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Glencoe’s Hometown Newspaper GlencoeAnchor.com • May 24, 2018 • Vol. 4 No. 38 • $1<br />

A<br />

Publication<br />

,LLC<br />

BMX rider shares<br />

inspiring story at<br />

annual Bike Rodeo,<br />

Page 4<br />

Professional BMX rider Matt Wilhelm jumps over three volunteers Saturday, May 19,<br />

at the Bike Safety Rodeo in Glencoe. Jill Dunbar/22nd Century Media<br />

Say ‘cheese!’<br />

The Anchor launches its annual<br />

Father’s Day Photo Contest, Page 8<br />

Parting<br />

ways<br />

Walgreens to<br />

depart<br />

Glencoe,<br />

move to<br />

Winnetka,<br />

Page 10<br />

fun in the sun<br />

22CM’s guide to local<br />

happenings this summer,<br />

INSIDE


2 | May 24, 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......................................15<br />

Puzzles18<br />

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

Dining Out22<br />

Home of the Week23<br />

Athlete of the Week26<br />

The Glencoe<br />

Anchor<br />

Editor<br />

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 />

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 />

SUNDAY<br />

Planting in the Garden<br />

1-3 p.m. May 27, Shelton<br />

Park, Glencoe. Dig in<br />

the dirt to plant the Glencoe<br />

Community Garden’s<br />

2018 crops.<br />

MONDAY<br />

Memorial Day Ceremony<br />

11 a.m. May 28, Veteran’s<br />

Memorial Park, 299<br />

Park Ave., Glencoe. Honor<br />

Glencoe residents who<br />

made the ultimate sacrifice<br />

in service to our country.<br />

WEDNESDAY<br />

Growing Top Tomatoes<br />

6-8 p.m. May 30, Chicago<br />

Botanic Garden, 1000<br />

Lake Cook Road, Glencoe.<br />

Discover tips and techniques<br />

for growing highquality<br />

tomatoes organically<br />

in this class loaded<br />

with tips on variety selection,<br />

transplanting, trellising,<br />

best cultural practices,<br />

soil requirements and troubleshooting<br />

techniques for<br />

pest and disease management.<br />

Each student will<br />

take home a tomato seedling<br />

for transplanting into<br />

their own garden. Visit<br />

www.chicagobotanic.org.<br />

Bike and Walk to School<br />

May 30, Village of Glencoe.<br />

Glencoe District 35<br />

invites its students to bike<br />

and walk to school today.<br />

The rain date is May 31.<br />

THURSDAY<br />

Cooking Class<br />

6-8:30 p.m. May 31,<br />

Chicago Botanic Garden,<br />

1000 Lake Cook Road,<br />

Glencoe. Get ready for<br />

summer grilling with<br />

enhanced flavors in the<br />

form of spice rubs and<br />

marinades in this cooking<br />

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

UPCOMING<br />

Glencoe Grand Prix<br />

June 2, Village of Glencoe.<br />

The Glencoe Grand<br />

Prix, the annual summer<br />

bike race event, returns<br />

to the streets of Glencoe.<br />

Afterward, head to the Village<br />

Court parking lot for<br />

the Glencoe Block Party.<br />

Study Break Lounge<br />

June 2-3, Glencoe Library,<br />

320 Park Ave.<br />

Looking to take a break<br />

while studying for finals?<br />

The Study Break Lounge<br />

is the perfect place for free<br />

snacks and a little socializing.<br />

Hosta Society Show and<br />

Sale<br />

10 a.m.-4:30 p.m.<br />

June 2-3, Chicago Botanic<br />

Garden, 1000 Lake<br />

Cook Road, Glencoe. The<br />

Northern Illinois Hosta<br />

Society presents this show,<br />

which features more than<br />

100 cut-leaf specimens of<br />

hosta, including rare and<br />

unusual varieties. Hosta<br />

growers will have gardenready<br />

plants for sale.<br />

Music on the Esplanade<br />

6-8 p.m. June 5, Chicago<br />

Botanic Garden, 1000<br />

Lake Cook Road, Glencoe.<br />

Bring lawn chairs every<br />

Tuesday to the garden<br />

and enjoy a summer concert<br />

series, which will run<br />

through Aug. 28. Chicagobased<br />

vocalist Sam Fazio<br />

performs this week.<br />

Vegetarian Dips<br />

11:30 a.m.-1 p.m. June 5,<br />

Chicago Botanic Garden,<br />

1000 Lake Cook Road,<br />

Glencoe. Learn how to use<br />

a food processor and immersion<br />

blender to make<br />

pea avocado hummus, artichoke-spinach-white<br />

bean<br />

spread, black bean and<br />

mango salsa, and middle<br />

eastern roasted red pepper<br />

and walnut puree. Visit<br />

www.chicagobotanic.org.<br />

Beach Bash<br />

2:30-5 p.m. June 7,<br />

Glencoe Beach. Celebrate<br />

the end of the school year<br />

with a party on the beach.<br />

Join in for entertainment,<br />

Frisbee, volleyball, snowcones<br />

and more. Food and<br />

drinks included in admission.<br />

Please register at<br />

GJHP.org; dates subject<br />

to change. In the event of<br />

inclement weather, this<br />

event will be in Central<br />

School small gym.<br />

Movies on the Green<br />

Dusk, June 8, Wyman<br />

Green, Glencoe. Enjoy<br />

monthly outdoor movie<br />

screenings at Wyman<br />

Green, between the Glencoe<br />

Public Library and<br />

Village Hall. Movies begin<br />

at dusk. The first movie<br />

screening, “Beauty and<br />

the Beast,” is scheduled<br />

for June 8. Check www.<br />

villageofglencoe.com for<br />

future listings.<br />

Book Sale<br />

June 9-11, Glencoe Library,<br />

320 Park Ave. The<br />

Friends of the Library<br />

Summer Book Sale will<br />

run Saturday and Sunday.<br />

For hours, visit www.glencoepubliclibrary.org.<br />

Ice Cream Social<br />

1-5 p.m. June 10, Glencoe<br />

Library, 320 Park<br />

Ave. Stop by for some<br />

free Culver’s ice cream to<br />

celebrate the start of the<br />

library summer reading<br />

clubs. There will be sweet<br />

treats and sign-up prizes.<br />

Hands-on Floral<br />

6:30-7:30 p.m. June 11,<br />

Takiff Center, 999 Green<br />

Bay Road, Glencoe. Learn<br />

to make your own floral<br />

crown with fresh flowers<br />

and greenery. This handson<br />

floral workshop lets<br />

you create an arrangement<br />

to take home. Register online.<br />

Music on the Esplanade<br />

6-8 p.m. June 12, Chicago<br />

Botanic Garden, 1000<br />

Lake Cook Road, Glencoe.<br />

Bring lawn chairs<br />

every Tuesday to the garden<br />

and enjoy a summer<br />

concert series, which will<br />

run through Aug. 28. The<br />

Nia Quintet performs this<br />

week.<br />

Breakfast Club<br />

10-11 a.m. June 14,<br />

Takiff Center, 999 Green<br />

Bay Road, Glencoe. Each<br />

month, join the park district<br />

staff in the Takiff Center<br />

lobby for breakfast and<br />

a meet and greet. Pre-registration<br />

is recommended.<br />

Snack on This<br />

7-8 p.m. June 21, Shelton<br />

Park, Glencoe. Snacking<br />

is a national pastime;<br />

making it delicious and nutritious<br />

is certified health<br />

coach Evey Schweig’s<br />

expertise. Find out how<br />

to choose and buy smarter<br />

snacks and how to make<br />

easy healthy treats for your<br />

on-the-go lifestyle. Please<br />

RSVP before June 19 to<br />

gcgarden18@gmail.com.<br />

Tots-N-Tunes<br />

10-10:45 a.m. June 22,<br />

LIST IT YOURSELF<br />

Reach out to thousands of daily<br />

users by submitting your event at<br />

GlencoeAnchor.com/calendar<br />

For just print*, email all information to<br />

megan@glencoeanchor.com<br />

*Deadline for print is 5 p.m. the Thursday prior to publication.<br />

Correction<br />

In the May 17 issue of<br />

The Glencoe Anchor, it<br />

was incorrectly stated<br />

that Piero’s Pizza in<br />

Wilmette will have to<br />

move from its 335<br />

Ridge Road location in<br />

July of this year due to<br />

a future construction<br />

project. It should<br />

have said the move<br />

is scheduled for late<br />

summer of 2019.<br />

The Anchor recognizes<br />

and regrets this error.<br />

Wyman Green, Glencoe.<br />

Playful pop-rocker Kevin<br />

and the Infinite Possibilities<br />

stretches children’s<br />

imaginations with his<br />

storytelling and will getting<br />

them up and moving.<br />

This Tots-N-Tunes concert<br />

hosted by the library<br />

will take place on Wyman<br />

Green. In case of inclement<br />

weather, the concert<br />

will take place in the Johnson<br />

Room.<br />

ONGOING<br />

Sit N’ Sip<br />

6:30 p.m. last Thursday<br />

of every month, Guildhall,<br />

694 Vernon Ave. All are<br />

welcome to this event to<br />

get out and socialize with<br />

other Glencoe residents.


glencoeanchor.com news<br />

the glencoe anchor | May 24, 2018 | 3<br />

New Trier High School then-senior Anya Leptich sings the National Anthem during<br />

Glencoe’s Memorial Day service last year at Veterans Memorial Park. This year, the<br />

service will be held at 11 a.m. Monday, May 28. 22nd Century Media File Photo<br />

Memorial Day ceremony<br />

planned at Veterans Park<br />

SUBMITTED BY VILLAGE OF<br />

GLENCOE<br />

The Village of Glencoe<br />

and Glencoe Historical<br />

Society will remember<br />

veterans who made the<br />

ultimate sacrifice in service<br />

to our country on the<br />

150th anniversary of Memorial<br />

Day on Monday,<br />

May 28.<br />

Residents are invited<br />

to partake in a solemn<br />

ceremony at 11 a.m.<br />

at Veterans’ Memorial<br />

Park, 299 Park Ave., led<br />

by community and religious<br />

leaders, Boy and<br />

Girl Scouts, and local<br />

students.<br />

The event will include<br />

a brief program<br />

honoring Glencoe veterans,<br />

as well as a flagraising<br />

and wreathlaying.<br />

In case of inclement<br />

weather, the event<br />

will be held in the Takiff<br />

Center, 999 Green<br />

Bay Road.<br />

Further holiday info<br />

The Village of Glencoe<br />

Village Hall, 675 Village<br />

Court, will be closed on<br />

Monday, May 28, in observance<br />

of the Memorial<br />

Day holiday and will<br />

resume normal business<br />

hours on Tuesday, May<br />

29.<br />

Garbage and recycling<br />

collection will be delayed<br />

one day in observance of<br />

the holiday. Monday collection<br />

will be on Tuesday,<br />

May 29, and Tuesday<br />

collection will be<br />

on Wednesday, May 30.<br />

Regular collection schedule<br />

will resume on Thursday,<br />

May 31. Yard waste<br />

collection on Wednesday<br />

will not be impacted by<br />

the holiday.<br />

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Honoring the Fallen<br />

In honor of Memorial Day this<br />

Monday, May 28, The Glencoe Anchor<br />

is honoring the soldiers who made the<br />

ultimate sacrifice. Below is a full list<br />

(submitted by the Glencoe Historical<br />

Society) of Glencoe soldiers who have<br />

died while serving their country since<br />

World War I. The Anchor salutes all<br />

those who have served and continue<br />

to serve our country.<br />

WORLD WAR I<br />

George Brandenburg<br />

Leon Bullard<br />

Marinus Christensen<br />

Norman Hillock<br />

Kenneth MacLeish<br />

WORLD WAR II, KOREA AND VIETNAM<br />

Basil Wilfred Andrews<br />

Frank Crane Baer<br />

William F. Baumann<br />

George Joseph Beinlich, Jr.<br />

Gilber Clarence Bills<br />

Edward Joseph Brockman<br />

Roger Bartlett Brown<br />

SERVICES<br />

2018 DIRECTORY<br />

Thomas P. Chavis<br />

Alan Lippett David<br />

Foster Miler Fargo<br />

Benjamin H. Goodman, Jr.<br />

Francise G. Crosse<br />

Donald Frederick Hamley<br />

Martin Charles Helke<br />

John Powers Hicks<br />

Jack Kirschbraun<br />

Donald Kraus<br />

Robert Bandent Long<br />

Edward B. Lott<br />

W. Philip McNulty II<br />

James Harrington Musson<br />

John Pendergast<br />

Ian Fraser Preston<br />

Robert D. Robertson<br />

Lawrence E. Teich<br />

Lee W. Walker, Jr.<br />

John Jasper Yowell, Jr.<br />

Korea<br />

Clifton H. Stowers, Jr.<br />

Jack Workman<br />

Vietnam<br />

Robert Varick<br />

To advertise in our<br />

Bridal Services Directory<br />

contact our Classifieds<br />

Department<br />

708.326.9170 | www.22ndcenturymedia.com<br />

385 Waukegan Road, Northbrook IL, 60062 • 847.267.1331


4 | May 24, 2018 | The glencoe anchor news<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

Glencoe’s Bike Rodeo features BMX champion<br />

Jennifer Bennett<br />

Freelance Reporter<br />

Families headed over<br />

to South School this past<br />

Saturday, May 19, to experience<br />

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

Bike Safety Rodeo.<br />

Courtesy of Glencoe<br />

Public Safety, the Village<br />

and the Park District, visitors<br />

were welcomed to the<br />

festivities with a variety<br />

of activities to participate<br />

in, along with a performance<br />

by BMX champion<br />

rider Matt Wilhelm.<br />

Guests were encouraged<br />

to bring their bikes<br />

and helmets to the rodeo,<br />

and upon arrival,<br />

they were directed to the<br />

registration booth. It was<br />

here that kids received a<br />

personal number for their<br />

bikes. Families loved this<br />

station, realizing if their<br />

bikes happened to get lost<br />

or stolen, they would now<br />

have a way to track them<br />

down.<br />

Glencoe mom Dawn<br />

Mazarakis registered her<br />

three children’s bikes.<br />

“This was a very sweet<br />

and educational event. We<br />

registered their bikes with<br />

the police department and<br />

all the police were very<br />

kind and helpful with the<br />

children,” Mazarakis said.<br />

Next, it was over to<br />

the helmet check station<br />

where helmets were inspected<br />

by the Park District<br />

for safety and proper<br />

fit. Then, guests made<br />

their way to the bike station,<br />

where Green Bay<br />

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After guests finished<br />

checking their gear, it was<br />

time for the bike course<br />

challenge. However, this<br />

was not your ordinary<br />

obstacle course. Instead,<br />

this was a challenge with<br />

a mission as each six stations<br />

had a safety measure<br />

behind it.<br />

The first station checked<br />

if bikers could mount<br />

and dismount their bikes<br />

safely while the second<br />

and third stations focused<br />

on rider control and maneuvering.<br />

Upon completion<br />

of the course, riders<br />

were awarded with a bike<br />

driver’s license, complete<br />

with their name and the<br />

date they mastered the<br />

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each participant received<br />

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a goody bag complete<br />

with safety pamphlets,<br />

helmet reflectors and bike<br />

safety bookmarks.<br />

Glencoe’s Natalie<br />

Holtzman appreciated the<br />

added educational aspects<br />

of the event.<br />

“It was entertaining and<br />

taught them about bike<br />

safety before summertime,”<br />

Holtzman added.<br />

The second half of the<br />

rodeo found the crowd<br />

cheering and clapping<br />

as BMX champion Matt<br />

Wilhelm took the stage.<br />

Visiting more than 300<br />

schools every year, Wilhelm’s<br />

motivational and<br />

inspirational programs<br />

have become a hit across<br />

the country.<br />

From the stage of the<br />

popular television show,<br />

“America’s Got Talent,”<br />

to the blacktop behind<br />

South School in Glencoe,<br />

Wilhelm’s BMX talent<br />

captivated all.<br />

Flipping, spinning on<br />

one wheel, riding handsfree<br />

and jumping his bike<br />

over three brave parents<br />

were just a few of the<br />

many tricks Wilhelm performed.<br />

And While Wilhelm’s<br />

bike stunts were<br />

crowd-pleasers, even<br />

more incredible were his<br />

inspirational stories behind<br />

each trick.<br />

From a tiny tot on a<br />

bike, Wilhelm’s dream<br />

was to make it to the largest<br />

BMX competition in<br />

the world, The X Games.<br />

However, the journey to<br />

the top was not an easy<br />

climb. Growing up, the<br />

three-times X games<br />

medalist was made fun of<br />

for being “different” and<br />

for riding BMX. He was<br />

close to quitting riding<br />

after an intense bullying<br />

incident at a local riding<br />

park.<br />

BMX rider Matt Wilhelm (left) coaches Mimi Drost, 6, on<br />

how to ride a bike backward Saturday, May 19, at the<br />

annual Bike Rodeo at South School in Glencoe. Photos<br />

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

Glencoe Public Safety officer D. Mahoney-Muno (left)<br />

guides Helena Brown, 3, on the bike safety course.<br />

Fortunately, another<br />

BMX rider had the courage<br />

to stand up for Wilhelm.<br />

It was this small act<br />

of kindness that changed<br />

Wilhelm’s life forever and<br />

inspired his anti-bullying<br />

programs he teaches today.<br />

Wilhelm wrapped up<br />

his program handing out<br />

posters and shirts and<br />

posing with each fan for a<br />

memorable picture.<br />

Dr. Catherine Wang,<br />

District 35 superintendent,<br />

appreciated how the<br />

rodeo brought the community<br />

together.<br />

“It’s been a wonderful<br />

collaboration of the Park<br />

District, the Village and<br />

Public Safety to highlight<br />

bike safety, but also<br />

a community event to get<br />

our youngest children involved<br />

and out on their<br />

bikes,” Wang added.<br />

And as the rodeo<br />

wrapped up that afternoon,<br />

families happily<br />

biked away exhausted<br />

from hours of worthwhile<br />

inspirational fun and<br />

smiling with a little more<br />

confidence in their pedal.


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6 | May 24, 2018 | The glencoe anchor news<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

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police reports<br />

Jewelry stolen in Glencoe home burglary<br />

It was reported at 8:20<br />

p.m. May 11 that an unknown<br />

offender forced<br />

entry into a residence in<br />

the 200 block of Sheridan<br />

Road. Two jewelry boxes<br />

were stolen, and the investigation<br />

is ongoing.<br />

In other police news:<br />

May 15<br />

• Antonio Cervantes, 32,<br />

of Waukegan, was arrested<br />

for possession of cannabis,<br />

suspended driver’s<br />

license and expired registration<br />

at 12:22 p.m. at the<br />

intersection of Green Bay<br />

THE WINNETKA CURRENT<br />

30 years pass since<br />

Hubbard Woods School<br />

shooting<br />

This past Sunday<br />

marked a big anniversary<br />

for Winnetka.<br />

However, the day is one<br />

that neither Winnetkans<br />

wish they had to be reminded<br />

of nor one which<br />

should have even happened<br />

in the first place.<br />

May 20 marked 30<br />

years since Laurie Dann<br />

— a Glencoe native with<br />

a history of mental illness<br />

— strolled into Hubbard<br />

Woods School armed with<br />

two handguns, killing one<br />

student, Nicholas Corwin.<br />

While the event’s anniversary<br />

has sparked local<br />

media attention, particularly<br />

through an ABC 7<br />

news special aired Thursday,<br />

May 17, Winnetka<br />

Public Schools District 36<br />

is not planning on having<br />

any formal recognition.<br />

“Rather, it is our hope<br />

that we can collectively<br />

appreciate the resilience<br />

and beauty of the school<br />

community we share at<br />

Road and Harbor Street.<br />

His court date is June 4.<br />

• Jaquis Y. Azaiza, 32, of<br />

Chicago, was cited for<br />

driving with an expired<br />

registration and possession<br />

of cannabis at 4:53<br />

p.m. at the intersection of<br />

Dundee Road and Pebblewood<br />

Drive.<br />

Hubbard Woods,” said<br />

Kate Hughes, communications<br />

and community<br />

relations coordinator, in a<br />

press release.<br />

On May 20, 1988 at<br />

Hubbard Woods School,<br />

Dann pushed a boy into a<br />

washroom and shot him,<br />

attempted to shoot two<br />

boys walking by and then<br />

walked into a secondgrade<br />

classroom where<br />

she opened fire, striking<br />

five students and killing<br />

8-year-old Corwin.<br />

Minutes later, she fled<br />

to a nearby home, telling a<br />

mom and her 20-year-old<br />

son, Philip Andrew, that<br />

she was raped and shot her<br />

assailant. While Andrew<br />

was able to take one gun<br />

away from Dann, she kept<br />

him hostage and shot him<br />

in the chest. He survived.<br />

Following a police<br />

standoff, Dann died in the<br />

home from a self-inflicted<br />

gunshot wound.<br />

Reporting by Jacqueline<br />

Glosniak, Contributing Editor.<br />

Story at WinnetkaCurrent.com.<br />

May 10<br />

• Marcos Dinas Pena, 31,<br />

of Round Lake Park, was<br />

arrested for driving under<br />

the influence and no rear<br />

registration plate light at<br />

1:57 a.m. at the intersection<br />

of Green Bay and<br />

Maple Hill roads. His<br />

court date is June 11.<br />

• Ian L. Webb, 18, of Wilmette,<br />

was cited for possession<br />

of cannabis and<br />

drug paraphernalia and<br />

disobeying a stop sign at<br />

5:13 p.m. at the intersection<br />

of Old Green Bay<br />

Road and Woodlawn Avenue.<br />

• An unknown offender<br />

fraudulently applied online<br />

and obtained a Navy<br />

Federal Credit Union<br />

credit card. There is no reported<br />

loss.<br />

THE LAKE FOREST LEADER<br />

Kings and Convicts<br />

Brewing seeks to relocate<br />

from Highwood to Lake<br />

Bluff<br />

Since opening Kings<br />

and Convicts Brewing<br />

Company in Highwood<br />

last May, the owners, two<br />

Lake Forest residents, are<br />

looking to relocate and expand<br />

the brewery to Lake<br />

Bluff.<br />

The Lake Bluff Joint<br />

Plan Commission and<br />

Zoning Board of Appeals<br />

held a pre-application<br />

workshop with the Kings<br />

and Convicts Brewing<br />

Company co-owners,<br />

Chris Bradley and Brendan<br />

Watters, both of Lake<br />

Forest, at its meeting,<br />

Wednesday, May 16.<br />

Kings and Convicts<br />

Brewing Company is a<br />

craft brewery looking for<br />

a larger facility. Its existing<br />

location in Highwood<br />

is 5,000 square feet and<br />

the Lake Bluff site at 927<br />

North Shore Drive is approximately<br />

60,000 square<br />

feet.<br />

“That particular facility<br />

• A street sign was reported<br />

stolen at 11:07 a.m. at<br />

the intersection of Jackson<br />

Avenue and Randolph<br />

Street.<br />

EDITOR’S NOTE: The<br />

Glencoe Anchor’s Police<br />

Reports are compiled from<br />

official reports found on<br />

file at the Glencoe Police<br />

Department headquarters in<br />

Glencoe. Individuals named<br />

in these reports are considered<br />

innocent of all charges<br />

until proven guilty in a court<br />

of law.<br />

(in Highwood) we have<br />

grown out of,” Watters<br />

said. “Within the next 12<br />

months, if we don’t find<br />

somewhere else, we’re<br />

going to hit a wall. We<br />

love Highwood. It’s just<br />

not a big enough location.”<br />

Kings and Convicts<br />

plans to create a destination<br />

brewery experience<br />

in its proposed larger Lake<br />

Bluff location.<br />

“We have a plan of doing<br />

what’s called destination<br />

brewery, where you<br />

come into the taproom<br />

with food and actually<br />

see the brewing taking<br />

place,” Watters said. “The<br />

ones that have a brand that<br />

grows, are the ones that<br />

create a destination experience.<br />

What that does is<br />

when you walk in somewhere,<br />

as opposed to just<br />

going into a bar, you go in<br />

and you see the brewing<br />

going on.”<br />

Reporting by Todd Marver,<br />

Freelance Reporter. Full<br />

story at LakeForestLeader.<br />

com.<br />

Please see nfyn, 15


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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 asubsidiaryofNRT LLC.<br />

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


8 | May 24, 2018 | The glencoe anchor News<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

Glencoe Park Board<br />

Classroom, staff expansion OK’d for Children’s Circle<br />

Emma Palatnik<br />

Freelance Reporter<br />

Beginning this September,<br />

the Children’s Circle<br />

at Glencoe Park District<br />

will undergo expansion.<br />

The expansion project<br />

was approved at the Glencoe<br />

Park District’s regular<br />

monthly board meeting<br />

on Tuesday, May 15, and<br />

comes with a $335,650<br />

price tag.<br />

This approved action<br />

item includes the addition<br />

of two Children’s<br />

Circle classrooms and<br />

three full-time employees.<br />

There were no questions<br />

or discussion regarding<br />

the project at the<br />

meeting.<br />

The three employees<br />

will be hired following<br />

parent concerns of<br />

teacher turnover, according<br />

to a report in the<br />

meeting’s agenda packet.<br />

The report, Children’s<br />

Circle Growth Plan, was<br />

written by Bobby Collins,<br />

Naomi Garvett and<br />

Jess Stockl.<br />

“This will allow the<br />

students to have a class<br />

more tailored to their developmental<br />

needs and<br />

give the teachers the opportunity<br />

to structure the<br />

classrooms in appropriate<br />

ways for the child,” Erin<br />

Maassen, superintendent<br />

of marketing and communications,<br />

told The Glencoe<br />

Anchor.<br />

Currently, the Early<br />

Childhood Program supervisor<br />

is spending more<br />

than 50 percent of their<br />

working hours in a classroom,<br />

and the students<br />

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“need more consistency,”<br />

the packet stated.<br />

Two of the new fulltimers<br />

will be lead teachers<br />

in the two new classrooms<br />

and the third will<br />

be director-qualified to<br />

allow the supervisor and<br />

manager to spend less<br />

time acting as a teacher in<br />

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A brief recap of Park<br />

Board action May 15<br />

• BMO Harris Bank<br />

was approved to be the<br />

Park District’s bank or<br />

depository.<br />

• Staff is looking to<br />

subdivide Linden House<br />

from park property. The<br />

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the Village for approval.<br />

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of the Early Learning<br />

Center classrooms to the<br />

multipurpose wing. It also<br />

includes yearly adjustments<br />

to the non-resident<br />

rate. This is to reach a<br />

goal where non-resident<br />

rates are 25 percent higher<br />

than resident rates.<br />

According to the agenda<br />

packet, all four current<br />

Children’s Circle classroom<br />

are at capacity. The<br />

children range from six<br />

weeks to 5 years old. The<br />

program is open all day<br />

from 7 a.m.-6:30 p.m. for<br />

12 months.<br />

Since more families are<br />

seeking full-day care, the<br />

packet stated, there is a<br />

“significant” Children’s<br />

Circle waitlist.<br />

“The waiting list is at<br />

40-something kids, so<br />

(we’re) really hoping to<br />

accommodate all the families<br />

that are looking for<br />

full-day care in the area<br />

with the change, and still<br />

offer excellent preschool<br />

with the quality that<br />

they’ve come to expect<br />

from the Glencoe Park<br />

District,” Maassen said.<br />

New board positions<br />

At the meeting, the<br />

Glencoe Park District<br />

board commissioners<br />

changed roles.<br />

They voted a new<br />

president and vice president.<br />

Commissioner Lisa<br />

Brooks was elected president,<br />

and commissioner<br />

Stefanie Boron was elected<br />

vice president.<br />

Brooks appointed commissioner<br />

Dudley Onderdonk<br />

treasurer.<br />

Editor Megan Bernard contributed<br />

to this story.<br />

Father’s Day Photo Contest<br />

The 2017 winning dad, Norman Pressman (left), holds<br />

up fish he caught with his son, Michael. Submit your<br />

photo by June 8. 22nd Century Media File Photo<br />

Send The Anchor<br />

your pictureperfect<br />

moment<br />

Alyssa Groh<br />

Contributing Editor<br />

There is no doubt<br />

that dads form a special<br />

bond with their children.<br />

Whether it is learning to<br />

ride a bike, playing sports<br />

or learning how to fix a<br />

car, dads are there for it<br />

all.<br />

In honor of Father’s<br />

Day, The Glencoe Anchor<br />

is asking residents to<br />

submit a photo capturing<br />

what makes their dad so<br />

great.<br />

Maybe it’s a picture of<br />

you two at graduation or<br />

shooting some late night<br />

hoops in the driveway —<br />

whatever sweet photo you<br />

have to share, The Anchor<br />

wants to see it.<br />

Send us a photo of your<br />

dad, and we’ll publish the<br />

winning entry, plus others,<br />

on Thursday, June 15, just<br />

in time for Father’s Day,<br />

which is Sunday, June 18.<br />

The author of the winning<br />

photo will receive a<br />

prize from a local business<br />

to share with his or<br />

her dad.<br />

The deadline for entries<br />

is noon Friday, June<br />

8, giving residents two<br />

weeks to submit a photo.<br />

All ages are encouraged<br />

to enter the contest, but<br />

dads must reside in the<br />

Village of Glencoe.<br />

Entries must include the<br />

father and author’s first<br />

and last name, as well as<br />

a phone number for the<br />

author.<br />

Send entries to Editor<br />

Megan Bernard at megan@glencoeanchor.com<br />

or mail to The Glencoe<br />

Anchor, 60 Revere Drive,<br />

Suite 888, Northbrook, IL<br />

60062. For any questions,<br />

call (847) 272-4565.<br />

visit us online at www.GLENCOEANCHOR.com


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


10 | May 24, 2018 | The glencoe anchor NEWS<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

Glencoe Village Board<br />

Glencoe’s Walgreens to relocate<br />

to Winnetka next month<br />

Results in loss of sales tax<br />

revenue for the Village<br />

Todd Marver<br />

Freelance Reporter<br />

With a new Walgreens under construction<br />

just down the road in Winnetka,<br />

Glencoe residents have been<br />

wondering what would become of the<br />

Walgreens location in their town.<br />

“We received a number of inquiries<br />

from residents regarding the new Walgreens<br />

location that’s currently under<br />

construction in Winnetka and what<br />

that might mean for the current Glencoe<br />

location in Hubbard Woods Plaza,”<br />

Village Manager Phil Kiraly said.<br />

Kiraly provided an answer to resident<br />

inquiries at the Glencoe Village<br />

Board’s Thursday, May 17 meeting.<br />

The Glencoe Walgreens, located at 63<br />

Green Bay Road, is slated to close in<br />

June with the opening of a new Walgreens<br />

location at 925 Green Bay<br />

Road in Winnetka next month. The<br />

Winnetka location was formerly the<br />

home of Mrs. Green’s Neighborhood<br />

Market.<br />

“We were informed this week by the<br />

ownership of Hubbard Woods Plaza<br />

that Walgreens confirmed with them<br />

that the Glencoe location will be closing<br />

in June,” Kiraly said.<br />

Kiraly is working with the owners<br />

of Hubbard Woods Plaza to find a tenant<br />

to fill the space that Walgreens will<br />

vacate next month.<br />

“Obviously from all of our perspectives<br />

this isn’t good news, but we are<br />

working proactively with the owners<br />

of the shopping center to discuss their<br />

plans to market and consider other<br />

uses for the property,” Kiraly said.<br />

“We’re going to be doing all we can<br />

to work proactively with the owners of<br />

the shopping center.”<br />

The lease for Walgreens in Glencoe<br />

runs through 2021 and the Village is<br />

looking to have someone sublease the<br />

space for the remainder of the Walgreens<br />

lease.<br />

“They have three years left on their<br />

lease,” Kiraly said. “One of the things<br />

in our conversations with the property<br />

owners we have talked about is ways<br />

that they’re going to be working with<br />

Walgreens to attempt to find sublease<br />

tenants that would hopefully fill that<br />

space. They don’t want a dark space<br />

anymore than we do.”<br />

Kiraly noted since the 63 Green Bay<br />

Road site is the second-largest retail<br />

space in Glencoe at 12,000 square<br />

feet, it could be hard to get a tenant for<br />

the building once Walgreens closes.<br />

“It’s actually the second-largest retail<br />

space in the community which is<br />

sometimes interesting because it feels<br />

from the street to be quite small,”<br />

Kiraly said. “But it’s about a 12,000<br />

square foot footprint, which is a bit<br />

of the problem because it’s a difficult<br />

space to refill.”<br />

Walgreens leaving is expected to result<br />

in a sales tax revenue loss for the<br />

Village.<br />

“I don’t know the exact figure,” Kiraly<br />

said regarding the loss. “I know<br />

that it’s not an insubstantial hit and not<br />

something that we’re happy about.”<br />

New finance director<br />

Glencoe has announced<br />

a replacement<br />

for former finance director<br />

David Clark, who<br />

departed in January. Nicole<br />

Larson, currently<br />

the finance director in<br />

Vernon Hills, will start Larson<br />

her new position in<br />

Glencoe on June 11.<br />

“After a comprehensive nationwide<br />

search with over 70 applicants from<br />

seven states, I’m pleased to report that<br />

Nicole Larson has accepted the position<br />

of finance director with the Village,”<br />

Kiraly said.<br />

Kiraly was impressed with Larson<br />

during the interview process.<br />

“Those who had a chance to meet<br />

her during the recruitment process I<br />

think would agree she’s a very gifted<br />

public finance professional,” Kiraly<br />

said. “I’m very much looking forward<br />

to her joining our team.”<br />

Glencoe resident appointed to university’s board<br />

Submitted by Governor<br />

Rauner’s Press Office<br />

Fun-raising<br />

Cop on a Rooftop collects funds for Special Olympics<br />

Glencoe and Winnetka police officers (left to right) Josue Perez, Estuardo Rendon,<br />

Mikayla Calanco and Richard Weiner rally the community to raise donations for the Law<br />

Enforcement Torch Run benefitting Special Olympics Illinois on Friday, May 18, at Dunkin<br />

Donuts in Glencoe. Megan Bernard/22nd Century Media<br />

Gov. Bruce<br />

Rauner appointed<br />

University<br />

of Illinois<br />

alumnus<br />

Sanford “Sandy”<br />

Perl to the<br />

University of Perl<br />

Illinois Board<br />

of Trustees on May 15. Perl,<br />

of Glencoe, is an attorney<br />

and partner at Kirkland &<br />

Ellis LLP in Chicago.<br />

“Sandy’s commitment to<br />

elevating the expectations of<br />

what can be accomplished<br />

at the University of Illinois<br />

makes him a forward-thinking<br />

addition to the board of<br />

our world renown university,”<br />

Rauner said.<br />

“We are committed to creating<br />

an economic climate<br />

that will keep the bright<br />

minds of our university students<br />

in Illinois after graduation.<br />

Sandy is one great<br />

example of a University of<br />

Illinois graduate who has<br />

stayed engaged in our state<br />

and will work to help improve<br />

our education system,”<br />

Rauner added.<br />

Perl attended the University<br />

of Illinois from 1983-1987<br />

and graduated with a degree<br />

in accountancy before earning<br />

his Juris Doctor degree<br />

from the University of Michigan<br />

Law School.<br />

“It is a true honor for me<br />

to join the University of Illinois<br />

Board of Trustees,<br />

as the university has had a<br />

meaningful impact on my<br />

life since I had the privilege<br />

of being a student there over<br />

30 years ago,” Perl said. “I<br />

am excited to join my fellow<br />

board members in working<br />

together with the university’s<br />

phenomenal staff, faculty<br />

and students to help the University<br />

of Illinois fulfill its<br />

mission to enhance the lives<br />

of the citizens of Illinois,<br />

across the nation and around<br />

the world, through leadership<br />

in learning, discovery,<br />

engagement, and economic<br />

development.”<br />

Perl is also eager to improve<br />

the university’s alumni<br />

engagement strategies to<br />

encourage alumni to commit<br />

their time and resources<br />

to the University of Illinois<br />

long after graduation, he<br />

said.<br />

Besides education, Perl<br />

is deeply committed to the<br />

Jewish community and<br />

serves on the national board<br />

of directors for the American<br />

Israel Public Affairs Committee<br />

(AIPAC), the board<br />

of directors for the Jewish<br />

Federation of Metropolitan<br />

Chicago, and the executive<br />

committee for the Spertus<br />

Institute for Jewish Learning<br />

and Leadership. He is<br />

the honored recipient of the<br />

Learned Hand Award from<br />

the American Jewish Committee.<br />

He is a member of the<br />

Economic Club of Chicago,<br />

the American Bar Association<br />

and recipient of the Elijah<br />

Watt Sells Award on the<br />

Uniform CPA Examination.<br />

Perl’s appointment is expected<br />

to go before the Senate<br />

for confirmation in the<br />

coming weeks.


glencoeanchor.com glencoe<br />

the glencoe anchor | May 24, 2018 | 11<br />

PREMIER LISTING!<br />

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855 Gordon Terrace<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,itisnot warranted and you should not rely upon it without personal verification. Real estate agents affiliated with Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage are independent contractor<br />

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


12 | May 24, 2018 | The glencoe anchor glencoe<br />

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glencoeanchor.com glencoe<br />

the glencoe anchor | May 24, 2018 | 13<br />

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14 | May 24, 2018 | The glencoe anchor glencoe<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

Your North Shore Neighbor<br />

Trusted Real Estate Agent<br />

NEW<br />

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Northbrook | $1,399,000<br />

6087Kirkwood.com<br />

Chicago — Sauganash | $1,700,000<br />

10 Lakewood Drive<br />

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Glencoe | $1,599,000<br />

160Linden.info<br />

Glencoe | $1,379,000<br />

90 Hawthorn Avenue<br />

Glencoe | $1,250,000<br />

PENDING<br />

SOLD!<br />

PENDING<br />

1324Adirondack.info<br />

Northbrook | $699,000<br />

1133 Fairfield Road<br />

Glencoe | $650,000<br />

3518Riverside.info<br />

Wilmette | $649,000<br />

SOLD<br />

FOR<br />

RENT<br />

michael mitchell<br />

HONESTY | DETERMINATION | RESULTS<br />

1647 Friar Tuck Avenue<br />

Highland Park | $425,000<br />

467 Jackson Avenue<br />

Glencoe | $5,000 Per Month Rental<br />

847.910.0146<br />

MichaelMitchellRealEstate.com<br />

Michael.Mitchell@cbexchange.com<br />

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


glencoeanchor.com sound off<br />

the glencoe anchor | May 24, 2018 | 15<br />

Social snapshot<br />

Top Stories<br />

from GlencoeAnchor.com as of May 21<br />

1. Update: Loyola Academy girls soccer<br />

coach fired over inappropriate, offensive<br />

comments<br />

2. Glencoe women host annual benefit for<br />

SCOPE Midwest<br />

3. Glencoe Park Board: Classroom, staff<br />

expansion OK’d for Children’s Circle<br />

4. Village Board: Glencoe’s Walgreens to<br />

relocate to Winnetka next month<br />

5. Unify Fitness moves into former Books on<br />

Vernon space<br />

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

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

May 14 with the caption: “New Trier theatre<br />

students had the opportunity to hear some<br />

expert advice from alum Rainn Wilson ‘84<br />

today, who spoke with classes about his<br />

acting career and answered questions<br />

about the industry. Welcome back, Rainn!<br />

#GoTrevs”<br />

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

“Met @max_rosie99 4 years ago around<br />

this time in a hallway and he wasn’t playing<br />

football. Oh how times have changed.<br />

#proudcoach #WhosNext”<br />

@DollBrian, Brian Doll, New Trier’s varsity<br />

football coach, posted on May 17<br />

Follow The Glencoe Anchor: @GlencoeAnchor<br />

From the Editor<br />

The diary of a ‘Live PD’ fan<br />

Megan Bernard<br />

megan@glencoeanchor.com<br />

It was only a matter of<br />

time.<br />

After I was introduced<br />

to A&E’s hit television<br />

show, “Live PD,” I<br />

was immediately sucked in.<br />

For those not familiar<br />

with the program, it follows<br />

police officers across<br />

the country in the course<br />

of their nighttime patrols.<br />

It’s live, broadcasting<br />

encounters with the public<br />

on Friday and Saturday<br />

nfyn<br />

From Page 6<br />

THE HIGHLAND PARK LANDMARK<br />

Spurned applicant causes<br />

ruckus at City Hall<br />

Police were called to<br />

Highland Park City Hall<br />

on Monday, May 14, after<br />

a man whose idea was<br />

turned back by the City<br />

Council lashed out as he<br />

was leaving the building.<br />

The man had hopes of<br />

moving a chiropractor office<br />

into the Ravinia Business<br />

District; however, he<br />

was informed by councilmembers<br />

that district is<br />

zoned for retail and was<br />

denied.<br />

“We appreciate your enthusiasm,<br />

but my sense is<br />

this is a practice that might<br />

be of interest to people,<br />

but not necessarily in the<br />

evenings. The show is<br />

hosted by Dan Abrams,<br />

the chief legal affairs<br />

anchor for ABC News,<br />

with analysis and commentary<br />

from Tom Morris<br />

Jr. and one officer from a<br />

department that has been<br />

featured on the series.<br />

Previously, our North<br />

Shore neighbors in Lake<br />

County were featured on<br />

the show. The department,<br />

however, hasn’t appeared<br />

on “Live PD” in recent<br />

months.<br />

To me, watching their<br />

patrols is so interesting. It<br />

serves an inside look on<br />

the law from their perspective.<br />

Plus, who wouldn’t<br />

want to see how a 30-minute<br />

police chase through<br />

the desert turns out?<br />

Also while watching,<br />

you get a glimpse at the<br />

officers’ personas. Turns<br />

first floor in the Ravinia<br />

Business District,” Mayor<br />

Nancy Rotering said to the<br />

man and his wife.<br />

The City Council suggested<br />

the man should<br />

look at other locations in<br />

the Ravinia District before<br />

voting to deny the couple<br />

a permit.<br />

The man became angry<br />

at the lectern in front of<br />

the council, but his behavior<br />

escalated, as he began<br />

to scream and throw items,<br />

while he was leaving the<br />

building.<br />

“This is an unbelievable<br />

setback for us,” the man<br />

said at the lectern. “This is<br />

abysmal.”<br />

The man continued to<br />

scream at City Hall after<br />

he exited the building,<br />

prompting city administrators<br />

to hurriedly secure the<br />

building, while Rotering<br />

called the police.<br />

out, they are just like any<br />

of us and can and should<br />

be approachable.<br />

While we may not<br />

know every Glencoe<br />

Public Safety officer since<br />

they aren’t filmed on<br />

national television, we can<br />

still take the time to say<br />

“hello” and be friendly.<br />

On Friday, May 18, I<br />

was excited to see our<br />

local officers out at the<br />

Glencoe Dunkin Donuts<br />

on Green Bay Road.<br />

The officers were raising<br />

money for the Law<br />

Enforcement Torch Run<br />

benefitting Special Olympics<br />

Illinois. The annual<br />

fundraiser is dubbed Cop<br />

on a Rooftop.<br />

Glencoe and Winnetka<br />

police created a fun<br />

atmosphere, welcoming<br />

customers with smiles,<br />

conversation and music.<br />

Highland Park police<br />

would not comment on<br />

the incident, but Rotering<br />

told The Landmark that<br />

the man left the premises<br />

and no charges were being<br />

filed by the City.<br />

Police, she said, were<br />

still on-site to ensure everyone’s<br />

safety as they left.<br />

“Just as a precaution we<br />

had our cops here,” Ramesh<br />

Kanapareddy, the director<br />

of public works said.<br />

Rotering said she’s never<br />

seen anything like that<br />

happen at a City meeting,<br />

but the City does have protocol<br />

in place in emergency<br />

situations.<br />

“It’s unfortunate that<br />

he was so strongly disappointed<br />

in our action,” Rotering<br />

said.<br />

Reporting by Erin Yarnall,<br />

Contributing Editor. Story at<br />

HPLandmark.com.<br />

While there, they also<br />

passed out vouchers for<br />

free donuts and let some<br />

little ones take a look<br />

inside their squad cars and<br />

a firetruck.<br />

Take advantage of these<br />

opportunities in the future.<br />

These men and women<br />

are doing much more<br />

than what you read in the<br />

blotter. You can take their<br />

patrols on “Live PD” as<br />

an example.<br />

go figure<br />

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

2<br />

The location Walgreens<br />

occupies in Glencoe is<br />

the second largest retail<br />

space in the village.<br />

(Page 10)<br />

The Glencoe<br />

Anchor<br />

Sound Off Policy<br />

Editorials and columns are the<br />

opinions of the author. Pieces<br />

from 22nd Century Media are<br />

the thoughts of the company<br />

as a whole. The Glencoe Anchor<br />

encourages readers to write<br />

letters to Sound Off. All letters<br />

must be signed, and names and<br />

hometowns will be published.<br />

We also ask that writers include<br />

their address and phone number<br />

for verification, not publication.<br />

Letters should be limited to 400<br />

words. The Glencoe Anchor reserves<br />

the right to edit letters. Letters<br />

become property of The Glencoe<br />

Anchor. Letters that are published<br />

do not reflect the thoughts and<br />

views of The Glencoe Anchor.<br />

Letters can be mailed to: The<br />

Glencoe Anchor, 60 Revere Drive<br />

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

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

email to megan@glencoeanchor.<br />

com.<br />

www.glencoeanchor.com


16 | May 24, 2018 | The glencoe anchor glencoe<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

WG ILN E NE CT OK EA<br />

107 L I N D E N<br />

•Beautifully renovated &impeccably maintained, home is acharmer inside and out.<br />

•Inviting enclosed front porch welcomes you.<br />

•Agracious living room has alovely fireplace and room to relax.<br />

•Wide arched opening leads to spacious dining room.<br />

•Brand new stainless steel appliances in granite kitchen with breakfast bar.<br />

•Second floor boasts 3well-scaled bedrooms with well-organized closets and alarge hall<br />

bath.<br />

•Brand new full bath on the first floor has sleek glass walk-in shower<br />

•The lower level provides another half bath, laundry area, and arecreation room.<br />

•Lovely fenced-in yard with new brick paver patio.<br />

•1car garage steps from back door,plus paver car pad in front.<br />

•Many recent updates, including HVAC, roof and tuck pointing.<br />

$579,000 www.107LINDEN.COM<br />

CATHERINE KING c 847.624.7738<br />

Visit us at www.thehudsoncompany.com W I N N E T K A<br />

for additional information on each listing<br />

G L E N C O E<br />

G L E N C O E<br />

G L E N C O E<br />

W I N N E T K A<br />

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G L E N C O E<br />

334 S H E R I D A N<br />

Stunning updated red brick 15 room<br />

6BR/4.1BA home near lake on .45 acre.<br />

$1,649,000<br />

HOWARD &SUSAN MEYERS<br />

800 LINCOLN<br />

460 OAKDALE 1178 C A R O L<br />

902 PINE<br />

241 FAIRVIEW<br />

Updated, charming 4BR/2.2BA home with Phenomenal NEWLOOK contemporary Center-entry 4BR/3.1BA move-in ready. A+ location on .75’ lot. Rebuilt 5BA/4.1 Fabulous new 6BR/5.1BA new home by<br />

open floor plan, great living space. gem, incredible light &open floor plan. Sophisticated decor,great location! gem in East Winnetka.<br />

award winning builder NEWLOOK.<br />

$829,000<br />

J.HUDSON &E.BERLINGHOF<br />

$1,329,000<br />

HOWARD &SUSAN MEYERS<br />

$1,199,000<br />

J.SAVINO &K.HARTSIG<br />

$1,599,000<br />

PAIGE DOOLEY<br />

$2,399,000<br />

HOWARD &SUSAN MEYERS<br />

JUNE 15&16 HUDSONFAMILYSTAGE.COM<br />

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HUDSON FAMILYSTAGE FESTIVITIES —ALL DAYSATURDAY STARTING AT 9:00 A.M.<br />

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STEVE HUDSON JOANNE HUDSON EMILY BERLINGHOF GENIE COOPER JENNY DAELLENBACH JANE DEARBORN PAIGE DOOLEY<br />

COCO HARRIS KATHY HARTSIG CARRIE HEALY TRACY HEDSTROM CATHERINE KING KELLY LUNDIN LAURA MCCAIN GEORGE MCCARTHY<br />

HOWARD MEYERS SUSAN MEYERS KATIE MEYERS RENÉ NELSON ROXANNE QUIGLEY JODY SAVINO SARA SULLIVAN JANET THOMAS JEAN WRIGHT


the glencoe anchor | May 24, 2018 | glencoeanchor.com<br />

Sprucing up<br />

Scouts restore entrance of Little<br />

House of Glencoe, Page 21<br />

All family here<br />

Sandy’s diner becomes a second home<br />

to many customers, Page 22<br />

Thousands of visitors to emerge in Glencoe<br />

for Butterflies and Blooms, Page 19<br />

The popular seasonal exhibit, Butterflies and Blooms, opens Saturday, May 26, at Chicago Botanic Garden.<br />

Last year, a group of Girl Scouts visited the exhibit and looked at the pupa. This year, Butterflies and Blooms will<br />

be located in its permanent location next to the butterfly pavilion in a tent. Photos Submitted


18 | May 24, 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 />

1. Electronics<br />

company based in<br />

Glenview<br />

4. Term from tennis,<br />

golf or poker<br />

7. “Give ___ break!”<br />

10. Fox or turkey follower<br />

12. “The Republic”<br />

writer<br />

14. Badger’s tunnel<br />

15. Amateur<br />

16. Hotel founder Ritz<br />

17. Saroyan character<br />

18. Frankenstein’s<br />

friend<br />

19. Drag your bag<br />

21. Principal<br />

23. Fish-eating hawk<br />

27. The “S” in EST:<br />

Abbr.<br />

28. Fathers, to tots<br />

33. Hobbits’ home<br />

34. Goodbye speeches<br />

36. “Do _____ say!”<br />

38. Not as fresh<br />

39. A.A.A. recommendation<br />

40. Grossly excessive<br />

43. Quartet member<br />

44. Hurdles<br />

45. Krypton is one<br />

48. Trembling trees<br />

50. Macaroni &<br />

cheese maker based<br />

in Glenview<br />

52. Proofs of purchase<br />

57. Goes with Romeo<br />

58. Hide<br />

61. Specialized idiom<br />

62. The Virgin Islands,<br />

e.g. (Abbr.)<br />

63. Soothing juice<br />

64. Organism community<br />

65. Course for a med.<br />

student<br />

66. U.P.S. delivery,<br />

for short<br />

67. Ship’s heading<br />

68. Cries of regret<br />

Down<br />

1. Top stories<br />

2. Brainy<br />

3. Ring-shaped<br />

4. Tina’s “30 Rock”<br />

costar<br />

5. Alternative to<br />

plastic<br />

6. And others: Abbr.<br />

7. Debussy subject<br />

8. Sched. time<br />

9. Kind of card<br />

11. Split<br />

12. Workstation machines,<br />

for short<br />

13. Sandwich cookie<br />

14. Deep blue jewel<br />

20. ‘’Hey, Buddy!’’<br />

22. U.S. agency<br />

24. Violent commotion<br />

25. Sea eagle<br />

26. Most assuredly<br />

29. More than some<br />

30. Meat purveyors<br />

31. Sales extra<br />

32. Historic Tuscan<br />

city<br />

34. French author,<br />

Leduc<br />

35. Rock that stands<br />

out<br />

36. Line on a graph<br />

37. Knock off<br />

40. Ms. Longoria<br />

41. Maharaja’s missus<br />

42. “Naughty,<br />

naughty!”<br />

45. Lead source<br />

46. Brawl<br />

47. Initiates<br />

49. Healing formation<br />

51. Pro ___ (proportionately)<br />

53. Actor Kristofferson<br />

54. They can be big<br />

in Hollywood<br />

55. Large volume<br />

56. Female saint,<br />

abbr.<br />

58. Soft food<br />

59. Giant deer<br />

60. Star Trek captain’s<br />

book<br />

GLENCOE<br />

Writers Theatre<br />

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

242-6000)<br />

■Through ■ June 24:<br />

‘Smart People’<br />

WILMETTE<br />

The Rock House<br />

(1150 Central Ave.<br />

(847) 256-7625)<br />

■7 ■ p.m. Thursday, May<br />

24: Open Mic!<br />

■6:30 ■ p.m. Friday, May<br />

25: Family Night +<br />

Karaoke<br />

Wilmette Historical<br />

Museum<br />

(609 Ridge Road (847)<br />

853-7666)<br />

■2-4 ■ p.m. Sunday,<br />

June 10: Exhibit<br />

Opening — ‘Dancing<br />

for My Tribe’<br />

HIGHLAND PARK<br />

The Panda Bar<br />

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

433-0589)<br />

■Every ■ Friday: Live<br />

Music<br />

HIGHWOOD<br />

210<br />

(210 Green Bay Road<br />

(847) 433-0304)<br />

■6:30 ■ p.m. Thursday,<br />

May 24: Blues<br />

Femmes Supershow<br />

■7:30 ■ p.m. Friday, May<br />

25: Dance Night —<br />

One Night Band<br />

■7:30 ■ p.m. Saturday,<br />

May 26: Dick Holliday<br />

and the Bamboo<br />

Gang<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 />

■8 ■ p.m. Thursday, May<br />

24: The Stingers<br />

■6 ■ p.m. Friday, May<br />

25: Family Night and<br />

Karaoke<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 | May 24, 2018 | 19<br />

Visitors expected to fly in for annual butterfly exhibit<br />

Chicago Botanic<br />

opens Butterflies<br />

and Blooms May 26<br />

Megan Bernard, Editor<br />

An estimated 25,000<br />

people will visit the Chicago<br />

Botanic Garden this<br />

summer to get up close<br />

and personal with hundreds<br />

of butterflies.<br />

The garden’s seventh<br />

annual Butterflies and<br />

Blooms exhibit opens<br />

Saturday, May 26, and<br />

closes Sept. 3 over Labor<br />

Day Weekend. It is<br />

open daily from 10 a.m.-<br />

5 p.m. with an admission<br />

fee.<br />

New this year, the exhibition<br />

has moved to its<br />

permanent location adjacent<br />

to the butterfly pavilion.<br />

It is housed in a tent,<br />

exposed to the elements,<br />

said Kristie Webber, the<br />

director of interpretive<br />

programs.<br />

“It feels very open because<br />

it’s not a conservatory,”<br />

Webber said. “If it’s<br />

BUTTERFLIES AND BLOOMS<br />

May 26-Sept. 3<br />

10 a.m.-5 p.m. daily<br />

1000 Lake Cook Road,<br />

Glencoe<br />

Pricing: Admission and<br />

parking fees apply<br />

Weather permitting<br />

raining outside, it will be<br />

raining inside.”<br />

In nearly 2,300 square<br />

feet surrounded by a<br />

white mesh enclosure,<br />

visitors can view hundreds<br />

of different butterfly<br />

species from around the<br />

world, including North<br />

America, Asia, Africa,<br />

South America and the<br />

Pacific.<br />

The butterflies are<br />

shipped in as pupa (stage<br />

after caterpillar) each<br />

week throughout the summer<br />

from specific suppliers.<br />

The pupa is hot glued<br />

to a rod, Webber said,<br />

where they hang until the<br />

butterfly emerges.<br />

The rods of pupa are<br />

stored in a staff-only<br />

room, but visitors are<br />

welcome to view them<br />

through a window.<br />

“Usually at least once<br />

a day, perhaps twice, the<br />

horticulturist is getting<br />

the butterflies that have<br />

emerged out of the room,”<br />

Webber said. “They are<br />

brought in the exhibition,<br />

and it’s exciting to watch<br />

the release.”<br />

The stars of the show<br />

come in all different colors<br />

and sizes. Some examples<br />

include the Blue Morpho<br />

and Malachite, which<br />

are vibrant and resemble<br />

stained glass, Webber<br />

said. There’s also the Paper<br />

Kite, Peacock Pansy,<br />

Starry Night Cracker and<br />

a butterfly that looks like<br />

an owl with eyes under its<br />

wings, among many others.<br />

“The insects have all<br />

these adaptations so they<br />

might look like a bigger<br />

thing so they avoid being<br />

eaten,” Webber added.<br />

Many of the butterflies<br />

are accustomed to tropical<br />

conditions, so with<br />

high temps and sunshine<br />

in Glencoe, they will be<br />

more active.<br />

The horticulturist also<br />

creates an environment<br />

similar to their natural<br />

habits, feeding them with<br />

the tropical nectar plants<br />

(the blooms portion of the<br />

show), blue Gatorade and<br />

rotten fruit.<br />

“When the butterflies<br />

emerge, they don’t have<br />

any chewing mouth parts,”<br />

Webber said. “(They like)<br />

things that are nice and<br />

gooey and liquid that they<br />

NATIONAL<br />

can suck up.”<br />

Questions regarding<br />

the butterflies, their food<br />

or the plants can be answered<br />

by volunteers at<br />

the exhibit. There will<br />

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A Girl Scout troop visits the Butterflies and Blooms 2017 exhibit at Chicago Botanic<br />

Garden in Glencoe. This year, it opens Saturday, May 26. Photo Submitted<br />

Youmake ithome, we make itbeautiful.


20 | May 24, 2018 | The glencoe anchor faith<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

Faith Briefs<br />

North Shore Congregation Israel (1185<br />

Sheridan Road, Glencoe)<br />

Mah Jongg<br />

Join the congregation<br />

from 1-3 p.m. every<br />

Thursday until June 28<br />

in the Rosenthal Family<br />

Gathering Place.<br />

Memorial Day<br />

The building will be<br />

closed Monday, May 28,<br />

in observance of Memorial<br />

Day.<br />

Family Promise Volunteer<br />

Training<br />

From 7-9 p.m. May<br />

30, learn about NSCI’s<br />

partnership with Family<br />

Promise and discuss how<br />

you can help host the Family<br />

Promise guests here at<br />

NSCI this summer. All are<br />

welcome. Sign up on the<br />

congregation’s website.<br />

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

Ruach Choir and Shir<br />

Chadash Shabbat<br />

Shabbat services are held<br />

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

approximately 75 minutes.<br />

This Shabbat service features<br />

Am Shalom’s newest<br />

Jewish musical leaders<br />

taking center bima to help<br />

lead the congregation in<br />

worship.<br />

Feeding the Hungry<br />

On the third Sunday of<br />

every month, volunteer<br />

members of Am Shalom<br />

gather from 9-10 a.m. to<br />

help at the temple’s kitchen.<br />

It just takes about an<br />

hour and is rewarding for<br />

people of any age. Questions?<br />

Call Nina Schroeder<br />

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

Memorial Day<br />

The office will be closed<br />

Monday, may 28, in observance<br />

of Memorial Day.<br />

Issues of the Day with<br />

Buddy Schreiber<br />

Explore current events<br />

from 1-11 a.m. on Tuesday,<br />

May 29, through a<br />

Jewish lens with Master<br />

Teacher, Buddy Schreiber.<br />

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

Vernon Ave.)<br />

Parish Picnic<br />

Come hungry to our Annual<br />

All Parish Picnic on<br />

June 3 after the 10 a.m. service.<br />

The sign-up sheets are<br />

on the easel. Contact Phil<br />

Miller at (847) 477-4546 if<br />

you have any questions.<br />

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

Beach Sunday<br />

Join the church June 17<br />

for its annual Beach Day at<br />

Glencoe Beach. Everyone<br />

meets for worship at 10<br />

am and stays for a cookout<br />

on the beach. This worship<br />

celebration is an opportunity<br />

express gratitude<br />

for our life together and<br />

time to remind ourselves<br />

of the blessing of living is<br />

such close proximity to the<br />

beauty of Lake Michigan.<br />

Worship<br />

Join the church for worship<br />

every Sunday at 10<br />

a.m.<br />

Request for Donations<br />

Cornerstone and First<br />

Look took on the challenge<br />

of collecting diapers,<br />

pacifiers and wipes,<br />

all to be donated to Share<br />

our Spare. They had some<br />

requests for items based<br />

on some immediate needs<br />

Chitwood’s aware of, like<br />

toddler clothing, portable<br />

cribs and strollers. Please<br />

bring any of these items to<br />

GUC and they will be delivered.<br />

Submit information for The<br />

Anchor’s Faith page to<br />

m.wojtychiw@22ndcentury<br />

media.com.<br />

In Memoriam<br />

Betsy Warren<br />

Elizabeth<br />

Curran Warren,<br />

90, former<br />

Village<br />

of Glencoe<br />

president,<br />

died after<br />

a brief illness.<br />

She<br />

Warren<br />

was surrounded in her last<br />

days by her four daughters,<br />

Kathryn, Patricia, Michele<br />

and Deborah, sharing love<br />

and fond memories we will<br />

treasure for the rest of our<br />

lives. Warren grew up in<br />

St. Louis and New York,<br />

and graduated from Bryn<br />

Mawr College. She married<br />

Geoffrey Warren in<br />

1949, and together they<br />

raised their four daughters<br />

in Texas, Kansas, Nebraska<br />

and Illinois, as he built his<br />

career with Sears, Roebuck<br />

& Company. While Warren<br />

blazed many trails, as<br />

a political scientist when<br />

there were few women in<br />

the field, and as a public official,<br />

she was Betsy to her<br />

many friends in Glencoe,<br />

where she was a long-time<br />

member of St. Elisabeth’s<br />

Episcopal Church and the<br />

garden club, and supported<br />

social agencies, including<br />

Glencoe Family Services<br />

and Senior Housing Aid.<br />

She loved to travel, and<br />

in the years after her husband’s<br />

death, she explored<br />

southern Europe, the Middle<br />

East and North Africa<br />

in a quest to learn more<br />

about the origins of the<br />

great religions of the western<br />

world. She wrote books<br />

about politics, religion and<br />

travel, and continued her<br />

study of the sources of human<br />

spirituality throughout<br />

her life. She loved her<br />

shelties and her rose garden<br />

in Egg Harbor, Wisc.,<br />

where she spent her last<br />

years. After a lifetime of<br />

good health, her illness was<br />

sudden and overwhelming.<br />

She was wonderfully<br />

cared for by the doctors,<br />

nurses and technicians at<br />

the Door County Medical<br />

Center, and by the talented<br />

and compassionate<br />

staff of Unity Hospice, to<br />

whom we daughters will<br />

be forever grateful. Warren<br />

is survived by her four<br />

daughters, Kathryn Warren,<br />

Patricia Young, Michele<br />

Mench (Mark), and Deborah<br />

Fakonas (Tony), as well<br />

as six Grandchildren and<br />

six great-grandchildren. In<br />

lieu of flowers, the family<br />

requests donations to Unity<br />

Hospice in Sturgeon Bay,<br />

Wisc., https://unityhospice.<br />

org. The funeral was Friday,<br />

May 18, at St. James<br />

the Less in Northfield.<br />

“Rest easy, Mama, we love<br />

you dearly and will always<br />

carry you in our hearts.”<br />

Joseph Jannotta Jr.<br />

New Trier<br />

graduate Joseph<br />

E. Jannotta, Jr., who died<br />

last month after complications<br />

from a fall, will be<br />

best remembered as a man<br />

ready to share a kind word<br />

and an open-hearted smile.<br />

Throughout his active life,<br />

he was quick with his humor,<br />

wit and warmth, always<br />

inquisitive about the<br />

lives and doings of others.<br />

Born on May 22, 1928, in<br />

Chicago to parents Joseph<br />

Sr. and Ramona, Jannotta<br />

was raised in Kenilworth<br />

with an older sister, Stella,<br />

and a younger brother,<br />

Ned. He attended New<br />

Trier High School and<br />

graduated with a bachelor’s<br />

from Williams College<br />

in 1950 and an MBA<br />

from The University of<br />

Chicago in 1967. Following<br />

his service as a lieutenant<br />

in the U.S. Navy from<br />

1951-1955, with a tour in<br />

Korea as a carrier pilot, he<br />

resumed a career with Jewel<br />

Companies. There, he<br />

spent 25 years, eventually<br />

serving as senior personnel<br />

officer of Osco Drug, Inc.<br />

In 1976, he became President<br />

of Yoplait Midwest, a<br />

startup company, until its<br />

sale to General Mills two<br />

years later. In 1978, he<br />

founded Jannotta, Bray &<br />

Associates, Inc., a career<br />

consulting firm which grew<br />

to include 13 offices coast<br />

to coast, and he served as<br />

its chairman until it was<br />

sold to Right Management<br />

Consultants, Inc. in 1994.<br />

He remained active in the<br />

career counseling industry,<br />

and as a volunteer board<br />

member and student mentor<br />

for Chicago State University.<br />

Against the backdrop<br />

of Chicago, the North<br />

Shore and his cherished<br />

Castle Park community in<br />

Michigan, he and his wife,<br />

Gina, raised their three<br />

children, Mary, Martha and<br />

Sepp. In the late 1990s,<br />

he and his wife retired to<br />

Santa Barbara, where he<br />

kept up with his student<br />

mentoring at the University<br />

of California Santa Barbara<br />

and served on the vestry at<br />

Montecito’s All Saints-bythe-Sea<br />

Episcopal church.<br />

In retirement, he wrote a<br />

memoir and historical account<br />

of his uncle Vernon<br />

Jannotta, a decorated U.S.<br />

Naval hero, and a Japanese<br />

naval officer, and their parallel<br />

experiences in the Solomon<br />

Islands during World<br />

War II. Jannotta is especially<br />

beloved by his wife of 58<br />

years, Gina Laun Jannotta;<br />

daughter Mary Jannotta<br />

Ireland (Doug Ireland) and<br />

children Haley, Jack, Billy<br />

and Josephine; daughter<br />

Martha Jannotta (Jay Mittelstead)<br />

and children Nick,<br />

Quin and Nell; son Sepp<br />

Jannotta (Alysha Goheen)<br />

and children Sylvie and<br />

Gigi; brother Edgar Dalzell<br />

Jannotta and family; late<br />

sister Stella Jannotta Kelly<br />

and family; sister-in law<br />

Katie Laun Hodgson Olson<br />

and family. In lieu of flowers,<br />

gifts may be made to<br />

the University of Chicago<br />

Booth School of Business<br />

in memory of Joseph Jannotta.<br />

Riley Joseph Walters<br />

New Trier graduate Riley<br />

Joseph Walters died<br />

May 9 in Burr Ridge. Born<br />

in Chicago on September<br />

7, 1936, he was 81 and died<br />

from natural causes. Walters<br />

is preceded in death<br />

by his third wife, Mariellen<br />

Peters (McGurr) as<br />

well as his parents, Bennie<br />

Lee and Martha Walters<br />

(Hoole). He is survived by<br />

his two children, Joseph<br />

Riley Walters (Wendy)<br />

and Laura Lee Murphy<br />

(Scott); as well as three<br />

grandchildren, Sebastian,<br />

Cassandra and Abigail. He<br />

has several great grandchildren<br />

as well. He graduated<br />

from New Trier High<br />

School in Northfield, and<br />

the University of Illinois<br />

at Champaign-Urbana. He<br />

was a successful, independent<br />

CPA for many decades<br />

and made his home with<br />

Mariellen in the Southern<br />

California area for over 40<br />

years. They shared a love<br />

for sailing, travel, cats and<br />

friendships. Being named<br />

Commodore of the Pacific<br />

Mariners Yacht Club in<br />

1985 was a highlight of his<br />

life. He was charming and<br />

kind and never met a glass<br />

of scotch he didn’t like. He<br />

will be missed by all whose<br />

lives he touched.<br />

Have someone’s life you’d<br />

like to honor? Email<br />

Michael Wojtychiw at<br />

m.wojtychiw@22ndcentury<br />

media.com with information<br />

about a loved one who was<br />

part of the Glencoe community.


glencoeanchor.com life & arts<br />

the glencoe anchor | May 24, 2018 | 21<br />

Little House of Glencoe restored with Girl Scout help<br />

Entrance area<br />

returns to prairielike<br />

condition<br />

Alan P. Henry<br />

Freelance Reporter<br />

Two members of Glencoe’s<br />

Girl Scout Troop<br />

40682 have been busy<br />

throughout the past month<br />

restoring the “teardrop”<br />

entrance area of the Little<br />

House of Glencoe to its<br />

former native and prairielike<br />

appearance.<br />

Eighth-graders Shylee<br />

Saladi and Kaila Chin<br />

have weeded and cleared<br />

buckthorn from the 30-<br />

by-90 foot area and have<br />

already planted 30 native<br />

plants. On May 20, they<br />

also held a planting day<br />

and expect with the help<br />

of fellow troop members,<br />

other scouts and volunteers<br />

to put in another<br />

100 plants by a hoped-for<br />

completion date of Thursday,<br />

May 31.<br />

“We get the satisfaction<br />

that we have done something<br />

to help the community,”<br />

Saladi said of the<br />

pair’s Silver Award project.<br />

“We also get to develop<br />

our leadership skills<br />

and communications<br />

skills with older people<br />

and with others that our<br />

not our peers.”<br />

“It makes me proud of<br />

myself for what we have<br />

accomplished,” Chin said.<br />

“Being able to finish this<br />

would be a huge accomplishment.<br />

It will be nice<br />

to do it for the community<br />

as well.”<br />

The actual clearing<br />

work has constituted<br />

only as fraction of the effort<br />

Saladi and Chin have<br />

put into the Silver Award<br />

community service project,<br />

which is the secondmost<br />

prestigious award a<br />

Girl Scout can earn, behind<br />

the Gold Award, and<br />

requires a minimum of 50<br />

hours of participation by<br />

each scout.<br />

The girls have been<br />

communicating with the<br />

Little House of Glencoe<br />

Board, the Forest Preserve<br />

District of Cook<br />

County, the Botanic Garden,<br />

the Village, the other<br />

Girls Scout troops in the<br />

area and many local businesses.<br />

They have also<br />

sent out donation requests<br />

and have raised close to<br />

$1,500 through a Go-<br />

FundMe page, cookie sale<br />

Posing (left to right) is Kaila Chin, Girl Scout troop leader Susan Chin and Shylee Saladi. The group restored Little<br />

House of Glencoe’s entrance for their Silver Award project. Alan P. Henry/22nd Century Media<br />

and plant fundraiser. Lurvey’s<br />

has provided a discount<br />

price for the plants,<br />

which include baptisia,<br />

chelone, mayapple, prairie<br />

dropseed, wood fern<br />

and sweetspire.<br />

“I’m very proud of<br />

them,” troop leader Susan<br />

Chin said. “They each<br />

have brought different<br />

strengths to this project<br />

and I think they’ve been<br />

really balancing each<br />

other out and staying<br />

on top of things. They<br />

are learning a lot about<br />

responsibility, meeting<br />

deadlines and following<br />

up with different people,<br />

and they have learned<br />

that sometimes it takes a<br />

lot of follow-up to get a<br />

response.”<br />

“It is a formative experience,”<br />

said Indira Saladi,<br />

Shylee’s mother. “I’ve<br />

been very impressed with<br />

Scouting specifically, and<br />

with Mrs. Chin’s guidance,<br />

I’ve seen the girls<br />

develop leadership skills<br />

and confidence in themselves<br />

and the empathy<br />

to give back and be of<br />

service.”<br />

BUTTERFLY<br />

From Page 19<br />

also be interpretive signage<br />

and a butterfly identification<br />

chart.<br />

The garden also offers<br />

an opportunity for private<br />

photography rentals,<br />

when groups of up to 20<br />

people can have exclusive<br />

access to the butterfly<br />

exhibition prior to<br />

opening to the public for<br />

the day.<br />

Admission fees are as<br />

follows: Adults: $8; seniors:<br />

$7; children (3–12<br />

years): $6; and children<br />

(2 and under): free. Garden<br />

members receive $1<br />

off each price. Garden<br />

Plus members are free<br />

on Wednesdays. Ten-visit<br />

pass: $50 member/$60<br />

nonmember.<br />

For safety reasons,<br />

strollers, tripods and<br />

monopods are not allowed.<br />

Regular parking<br />

fees apply.<br />

For more information,<br />

visit www.chicagobotanic.org/butterflies.<br />

RIGHT: More than 100<br />

types of butterflies are<br />

featured in the exhibit.<br />

PHOTO SUBMITTED


22 | May 24, 2018 | The glencoe anchor dining out<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

If it ain’t broke…<br />

Sandy’s Restaurant<br />

continues to serve<br />

up the classics<br />

after 56 years<br />

Erin Yarnall<br />

Contributing Editor<br />

There’s something timeless<br />

about an American<br />

diner.<br />

Patrons of these establishments<br />

don’t turn to<br />

them over and over again<br />

for their elegant takes on<br />

modern cuisine or fancy<br />

gastronomy. Instead, diners<br />

routinely serve up the<br />

classics — pancakes, omelettes,<br />

sandwiches, coffee,<br />

and they do it with<br />

consistency and quality.<br />

That’s the case with<br />

Sandy’s Restaurant, a<br />

diner in Highwood that’s<br />

DO YOU HAVE ANY OF THE<br />

FOLLOWING SYMPTOMS?<br />

• spinning sensation or dizziness<br />

• feeling lightheaded or woozy<br />

• feeling of walking on a boat<br />

• falling or feeling of falling<br />

• vertigo (whirling)<br />

• visual blurring<br />

• disorientation<br />

• swaying<br />

• floating<br />

been open since 1962.<br />

When a restaurant has<br />

been open for so long, 56<br />

years in Sandy’s case, it<br />

can start to feel more like a<br />

second home and less like<br />

a restaurant to its regulars.<br />

That’s the feeling owner<br />

Darcy Mosconi hopes to<br />

maintain.<br />

“I’d say 50 percent of<br />

our customers are regulars<br />

that do know each other,”<br />

Mosconi said. “They grew<br />

up around here. Their kids<br />

are friends, their grandkids<br />

are friends. It’s somewhere<br />

you can always go<br />

where you know somebody.”<br />

Mosconi contributes to<br />

this by greeting most customers<br />

by name and asking<br />

them questions about<br />

their lives as soon as they<br />

walk in the door.<br />

But, she attributes the<br />

French toast ($4.25) is a rich and delicious treat that is<br />

among the most popular items on the menu.<br />

TREATED IN 3 EASY STEPS<br />

WITH 85% SUCCESS<br />

A Fall Risk Assessment performed<br />

by Linda Backus, MSPT<br />

Vestibular Rehabilitation<br />

Specialist & her team is simple,<br />

painless & effective.<br />

To schedule an appointment<br />

please call 847.243.6444.<br />

Treatment is covered by<br />

Medicare & Most Insurances<br />

Glenview, Highland Park,<br />

Vernon Hills, Bloomingdale & Hinsdale<br />

847.243.6444<br />

restaurant’s friendly atmosphere<br />

to her mother,<br />

Sandy Suckow, for whom<br />

the restaurant is named.<br />

Suckow worked at the<br />

restaurant for 50 years, as<br />

an employee for 24 years<br />

and the owner for the following<br />

26 years. Mosconi<br />

took the restaurant over<br />

after her mother died last<br />

June.<br />

“My mom was awesome,”<br />

Mosconi said.<br />

“She made this place what<br />

it is today. She had the<br />

most wonderful personality.”<br />

Mosconi said that her<br />

mother had such a close<br />

relationship with her regular<br />

customers that if they<br />

ever missed a breakfast or<br />

lunch at the restaurant, she<br />

would call them to check<br />

in.<br />

“She would call them to<br />

make sure they were OK,<br />

that they weren’t sick, and<br />

see if they needed something,”<br />

Mosconi said.<br />

“People came here for<br />

her.”<br />

Mosconi grew up in the<br />

restaurant.<br />

Her mother started<br />

working there when she<br />

was 18, after moving to<br />

Highwood from Wisconsin.<br />

Suckow was a single<br />

mom, and had Mosconi<br />

working in the restaurant<br />

with her.<br />

Working at Sandy’s is<br />

the only job Mosconi has<br />

ever had, and she isn’t<br />

planning on changing that<br />

any time soon.<br />

“[Working here] makes<br />

me happy, and it’s like my<br />

home,” Mosconi said.<br />

In fact, Mosconi isn’t<br />

planning on changing<br />

much, at all, just “little<br />

things.”<br />

“I’ve tried to do it<br />

slowly because people really<br />

don’t like change,”<br />

Mosconi said.<br />

The garbage omelette ($9.75) at Sandy’s Restaurant<br />

in Highwood features ham, bacon, tomato, onion,<br />

green pepper, mushrooms, broccoli, American cheese<br />

and mozzarella cheese. Photos by Harrison Raft/22nd<br />

Century Media<br />

The wall paneling was<br />

redone after Mosconi discovered<br />

brick underneath.<br />

The bathroom is being<br />

tiled, and the roof is being<br />

updated. Aside from that<br />

she’s keeping things the<br />

way her mom had them.<br />

A group of 22nd Century<br />

Media editors visited<br />

Sandy’s to sample some<br />

of the restaurant’s best<br />

breakfast dishes, as well<br />

as take in a slice of charm.<br />

One of the breakfast<br />

staples at Sandy’s is the<br />

garbage omelette ($9.75),<br />

filled with ham, bacon,<br />

tomato, onion, green pepper,<br />

mushrooms, broccolli,<br />

American cheese and<br />

mozzarella cheese.<br />

The filling omelette<br />

is served with buttered<br />

toast and crisp home fries<br />

cooked with green peppers<br />

and onion.<br />

We also sampled The<br />

Moron ($7), a large breakfast<br />

sandwich filled with<br />

egg, bacon, cheese and<br />

onion on Italian toast and<br />

also served with home<br />

fries.<br />

The French toast ($4.25)<br />

is grilled so each bite is<br />

crispy before giving way<br />

to a soft interior.<br />

It’s buttered and covered<br />

in powdered sugar,<br />

and the two toppings melt<br />

into each other for a sugary<br />

bite each time that<br />

Sandy’s Restaurant<br />

415 Sheridan Road,<br />

Highwood<br />

(847) 433-1555<br />

6 a.m.-1:30 p.m.<br />

Monday-Saturday<br />

7 a.m.-11:30 a.m.<br />

Sunday<br />

isn’t overpowering.<br />

Sandy’s also provides<br />

two bottles of homemade<br />

hot sauce for each table,<br />

a more mild green option<br />

and a blazing hot red option.<br />

Both bring the flavor,<br />

though the red hot sauce is<br />

for the more daring.<br />

The restaurant is also<br />

open for lunch and serves<br />

up a variety of burgers,<br />

sandwiches and specials,<br />

including Taco Tuesday<br />

and Thursday meals.<br />

“My cook always makes<br />

something authentic,”<br />

Mosconi said.<br />

Sandy’s isn’t only a family<br />

business for Mosconi.<br />

Her cook’s entire family<br />

works in the restaurant as<br />

well — his wife cleans the<br />

dishes and his daughter<br />

serves on the weekends.<br />

The close family ties evident<br />

in the restaurant, and<br />

the personal connections<br />

that Mosconi makes with<br />

customers, makes Sandy’s<br />

a home away from home<br />

for diners and staff alike.


glencoeanchor.com real estate<br />

the glencoe anchor | May 24, 2018 | 23<br />

SPONSORED CONTENT<br />

The Glencoe Anchor’s<br />

of the<br />

WEEK<br />

What: Four bedrooms,<br />

three baths<br />

Where: 751 Strawberry<br />

Hill, Glencoe<br />

Amenities: This sunny,<br />

updated home boasts a<br />

large, open floor plan with<br />

tall ceilings, hardwood<br />

floors and floor-to-ceiling<br />

windows. Situated in a<br />

convenient location, Close<br />

to hiking/biking trails, the<br />

Botanic Garden, shopping,<br />

restaurants, the highway<br />

and schools. Large kitchen<br />

with center island, vaulted<br />

ceiling, ample storage and<br />

stainless steel appliances<br />

with granite countertops.<br />

This is the perfect home<br />

for entertaining large or<br />

small gatherings. The<br />

kitchen flows into the<br />

dining room and living<br />

room, which features<br />

a midcentury fireplace<br />

and additional floor-toceiling<br />

windows. Master<br />

bedroom has wonderful<br />

master bath with steam<br />

shower. Three additional<br />

bedrooms<br />

and hall<br />

bath with whirlpool tub. Lower level has generous family room, ideal<br />

for lounging or watching TV and laundry/mudroom. In the summer,<br />

enjoy the beautiful backyard and patio for barbecues and<br />

parties. Two-car attached garage and a fenced-in back yard<br />

complete the picture.<br />

Listing Price: $795,000<br />

Listing Agent: Laurie<br />

Gross, Coldwell Banker<br />

Residential Broker,<br />

(847) 337-2217<br />

Agent Brokerage:<br />

Coldwell Banker<br />

Residential Brokerage<br />

To see your home featured as Home of the Week, email John Zeddies at<br />

j.zeddies@22ndcenturymedia.com or call (847) 272-4565.<br />

April 2<br />

• 630 Vernon Ave. 12,<br />

Glencoe, 60022-1681 —<br />

Black Trust to David Calvano,<br />

$275,000<br />

• 630 Vernon Ave. 13, Glencoe,<br />

60022-1681 — Shahon Trust<br />

to Juliana Ernst Mcomber,<br />

$275,000<br />

March 27<br />

• 245 Greenwood Ave.,<br />

Glencoe, 60022-2005 — Ims<br />

Bright Fund III Llc. to Jeremy<br />

Hollis, Amanda Hollis, $880,000<br />

March 26<br />

• 271 South Lane, Glencoe,<br />

60022-1751 — Richard Kramer<br />

to James Dee, Laura Dee,<br />

$465,000<br />

• 390 Greenwood Ave.,<br />

Glencoe, 60022-1806 —<br />

Helaine T. Pressman to Clifford<br />

Gordon, Lori Gordon, $910,000<br />

Brought to you by:<br />

FOR ALL YOUR<br />

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

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

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

thefederalsavingsbank.com<br />

March 23<br />

• 439 Adams Ave., Glencoe,<br />

60022-1816 — Kalsch Trust<br />

to Jonathan Rennels, Barbara<br />

Steward Rennels, $589,000<br />

March 15<br />

• 375 Madison Ave., Glencoe,<br />

60022-1809 — Mark A. Kittnar<br />

to Michael Segretto, Nicole<br />

Segretto, $645,000<br />

March 13<br />

• 645 Valley Road, Glencoe,<br />

60022-1660 — Barber Trust to<br />

Jeffery Brown, Kimberly Brown,<br />

$751,000<br />

March 12<br />

• 60 Brentwood Drive,<br />

Glencoe, 60022-1203 — Frank<br />

D Mayer Jr. to William S. Gold,<br />

Julie Gold, $860,000<br />

March 7<br />

• 1133 Fairfield Road,<br />

Glencoe, 60022-1012 — Enoch<br />

Silverstein to Allen Perl, Rachel<br />

Perl, $650,000<br />

Feb. 28<br />

• 724 Sycamore Lane,<br />

Glencoe, 60022-1447 — Leavitt<br />

Trust to Jeremy Whitener,<br />

Rebecca D. Whitener, $500,000<br />

Feb. 21<br />

• 925 Sheridan Road,<br />

Glencoe, 60022-1345 — Beth<br />

A. Perlmutter to Juan Sebastian<br />

Espinosa, Natalic J. Espinosa,<br />

$1,020,000<br />

The Going Rate is provided<br />

by Record Information<br />

Services, Inc. For more<br />

information, visit www.<br />

public-record.com or call<br />

(630) 557-1000


24 | May 24, 2018 | The glencoe anchor classifieds<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

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glencoeanchor.com classifieds<br />

the glencoe anchor | May 24, 2018 | 25<br />

CLASSIFIEDS<br />

Help Wanted · Garage Sales · Automotive<br />

Real Estate · Rentals · Merchandise<br />

Sell It 708.326.9170 | Fax It 708.326.9179<br />

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2703 Legal<br />

Notices<br />

Residential recycling service provided<br />

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in the Villages of Glencoe<br />

and Winnetka will beaffected the<br />

week of May 27th due to Memorial<br />

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falls onaMonday your service will<br />

occur onTuesday. If your normal<br />

service day falls on aTuesday your<br />

service will occur Wednesday.<br />

Thursday and Friday services will<br />

not be affected by the holiday.<br />

Normal service schedule will resume<br />

Monday, June 4th at 7am.<br />

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

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Automotive<br />

$52<br />

4 lines/<br />

7 papers Help Wanted<br />

$50<br />

6 lines/<br />

7 papers Merchandise<br />

$13<br />

per line<br />

7 papers<br />

$30<br />

4 lines/<br />

7 papers<br />

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Please cut this form out and mail or fax it back to us at:<br />

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FAX: 708.326.9179


26 | May 24, 2018 | The glencoe anchor sports<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

soccer<br />

From Page 28<br />

and his team to rest its starters<br />

in the second half and<br />

get backups valuable playoff<br />

game experience.<br />

“We didn’t play any<br />

starters in the second half,”<br />

the coach said. “Our system<br />

is a big family team,<br />

we wanted to get everyone<br />

in, get everyone playing<br />

time and the starters went<br />

out and got the four goals<br />

in the first half, so we knew<br />

we could put them in.”<br />

Despite playing its backups<br />

in the second half,<br />

Loyola was still able to<br />

put consistent pressure on<br />

the Panthers defense, finally<br />

culminating in a goal<br />

by Claire Cashion off of a<br />

header with 18:22 remaining<br />

in the game.<br />

Alex Guzzardo finished<br />

the scoring with a goal of<br />

her own with just under<br />

four-and-a-half minutes to<br />

play, capping the 6-0 win.<br />

While the Loyola offense<br />

was dominant, its defense<br />

was just as dominant, if<br />

not more so. The Ramblers<br />

didn’t allow Von Steuben<br />

to get a shot off and other<br />

than on kickoffs or Loyola<br />

passing the ball back, the<br />

Panthers didn’t cross midfield<br />

until there was 14:41<br />

remaining in the game.<br />

The Ramblers played<br />

their second game since<br />

the firing of coach Craig<br />

Snower, who was relieved<br />

of his duties May 10 amid<br />

allegations of inappropriate<br />

or offensive comments<br />

toward team members. The<br />

Wilmette Police Department<br />

announced May 15<br />

that no criminal charges<br />

will be pursued.<br />

In the meantime, Ackman<br />

and Jordan Kellgren<br />

have taken over coaching<br />

duties.<br />

“We found out last<br />

Thursday (May 10),” Ackman<br />

said. “We’ve got seven<br />

games to get to the finals<br />

and that’s our ultimate<br />

goal. We called the girls in<br />

and said, ‘We’re continuing<br />

where we left off, we have<br />

the same goal in sight and<br />

that Friday was the end of<br />

our first season. This is the<br />

second season and our goal<br />

is to get to state.’<br />

“We’re pretty focused.”<br />

Athlete of the Week<br />

Tracy Allen/22nd Century Media<br />

10 Questions<br />

with Lauren Voss<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

The Loyola senior was a<br />

four-year member of the<br />

girls water polo team.<br />

Do you have any<br />

superstitions before,<br />

during or after a<br />

game?<br />

I don’t have one myself,<br />

but as a team we have to<br />

listen to Alicia Keys’ “If<br />

I Ain’t Got You” before<br />

every game. One day on a<br />

bus ride, we were jamming<br />

out to a couple songs and<br />

that’s one we started belting<br />

out and it became our<br />

anthem of the year.<br />

What’s one thing<br />

people don’t know<br />

about you?<br />

I have something like 50<br />

cousins. My mom is the<br />

eighth of 11 children and<br />

most live in the area.<br />

What’s one item on<br />

your bucket list?<br />

Traveling more to different<br />

countries.<br />

If you could travel<br />

anywhere, where<br />

would you go?<br />

I’d love to go to Eastern<br />

Europe or ones with a<br />

beach.<br />

If you had $3 at<br />

Walgreens, what<br />

would you buy?<br />

Chocolate.<br />

What’s the best part<br />

about being a Loyola<br />

athlete?<br />

The team aspect of<br />

having everyone going<br />

through the same thing<br />

and those people coming<br />

together. Having teachers<br />

understand that you have<br />

more than just academics<br />

going on is nice, too.<br />

What’s the best advice<br />

you’ve gotten and<br />

who’s it from?<br />

To strive to be your best<br />

at whatever you do. My<br />

mom’s said that.<br />

If you could play<br />

another sport, what<br />

would it be and why?<br />

I’d really wish I could<br />

try skiing or snowboarding.<br />

Unfortunately, we’re<br />

not in a very mountainous<br />

area.<br />

What’s been your<br />

favorite moment at<br />

Loyola?<br />

Developing the friendships<br />

I have through swimming<br />

and water polo. Being<br />

able to play with my<br />

sister for two years was<br />

really fun.<br />

If you could have a<br />

superpower, what<br />

would it be and why?<br />

I’d teleport because then<br />

I wouldn’t have to sit in<br />

traffic and drive anywhere.<br />

Interview by Sports Editor<br />

Michael Wojtychiw


glencoeanchor.com sports<br />

the glencoe anchor | May 24, 2018 | 27<br />

This Week In...<br />

Trevian varsity athletics<br />

Baseball<br />

■May ■ 26 - vs. Lane/Glenbrook South (at<br />

Kerry Wood Field), 2 p.m.<br />

■May ■ 30 - vs. TBA (at Loyola Sectional),<br />

7 p.m.<br />

Boys lacrosse<br />

■May ■ 25 - vs. TBA (at St. Viator Sectional),<br />

5:30 p.m.<br />

■May ■ 29 - vs. TBA (at Lake Forest<br />

Supersectional), 8 p.m.<br />

■May ■ 31 - vs. TBA (IHSA semifinals at<br />

Hinsdale Central), 7 p.m.<br />

Girls lacrosse<br />

■May ■ 25 - vs. TBA (at Glenbrook North<br />

Sectional), 6 p.m.<br />

■May ■ 29 - vs. TBA (at Lake Forest<br />

Supersectional), 6:30 p.m.<br />

Girls soccer<br />

■May ■ 25 - vs. TBA (at Glenbrook South<br />

Sectional), 6 p.m.<br />

■May ■ 29 - vs. TBA (at Evanston<br />

Supersectional), 6:30 p.m.<br />

Softball<br />

■May ■ 26 - vs. TBA (at Glenbrook South<br />

Regional), 11 a.m.<br />

■May ■ 29 - vs. TBA (at Warren Sectional),<br />

4:30 p.m.<br />

Boys tennis<br />

■May ■ 24 - at IHSA State Finals, TBA<br />

■May ■ 25 - at IHSA State Finals, TBA<br />

■May ■ 26 - at IHSA State Finals, TBA<br />

Boys track and field<br />

■May ■ 24 - at IHSA State Finals, TBA<br />

■May ■ 25 - at IHSA State Finals, TBA<br />

■May ■ 26 - at IHSA State Finals, TBA<br />

Boys volleyball<br />

■May ■ 25 - vs. TBA (at Glenbrook South<br />

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

■May ■ 29 - vs. TBA (at Glenbrook South<br />

Sectional), 6 p.m.<br />

Rambler varsity athletics<br />

Baseball<br />

■May ■ 26 - vs. TBA (at Notre Dame<br />

Regional), 2 p.m.<br />

■May ■ 30 - vs. TBA (at Loyola Sectional),<br />

4:30 p.m.<br />

Boys lacrosse<br />

■May ■ 25 - vs. TBA (at Maine South<br />

Sectional), 5 p.m.<br />

■May ■ 29 - vs. TBA (at Lane<br />

Supersectional), 7:30 p.m.<br />

■May ■ 31 - vs. TBA (IHSA semifinals at<br />

Hinsdale Central), 5 p.m.<br />

Girls lacrosse<br />

■May ■ 25 - vs. TBA (at Evanston Sectional),<br />

5 p.m.<br />

■May ■ 29 - vs. TBA (at Lane<br />

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

Girls soccer<br />

■May ■ 25 - vs. TBA (at Glenbrook South<br />

Sectional), 6 p.m.<br />

■May ■ 29 - vs. TBA (at Evanston<br />

Supersectional), 6:30 p.m.<br />

Softball<br />

■May ■ 26 - host TBA (IHSA Loyola<br />

Regional), 10 a.m.<br />

■May ■ 30 - vs. TBA (at Warren Sectional),<br />

4:30 p.m.<br />

Boys tennis<br />

■May ■ 24 - at IHSA State Finals, TBA<br />

■May ■ 25 - at IHSA State Finals, TBA<br />

■May ■ 26 - at IHSA State Finals, TBA<br />

Boys track and field<br />

■May ■ 24 - at IHSA State Finals, TBA<br />

■May ■ 25 - at IHSA State Finals, TBA<br />

■May ■ 26 - at IHSA State Finals, TBA<br />

Boys volleyball<br />

■May ■ 25 - vs. TBA (at Glenbrook South<br />

Sectional), 6:30 p.m.<br />

■May ■ 29 - vs. TBA (at Glenbrook South<br />

Sectional), 6 p.m.<br />

Panther varsity athletics<br />

Girls lacrosse<br />

■May ■ 25 - vs. TBA (at Glenbrook South<br />

Sectional), 6 p.m.<br />

■May ■ 29 - vs. TBA (at Evanston<br />

Supersectional), 6:30 p.m.<br />

Softball<br />

■May ■ 26 - vs. TBA (IHSA Sectional at<br />

Lisle), 11 a.m.<br />

■May ■ 28 - vs. TBA (IHSA Supersectional at<br />

Seneca), 11 a.m.<br />

Raider varsity athletics<br />

Girls soccer<br />

■May ■ 25 - vs. TBA (IHSA State Finals at<br />

North Central College), 7 p.m.<br />

■May ■ 26 - vs. TBA (IHSA State Finals at<br />

North Central College), 3/5 p.m.<br />

Boys tennis<br />

■May ■ 24 - at IHSA State Finals, TBA<br />

■May ■ 25 - at IHSA State Finals, TBA<br />

■May ■ 26 - at IHSA State Finals, TBA<br />

Girls track and field<br />

IHSA state finals<br />

Junior Marne Sullivan<br />

led an impressive New Trier<br />

contingent at the state<br />

finals at Eastern Illinois<br />

by finishing fifth overall<br />

in the 800-meter run in<br />

a time of 2:13.96. Teammate<br />

Savannah Noethlich<br />

was also in the final for the<br />

800 and finished 12th. The<br />

1,600-mater relay team of<br />

Emma Fowkes, Noethlich,<br />

Bridget Forbes and Sullivan<br />

took fifth in a time<br />

of 3:54.91. Other New<br />

Trier finalists included<br />

3,200-meter runners Leah<br />

Ulrich and Ellie Finnigan,<br />

who finished 15th and<br />

22nd, respectively. The<br />

Trevians as a team finished<br />

in 29th place with 10<br />

points.<br />

Baseball<br />

Loyola 1, Downers Grove<br />

South 0<br />

PJ McKermitt and Will<br />

Jackson combined for a<br />

six-hit shutout on May 16<br />

in Glenview.<br />

Loyola 7, Evanston 0<br />

Ben Wagner and Joe<br />

McKermitt combined for<br />

a five-hit shutout Saturday,<br />

May 19, in Evanston. Matthew<br />

Raymond drove in<br />

two in the win.<br />

New Trier 5, Evanston 0<br />

Drew Gorski tossed six<br />

innings of five-hit shutout<br />

ball and struck out 12<br />

May 16 in Evanston. Nate<br />

Shapiro went 2-for-3 with<br />

three RBI.<br />

New Trier 9, Fremd 1<br />

Anthony Calarco went<br />

2-for-3 with two runs<br />

scored, three RBI and a<br />

high school highlights<br />

The rest of the week in high school sports<br />

home run Thursday, May<br />

17, in Winnetka.<br />

New Trier 17, East Peoria<br />

0<br />

Pete Burnside went all<br />

five innings, striking out<br />

10 in a win Friday, May<br />

18, in Champaign.<br />

New Trier 5, Centennial 1<br />

Alex Calarco went<br />

2-for-4 with two RBI in a<br />

Saturday, May 18, win in<br />

Champaign.<br />

Softball<br />

Loyola 13, Fenton 1<br />

Emily Molloy with<br />

2-for-3 with three runs<br />

scored and four RBI in<br />

a Friday, May 18, win in<br />

Glenview.<br />

Loyola 6, Young 1<br />

KK Raymond and Nora<br />

Conway both drove in two<br />

in a Ramblers win Thursday,<br />

May 17, at The Ballpark<br />

at Rosemont in Rosemont.<br />

Loyola 9, Maine South 8<br />

Nora Conway hit a tworun<br />

walk-off double to lead<br />

Loyola May 15 in Glenview.<br />

Maris Michi went<br />

3-for-4 with four RBI.<br />

New Trier 10, Von Steuben<br />

0<br />

Ava Reichert and Alex<br />

Rothstein both went 3-for-<br />

3 with three RBI Saturday,<br />

May 19, in Winnetka.<br />

Regina 13, Guerin 0, (9<br />

innings)<br />

Summer Rocha struck<br />

out 11 and gave up only<br />

two hits as the Panthers<br />

won the regional title Saturday,<br />

May 19, in River<br />

Grove. The Panthers<br />

scored all 13 runs in the<br />

ninth inning.<br />

Regina 17, Chicago<br />

Academy 4<br />

Sophie Hoffman had<br />

five RBI in a regional<br />

semifinal win Thursday,<br />

May 17, in River Grove.<br />

Girls soccer<br />

New Trier 9, Maine East 0<br />

Nicole Kaspi had a hat<br />

trick in the Trevians’ regional<br />

semifinal win May<br />

15 in Park Ridge.<br />

Boys volleyball<br />

Loyola d. Glenbrook South<br />

25-19, 25-17<br />

Drake Johnson had eight<br />

kills and three blocks in a<br />

May 16 win.<br />

New Trier d. Niles West<br />

25-22, 25-10<br />

Jay Saravis had eight<br />

kills and a block Thursday,<br />

May 17, in Skokie.<br />

Girls lacrosse<br />

Loyola 17, Barrington 1<br />

Riley Dolan led the<br />

Ramblers with four goals<br />

May 16 in Barrington. Sophia<br />

Rucker and Maggie<br />

Gorman both added three<br />

girls apiece.<br />

New Trier 15, Glenbrook<br />

South 4<br />

Lucky Murray had four<br />

goals and four assists for<br />

the Trevians May 15 in<br />

Northfield. Charley Meier<br />

and Claudia Shevitz both<br />

added three goals.<br />

New Trier 11, Hinsdale<br />

Central 9<br />

Murray and Shevitz both<br />

scored four time in the<br />

Thursday, May 17, win.<br />

visit us online at GLENCOEANCHOR.com


28 | May 24, 2018 | The glencoe anchor sports<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

GIRLS SOCCER<br />

Early corner leads New Trier to regional title<br />

Todd Marver<br />

Freelance Reporter<br />

New Trier’s result in<br />

the regional championship<br />

game is something the girls<br />

soccer program has come to<br />

expect over the past couple<br />

decades. The Trevians won<br />

yet regional title with a 2-0<br />

win over Maine South on<br />

Friday, May 18, in the Class<br />

3A Maine East regional<br />

final in Park Ridge. New<br />

Trier advanced to the Glenbrook<br />

South sectional semifinals<br />

to take on Evanston<br />

on Tuesday, May 22.<br />

“We want to keep going,”<br />

senior defender Sydney<br />

Parker said. “We don’t want<br />

to lose now. We have an undefeated<br />

season thus far. We<br />

want to be there on [June 2]<br />

(at the state finals in Naperville).”<br />

New Trier’s expectation<br />

is for the regional trophy<br />

to be the first of many this<br />

postseason. The Trevians<br />

won three consecutive<br />

state titles from 2014-2016<br />

and took home the secondplace<br />

trophy last season.<br />

“This is not the trophy<br />

we want,” sophomore<br />

midfielder Emma Weaver<br />

said of the team’s desire to<br />

take home a state title.<br />

New Trier (20-0-2) struck<br />

early just as fans started getting<br />

settled into their seats.<br />

In the first minute of play,<br />

Parker scored on a header<br />

off a corner from Weaver to<br />

put the Trevians ahead 1-0.<br />

“We scored pretty early,”<br />

Parker said. “We got a corner<br />

really early which was<br />

good. We try to get corners<br />

a lot. Every time that I had<br />

the opportunity to score,<br />

it’s always from (Emma’s)<br />

balls. She’s able to always<br />

put a perfect ball far post,<br />

which is where we try to<br />

look. That was just a good<br />

goal to come out strong<br />

with and stick it to them.”<br />

Scoring immediately at<br />

the start of the game gave<br />

the Trevians a momentum<br />

boost.<br />

“We always try to score<br />

early and we always try to<br />

score first,” Parker said.<br />

“Coming out really strong<br />

like that especially in the<br />

first 30 seconds was motivational.<br />

It puts them<br />

down because they think<br />

they have an opportunity<br />

and then when you score<br />

it gives us confidence too.”<br />

New Trier struck again<br />

when they were still fresh<br />

off the halftime break.<br />

Three minutes into the second<br />

half, Weaver scored on<br />

a rebound off the goalpost.<br />

“My second goal was<br />

first I think Lily (Conley)<br />

and then Nicole (Kaspi)<br />

also shot it and then I was<br />

just there for the rebound,”<br />

Weaver said. “It was really<br />

my teammates who did it.”<br />

The Trevians came out<br />

swinging in both the first and<br />

second halves, scoring both<br />

of their goals in the first few<br />

minutes of each half.<br />

“It puts a mark in it so it’s<br />

always good to come out<br />

and score first especially<br />

when we scored right out of<br />

the second half too,” Weaver<br />

said. “It gives us more<br />

confidence and keeps up<br />

our energy. It showed how<br />

much energy we wanted<br />

to come out with and we<br />

wanted to prove right when<br />

the clocked ticked that we<br />

were here to win.”<br />

In the regional final, the<br />

Trevians recorded their 16th<br />

shutout of the season. New<br />

Trier has not given up more<br />

than a goal in any game.<br />

The Trevians have given<br />

up a goal in a game only six<br />

times.<br />

“I think that we’ve improved<br />

every game,” Parker<br />

said. “We do a good job<br />

of being physical and we<br />

try to keep our feet most<br />

of the time. I think we do<br />

a good job of controlling<br />

and talking in the back and<br />

making sure we know who<br />

has which man. We’re all<br />

seniors and I think we’re<br />

just a strong back line. I’m<br />

proud to play with my three<br />

other seniors in the back.”<br />

Girls soccer<br />

Loyola outlasts Lane for regional crown<br />

Michael Wojtychiw<br />

Sports Editor<br />

Every year, a new soccer<br />

season comes, but one<br />

thing seems to stay the<br />

same — Loyola Academy<br />

wins a regional title.<br />

The Ramblers came into<br />

Friday, May 19’s game<br />

against Lane looking for its<br />

10th consecutive regional<br />

title. It probably took a little<br />

longer than the team had<br />

hoped, but the team from<br />

Wilmette left the game<br />

as Niles North Regional<br />

champions after defeating<br />

the Indians 1-0 in double<br />

overtime.<br />

“We knew Lane Tech<br />

was going to be really, really<br />

good after winning<br />

city,” Loyola coach Scott<br />

Ackman said. “We played<br />

them earlier in the year,<br />

knew they had some weapons<br />

and their goalie had an<br />

amazing game. To get the<br />

lucky bounce there at the<br />

end was fantastic.<br />

“The girls have been<br />

playing really loose.<br />

They’ve been moving the<br />

ball well, getting lots of<br />

chances, as you see, but the<br />

big thing is they’re loose<br />

and having fun.”<br />

After a little over 92 minutes<br />

of play, it was a little<br />

trickery, a not-so flick of<br />

the foot, that helped Loyola<br />

score its only goal with<br />

seven minutes, 54 seconds<br />

left in the second overtime<br />

period.<br />

“I knew it was going to<br />

go to the front post because<br />

all of them (previous corner<br />

kicks) were, and then I<br />

just stepped in front of their<br />

player and it went right<br />

through my legs,” Sammie<br />

Holton said. “It might have<br />

touched my leg a little going<br />

in.”<br />

For the Ramblers (19-1-<br />

3), that goal capped a night<br />

of frustration that saw the<br />

team hit numerous crossbars<br />

and come up empty<br />

on multiple opportunities,<br />

The Lane goalie, Margaret<br />

Grossman, played a big<br />

role in that, saving pretty<br />

much everything that came<br />

at her, coming up with crazy<br />

saves to keep her team<br />

in the game.<br />

“The extra 20 minutes<br />

made us feel comfortable,<br />

like we have time to play<br />

our game and to actually not<br />

rush things,” Loyola’s Maggie<br />

Brett said. “Our bench<br />

was huge for us, standing<br />

and yelling for us, cheering<br />

us on. I don’t know if we<br />

would have been able to finish<br />

without them.”<br />

Much like the Ramblers’<br />

regional semifinal game<br />

against Von Steuben, the<br />

regional final showed why<br />

the team has one of the best<br />

defenses in the state. Controlling<br />

the ball the majority<br />

of the time, the Indians<br />

didn’t get a really good<br />

scoring opportunity until<br />

there were just over threeand-a-half<br />

minutes left in<br />

regulation.<br />

Loyola 6, Von Steuben 0<br />

After news of the firing<br />

of former coach Craig<br />

Snower came out, it would<br />

have been easy for Loyola<br />

Academy to come out flat<br />

and sluggish during its<br />

Niles North Regional semifinal<br />

against Von Steuben.<br />

After a slow start, however,<br />

the Ramblers rebounded<br />

quickly and ran<br />

away with a 6-0 win May<br />

15 in Skokie.<br />

“It was the wind that<br />

helped us,” Loyola coach<br />

Scott Ackman said. “They<br />

had nine girls behind the<br />

ball and we couldn’t penetrate.<br />

We had our outside<br />

backs go up, basically become<br />

forwards and changed<br />

Loyola’s Emily Chrisman serves up a free kick during<br />

the regional title game Friday, May 18, in Skokie.<br />

Michael Wojtychiw/22nd Century Media<br />

the formation a little. We<br />

knew once we got one, it<br />

was only a matter of time.”<br />

Stephanie Ramsay’s goal<br />

with 23 minutes, 19 seconds<br />

remaining in the first<br />

half, finally put the Ramblers<br />

on the board and it<br />

started a floodgate of scoring.<br />

Maggie Brett followed<br />

with a goal a little under<br />

five minutes later.<br />

“In general, they had<br />

about their entire team<br />

back, so it just took us a little<br />

while to get our rhythm,<br />

but once we got it figured<br />

out how to score one goal,<br />

they just kept coming,”<br />

Loyola’s Riley Burns said.<br />

The Loyola offense<br />

forced the Von Steuben<br />

goalie, Giselle Ortiz, to<br />

stand on her head for much<br />

of the game, especially in<br />

the first half, peppering<br />

her with 11 first-half shots<br />

on goal. Ortiz would make<br />

seven saves in the first half<br />

and end up with 12.<br />

Vanessa Murray and<br />

Cate Schellenback scored<br />

before half, giving the<br />

second-seeded Ramblers a<br />

4-0 halftime lead. The wide<br />

margin allowed Ackerman<br />

Please see soccer, 26


glencoeanchor.com sports<br />

the glencoe anchor | May 24, 2018 | 29<br />

Boys track and field<br />

Yen rules the hurdles at sectional meet<br />

Brittany Kapa<br />

Contributing Sports Editor<br />

New Trier coach Mark<br />

Wukas said it best when he<br />

described just how much<br />

pressure the track and field<br />

sectional encompasses.<br />

“Everyone is dying to get to<br />

the state meet, this is the meet<br />

where you really have to bring<br />

it,” he said.<br />

Some athletes rose to the<br />

occasion while others cracked<br />

under pressure at the Loyola<br />

Academy sectional Thursday,<br />

May 17, in Wilmette.<br />

New Trier finished in second-place<br />

at the sectional,<br />

scoring 59 points, but was well<br />

behind Evanston’s sectionalwinning<br />

total of 110. Loyola<br />

finished eighth with 31 points,<br />

Glenbrook South 10th with 25,<br />

Glenbrook North was right behind<br />

them with 24, Lake Forest<br />

finished 14th with 11 and<br />

Highland Park finished last<br />

of the 16 schools with seven<br />

points.<br />

“We have good individuals<br />

and we are a year away as a<br />

team,” Wukas said. “I’ve been<br />

impressed with the guys that<br />

have been performing well all<br />

year.”<br />

Albert Yen, a senior at New<br />

Trier, was one of those guys<br />

Wukas was impressed with<br />

and Yen’s hard work paid off<br />

with a first place finishes in<br />

both the 110-meter hurdles and<br />

the 300-meter hurdles.<br />

Yen finished the 110 in 14.54<br />

seconds, coming in well under<br />

the 15-second qualifying time<br />

for state. In the 300 hurdles it<br />

was again no contest as Yen<br />

caught a couple deep breaths<br />

after the finish before the next<br />

competitor crossed the line.<br />

“I was just really going for<br />

a [personal record], which I<br />

haven’t done this year so I’m<br />

really eager,” Yen said after<br />

the 300 hurdle race.<br />

Yen’s personal record goal<br />

is 38.70 seconds and he’s hoping<br />

that better weather, and not<br />

New Trier’s Albert Yen clears a hurdle en route to winning<br />

his section of the 110-meter hurdles Thursday, May 17, in<br />

Wilmette. Carlos Alvarez/22nd Century Media<br />

hitting the hurdle, will yield<br />

better results next week.<br />

“I think for me it’s about the<br />

first hurdle,” he said. “I was a<br />

little too close, maybe because<br />

of the wind, so I kind of hit it<br />

a little bit and that disrupted<br />

my rhythm for the next nine<br />

hurdles.”<br />

Yen made it down state<br />

last year and took eighth in<br />

the event and 10th in the 110<br />

hurdles.<br />

Wukas wasn’t surprised that<br />

Yen made the state cut against<br />

this season.<br />

“This is something he deserves,”<br />

he said. “He is one of<br />

the top hurdlers in the state. This<br />

is a culmination of a great four<br />

years with us at New Trier.”<br />

Yen will be joined at state<br />

by teammate Ryan Struckman,<br />

a distance runner, who finished<br />

first in the 1,600.<br />

“It was a pretty typical race,”<br />

Struckman said after he crossed<br />

the finish line. “I was feeling<br />

fine. I was definitely able to<br />

come back for that last lap and I<br />

was able to pass Jordan (Theriault)<br />

[of Glenbrook South] who<br />

is a tremendous runner.<br />

“Without him I probably<br />

would have gotten a slower<br />

time. I was mentally focusing<br />

on him and that’s kind of what<br />

allowed me to pull through in<br />

the last stretch.”<br />

Struckman said last week he<br />

went out too fast in the race and<br />

his time suffered as a result.<br />

“I got a little more conservative<br />

and I think it ultimately<br />

paid off,” he said.<br />

Struckman finished in<br />

4:20.14, a second under the<br />

state qualifying time, and this<br />

is the first time he will compete<br />

in state for the 1,600. That<br />

fact started to sink in a few<br />

minutes after the race.<br />

“I’ve never qualified for an<br />

event individually, so it feels<br />

pretty great and it’s a great moment<br />

right now,” he said.<br />

The sectional meet presented<br />

an opportunity for Loyola’s<br />

Declan Ritzenthaler to continue<br />

his three-year push of competing<br />

in the state meet.<br />

Ritzenthaler finished first in<br />

the pole vault with a distance<br />

of 15 feet, 3 inches and almost<br />

broke the stadium record of<br />

15-7 with his latest attempt,<br />

but fell short.<br />

While Loyola came close to<br />

qualifying in numerous different<br />

races after third-place finishes,<br />

head coach Dan Seeberg<br />

was proud of not only what his<br />

team accomplished, but what<br />

Ritzenthaler accomplished.<br />

“It’s great,” Seeberg said.<br />

“He’s become a mature athlete<br />

in the discipline and is super<br />

confident right now. He’s<br />

very focused, experienced and<br />

ready to go.”<br />

Additional reporting by Michal<br />

Dwojak, Contributing Sports<br />

Editor<br />

Boys tennis<br />

Trevians, Ramblers cruise to state meet<br />

Todd Marver, Freelance Reporter<br />

Rivals New Trier and Loyola were<br />

the top echelon of the Class 2A Niles<br />

North tennis sectional. The Trevians<br />

won the sectional with a team score<br />

of 25 and the Ramblers took second<br />

place with 19 points on Saturday,<br />

May 19, in Skokie.<br />

The singles title was won by a<br />

Rambler and the doubles title was<br />

won by Trevians. Loyola senior Alan<br />

Arocho defeated New Trier senior<br />

Jeffrey Chen in the singles final, 6-7<br />

(6), 6-3, 3-0. Chen retired halfway<br />

through the third set. Both players<br />

were cramping up throughout the<br />

match.<br />

“It was pretty much anyone’s<br />

match,” Arocho said. “It was a super<br />

close first set. Second set we both<br />

started cramping and everything, so<br />

from there it was just who can be<br />

more physically fit to continue.”<br />

Arocho will be making his third<br />

trip to state. He competed in doubles<br />

at state in his freshman and sophomore<br />

years, but this will be his first<br />

trip to state in singles.<br />

“It’s a different mindset,” he said.<br />

“As you get older, you mature more.<br />

Tennis is a mental game so as you<br />

get older you get a little bit better<br />

mentally and it helps a lot with your<br />

game overall.”<br />

Arocho’s state goal is to reach the<br />

quarterfinals.<br />

“I’m hoping to definitely be in the<br />

quarters and from there on, it’s just<br />

anyone’s match really because it’s<br />

all so close,” he said. “But yeah definitely<br />

to try and get through those<br />

first couple matches and see what<br />

happens. Probably every match is<br />

going to be pretty competitive so<br />

I’ve got to be ready for long matches<br />

and everything.”<br />

The Trevians were faced with the<br />

unique situation of two New Trier<br />

doubles teams set to face off against<br />

one another in the doubles championship<br />

match. Ultimately the match<br />

was not played and New Trier seniors<br />

Reed Bianucci and Peter Leutz<br />

won the doubles title bout by default.<br />

“It’s nice to end on top in the sectional<br />

and try to represent the sectional<br />

well next week,” Leutz said.<br />

“But I think we’re all thinking about<br />

that first match on Thursday now (at<br />

state). So we’re ready to go for sure.”<br />

Bianucci and Leutz are making<br />

repeat appearances to state, although<br />

they did not go there together as a<br />

doubles team last year. Leutz competed<br />

in singles at state last year and<br />

Bianucci with a different doubles<br />

partner. However, Bianucci and<br />

Leutz are very familiar with one another<br />

having competed together as a<br />

doubles team in the past.<br />

“We’ve been playing together<br />

since freshman year and we almost<br />

played together last year, but we ended<br />

up putting Peter in singles,” Bianucci<br />

said. “Peter and I, we always<br />

know where we’re going to be on the<br />

court and we have great chemistry<br />

and everything.”<br />

The Trevians took second at state<br />

last year, so Leutz’s team goal is to<br />

do better than that and take home a<br />

state title.<br />

“Everyone in our locker room<br />

unfortunately after last year knows<br />

how second place feels and we want<br />

to do whatever we can to make sure<br />

we don’t feel that way again,” Leutz<br />

said.<br />

The top four finishers in singles<br />

and doubles at the sectional advanced<br />

to state, which takes place May 24-<br />

26. In total, the Trevians advanced<br />

two singles players and two doubles<br />

teams to state. The singles players<br />

include Chen (second place) and<br />

freshman Max Bengtsson (third) and<br />

the doubles teams includes Bianucci/<br />

Leutz (first) and sophomore Dylan<br />

Drier/junior Jake Zipoli (second).<br />

“You never want to take any match<br />

or opponent lightly so we were working<br />

hard going into this week because<br />

to have a chance at state you’ve got<br />

to have four entries in this year,” Bianucci<br />

said. “So that was definitely a<br />

goal and we’re glad to have all four<br />

in.”<br />

The Ramblers advanced two doubles<br />

teams and a singles player to<br />

state including Arocho (first), senior<br />

Andy Paden/junior John Livaditis<br />

(third) and seniors Thomas Sullivan/<br />

Daly Frost (fourth).<br />

“It feels pretty good to get everyone<br />

out there for the state tournament,”<br />

Arocho said. “It’s going to be<br />

a lot of fun next weekend.”


30 | May 24, 2018 | The glencoe anchor sports<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

Loyola matches program-best finish<br />

Michael Wojtychiw<br />

Sports Editor<br />

LAND<br />

OF THE<br />

FREE<br />

BECAUSE<br />

OF THE<br />

BRAVE<br />

Lic. 055-004618<br />

There comes a point in<br />

the season where every<br />

coach and player gets a feeling<br />

on how far their team<br />

can make it in the playoffs.<br />

For Loyola girls water polo<br />

coach Kim Przekota, it was<br />

a couple moments at different<br />

times of the season that<br />

gave her the idea her Ramblers<br />

could make it to the<br />

state finals.<br />

“We play a tough schedule<br />

and get whooped on by<br />

some good teams,” Przekota<br />

said. “We take our<br />

lumps and that’s how we<br />

get better and better and<br />

we’re playing our best water<br />

polo at the end of the<br />

season.<br />

“When we beat New<br />

Trier in the regular season,<br />

I knew our sectional was<br />

up for grabs, but honestly,<br />

when we played Fenwick<br />

to two-goal game in the<br />

conference tournament,<br />

that convinced the girls<br />

that, ‘Hey we could play<br />

with some of the better<br />

teams in the state.’”<br />

After dropping its semifinal<br />

game to Fenwick earlier<br />

in the day, Loyola was<br />

looking to bounce back<br />

and take the third-place<br />

game against Naperville<br />

North Saturday, May 19,<br />

in Lincolnshire. A win<br />

would have secured the<br />

best finish in the program<br />

history. Unfortunately for<br />

the Ramblers, they fell to<br />

the Huskies 11-9, winning<br />

only the second trophy<br />

in program history, tying<br />

the fourth-place finishing<br />

team from 2009.<br />

“We tied for how far<br />

Loyola has ever gone in<br />

water polo for girls, that’s<br />

just so amazing, so much<br />

fun,” Voss said. “One of<br />

our assistant coaches (Nicole<br />

Pinelli) was on that<br />

team, and it’s pretty cool to<br />

be able to say we’re on that<br />

same level as that team.”<br />

The Huskies got on the<br />

board first when Taylor<br />

Wessel put a shot past<br />

Loyola goalie Mary Kate<br />

Lopez on the team’s third<br />

possession of the game,<br />

giving Naperville North<br />

the lead with 5 minutes, 35<br />

seconds remaining in the<br />

quarter.<br />

Lauren Voss came back<br />

about a minute-and-a-half<br />

Loyola goalie Mary Kate Lopez defends against a shot by Naperville North’s Kelsey<br />

Ryan during the IHSA state finals Saturday, May 19, in Lincolnshire. Tracy Allen/22nd<br />

Century Media<br />

later to tie the game and<br />

that began the see-saw affair.<br />

A goal by Kelsey Roan<br />

was followed by another<br />

one by Voss and the teams<br />

went to their respective<br />

benches at the end of the<br />

first period the same way<br />

they had at the beginning<br />

of the game — tied.<br />

Capts. Carrie Hoza and PhilHoza<br />

Both teams scored on<br />

their first possession of the<br />

second quarter, Loyola’s<br />

goal coming off of Voss’s<br />

third of the night, one she<br />

lobbed left-handed from in<br />

front of the goal.<br />

The Huskies would go<br />

on to score three of the last<br />

four goals of the half, going<br />

up 6-4 at halftime, and<br />

never allowing the Ramblers<br />

(20-14) to get closer<br />

than two.<br />

The third quarter allowed<br />

both teams multiple<br />

power-play opportunities,<br />

something neither team<br />

really had in the first half.<br />

Loyola converted on two<br />

of its three opportunities,<br />

with Voss putting n a goal<br />

up two women and Nicole<br />

Kielba putting one in as<br />

well.<br />

After Voss drew the<br />

team to within two, 10-8,<br />

at the end of the third period,<br />

Naperville North again<br />

scored with 5:35 remaining<br />

in the period to make<br />

it 11-8 and extend the lead<br />

further than the Ramblers<br />

could recover from.<br />

Along with Voss’s five<br />

goals, Nicole Kielba,<br />

Aidan Koconis-O’Malley,<br />

Shannon Kearney and Sarah<br />

Pinkerton all had a goal<br />

apiece.<br />

Loyola goalie Mary<br />

Kate Lopez made 10<br />

saves, thwarting many<br />

more opportunities Naperville<br />

North had to distance<br />

themselves even further<br />

from the Ramblers.<br />

Other than Koconis-<br />

O’Malley’s tally, the other<br />

eight goals were scored by<br />

seniors, a class the Loyola<br />

coach will remember<br />

fondly.<br />

“Making it this far is<br />

huge for the program,” she<br />

said. “Especially with the<br />

new pool coming, it will<br />

be excitement for girls to<br />

come out and play.”<br />

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glencoeanchor.com sports<br />

the glencoe anchor | May 24, 2018 | 31<br />

baseball<br />

Six-run second inning helps Loyola top GBN<br />

Martin Carlino<br />

Contributing Editor<br />

22nd century file photo<br />

1st-and-3<br />

STARS OF THE WEEK<br />

1. Albert Yen (above).<br />

The New Trier<br />

senior hurdler won<br />

both hurdle events<br />

at the sectional<br />

meet, helping<br />

the Trevians to<br />

a second-place<br />

finish in the team<br />

standings.<br />

2. Pete Burnside.<br />

The New Trier<br />

junior pitcher<br />

had a dominant<br />

game against East<br />

Peoria. Burnside<br />

struck out 10<br />

hitters in a 17-0,<br />

five-inning win and<br />

gave up only three<br />

hits and one walk.<br />

3. Lauren Voss.<br />

The Loyola senior<br />

girls water polo<br />

player scored 14<br />

goals in three<br />

games, including<br />

six against Conant<br />

in the quarterfinals<br />

as the Ramblers<br />

finished fourth in<br />

the state.<br />

With two outs in the bottom<br />

of the second inning, a<br />

slowly hit ground ball off<br />

the bat of Loyola Academy’s<br />

Jack Moran appeared<br />

to be nothing more than the<br />

end of an inning.<br />

But, a sprinting Moran<br />

refused to let that be the<br />

case, beating the defender’s<br />

throw by inches, legging out<br />

an infield single that would<br />

ignite a six-run outburst<br />

from Loyola’s offense.<br />

The Ramblers’ six-run<br />

second inning helped them<br />

top the Glenbrook North<br />

Spartans 9-1 on Thursday,<br />

May 17, in Glenview.<br />

The loss was just the<br />

eighth of the season for<br />

the Spartans and one that<br />

was uncharacteristic of the<br />

team’s season-long sound<br />

defensive play.<br />

“We made some very uncharacteristic<br />

mistakes today,”<br />

said Glenbrook North<br />

head coach Dom Savino.<br />

“We just didn’t play well<br />

enough to win. ... I thought<br />

defensively, both mentally<br />

and physically we need to<br />

be a lot sharper and a lot<br />

cleaner. We gave away a<br />

lot of free bases with the<br />

way we played defensively<br />

and that’s something that<br />

we need to clean up before<br />

playoffs start.”<br />

Much to the pleasure<br />

of Nick Bridich, Loyola’s<br />

head coach, the Ramblers<br />

capitalized on GBN’s miscues<br />

with timely offense.<br />

Loyola’s Henry Haracz delivers a pitch against Glenbrook North Thursday, May 17, in Glenview. The Ramblers won<br />

9-1 with the help of a six-run second inning. Martin Carlino/22nd Century Media<br />

“I’m really happy with<br />

how we played all seven innings<br />

today,” Bridich said.<br />

“We had a lot of men on<br />

base, that put some pressure<br />

on their pitchers ... we didn’t<br />

swing it great, but we did<br />

some things with runners<br />

in scoring position and less<br />

than two outs that allowed<br />

us to keep tacking on.”<br />

Offensively, the Spartans<br />

threatened to chip away<br />

at Loyola’s lead, but senior<br />

starting pitcher Henry<br />

Haracz neutralized nearly<br />

every chance with his effective<br />

three-pitch mix,<br />

holding the Spartans to just<br />

one run over six innings of<br />

work.<br />

Haracz struck out five<br />

batters, while allowing five<br />

hits and two walks.<br />

“That was maybe the<br />

best outing for him this<br />

year, which was really nice<br />

to see,” Bridich said.<br />

Key to Haracz’s success<br />

was the ability to establish<br />

his fastball early in the<br />

game, then pair it with his<br />

changeup and slider.<br />

“For Henry, there’s a<br />

heck of a lot of movement<br />

on the fastball,” Bridich<br />

said. “For him today,<br />

I think it was just about<br />

being able to control that<br />

and command that, ... He<br />

had some tough counts<br />

he had to work back<br />

from, but he’s an incredibly<br />

mature kid and just<br />

built to put a team on his<br />

shoulders and go out and<br />

compete. I think he just<br />

settled in. His fastball was<br />

running and there weren’t<br />

guys that got many good<br />

swings on it.”<br />

For Haracz, the strong<br />

execution of his slider, a<br />

pitch he’s struggled with<br />

recently, was a welcome<br />

sign as the team prepares<br />

for the playoffs.<br />

“I’ve been struggling to<br />

throw my slider all year, so<br />

I’m trying to work in into<br />

counts more often ... it really<br />

worked out for me today,”<br />

Haracz said.<br />

“Once I saw that slider<br />

start moving a lot, hitters<br />

were looking at it and<br />

starting to get a little<br />

more uneasy about what I<br />

was throwing. I got a lot<br />

more comfortable and was<br />

able to just do what I do<br />

best and just go right at<br />

[hitters].”<br />

When Haracz did allow<br />

baserunners, Loyola’s defense<br />

was nearly flawless<br />

in its ability to turn difficult<br />

plays into outs.<br />

“We’ve continued to<br />

kind of pick up ourselves<br />

on defense in the last couple<br />

of weeks,” Bridich said.<br />

“The parts of the game that<br />

we can control, that are<br />

most controllable ... the<br />

pitching and the defense,<br />

I’m really happy with how<br />

we played.”<br />

Listen Up<br />

“Making it this far is huge for the program.”<br />

Kim Przekota — Loyola girls water polo coach after her<br />

team’s fourth-place finish at the state finals.<br />

tunE in<br />

What to watch this week<br />

BOYS TENNIS: New Trier and Loyola hope to improve on last<br />

year’s state finish.<br />

• Both teams take part in the IHSA state finals May 24-<br />

26 at various locations.<br />

Index<br />

27 - This Week In<br />

26 - Athlete of the Week<br />

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

m.wojtychiw@22ndcenturymedia.com.


the glencoe anchor | May 24, 2018 | glencoeanchor.com<br />

Making it to state<br />

New Trier, Loyola track and field<br />

qualifies for state finals, Page 29<br />

Swinging away<br />

New Trier tennis wins sectional, Loyola qualifies<br />

three, Page 29<br />

Loyola’s Aidan<br />

Koconis-O’Malley<br />

shoots and scores<br />

against Naperville<br />

North in the<br />

third-place game<br />

Saturday, May 19, in<br />

Lincolnshire. Tracy<br />

Allen/22nd Century<br />

Media<br />

Loyola takes fourth place at water polo finals, Page 30

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