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Glencoe’s Hometown Newspaper GlencoeAnchor.com • September 13, 2018 • Vol. 4 No. 2 • $1<br />

A<br />

Publication<br />

,LLC<br />

The Hoover estate in Glencoe hits the market, Page 4<br />

The 12.22-acre property at 1801 Green Bay Road in Glencoe was the longtime<br />

home of the Hoover family of vacuum cleaner fame. Photo Submitted<br />

Goal achieved<br />

New Trier grad sings national anthem at<br />

Wrigley after fundraising, Page 3<br />

New<br />

digs<br />

The Varsity<br />

Podcast’s new<br />

partnership<br />

leads to studio<br />

recording,<br />

Page 6<br />

80th<br />

annual<br />

show<br />

New Trier’s<br />

Lagniappe<br />

takes the stage<br />

this week,<br />

Page 6


2 | September 13, 2018 | The glencoe anchor calendar<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

In this week’s<br />

anchor<br />

Pet of the Week........................10<br />

Police Reports ...........................10<br />

Editorial......................................17<br />

Puzzles ........................................20<br />

Faith ............................................22<br />

Dining Out .................................23<br />

Home of the Week ..................24<br />

Athlete of the Week ................27<br />

The Glencoe<br />

Anchor<br />

ph: 847.272.4565<br />

fx: 847.272.4648<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 />

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Published by<br />

www.22ndcenturymedia.com<br />

SATURDAY<br />

The Great Mud Run<br />

9 a.m.-noon, Sept.<br />

15, Watts Ice Center to<br />

Watts Park, Glencoe. The<br />

Great Mud Run is a 1.25-<br />

mile race through Watts<br />

Park. This race will take<br />

your adventurous youth<br />

throughout the parkland<br />

of Glencoe. There<br />

will be 10-12 natural<br />

and man-made obstacles<br />

throughout the course<br />

challenging your drive<br />

and physical stamina.<br />

Participants will receive<br />

a T-shirt, finisher medal<br />

and bragging rights. Register<br />

online.<br />

SUNDAY<br />

Car Wash<br />

1-4 p.m. Sept. 16, Takiff<br />

Center, 999 Green Bay<br />

Road, Glencoe. The Find a<br />

Cure service club is hosting<br />

its annual fundraiser<br />

benefiting the Leukemia<br />

and Lymphoma Society.<br />

The club is comprised of<br />

65-plus high school students<br />

from the North shore<br />

area.<br />

Doggie Dip<br />

2-3 p.m. Sept. 16, Glencoe<br />

Beach. Owners can<br />

watch their dogs swim<br />

in Lake Michigan while<br />

enjoying the company of<br />

other dogs in this fun-filled<br />

free event. Aggressive<br />

dogs, dogs in heat, or dogs<br />

under 4 months of age will<br />

not be allowed. Owners<br />

must clean up after their<br />

dogs. Dogs must wear flat<br />

buckle/snap collars for<br />

controlling them while on<br />

the beach (no prong, choke<br />

or training collars). All<br />

dogs must be up to date on<br />

their vaccines to participate.<br />

MONDAY<br />

Monday at the Movies<br />

1 and 7 p.m. Sept. 17,<br />

Glencoe Library, 320<br />

Park Ave. The library will<br />

screen “RBG.”<br />

UPCOMING<br />

Village Board<br />

7 p.m. Sept. 20, Village<br />

of Glencoe, 675 Village<br />

Court. The Village Board<br />

meets at Village Hall in the<br />

Council Chambers located<br />

on the second floor.<br />

American Craft Exposition<br />

Sept. 21-23, Chicago<br />

Botanic Garden, 1000<br />

Lake Cook Road, Glencoe.<br />

This highly competitive<br />

juried show and sale<br />

of fine craft features oneof-a-kind<br />

handcrafted artwork<br />

and luxury collections<br />

from the country’s<br />

leading craftspeople. Visit<br />

www.chicagobotanic.<br />

org.<br />

Culture Shock<br />

2-3 p.m. Sept. 22, Glencoe<br />

Library, 320 Park Ave.<br />

Join Culture Shock Chicago<br />

for a mind-blowing<br />

hip-hop performance,<br />

followed by dance demonstrations<br />

and audience<br />

participation, connecting<br />

the ideas and history of<br />

hip-hop to the ways we<br />

can make positive choices<br />

in our lives.<br />

Harvest Weekend<br />

Sept. 29-30, Chicago<br />

Botanic Garden, 1000<br />

Lake Cook Road, Glencoe.<br />

Learn how to harvest,<br />

preserve, and store your<br />

homegrown produce or<br />

Farmers’ Market bounty<br />

during Harvest Weekend.<br />

Join us at the Regenstein<br />

Fruit & Vegetable Garden<br />

for “how-to” demonstrations,<br />

shopping from local<br />

vendors, hands-on activities<br />

for kids and families,<br />

Garden Chef Series presentations,<br />

a cookbook<br />

swap, and more.<br />

Fall Bulb Festival<br />

Oct. 5-7, Chicago Botanic<br />

Garden, 1000 Lake<br />

Cook Road, Glencoe. Enjoy<br />

family activities and<br />

shop for more than 200<br />

varieties of bulbs. Visit<br />

www.chicagobotanic.org/<br />

bulb.<br />

Harvest Fest<br />

10 a.m.-1 p.m. Oct. 6,<br />

Kalk Park, Glencoe. Celebrate<br />

fall at one of the<br />

best community spirit<br />

events of the year. Spend<br />

the morning at Kalk Park<br />

enjoying family friendly<br />

games, attractions and entertainment.<br />

Halloween<br />

pumpkins will be available<br />

for purchase. All ages welcome.<br />

Tales and Ales<br />

2.-6 p.m. Oct. 6, Glencoe<br />

Beach. Enjoy a family-friendly<br />

happy hour<br />

with your dog at Glencoe<br />

Beach. The event includes<br />

beer, wine, cider, entertainment<br />

and playtime for<br />

your pup. Admission includes<br />

a souvenir cup, as<br />

well as two drink tickets.<br />

Food will be available for<br />

purchase. Bringing dogs is<br />

not mandatory, but liking<br />

dogs is!<br />

Autumn Brews<br />

6-8 p.m. Oct. 11, Chicago<br />

Botanic Garden, 1000<br />

Lake Cook Road, Glencoe.<br />

Breweries pour seasonally<br />

selected beers at this popular<br />

evening tasting. Must<br />

be 21 or older to attend<br />

event; valid ID card must<br />

be shown. Tickets to be<br />

purchased in advance.<br />

Art Show<br />

6-8 p.m. Oct. 19, Takiff<br />

Center, 999 Green Bay<br />

Road, Glencoe. Join the<br />

Glencoe Park District at<br />

the Takiff Center for opening<br />

night of its art show.<br />

Paintings, drawings and<br />

ceramic pieces by our students<br />

and instructors will<br />

be on display. Light refreshments<br />

will be served.<br />

Night of 1,000 Jack-o’-<br />

Lanterns<br />

6:30-10:30 p.m. Oct.<br />

24-28, Chicago Botanic<br />

Garden, 1000 Lake Cook<br />

Road, Glencoe. More than<br />

1,000 hand-carved pumpkins<br />

— some as large as<br />

150 pounds — will light<br />

up the night at the Chicago<br />

Botanic Garden. Night of<br />

1,000 Jack-o’-Lanterns is<br />

the only event of its kind<br />

in the Chicago area.<br />

ONGOING<br />

Sesquicentennial Planning<br />

Committee<br />

Every other Tuesday,<br />

Glencoe Village Hall, 675<br />

Village Court. The Sesquicentennial<br />

Planning Committee<br />

meets in the First<br />

Floor Conference Room.<br />

For the schedule and agenda,<br />

visit www.villageofglencoe.org.<br />

North Shore Chess Club<br />

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

Starbucks, 347 Park<br />

Ave., Glencoe. The North<br />

Shore Chess Club meets<br />

with players at all levels<br />

of chess skill, beginner,<br />

intermediate, advanced.<br />

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 />

Very friendly, casual atmosphere.<br />

No fees. Open<br />

to teens and adults. Bring<br />

your chess set if you have<br />

one. For more information,<br />

email guntherrice@gmail.<br />

com.<br />

Garden Chef Series<br />

1:30 and 2:30 p.m. Saturdays<br />

and Sundays, May<br />

26-Oct. 7, Chicago Botanic<br />

Garden, 1000 Lake Cook<br />

Road, Glencoe. Learn to<br />

cook with garden-fresh ingredients<br />

all summer long<br />

at the Garden Chef Series.<br />

Noted chefs prepare recipes<br />

in the Regenstein Fruit<br />

& Vegetable Garden’s<br />

open-air amphitheater.<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.<br />

Village Board Meetings<br />

7 p.m. third Thursday<br />

every month, Glencoe<br />

Village Hall, 675 Village<br />

Court. Come out to Village<br />

Hall for the Glencoe Village<br />

Board meeting.<br />

Tales for Tots<br />

10:30 a.m. Thursdays,<br />

Glencoe Library, 320 Park<br />

Ave. Read, sing, talk and<br />

play to build early literacy<br />

skills. Join in for stories,<br />

songs and more, followed<br />

by time for socialization<br />

and play.


glencoeanchor.com news<br />

the glencoe anchor | September 13, 2018 | 3<br />

Glencoe district 35 School Board<br />

2019 budget begins to set aside reserves for capital needs<br />

Todd Marver<br />

Freelance Reporter<br />

With the start of a new<br />

school year came the<br />

adoption of the fiscal year<br />

2019 budget at the Glencoe<br />

School District 35<br />

Board’s Thursday, Sept. 6<br />

regular meeting.<br />

The total revenue is<br />

$27.9 million and the total<br />

expenditures is $37.4 million,<br />

resulting in a $9.5<br />

million deficit.<br />

“This budget starts to<br />

set aside part of our reserves<br />

to address the longterm<br />

capital needs, while<br />

still leaving our district in<br />

a place where we’re going<br />

to be able to be responsive<br />

to the educational needs,”<br />

director of finance and<br />

operations Jason Edelheit<br />

said. “I think the budget<br />

does a nice job of balancing<br />

that.”<br />

The $37.4 million in total<br />

expenditures includes<br />

$20.7 million for salary<br />

and benefits, $4.4 million<br />

for goods and services and<br />

$12.3 million for capital<br />

outlay/transfers/other.<br />

The expenditures by<br />

percent are 55.4 percent<br />

salary and benefits, 11.7<br />

percent goods and services<br />

and 32.9 percent capital<br />

outlay/transfers/other.<br />

The major revenue<br />

source for Glencoe School<br />

District 35 is from local<br />

property taxes. The $27.9<br />

million in total revenue<br />

includes $26.6 million<br />

from local sources, $1<br />

million from state sources<br />

and $295,000 from federal<br />

sources. The source of<br />

revenue by percent is 95.3<br />

percent local sources, 3.6<br />

percent state sources and<br />

1.1 percent federal sources.<br />

The operating revenue<br />

increase from last year<br />

to this year is .31 percent<br />

($92,710). The operating<br />

expenditures increase<br />

from last year to this year<br />

is 30.31 percent ($8.7<br />

million), resulting in a<br />

budgeted deficit of $7.5<br />

million. Capital expenditures<br />

total approximately<br />

$5 million.<br />

“We’ll see a deficit<br />

there, but those monies are<br />

not going out the door,”<br />

Edelheit said. “That money<br />

is going to reestablish<br />

the capital projects fund.<br />

Over the next several<br />

years, those funds will be<br />

dedicated to the long-term<br />

capital needs.”<br />

Edelheit added that the<br />

30 percent operating expenditures<br />

increase is also<br />

attributable to the capital<br />

projects fund.<br />

“The large 30 percent<br />

increase, don’t worry,<br />

we’re not going crazy<br />

spending all this money,”<br />

he said. “It’s the transfer to<br />

the capital projects fund.”<br />

All year-to-year comparisons<br />

are budget to actual<br />

and the state revenue<br />

was budgeted conservatively,<br />

according to Edelheit.<br />

“We use a 98 percent tax<br />

collection rate,” Edelheit<br />

said. “Every year we come<br />

in right at 100 percent for<br />

our tax collection rate.”<br />

The final budget adoption<br />

at the board’s September<br />

meeting culminated<br />

the fiscal year 2019 budget<br />

process. In February,<br />

the process began with the<br />

authorization to prepare<br />

the budget. In April, the<br />

preliminary budget was<br />

prepared and in June, the<br />

tentative budget was approved.<br />

The School Board was<br />

required to approve the<br />

budget within 90 days<br />

of fiscal year end, which<br />

Update: New Trier grad sings national anthem at Cubs game<br />

Eric DeGrechie<br />

Managing Editor<br />

New Trier graduate Stefan<br />

Xidas, 30, was set to<br />

have his lifelong dream<br />

fulfilled Monday, Sept.<br />

10.<br />

Xidas, of Wilmette,<br />

started a GoFundMe campaign<br />

two weeks ago with<br />

a goal of singing the national<br />

anthem at a Chicago<br />

Cubs game if he reached a<br />

fundraising goal of $5,000<br />

for Special Olympics Illinois.<br />

According to his<br />

family, Xidas was scheduled<br />

to sing the national<br />

anthem prior to the Monday,<br />

Sept. 10 home game<br />

versus the Milwaukee<br />

Brewers. This event happened<br />

after press time for<br />

this week’s edition of The<br />

Anchor.<br />

Xidas, who has Down<br />

syndrome, wrote a letter<br />

to fellow Wilmette<br />

resident and Cubs owner<br />

Tom Ricketts. Along with<br />

friend Tom Molitor, who<br />

helped set up the Go-<br />

FundMe campaign, Xidas<br />

hand-delivered the letter to<br />

Wrigley Field at a recent<br />

Cubs game.<br />

The GoFundMe campaign<br />

far surpassed the<br />

original fundraising goal<br />

by garnering $18,132 in<br />

15 days as of press time<br />

of this story. According to<br />

the Xidas’ family, the Cubs<br />

will match Stefan’s money<br />

raised.<br />

New Trier grad Stefan Xidas fundraised and sang the<br />

national anthem at a Cubs game. Photo submitted<br />

is Sept. 30, so it met that<br />

deadline. The certified<br />

copy must be filed with<br />

the county clerk within 30<br />

days of adoption and filed<br />

electronically with the Illinois<br />

State Board of Education<br />

within 30 days of<br />

adoption.<br />

3222 Glenview Rd, Glenview<br />

847-730-3448<br />

Open M-F: 10 - 8PM<br />

SAT: 10 - 7PM<br />

SUN: 11 - 5PM<br />

luxilonfurniture.com<br />

Enrollment update<br />

Superintendent Catherine<br />

Wang provided the<br />

district’s current enrollment<br />

numbers. There are<br />

a total of 1,171 students in<br />

the district.<br />

At South School, there<br />

are a total of 393 kindergarteners<br />

through thirdgraders,<br />

including 120<br />

kindergarteners (five sections),<br />

123 first graders<br />

(six sections) and 150<br />

second graders (seven sections).<br />

At West School, there<br />

are 245 third- and fourthgraders,<br />

including 126<br />

third graders (six sections)<br />

and 119 fourth graders (six<br />

sections).<br />

At Central School, there<br />

are 533 fifth- through<br />

eighth-graders, including<br />

150 fifth-graders (seven<br />

sections), 112 sixth-graders<br />

(five sections), 124<br />

seventh-graders and 147<br />

eighth-graders.<br />

There aren’t sections at<br />

the seventh- and eighthgrade<br />

levels in the same<br />

way that there are at the<br />

lower grade levels.<br />

“Seventh and eighth is a<br />

little bit different because<br />

of the way that we do all<br />

the different concentrated<br />

classes,” Wang said.<br />

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4 | September 13, 2018 | The glencoe anchor news<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

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BLOOMINGDALE ELMHURST<br />

Glencoe’s Hoover mansion<br />

is most expensive in ’burbs<br />

NEIL MILBERT<br />

Freelance Reporter<br />

The 12.22-acre property at 1801 Green Bay Road in<br />

Glencoe was the longtime home of the Hoover family of<br />

vacuum cleaner fame. Photo Submitted<br />

Chicago Dream Town<br />

Realty broker Hadley Rue<br />

calls it “a very special<br />

piece of property, a beautiful<br />

residential estate.”<br />

The 12.22-acre property<br />

at 1801 Green Bay Road<br />

in Glencoe was the longtime<br />

home of the Hoover<br />

family of vacuum cleaner<br />

fame and fortune and it’s<br />

so “special” that it was<br />

listed at $15.9 million<br />

when it was put up for sale<br />

on Aug. 22.<br />

It’s the most expensive<br />

listing in the Chicago suburbs<br />

and second only in Illinois<br />

to a home in the Lincoln<br />

Park neighborhood of<br />

the city which has a $50<br />

million asking price.<br />

The Hoover estate, however,<br />

is $3.6 million shy<br />

of the most expensive sale<br />

in Glencoe history, which<br />

was a $19.5 million lakefront<br />

property on Glade<br />

Road bought by Groupon<br />

founder Eric Lefkovsky in<br />

2014.<br />

The seller of the estate<br />

of Miriam Hoover. It was<br />

her primary residence<br />

at the time of her death,<br />

which occurred age 104<br />

this March at her winter<br />

home in Palm Springs,<br />

Cal. Her husband, H. Earl<br />

Hoover, former chairman<br />

of Hoover Vacuum and<br />

nephew of the founder of<br />

the company that makes<br />

sweepers, died in 1985 at<br />

age 94.<br />

H. Earl Hoover purchased<br />

the sprawling<br />

property in 1926. It is the<br />

largest portion of a small<br />

parcel of land currently<br />

surrounded on three sides<br />

by golf courses and a forest<br />

preserve.<br />

“When the property was<br />

bought, it was a one-level<br />

farmhouse,” Rue said.<br />

“Mr. Hoover developed<br />

the property and used part<br />

of the farm house foundation<br />

to build the 10,000<br />

square-foot residence, an<br />

English Tudor-style mansion<br />

with a brick and timber<br />

façade.”<br />

The mansion has seven<br />

bedrooms, eight full bathrooms,<br />

one half-bathroom,<br />

a stone fireplace, a finished<br />

attic with pull-down stairs<br />

and a large unfinished<br />

basement.<br />

It was designed by William<br />

Furst, of Armstrong,<br />

Furst and Tilton. According<br />

to Laurie Peterson, editor<br />

of the American Institute<br />

of Architects Guide to<br />

Chicago, he also designed<br />

all three of Glencoe’s<br />

original public schools<br />

and Northwestern’s Seabury<br />

Western Seminary<br />

and when he was with his<br />

later firm, Furst, Maher<br />

and McGrew, he designed<br />

Glencoe’s town hall and<br />

the central portion of New<br />

Trier.<br />

The property also has<br />

a coach house, a green<br />

house and a stable house,<br />

all built about the same<br />

time. H. Earl Hoover ran<br />

the vacuum company and<br />

another company, Hoover<br />

& Mason phosphate, from<br />

the carriage house and he<br />

grew orchids in the greenhouse.<br />

“All of the buildings<br />

have a true English Tudor<br />

style and have slate roofs<br />

adorned with copper gutters,”<br />

Rue added. “The<br />

main house has expensive<br />

millwork. The great room,<br />

also known as The Studio,<br />

has a beautiful two-story<br />

cathedral ceiling, extensive<br />

woodwork, walnut<br />

hardwood floors imported<br />

from England and 12-foot<br />

windows that overlook<br />

the southern lawn and one<br />

of the sunken gardens.<br />

The lawn is very lush and<br />

green.<br />

“The Hoovers loved it<br />

because of its location off<br />

Green Bay Road, the main<br />

artery of the North Shore,<br />

but more importantly because<br />

of the serenity and<br />

beauty the property has to<br />

Please see hoover, 10


glencoeanchor.com glencoe<br />

the glencoe anchor | September 13, 2018 | 5<br />

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6 | September 13, 2018 | The glencoe anchor news<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

Sounds good!: 22CM podcast partners with local studio Media Podz<br />

Eric DeGrechie<br />

Managing Editor<br />

Just over a year ago,<br />

22nd Century Media, parent<br />

company of The Glencoe<br />

Anchor, launched its<br />

first podcast, “The Varsity:<br />

North Shore.”<br />

The brainchild of Michal<br />

Dwojak, who has<br />

worked with co-host Michael<br />

Wojtychiw since its<br />

inception, the weekly high<br />

school spots talk show has<br />

seen its popularity grow<br />

through each successive<br />

high school sports season.<br />

“I honestly originally<br />

thought we would just be<br />

doing it during the football<br />

season. It turned into us<br />

doing it the whole year,”<br />

said Dwojak, who is also<br />

the sports editor of 22nd<br />

Century Media’s The<br />

Glenview Lantern and The<br />

Northbrook Tower. “It really<br />

is cool that it’s grown<br />

to this level.”<br />

Now, the podcast is<br />

ready to take the next step<br />

in its evolution as it partners<br />

with Northfield-based<br />

Media Podz.<br />

Co-founded by Chris<br />

Falcon, David Kohn and<br />

Joe Pettinato, the local<br />

startup prides itself on having<br />

state-of-the-art, private<br />

recording spaces that offer<br />

clients with the ability to<br />

record high-quality audio<br />

and video content for marketing<br />

and social media.<br />

“We worked hard creating<br />

a proprietary software<br />

that makes the experience<br />

of recording high-quality<br />

content simple, but our<br />

real goal was to create a<br />

vehicle that helps people<br />

connect with each other<br />

and with the world,” Falcon<br />

said.<br />

Last week, the co-hosts<br />

poor connection?<br />

were given a tour. Recording<br />

at Media Podz, 181<br />

Waukegan Road, began<br />

Tuesday, Sept. 11.<br />

“I really like it. Being<br />

able to hear ourselves<br />

while we’re talking will<br />

be nice,” said Wojtychiw,<br />

who is also sports editor<br />

of 22nd Century Media’s<br />

The Wilmette Beacon,<br />

The Glencoe Anchor and<br />

The Winnetka Current.<br />

“What’s also going to help<br />

is there’s going to be an<br />

audio engineer there to so<br />

we don’t have to worry<br />

about things like whether<br />

it sounds good.”<br />

Describing itself as a<br />

“podcaster’s dream,” Media<br />

Podz uses professional<br />

mics, cameras, lighting<br />

and software. The company<br />

touts it can make a beginner<br />

sound professional.<br />

“Collaboration and partnerships<br />

are the future and<br />

Michal Dwojak (left), co-host of 22nd Century Media’s The Varsity podcast, is<br />

assisted by David Kohn, co-founder of Media Podz, while his co-host Michael<br />

Wojtychiw (seated) is helped by Chris Falcon, co-founder of Media Podz, Thursday,<br />

Sept. 6, in Northfield. Eric DeGrechie/22nd Century Media<br />

the now,” Kohn said. “We<br />

look forward to the partnership.<br />

It’s not only an<br />

opportunity for us to flex<br />

the muscle of our software,<br />

but also to demonstrate the<br />

strength of community and<br />

teamwork.”<br />

While Media Podz is<br />

just getting started, The<br />

Varsity podcast celebrates<br />

its one-year anniversary of<br />

production.<br />

“The podcast had enormous<br />

potential from the<br />

start,” said Joe Coughlin,<br />

publisher of 22nd Century<br />

Media and producer of the<br />

podcast. “We know there<br />

are prep sports fans and<br />

families along the North<br />

Shore. With the enthusiasm<br />

and experience of<br />

our hosts, all ‘The Varsity’<br />

needed to do was reach<br />

them. We’re getting better<br />

at that every week.”<br />

mediapodz.com<br />

80th Lagniappe-Potpourri show ‘Enjoy the<br />

Ride’ opens New Trier’s theater season<br />

Submitted by New Trier<br />

Lagniappe-Potpourri<br />

“Enjoy the Ride” kicked<br />

off the New Trier High<br />

School performing arts<br />

season Wednesday, Sept.<br />

12, in the Winnetka Campus<br />

Gaffney Auditorium.<br />

The production will also<br />

run at 7 p.m. Thursday-<br />

Friday, Sept. 13-14.<br />

Lagniappe-Potpourri,<br />

New Trier’s annual variety<br />

show, celebrates its 80th<br />

year this fall. Students<br />

contribute to all levels of<br />

the production and decision-making,<br />

including<br />

building, choreographing,<br />

composing, conducting,<br />

designing, directing,<br />

managing, marketing, performing<br />

and writing.<br />

Lagniappe-Potpourri<br />

gives student board members<br />

the opportunity to work<br />

with specialized mentors<br />

to develop as leaders and<br />

features student designers,<br />

technicians, musicians,<br />

dancers and performers.<br />

More than 120 students<br />

come together to make the<br />

show a reality. The leadership<br />

board began work<br />

this past spring, putting together<br />

auditions, materials<br />

and planning for rehearsals<br />

at the end of summer. The<br />

crew, band and performers<br />

came together in August<br />

to prepare for the performances<br />

in September.<br />

While Lagniappe-Potpourri<br />

is 80 years old, the<br />

spirit is vibrant among the<br />

students, and the cast and<br />

crew says they are ready to<br />

bring the tradition to a new<br />

generation.


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the glencoe anchor | September 13, 2018 | 7<br />

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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.Coldwell<br />

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10 | September 13, 2018 | The glencoe anchor news<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

Butternut<br />

PAWS Chicago North Shore<br />

Butternut is a 4-year-old<br />

beauty who turns heads of<br />

everyone who passes him<br />

at the PAWS Chicago North<br />

Shore Adoption Center.<br />

Butternut was originally adopted as a kitten but<br />

was recently returned due to no fault of his own.<br />

This recent change has been hard on Butternut,<br />

so he will need a home that will be patient as he<br />

comes out of his shell. However his true personality<br />

is very sweet and friendly, and his future family will<br />

be very lucky to have him in their home.<br />

Butternut, along with many dogs and cats, is<br />

available for adoption at the PAWS Chicago North<br />

Shore Adoption Center located inside the Petco<br />

at 1616 Deerfield Road in Highland Park. To<br />

learn more and see the hours of operation, visit<br />

pawschicago.org or call 773-935-PAWS.<br />

police reports<br />

Suspect requests tow truck money for fake car accident<br />

On Sept. 1, an unknown<br />

offender went to two Glencoe<br />

residences in the 300<br />

block of Woodlawn Avenue<br />

and the 400 block of<br />

Adams Avenue requesting<br />

money for a vehicle tow<br />

after his wife allegedly got<br />

into a nearby accident.<br />

The police, however,<br />

said there were no accidents<br />

in the Glencoe and<br />

Winnetka area at that time.<br />

One victim gave the suspect<br />

$40; the other victim<br />

suffered no loss.<br />

In other police news:<br />

Sept. 4<br />

hoover<br />

From Page 4<br />

• An unknown offender<br />

attempted and eventually<br />

gained access to a victim’s<br />

Instagram account and<br />

changed the password at<br />

10:25 a.m. Upon further<br />

investigation, the victim’s<br />

Amazon and Apple iCloud<br />

accounts were also compromised.<br />

No monetary<br />

losses occurred.<br />

Sept. 3<br />

• A 2017 Maserati and<br />

2017 Audi were reported<br />

stolen at 11:01 a.m. in the<br />

1100 block of Sheridan<br />

Road. Both cars had their<br />

key fobs left inside.<br />

Sept. 2<br />

• It was reported at 10:18<br />

a.m., an unknown offender<br />

broke a glass door and<br />

trespassed on the property<br />

at an auto dealership in the<br />

1600 block of Frontage<br />

Road. Nothing was stolen<br />

as of the reported date.<br />

• Rene Avendano, 42, of<br />

Chicago, was arrested<br />

for driving with no rear<br />

registration plate light,<br />

no driver’s license and<br />

no insurance at 7:48<br />

p.m. at the intersection<br />

of Sheridan Road and<br />

Scott Avenue. Avendano’s<br />

court date is Oct. 23.<br />

Aug. 31<br />

• It was reported at 9:33<br />

p.m., a victim’s wallet<br />

was stolen and their credit<br />

cards were used at several<br />

Sam’s Club locations for<br />

purchases worth more than<br />

$12,000.<br />

EDITOR’S NOTE: The Glencoe<br />

Anchor’s Police Reports<br />

are compiled from official<br />

reports found on file at the<br />

Glencoe Police Department<br />

headquarters in Glencoe. Individuals<br />

named in these reports<br />

are considered innocent<br />

of all charges until proven<br />

guilty in a court of law.<br />

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

as Pet of the Week, send information to megan@glencoeanchor.com<br />

or 60 Revere Drive, Suite 888, Northbrook, IL<br />

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offer.<br />

“It’s truly magical and<br />

whimsical.”<br />

The same can be said<br />

for the life story of Miriam<br />

Hoover.<br />

The former Marian<br />

Fanny Ulvinen was from<br />

a farm family of Finnish<br />

extraction in Upper Michigan.<br />

There were three boys<br />

and she was the youngest<br />

of nine girls, two of whom<br />

died as babies. Her father<br />

died when she was 4 years<br />

old.<br />

In the mid-1930s at age<br />

20, she came to Hoover’s<br />

mansion to work as the upstairs<br />

maid, one of about a<br />

dozen servants. She was<br />

brought there by a sister<br />

who also worked as a servant.<br />

J. Earl, who persuaded<br />

Marian Fanny to change<br />

her name to Miriam, was<br />

divorced from his first<br />

wife, Dorothy, and shortly<br />

after he was divorced<br />

from his second wife, also<br />

named Dorothy. He married<br />

the former upstairs<br />

The great room, which was referred to as the studio by the Hoovers at their Glencoe<br />

estate now up for sale for $15.9 million. Photo Submitted<br />

maid on Oct. 2, 1950<br />

while on a business trip to<br />

Denver.<br />

At the time of their<br />

marriage, he was 60 years<br />

old and she was 38. The<br />

loving couple traveled<br />

the world and she immersed<br />

herself in Episcopal<br />

Church undertakings<br />

and made philanthropic<br />

contributions to dozens of<br />

cultural organizations.<br />

Among her beneficiaries<br />

were the Chicago Botanical<br />

Society, the Art Institute<br />

of Chicago, the Lyric<br />

Opera of Chicago and the<br />

Chicago Symphony Orchestra.<br />

She also was a<br />

major contributor to LGBT<br />

causes. Miriam is survived<br />

by four stepsons and their<br />

families.<br />

Although Rue said the<br />

longtime family home<br />

“would be perfect for a<br />

residential family looking<br />

for a larger piece of land,”<br />

the real estate broker left<br />

open the possibility that<br />

the property “could be developed”<br />

to include other<br />

residences.


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the glencoe anchor | September 13, 2018 | 11<br />

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12 | September 13, 2018 | The glencoe anchor glencoe<br />

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The circular driveway leads to a Newer thoughtfully designed and appointed Colonial in the heart of Glenayre Park. Two story foyer with bridal staircase divides the formal<br />

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keg, billiard room, exercise room, sixth bedroom, and a full bathroom. Beautifully landscaped backyard completes the gorgeous setting. One of Glenview’s Premier Homes!<br />

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

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

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


14 | September 13, 2018 | The glencoe anchor glencoe<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

Would you like To<br />

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Then fill ouT This form and<br />

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glencoeanchor.com news<br />

the glencoe anchor | September 13, 2018 | 15<br />

Body of missing kayaker found<br />

Staff Report<br />

The body<br />

of Sebastian<br />

Duncan, the<br />

20-year-old<br />

Glenview<br />

resident<br />

who went<br />

missing following<br />

a Lake Michigan<br />

Duncan<br />

kayaking accident on Aug.<br />

27, has been found according<br />

to Dr. Howard Cooper,<br />

Lake County coroner.<br />

Cooper said an autopsy<br />

was scheduled for Monday,<br />

Sept. 10.<br />

Duncan’s body was<br />

found along Highland<br />

From Sept. 10<br />

Park’s Openlands Lake<br />

Michigan shoreline by<br />

a passerby on Saturday,<br />

Sept. 8, according to Hayley<br />

Garard, assistant to the<br />

City Manager of Highland<br />

Park.<br />

After being notified, the<br />

City of Highland Park Police<br />

and Fire departments<br />

immediately responded<br />

and removed Duncan’s<br />

body from the water, Garard<br />

said.<br />

He was identified after a<br />

forensic examination performed<br />

by Cooper on Sunday,<br />

Sept. 9.<br />

According to Kitty<br />

Bliss, spokesperson for<br />

the Duncan family, funeral<br />

arrangements are being<br />

discussed following the<br />

autopsy.<br />

“They’re in the midst of<br />

planning. They’re choosing<br />

music and who will<br />

speak,” Bliss said.<br />

Duncan, who graduated<br />

from New Trier in<br />

2016, was the son of<br />

Wilmette business owner<br />

Tony Duncan and Shai<br />

Duncan.<br />

To receive breaking news<br />

alerts, visit www.glencoeanchor.com/plus.<br />

Gately ordered to submit DNA<br />

collection for indictment<br />

Megan Bernard, Editor<br />

Northfield murder suspect<br />

John Gately III, of<br />

Winnetka, was notified in<br />

court Monday, Sept. 10,<br />

his DNA specimen will be<br />

collected for indictment of<br />

first-degree murder.<br />

The collection will occur<br />

within 14 days, according<br />

to Judge Anjana<br />

M.J. Hansen.<br />

Gately, 66, was charged<br />

with one count of homicide<br />

for the killing of his<br />

brother-in-law Stephen<br />

Shapiro, 72, of Northfield,<br />

and one count of attempted<br />

homicide for trying<br />

to kill Joan Shapiro, Stephen’s<br />

wife and Gately’s<br />

sister, at their residence<br />

on Aug. 13. Details of the<br />

murder were disclosed at<br />

Gately’s Aug. 16 bonding<br />

hearing, where he was denied<br />

bail.<br />

At the Monday court<br />

hearing, Assistant State’s<br />

Attorney Andreana Turano<br />

listed the indictment<br />

for only first-degree murder.<br />

Since “it is a pending<br />

case,” Turano said she<br />

could not speak on the previous<br />

attempted homicide<br />

charge.<br />

Gately, a New Trier<br />

graduate, who will now be<br />

represented by public defender<br />

David McMahon,<br />

will exercise his right to<br />

not speak to those collecting<br />

his DNA. McMahon<br />

was not present at court<br />

due to another assignment.<br />

The Current’s questions<br />

to McMahon went unanswered<br />

as of press time.<br />

This is Gately’s third<br />

appearance in court. On<br />

Aug. 30, The Current previously<br />

reported Chicagobased<br />

lawyer Michael J.<br />

Petro said he was seeking<br />

leave from the case<br />

because he has “explored<br />

many avenues for fees,”<br />

like Gately’s “family and<br />

friends” and has not been<br />

successful.<br />

At Gately’s bond hearing<br />

in Aug. 16, Petro said<br />

Gately will plead not guilty<br />

to the crimes; however, no<br />

plea has been entered.<br />

Gately will return to<br />

Skokie Courthouse for indictment<br />

at 9:30 a.m. Sept.<br />

26.<br />

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16 | September 13, 2018 | The glencoe anchor sound off<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

Glencoe: Yesterday and Today<br />

Wyman Green named after<br />

former village president<br />

Glencoe Historical<br />

Society<br />

Contributing Columnist<br />

here, lived<br />

here, worked<br />

“Born<br />

here – and<br />

made a difference.” These<br />

are the basic qualifications<br />

for consideration for the<br />

Glencoe Sesquicentennial<br />

Hall of Fame. The Glencoe<br />

Historical Society<br />

is seeking<br />

nominations<br />

of individuals<br />

to be<br />

included in<br />

a collection<br />

honoring<br />

150 extraordinary<br />

Glen-<br />

Wyman<br />

coe residents. The Hall<br />

of Fame will ultimately<br />

include men and women<br />

of all ages and ethnicities<br />

that have helped shape<br />

the worlds of business,<br />

government, science, the<br />

arts and sports. They will<br />

all be individuals who represent<br />

the values that the<br />

Village holds dear.<br />

To help our community<br />

begin considering<br />

who might be candidates<br />

for this list, the Glencoe<br />

Historical Society introduces<br />

you to one potential<br />

nominee – someone who<br />

made his name both in the<br />

village through election<br />

to various government<br />

offices and in the world<br />

through his legal career<br />

and public service.<br />

Wyman Green is one<br />

of the few open spaces<br />

that belong to the village.<br />

It sits between the<br />

Glencoe Public Library<br />

and Glencoe Village Hall<br />

and is a gathering place<br />

for residents on the fourth<br />

of July or movie nights or<br />

the French Market or just<br />

a quiet summer lunch on<br />

the picnic table. Do you<br />

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and entertainment, assisted living, real estate, travel and more.<br />

For more information, call<br />

708.326.9170 or visit www.22ndcenturymedia.com/events<br />

DEADLINE: WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 26<br />

Summer Reads for Glencoe Beach<br />

‘All the President’s Men,’ a<br />

brilliant journalistic narrative<br />

Glencoe Historical<br />

Society<br />

Contributing Columnist<br />

After watching<br />

the movie “The<br />

Post” this year,<br />

I developed a soft-spot<br />

for journalistic discovery<br />

stories. Needless to say,<br />

when I learned about<br />

Bob Woodward and Carl<br />

Bernstein’s “All the<br />

President’s Men,” a book<br />

detailing the lead-up and<br />

reveal of the Watergate<br />

scandal, the prospect<br />

of it piqued my interest.<br />

I checked out both<br />

the book and the movie<br />

from the Glencoe Public<br />

Library as quickly as I<br />

could.<br />

Woodward and Bernstein’s<br />

story dives into<br />

the two reporters’ experience<br />

at The Washington<br />

Post as lies start to unravel<br />

in the Nixon-era White<br />

House. What begins as a<br />

break-in at the Democratic<br />

National Committee<br />

headquarters turns into<br />

convictions, a secret cash<br />

fund and corruption leading<br />

straight to President<br />

Nixon. Through Woodward<br />

and Bernstein’s<br />

journalistic narrative, the<br />

reader learns about the<br />

process of reporting for<br />

a high-stakes story, especially<br />

the critical nature<br />

of sound facts, accurate<br />

portrayals and trustworthy<br />

sources.<br />

I found Woodward and<br />

Bernstein’s writing brilliant.<br />

The authors prove<br />

themselves pure journalists<br />

as they deal with factual,<br />

historical evidence<br />

in a matter-of-fact and<br />

succinct style and retell<br />

their discoveries without<br />

any added nuances. As a<br />

reader, I followed Woodward<br />

and Bernstein’s<br />

journey, complete with<br />

footnotes and quotations,<br />

and I couldn’t help but<br />

admire how every strand<br />

of the political puzzle<br />

tied together at the end.<br />

Given the importance<br />

of journalistic integrity<br />

in politics, I found<br />

it refreshing that these<br />

authors admitted to their<br />

errors as readily as they<br />

presented the ideas that<br />

ultimately led them to the<br />

correct solutions.<br />

I have not read many<br />

co-authored books. Also,<br />

Woodward and Bernstein<br />

wrote about themselves<br />

in the third person, which<br />

I found a bit off-putting<br />

at first. However, I quickly<br />

began to appreciate the<br />

depth the two perspectives<br />

added and the wider<br />

view they allowed me as<br />

a reader. For example,<br />

Deep Throat, an anonymous<br />

source, provided<br />

Woodward and not Bernstein<br />

with information,<br />

but the incorporation of<br />

those conversations allowed<br />

vital information<br />

to fall into place. As each<br />

reporter had his own way<br />

of doing things, it was<br />

enjoyable to watch their<br />

collective work – and<br />

their editors’ responses<br />

to their work – play out<br />

across the pages.<br />

Today’s general public<br />

knows the names of<br />

individuals like Michael<br />

Cohen and Paul Manafort<br />

too well, and it was<br />

impossible to read about<br />

John Mitchell, H.R. Halderman,<br />

Charles Colson<br />

and Gordon Liddy without<br />

drawing the connection<br />

to yet another group<br />

of ambitious men in positions<br />

of great power finding<br />

themselves knee-deep<br />

in a political mess. John<br />

Dalberg Acton famously<br />

stated, “Absolute power<br />

corrupts absolutely”; yet<br />

it is surprisingly easy to<br />

want to sympathize with<br />

them. After all, even the<br />

greediest men have families<br />

they want to protect.<br />

While the Watergate<br />

scandal is widely familiar,<br />

“All the President’s<br />

Men” did more than<br />

bring the scandal to light.<br />

Woodward and Bernstein’s<br />

book provides<br />

readers with a rare vein<br />

through which to explore<br />

the intricacies of working<br />

as a newspaper reporter<br />

during a time of national<br />

crisis. I truly recommend<br />

reading this work. It<br />

resonates extremely well<br />

with our current political<br />

climate and brings to<br />

light in a highly skilled<br />

manner an important era<br />

in U.S. history.<br />

Glencoe resident Mikaela<br />

Ritchie is a New Trier graduate<br />

and a rising sophomore<br />

at Harvard University. She<br />

is studying literature and<br />

creative writing and plans to<br />

major in English.


glencoeanchor.com sound off<br />

the glencoe anchor | September 13, 2018 | 17<br />

Social snapshot<br />

Top Stories<br />

from GlencoeAnchor.com as of Sept. 10<br />

1. News From Your Neighbors: Fire causes<br />

$400k in damages to vacant Lake Forest<br />

home<br />

2. In Memoriam: Galanis, Page<br />

3. Vernon Playground reopens with more<br />

open space, accessibility<br />

4. Update: New Trier grad will sing national<br />

anthem at Cubs game<br />

5. Glencoe Library readies kids for<br />

kindergarten<br />

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

From the Publisher<br />

Your continued support keeps The Anchor free<br />

Joe Coughlin<br />

Publisher<br />

A<br />

common question<br />

we get is: “How<br />

can you send a free<br />

weekly newspaper?”<br />

The easy answer is:<br />

“Your support.”<br />

Nine years later that<br />

has held true. The support<br />

from the community<br />

(readers and advertisers)<br />

is stronger than ever, and<br />

because of that, we can<br />

continue to deliver unmatched,<br />

award-winning<br />

weekly coverage of Glencoe<br />

at no cost to you.<br />

The only “price” we<br />

ask you to pay as readers<br />

is to take the time and<br />

effort every three years<br />

to complete a brief form<br />

acknowledging that you<br />

want to continue receiving<br />

your free newspaper.<br />

That’s it.<br />

That form, which we<br />

gather from about 60 percent<br />

of Glencoe residents,<br />

allows us to achieve a<br />

better, more cost-effective<br />

class of mail that is essential<br />

for our free distribution.<br />

It is time again for our<br />

loyal readers to send in<br />

their request forms.<br />

Each week, a form<br />

will be published in the<br />

newspaper (Page 14 this<br />

week). You can mail or<br />

fax the form back, but the<br />

quickest and easiest way<br />

to request the paper is to<br />

go to GlencoeAnchor.<br />

com/delivery.<br />

As always, all your<br />

information will be kept<br />

completely confidential.<br />

The U.S. Postal Service<br />

is tough to please and<br />

requires that we prove<br />

our mailing list every<br />

three years. We have been<br />

able to do this over and<br />

over because of you. The<br />

postal service will audit<br />

The Anchor to ensure that<br />

our readers have returned<br />

these important forms.<br />

It only takes a minute of<br />

your time, and we thank<br />

the hundreds who have already<br />

sent in their forms.<br />

North Shore Country Day School posted this<br />

photo Sept. 5 with the caption: “You may notice<br />

orange ribbons such as this one appearing<br />

around the #NSCDS campus to show support<br />

for the family of Glenview resident Sebastian<br />

Duncan.”<br />

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

“Great Mud Run T-shirt preview. Can’t wait to<br />

see how muddy these shirts get!”<br />

@GlencoeParks posted on Sept. 6<br />

Follow The Glencoe Anchor: @GlencoeAnchor<br />

go figure<br />

$15.9M<br />

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

How much the Hoover<br />

estate is listed at in<br />

Glencoe. (Page 4)<br />

historical<br />

From Page 16<br />

know, however, that the<br />

Green is named for one of<br />

the Village’s Past Presidents,<br />

Austin L. Wyman?<br />

Wyman was a prominent<br />

and influential leader<br />

whose work left an impact<br />

on Glencoe, the City of<br />

Chicago and on the State<br />

of Illinois. Born on July<br />

14, 1899, Wyman grew up<br />

in Chicago and moved to<br />

Glencoe in 1922, following<br />

his service in the U.S.<br />

Army during World War I.<br />

The Wymans lived first at<br />

27 Crescent Drive and later<br />

at 945 Eastwood Road.<br />

That same year, Wyman<br />

graduated from Chicago<br />

Kent College of Law<br />

and began a successful<br />

law career representing a<br />

variety of corporate and<br />

individual clients in real<br />

estate transactions and<br />

personal matters. Two<br />

years later, he became<br />

involved in Glencoe village<br />

affairs when he was<br />

elected police magistrate,<br />

a position that he occupied<br />

until 1926. He then<br />

served for six years on<br />

the Public Library Board<br />

(1927-1933) and later as<br />

President of the Glencoe<br />

Community Chest, a forerunner<br />

of today’s United<br />

Way (1938-1939).<br />

In 1942, Wyman was<br />

named to the Chicago<br />

Crime Commission, an<br />

independent, non-partisan<br />

group of business leaders<br />

dedicated to addressing<br />

public corruption<br />

and violent crime. His<br />

12-year service with the<br />

commission spanned an<br />

era in which commercialized<br />

gambling and gang<br />

murders flourished in<br />

Chicago with, in Wyman’s<br />

view, the blessing of a<br />

corrupt Democratic machine.<br />

As chairman of the<br />

commission from 1948-<br />

1954, Wyman repeatedly<br />

chastised politicians and<br />

pushed for a more independent<br />

police force to<br />

help address the problems.<br />

After leaving the<br />

Chicago Crime Commission<br />

in 1954, Wyman was<br />

one of nine candidates<br />

vying for the Republican<br />

nomination for the United<br />

States Senate. He traveled<br />

throughout the state<br />

in a campaign that was<br />

memorable for his use of a<br />

helicopter and a calliope.<br />

His efforts to challenge<br />

incumbent Democrat Paul<br />

Douglas in the general<br />

election fell short, however,<br />

when he placed third<br />

in the primary.<br />

In 1956, Illinois Gov.<br />

William Stratton named<br />

Wyman chairman of the<br />

Illinois State Toll Highway<br />

Commission tasked<br />

with building 187 miles of<br />

modern four and six lane<br />

highways in the state in less<br />

than three years. Under his<br />

leadership, the $441 million<br />

construction project was<br />

completed and opened to<br />

the public.<br />

In 1960, Wyman was<br />

elected president of the<br />

Village of Glencoe and<br />

served two terms. On<br />

Aug. 8, 1968, the Village<br />

Board voted to recognize<br />

“the dedication and civic<br />

contributions that Wyman<br />

has given to our community<br />

through outstanding<br />

service both as a private<br />

citizen and as president of<br />

the Village of Glencoe” by<br />

naming the Green outside<br />

Village Hall in his honor.<br />

Glencoe: Yesterday and<br />

Today is a biweekly column<br />

submitted by the Glencoe<br />

Historical Society. Do you<br />

know a resident – living or<br />

dead – who deserves consideration<br />

for the Glencoe Sesquicentennial<br />

Hall of Fame?<br />

Go to www.glencoehistory.<br />

org or www.glencoe150.org.<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


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TOo GOODE<br />

Goode & Fresh Pizza Bakery offers large<br />

menu beyond pizza, Page 23<br />

Glencoe Historical Society honors 100th anniversary<br />

of the end of World War I during gala, Page 21<br />

Chairman of the Historic<br />

Preservation Tom<br />

Scheckelhoff (left) and<br />

his wife Sandra speak<br />

with board member John<br />

Carothers Saturday, Sept.<br />

8, about the replica he<br />

built at the annual gala.<br />

Jill Dunbar/22nd Century<br />

Media


20 | September 13, 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. Ideology suffixes<br />

5. Kind of I.R.A.<br />

8. Plunge into water<br />

12. Shows approval<br />

14. M.’s counterpart<br />

15. Walkie-talkie<br />

word<br />

16. Accumulated<br />

steadily<br />

17. Recently, abbr.<br />

18. Himalayan legend<br />

19. Barely adequate<br />

21. Stalk<br />

23. Silly little guy<br />

24. Velvet finish?<br />

25. Lose it<br />

28. Calls<br />

30. Loos<br />

33. Pamplona runners<br />

35. Where the congregation<br />

sits<br />

36. “Yeah, right!”<br />

37. Chic<br />

40. Loyola Academy<br />

junior girls track<br />

runner, Addison<br />

42. Australian jumper,<br />

for short<br />

43. Marching grp.<br />

45. Connect with<br />

46. Common ID<br />

47. Apprehensive<br />

50. Norwegian king<br />

51. Flatter, in a way<br />

52. Ringo of rock<br />

54. Glenbrook South<br />

girls track runner,<br />

___ Robertson<br />

57. Rest<br />

61. Noticed accidentally<br />

62. Austrian Expressionist<br />

Schiele<br />

64. File<br />

65. It may be dominant<br />

66. Some cameras, for<br />

short<br />

67. Odom of the L.A.<br />

Clippers<br />

68. Tree having<br />

winged fruit<br />

69. 1975 ABBA song<br />

70. On your own<br />

Down<br />

1. Part of a nuclear<br />

arsenal, for short<br />

2. Swing around<br />

3. Hotel employee<br />

4. Divided winnings<br />

in poker<br />

5. Consider overnight<br />

6. Commuting options<br />

7. Major personal<br />

annoyance<br />

8. Senior member<br />

9. Professional poker<br />

player Phil<br />

10. President’s rejection<br />

11. Yeats’s land,<br />

poetically<br />

13. Put away<br />

14. Gift from the<br />

three wise men<br />

20. Woodland mushroom<br />

22. Forwarded<br />

25. Keeps the sauce<br />

from burning<br />

26. Things to avoid<br />

27. Torcher’s misdeed<br />

29. Capture<br />

30. Revolutionary<br />

invention<br />

31. Magna ___<br />

32. Under<br />

34. Sweet<br />

38. Solitude<br />

39. French summer<br />

41. Three dimensional<br />

models<br />

44. Small wheels<br />

48. Laurel and Lee<br />

49. Shoot the breeze<br />

51. Adjust<br />

53. Rod’s companion<br />

54. Indian music<br />

55. Jack’s portrayer<br />

on “30 Rock”<br />

56. “___ kleine<br />

Nachtmusik”<br />

58. Lost fish<br />

59. Asia’s shrunken<br />

sea<br />

60. Fiery prefix<br />

63. Day__ (fluorescent<br />

paint maker)<br />

GLENCOE<br />

Writers Theatre<br />

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

242-6000)<br />

■Through ■ Sept. 23:<br />

‘Vietgone’<br />

WILMETTE<br />

The Rock House<br />

(1150 Central Ave.<br />

(847) 256-7625)<br />

■6:30 ■ p.m. Friday,<br />

Sept. 14: Family Night<br />

and Karaoke<br />

■6:30 ■ p.m. Saturday,<br />

Sept. 15: Caleb<br />

James<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 />

■5 ■ p.m. Friday, Sept.<br />

14: Family Night and<br />

Karaoke<br />

■10 ■ a.m. Sunday, Sept.<br />

16: Emily Patt<br />

■Noon, ■ Sunday Sept.<br />

16: Sean Heffernan<br />

Oil Lamp Theater<br />

(1723 Glenview Road,<br />

(847) 834-0738)<br />

■Through ■ Sept. 23:<br />

‘The God Committee’<br />

Curragh Irish Pub<br />

(1800 Tower Drive,<br />

(847) 998-1100)<br />

■7:30 ■ p.m. every<br />

Wednesday: Trivia<br />

LAKE BLUFF<br />

Lake Bluff Brewing<br />

Company<br />

(16 E. Scranton Ave.<br />

(224) 544-5179)<br />

■7-10 ■ p.m. Monday,<br />

Sept. 17: Trivia Night<br />

with the Lake Bluff<br />

Public Library<br />

WINNETKA<br />

Elm Street Shopping<br />

District<br />

(Multiple locations,<br />

HoffmannCRE.com)<br />

■4-8 ■ p.m. Thursdays-<br />

Saturdays in the<br />

summer: Elm Street<br />

music performances<br />

To place an event in The<br />

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

answers<br />

How to play Sudoku<br />

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

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

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

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

1 to 9.<br />

LEVEL: Medium<br />

Crossword by Myles Mellor and Susan Flanagan


glencoeanchor.com life & ARTS<br />

the glencoe anchor | September 13, 2018 | 21<br />

Historical society’s gala remembers Glencoe’s WWI efforts<br />

Hilary Anderson<br />

Freelance Reporter<br />

A group of about 100<br />

Glencoe residents and<br />

friends took a step back<br />

into time courtesy of the<br />

Glencoe Historical Society.<br />

They gathered for<br />

an old-fashioned Gala<br />

Garden Party on GHS<br />

grounds last Saturday,<br />

Sept. 8, where an interactive<br />

exhibit about World<br />

War I is ongoing.<br />

The gala’s purpose was<br />

to honor the 100th anniversary<br />

of the end of<br />

World War I and to celebrate<br />

Glencoe Historical<br />

Society’s prestigious<br />

2018 Award of Merit for<br />

its World War I exhibit by<br />

the American Association<br />

of State and Local History,<br />

the only historical society<br />

so honored in Illinois.<br />

Guests entering the gala<br />

were amazed by the measures<br />

the Glencoe Historical<br />

Society took to bring<br />

visitors back, if only in<br />

their imaginations, to this<br />

historical moment.<br />

The gala entrance greeted<br />

guests with a huge<br />

Chicago Tribune headline<br />

dated Nov. 11, 1918 along<br />

one entire wall, “Great War<br />

Ends. Germany Signed Armistice<br />

at 2:45 a.m.” Red,<br />

white and blue bunting ran<br />

above the entire width of<br />

the headline.<br />

The gala was out in the<br />

garden with a World War<br />

I Armistice Celebratorytype<br />

Dinner.<br />

“It was food that may<br />

have been served by Allies<br />

in England, France,<br />

Italy and the United States<br />

around the time of the<br />

signing of the Armistice,”<br />

said Karen Ettelson, vice<br />

president of Glencoe Historical<br />

Society.<br />

Items included Yorkshire<br />

pudding, Vichyssoise,<br />

Parisien Chicekn<br />

Cordon Bleu, North Atlantic<br />

salmon, English<br />

Victory Garden Salad and<br />

Italian orzo salad. Dessert<br />

included doughboy<br />

brownies, apple hand pies<br />

and ricotta cheesecakes.<br />

Entertainment was ballroom<br />

music for dancing.<br />

“The Glencoe Ballroom<br />

Dance Studio showed the<br />

gathered crowd some of<br />

the steps that were popular<br />

then,” said Evey Schweig,<br />

board member of Glencoe<br />

Historical Society. “Glencoe’s<br />

Viktoriya Dilay and<br />

Peter Minkow gave everyone<br />

insight into what was<br />

popular at the time of the<br />

Armistice.”<br />

Schweig wore a dress<br />

and jewelry for the evening,<br />

considered quite<br />

stylish for the era. Others<br />

were similarly dressed for<br />

that time in history.<br />

“The Glencoe Historical<br />

Society is an all-volunteer<br />

group of local citizens who<br />

teamed together to create a<br />

uniquely interesting exhibit<br />

on the war’s history up<br />

to and including the signing<br />

of the Armistice, Nov.<br />

11, 1918,” said Ed Goodale,<br />

president of Glencoe<br />

Historical Society. “It took<br />

about of year of research.<br />

While it is geared to the<br />

role Glencoe citizens<br />

played in the war effort,<br />

it is a unique education<br />

about the war effort for everyone.”<br />

Even some of the Glencoe<br />

Historical Society’s<br />

former members came<br />

back to help in the research<br />

for the exhibit.<br />

One of them is Ellen<br />

Shubart, who served as<br />

president in the 1970s to<br />

1980s time frame.<br />

“Glencoe is lucky to<br />

Jennifer Faulk (left) and her husband Glenn chat with Evey Schweig, who donned<br />

a 1920s-themed outfit for the evening, Saturday, Sept. 8, at the Glencoe Historical<br />

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

The Coopers (left to right) Christine, Ricky, son Joshua and wife Jeanne Shin-<br />

Cooper pose for a photo.<br />

have the grounds on which<br />

the Glencoe Historical<br />

Society’s exhibit areas,<br />

office and garden are located,”<br />

Shubart said. “We<br />

had nothing at first, no<br />

real home. Sally (Sara)<br />

Eklund donated the land<br />

and buildings on it to the<br />

Society. Her family was<br />

prominent in Glencoe, particularly<br />

in the early part<br />

of the 1900s.”<br />

The exhibits feature<br />

actual photos and videos<br />

of Glencoe residents who<br />

were part of the war effort.<br />

Photos show a horsedrawn<br />

fire wagon, Central<br />

School and Wienecke’s<br />

Hardware store, among<br />

dozens of other locations.<br />

“The exhibit is a visual<br />

history of Glencoe’s past,”<br />

said Mary Osimitz, board<br />

member of Glencoe Historical<br />

Society. “It shows<br />

how connected we all are<br />

and what a small world it<br />

is after all.”<br />

Building the exhibits<br />

was no easy task.<br />

“The passion and skill<br />

of everyone involved was<br />

amazing,” said Peggy<br />

Hamil, the secretary of the<br />

historical society.<br />

John Carouthers III, another<br />

Glencoe Historical<br />

Society board member,<br />

built a replica of an ambulance<br />

used during World<br />

War I.<br />

Carouthers, with the<br />

help of board member Ed<br />

Olinger also created and<br />

built a scaled-down replica<br />

of the Sopwith Camel, a<br />

British single seat biplane<br />

that visitors to the exhibit<br />

can actually sit in.<br />

“It was the most iconic<br />

aircraft of World War I,”<br />

Goodale said. “We now<br />

are looking for what to do<br />

with it. Perhaps there is<br />

someone, maybe a museum<br />

that could use this airplane.<br />

We do not have any<br />

place to store it.”<br />

The entire World War I<br />

exhibit will remain open<br />

to the public until Veterans<br />

Day, Nov. 11, 2018.<br />

“We will dismantle the<br />

exhibits after that,” said<br />

Goodale. “The photos and<br />

information are all digitized.<br />

We will replace the<br />

exhibit with one featuring<br />

Glencoe’s 150 year anniversary<br />

that will open in<br />

early spring 2019.”<br />

Anyone interested in the<br />

giving the Sopwith Camel<br />

airplane now in the Glencoe<br />

Historical Society’s<br />

World War I exhibit a new<br />

home can contact the museum<br />

at www.glencoehistory.org


22 | September 13, 2018 | The glencoe anchor FAITH<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

Faith Briefs<br />

North Shore Congregation Israel (1185<br />

Sheridan Road, Glencoe)<br />

Celebrate Rosh Hashanah<br />

and Yom Kippur<br />

Tot Services are at 9 a.m.<br />

Wednesday, Sept. 19. Free<br />

and open to the community<br />

but a pass is required.<br />

SAVE THE DATE<br />

PRESENTED BY<br />

22ND CENTURY<br />

MEDIA<br />

SATURDAY, OCT. 13<br />

10AM - 2PM<br />

Northbrook Court<br />

1515 Lake Cook Road • Northbrook<br />

THIS EXPO WILL FEATURE:<br />

• Free gift bag to the<br />

first 200 attendees!<br />

• Health Screenings<br />

• Vendor tables<br />

AND MORE<br />

TO COME!<br />

For more information, call 847-272-4565 or<br />

RSVP* at 22ndCenturyMedia.com/active<br />

*RSVP is not required to attend<br />

Macy's Court (lower-level)<br />

FREE<br />

PARKING & ADMISSION<br />

Prayers of High Holy Days<br />

Are you interested in<br />

gaining a deeper understanding<br />

of the prayers we<br />

say during the High Holy<br />

Days? Whether you know<br />

the words or not, this<br />

two-part class with Rabbi<br />

Geffen from 12:30-1:30<br />

In Memoriam<br />

Virginia Denham<br />

Virginia Denham was<br />

born on Aug. 28, 1925 and<br />

died Aug. 31. Denham was<br />

a resident of Oregon at the<br />

time of passing. She grew<br />

up in Glencoe and graduated<br />

high school from North<br />

Shore Country Day School<br />

in 1943. Donations in her<br />

memory may be made to<br />

the National Parks Foundation<br />

at www.nationalparks.org<br />

In accordance<br />

with her wishes, no funeral<br />

service will be held.<br />

Barbara DiCola<br />

New Trier graduate Barbara<br />

(Leahy) DiCola, 58,<br />

died unexpectedly on Aug.<br />

8 at her home in Alameda,<br />

Calif. DiCola was born in<br />

Oak Park to Thomas M.<br />

Leahy, Jr. and Marjorie<br />

(Thalin) Leahy and spent<br />

most of her life in Wilmette<br />

and Chicago. DiCola was a<br />

1977 graduate of New Trier<br />

East High School, a 1981<br />

graduate of Colorado State<br />

University with a Bachelor<br />

of Science in Business Administration,<br />

and in 2007<br />

received a Bachelor of Science<br />

in Nursing from Rush<br />

University. DiCola met the<br />

love of her life and was<br />

married in 1998 to Paul J.<br />

DiCola. He preceded her<br />

p.m. Friday, Sept. 14, will<br />

invite exploration of the<br />

key sections of the High<br />

Holy Day liturgy in order<br />

to better understand what<br />

the Days of Awe are really<br />

about and what opportunities<br />

they hold for us.<br />

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

Vernon Ave.)<br />

Soup Kitchen<br />

The church needs helping<br />

hands to pack 100<br />

lunches 3 p.m. Thursday,<br />

Sept. 13. Cooks are also<br />

needed at 5 p.m. and servers<br />

ages 5 and up at 6 p.m.<br />

to help serve 80-90 diners.<br />

in death in 2003. She was<br />

a loving sister to Thomas<br />

C. Leahy (Marilyn), Nancy<br />

Leahy Glass (Michael)<br />

and Jane Leahy Haras. She<br />

was an aunt to Katherine<br />

and Thomas Haras, Lauren<br />

and Thomas Christopher<br />

Leahy, Zev, Tala and<br />

Mica Glass, a godmother to<br />

many and a great-godmother<br />

to Katherine’s daughter,<br />

Ember Rose. Dicola was a<br />

flight attendant for American<br />

Airlines for 35 years,<br />

which helped fulfill her<br />

zest for travel and exploration.<br />

She also worked<br />

in the Neurology Unit for<br />

Alexian Brothers Medical<br />

Center for five years.<br />

A memorial service will be<br />

held at 1 p.m. on Sept. 22 at<br />

St. Augustine’s Episcopal<br />

Church, 1140 Wilmette Avenue,<br />

Wilmette.<br />

Dorothy Ann “Dee” Van Aalsburg<br />

On September 1, with<br />

family by her bedside, Dorothy<br />

Ann “Dee” Van Aalsburg,<br />

a New Trier graduate,<br />

died from a valiant and epic<br />

battle with cancer after successfully<br />

beating the disease<br />

for over a decade. Van<br />

Aalsburg was born Sept.<br />

8, 1950 to Frank Brookes<br />

Hubachek, Jr. and his wife,<br />

The meal includes ham,<br />

turkey, beans and salad<br />

during the supper hour at<br />

First Methodist Church in<br />

Evanston.<br />

St. Elisabeth’s Labyrinth<br />

The labyrinth is open<br />

daily to the public for<br />

walking meditation, from<br />

dawn to dusk. At the corner<br />

of Hawthorn, South<br />

and Greenwood Avenues.<br />

Submit information for The<br />

Anchor’s Faith page to<br />

m.wojtychiw@22ndcentury<br />

media.com.<br />

Imogene (Chancellor). She<br />

grew up in Glencoe and<br />

was a graduate of New Trier<br />

High School. She is celebrated<br />

and remembered<br />

for her abundant happiness,<br />

even in the most trying of<br />

times, and her ability to<br />

laugh in the face of adversity.<br />

All those that came in<br />

contact with Van Aalsburg<br />

would agree she made life<br />

that much brighter. She<br />

was a devout Christian and<br />

supporter of Billy Graham<br />

Ministries and various local<br />

charities. Van Aalsburg<br />

is survived by her husband<br />

of 33 years, Ted Van<br />

Aalsburg; son Dillon W.<br />

Rasmussen (Tom Fox) and<br />

grandsons, Calvin and Oscar.<br />

Her younger brother<br />

Steve Hubachek (Julie) is<br />

also a resident of the Denver<br />

Metro Area (Thornton)<br />

and she is preceded in<br />

death by her older brother<br />

William “Billy” Hubachek.<br />

Memorial service to be announced<br />

at a later date.<br />

Have someone’s life you’d<br />

like to honor? Email Michael<br />

Wojtychiw at m.wojtychiw@<br />

22ndcenturymedia.com with<br />

information about a loved<br />

one who was part of the<br />

Glencoe community.


glencoeanchor.com dining out<br />

the glencoe anchor | September 13, 2018 | 23<br />

Customer is king at Glenview’s Goode & Fresh Pizza Bakery<br />

Erin Yarnall<br />

Contributing Editor<br />

When Jay Phillips decided<br />

to open his own restaurant<br />

in 1983, he didn’t have<br />

a lot of competition.<br />

After working for various<br />

restaurants for nearly<br />

a decade, Phillips opened<br />

Goode & Fresh Pizza Bakery<br />

on Waukegan Road in<br />

Glenview.<br />

“When we opened up,<br />

there were only two other<br />

pizza places,” Phillips said.<br />

Now, he says, there are<br />

14 in Glenview alone.<br />

In the 35 years since<br />

he’s opened shop, other<br />

pizza places have come and<br />

gone, but Goode & Fresh<br />

remains.<br />

Both Jay Phillips and<br />

co-owner Kris Phillips believe<br />

their success lies in<br />

the quality of their food,<br />

and their attention to their<br />

service they have with customers.<br />

“We’ve withstood for a<br />

long time,” Kris Phillips<br />

said. “We’ve always taken<br />

a lot of pride in the quality,<br />

value and service we have<br />

given our customers.”<br />

Part of the service that<br />

they give to their customers<br />

is being accommodating<br />

toward people with allergies<br />

or other food intolerances.<br />

“Because we’re an independent<br />

restaurant, we have<br />

the option or opportunity to<br />

change our menu when we<br />

feel that we need to or want<br />

to,” Jay Phillips said.<br />

“We have gluten-free<br />

items,” Kris Phillips said.<br />

“We can make vegan items.<br />

People can bring in their<br />

own cheese. We’re nutfree.”<br />

Kris Phillips believes<br />

the restaurant’s ability to<br />

accommodate their menu<br />

items for whatever needs<br />

customers may have sets<br />

them apart from other restaurants<br />

in the area.<br />

“We really do everything<br />

we can to accommodate<br />

Goode & Fresh Pizza<br />

Bakery<br />

1336 Waukegan Road,<br />

Glenview<br />

(847) 724-0520<br />

9:30 a.m.-9 p.m.<br />

Monday-Thursday<br />

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

Friday<br />

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

Saturday<br />

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

Sunday<br />

what people need and what<br />

people want,” Kris Phillips<br />

said. “We try to make everybody<br />

happy.”<br />

The two co-owners also<br />

attribute a lot of their success<br />

to the support they receive<br />

from their family and<br />

employees.<br />

After Jay Phillips suffered<br />

a stroke in 2015, his<br />

six children stepped up to<br />

work more frequently in<br />

the restaurant.<br />

“All of my kids work or<br />

have worked here,” Kris<br />

Phillips said.<br />

They also have an employee<br />

who has worked<br />

at the shop for nearly 30<br />

years, and another one who<br />

has been there for 25.<br />

“We’re so fortunate to<br />

have such an incredible<br />

staff,” Kris Phillips said.<br />

“They’re the key to it.”<br />

A group of 22nd Century<br />

Media editors stopped by<br />

the shop recently to sample<br />

some of their menu items.<br />

We first sampled the<br />

namesake of the restaurant<br />

— its pizza.<br />

But when ordering pizza<br />

at Goode & Fresh Pizza<br />

Bakery, it’s important to be<br />

specific.<br />

The restaurant serves up<br />

pies in a variety of ways<br />

— thin crust, stuffed, in<br />

calzones or pan crust party<br />

pizzas.<br />

Each pizza can also be<br />

topped with more than 20<br />

vegetables, nine meats,<br />

four options for cheese and<br />

six different sauces.<br />

The first pizza we<br />

sampled was a thin crust,<br />

topped with spinach and tomato<br />

($15.49 for a 12-inch<br />

pizza with two toppings).<br />

The crust was crunchy, and<br />

was complemented by the<br />

toppings and sauce.<br />

We also sampled a<br />

cheese stuffed pizza ($6.99<br />

for a 6-inch), which lived<br />

up to its name. Mozzarella<br />

cheese was oozing out of<br />

the pizza, and was topped<br />

with a thick tomato sauce.<br />

The restaurant also<br />

serves subs and sandwiches,<br />

and we were able<br />

to sample the spinach sub<br />

($6.50), which was packed<br />

with black olives, red onion,<br />

tomato, mushroom,<br />

mayonnaise and freshly<br />

chopped spinach baked<br />

with mozzarella cheese.<br />

Goode & Fresh Pizza Bakery’s thin crust pizza ($15.49 for<br />

a 12-inch pizza with two toppings) can be served with a<br />

variety of toppings. Alyssa Groh/22nd Century Media<br />

The spinach sub is one<br />

of the two original sub<br />

sandwiches on the menu —<br />

along with the vegetarian<br />

sub ($6.50). The two sandwiches<br />

have been on Jay’s<br />

original menu since opening<br />

the restaurant.<br />

We also had the chance<br />

to try one of the restaurant’s<br />

chopped salad ($8.99 for a<br />

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regular), one of five salad<br />

options on Goode & Fresh’s<br />

huge menu. It’s made with<br />

romaine hearts, tomato, egg,<br />

avocado, scallions, bacon,<br />

roasted corn, tortilla strips,<br />

provolone cheese and a citrus<br />

mango dressing.<br />

Like all of their other<br />

menu items, each salad is<br />

customizable and available<br />

in a wide array of<br />

sizes, from a regular, which<br />

serves 1-2, or large party<br />

salads, which can serve up<br />

to 25 people.<br />

The restaurant offers<br />

take-out and catering services,<br />

and with a menu as<br />

large and customizable as<br />

theirs, there’s something<br />

for everyone.


24 | September 13, 2018 | The glencoe anchor real estate<br />

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glencoeanchor.com classifieds<br />

the glencoe anchor | September 13, 2018 | 25<br />

CLASSIFIEDS<br />

Help Wanted · Garage Sales · Automotive<br />

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$52 4 lines/<br />

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$50 7 7 papers<br />

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$30 7 4 papers<br />

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Glenview, 3611 Linneman St.<br />

9/13 &9/14 9-4p. 9/15 9-1p.<br />

Everything must go! Antiques,<br />

collectibles, vintage items,<br />

furn, kitchen ware, tools, clothing,<br />

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22nd Century Media seeks Graphic Designer<br />

Position Overview:<br />

22nd Century Media, a media publishing company based in<br />

Orland Park & Northbrook, is seeking a Graphic Designer<br />

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Responsibilities Include:<br />

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26 | September 13, 2018 | The glencoe anchor classifieds<br />

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glencoeanchor.com sports<br />

the glencoe anchor | September 13, 2018 | 27<br />

Athlete of the Week<br />

10 Questions<br />

with Hannah Kelly<br />

The Loyola senior is a<br />

member of the cross-country<br />

team.<br />

When and why did<br />

you start running?<br />

I ran mostly as cross<br />

training for dance when I<br />

was younger and always<br />

enjoyed it, but it wasn’t<br />

until freshman year that I<br />

started consistently running.<br />

I joined the team<br />

mostly to meet people and<br />

get involved in something<br />

at Loyola. My three older<br />

brothers all ran cross country<br />

and track, so my parents<br />

encouraged that and I’ve<br />

been running ever since.<br />

Do you have any<br />

superstitions before,<br />

during or after a<br />

meet?<br />

Before a meet, I usually<br />

get pretty nervous, so I always<br />

have to listen to music<br />

and The team always<br />

talks and prays together<br />

right before we race, which<br />

really helps with nerves.<br />

What’s one thing<br />

people don’t know<br />

about you?<br />

I’m double jointed.<br />

What’s one item on<br />

your bucket list?<br />

I’d love to travel to all<br />

seven continents.<br />

If you could travel<br />

anywhere, where<br />

would you go?<br />

I’d definitely go to Thailand.<br />

What’s the best part<br />

about being a Loyola<br />

athlete?<br />

My favorite part about<br />

being a Loyola athlete is<br />

the support from the whole<br />

school as well as the size<br />

of the girls’ cross country<br />

team - it is really nice to<br />

have.<br />

What’s the best advice<br />

you’ve gotten and<br />

who’s it from?<br />

It’s simple, but my dad<br />

always reminds me to focus<br />

on the big picture and<br />

not stress about the little<br />

things in life.<br />

If you could play<br />

another sport, what<br />

would it be and why?<br />

PHOTO SUBMITTED<br />

If I didn’t run, I would<br />

love to play lacrosse<br />

What’s been your<br />

favorite moment at<br />

Loyola?<br />

The state football game<br />

last year was a great experience<br />

as it was really cool<br />

to see such a large portion<br />

of the student body supporting<br />

the team.<br />

If you could have a<br />

superpower, what<br />

would it be and why?<br />

If I could have a superpower,<br />

I would pick teleportation<br />

because I think<br />

it would be nice to easily<br />

travel anywhere.<br />

Interview by Sports Editor<br />

Michael Wojtychiw<br />

<br />

<br />

2018 Football Standings<br />

Central Suburban League South Division<br />

Evanston 3-0 overall, 0-0 conference<br />

Maine South 2-1, 0-0<br />

New Trier 2-1, 0-0<br />

Niles North 1-2, 0-0<br />

Glenbrook South 0-3, 0-0<br />

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28 | September 13, 2018 | The glencoe anchor sports<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

Field hockey<br />

Trevians stay undefeated with win over NSCDS<br />

Neil Milbert<br />

Freelance Reporter<br />

New Trier has just over<br />

4,000 students and North<br />

Shore Country Day has 225<br />

but those numbers proved<br />

to be irrelevant when their<br />

field hockey teams met last<br />

season.<br />

During the regular season<br />

the Raiders defeated<br />

the Trevians for the first<br />

time in any sport and then<br />

in the semifinals of the<br />

state tournament, they did<br />

it again before losing the<br />

championship game to<br />

Lake Forest.<br />

Not surprisingly, both<br />

teams were flaunting undefeated<br />

records when they<br />

stepped onto the Skokie<br />

Playfields to renew their<br />

rivalry on Sept. 5.<br />

This time it was New<br />

Trier that was victorious,<br />

prevailing 4-1 in a game<br />

that was interrupted by a<br />

lightning and a rainstorm<br />

early in the second half.<br />

Play resumed but heavy<br />

rain continued intermittently<br />

for the duration of<br />

the contest.<br />

“I don’t think this was<br />

indicative of either team’s<br />

best play,” said Mullery<br />

Doar, who has taken over<br />

as head coach of the Raiders<br />

(4-1) after serving as an<br />

assistant coach for the previous<br />

two seasons. “You’ve<br />

got to hand it to New Trier.<br />

They put it together today.<br />

“I went to North Shore<br />

Country Day and the fact<br />

that we can play with them<br />

boggles my mind. It’s a testament<br />

to these girls.”<br />

The Trevians (7-0) were<br />

coming off a successful<br />

tournament appearance in<br />

a St. Louis invitational,<br />

where they defeated teams<br />

from Missouri, Kentucky,<br />

Texas and Wisconsin.<br />

The star of this game<br />

was Kathryn McLaughlin,<br />

a junior who didn’t play in<br />

St. Louis because she was<br />

playing in an ice hockey<br />

tournament with the Chicago<br />

Young Americans, one<br />

of the premier teams in the<br />

Midwest.<br />

A minute after North<br />

Shore Country Day sophomore<br />

Jane Scullion opened<br />

the scoring with 7 minutes,<br />

24 seconds elapsed,<br />

McLaughlin found the net<br />

to tie the score.<br />

Late in the half,<br />

McLaughlin’s attempt to<br />

give the Trevians the lead<br />

was rejected by senior<br />

goalie Abby Renaud but<br />

she persisted and managed<br />

to find the net for the goahead<br />

goal with 2:12 remaining<br />

in the half.<br />

“The first 10 minutes<br />

we were playing very defensively,”<br />

said New Trier<br />

coach Stephanie Nykaza.<br />

“Once Kathryn put in that<br />

first goal we started attacking<br />

more and played well.”<br />

McLaughlin played junior<br />

varsity field hockey<br />

as a freshman but spent<br />

last season skating for the<br />

Young Americans. Now<br />

that she has gone back to<br />

field hockey, it often seems<br />

as though everything is<br />

happening in slow motion.<br />

“Field hockey is a lot<br />

slower sport so you can<br />

control the ball,” she said.<br />

“There’s a much faster pace<br />

in ice hockey. The puck<br />

changes hands much faster.”<br />

With 76 seconds elapsed<br />

in the second half, junior<br />

Eve Lake scored the Trevians’<br />

third goal — shortly<br />

before the lightning that<br />

accompanied the rain temporarily<br />

halted play — and<br />

their last goal came from<br />

the stick of senior Faith<br />

Stineman with 97 seconds<br />

left in the game.<br />

Not only is Nykaza<br />

pleased with the offensive<br />

performances of her juniors<br />

this season, the New Trier<br />

coach likes the strong play<br />

she has been getting from<br />

senior defenders Julianne<br />

Ross, Kathleen Carmody,<br />

Lucy Murray and Ella<br />

Schotz. The only other<br />

seniors on the roster are<br />

Stineman and goalie Emmaliese<br />

Lauber.<br />

While Nykaza had 21<br />

players at her disposal,<br />

Doar had only 14 and<br />

her three substitutes were<br />

New Trier’s Kathryn McLaughlin puts a shot on game<br />

as North Shore Country Day School’s Abby Renaud<br />

goes down to make a save Sept. 5 in Winnetka. Michael<br />

Wojtychiw/22nd Century Media<br />

freshmen Lindsey Glew<br />

and Taylor and Kendall<br />

Vallas.<br />

Not only does North<br />

Shore Country Day have a<br />

small enrollment the school<br />

has three other fall sports<br />

— volleyball, tennis and<br />

cross-country — competing<br />

for the girls on campus.<br />

For freshmen and sophomores,<br />

that means the opportunity<br />

to get significant<br />

playing time on the field<br />

hockey team.<br />

“We have as many freshmen<br />

as seniors,” Doar said.<br />

“We have a lot of young<br />

players so getting them in<br />

games like this is great because<br />

they get experience<br />

and exposure.”<br />

The seniors are Renaud,<br />

Paige Forester and Katie<br />

Nolan.<br />

After time-sharing in<br />

goal her freshman season,<br />

Renaud has been the starter<br />

ever since.<br />

“Abby has quick reactions,<br />

good instincts and<br />

she can dive,” Doar said.<br />

“She’s steady; she doesn’t<br />

got frazzled.<br />

“On offense Caroline<br />

Segal, one of our returning<br />

juniors, and Jane Scullion<br />

have been getting goals for<br />

us. (Junior) Xas Morgan is<br />

another offensive threat.<br />

“Our team has some<br />

strong players.”<br />

This Week In...<br />

Trevian varsity<br />

athletics<br />

Boys cross-country<br />

■Sept. ■ 15 - at Libertyville<br />

Invite, 9 a.m.<br />

■Sept. ■ 17 - at CSL Quad,<br />

4:30 p.m.<br />

Girls cross-country<br />

■Sept. ■ 15 - at Libertyville<br />

Invite, 8:30 a.m.<br />

■Sept. ■ 17 - host CSL Quad,<br />

4:30 p.m.<br />

Field hockey<br />

■Sept. ■ 14 - host Glenbard<br />

West, 5:30 p.m.<br />

Boys golf<br />

■Sept. ■ 13 - host Evanston<br />

(at Winnetka Park District),<br />

4 p.m.<br />

■Sept. ■ 15 - at Mundelein<br />

Invite (at Steeple Chase Golf<br />

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

Girls golf<br />

■Sept. ■ 15 - at Decatur<br />

Eisenhower Invite, 9 a.m.<br />

■Sept. ■ 18 - vs. Loyola (at<br />

TBA), 4 p.m.<br />

Boys soccer<br />

■Sept. ■ 13 - at Maine<br />

South, 7 p.m.<br />

■Sept. ■ 15 - host Round<br />

Lake, 11 a.m.<br />

■Sept. ■ 17 - at Niles West,<br />

6:30 p.m.<br />

Girls swimming and<br />

diving<br />

■Sept. ■ 14 - host Loyola,<br />

5:30 p.m.<br />

Girls tennis<br />

■Sept. ■ 13 - at Maine<br />

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

■Sept. ■ 15 - host HP, 8:30<br />

a.m.<br />

■Sept. ■ 17 - at Evanston,<br />

4:30 p.m.<br />

Girls volleyball<br />

■Sept. ■ 17 - at Evanston, 6<br />

Rambler varsity<br />

athletics<br />

Boys cross-country<br />

■Sept. ■ 15 - at Peoria Invite,<br />

9 a.m.<br />

Girls cross-country<br />

■Sept. ■ 15 - at Peoria Invite,<br />

10 a.m.<br />

Field hockey<br />

■Sept. ■ 14 - host Latin,<br />

6:15 p.m.<br />

■Sept. ■ 15 - host NSCD,<br />

6:15<br />

Boys golf<br />

■Sept. ■ 15 - at Wheeling<br />

Invite (at Chevy Chase Golf<br />

Club), 8 a.m.<br />

■Sept. ■ 15 - at Mundelein<br />

Invite, 1 p.m.<br />

■Sept. ■ 17 - at Evanston (at<br />

Evanston Golf Club), 4 p.m.<br />

■Sept. ■ 18 - at St. Viator (at<br />

Park Ridge Country Club), 4<br />

Girls golf<br />

■Sept. ■ 13 - at Glenbrook<br />

North (at Sportsman’s<br />

Country Club), 4 p.m.<br />

■Sept. ■ 15 - at Decatur<br />

Eisenhower Invite, 9 a.m.<br />

■Sept. ■ 17 - at Prospect, 4<br />

■Sept. ■ 18 - vs. New Trier<br />

(at TBA), 4 p.m.<br />

■Sept. ■ 19 - host<br />

Resurrection (at Glencoe<br />

Golf Course), 4 p.m.<br />

Boys soccer<br />

■Sept. ■ 13 - at Marmion,<br />

5:30 p.m.<br />

■Sept. ■ 17 - host LF, 5 p.m.<br />

■Sept. ■ 18 - at St.<br />

Laurence, 6 p.m.<br />

Girls swimming<br />

■Sept. ■ 14 - at New Trier,<br />

5:30 p.m.<br />

Girls tennis<br />

■Sept. ■ 15 - host Invite, 8<br />

a.m.<br />

■Sept. ■ 17 - host Young,<br />

4:30 p.m.<br />

■Sept. ■ 20 - host Latin,<br />

4:30 p.m.<br />

Girls volleyball<br />

■Sept. ■ 18 - host De La<br />

Salle, 6 p.m.<br />

Raider varsity<br />

athletics<br />

Field hockey<br />

■Sept. ■ 14 - at GBS, 4:15<br />

■Sept. ■ 17 - at Loyola, 4:30<br />

Boys golf<br />

■Sept. ■ 20 - host Evanston<br />

(at Merit Club), 4 p.m.<br />

Girls golf<br />

■Sept. ■ 14 - at Latin Invite<br />

(at Marovitz Golf Course),<br />

4 p.m.<br />

Boys soccer<br />

■Sept. ■ 13 - at Christian<br />

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

■Sept. ■ 14 - host Elgin<br />

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

■Sept. ■ 17 - host Parker,<br />

4:30 p.m.<br />

■Sept. ■ 20 - host Latin,<br />

4:30 p.m.<br />

Girls tennis<br />

■Sept. ■ 13 - at St. Viator,<br />

4:30 p.m.<br />

■Sept. ■ 17 - host Morgan<br />

Park Academy, 4:30 p.m.<br />

■Sept. ■ 20 - at U-High, 4:30<br />

p.m.<br />

Girls volleyball<br />

■Sept. ■ 13 - host U-High,<br />

5:30 p.m.<br />

■Sept. ■ 17 - host Lake<br />

Forest Academy, 5:30 p.m.


glencoeanchor.com sports<br />

the glencoe anchor | September 13, 2018 | 29<br />

Girls volleyball<br />

Loyola learns from<br />

miscues, beats New Trier<br />

Michael Wojtychiw<br />

Sports Editor<br />

In any sport, making<br />

adjustments from game to<br />

game is a vital aspect that<br />

can help determine future<br />

outcomes. How a team<br />

adjusts from seeing what<br />

worked and what can be<br />

worked on can be the difference<br />

between a win and<br />

a loss.<br />

Following its three-set<br />

loss to New Trier in the<br />

title game of the Summer’s<br />

End Tournament Sept. 1,<br />

Loyola (8-2) watched film<br />

from the match, worked on<br />

some things and came out<br />

on fire when it beat the Trevians<br />

four days later 25-11,<br />

25-15 Sept. 5 in Wilmette.<br />

“Everyone was playing<br />

to their highest level, to<br />

levels we know they could<br />

play. It wasn’t just a couple<br />

players,” Loyola coach<br />

Mallory Thelander said.<br />

“Every single player was<br />

on the same page. Every<br />

player was competing at<br />

the level we know they can<br />

compete at.<br />

“We came out of that<br />

match Saturday wanting so<br />

much more, knowing how<br />

much more we could have<br />

done. We always put film<br />

up for the girls to watch<br />

themselves and we had<br />

a lot of unforced errors,<br />

which we can’t do. .”<br />

A Mary Kate Lopez<br />

kill that broke a two-all<br />

tie, started a 7-0 lead that<br />

gave the Ramblers a 9-2<br />

lead, one the Trevians (7-1)<br />

wouldn’t be able to come<br />

back from. Outside hitter<br />

Lizzie Walker was at the<br />

service line for the entire<br />

run, one that saw the Trevians<br />

hit into three hitting errors<br />

and an unforced setting<br />

Loyola’s Jackie Yau (5), Anne Martinson (1), and Mary<br />

Kate Lopez (10) celebrate after a point in the Ramblers’<br />

Sept. 5 match against New Trier in Wilmette. Tracy<br />

Allen/22nd Century Media<br />

error.<br />

Coincidentally, Walker<br />

was at the service line with<br />

the Ramblers up 20-11, as<br />

they went on a run to win<br />

the set 25-11.<br />

“I was just staying focused<br />

and blocking out<br />

everything around me,”<br />

Walker said. “I just focus<br />

on getting the ball in the<br />

court and blocking everything<br />

else out.”<br />

As dominating as the first<br />

set was, the second was<br />

even more so. The Ramblers<br />

ran out to leads of<br />

12-1 and 15-3, before both<br />

teams started substituting<br />

and putting in some of their<br />

other players. Lopez had<br />

three kills in the 12-1 run<br />

start, while Julia Martinez<br />

added two of her own.<br />

“We were not passing<br />

well and that’s the name<br />

of the game,” New Trier<br />

coach Hannah Hsieh said.<br />

“We were anticipating it,<br />

they were going to serve<br />

us deep and we still didn’t<br />

even make that adjustment,<br />

even when we practiced<br />

that. We set high balls and<br />

they had a big block. They<br />

executed well.”<br />

Loyola got equal distribution<br />

from its seniors as<br />

Lopez led the team with<br />

eight kills, four blocks and<br />

six assists, Martinez added<br />

seven kills and two blocks,<br />

Elizabeth Ford six kills and<br />

Anne Martinson 16 assists.<br />

“The experience of having<br />

one more year over the<br />

juniors, especially at the<br />

varsity level, they know<br />

what it feels like and how<br />

to compete at this level,”<br />

Thelander said.<br />

Maddie McGregor led<br />

the Trevs with three kills.<br />

The Trevians know that<br />

matches like these are ones<br />

that can make them a better<br />

team, give them something<br />

to learn from as the season<br />

moves forward.<br />

“We simply said that<br />

that’s the best loss we have<br />

all season because that’s<br />

going to motivate us to<br />

make changes and continue<br />

on what we need to<br />

work on because this is not<br />

a team that has arrived,”<br />

Hsieh said. “This is a team<br />

that has things they can get<br />

better at and that’s something<br />

that hopefully can<br />

motivate them.”<br />

Boys golf<br />

Radler leads Loyola to Deerfield Invite title<br />

Gary Larsen<br />

Freelance Reporter<br />

Loyola Academy’s Peter<br />

Radler placed eighth as a<br />

junior at last year’s Class<br />

3A state finals, but he knew<br />

coming into his senior year<br />

that the Ramblers would<br />

need more from him than<br />

just low scores this season.<br />

“We had a group of established<br />

leaders graduate<br />

so I knew this year it was<br />

going to be my turn,” Radler<br />

said. “I was ready for<br />

it. Golf is such an individual<br />

sport that a lot of leadership<br />

comes off the course.<br />

So that’s where I’ve tried to<br />

help.”<br />

Loyola coach Tim Kane<br />

is happy with what Radler<br />

is providing both on and off<br />

the course this year.<br />

“He’s a very consistent<br />

player, he’s level-headed,<br />

and he’s not a flashy player<br />

but he does a really nice<br />

job,” Kane said of Radler.<br />

“And he has definitely<br />

stepped up as a senior, and<br />

he’s able to help coach<br />

other players. He has also<br />

become more consistent as<br />

a player. He plays well consistently<br />

and he’s comfortable<br />

playing well.”<br />

Radler shot a 71 to lead<br />

the Ramblers to the team<br />

title of this year’s 12-team<br />

Deerfield Invite on Saturday,<br />

Sept. 8. The Ramblers<br />

edged second-place<br />

New Trier by a single team<br />

point, 298-299. Highland<br />

Park placed third with 304<br />

points.<br />

In addition to Radler’s<br />

71, the Ramblers got quality<br />

scores from Jack Crawshaw<br />

(74), Ryan Savarie<br />

(75), and Patrick Adler<br />

(78).<br />

Golfers had to contend<br />

with one of the first windy<br />

and cool days of the season<br />

at this year’s Deerfield<br />

Invite, playing at the Twin<br />

Orchard Country Club in<br />

Long Grove.<br />

“It’s a really tough course<br />

in windy conditions today,<br />

and the kids grinded out a<br />

really good score,” Kane<br />

said. “We were focused today.<br />

They knew conditions<br />

would be tough and they<br />

adjusted.”<br />

Radler’s 71 was a welcome<br />

change for him in<br />

light of years past at the<br />

Deerfield Invite.<br />

“The last couple years<br />

I’ve played in this tournament<br />

I haven’t done so<br />

well, so I came in thinking<br />

‘it’s windy and greens<br />

are fast, so who knows<br />

what’s going to happen?’,”<br />

Radler said. ‘But I made a<br />

couple good putts early in<br />

the round and then I played<br />

well from there.<br />

“The driver wasn’t very<br />

good today but I put the<br />

ball in the right spot around<br />

the greens. And from there<br />

you can make a bunch of<br />

putts as long as you’re below<br />

the hole.”<br />

New Trier placed second<br />

at a tournament for the<br />

second time in three days,<br />

having taken second behind<br />

team champion Lake<br />

Forest in a tournament at<br />

Buffalo Grove on Sept. 6.<br />

Saturday it was Loyola<br />

that nipped New Trier at<br />

the wire by a single point.<br />

“We’re doing a lot better<br />

than we did at the<br />

beginning of the season<br />

and I think we’ll only get<br />

better as the season goes<br />

on,” New Trier’s Charlie<br />

Creamean said.<br />

Creamean led the Trevians<br />

with a low round of 73.<br />

“My putting was really<br />

good and my wedges were<br />

as well,” he said. “It was a<br />

little hard adjusting to the<br />

wind because of how much<br />

it affects your shots. You<br />

had to keep (the ball) low<br />

and I was able to do that<br />

today.”<br />

New Trier coach Pete<br />

Drevline likes what he’s<br />

been getting from Creamean.<br />

“Charlie is really coming<br />

on lately,” Drevline<br />

said. “He’s been coming<br />

on strong. It’s one of the<br />

windier days we’ve had<br />

today so you have to make<br />

solid contact or the wind<br />

will take it away. You have<br />

to have solid contact and<br />

Charlie did that today.”<br />

Daniel Tanaka (74),<br />

Brian Joseph (75) and Will<br />

Hedstrom (77) also shined<br />

for New Trier.<br />

“We’re trending upward<br />

and that’s what we try to<br />

do,” Drevline said. “We<br />

want to play our best golf<br />

three weeks from now and<br />

we’re definitely moving in<br />

the right direction.”<br />

North Shore Country<br />

day finished twelfth, led<br />

by Henry Echt (81), Ward<br />

Madigan (83), Eli Sherman<br />

(84), and Evan Dybas (91).<br />

Highland Park’s thirdplace<br />

finish featured a 73<br />

from Judd Moss, who had<br />

one club to thank above all<br />

others.<br />

“My putting was really<br />

good today,” Moss said.<br />

“And I had a chip-in at<br />

(hole) 17. I was solid off<br />

the tee and I was just really<br />

consistent. Everything was<br />

consistent and the putter<br />

was really good. I didn’t<br />

finish as strong as I could<br />

have but it was a good day.”<br />

The Giants also got a<br />

good day’s work from Max<br />

Golding (74), Jared Grossman<br />

(78), and Jake Pielet<br />

(79) to finish with 304<br />

points.<br />

“A tough day, a lot of<br />

wind, a tough course to<br />

play and you saw some<br />

great scores,” Giants coach<br />

Paul Harris said. “A 304<br />

was really solid and it was<br />

a nice day overall.”


30 | September 13, 2018 | The glencoe anchor sports<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

Mount Carmel shocks Loyola, ends home winning streak<br />

Neil Milbert<br />

Freelance Reporter<br />

Back home for the 50th<br />

reunion of his 1968 Loyola<br />

Academy graduating class<br />

on Saturday, Sept. 8, Bill<br />

Murray showed up to<br />

watch the Ramblers’ football<br />

home opener against<br />

Mount Carmel.<br />

It had a Hollywood ending.<br />

Unfortunately for the<br />

Ramblers, it wasn’t a happy<br />

ending.<br />

Down by 11 points with<br />

4 minutes, 24 seconds remaining,<br />

they pulled within<br />

five with 2:46 to play and<br />

then made another desperate<br />

drive in the final 69 seconds<br />

that ended when quarterback<br />

Matthew Schiltz<br />

was stopped at the goal<br />

line on the last play of the<br />

game.<br />

The do-or-die drive began<br />

when a Mount Carmel<br />

punt rolled dead on<br />

the Loyola 17-yard line.<br />

Collaborating with receivers<br />

Rory Boos, Artie Collins<br />

and Matt Mangan and<br />

helped by three penalties<br />

by the Caravan — two of<br />

which were for pass interference<br />

in the end zone<br />

in the last six seconds —<br />

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Loyola’s Tyler Flores (24) breaks a tackle by Mount<br />

Carmel’s Matt Lenti to score Loyola’s second<br />

touchdown Saturday, Sept. 8, in Wilmette. Tracy<br />

Allen/22nd Century Media<br />

Schiltz led the Ramblers to<br />

the Caravan 4-yard-line.<br />

With three seconds on<br />

the clock, he rolled left<br />

looking for receivers and<br />

when he saw no one was<br />

open he scrambled toward<br />

the left corner of the end<br />

zone in an attempt to score<br />

the game-winning touchdown.<br />

Schiltz was met by tacklers<br />

and fell inches short,<br />

sending Mount Carmel<br />

back to the South Side celebrating<br />

a 17-12 triumph.<br />

“We knew their defense<br />

was good,” Loyola<br />

coach John Holecek said.<br />

“They’re a big, powerful<br />

team. They’ve got giant<br />

size; they’ve got speed. We<br />

played well defensively<br />

sometimes but again their<br />

size wore us down.”<br />

Ironically, at the outset of<br />

the contest, almost everything<br />

seemed to be going<br />

the Ramblers’ way.<br />

On the first play from<br />

scrimmage, defensive back<br />

Michael Byrne intercepted<br />

a pass thrown by Rad<br />

Premovic at the Mount<br />

Carmel 17 and five plays<br />

later, Schiltz threw a 7-yard<br />

touchdown pass to Boos.<br />

The Caravan was penalized<br />

for encroachment<br />

when the teams lined up<br />

for the extra point kick so,<br />

hoping to take advantage of<br />

the short yardage situation,<br />

Holecek decided to try for a<br />

two-point conversion. The<br />

ballcarrier on the conversion<br />

attempt, Tyler Flores,<br />

was thwarted and Loyola<br />

had to settle for a 6-0 lead.<br />

Mount Carmel had to<br />

punt on its ensuing possession<br />

and Jared Lombardi<br />

made a fair catch at his<br />

own 38-yard line. Three<br />

plays later, Schiltz connected<br />

with Boos on a 52-yard<br />

pass play that put the ball<br />

on the 5. Two rushes by<br />

Setting the<br />

Standards of<br />

Innovation<br />

Michael Gavric took it to<br />

the 1 but an end zone pass<br />

by Schiltz on fourth down<br />

went out of bounds.<br />

The momentum gradually<br />

shifted to Mount Carmel.<br />

The Caravan gained<br />

a 7-6 lead on Kieran Conjar’s<br />

one-yard run and Julian<br />

Patino’s point after<br />

touchdown in the second<br />

quarter, increased the lead<br />

on Patino’s 40-yard field<br />

goal in the third quarter and<br />

padded it some more in the<br />

fourth quarter on Conjar’s<br />

two-yard run followed by<br />

Patino’s PAT.<br />

Loyola had two touchdowns<br />

called back because<br />

LOYOLA vs. MOUNT CARMEL<br />

1 2 3 4 F<br />

MC 0 7 3 7 17<br />

LA 6 0 0 6 12<br />

Top Performers<br />

1. Rory Boos, WR – 13 catches, 182 receiving yards, one<br />

touchdown.<br />

2. Matthew Schiltz, QB – 23-of-43, 226 passing yards, one<br />

touchdown.<br />

3. Michael Byrne, DB – interception on the first play of the<br />

game.<br />

of penalties — a long breakaway<br />

punt return down the<br />

left sideline by Lombardi<br />

in the second quarter and<br />

a 63-yard Schiltz-to-Boos<br />

pass play in the third.<br />

Schiltz completed 23-of-<br />

43 passes for 263 yards but<br />

was intercepted four times.<br />

And, on the ground, the<br />

Ramblers found it difficult<br />

to make headway. They<br />

netted only 79 yards in 29<br />

carries, while the Caravan<br />

had 175 yards to show for<br />

48 rushing attempts.<br />

“We knew our offense<br />

was going to have a hard<br />

time running the ball,” Holecek<br />

said. “Third and long<br />

and fourth and long are not<br />

good for us. Penalties and<br />

turnovers hurt us.”<br />

Boos was the best player<br />

on the field. Even though<br />

he was double-covered for<br />

much of the second half, he<br />

caught 13 passes for 182<br />

yards.<br />

“I have to give Matthew<br />

the credit because he just<br />

kept throwing me the ball,”<br />

Boos said. “At the end we<br />

thought we could do it but<br />

Mount Carmel has a really<br />

good team. They made<br />

some big plays.”<br />

“They’re big and fast and<br />

they have good coaches<br />

just like us,” said Joe Naselli,<br />

the Ramblers’ 6-foot-<br />

2-inch, 225-pound senior<br />

lineman<br />

“Now, we have six days<br />

to get ready to go to Brother<br />

Rice.”<br />

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glencoeanchor.com sports<br />

the glencoe anchor | September 13, 2018 | 31<br />

Football<br />

Trevians, new faces outlast Fremd<br />

1st-and-3<br />

22CM FILE PHOTO<br />

Three STARS of the<br />

week<br />

1. Carson Ochsenhirt<br />

(above). The New<br />

Trier quarterback<br />

threw for 169<br />

yards and two<br />

touchdowns, while<br />

rushing for 100<br />

more and two<br />

more touchdowns<br />

in the Trevians’<br />

win.<br />

2. Rory Boos. The<br />

Loyola wide<br />

receiver caught<br />

13 passes for<br />

182 yards in a<br />

touchdown in the<br />

Ramblers’ close<br />

17-12 loss to<br />

Mount Carmel.<br />

3. Mary Kate Lopez.<br />

The Loyola girls<br />

volleyball player<br />

had eight kills,<br />

four blocks and<br />

six assists in the<br />

Ramblers’ win over<br />

New Trier.<br />

Michael Wojtychiw<br />

Sports Editor<br />

New Trier was looking<br />

to bounce back from its<br />

loss to rival Loyola when<br />

Fremd came to Northfield<br />

Friday, Sept. 7.<br />

Despite playing with six<br />

new starters on defense,<br />

the Trevians were able to<br />

hold off the Vikings 27-<br />

21 in a Central Suburban<br />

League/Mid-Suburban<br />

League matchup.<br />

“This was a nice bounceback<br />

win for us, especially<br />

since we had a lot of new<br />

faces out here tonight,”<br />

New Trier coach Brian<br />

Doll said.<br />

With Brian Sitzer still<br />

out with an injured ankle,<br />

the Trevians (2-1) changed<br />

their offense to revolve<br />

more around quarterback<br />

Carson Ochsenhirt. The<br />

Game of the Week:<br />

• Lake Forest (1-2) at Lake Zurich (2-1)<br />

Other matchups:<br />

• Highland Park at Schaumburg<br />

• Loyola at Brother Rice<br />

• Glenbrook North at Elk Grove<br />

• Glenbrook South at Fremd<br />

• New Trier at Palatine<br />

• Maine West at Hersey<br />

senior responded with<br />

four total touchdowns, two<br />

passing and two rushing.<br />

Ochsenhirt rushed for 100<br />

yards on 20 carries and<br />

completed 12-of-16 passes<br />

for 169 yards.<br />

“When Brian (Sitzer)<br />

went down, we changed<br />

the offense to revolve<br />

around me and JT (Jonathan<br />

Taylor), so we turned<br />

into a run-pass option<br />

team,” Ochsenhirt said.<br />

One aspect that Ochsenhirt<br />

became more comfortable<br />

with was his passing<br />

game, especially when<br />

throwing to Carson Kosanovich.<br />

Kosanovich was<br />

on the receiving end of<br />

six of Ochsenhirt’s completions,<br />

including both<br />

touchdown passes.<br />

“I’ve known Carson<br />

since I’ve been born basically,<br />

our parents are best<br />

16-5<br />

JOE COUGHLIN |<br />

Publisher<br />

• Lake Zurich 42, Lake Forest 14<br />

Scouts are no match for a fellow<br />

Lake school this season.<br />

• Highland Park<br />

• Loyola<br />

• Glenbrook North<br />

• Fremd<br />

• New Trier<br />

• Hersey<br />

14-7<br />

friends,” the quarterback<br />

said. “It’s been hard to<br />

separate us but I just love<br />

throwing the ball to him<br />

because he’s really fast.<br />

He never stops running.”<br />

It was Fremd who got<br />

on the board first though<br />

as they turned an interception<br />

into a short field and<br />

scored on a touchdown run<br />

by Ben Kurka to take a 7-0<br />

lead.<br />

New Trier responded by<br />

starting its next possession<br />

on its own 19 and using 15<br />

plays to march downfield<br />

and score on the first Carson-to-Carson<br />

touchdown.<br />

After forcing Fremd to<br />

punt, the Trevians again<br />

marched down the field,<br />

this time 59 yards in 10<br />

plays to take a 13-7 lead on<br />

another Carson-to-Carson<br />

connection.<br />

Fremd would drive all<br />

BRITTANY KAPA |<br />

Contributing Sports Editor<br />

• Lake Forest 17, Lake Zurich 14<br />

Everything starts to click for the<br />

Scouts who pull off the Week 4 win.<br />

• Highland Park<br />

• Brother Rice<br />

• Glenbrook North<br />

• Fremd<br />

• New Trier<br />

• Maine West<br />

15-6<br />

MICHAL DWOJAK |<br />

Contributing Sports Editor<br />

• Lake Zurich 21, Lake Forest 17<br />

Scouts make it close but can’t<br />

pull it off.<br />

• Schaumburg<br />

• Loyola<br />

• Glenbrook North<br />

• Glenbrook South<br />

• New Trier<br />

• Maine West<br />

NEW TRIER VS. FREMD<br />

1 2 3 4 F<br />

FREMD 7 0 7 7 21<br />

nt 0 13 6 8 27<br />

Top Performers<br />

1. Carson Ochsenhirt, QB – 169 passing yards, 2<br />

touchdowns, 100 rushing yards, 2 touchdowns.<br />

2. Carson Kosanovich, WR – 99 yards on 6 receptions, 2<br />

touchdowns.<br />

3. New Trier special teams – blocked field goal attempt for<br />

the second time in three weeks..<br />

the way to the New Trier<br />

10-yard line, but Jonathan<br />

Taylor blocked a field goal<br />

attempt to keep the score<br />

13-7 at halftime.<br />

The second half was<br />

more of when Ochsenhirt<br />

took over with his legs.<br />

After the Vikings scored<br />

on the opening drive of the<br />

second half, to take a 14-<br />

13 lead, Ochsenhirt and<br />

15-6 16-5<br />

MICHAEL WOJTYCHIW |<br />

Sports Editor<br />

• Lake Zurich 28, Lake Forest 14<br />

The Scouts got their first win of the<br />

season last Friday, but Lake Zurich<br />

has too much firepower for Lake<br />

Forest to handle.<br />

• Schaumburg<br />

• Loyola<br />

• Glenbrook North<br />

• Fremd<br />

• New Trier<br />

• Maine West<br />

the Trevians took over at<br />

their own 31-yard line. He<br />

would rush for 21 yards,<br />

including a four-yard<br />

keeper for a score.<br />

After forcing a Fremd<br />

punt and getting a nice return<br />

back to the Vikings’<br />

39-yard line, a 36-yard<br />

pass to Charlie Hoban<br />

set up Ochsenhirt’s final<br />

touchdown.<br />

MARTIN CARLINO |<br />

Contributing Editor<br />

• Lake Zurich 24, Lake Forest 7<br />

This tough road test proves to be<br />

too much for the Scouts, as Lake<br />

Zurich runs away with it late.<br />

• Schaumburg<br />

• Loyola<br />

• Glenbrook North<br />

• Fremd<br />

• New Trier<br />

• Hersey<br />

Listen Up<br />

“I was just staying focused and blocking out<br />

everything around me.”<br />

Lizzie Walker — Loyola girls volleyball player on her<br />

concentration.<br />

tunE in<br />

What to watch this week<br />

GIRLS SWIMMING AND DIVING: The battle for neighborhood<br />

supremacy takes place in the Winnetka pool.<br />

• New Trier hosts loyola at 5:30 p.m. Friday, Sept. 14,<br />

in Winnetka<br />

Index<br />

28 - This Week In<br />

27 - Athlete of the Week<br />

Fastbreak is compiled by Sports Editor Michael<br />

Wojtychiw, m.wojtychiw@22ndcenturymedia.com.


the glencoe anchor | September 13, 2018 | glencoeanchor.com<br />

Sigh of relief<br />

New Trier holds off<br />

Fremd on the gridiron,<br />

Page 31<br />

Get out the<br />

brooms Loyola girls<br />

volleyball sweeps rival<br />

New Trier, Page 29<br />

Schiltz stopped short of goal line, LA falls to Mount Carmel, Page 30<br />

Loyola’s Rory Boos<br />

catches a pass over<br />

Mount Carmel’s Davion<br />

Brooks for a touchdown<br />

Saturday, Sept. 8,<br />

in Wilmette. Tracy<br />

Allen/22nd Century Media<br />

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