />

players and rolling<br />

that into success at the<br />

team level.<br />

Wilhelm had two major<br />

challenges this season.<br />

The first was making up<br />

for the two key players<br />

who graduated. The success<br />

of the season prior<br />

acted as motivation for this<br />

year’s squad and Wilhelm<br />

saw that this past summer.<br />

“I think the big thing<br />

was ... they came in really<br />

focused this summer and<br />

really determined to meet<br />

and exceed last year’s performance,”<br />

Wilhelm said.<br />

The seconds, unfortunately,<br />

was making up<br />

for Maeve Summerville’s<br />

absence. Summerville suffered<br />

a season-ending injury<br />

at the end of the summer<br />

session. Wilhelm had<br />

to figure out how to make<br />

up 25-27 points per game<br />

from losing those three<br />

players.<br />

“As the season started,<br />

it was really just challenging<br />

those players to fill the<br />

void that Maeve was leaving,”<br />

he said. “We really<br />

talked about how it wasn’t<br />

going to be one person to<br />

do that. It was really going<br />

to have to be collective effort,<br />

and everyone was going<br />

to have to step up.”<br />

They didn’t disappoint.<br />

Sophomore point guard<br />

Halle Douglass was one of<br />

the team’s top scorers. Seniors<br />

Jen Whittington and<br />

Audrey Kaus stepped up in<br />

a big way .<br />

For complete story, visit<br />

GlencoeAnchor.com.<br />

Boys Basketball Coach of the Year<br />

Giants’ Harris named inaugural winner<br />

Brittany Kapa, Sports Editor<br />

Simply put, coaches<br />

champion their players.<br />

In a season filled with<br />

inevitable ups and downs,<br />

it is the coach’s job to keep<br />

their teams on task.<br />

When looking at who<br />

did that the best this season<br />

across 22nd Century<br />

Media area teams it was<br />

a hard decision. Programs<br />

like New Trier and Loyola<br />

Academy stand out as having<br />

coaching staffs that<br />

are undoubtably talented.<br />

However, the sports department<br />

looked deeper<br />

into regular-season play<br />

and chose a coach that<br />

helped lift his team from a<br />

shaky start to a team that<br />

finished the regular season<br />

with confidence.<br />

Highland Park High<br />

School’s Paul Harris was<br />

chosen as the inaugural recipient<br />

for the 2018 Coach<br />

of the Year.<br />

Harris, who just completed<br />

his 19th year as head<br />

coach with the Giants, led<br />

his team to a 15-11 overall<br />

record and an 8-2 Central<br />

Suburban League North<br />

conference finish after a<br />

0-4 start.<br />

“Our mindset as coaches,<br />

and as a program, was to try<br />

and get the guys to focus on<br />

improvement and get them<br />

to remember that past success<br />

doesn’t guarantee future<br />

success,” he said.<br />

The team’s start didn’t<br />

define the Giants’ season,<br />

and Harris even celebrated<br />

a personal accomplishment<br />

in January after nabbing<br />

his 300th career win.<br />

However, none of those<br />

accolades are more important<br />

to Harris than the<br />

growth of his team from<br />

summer 2017 until the end<br />

of the season this year.<br />

“When I think about the<br />

season as a whole, I’m just<br />

really proud of how we<br />

competed,” he said. “This<br />

was a group that set high<br />

standards for themselves.”<br />

Slowly, the Giants’<br />

came together for some<br />

big wins during the season.<br />

“They showed tremendous<br />

resiliency,” Harris<br />

said. “With playing a tough<br />

schedule, we weren’t going<br />

to go undefeated this<br />

year. We knew that wasn’t<br />

going to happen.”<br />

Highland Park boys basketball coach Paul Harris gives<br />

his team instruction in a timeout earlier this season.<br />

22nd Century Media File Photo<br />

Part of that bounceback<br />

was the willingness of the<br />

group to work as a team,<br />

Harris said. The team<br />

didn’t care who was the<br />

top scorer of the night, as<br />

long as they won.<br />

“We had a group of<br />

guys that just wanted to be<br />

successful,” Harris said.<br />

“That’s fun to be around<br />

and that’s a credit to their<br />

character.”<br />

Part of the joy of Harris’<br />

job is watching players<br />

develop over their careers<br />

and over the course of a<br />

season. However, part of<br />

the challenge of coaching<br />

is helping players reach the<br />

next level of their game.<br />

“It’s really rewarding<br />

to see players get out of<br />

their comfort zone, because<br />

that’s how they<br />

grow,” he said.<br />

There have been concepts<br />

that the Giants’<br />

coaching staff will work<br />

with players during practice<br />

and to see that translate<br />

on the court during a game<br />

is another highlight for<br />

Harris.<br />

“To see players trust the<br />

coaching that they’re receiving<br />

– that feels really<br />

good,” he said.<br />

Editors Note: Coach of<br />

the Year was chosen by the<br />

Sports Department at 22nd<br />

Century Media. The decision<br />

was made on regular-season<br />

play and the development of<br />

the team from the beginning<br />

of the regular season until<br />

the conclusion.


36 | March 22, 2018 | The glencoe anchor Sports<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

Girls basketball Player of the Year<br />

Martinez earns inaugural award after her historic season<br />

Michael Wojtychiw<br />

Sports Editor<br />

For most basketball<br />

teams, the point guard is<br />

another coach on the court.<br />

They’re the ears and<br />

eyes of what’s going on<br />

the hardwood.<br />

Loyola Academy’s point<br />

guard, Julia Martinez, was<br />

that and more for the Ramblers<br />

this season. Thanks<br />

to her efforts, the Loyola<br />

star was named the inaugural<br />

22nd Century Media<br />

girls basketball Player of<br />

the Year.<br />

Martinez knew from a<br />

young age she wanted to<br />

play basketball and it was<br />

all thanks to family.<br />

“I’ve kind of played basketball<br />

my whole life, but<br />

probably started when I was<br />

around kindergarten,” she<br />

said. “I have two older sisters<br />

who played, and both<br />

my parents were coaches.<br />

Ever since I was younger,<br />

I always knew I wanted to<br />

play basketball and would<br />

play against the older kids.”<br />

The 5-foot-10 junior<br />

from Chicago averaged<br />

9.9 points per game, 7.3<br />

rebounds per game, 6.7<br />

assists per game and 2.8<br />

steals a contest, en route<br />

to leading her team to a<br />

sectional-title game appearance.<br />

She came to Loyola and<br />

earned a spot on the varsity<br />

team right away, something<br />

not easy to do at a<br />

school like Loyola.<br />

But that didn’t faze Martinez.<br />

“I feel like when I was<br />

younger, I was so confident<br />

in my game, and I love the<br />

game so much,” she said.<br />

“I came in doing what I<br />

normally do and actually<br />

wasn’t that nervous when<br />

coach Schoenecker said<br />

my name for the first game<br />

my freshman year. I was<br />

more excited than nervous,<br />

I’ve always loved playing<br />

against the big, older kids<br />

because it’s more competition<br />

and I’m very competitive.<br />

I was very thankful<br />

for the opportunity.”<br />

Point guards are usually<br />

one of two kinds, ones that<br />

are a true point guard, and<br />

pass the ball to their teammates<br />

before anything<br />

else, or a scoring point<br />

guard who isn’t afraid to<br />

put up shot after shot.<br />

“I’d probably say I’m a<br />

pass-first mentality point<br />

guard,” Martinez said.<br />

“I look to find my teammates,<br />

looking upcourt to<br />

see who’s open, giving my<br />

teammates the ball. My<br />

teammates do a really great<br />

job of finding an open shot<br />

and being ready to shot or<br />

attack once I get them the<br />

ball and do my job.”<br />

Colleges had taken notice<br />

of Martinez doing her<br />

job, as she’d racked up 12<br />

scholarship offers from<br />

Division I schools, and on<br />

March 16, committed to<br />

Saint Louis University.<br />

“I don’t want to go too far<br />

from home,” Martinez said.<br />

“I really need to feel good<br />

with my coach. I’m a point<br />

guard, so I’m an extended<br />

coach on the court so I feel<br />

it’s really important to have<br />

a good relationship with<br />

your coaches.<br />

“The biggest aspect is<br />

for me to feel comfortable,<br />

where I see myself, where<br />

I can see myself walking<br />

from class to class to practice<br />

and to the gym. Being<br />

Please see POY, 34<br />

Loyola’s Julia Martinez<br />

drives to the basket<br />

against Maine West this<br />

season. 22nd Century<br />

Media File photo<br />

Boys basketball Player of the Year<br />

Cunningham uses growth to achieve his dreams<br />

Michael Wojtychiw<br />

Sports Editor<br />

For athletes, the hope<br />

is to improve as they get<br />

older, with more experience<br />

and better skills en<br />

route to hopefully earn an<br />

opportunity to play at the<br />

next level, collegiately.<br />

That was the route that<br />

Loyola senior Kevin Cunningham<br />

took during his<br />

four years at Loyola, one<br />

that saw him finish his<br />

Rambler career as 22nd<br />

Century Media’s inaugural<br />

boys basketball Player of<br />

the Year.<br />

Cunningham said he<br />

feels he’s grown every<br />

season.<br />

“Freshman year was<br />

tough for me because I<br />

was hurt and didn’t play<br />

the whole year,” he said.<br />

“Sophomore year I got hurt<br />

again and missed a couple<br />

games but since then I’ve<br />

just improved my whole<br />

game. I don’t think there’s<br />

a part of my game that’s<br />

gotten worse or stayed the<br />

same, I think I got stronger,<br />

more aggressive and<br />

became an all-around better<br />

player.”<br />

After having players<br />

like Ramar Evans and Julian<br />

DeGuzman as last<br />

year’s go-to players, Cunningham’s<br />

role changed<br />

this year, not only moving<br />

over to the point guard position,<br />

but also becoming<br />

the squad’s primary leader.<br />

“Ramar last year was<br />

our big leader, well and<br />

Julian too, but Ramar was<br />

our captain, really led us<br />

when times got tough,”<br />

Cunningham said. “That<br />

really helped me because I<br />

looked up to him last year<br />

as a leader and he taught<br />

me so much. He had a<br />

great voice, through his<br />

actions and how he played,<br />

he never got rattled; he<br />

was just always on top of<br />

his game.”<br />

The change wasn’t always<br />

easy for him.<br />

“I think there were some<br />

difficulties adjusting,”<br />

he said, “I had to go over<br />

the plays and make sure I<br />

knew every position, because<br />

I didn’t really know<br />

that one game I could be<br />

playing point guard, the<br />

next at two guard. The<br />

difficulty was being comfortable<br />

with it because I<br />

didn’t play any point guard<br />

last year.”<br />

For the fourth time in<br />

coach Tom Livatino’s nine<br />

years at Loyola, it finished<br />

with 20 wins and a regional<br />

title. Both of those are<br />

hard to achieve in general,<br />

but the Ramblers play in<br />

one of the tougher conferences<br />

in Illinois and were<br />

in one of the hardest, if not<br />

the hardest, sectionals.<br />

“Livatino has a great<br />

system,” Cunningham<br />

said. “Anybody who plays<br />

for Livatino has to buy into<br />

his system or else it’ll be<br />

hard to get many minutes.<br />

It’s just the culture he’s<br />

built. Our team revolves<br />

around defense, getting<br />

good shots and not rushing<br />

shots. It’s just buying<br />

into the culture and I think<br />

every guy in the past two<br />

years did that. That leads<br />

to success.<br />

“One common misconception<br />

is that Loyola<br />

likes to hold the ball and<br />

keep it low-scoring. If<br />

we have open shots, we<br />

want to take them, but we<br />

Loyola’s Kevin Cunningham evades a steal attempt by<br />

Notre Dame’s Troy D’Amico during the 2017-18 season.<br />

22nd Century Media file photo<br />

want to make sure they’re<br />

good shots. Sometimes,<br />

the ball’s just not falling.<br />

Then on defense, we want<br />

to hold teams in the 30s,<br />

wear them down. If we<br />

can’t get a quick shot in<br />

transition on offense, then<br />

we want to wear a team<br />

down through our motion<br />

and try to get easy shots<br />

like layups. We don’t think<br />

a forced shot is going to<br />

be a good shot for us, so if<br />

we can get out in transition<br />

we will. If we can find an<br />

open shot, we’ll shoot it,<br />

the scores are low but they<br />

got the job done.”


glencoeanchor.com Sports<br />

the glencoe anchor | March 22, 2018 | 37<br />

This Week In...<br />

Trevian varsity<br />

athletics<br />

Badminton<br />

■March ■ 22 - at Vernon<br />

Hills, 4:30 p.m.<br />

Baseball<br />

■March ■ 22 - host Notre<br />

Dame, 4:30 p.m.<br />

■March ■ 26 - at Brentwood<br />

Academy (Tenn.), 4:30 p.m.<br />

■March ■ 28 - vs. Stagg (at<br />

Shelby Park, Nashville),<br />

9:30 a.m.<br />

■March ■ 29 - at Christian<br />

Presbyterian Academy<br />

(Tenn.), 4:30 p.m.<br />

Boys lacrosse<br />

■March ■ 22 - at St. Ignatius,<br />

7 p.m.<br />

■March ■ 27 - at Cathedral<br />

(Ind.), 7 p.m.<br />

■March ■ 28 - at Carmel<br />

(Ind.), 5:30 p.m.<br />

Girls lacrosse<br />

■March ■ 22 - at Vernon<br />

Hills, 7 p.m.<br />

■March ■ 24 - host Upper<br />

Arlington (Ohio), 10 a.m.<br />

Girls soccer<br />

■March ■ 22 - host Maine<br />

South, 7 p.m.<br />

Softball<br />

■March ■ 22 - host Lane,<br />

4:45 p.m.<br />

■March ■ 24 - at Beecher, 11<br />

a.m./1 p.m.<br />

■March ■ 26 - at Bradley-<br />

Bourbonnais, 11 a.m./1<br />

p.m.<br />

■March ■ 27 - at Lincoln-Way<br />

East, 10 a.m./noon<br />

Boys tennis<br />

■March ■ 23 - National<br />

Invitational Boys High<br />

School Team Tennis<br />

Tournament (Newport<br />

Beach, Calif.), TBA<br />

■March ■ 24 - National<br />

Invitational Boys High<br />

School Team Tennis<br />

Tournament (Newport<br />

Beach, Calif.), TBA<br />

Boys volleyball<br />

■March ■ 24 - vs. Lincoln-<br />

Way East (at Loyola<br />

University), 3 p.m.<br />

Boys water polo<br />

■March ■ 23 - vs. TBD (at<br />

York Invite), TBD<br />

■March ■ 24 - vs. TBD (at<br />

York Invite), TBD<br />

Rambler varsity<br />

athletics<br />

Baseball<br />

■March ■ 22 - host Taft, 4:30<br />

p.m.<br />

■March ■ 24 - host De La<br />

Salle, 11 a.m.<br />

■March ■ 26 - at Fenwick, 5<br />

p.m.<br />

■March ■ 28 - at Maine<br />

South, 4:30 p.m.<br />

Boys lacrosse<br />

■March ■ 27 - host St.<br />

Laurence, 6:45 p.m.<br />

■March ■ 28 - host St. Rita,<br />

5:30 p.m.<br />

Girls lacrosse<br />

■March ■ 24 - host Montini,<br />

10 a.m.<br />

Girls soccer<br />

■March ■ 24 - at Mother<br />

McAuley (at St. Xavier<br />

University), 1 p.m.<br />

■March ■ 26 - host Trinity,<br />

4:45 p.m.<br />

Softball<br />

■March ■ 23 - host Taft, 4:45<br />

p.m.<br />

■March ■ 26 - at Niles North,<br />

4:45 p.m.<br />

■March ■ 27 - at Evanston,<br />

4:30 p.m.<br />

■March ■ 28 - at Trinity (at<br />

Triton College), 4:45 p.m.<br />

Boys track and field<br />

■March ■ 24 - at Illinois<br />

Top Times Invite (at Illinois<br />

Wesleyan University), 2:30<br />

p.m.<br />

■March ■ 27 - at Niles North,<br />

4 p.m.<br />

Girls track and field<br />

■March ■ 24 - at Illinois<br />

Top Times Invite (at Illinois<br />

Wesleyan University), 2:30<br />

p.m.<br />

Boys tennis<br />

■March ■ 22 - host<br />

Providence, 4:30 p.m.<br />

■March ■ 27 - at De La Salle,<br />

4:30 p.m.<br />

Boys volleyball<br />

■March ■ 22 - at De La Salle,<br />

6 p.m.<br />

■March ■ 23 - at Vernon Hills<br />

Invite, TBA<br />

■March ■ 24 - at Vernon Hills<br />

Invite, TBA<br />

■March ■ 27 - host Brother<br />

Rice, 6 p.m.<br />

■March ■ 28 - Wheaton-<br />

Warrenville South Invite,<br />

TBA<br />

■March ■ 29 - Wheaton-<br />

Warrenville South Invite,<br />

TBA<br />

Boys water polo<br />

■March ■ 23 - vs. TBD (at<br />

York Invite), TBD<br />

■March ■ 24 - vs. TBD (at<br />

York Invite), TBD<br />

■March ■ 26 - at St. Rita,<br />

5:30 p.m.<br />

Panther varsity<br />

athletics<br />

Girls lacrosse<br />

■March ■ 22 - host Taft, 5<br />

p.m.<br />

■March ■ 24 - at Fenwick,<br />

11 a.m.<br />

■March ■ 24 - vs. St. Ignatius<br />

(at Fenwick), 3 p.m.<br />

■March ■ 27 - host Marist,<br />

4:30 p.m.<br />

■March ■ 29 - host Mother<br />

McAuley, 5 p.m.<br />

Girls soccer<br />

■March ■ 22 - at Guerin,<br />

4:30 p.m.<br />

■March ■ 27 - at Elmwood<br />

Park, 6:30 p.m.<br />

■March ■ 29 - at Zion-<br />

Benton, 6:15 p.m.<br />

Softball<br />

■March ■ 22 - at Taft, 4:30<br />

p.m.<br />

■March ■ 24 - at Maine West,<br />

10 a.m./noon<br />

■March ■ 26 - at<br />

Resurrection, 4:30 p.m.<br />

■March ■ 28 - at Fenwick,<br />

4:30 p.m.<br />

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Girls lacrosse<br />

Loyola 16, Mother<br />

McAuley 1<br />

Maggie Gorman and Riley<br />

Dolan each had three<br />

goals for the Ramblers Satruday,<br />

March 17.<br />

Loyola 15, St. Ignatius 1<br />

Brynn Holohan and<br />

Kelsey Koch both had<br />

three goals to lead the<br />

Ramblers Friday, March<br />

16, in Chicago.<br />

Loyola 18, Fenwick 1<br />

Claire Caffery led the<br />

Ramblers with four goals<br />

in their season opener<br />

March 15.<br />

Boys water polo<br />

Loyola 10, St. Ignatius 4<br />

John Merucci lead the<br />

team with 4 goals as the<br />

Ramblers won their sixth<br />

straight game March 12 in<br />

Chicago. Kevin Considine<br />

had three assists in the win.<br />

Loyola 16, Mt. Carmel 10<br />

Kenny Sajnaj scored<br />

4 times and added 3 assists<br />

March 14 in Chicago.<br />

Charlie Freedman and<br />

Will Edwards each scored<br />

3 times and Jack Maddalozzo<br />

scored his first career<br />

goal for the Ramblers<br />

(7-1, 3-1 MCAC), who<br />

won their seventh game in<br />

a row.<br />

Girls water polo<br />

Loyola 12, St. Ignatius 6<br />

Lauren Voss led the<br />

Ramblers to a win in<br />

Chicago by scoring four<br />

goals, while Aidan Koconis-O’Malley<br />

and Sarah<br />

Pinkerton both scored<br />

three apiece.<br />

Loyola 5, New Trier 4<br />

Lauren Voss scored two<br />

goals to lead the Ramblers<br />

to a come-from behind win<br />

Clinical Study:<br />

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over the Trevians Friday,<br />

March 16. Lauren Vallace,<br />

Sarah Pinkerton and<br />

Anna Schaupp also scored<br />

Loyola, which overcame a<br />

4-0 deficit.<br />

Windy City Water Polo<br />

Classic<br />

Loyola went 4-0 to win<br />

the title, defeating Bradley-Bourbonnais<br />

11-1,<br />

Jones-Payton Co-Op 8-3,<br />

Waubonsie Valley 12-5<br />

and Rolling Meadows 14-<br />

4. Voss led the team with<br />

16 goals.<br />

Softball<br />

Regina 10, DePaul Prep 7<br />

Kendall Barrett had four<br />

RBI in the win Saturday,<br />

March 17, in Chicago.<br />

Regina 15, DePaul Prep 8<br />

Maddie Pearce went<br />

3-for-4 with five RBI and a<br />

home run in the win.<br />

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38 | March 22, 2018 | The glencoe anchor Sports<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

Loyola Gold advances to state final with close win<br />

Gary Larsen<br />

Freelance reporter<br />

Loyola Academy’s<br />

hockey team raucously<br />

crowded its way into to its<br />

locker room at the Edge<br />

Ice Arena in Bensenville,<br />

carried by the euphoria of<br />

a 2-1 win over Glenbrook<br />

North in a state semifinal<br />

game.<br />

The Ramblers are going<br />

to the United Center<br />

to play in a state title game<br />

for the first time since<br />

2010.<br />

“It’s a dream,” Loyola<br />

forward Brock Huber said.<br />

“Ever since I was little it’s<br />

what I’ve wanted to do.<br />

It’s just a dream.”<br />

Huber’s goal at the<br />

buzzer to end the second<br />

period, on a 2-on-1 feed<br />

from Daniel Stevens,<br />

broke a 1-1 tie and stood<br />

up as the game-winner on<br />

March 12. Loyola next<br />

takes on Stevenson in the<br />

state title game on March<br />

24.<br />

Stevens scored the<br />

game’s first goal on a Huber<br />

assist in the first period,<br />

and the Spartans tied<br />

the game in the second on<br />

a Kevin Koren goal and<br />

assists from David Rubin<br />

and Jacob Crane.<br />

Since Loyola Gold won<br />

a state title in 1996, the<br />

program has finished second<br />

in Illinois seven times<br />

and hasn’t been in the title<br />

game since 2010.<br />

Ramblers coach DJ La-<br />

Varre was there for every<br />

one of those state finals,<br />

so he knows how special<br />

it is for a team to get that<br />

chance.<br />

“It’s just a great accomplishment<br />

for those kids in<br />

the locker room,” LaVarre<br />

said. “It’s that experience<br />

that you really want these<br />

kids to enjoy, to have an<br />

opportunity to play where<br />

they see their legends play,<br />

at the United Center.<br />

“I’m just so happy that<br />

they get to experience this.<br />

It’s the opportunity of a<br />

lifetime.”<br />

Fifty feet down the hall<br />

from the Ramblers’ celebration,<br />

Glenbrook North<br />

was dealing with the pain<br />

that comes with every<br />

postseason loss.<br />

“I talked with the guys<br />

and I thought we played<br />

all 51 minutes tonight,”<br />

Loyola Gold forward Daniel Stevens had a goal and an<br />

assist in the Ramblers’ win over Glenbrook North on<br />

March 12 in Bensenville. Gary Larsen/22nd Century Media<br />

Rubin said. “That’s all<br />

you can ask. There’s some<br />

tears in the locker room<br />

and not because of how<br />

we played, but mostly because<br />

we’ve been together<br />

so long and we’re not going<br />

to see each other in this<br />

setting again.”<br />

Glenbrook North was<br />

the only team to win twice<br />

against Loyola Gold,<br />

which won five of their<br />

seven meetings this year.<br />

The Ramblers scored with<br />

6:32 left in the first period<br />

on Tuesday and the Spartans<br />

tied the game early in<br />

the second period.<br />

The game’s most exciting<br />

goal came in the<br />

waning seconds of the<br />

second period, when Stevens<br />

swept up the left side<br />

with the puck and crossed<br />

a pass to Huber near the<br />

goalmouth.<br />

“(Stevens) put it in a<br />

great spot,” Huber said,<br />

“And I just put it in.”<br />

Spartans goalie Tyler<br />

Laarveld shined throughout<br />

and finished with 36<br />

saves, while Ramblers<br />

goalie Hugh Brady made<br />

14 saves in the win as<br />

Loyola held firm throughout<br />

the third period.<br />

PLUMBING MADNESS!<br />

Afterwards, LaVarre<br />

emerged from the locker<br />

room carrying a replica of<br />

a prize-fight belt, which in<br />

team tradition is typically<br />

handed from one playerof-the-game<br />

winner to the<br />

next.<br />

After Tuesday’s win,<br />

previous belt holder Jack<br />

Purcell awarded the belt to<br />

LaVarre.<br />

“The team played well<br />

but (LaVarre) hasn’t been<br />

there in a while, so that’s<br />

special,” Huber said.<br />

The Ramblers will play<br />

a Stevenson team that won<br />

3-2 over Glenbrook South<br />

in Tuesday’s first semifinal.<br />

“They play strong, hard,<br />

aggressive hockey,” La-<br />

Varre said of Stevenson.<br />

“I think we have the type<br />

of team that can play any<br />

style … so it’s going to be<br />

an interesting match. But<br />

it’s all about getting the<br />

kids to enjoy the moment.”<br />

Glenbrook North will<br />

bid farewell to 11 seniors<br />

from this year’s team in<br />

Rubin, Crane, Koren,<br />

Laarveld, Cole Chobak,<br />

Evan Larson, Jake Silverman,<br />

Justin Ho, Zach Samuelsohn,<br />

Zach Walden, and<br />

Henry Fitzgerald.<br />

“The end of a year is<br />

never easy,” Poulakidas<br />

said. “I’m saying goodbye<br />

to some kids that I’ve been<br />

coaching for twelve years,<br />

so I’ll never see them in<br />

this light again. We spent<br />

285 days together. That’s a<br />

lot of days.<br />

“They’re not ordinary<br />

kids. Look at today’s<br />

world and what they could<br />

be doing instead of playing<br />

hockey, and sacrificing, is<br />

so much easier than what<br />

they come out and put<br />

themselves through. We’re<br />

very appreciative of our<br />

kids. We care about them.”<br />

Rubin was named<br />

AHAI’s player of the year<br />

in Illinois and he’ll miss<br />

lacing up his skates for the<br />

Spartans.<br />

“It’s over now and we<br />

have to live with it,” Rubin<br />

said, “but we won fiftysix<br />

games, we won three<br />

tournaments, and those are<br />

things we can take away<br />

from this season. It would<br />

have been nice to play<br />

at the United Center but<br />

there’s nothing for us to be<br />

ashamed of at all.”<br />

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glencoeanchor.com sports<br />

the glencoe anchor | March 22, 2018 | 39<br />

Young New Trier team anticipates rebuilding season<br />

22ND CENTURY MEDIA FILE PHOTO<br />

1st-and-3<br />

THREE ATHLETES OF<br />

THE WEEK<br />

1. Hugh Brady<br />

(above). The<br />

Loyola Gold goalie<br />

allowed only<br />

one goal in the<br />

Ramblers’ AHAI<br />

Blackhawk Cup<br />

semifinal 2-1 win<br />

over Glenbrook<br />

North.<br />

2. Lauren Voss. The<br />

Loyola girls water<br />

polo player scored<br />

22 goals in six<br />

games, leading<br />

the Ramblers to<br />

an undefeated 6-0<br />

record, including<br />

4-0 in the Windy<br />

City Water Polo<br />

Classic. Sixteen<br />

of the goals<br />

came during that<br />

tournament and<br />

two of the six wins<br />

were against rivals<br />

New Trier and St.<br />

Ignatius.<br />

3. Lilly Frentzel. The<br />

New Trier soccer<br />

player scored her<br />

first career goal<br />

against Highland<br />

Park Saturday,<br />

March 17.<br />

Megan Bernard, Editor<br />

With only a handful of<br />

returning players and two<br />

seniors on its roster, New<br />

Trier will undergo a season<br />

of growth this spring.<br />

“We’re facing a little uncertainty<br />

because we have<br />

a very young team,” coach<br />

John Cadwell said. “This<br />

a team that’s very young<br />

and very contingent of the<br />

freshmen, sophomores and<br />

juniors.”<br />

The Trevians’ season<br />

opened Thursday, March<br />

15, when they faced last<br />

year’s state champions in<br />

Oak Park-River Forest.<br />

New Trier fell 10-0 to the<br />

Huskies.<br />

On the mound for the<br />

first time was senior pitcher<br />

Elisa Nettesheim, who<br />

Cadwell said has been<br />

“outstanding” in the preseason<br />

weeks.<br />

“In our preseason, [Nettesheim<br />

has] been a leader<br />

of the team,” he said.<br />

“She’s really been pushing<br />

the girls and motivating<br />

them to step up their games<br />

and helping them understand<br />

the challenges of being<br />

on the varsity team. We<br />

are really pleased with her<br />

work.”<br />

This is Nettesheim’s<br />

first time in “live action”<br />

this year, Cadwell said,<br />

and “we are really counting<br />

on her to really be effective<br />

as a pitcher.”<br />

Backing Nettesheim<br />

up as the No. 2 pitcher is<br />

sophomore Beth Fisher,<br />

2018 NEW TRIER GIRLS<br />

SOFTBALL ROSTER<br />

Maia Blomberg<br />

Rebecca Brodne<br />

Ivy Burck<br />

Abigail Carpenter<br />

Taylor Daniels<br />

Elizabeth Fisher<br />

Eleanor Knight<br />

Isabella Mendes<br />

Elisa Nettesheim<br />

Kayla Okninski<br />

Ava Reichert<br />

Alexandra Rothstein<br />

Claire VanDamme<br />

Samantha Wojcik<br />

2018 New Trier Softball Schedule<br />

Date Opponent Time<br />

3/22 vs. Lane Tech 4:45 p.m.<br />

3/24 at Beecher 11 a.m./1 p.m.<br />

3/26 at Bradley-Bourbonnais 11 a.m./1 p.m.<br />

3/27 at Lincoln-Way East 10 a.m./noon<br />

4/3 vs. Buffalo Grove 4:45 p.m.<br />

4/5 host Maine East 4:45 p.m.<br />

4/7 at St. Charles North 10 a.m./noon<br />

4/9 at Resurrection 4:30 p.m.<br />

4/10 host Glenbrook South 4:45 p.m.<br />

4/12 at Niles North 5 p.m.<br />

4/14 at Zion-Benton 10 a.m./noon<br />

4/17 host Maine South 4:45 p.m.<br />

4/19 at Evanston 4:45 p.m.<br />

4/21 host Elk Grove 11 a.m./1 p.m.<br />

4/23 at Deerfield 4:45 p.m.<br />

4/24 host Niles West 4:45 p.m.<br />

4/26 at Glenbrook South 5 p.m.<br />

4/28 at Lake Zurich 10 a.m./noon<br />

5/1 host Niles North 4:45 p.m.<br />

5/3 host Evanston 4:45 p.m.<br />

5/5 at Downers Grove South 10 a.m./noon<br />

5/8 at Maine South 4:45 p.m.<br />

5/10 at Niles West 4:45 p.m.<br />

5/14 vs. Loyola 4:45 p.m.<br />

5/19 host Von Steuben 11 a.m./1 p.m.<br />

who will also play third<br />

base when she’s not on the<br />

mound.<br />

“She is such a hard<br />

worker and brings such<br />

intensity to her game,”<br />

Cadwell said of Fisher.<br />

“She’s somebody who is<br />

looking to improve every<br />

time she steps onto the<br />

field.”<br />

Other players to look<br />

out for this spring include<br />

sophomore outfielder Kayla<br />

Okninski, who will play<br />

center field after a successful<br />

season playing in the<br />

infield last year.<br />

“Kayla is one of the best<br />

kids we’ve ever had in the<br />

program because she really<br />

makes things happen offensively<br />

for us,” Cadwell<br />

added. “This year, we are<br />

asking her to step into the<br />

role as center fielder. In<br />

our practices, she has demonstrated<br />

great range with<br />

her speed and an outstanding<br />

arm. Even as a sophomore,<br />

she’s also taken on a<br />

leadership role.”<br />

Cadwell also expects<br />

returning players, like juniors<br />

Abby Carpenter and<br />

Ivy Burck, to make an impression<br />

on the team. Carpenter<br />

will play “any position<br />

that we have a need<br />

for because she’s always<br />

ready to play,” Cadwell<br />

said, and Burck will call<br />

first base home.<br />

“Ivy’s glovework has<br />

been terrific so far this season,”<br />

Cadwell added.<br />

Team selection was held<br />

Feb. 26, leaving two-anda-half<br />

weeks of preseason<br />

practice. The Trevians<br />

have not practiced on their<br />

home field yet at Duke<br />

Child’s due to the unpredictable<br />

weather.<br />

After their season opener,<br />

the Trevs played in a invitational<br />

Saturday, March<br />

17, where they faced three<br />

of the toughest teams<br />

they’d see all season,<br />

Cadwell said.<br />

“This is a chance for us<br />

to get in a good groove,”<br />

Cadwell said before the<br />

games.<br />

“It’s going to be a season<br />

of growth. We have<br />

a lot of players that we<br />

want to help develop and<br />

move into their own comfort<br />

zone during the course<br />

of the season. This as an<br />

experience that will help<br />

them develop as individuals<br />

and grow as a team.”<br />

Listen Up<br />

“Ivy’s glovework has been terrific so far<br />

this season.”<br />

John Cadwell — New Trier softball coach about his first<br />

baseman Ivy Burck as the Trevians get ready for their<br />

season.<br />

tunE in<br />

What to watch this week<br />

GIRLS LACROSSE: One of the Midwest’s best teams travels<br />

west for a battle with another one of the Midwest’s best.<br />

• New Trier hosts Upper Arlington (Ohio) at 10 a.m. on<br />

Saturday, March 24, in Northfield.<br />

Index<br />

37 - This Week In<br />

34 - Athlete of the Week<br />

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

m.wojtychiw@22ndcenturymedia.com.


the glencoe anchor | March 22, 2018 | glencoeanchor.com<br />

Youth Movement New Trier softball reloads<br />

behind sophomores, freshmen, Page 39<br />

Cream of the crop 22CM names inaugural<br />

Player, Coach of the Year winners, Page 35-36<br />

Loyola Gold beats GBN 2-1 to move<br />

on to state final, Page 38<br />

Loyola Gold players mob goalie Hugh Brady after the<br />

Ramblers’ 2-1 win over Glenbrook North on March 12 in<br />

Bensenville. Gary Larsen/22nd Century Media

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