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The Highland Park Landmark 032218
The Highland Park Landmark 032218
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6 | March 22, 2018 | The highland park landmark news<br />
hplandmark.com<br />
MOUSSY<br />
The Dose Family, Highland Park<br />
Moussy is a champagne colored, FIV positive cat.<br />
While FIV positive cats shouldn’t be kept around<br />
other cats, they’re perfectly safe to own and<br />
can live with humans no problem. Just because<br />
they’re sluggish in shelters doesn’t mean<br />
they’re not worth adopting, often times they’re<br />
depressed due to isolation. Frederick Dose’s<br />
advice: “Ask what you can do for it — you already<br />
know what it can do for you.”<br />
If you’d like to see your pet as Pet of the Week, email editor<br />
Xavier Ward at xavier@hplandmark.com<br />
FLOOR CLEANING SALE<br />
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area rug cleaning & upholstery cleaning.<br />
Welcome 2018 with<br />
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Typical Bedroom Carpet (10x14 Ft.) - $44.80 ($0.32/sf)<br />
4x6 Ft. Area Rug - $28.80 ($1.20/sf)<br />
Offers end 02/28/18. Conditions apply. See store or call for details.<br />
1107 Greenleaf Ave, Wilmette<br />
847-865-8283 KashianBros.com<br />
Police Reports<br />
Residential burglary reported in Highland Park<br />
A Highland Park residence<br />
was ransacked<br />
sometime during the day<br />
March 10.<br />
An unknown subject<br />
forced entry to the home<br />
in the 2200 block of Green<br />
Bay Road.<br />
Cash and jewelry were<br />
reported missing.<br />
No additional information<br />
was available.<br />
In other police news:<br />
March 11<br />
THE GLENVIEW LANTERN<br />
Residents, community<br />
leaders, politicians unite<br />
against rail expansion<br />
Don’t turn Glenview’s<br />
neighborhoods into a parking<br />
lot for freight trains.<br />
That was the message<br />
that came across loud and<br />
clear during the public<br />
forum held in Glenbrook<br />
South’s Watson Auditorium<br />
on March 12, which<br />
drew more than 1,000<br />
North Shore residents.<br />
The forum called by the<br />
Village of Glenview was<br />
a response to Amtrak’s<br />
proposal to the Federal<br />
Railroad Administration<br />
to add three daily round<br />
trips to the Hiawatha service<br />
between Chicago and<br />
Milwaukee, increasing<br />
the number of its passenger<br />
trains passing through<br />
Glenview from 14 to 20.<br />
This would also entail<br />
building a two-mile holding<br />
track in West Glenview<br />
to accommodate the Canadian<br />
Pacific and Union<br />
Pacific freight trains that<br />
share the rail line with Metra,<br />
as well as Amtrak’s Hiawatha<br />
and Empire Builder<br />
(cross-country) passenger<br />
• An unknown subject removed<br />
cash from a register<br />
that may have been left<br />
partially open at a business<br />
in the 1800 block of Second<br />
Street.<br />
• Graffiti was reported on a<br />
fence post and the wall on<br />
the tunnel area at the Cherokee<br />
Road and Blackhawk<br />
Road walkway.<br />
March 5<br />
• Brian Kozlow, 46, of<br />
the 500 block of Lockard<br />
trains. The Glenview tracks<br />
would run north from West<br />
Lake Avenue to Willow<br />
Road, and opponents assert<br />
that they would have a negative<br />
impact on traffic, the<br />
environment and the community<br />
at large.<br />
As a consequence, there<br />
would be increased congestion<br />
on West Lake Avenue,<br />
producing delays and,<br />
at times, blocking traffic<br />
to the hospital and high<br />
school. The holding tracks<br />
alongside the existing<br />
tracks also would necessitate<br />
removing the landscape<br />
buffer and replacing<br />
the greenery with a 20-foot<br />
retaining wall.<br />
“It is clear that this is<br />
one of the largest challenges<br />
Glenview has faced in<br />
the last decade,” said Village<br />
President Jim Patterson.<br />
“We need your voice<br />
and you need to get others<br />
involved.”<br />
Reporting by Neil Milbert,<br />
Freelance Reporter. Full<br />
story at GlenviewLantern.<br />
com.<br />
THE WINNETKA CURRENT<br />
NSCDS joins schools<br />
Lane, Highwood was arrested<br />
and charged with<br />
driving while license revoked,<br />
expired registration<br />
and uninsured motor<br />
vehicle after being stopped<br />
by police near the intersection<br />
of Half Day Road<br />
and Greenwood Avenue.<br />
Kozlow was released on<br />
a personal recognizance<br />
bond with a court date of<br />
April 11 in Park City.<br />
EDITOR’S NOTE: The<br />
Highland Park Landmark’s<br />
Police Reports are compiled<br />
from official reports emailed<br />
from the Highland Park<br />
Police Department headquarters<br />
in Highland Park<br />
and the Highwood Police<br />
Department headquarters<br />
in Highwood. Individuals<br />
named in these reports are<br />
considered innocent of all<br />
charges until proven guilty in<br />
a court of law.<br />
nationwide for National<br />
School Walkout protest<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 March 14 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 />
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<br />
they think are the best for<br />
our country, and we as<br />
children, our generation,<br />
is unheard,” Graboys said.<br />
“But now, it’s our time to<br />
speak. Now, it’s our time<br />
to demand change, demand<br />
reform and what we<br />
want, and we have to take<br />
that opportunity.”<br />
Reporting by Jacqueline<br />
Glosniak, Contributing Editor.<br />
Full story at Winnetka-<br />
Current.com.<br />
THE NORTHBROOK TOWER<br />
Northbrook native<br />
co-authors book on Joe<br />
Maddon<br />
Most Chicago Cubs fans<br />
quickly developed an affinity<br />
for manager Joe<br />
Maddon following his arrival<br />
in late 2014.<br />
Please see NFYN, 10