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Glencoe’s Hometown Newspaper GlencoeAnchor.com • September 20, 2018 • Vol. 4 No. 3 • $1<br />

A<br />

Publication<br />

,LLC<br />

For Teens,<br />

by teens<br />

Glencoe Youth Services<br />

joins forces for inaugural<br />

Teen Fest, Page 3<br />

Remembering<br />

Sept. 11<br />

Glencoe honors Patriot’s<br />

Day at Am Shalom,<br />

Page 6<br />

‘The last of<br />

the real ones’<br />

North Shore-made Fall<br />

Out Boy rocks Wrigley,<br />

Page 16<br />

300-plus kids<br />

participate in<br />

Glencoe Park<br />

District’s Mud<br />

Run, Page 4<br />

Lucia Serrano, 11, of Glencoe, crosses through the foam Slip ’n’ Slide during the annual Mud<br />

Run Saturday, Sept. 15, in Glencoe. Rhonda Holcomb/22nd Century Media<br />

benefiting<br />

NorthShore University HealthSystem<br />

Petra Class<br />

SEPTEMBER 21-23, 2018<br />

Chicago Botanic Garden<br />

americancraftexpo.org


2 | September 20, 2018 | The glencoe anchor calendar<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

In this week’s<br />

anchor<br />

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

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

Editorial......................................19<br />

Puzzles 22<br />

Faith ............................................24<br />

Dining Out 27<br />

Home of the Week 28<br />

Athlete of the Week 31<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 />

Northbrook, IL 60062<br />

Published by<br />

www.22ndcenturymedia.com<br />

THURSDAY<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 />

Big Books<br />

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

Library, 320 Park<br />

Ave. Join the library for a<br />

nine-week dive into what<br />

many consider Charles<br />

Dickens’s greatest novel,<br />

“Bleak House.” Leading<br />

this fall’s Big Books<br />

discussion will be Holly<br />

Marihugh, who has guided<br />

discussions of literary fiction<br />

for seven years. Registration<br />

is required and<br />

space is limited.<br />

FRIDAY<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<br />

sale of fine craft features<br />

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

artwork and luxury collections<br />

from the country’s<br />

leading craftspeople. Visit<br />

www.chicagobotanic.org.<br />

SATURDAY<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 />

UPCOMING<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 />

Semi-Annual Clean-Up Day<br />

Oct. 6, Village of Glencoe.<br />

Clean-up days are an<br />

opportunity for residents to<br />

dispose of bulk items that<br />

are not generally included<br />

in garbage collection, such<br />

as furniture, appliances,<br />

boxes and tires. Unlike<br />

the Village’s previous program,<br />

all bulk items are to<br />

be put out on one day for<br />

all zones (there is not a<br />

different day for Monday/<br />

Tuesday and Thursday/<br />

Friday zones).<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 />

Sculpt and Sip<br />

6:30-8:30 p.m. Oct. 12,<br />

Takiff Center, 999 Green<br />

Bay Road, Glencoe. Grab<br />

a friend for an evening of<br />

ceramics sculpting and<br />

wine. Ceramics instructor<br />

Natalie Steinmetz will<br />

guide you through the process<br />

of creating your own<br />

masterpiece. No experience<br />

or supplies necessary;<br />

new and seasoned artists<br />

are welcome. BYOB.<br />

Friday Fortnite<br />

3:45-5:30 p.m. Oct. 12,<br />

Glencoe Library, 320 Park<br />

Ave. Play Fortnite: Battle<br />

Royal on the library gaming<br />

computers or on your<br />

own device. Registration<br />

encouraged; if you register,<br />

you are guaranteed a<br />

library computer.<br />

Buckthorne Barbecue<br />

Oct. 17, Chicago Botanic<br />

Garden, 1000 Lake<br />

Cook Road, Glencoe. The<br />

Friends of the Green Bay<br />

Trail’s annual Buckthorn<br />

Barbecue returns for an<br />

eighth year. The Barbecue<br />

is always one of Glencoe’s<br />

most popular events due to<br />

the north shore’s interest in<br />

and support for restoring<br />

and preserving native habitats<br />

on the Green Bay Trail.<br />

This year’s keynote speaker<br />

is Bill Kurtis, an ardent<br />

conservationist, acclaimed<br />

television documentary<br />

producer and former CBS<br />

news anchor. Advance<br />

ticket sales indicate this<br />

will be FGBT’s best BBQ.<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 />

Farm Fit<br />

10 a.m.-noon, Oct. 20,<br />

Glencoe Community Garden,<br />

385 Old Green Bay<br />

Road. The Glencoe Community<br />

Garden will lead a<br />

unique circuit event, putting<br />

the garden to bed for<br />

winter and giving you an<br />

extraordinary workout (accommodating<br />

to all ages<br />

and levels).<br />

Night of 1,000 Jack-o’-<br />

Lanterns<br />

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

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 />

Very friendly, casual atmosphere.<br />

No fees. Open to<br />

teens and adults.<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.


glencoeanchor.com news<br />

the glencoe anchor | September 20, 2018 | 3<br />

Three youth groups partner<br />

for inaugural Teen Fest<br />

STEM CELL RECRUITMENT<br />

FOR KNEE PAIN, ARTHRITIS & JOINT PAIN<br />

Covered by Medicare & Insurance*<br />

(Consultation & Treatment)<br />

Daniel I. Dorfman<br />

Freelance Reporter<br />

The inaugural Teen Fest<br />

had friends catching up,<br />

having something to eat<br />

and most of all, it was an<br />

opportunity for some local<br />

teenagers to display their<br />

talents.<br />

At Hubbard Woods Park<br />

on the warm evening of<br />

Friday, Sept. 14, three local<br />

youth-based groups<br />

– Glencoe Youth Services,<br />

Wilmette’s Warming<br />

House Youth Center and<br />

the Winnetka Youth Organization<br />

– held the inaugural<br />

Teen Fest.<br />

Similar gatherings occurred<br />

before under the<br />

direction of the groups,<br />

but they were primarily<br />

focused on high school<br />

freshmen. This year’s<br />

change of focus was an<br />

attempt to all reach seventh-graders<br />

through high<br />

school seniors, who might<br />

be interested in the youthbased<br />

programming.<br />

“We are trying to get the<br />

word out about our organizations<br />

and reminding<br />

our community that we<br />

exist and we are here for<br />

the youth,” said Margaret<br />

Ann Paauw, the executive<br />

director of Glencoe Youth<br />

Services. “We also want to<br />

let teens know that we are<br />

our services.”<br />

Therefore, those who<br />

arrived at the park could<br />

get something to eat, play<br />

Spikeball and get a temporary<br />

tattoo, all while seeing<br />

what local teens can do<br />

under a spotlight.<br />

That talent roster included<br />

New Trier High<br />

School student Quinton<br />

Eudy, 16, who has a band<br />

labeled Stairwayz. He<br />

spoke passionate about<br />

his love to sing.<br />

Quinton Eudy, 16, of Wilmette, performs at Teen Fest<br />

Friday, Sept. 14. Rhonda Holcomb/22nd Century Media<br />

“I have been singing<br />

all the time since I can<br />

remember,” Eudy said. “I<br />

listen to music all the time<br />

and it is a big inspiration<br />

for what I have been doing<br />

with my life. I thought it<br />

would be fun for me to put<br />

my music out there that I<br />

have been working on for<br />

over a year for people to<br />

listen to.”<br />

He was very excited<br />

about the chance to perform<br />

at Teen Fest.<br />

“I think it is a great idea<br />

to bring kids together and<br />

play music because music<br />

is in everyone’s lives<br />

no matter what you do,”<br />

Eudy said. “I think it is really<br />

important to get music<br />

out there.”<br />

Taking the stage following<br />

Eudy was Amanda<br />

Howell, who was the lead<br />

singer for the second time<br />

in a group called At Least<br />

We Tried.<br />

“I think it is a nice collaborative<br />

energy between<br />

people,” Howell said of<br />

why she likes singing in a<br />

group. “It teaches you a lot<br />

about teamwork and you<br />

make good friends.”<br />

However, there were<br />

other types of aptitudes on<br />

display including the fashion<br />

sense of Wilmette’s<br />

Victor Pearlman. The<br />

New Trier senior sold his<br />

clothes that he designed to<br />

those passing by his stand.<br />

Please see fest, 18<br />

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SEPTEMBER 21-23, 2018<br />

Chicago Botanic Garden<br />

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*Insurance coverage varies by plan & carrier.<br />

HIGHLAND PARK GLENVIEW VERNON HILLS<br />

BLOOMINGDALE ELMHURST<br />

benefiting<br />

NorthShore University HealthSystem<br />

Dr. Angelo Reyes, MD<br />

Leading Provider of<br />

Non-Surgical Treatments


4 | September 20, 2018 | The glencoe anchor news<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

Glencoe’s Mud Run adds new obstacles in second year<br />

Alexa Burnell<br />

Freelance Reporter<br />

The Glencoe Park District<br />

hosted the second annual<br />

Great Mud Run on<br />

Saturday, Sept. 15, setting<br />

forth the following tough<br />

requirements for the 331<br />

youth participants: have<br />

fun, get filthy, have fun.<br />

The event, geared toward<br />

kids ages 7-10 was held at<br />

Watts Park, encouraging<br />

kids to give it their physical<br />

best, while complimenting<br />

the Park District’s overarching<br />

mission.<br />

“One of our main goals<br />

is to promote health and<br />

wellness throughout the<br />

community,” said the Park<br />

District’s superintendent of<br />

marketing Erin Maassen.<br />

“The Great Mud Run is a<br />

fun way to get kids outdoors,<br />

while enjoying nature,<br />

exercising and getting<br />

totally messy at the same<br />

time. Kids just love it.”<br />

The race was divided<br />

into various heats according<br />

to age, challenging<br />

participants to run a 1.25-<br />

mile course, filled with<br />

a variety of surprises —<br />

climbing walls, mud pits,<br />

balance beams, rope swing<br />

and even a brand, new Slip<br />

’n’ Slide challenge, where<br />

kids dove through mounds<br />

of foam.<br />

After making it around<br />

the course, kids proudly<br />

crossed their finish line<br />

covered in mud, making<br />

them nearly unrecognizable<br />

and eager to hit the<br />

rinse-off stations nearby.<br />

While 11-year-old Kate<br />

Doelman, of Glencoe,<br />

cleaned up, she laughed<br />

with her friends about their<br />

great adventure.<br />

“The race was so much<br />

fun. I especially loved<br />

army crawling through<br />

the mud. It was so fun; the<br />

Slip ’n’ Slide was awesome<br />

too,” Doelman said.<br />

Doelman’s friend, Cate<br />

Martin, 10, also of Glencoe,<br />

crossed the finish line<br />

minutes after, grinning<br />

from ear-to-ear, giving the<br />

event two thumbs-up.<br />

“I loved it,” Martin said.<br />

“This was so awesome. It<br />

was fun to climb through<br />

the mud and really challenge<br />

ourselves. I just<br />

loved it.”<br />

The happy responses<br />

warmed the heart of the<br />

Eleanor Scjhebal (left), 11, and Asha Lee,12, of Glencoe, climb out of the mud trenches during the Mud Run<br />

Saturday, Sept. 15, at Watts Park. Photos by Rhonda Holcomb/22nd Century Media<br />

Park District’s special<br />

event’s manager, Liz Visteen,<br />

who cheered for kids<br />

as they neared the end.<br />

“What I most enjoy is<br />

watching the kids cross the<br />

finish line, covered from<br />

head-to-toe in mud, but<br />

with big smiles on their<br />

faces. I just want them to<br />

have fun and embrace the<br />

messm” Visteen said.<br />

Adding a festive feel to<br />

the day was Famous DJ<br />

Entertainment, who played<br />

one tune after another, and<br />

The Grand Food Center<br />

who offered bananas to<br />

reenergize the brave participants.<br />

Members of the<br />

Glencoe Jr. High Project<br />

also volunteered, working<br />

alongside Visteen, making<br />

the event run smoothly.<br />

“We couldn’t have done<br />

it without our great junior<br />

high volunteers, supporters<br />

and all our brave participants<br />

who gave it their<br />

all today,” Visteen said.<br />

“What more could I ask<br />

for?”<br />

A group of runners climb over an obstacle.<br />

Kisten Nolan, 10, of Northfield, showers off the mud following the race.


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6 | September 20, 2018 | The glencoe anchor news<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

Gus and Tillie<br />

The Goodale family,<br />

of Glencoe<br />

We’re Gus and Tillie, cat<br />

partners in crime who<br />

live with the Goodale<br />

family in Glencoe. We’re<br />

brother and sister who<br />

were rescued by Officer<br />

Katie Sweeney, and she<br />

agreed to keeping us<br />

together in adoption.<br />

(Our family thought they<br />

were adopting two male<br />

cats, but the veterinarian<br />

set them straight!) Our hobbies are shredding any<br />

paper we can find, chasing each other through the<br />

house, and keeping an eagle eye out for squirrels,<br />

chipmunks, deer, and human foot traffic from our<br />

screened porch. And sleeping, of course.<br />

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

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

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

IL 60062.<br />

WINNER:<br />

Best Groomer in<br />

Chicagoland<br />

Pet of the Week<br />

Sponsored by<br />

Love Fur Dogs<br />

The Best in Grooming 847-LUV-DOGS<br />

www.LoveFurDogs.com • 69 Green Bay Rd. Glencoe, IL<br />

The North Shore’s<br />

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$1.50 per square foot<br />

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

Schedule a cleaning: kashianbros.com/floorcleaning<br />

1107 Greenleaf Ave, Wilmette<br />

847-865-8283 KashianBros.com<br />

Remembering<br />

our patriots<br />

Glencoe honors Sept. 11 with Am<br />

Shalom ceremony<br />

RIGHT: A special ceremony was held last week to<br />

remember Sept. 11, 2001 at Am Shalom in conjunction<br />

with the Glencoe Public Safety Department. Photo<br />

Submitted by Village of Glencoe<br />

police reports<br />

Sunflower thief hits Vernon Avenue<br />

It was reported at 4:27<br />

p.m. Sept. 10, an unknown<br />

offender stole two sunflower<br />

plant heads in the 500<br />

block of Vernon Avenue.<br />

In other police news:<br />

Sept. 11<br />

• A victim received a letter<br />

from an unknown offender<br />

claiming to blackmail<br />

them with secret if the victim<br />

didn’t send $9,300 in<br />

Bitcoin. There was no loss.<br />

• A victim brought in several<br />

pieces of jewelry for<br />

repair at C G Jewelers, 660<br />

Vernon Ave. The suspect<br />

at the business offered to<br />

buy some of the items, but<br />

asked the victim to return<br />

in one week for the appraisal<br />

paperwork. When<br />

the victim returned at 8:17<br />

p.m., the business was<br />

closed. The taken jewelry<br />

is worth around $600. Investigation<br />

is ongoing.<br />

• Francisco De La Cruz,<br />

36, of Highland Park, was<br />

arrested for driving with<br />

only one headlight, no rear<br />

registration plate light,<br />

suspended license and no<br />

insurance at 8:56 p.m. at<br />

the intersection of Green<br />

Bay and Lake Cook roads.<br />

His court date is Oct. 9.<br />

Sept. 10<br />

• A Trek 930 bike, worth<br />

less than $500, was reported<br />

stolen at 12:44 p.m.<br />

in the 700 block of Green<br />

Bay Road.<br />

Sept. 9<br />

• A locked mountain bike,<br />

worth less than $500, was<br />

reported stolen at 12:48<br />

p.m. in the 700 block of<br />

Green Bay Road.<br />

Sept. 7<br />

• An unknown offender requested<br />

a replacement card<br />

for a victim’s Fifth Third<br />

Bank account, which was<br />

put on hold. Further research<br />

revealed a total of<br />

five cards were attempted<br />

to be opened with the victim’s<br />

identifiers. Only one<br />

card was opened successfully<br />

at Best Buy, but there<br />

was no reported activity on<br />

the card.<br />

Sept. 4<br />

• Jacob G. Ellison, 27, of<br />

New York, was arrested for<br />

driving under the influence<br />

(more than 0.08 BAC) at<br />

11 p.m. in the 800 block<br />

of Dundee Road. His court<br />

date is Oct. 9.<br />

Sept. 3<br />

• An unknown offender<br />

broke out the window of<br />

a victim’s vehicle, a 2013<br />

Hyundai Elantra, and stole<br />

a purse at 4:40 p.m. in the<br />

0-100 block of Park Avenue.<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 />

Funeral service for Sebastian Duncan set for Sept. 22<br />

Staff Report<br />

A memorial Mass for<br />

Sebastian Duncan, the<br />

20-year-old Glenview man<br />

who died in a kayaking<br />

accident Aug. 27 on Lake<br />

Michigan, is scheduled for<br />

10 a.m. Saturday, Sept. 22,<br />

at Saint Joseph Church,<br />

1747 Lake Ave., Wilmette.<br />

Interment is private.<br />

Sebastian Alante Duncan<br />

was born April 1, 1998.<br />

He was a 2016 graduate of<br />

New Trier Township High<br />

School and had attended<br />

Northeastern University.<br />

Duncan is survived by<br />

his loving parents, Tony<br />

and Sharon Duncan; three<br />

siblings, Najerie Neal<br />

(Tevin) of Atlanta, Georgia,<br />

Lauren Gabrielle and<br />

Hunter Alexander; his paternal<br />

grandmother Bonnie<br />

Davis (John) and a host of<br />

aunts, uncles, cousins, and<br />

friends.<br />

He was preceded in<br />

death by his maternal<br />

grandparents, Katherleen<br />

and Henry Mitchell and<br />

his paternal grandfather,<br />

James Duncan.


glencoeanchor.com glencoe<br />

the glencoe anchor | September 20, 2018 | 7<br />

INDEPENDENT BOARDING SCHOOL FAIR<br />

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 3, 2018 •6:30 –8:30 PM<br />

Lake Forest Country Day School invites you<br />

to spend an evening with us learning about boarding school life.<br />

One of the largest ofits kind, the LFCDS Independent Boarding School Fair<br />

draws more than 70 diverse boarding schools from across the country,<br />

each with adistinctive educational approach.<br />

This Event is Free and Open to All Area Students and Their Families<br />

To see acomplete list ofall attending schools and for more information,<br />

please visit lfcds.org/boardingschoolfair or call 847.615.6114<br />

145 South Green Bay Road, Lake Forest, IL 60045 •847.234.2350 •lfcds.org


8 | September 20, 2018 | The glencoe anchor glencoe<br />

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att.com/broadbandinfo for details. ©2018 AT&T Intellectual Property. All rights reserved. AT&T, the AT&T logo, and all other marks contained herein are trademarks of AT&T Intellectual Property and/or AT&T affiliated companies.


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the glencoe anchor | September 20, 2018 | 9<br />

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10 | September 20, 2018 | The glencoe anchor news<br />

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?<br />

Developers propose $2.3M Old<br />

Green Bay Linear Parks project<br />

Todd Marver<br />

Freelance Reporter<br />

The Glencoe Park District<br />

is in the initial stages<br />

of considering changes<br />

to Old Green Bay Linear<br />

Parks.<br />

At the Special Projects<br />

and Facilities Committee’s<br />

Tuesday, Sept.<br />

11 meeting, Altamanu, a<br />

landscape architect firm,<br />

discussed its proposal for<br />

a recreational multiuse<br />

trail through the parks<br />

along Old Green Bay<br />

Road from Park Avenue to<br />

Maple Hill Road, which<br />

encompasses 0.53 miles<br />

and 2,800 feet.<br />

The costs associated<br />

with the trail include a<br />

drinking fountain on the<br />

north end, 10-foot wide<br />

decomposed granite and<br />

stop sign changes and<br />

bike paintings at the intersections<br />

for $845,000.<br />

“There are only pathways<br />

(currently) along<br />

some of the roads and<br />

there are no park pathways,”<br />

Altamanu principal<br />

John Mac Manus said.<br />

The project also includes<br />

the replacement of<br />

the playground at Lincoln<br />

and Crescent. Mac Manus<br />

said the playground at<br />

Lincoln and Crescent has<br />

to be replaced because it<br />

was constructed 26 years<br />

ago and most playgrounds<br />

last 10-15 years. Mac Manus<br />

explained his vision<br />

of the playground with<br />

slides, play equipment, an<br />

interactive water splash<br />

pad and hand-cranked<br />

train.<br />

“We want to make use<br />

of the slope,” he said.<br />

“We did so at West and it<br />

was very successful using<br />

the actual slope for the<br />

kids to have slides down<br />

and have different types<br />

of play equipment. Some<br />

of the more interesting<br />

ideas are to have a small<br />

interactive pad and handcranked<br />

train.”<br />

The Lincoln and Crescent<br />

playground replacement<br />

is slated at $314,000,<br />

interactive water splash<br />

pad at $150,000 and handcranked<br />

train at $165,000.<br />

The project also includes<br />

upfront work, such as site<br />

preparation, excavation<br />

and utilities for $616,000,<br />

half a dozen fitness stations<br />

at $77,000, plantings<br />

at $45,000 and a<br />

children’s bike training<br />

circuit at $121,000 where<br />

Mac Manus said children<br />

“can flex their muscles<br />

and bravery.”<br />

The total cost of the<br />

project at this time that<br />

Altamanu presented is<br />

$2.3 million.<br />

“We’re trying for state<br />

grants,” Altamanu principal<br />

Josephine Bellalta<br />

said. “If we receive it, it’s<br />

a maximum of $400,000.”<br />

In addition to grants,<br />

donations would go toward<br />

funding the project.<br />

Park District Executive<br />

Director Lisa Sheppard<br />

explained Glencoe taxpayers<br />

would not feel the<br />

burden of the cost of the<br />

project.<br />

“The project would not<br />

entail raising taxes or going<br />

to referendum,” she<br />

said. “We would use our<br />

current capital projects<br />

budget.”<br />

Neighbors came to<br />

share their thoughts on<br />

the proposal. Jim Nyeste,<br />

of the 200 block of Maple<br />

Hill Road, agreed with<br />

Altamanu’s proposal to<br />

update the playground at<br />

Lincoln and Crescent.<br />

“The playground, I remember<br />

when it was redone<br />

and it was 26 or 28<br />

years ago, so it probably<br />

is ready for that to be redeveloped<br />

again,” he said.<br />

“I don’t really want to see<br />

it get much larger but it<br />

could be reoriented and<br />

improved and use made of<br />

a slope that exists.”<br />

Nyeste, however, opposes<br />

the path that Altamanu<br />

proposed and is<br />

against the fitness stations<br />

and would like to see open<br />

space preserved.<br />

“I don’t really like the<br />

path that is planned,” he<br />

said. “It’s going to be wet<br />

much of the year and unusable.<br />

The plan envisions<br />

a number of new pieces<br />

of exercise equipment. It<br />

just adds clutter to some<br />

beautiful park space that<br />

I would like to see remain<br />

largely open. I oppose<br />

making kids engaged in<br />

these formal activities that<br />

adults plan for them and<br />

let’s let them play free.”<br />

Eric Sigurdson, of the<br />

200 block of Dennis Lane,<br />

felt that updating the playground<br />

should be a top<br />

priority for the project,<br />

while the path should not<br />

be as high of a priority.<br />

“We can only afford<br />

to spend money on<br />

must haves versus nice<br />

to haves,” he said. “The<br />

park is a must have. It’s<br />

got to be fixed. We need<br />

to invest money in that.<br />

It’s a wonderful place for<br />

kids to go and for parents<br />

to spend time with their<br />

kids. I think adding another<br />

path is redundant.<br />

I think it’s extra cost and<br />

I think it’s a real nice to<br />

have, but it really isn’t a<br />

must have.”


glencoeanchor.com glencoe<br />

the glencoe anchor | September 20, 2018 | 11<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<br />

accurate, it is not warranted and you should not rely upon it without personal verification. Real estate agents affiliated with Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage are independent contractor agents and are not employees of the<br />

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12 | September 20, 2018 | The glencoe anchor news<br />

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THIS EXPO WILL FEATURE:<br />

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As in the past, The Glencoe<br />

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The good news is we’ve<br />

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22CM’s Women in Business<br />

Lunch awards 13 recipients<br />

Megan Bernard, Editor<br />

22nd Century Media,<br />

the parent company of The<br />

Glencoe Anchor, held its inaugural<br />

Women in Business<br />

Lunch Thursday, Sept. 13,<br />

at Pinstripes in Northbrook.<br />

“This event was an awesome<br />

opportunity for us to<br />

help recognize the top businesswomen<br />

in the North<br />

Shore,” said Heather Warthen,<br />

22nd Century Media’s<br />

chief events officer.<br />

The event honored 13<br />

North Shore women in 13<br />

categories: Large Company<br />

(51 employees or more),<br />

Medium Company (11-50<br />

employees), Small Company<br />

(10 employees or less),<br />

Nonprofit, Entrepreneur,<br />

Woman-Owned Business,<br />

Health and Wellness, Real<br />

Estate, Financial, Legal,<br />

Hospitality and Dining,<br />

Education, and Senior Care.<br />

“We were overwhelmed<br />

with the response we had<br />

for nominations and our<br />

13 winners are incredible<br />

women who are doing<br />

amazing things in the<br />

business world,” Warthen<br />

added.<br />

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The simplest way to<br />

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So, to all residents, we<br />

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Thank you for your support.<br />

Jeanne Malnati, CEO<br />

and founder of The<br />

Culture Group, was the<br />

keynote speaker at 22nd<br />

Century Media’s Women<br />

in Business Luncheon<br />

Thursday, Sept. 13, at<br />

Pinstripes in Northbrook.<br />

Carlos Alvarez/22nd<br />

Century Media<br />

culture transformation<br />

expert Jeanne Malnati as<br />

a speaker. Malnati is the<br />

CEO and founder of The<br />

Culture Group, a company<br />

which teaches communication<br />

and leadership principles.<br />

She is also a licensed<br />

psychotherapist and expert<br />

in workplace wellness.<br />

More information on<br />

Women in Business and the<br />

awardees will be printed<br />

with photos in the upcoming<br />

special section inserted<br />

into this paper Thursday,<br />

Sept. 27.


glencoeanchor.com glencoe<br />

the glencoe anchor | September 20, 2018 | 13<br />

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


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the glencoe anchor | September 20, 2018 | 15<br />

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16 | September 20, 2018 | The glencoe anchor school<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

Fall Out Boy makes a play for home<br />

Band plays Wrigley<br />

Field for first time<br />

Heather Warthen<br />

Contributing Editor<br />

With a bit of wide-eyed<br />

wonder, Fall Out Boy took<br />

to the largest headlining<br />

stage in the band’s nearly<br />

20 year history — playing<br />

Wrigley Field.<br />

North Shore natives Patrick<br />

Stump, Joe Trohman<br />

and Pete Wentz, along<br />

with Wisconsin native<br />

Andy Hurley, took their<br />

place on center stage in<br />

centerfield Sept. 8 at the<br />

Friendly Confines.<br />

Wentz, a North Shore<br />

Country Day graduate, reminded<br />

the audience that it<br />

is possible for dreams like<br />

playing at Wrigley Field<br />

do come true.<br />

“There is somebody<br />

Wednesday, October3<br />

5pmto6pm<br />

Whitehall of Deerfield<br />

300WaukeganRoad<br />

Deerfield, Illinois<br />

Patrick Stump (left), a native of Glenview, and Pete<br />

Wentz, a NSCDS graduate, of Fall Out Boy play Sept. 8<br />

during the band’s MANIA Tour stop at Wrigley Field in<br />

Chicago. Heather Warthen/22nd Century Media<br />

in this crowd right now<br />

who’s in a band ... who<br />

will be playing on a stage<br />

like this,” he said.<br />

In late August, the band<br />

released what they call<br />

their “love letter to Chicago”<br />

in the form of an<br />

EP called Lake Effect Kid.<br />

The show, however, highlighted<br />

a mix of the old<br />

and the new across their<br />

seven full-length albums<br />

during the hour-and-a-half<br />

set.<br />

Openers for the MANIA<br />

Tour included Chicagobased<br />

punk band Rise<br />

Against and rapper Machine<br />

Gun Kelly.<br />

How to improveyour<br />

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‘Everyone was behind him:’ New Trier<br />

grad shines during national anthem<br />

Hilary Anderson<br />

Freelance Reporter<br />

New Trier graduate Stefan<br />

Xidas’ dream came<br />

true.<br />

The Wilmette resident<br />

sang the national anthem<br />

at a Chicago Cubs baseball<br />

game Sept. 10 at Wrigley<br />

Field in front of a crowd of<br />

about 38,400 fans.<br />

There were only superlatives<br />

to describe the evening<br />

according to Xidas,<br />

who has Down syndrome.<br />

“It was an awesome experience<br />

doing it,” he said<br />

told The Glencoe Anchor.<br />

“It was such a great night<br />

for me.”<br />

Xidas’ father describes<br />

the scene as ridiculously<br />

amazing.<br />

“There must have been<br />

10 TV cameras and 20<br />

microphones around Stefan,”<br />

Stan Xidas said. “You<br />

could tell Stefan was embracing<br />

the moment when<br />

he put his hand over his<br />

heart while singing. The<br />

people in the stands were<br />

singing in unison with him.<br />

Stefan’s disability did not<br />

stop him. He was singing<br />

for a great cause, Special<br />

Olympics, and sang well.<br />

Everyone was behind him.<br />

It was unbelievable.”<br />

Stan Xidas said there<br />

was no rehearsal before the<br />

game.<br />

“The sound of Stefan’s<br />

singing bounced back but<br />

he carried on,” Stan Xidas<br />

said. “A real trooper.”<br />

“I got to go into the<br />

clubhouse and meet some<br />

of the Cubs’ players including<br />

Kris Bryant, Kyle<br />

Schwarber and Willson<br />

Contreras,” Stefan Xidas<br />

said. “Anthony Rizzo<br />

signed my shirt. A couple<br />

(former) Bears players —<br />

Lance Briggs and Matt<br />

Forte — were there, too.<br />

New Trier graduate Stefan Xidas sings the national<br />

anthem prior to the start of the Sept. 10 Chicago Cubs<br />

game at Wrigley Field. Photo submitted<br />

When I was walking off the<br />

field Coach Joe Maddon<br />

shook my hand and talked<br />

with me.”<br />

Family and friends of the<br />

Xidas filled one section of<br />

the stands.<br />

Rick Malnati, from Lou<br />

Malnati’s Pizza where Stefan<br />

Xidas works, had 100<br />

T-shirts made for the occasion.<br />

The front of the shirt<br />

said Chicago and on the<br />

back was Xidas No. 1.<br />

“We gave out the shirts at<br />

the ballpark but they were<br />

gone quickly,” Stan Xidas<br />

said.<br />

Stefan’s Aunt Demetra<br />

Xidas flew in from San Antonio<br />

for the event.<br />

New Trier High School<br />

friends even came in from<br />

out-of-state to see Stefan<br />

sing. One was Zack Holfeld,<br />

who came in from<br />

Minnesota. John Rosinski,<br />

now a special education<br />

teacher, was also there. He<br />

along with Tom Molitar<br />

have been friends of Stefan’s<br />

since kindergarten at<br />

McKenzie School.<br />

It was Molitar who organized<br />

the GoFundMe<br />

campaign that started the<br />

process of raising money<br />

for Special Olympics and<br />

challenged Tom Ricketts to<br />

allow Stefan to sing the national<br />

anthem at a Chicago<br />

Cubs game if donations<br />

reached a $5,000 limit.<br />

“As of today, Sept. 11,<br />

donations are still coming<br />

in nearing around<br />

$20,000,” Stan Xidas said.<br />

“We are getting posts<br />

around the country who<br />

saw this (Stefan singing the<br />

National Anthem) on their<br />

local news programs. There<br />

has not been one negative<br />

comment.”<br />

Stefan Xidas received<br />

an oversized check for<br />

$18,000 matching the donations<br />

on behalf of the<br />

Chicago Cubs Charities for<br />

Special Olympics prior to<br />

the start of the game.<br />

“This is a great story<br />

about the human spirit and<br />

people getting behind a<br />

great cause,” Stan said. “It<br />

is a beautiful thing to see<br />

people cheering on someone<br />

with a disability and<br />

raising money for Special<br />

Olympics in the process.”<br />

Stefan Xidas admits<br />

he would like to sing the<br />

national anthem at other<br />

sporting events.<br />

“I hope I will always be<br />

a role model for people like<br />

me who have a disability.<br />

Mine is Down syndrome.<br />

We might have a disability<br />

but that should never stop<br />

us from doing activities we<br />

would like to do even ones<br />

some think might be impossible<br />

to achieve.”


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the glencoe anchor | September 20, 2018 | 17<br />

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18 | September 20, 2018 | The glencoe anchor sound off<br />

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City Girl Confessions<br />

Something old, something new<br />

Kelly Anderson<br />

Contributing Columnist<br />

A<br />

funny thing happened<br />

on the way<br />

to Vernon Avenue.<br />

You see, I used to live on<br />

Vernon in a sweet little red<br />

brick house. It was where<br />

I first moved to when I<br />

officially decamped from<br />

city life. But as I drove<br />

along in my car things<br />

seemed ... different.<br />

I’m in a unique position<br />

here. Two years ago,<br />

I moved from one house<br />

in Glencoe to another<br />

house in Glencoe. And as<br />

a result there are several<br />

situations in which I am<br />

presented with the visual<br />

of my previous residence.<br />

Don’t worry, there are no<br />

tears or regrets involved<br />

— these are just moments<br />

that occasionally give me<br />

pause to stop and reminisce.<br />

Back to the funny thing<br />

that happened. After<br />

passing by my old house,<br />

I was confronted with<br />

something new. A big,<br />

shiny new park. “Vernon<br />

Park” read the wooden<br />

sign, its letters freshly<br />

painted.<br />

My first thought: They<br />

got it wrong. When I<br />

had lived here, me and<br />

my kids always referred<br />

to this as Jefferson Park<br />

(because it sits right at the<br />

cross street, natch). This<br />

was where my son first<br />

sat in a swing as an infant.<br />

This was where he learned<br />

to slowly pull his chubby<br />

toddler legs up the wooden<br />

steps to eventually zip<br />

down the slide. This park<br />

was a near-nightly visit<br />

for my family in the summer<br />

months after dinner.<br />

Well Jefferson Park<br />

is no more. And I will<br />

admit that Vernon Park<br />

is very nice with twisty<br />

rope climbs, multi-age<br />

play surfaces and variety<br />

of slides. But the sight<br />

of it was jarring. In my<br />

mind, I can still vividly<br />

picture how things used<br />

to be — the placement of<br />

each swing, the color of<br />

the weathered wood. What<br />

was most unnerving was<br />

acceptance that I have<br />

now become “one of those<br />

people.” You know what I<br />

mean: one of those people<br />

who talk fondly of how<br />

things used to be, as if the<br />

only good times were the<br />

past times. One of those<br />

people who share memories<br />

openly even though<br />

there is probably no eager<br />

audience awaiting those<br />

details.<br />

Life is funny like that.<br />

It’s not afraid to dole out a<br />

big ol’ serving of humility.<br />

And yet, there is poignancy<br />

to everything I’m<br />

telling you now. Because<br />

my kids recently had a<br />

day off of school and my<br />

son suggested we visit<br />

Vernon Park. So that’s just<br />

what we did.<br />

As my kids took off<br />

running towards the<br />

swings, wood chips flying<br />

beneath their sneakered<br />

feet, new memories began.<br />

You see, the old park<br />

was special to me, but<br />

my children were far too<br />

young to vividly recall the<br />

milestones of childhood<br />

they had there. Right now,<br />

the new park is something<br />

exciting and vibrant in<br />

their lives — it’s a chance<br />

to make it their own, to<br />

place its existence squarely<br />

into their childhood.<br />

Embracing what’s new<br />

— perhaps I’m becoming<br />

one of those people, too.<br />

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

photographer and former<br />

Chicagoan. She pens blogs<br />

and books from her home in<br />

Glencoe, which she shares<br />

with her husband, son,<br />

daughter and Boston terrier.<br />

Vendors are needed to offer seniors and baby boomers everything they need<br />

to know about health and wellness, fitness, financial planning, shopping<br />

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 />

fest<br />

From Page 3<br />

Pearlman’s clothes –<br />

some of which are composed<br />

of recycled materials<br />

– all come with a<br />

focus and a theme, such as<br />

anti-bullying, the #MeToo<br />

movement or strongly suggesting<br />

youth should be<br />

fearless.<br />

“This is a phenomenal<br />

opportunity,” said Pearlman,<br />

who has aspirations<br />

of studying at Chicago’s<br />

School of Art Institute.<br />

“We wear clothes every<br />

day and they represent<br />

who and what we are. I’d<br />

like to take that moment to<br />

influence others.”<br />

Afterward, Paauw estimated<br />

60 showed up for<br />

Teen Fest. She spoke of<br />

the collective goal of the<br />

night, besides building<br />

name recognition for the<br />

three youth clubs.<br />

“It was important to<br />

us in developing this<br />

event was to highlight local<br />

teen’s talent,” Paauw<br />

said. “So this was an<br />

event put on for teens by<br />

teens.”


glencoeanchor.com sound off<br />

the glencoe anchor | September 20, 2018 | 19<br />

Social snapshot<br />

Top Stories<br />

from GlencoeAnchor.com as of Sept. 17<br />

From the Sports Editor<br />

Giving a hand to all friends<br />

1. Glencoe’s Hoover mansion is most<br />

expensive in suburbs<br />

2. BREAKING: Body of missing kayaker<br />

found<br />

3. Developers propose $2.3M Old Green<br />

Bay Linear Parks project<br />

4. Photos: Glencoe honors Patriot Day with<br />

Am Shalom ceremony<br />

5. Police Reports: Suspect requests tow<br />

truck money for fake car accident<br />

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

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

Sept. 10 with the caption: “After a Friday night<br />

win, New Trier football collected food and supplies<br />

for the New Trier Township Food Pantry on<br />

Saturday. Good work, Trevians!”<br />

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

Michael Wojtychiw<br />

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

A<br />

line in the TV<br />

show “Cheers’”<br />

intro song is<br />

“Where everybody knows<br />

your name. And they’re<br />

always glad you came.”<br />

It’s about a sense of community,<br />

friendship and<br />

being around people you<br />

have similar interests in<br />

and enjoy spending time<br />

with.<br />

Six years ago, Derby<br />

Bar and Grill in Chicago<br />

partnered with the University<br />

of Missouri Alumni<br />

Association’s Chicago<br />

chapter to become the<br />

city’s only Mizzou bar,<br />

a place where Mizzou<br />

alumni go to watch football<br />

and basketball games,<br />

host alumni gatherings or<br />

just meet together for a<br />

drink or some food.<br />

Nestled in a quiet<br />

stretch of the Lincoln Park<br />

neighborhood, it almost<br />

made the restaurant feel<br />

more like a hidden spot,<br />

but you would always<br />

know that on game day,<br />

Derby was the place to<br />

go to watch game. With<br />

multiple school flags flying<br />

outside, banners and<br />

decals on the windows<br />

and walls, it truly felt like<br />

a home away from home<br />

for those who went to<br />

school in Columbia, Mo.<br />

This all came about this<br />

past weekend when the<br />

head bartender, Landon,<br />

at the establishment had<br />

his final days at Derby, as<br />

he was being transferred<br />

somewhere else and was<br />

also beginning a career in<br />

real estate. He had been<br />

with the establishment,<br />

and our alumni chapter,<br />

for all six years we have<br />

been with Derby. He’d<br />

become someone that<br />

everyone knew and he<br />

knew everybody, or so it<br />

seemed.<br />

It could even be said<br />

that he became a friend.<br />

Wait staff comes and<br />

goes, but the one constant<br />

had always been Landon.<br />

This past weekend,<br />

current and former staff<br />

members, fellow alumni<br />

and those who have been<br />

served by the bar gathered<br />

to wish him a goodbye of<br />

sorts, sharing a last toast<br />

or laugh with him.<br />

Sitting around with<br />

everyone, sharing old<br />

stories, having laughs,<br />

it reminded me of being<br />

around friends, not just<br />

people that are there to<br />

serve you. Everyone<br />

knows your name, a good<br />

amount of your life story,<br />

things that some of one’s<br />

best friends might not<br />

know.<br />

I was lucky to be the<br />

chapter president of our<br />

alumni chapter for nearly<br />

four years, and currently<br />

still serve on our board,<br />

so I’ve gotten to know<br />

pretty much everyone<br />

that’s worked there since<br />

we first partnered with<br />

Derby six years ago. One<br />

could say it’s almost like<br />

a family.<br />

This is just an example<br />

of the great work and<br />

relationships that are built<br />

between groups, bars and<br />

restaurants in the area.<br />

I have also seen this<br />

type of relationship in the<br />

North Shore, and it’s so<br />

great to see. Hopefully<br />

many have had a similar<br />

experience as I have<br />

because I’m sure glad I<br />

found my “Cheers.”<br />

The Glencoe<br />

Anchor<br />

“We’re proud to offer 4 new classes with @<br />

ReachYoga60022 at the Takiff Center! #beginneryoga<br />

#communityyoga”<br />

@GlencoeParks, Glencoe Park District, posted<br />

on Sept. 13<br />

Follow The Glencoe Anchor: @GlencoeAnchor<br />

go figure<br />

$2.3M<br />

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

How much the Old Green<br />

Bay Linear Parks Project is<br />

proposed for. (Page 4)<br />

THE NORTHBROOK TOWER<br />

Firm hired to find D225<br />

Superintendent Riggle’s<br />

successor<br />

The Glenbrook District<br />

225 Board of Education<br />

approved the hiring of<br />

BWP and Associates of<br />

Libertyville as the firm that<br />

will conduct the search for<br />

a replacement for retiring<br />

Superintendent Dr. Mike<br />

Riggle during its Tuesday,<br />

Sept. 11 meeting.<br />

BWP was selected from<br />

a slate of three firms that<br />

were interviewed before<br />

the start of the school year.<br />

The cost of the agreement<br />

is $17,500, plus expenses,<br />

and plans call for Riggle’s<br />

replacement to be selected<br />

in December.<br />

Prior to approving BWP<br />

and Associates at the conclusion<br />

of the regular<br />

meeting, the board members<br />

interrupted the meeting<br />

to speak with BWP<br />

1992 founding member<br />

and current director Ron<br />

Barnes and associate Kathleen<br />

Williams in executive<br />

session.<br />

Speaking with reporters<br />

while awaiting their appearance<br />

before the board<br />

during the closed session,<br />

Barnes and Williams explained<br />

their methodology,<br />

objectives and timetable.<br />

Barnes said they’ll be<br />

trying to identify the “10<br />

or 12 characteristics of<br />

what it’ll take to be successful<br />

as superintendent<br />

in this district.”<br />

There will be focus<br />

group meetings in early<br />

October, online community<br />

surveys and community<br />

forums at Glenbrook North<br />

and Glenbrook South.<br />

BWP will solicit input<br />

from students, teachers,<br />

parents, administrators,<br />

board members and residents<br />

of the community.<br />

Reporting by Neil Milbert,<br />

Freelance Reporter. Full<br />

story at NorthbrookTower.<br />

com.<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


20 | September 20, 2018 | The glencoe anchor glencoe<br />

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the glencoe anchor | September 20, 2018 | glencoeanchor.com<br />

the black sheep<br />

Boba tea shop prides itself on originality, Page 27<br />

New Trier senior<br />

Rebecca Smith, of<br />

Winnetka, performs<br />

in Lagniappe-<br />

Potpourri’s “Enjoy<br />

the Ride,” which<br />

ran Wednesday-<br />

Saturday,<br />

Sept. 12-15, in<br />

Winnetka. Rhonda<br />

Holcomb/22nd<br />

Century Media<br />

80th Lagniappe show keeps<br />

the crowd in stitches, Page 23


22 | September 20, 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. Triumphant cries<br />

5. Pond slime<br />

9. Fall times, abbr.<br />

13. Sassy<br />

14. Unloads<br />

16. Close a door<br />

17. When doubled, a<br />

Pacific capital<br />

18. Sao ___<br />

19. Wallops<br />

20. Posh British<br />

school<br />

21. Weave<br />

23. French writer.....<br />

25. One-thousand<br />

bucks (sl.)<br />

26. Airline to Amsterdam<br />

28. CD predecessors<br />

29. Cardinal, e.g.<br />

32. ____ gow poker<br />

33. Glenbrook South<br />

senior 2017 Youth of<br />

the Year, Christian<br />

_____<br />

34. Prefix with space<br />

35. Car make in<br />

Europe<br />

37. Huge amount<br />

38. Battle<br />

39. Spoil<br />

40. Frozen area<br />

42. Chowed down<br />

43. Computer system<br />

saboteurs<br />

45. Atlas abbreviation<br />

48. G.I. entertainers<br />

49. Cigar residue<br />

50. Ideal state<br />

52. Cheaters<br />

56. GBS girls soccer<br />

star, Alexandria<br />

_____<br />

57. “Rule, Britannia”<br />

composer<br />

58. Coup ___<br />

59. Barely adequate<br />

60. “Très ___!”<br />

61. Toughen up<br />

62. 401(k) cousins<br />

63. Beehive, e.g.<br />

64. 20-20, e.g.<br />

65. “___ la guerre”<br />

Down<br />

1. Claim<br />

2. Intensify<br />

3. Specialized vocabularies<br />

4. Oscar-winning<br />

director of “Platoon”<br />

5. Promotion seeker<br />

6. Like Jack Sprat’s<br />

diet<br />

7. Much turkey<br />

8. Loyalty<br />

9. Workplace safety<br />

org.<br />

10. Garbanzo<br />

11. Of guardianship<br />

12. 10th, 20th and<br />

30th in NYC<br />

15. More tender<br />

22. ___ Zeppelin<br />

24. Eurasia’s ___<br />

Mountains<br />

27. “O Sole ___”<br />

30. Military unit<br />

31. Icelandic singer<br />

33. Stock holder<br />

34. Circumference<br />

segment<br />

35. Surpass<br />

36. Used<br />

38. Duke<br />

39. Cross shape<br />

41. Confided<br />

43. “The Cat in the<br />

__”<br />

44. Line to the audience<br />

45. Bailiwick<br />

46. Head adornments<br />

47. Least refined<br />

51. Of the sense of<br />

smell<br />

53. Wine: Prefix<br />

54. Needle holder<br />

55. Steak orderer’s<br />

option<br />

57. Aladdin’s monkey<br />

GLENCOE<br />

Writers Theatre<br />

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

242-6000)<br />

■Through ■ Sept. 23:<br />

‘Vietgone’<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 />

21: Family Night and<br />

Karaoke<br />

■10 ■ a.m. Saturday,<br />

Sept. 22: Brad<br />

Moldofsky<br />

■Noon, ■ Saturday, Sept.<br />

22: Matt Burch<br />

■7:30 ■ p.m. Saturday,<br />

Sept. 22: 2nd Chance<br />

Revival<br />

■10 ■ a.m. Sunday, Sept.<br />

23: Emily Patt<br />

■Noon, ■ Sunday Sept.<br />

23: 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 />

■6-10:30 ■ p.m. Saturday,<br />

Sept. 22: OktoberFest<br />

WINNETKA<br />

Elm Street Shopping<br />

District<br />

(Multiple locations,<br />

HoffmannCRE.com)<br />

■4-8 ■ p.m. Thursdays,<br />

Fridays and Saturdays<br />

through the summer:<br />

Elm Street music<br />

performances<br />

To place an event in The<br />

Scene, email martin@<br />

NorthbrookTower.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 20, 2018 | 23<br />

Students collaborate to produce 80th Lagniappe show<br />

Hilary Anderson<br />

Freelance Reporter<br />

The longstanding tradition<br />

continued when Lagniappe-Potpourri,<br />

New<br />

Trier’s annual variety<br />

show, began the school’s<br />

performing arts season<br />

and marked its 80th year<br />

of the all-student-run<br />

production. It played for<br />

a delighted audience last<br />

week from Wednesday-<br />

Saturday, Sept. 12-15, at<br />

the Winnetka campus in<br />

the Gaffney Auditorium.<br />

This year’s theme for<br />

Lagniappe Potpourri 2019<br />

was “Enjoy the Ride.”<br />

Approximately 135 students<br />

last spring began<br />

the production process of<br />

writing the show along<br />

with designing and building<br />

sets, choreographing,<br />

composing music, auditioning<br />

performers, and<br />

marketing it.<br />

Nina Lynn, a New Trier<br />

teacher, served as the head<br />

person for the production.<br />

“This year’s student<br />

leadership board has been<br />

particularly collaborative<br />

and thought about the entire<br />

process,” Lynn said.<br />

“The result is a particularly<br />

well-structured show<br />

and good experience for<br />

everyone involved.”<br />

The theme, “Enjoy the<br />

Ride,” was a fun look at<br />

how fast four years can go<br />

for an incoming freshman.<br />

It cleverly tied-in comments<br />

about the school’s<br />

new stairway versus the<br />

old stairway, referring to<br />

the changes that have taken<br />

place since the recent<br />

additions and renovations<br />

at New Trier.<br />

There were spoofs on<br />

situations that may have<br />

happened during students’<br />

advisery and other classes<br />

such as “getting to know<br />

A skit called “Holiday” was performed during Lagniappe-Potpourri, which ran<br />

Wednesday-Saturday, Sept. 12-15, at New Trier’s Winnetka campus. Photos by Rhonda<br />

Holcomb/22nd Century Media<br />

you sessions,” no technology<br />

times and worrying<br />

about getting a paper<br />

printed in time that was<br />

due for the next class.<br />

A true-to-life skit about<br />

distractions that tend to<br />

occur during test-taking<br />

times brought applause.<br />

Former New Trier<br />

graduates would laugh at<br />

the New Trier senior “old<br />

people’s home.”<br />

Another musical number<br />

was about New Trier<br />

being the land of fame and<br />

success.<br />

A skit about teacher<br />

tweets bought the most<br />

laughter. Students wrote<br />

fake tweets directed to<br />

specific teachers, similar<br />

to TV talk show host<br />

Jimmy Kimmel’s method.<br />

The actual teachers had to<br />

read them on camera.<br />

“Students videotaped<br />

the teachers’ first reaction<br />

as they read the tweet,”<br />

Lynn said. “That made it<br />

even funnier.”<br />

Most impressive was<br />

the choreography under<br />

direction of seniors Lilly<br />

Lederer and Nicki Montenegro.<br />

Their past dancing<br />

and choreography experience<br />

showed itself exquisitely<br />

in well-orchestrated<br />

numbers.<br />

“It was difficult getting<br />

everyone to understand<br />

what we wanted to<br />

achieve but in the end it<br />

all came together,” said<br />

Lederer, who has been<br />

choreographing for three<br />

years.<br />

“We started working on<br />

this after getting the music,”<br />

Montenegro said.<br />

The music was another<br />

bright star in the production’s<br />

crown.<br />

Seniors Alexandra<br />

Riedinger and Eli Friedman<br />

wrote the music for<br />

the show.<br />

Riedinger conducted the<br />

band and Friedman was<br />

co-conductor.<br />

“Eli and I traded off<br />

writing music,” Riedinger<br />

said.<br />

The music and dancing<br />

were so impressive they<br />

could be a separate show<br />

entirely on their own merits.<br />

It was obvious the band<br />

members truly enjoyed<br />

what they were doing.<br />

Musician Sam Wert<br />

could be seen moving with<br />

the music even while playing<br />

the trumpet.<br />

Weillin Feng had a<br />

sense of humor and lit up<br />

the dark transitions between<br />

skits with orange<br />

lights on his trombone.<br />

Credit goes to the producers<br />

of the variety show<br />

— seniors Josh Hoffman<br />

and Lilly Meehan, who<br />

pulled the show together<br />

and made it a memorable<br />

80th anniversary production.<br />

Both participated<br />

in some part of the show<br />

during previous years —<br />

stage crew, costume crew.<br />

“So many of my friends<br />

are from the Lagniappe-<br />

Potpourri productions,”<br />

Hoffman said. “The com-<br />

Erin Donohue (left) and Carly Martin perform in an act.<br />

The student-run show was the 80th annual production.<br />

munity aspect of his show<br />

means so much to us.”<br />

“I worked behind the<br />

scenes for three years and<br />

wanted to take this on,”<br />

Meehan said. “You spend<br />

so much time working towards<br />

this goal along with<br />

so many friends. It will be<br />

sad to leave it when we<br />

graduate but the memories<br />

will be great. We are<br />

celebrating the good times<br />

now.”


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

glencoeanchor.com<br />

Faith Briefs<br />

North Shore Congregation Israel (1185<br />

Sheridan Road, Glencoe)<br />

Baby Wiggleworms<br />

Join the congregation<br />

from 9:30-10:15 a.m. Saturdays,<br />

Sept. 22-Oct. 20.<br />

This classic music program<br />

led by musician Joel<br />

Frankel from the Old Town<br />

School of Folk Music will<br />

have you singing and moving<br />

with your little ones.<br />

Register at www.juf.org/<br />

jBabyWiggleworms<br />

North Shore Alateen<br />

Meeting<br />

Join the congregation<br />

for this meeting from 7-8<br />

p.m. every Monday Oct.<br />

5-Dec. 17.<br />

Sukkot Experience<br />

Get the Sukkot Experience<br />

from 9:15-10:45 a.m.<br />

Monday, Sept. 24.<br />

Hand in Hand: A Support<br />

Group for Spouse/Partner<br />

Loss for Older Adults<br />

The loss of a spouse or<br />

partner can be life-changing,<br />

especially as you face<br />

the “golden” years alone.<br />

Learn what to expect from<br />

your grief, adapt to role<br />

changes, learn coping skills<br />

and navigate relationships<br />

in your new status. For<br />

those with a loss over the<br />

past year and a half, join<br />

NSCI, as well as North<br />

Suburban Synagogue Beth<br />

El of Highland Park for<br />

the event from 10:30 a,m,-<br />

noon every Wednesday<br />

from Sept. 26-Oct. 24. Cost<br />

is $30 for the series. For<br />

more information, contact<br />

Elizabeth Siegel Cohen at<br />

847-745-5404 or ElizabethCohen@jcfs.org.<br />

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

Erev Sukkot Service and<br />

Pizza in the Hut<br />

Are you ready to shake<br />

your lulav? Join us for Erev<br />

Sukkot Services, from 5-9<br />

p.m. Sunday, Sept. 23, followed<br />

by Pizza in the Hut!<br />

$10/person or $25/family.<br />

Don’t forget to bring mittens<br />

to decorate the Sukkah;<br />

they will be donated<br />

after the holiday to children<br />

in need.<br />

Issues of the Day with<br />

Buddy Schreiber<br />

Explore current events<br />

through a Jewish lens with<br />

Master Teacher, Buddy<br />

Schreiber from 10-11 a.m.<br />

Tuesday, Sept. 25.<br />

Hebrew School<br />

Hebrew classes begin at<br />

4:15 p.m. and end at 6:00<br />

p.m. every Wednesday,<br />

starting Sept. 26. Students<br />

are invited to join at Drop<br />

In for games and prizes plus<br />

pizza and snacks (for purchase)<br />

starting at 3:20 p.m.<br />

Learn to Play Bridge<br />

Come and learn how<br />

to play with friends from<br />

Am Shalom from 9:30-<br />

11:30 every Friday until<br />

Sept. 14. This class will<br />

meet for eight weeks. $72/<br />

player. Questions? Please<br />

contact Alyssa Latala at<br />

847.835.4800 or alatala@<br />

amshalom.com.<br />

Fanchon Simons’ Feeding<br />

the Hungry<br />

On the third Sunday of<br />

every month, volunteer<br />

members of Am Shalom<br />

gather to help at the temple’s<br />

kitchen from 9-10<br />

a.m.. It just takes about an<br />

hour and is rewarding for<br />

people of any age! Questions?<br />

Please call Nina<br />

Schroeder at 847-835-<br />

7025.<br />

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

Vernon Ave.)<br />

Gender Authenticity<br />

Workshop<br />

The LGBTQ team is<br />

pleased to announce a<br />

workshop on Gender Authenticity<br />

on Oct. 7, following<br />

the 10 a.m. service. The<br />

facilitator will be Vanessa<br />

Sheridan, Director of Gender<br />

Equity at the Center on<br />

Halsted. Lunch and childcare<br />

will be provided.<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 />

kitty-corner from Central<br />

School. Pick up an informational<br />

brochure at the<br />

entrance.<br />

A French Dip<br />

With great excitement,<br />

St. Elisabeth’s has begun<br />

to prepare for hosting a<br />

group of pilgrims from<br />

the Paroisse de la Trinité<br />

in Nantes, France. Eleven<br />

travelers plus their priest are<br />

coming to Glencoe October<br />

17-29 to learn about religion<br />

in America. They’ll be<br />

visiting the Bahai Temple,<br />

having Shabbat suppers in<br />

Jewish homes, and going<br />

out to Barrington to see Willow<br />

Creek Church, among<br />

other religious explorations.<br />

Of course they will<br />

also do touristic adventures<br />

in downtown Chicago too.<br />

There are several different<br />

ways to help with this visit,<br />

from giving rides to making<br />

coffee. Please contact Susan<br />

Newcomb to offer help.<br />

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

A Storytelling Workshop<br />

This is a workshop led<br />

by Rev. Rebecca Anderson<br />

from 9 a.m.-noon on Saturday,<br />

Sept. 29. In this active<br />

and interactive event, participants<br />

will strengthen<br />

their skills of crafting and<br />

telling stories. Rebecca<br />

will help us think outside<br />

our usual stories -- thinking<br />

beyond what “counts”<br />

as a story worth telling in<br />

a faith community. To that<br />

end, our storytelling session<br />

will help you: Learn<br />

how to better mine experience<br />

for, and then craft,<br />

personal narratives on a<br />

Please see FAITH, 25<br />

In Memoriam<br />

Pamela Gee<br />

Pamela Porter Gee, a<br />

New Trier graduate, 74,<br />

died in Lexington on Sept.<br />

1, surrounded by family.<br />

She was in the fifth year of<br />

her courageous battle with<br />

ovarian cancer. Gee served<br />

as president of Ronald Mc-<br />

Donald House Charities of<br />

the Bluegrass, the Lexington<br />

Medical Society Auxiliary<br />

and Baby Health Service,<br />

which provides free<br />

healthcare to children who<br />

do not have medical insurance.<br />

She also worked<br />

as manager and buyer for<br />

the gift shops at St. Joseph<br />

Hospital and St. Joseph<br />

East Hospital, reprising<br />

her earlier career as a<br />

buyer for Marshall Field’s<br />

in Chicago and Macy’s in<br />

San Francisco. Her interest<br />

in meeting people and volunteering<br />

led her to help<br />

Central Kentucky host<br />

some of the biggest events<br />

to be held in the area in<br />

the past four decades: She<br />

volunteered at the 1985<br />

men’s Final Four at Rupp<br />

Arena, vice presidential<br />

debates at Centre College<br />

in Danville and the 2010<br />

World Equestrian Games<br />

in Lexington. Born Oct.<br />

21, 1943, in Evanston,<br />

she grew up in a two-story<br />

Art Deco house in Northfield,<br />

a North Shore suburb<br />

of Chicago, the third of<br />

four children. Gee graduated<br />

from New Trier High<br />

School in Winnetka and<br />

earned a bachelor’s degree<br />

from Skidmore College in<br />

Saratoga Springs, NY. She<br />

lived in Chicago for three<br />

years after college before<br />

moving to San Francisco,<br />

where she met her husband<br />

Bill, then an officer<br />

in the Navy stationed at<br />

Treasure Island Naval Station.<br />

They were married<br />

for 48 years. Gee moved<br />

to Lexington in 1975 with<br />

Bill, her children Bobby,<br />

then 3, and Lucy, then 1,<br />

and golden retriever Captain,<br />

after Bill completed<br />

his urology residency at<br />

the University of Washington.<br />

The family built a<br />

house in 1980, where they<br />

lived ever since. Gee was<br />

a lifelong Chicago Cubs<br />

fan, attending games as<br />

a child with her father<br />

Bob. She attended Game<br />

3 of the 2016 World Series<br />

in Chicago, the only<br />

Cubs championship in her<br />

lifetime. She was also a<br />

Kentucky basketball fan,<br />

attending home games for<br />

many years in section 213.<br />

She was an avid reader<br />

of novels and a voracious<br />

consumer of news. Gee<br />

was a lifelong supporter<br />

of the Democratic Party,<br />

always believing it was<br />

important to help those<br />

less fortunate. Gee and her<br />

husband enjoyed traveling,<br />

including to presidential<br />

libraries and frequent<br />

visits to see their children<br />

in Chicago and Austin,<br />

Texas, and most recently<br />

their granddaughter Leila,<br />

whom Gee adored. Among<br />

their most memorable trips<br />

were visits to the Holy<br />

Land, Syria and Lebanon.<br />

Gee was a kind and gentle<br />

person, with rarely with<br />

a cross word to anyone.<br />

She cherished all of her<br />

friends, from childhood to<br />

those she met later in life.<br />

Family was also very important<br />

to Gee. She valued<br />

her relationships with her<br />

siblings, many cousins,<br />

nieces and nephews. She<br />

loved dogs and enjoyed<br />

neighborhood walks, gardening<br />

and golf in Lexington<br />

and Vero Beach,<br />

Fla. During her illness she<br />

enjoyed the support and<br />

companionship of many<br />

friends in Lexington and<br />

from around the country.<br />

Her family wishes to thank<br />

Baptist Health Lexington<br />

Gynecologic Oncology,<br />

the Baptist Health Infusion<br />

Center and Hospice of the<br />

Bluegrass. Gee was preceded<br />

in death by her parents<br />

Elizabeth Wales and<br />

Robert Porter of Northfield,<br />

her sister Elizabeth<br />

Bowman of Northbrook<br />

and her golden retrievers<br />

Captain, Dixie and Henry<br />

and yellow Labrador retriever<br />

Abby. She is survived<br />

by her husband Dr.<br />

William F. Gee of Lexington;<br />

daughter Lucy W. Gee<br />

of Chicago; son Robert W.<br />

Gee, daughter-in-law Carolyn<br />

and granddaughter<br />

Leila Porter Gee of Austin,<br />

Texas; brothers Robert T.<br />

Porter (Lee) of Alpharetta,<br />

Ga.; and William W. Porter<br />

of Denver; brother-in-law<br />

John W. Gee of Madison,<br />

Wis.; and eight nieces and<br />

nephews. Friends are invited<br />

to a celebration of<br />

Gee’s life from 2-4 p.m.<br />

on Saturday Sept. 22 at<br />

the Gee residence. In lieu<br />

of flowers, donations in<br />

memory of Gee are suggested<br />

to Baby Health<br />

Service Inc., 1590 Harrodsburg<br />

Road, Lexington,<br />

KY 40504. babyhealthlexington.org<br />

Have someone’s life you’d<br />

like to honor? Email<br />

Michael Wojtychiw at<br />

m.wojtychiw@22ndcentury<br />

media.com with information<br />

about a loved one who was<br />

part of the Glencoe community.


glencoeanchor.com life & arts<br />

the glencoe anchor | September 20, 2018 | 25<br />

FAITH<br />

From Page 24<br />

theme, improve your style:<br />

presence, tone, pacing, presentation<br />

and use structure<br />

intentionally and creatively<br />

to strengthen your story.<br />

This workshop is open<br />

to all (members of GUC or<br />

non-member) — whether<br />

you have storytelling experience<br />

or are new to<br />

this medium. Sign up<br />

Sunday mornings, email<br />

David Wood (david@<br />

glencoeunionchurch.org)<br />

or call the church office<br />

(847-235-1111).<br />

An Evening with Alan<br />

Lightman<br />

Join the church at 7 p.m.<br />

Oct. 25 for an evening<br />

will include a presentation<br />

by Dr. Lightman on<br />

the relationship between<br />

religion and science along<br />

with time for conversation<br />

with him on a range of related<br />

topics. The event<br />

will be free and open to<br />

everyone.<br />

Gentle Yoga<br />

Join the church from<br />

9-10 a.m. every Monday<br />

and Wednesday for yoga.<br />

Submit information for The<br />

Anchor’s Faith page to<br />

m.wojtychiw@22ndcentury<br />

media.com.<br />

DISCOVER:<br />

Safety issues<br />

Maintenance issues<br />

Repair issues<br />

Replacement issues<br />

Before you List, Know what you’re Selling!<br />

Don’t Get Surprised From A Buyers Inspection<br />

Also Inspects & Manages New Construction<br />

A detailed, comprehensive report on the condition of your structure, systems & safety issues.<br />

mike@mjclarkinspections.com 224-554-9798<br />

www.mjclarkinspections.com<br />

FLOORING • TILE • RUGS • CABINETRY<br />

COUNTERTOPS • WINDOW TREATMENTS<br />

1840 Skokie Boulevard, Northbrook, IL60062<br />

847.835.2400 •www.lewisblinds.com


26 | September 20, 2018 | The glencoe anchor glencoe<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

October 5-7<br />

Downtown<br />

Highwood<br />

Prelude to<br />

Pumkin Fest<br />

Come Carve and Fill Walls<br />

October 1st - 4th, 3:30 - 9 p.m.<br />

Community<br />

Appreciation Night<br />

October 4th, 5 - 10 p.m.<br />

Free Admission<br />

Carnival Rides Open<br />

October 4th at 5pm<br />

Unlimited Ride Wristbands Available<br />

Admission<br />

$3 Daily Admission<br />

$5 Weekend Pass<br />

Kids Under 6 Free<br />

BYOP<br />

(Bring Your Own Pumpkin)<br />

To Receive Free Admission<br />

Sign up for the<br />

Superhero 5K Run/Walk<br />

in Honor of Superman Sam!<br />

October 6th, 9 a.m.<br />

Help break the Guinness World Record for largest display of lit jack-o’-lanterns, while raising money for Make-A-Wish Illinois<br />

All-You-Can-Carve Pumpkins • 4 Stages of Live Music • Costume & Pie-Eating Contests • Pony & Camel Rides • Petting Zoo, Food & Drink Vendors Galore, and More!<br />

Thank You To The Great Highwood Pumpkin Fest Sponsors<br />

Full event and music schedule, volunteer and contest sign-up at:<br />

www.HighwoodPumpkinFest.com


glencoeanchor.com dining out<br />

the glencoe anchor | September 20, 2018 | 27<br />

New boba tea shop adds new twists to popular concept<br />

Brittany Kapa<br />

Contributing Sports Editor<br />

Glenview’s Boba Club<br />

knows it may be a black<br />

sheep, but owner Steve Ha<br />

is OK with that.<br />

Ha’s latest business venture,<br />

Boba Club, even dons<br />

a black sheep on its logo —<br />

a subtle way of letting the<br />

community know his place<br />

does things a little differently.<br />

Ha, an avid boba tea<br />

drinker, would frequent his<br />

local boba tea shop with<br />

his wife three or four times<br />

a week. One day, as Ha<br />

looked around, he noticed<br />

the constant line of guests<br />

waiting outside the door.<br />

And, he then realized<br />

there was room for another<br />

boba tea shop in Glenview,<br />

one that did things a little<br />

differently.<br />

Ha and his wife opened<br />

Boba Club, 1825 Waukegan<br />

Road in Glenview, just<br />

a few short weeks ago and<br />

offer more than just a graband-go<br />

experience to its<br />

customers.<br />

Boba Club encourages<br />

patrons to grab a drink, stay<br />

a while and work. Long<br />

chats, homework sessions<br />

or work duties are encouraged<br />

by the incorporation<br />

of private and semi-private<br />

work spaces.<br />

For those that want to<br />

focus and work alone,<br />

there are two private workstations<br />

disguised as red<br />

phone booths.<br />

“The telephone booths<br />

are really a throwback to<br />

when I first moved here,”<br />

Ha said.<br />

Glenview’s downtown<br />

area originally had phone<br />

booths located across from<br />

the library, and Ha wanted<br />

to bring a little local Glenview<br />

history into his shop.<br />

“I wanted to make it like<br />

this because I worked from<br />

home before, and I was a<br />

Boba Club’s fruit freeze ($4 for a small, $5 for a large)<br />

can be made with a variety of fruits, of which customers<br />

choose three, and has tapioca balls at the bottom.<br />

remote worker, so I was<br />

always looking for places<br />

like this,” he said.<br />

Boba Club also has two<br />

larger group work spaces,<br />

both enclosed, in addition<br />

to a general seating area<br />

and a bigger open workspace<br />

toward the back.<br />

“I’m really happy since<br />

we’ve opened to see the<br />

regulars come in on their<br />

bikes at 3:30 or 4 p.m. and<br />

they’re in the rooms doing<br />

their homework,” he said.<br />

As for the menu, Ha<br />

mixed traditional boba tea<br />

flavors with more popular<br />

and modern options for his<br />

customers.<br />

“We do things authentic<br />

where they have to be, so<br />

our jasmine milk tea, for<br />

instance, it’s what you’re<br />

going to expect when you<br />

go into a typical boba tea<br />

shop,” he said.<br />

Part of that authentic experience<br />

is making the tapioca<br />

balls frequently, so the<br />

flavor and texture is what<br />

a customer would expect<br />

from any boba tea shop.<br />

Boba Club’s tapioca is<br />

cooked every three to four<br />

hours, as Ha doesn’t want<br />

his product sitting around<br />

all day.<br />

“That’s what I expect<br />

when I go to a boba tea<br />

shop,” he said.<br />

Boba Club offers more<br />

recognizable drink options<br />

Boba Club<br />

1825 Waukegan Road,<br />

Glenview<br />

Noon-11 p.m., Sunday-<br />

Thursday<br />

Noon-midnight, Friday-<br />

Saturday<br />

(847) 603-6000<br />

such as coffees and lattes<br />

for customers looking for a<br />

little caffeine.<br />

Ha incorporated his version<br />

of an international dish<br />

he tried in Hong Kong. The<br />

waffle puff ($5 classic,<br />

$8.50 waffle and ice cream<br />

combination) is a take on<br />

a traditional street waffle<br />

served in Hong Kong.<br />

“The waffle has the texture,<br />

bounce and chewiness<br />

that you’re going to<br />

get from the street waffle in<br />

Hong Kong,” Ha said.<br />

Boba Club’s waffle puff<br />

is served with a variety of<br />

ice cream flavors ranging<br />

from traditional flavors like<br />

vanilla to more exotic ones<br />

like green tea.<br />

22nd Century Media<br />

editors recently ventured to<br />

Glenview to get a taste of<br />

what Boba Club has to offer.<br />

Ha prepared two different<br />

versions of a fruit<br />

freeze ($4 for a small, $5<br />

for a large), which includes<br />

three different types of fruit<br />

blended with ice and served<br />

The Purple Palmer, served in a lightbulb cup ($6.75), is a twist on an Arnold Palmer<br />

drink made with butterfly pea flower tea and lemonade. Photos by Erin Yarnall/22nd<br />

Century Media<br />

An original waffle puff combo ($8.50) is served with green tea ice cream and topped<br />

with dried rose petals.<br />

with chewy tapioca balls.<br />

Ha combined peach,<br />

mango and strawberry to<br />

create a thicker version of<br />

the drink that was sweet<br />

and near-perfect for a hot<br />

late-summer day.<br />

The other fruit freeze,<br />

made with honey dew, cantaloupe<br />

and watermelon,<br />

had a lighter texture to it<br />

but was still a sweet treat.<br />

“Our drinks are somewhat<br />

good for kids, there’s<br />

a lot of sugar because of the<br />

fruits and stuff, but it’s all<br />

real,” Ha said.<br />

Ha also let us sample<br />

the waffle puffs. The first,<br />

with the classic waffle,<br />

similar in flavor to vanilla,<br />

was served with green tea<br />

ice cream and topped with<br />

dried rose petals. The second,<br />

a nod to cookies and<br />

cream, was the chocolate<br />

waffle puff served with sesame<br />

ice cream and topped<br />

with crushed chocolate<br />

sandwich cookies.<br />

Both of these sweet treats<br />

strike a balance between<br />

authentic and inauthentic<br />

flavors, that work well together,<br />

as was Ha’s intent.<br />

“I really want to keep<br />

everything acceptable to<br />

the people that live on the<br />

North Shore,” he said.


28 | September 20, 2018 | The glencoe anchor real estate<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

The Glencoe Anchor’s<br />

What: Five bedrooms,<br />

three bathrooms<br />

Where: 235 Maple Hill<br />

Road, Glencoe<br />

SPONSORED CONTENT<br />

of the<br />

WEEK<br />

July 16<br />

• 502 Jackson Ave., Glencoe,<br />

60022-2026 — Mary Denise<br />

Wirth to Tina M. Balderas,<br />

Edward Balderas, $697,500<br />

• 538 Monroe Ave., Glencoe,<br />

60022-2072 — Trent Cornell<br />

to Robert Melsher, Melissa<br />

Melsher, $1,972,500<br />

July 12<br />

• 300 Drexel Lane, Glencoe,<br />

60022-2003 — American Tire<br />

Distributors Inc to Virginia<br />

Cardoza, $615,000<br />

July 11<br />

• 151 Park Ave., Glencoe,<br />

FOR ALL YOUR<br />

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

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

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

thefederalsavingsbank.com<br />

60022-1334 — Joseph A.<br />

Canepari to Tal Broda, Yael<br />

Broda, $2,187,000<br />

• 554 Dundee Road, Glencoe,<br />

60022-1402 — Scott A. Imhoff<br />

to Kimberly Goldstein, $783,500<br />

• 951 Valley Road, Glencoe,<br />

60022-1451 — Alan J. Gillman<br />

to Patros A. Youkhana, Michelle<br />

Marie Mkrdichian, $680,000<br />

July 10<br />

• 265 Randolph St., Glencoe,<br />

60022-2159 — Robert Salvaggio<br />

to Emily Golstser, Anthony<br />

Golstser, $450,000<br />

July 6<br />

Brought to you by:<br />

• 37 Crescent Drive, Glencoe,<br />

60022-1301 — Daniel Goldstein<br />

to Alison Garber, Rebecca<br />

Garber, $810,000<br />

July 2<br />

• 831 Oak Drive, Glencoe,<br />

60022-1428 — Lauri R. Rice<br />

to Suresh Pinjarkar, Joyce<br />

Pinjarkar, $660,000<br />

The Going Rate is provided<br />

by Record Information<br />

Services, Inc. For more<br />

information, visit www.<br />

public-record.com or call<br />

(630) 557-1000<br />

Amenities: Brick centerentry<br />

colonial with<br />

great presence on one<br />

of the prettiest, most<br />

prestigious streets in<br />

East Glencoe. Located<br />

less than half mile to<br />

town/train and close to<br />

parks/beach/community<br />

center. Grand two-story<br />

oval foyer with sweeping<br />

staircase welcomes you.<br />

First floor has hardwood<br />

floors and crown<br />

molding. Large living<br />

room. Eat-in kitchen<br />

with commercial-style<br />

stainless appliances<br />

and abundant cabinetry<br />

opens to family room<br />

with gas fireplace.<br />

Three-season sunroom overlooks big, fully-fenced yard with in-ground pool and<br />

automatic pool cover, brick paver patio-plus large, grassy area. Generous dining<br />

room, office and mud/laundry room leads to two-car attached garage. Upstairs,<br />

five bedrooms, three bathrooms (two compartmentalized hall baths). First and<br />

second floor laundry. Master suite with huge walk-in<br />

closet, beaut. appointed master bath with double<br />

vanity, large shower and big tub. Full basement offers<br />

rec room, play room, exercise room and plenty<br />

of storage. Many recent upgrades: windows<br />

(2009) and roof (2018).<br />

Listing Price:<br />

$1,269,000<br />

Listing Agent:<br />

Michael Mitchell,<br />

michael.mitchell@<br />

cbexchange.com,<br />

(847) 910-0146;<br />

Gloria Matlin, gloria.<br />

matlin@cbexchange.<br />

com, (847) 951-4040<br />

Agent Brokerage:<br />

Coldwell Banker<br />

Residential Brokerage<br />

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

j.zeddies@22ndcenturymedia.com or call (847) 272-4565.


glencoeanchor.com Classifieds<br />

the glencoe anchor | September 20, 2018 | 29<br />

CLASSIFIEDS<br />

Help Wanted · Garage Sales · Automotive<br />

Real Estate · Rentals · Merchandise<br />

Rental<br />

1099 Lake Front<br />

Property For Sale<br />

1.5 Acres Lake Front Property<br />

on Loon Lake in Antioch.<br />

200+ ft lake frontage. 1 3Br<br />

ranch, 1 cottage. Homes need<br />

major repairs. New 2 car<br />

garage. Buy for land value.<br />

Summered for 20 years, dream<br />

location! Selling due to health.<br />

$300k firm, no brokers. Only<br />

interested parties, don’t waste<br />

my time. Call Mike<br />

630-807-9714 12-6pm<br />

1212 Rentals<br />

Glencoe Sleeping Room<br />

Furnished, Wi-Fi, Cable,<br />

Parking, No Laundy or<br />

Kitchen $650/month<br />

Carla (847)835-4286<br />

1310 Offices for<br />

Rent<br />

Winnetka - 6 Units<br />

454-462 Winnetka Ave<br />

Ground level spaces available,<br />

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Utilities & Internet included<br />

150-1200 sq. ft. $645-800/mo<br />

Dako 773-969-1011<br />

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Advertise your<br />

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Business Directory<br />

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Want to<br />

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30 | September 20, 2018 | The glencoe anchor Classifieds<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

CLASSIFIEDS<br />

Help Wanted · Garage Sales · Automotive<br />

Real Estate · Rentals · Merchandise<br />

Merchandise<br />

Directory<br />

2489 Merchandise Wanted<br />

I'LL PAY YOU $$$<br />

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224-616-7474<br />

$$ JUKE BOXES &<br />

COIN-OP MACHINES<br />

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Fax It 708.326.9179<br />

Charge It<br />

DEADLINE -<br />

Friday at 3pm<br />

Automotive<br />

$52<br />

4 lines/<br />

7 papers<br />

Help Wanted<br />

per line $13<br />

4 lines/<br />

7 papers<br />

Real Estate<br />

$50<br />

7 lines/<br />

7 papers<br />

In this tough economy, we'll give you a free<br />

merchandise ad totaling $100 or less.<br />

· Write your FREE ad in 30 words or less.<br />

· One free ad per week.<br />

· Same ad may not be submitted more than 3 times.<br />

· The total selling price of your ad must not exceed $100.<br />

· Ads will be published on a space available basis.<br />

· Free Ads are Not Guaranteed to Run!<br />

Merchandise<br />

$30<br />

4 lines/<br />

7 papers<br />

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Choose Paper: Homer<br />

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Credit Card Orders Only<br />

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$30 for 7 papers<br />

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

22nd Century Media<br />

11516 W. 183rd St, Suite #3 Unit SW<br />

Orland Park, IL 60467<br />

FAX: 708.326.9179<br />

Circle One:


glencoeanchor.com sports<br />

the glencoe anchor | September 20, 2018 | 31<br />

Athlete of the Week<br />

2018 Football Standings<br />

10 Questions<br />

with Jack Crawshaw<br />

Central Suburban League South Division<br />

Evanston 4-0 overall, 0-0 conference<br />

Maine South 3-1, 0-0<br />

New Trier 3-1, 0-0<br />

Niles North 1-3, 0-0<br />

Glenbrook South 0-4, 0-0<br />

Niles West 0-4, 0-0<br />

Catholic League Blue Division<br />

Providence Catholic 4-0, 1-0<br />

Brother Rice 4-0, 1-0<br />

Montini Catholic 4-0, 0-0<br />

Loyola Academy 2-2, 0-1<br />

St. Rita 1-3, 0-1<br />

The Loyola senior golfer<br />

will play at Kent State<br />

next season.<br />

<br />

If you could travel<br />

anywhere in the<br />

world, where would it<br />

be and why?<br />

If I could travel anywhere<br />

in the world I would<br />

travel to Switzerland because<br />

I used to live with a<br />

guy from Switzerland.<br />

<br />

What’s the best part<br />

about being a Loyola<br />

athlete?<br />

The best part of being<br />

a Loyola athlete is having<br />

the opportunity to go out<br />

and compete for Loyola<br />

Academy and the Loyola<br />

community.<br />

If you could play<br />

another sport, what<br />

would you play and<br />

why?<br />

If I could play another<br />

sport besides golf I would<br />

play basketball. I grew up<br />

playing basketball and still<br />

continue to play.<br />

What’s been your<br />

favorite moment at<br />

Loyola?<br />

My favorite moment at<br />

Loyola has to be my first<br />

day of school at Loyola<br />

which was the start of junior<br />

year and being able to<br />

see old friends again.<br />

What’s the hardest<br />

part about golf?<br />

The hardest part about<br />

golf is staying in the present.<br />

The one thing that I<br />

and I feel like most people<br />

struggle with is getting<br />

caught up in previous<br />

shots which can lead to<br />

poor decisions later on.<br />

What’s the best part<br />

about playing golf?<br />

The best part about golf<br />

is going out and competing.<br />

Every time you are out<br />

there is a grind and to me<br />

that’s the best part about<br />

golf. Grinding out good<br />

and bad rounds.<br />

What’s one thing that<br />

people don’t know<br />

about you?<br />

One thing that people<br />

do not know about me is<br />

that Loyola Academy has<br />

been my third school all<br />

throughout High school.<br />

The previous two were<br />

Windermere Preparatory<br />

(Freshman) and Montverde<br />

Photo submitted<br />

Academy (Sophomore)<br />

If you could have a<br />

superpower, what<br />

would it be and why?<br />

The one superpower that<br />

I would have would most<br />

likely be the ability to fly.<br />

Being able to fly could<br />

make life a lot easier with<br />

traffic or any type of traveling.<br />

If you had $3 at<br />

Walgreens what<br />

would you buy?<br />

If I had three dollars I<br />

would probably buy some<br />

pretzels and an Arnold<br />

Palmer and maybe some<br />

gum.<br />

What’s one item on<br />

your bucket list?<br />

The one thing on my<br />

bucket list is to go to the<br />

Masters one day.<br />

Interview by Sports Editor<br />

Michael Wojtychiw<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

Don’t just<br />

list your<br />

real estate<br />

property...<br />

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Sell It!<br />

With a Classified Ad<br />

See the Classified Section for more<br />

info, or call 708.326.9170<br />

22ndCenturyMedia.com


32 | September 20, 2018 | The glencoe anchor sports<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

Girls Tennis<br />

Raiders sweep Woodlands<br />

in early conference match<br />

Brittany Kapa<br />

Contributing Sports Editor<br />

North Shore Country Day School’s Caroline Lommer<br />

focuses on hitting the ball Sept. 11 in Lake Forest.<br />

Brittany Kapa/22nd Century Media<br />

Last season, North Shore<br />

Country Day School didn’t<br />

have any expectations<br />

about how it would finish<br />

its season.<br />

Then, it won the IHSA<br />

Class 1A title.<br />

Now, it’s looking forward<br />

to building on the team’s<br />

good finish from last year<br />

while adding championships<br />

at both conference and<br />

at its sectional. With everyone<br />

on board, the team is<br />

looking to make a competitive<br />

run through the season.<br />

“Last year we had no<br />

expectations, we did not<br />

know we were going to win<br />

state,” said Claudia Miller,<br />

a returning sophomore and<br />

No. 1 singles player. “I’m<br />

really hopeful that we’ll<br />

win state again this year.”<br />

Miller’s excitement only<br />

grew when she, and the<br />

team, welcomed freshman<br />

Vivian Miller to the roster.<br />

Vivian Miller, who quickly<br />

secured her spot with No.<br />

1 doubles partner Caroline<br />

Lommer, had a smooth<br />

transition to the team this<br />

season.<br />

“I pretty much knew a<br />

lot of these people because<br />

my sister, Claudia, was on<br />

the team last year,” Vivian<br />

Miller said about being<br />

welcomed to the team as a<br />

freshman this season.<br />

Claudia Miller finished<br />

fourth in state last year, and<br />

is looking to make it back<br />

to that stage to help her<br />

team to another victory.<br />

But in order to do that,<br />

both the Miller sisters and<br />

Lommer know that working<br />

together, and supporting<br />

their teammates on the<br />

court, will be keys to another<br />

successful season.<br />

The Raiders took one<br />

step closer to their goal<br />

Tuesday, Sept. 11, picking<br />

up wins in all five matches<br />

against Woodlands Academy<br />

Sept. 11 in Lake Forest.<br />

Claudia Miller defeated<br />

the Wildcats’s Genevieve<br />

Hesse, a junior, 6-1, 6-0.<br />

And despite the Raiders’s<br />

No. 1 doubles pair of<br />

Vivian Miller and Lommer<br />

having only been matched<br />

up together this season,<br />

they took the 6-2, 6-0 win<br />

over Elise Albertson and<br />

Abigail Hurtgen.<br />

Woodlands keep it interesting<br />

at No. 2 doubles<br />

when Hailey Denton and<br />

Daphne Ricketts held their<br />

own against Edith Edwards-Mizel<br />

and Gabbie<br />

Kaplinsky when after tying<br />

7-5, 4-6, the pairs were<br />

forced to play a super-tie<br />

breaker where NSCDS ultimately<br />

won out 10-7.<br />

Alex Arenson controlled<br />

the play at No. 2 singles<br />

when she won 6-0, 6-0<br />

over Mary Clare Scalise.<br />

Number 3 doubles played a<br />

competitive match as well,<br />

but NSCDS won out as<br />

Emily Weil and Emily Yoo<br />

topped Aine Heanney and<br />

Ingrid Hu 6-4, 6-3.<br />

“I’m just really proud of<br />

everyone for staying focused,<br />

being competitive<br />

but also a big thing for me<br />

is sportsmanship,” Raiders<br />

coach Alex Bergman said.<br />

“It’s high school tennis.<br />

We’re here to get better but<br />

also to have fun. It’s nice<br />

to see the girls cheering on<br />

their teammates but also focusing<br />

on getting their job<br />

done.”<br />

Bergman, as a first year<br />

coach, is trying to create a<br />

culture with her team. So<br />

far, her team has responded.<br />

“I love her, she’s so<br />

great,” Claudia Miller said.<br />

“She is learning with us.<br />

She is good at pushing us<br />

and good at being there<br />

when we’re upset. She<br />

understands where we’re<br />

coming from.”<br />

And even in matches that<br />

are a little lopsided, Bergman<br />

is pushing her players<br />

and ramping up her expectation<br />

so it can be one step<br />

closer to winning another<br />

state championship.<br />

“I told every girl to go<br />

out there with a purpose<br />

and to focus on something,<br />

every match is an opportunity<br />

to get better,” she said.<br />

“That’s all you really need<br />

to focus on even if there<br />

is a slight imbalance that<br />

doesn’t matter.”<br />

Girls cross-country<br />

Pack mentality leads New Trier to invite crown<br />

Gary Larsen<br />

Freelance Reporter<br />

This Week In...<br />

Trevian varsity<br />

athletics<br />

Boys cross-country<br />

■Sept. ■ 22 - at Prospect<br />

Invite, 9 a.m.<br />

■Sept. ■ 25 - at CSL Quad,<br />

5 p.m.<br />

Girls cross-country<br />

■Sept. ■ 22 - at Bartlett<br />

Invite, 9 a.m.<br />

■Sept. ■ 22 - at Palatine<br />

Invite, 9 a.m.<br />

■Sept. ■ 25 - at CSL Quad,<br />

4:30 p.m.<br />

Field hockey<br />

■Sept. ■ 20 - host Oak Park-<br />

River Forest, 6:30 p.m.<br />

■Sept. ■ 22 - vs. Sacred<br />

Heart Academy (Ky.), 10 a.m.<br />

New Trier’s Bridget Forbes finished third in a field<br />

of 141 runners at this year’s 16-team Libertyville<br />

Invitational on Saturday, Sept. 15, at Adler Park. Gary<br />

Larsen/22nd Century Media<br />

■Sept. ■ 25 - at Glenbard<br />

West, 6 p.m.<br />

Boys golf<br />

■Sept. ■ 20 - vs. Highland<br />

Park, Loyola, Lake Forest (at<br />

Sunset Valley Golf Course),<br />

4 p.m.<br />

■Sept. ■ 22 - at LF Invite, 1<br />

■Sept. ■ 25 - at CSL, 8 a.m.<br />

Girls golf<br />

■Sept. ■ 20 - host HP, 4 p.m.<br />

■Sept. ■ 24 - host Glenbrook<br />

North, 4 p.m.<br />

■Sept. ■ 26 - at CSL 8 a.m.<br />

Boys soccer<br />

■Sept. ■ 20 - host Evanston,<br />

7 p.m.<br />

■Sept. ■ 22 - host Lake<br />

Forest, noon<br />

■Sept. ■ 25 - host Glenbrook<br />

South, 7 p.m.<br />

There’s a pack mentality<br />

and then there’s what New<br />

Trier’s cross-country team<br />

did at this year’s Libertyville<br />

Invitational.<br />

The Trevians took first in<br />

the 16-team field by placing<br />

four of the top seven<br />

finishers and five of the top<br />

20 among 141 participants.<br />

But senior Leah Ulrich was<br />

less than surprised by her<br />

pack’s performance.<br />

“With a team of two hundred<br />

you’re going to have a<br />

lot of people who are close,<br />

and our top people this year<br />

are really close,” Ulrich<br />

said. “It’s really been awesome.”<br />

New Trier returned six of<br />

its top seven runners from<br />

the team that placed 13th<br />

at last year’s Class 3A state<br />

finals. The course at Adler<br />

Park in Libertyville on Saturday,<br />

Sept. 16, provided<br />

coach John Burnside’s girls<br />

with a challenge.<br />

“For a lot of the girls this<br />

was Day One and they had<br />

to come out on hills, in the<br />

heat,” Burnside said. “So<br />

what could have been really<br />

terrible ended up being<br />

challenging, but a great<br />

opener for us. I’ve come<br />

to learn from this group of<br />

kids, to not be surprised.”<br />

Bridget Forbes led the<br />

way by placing third, Ulrich<br />

was fifth, with Marlee<br />

Fradkin sixth, Ellie Finnigan<br />

seventh, and Eileen<br />

Wolff placing 17th.<br />

“(Wolff) was our fifth<br />

and that’s a huge improvement<br />

since last year, and<br />

that’s just her taking on<br />

her own development and<br />

working with the group,<br />

and getting better,” Burnside<br />

said. “As a senior, to<br />

see her doing that is great.”<br />

Forbes finished in<br />

19:15.6, one second out<br />

of second place behind St.<br />

Viator’s Katie Castelli, and<br />

Ulrich finished only three<br />

seconds behind Forbes.<br />

“I knew we’d run really<br />

close as a pack, and our<br />

pack did really well today,”<br />

Forbes said. “This was only<br />

my second race this year,<br />

so I was happy with how I<br />

ran.”<br />

Burnside was impressed<br />

by Forbes’ approach in Libertyville.<br />

Girls swimming and<br />

diving<br />

■Sept. ■ 21 - at Maine<br />

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

■Sept. ■ 22 - at Hinsdale<br />

Central, 10 a.m.<br />

Girls tennis<br />

■Sept. ■ 20 - host Niles<br />

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

■Sept. ■ 22 - at Prospect<br />

Invite, 9 a.m.<br />

■Sept. ■ 25 - at Niles West,<br />

4:30 p.m.<br />

■Sept. ■ 27 - host Loyola,<br />

4:30 p.m.<br />

Girls volleyball<br />

■Sept. ■ 24 - at Niles West,<br />

6 p.m.<br />

■Sept. ■ 26 - host Glenbrook<br />

South, 6 p.m.


glencoeanchor.com sports<br />

the glencoe anchor | September 20, 2018 | 33<br />

Football<br />

Loyola drops second straight game, falls to Brother Rice<br />

Neil Milbert<br />

Freelance Reporter<br />

Loyola Academy’s<br />

sophomore team surmounted<br />

a three touchdown<br />

first half deficit and<br />

won on a field goal on the<br />

last play of the game.<br />

That was the highlight of<br />

the Ramblers’ trip to Brother<br />

Rice on Friday, Sept. 15.<br />

Saying that the varsity<br />

was unable to come up<br />

with an encore is an understatement.<br />

“It’s been over a decade<br />

since we lost like this,”<br />

coach John Holecek lamented<br />

after the Ramblers<br />

were routed 35-3. “It was<br />

such a debacle — offensively<br />

and defensively —<br />

that I can’t put my finger<br />

on anything.<br />

“Obviously, they’re a<br />

good team and they’re<br />

rolling. They executed<br />

in every aspect and we<br />

didn’t. They have some<br />

good weapons. We had to<br />

play catch up and that’s<br />

not our forte.”<br />

The Ramblers trailed 7-0<br />

at the end of the first quarter<br />

and 14-0 when the second<br />

quarter was in its infancy<br />

before Nate Van Zelst’s<br />

38-yard field goal put them<br />

on the scoreboard midway<br />

through the quarter.<br />

Brother Rice answered<br />

immediately with a 74-<br />

yard touchdown drive and<br />

maintained its momentum<br />

by scoring again in the<br />

third and fourth quarters.<br />

The loss in their Catholic<br />

League Blue Division<br />

opener was the second<br />

straight for the Ramblers<br />

(2-2). They were defeated<br />

at home 17-12 the previous<br />

week by Mount Carmel,<br />

a game in which they<br />

were stopped on the goal<br />

line on the last play.<br />

Undefeated Brother<br />

Rice (4-0) was led on offense<br />

by quarterback John<br />

LOYOLA VS. BROTHER RICE<br />

1 2 3 4 F<br />

LOYOLA 0 3 0 0 3<br />

RICE 7 7 14 7 35<br />

Top Performers<br />

1. John Bean, Brother Rice QB – 253 passing yards, 1<br />

touchdown, 53 rushing yards, 1 touchdown.<br />

2. Brother Rice defense – four interceptions.<br />

3. Nate Van Zelst – The sophomore connected on a 38-<br />

yard field goal to put the ramblers on the board in the<br />

second quarter.<br />

Bean, who completed 14-<br />

of-20 passes for 248 yards<br />

and one touchdown and<br />

ran 12 times for 46 yards<br />

and another touchdown,<br />

and by running back Jessi<br />

Plunkett, who rushed for<br />

two touchdowns.<br />

Spearheading the defense<br />

in the Crusaders’ first<br />

victory over Loyola since<br />

2014 was defensive back<br />

Danny Fitzgerald, who returned<br />

a fumble recovery<br />

55 yards for a touchdown<br />

and accounted for two of<br />

their four interceptions.<br />

Ironically, the Ramblers<br />

made a good first impression.<br />

Michael Gavric<br />

fielded the opening kickoff<br />

with a fair catch at his own<br />

29-yard line and the passing<br />

of Matthew Schiltz and<br />

running of Trevor Cabanban<br />

brought the ball down<br />

to the Crusaders’ 20-yard<br />

line in six plays.<br />

Brother Rice’s defense<br />

then stiffened, putting<br />

the Ramblers in a fourthand-16<br />

situation. They tried<br />

to salvage three points on a<br />

field goal attempt by Van<br />

Zelst but his kick was wide.<br />

On their first play from<br />

scrimmage the Crusaders<br />

were penalized five yards<br />

for having an illegal receiver<br />

downfield. They then got<br />

their act together and drove<br />

85 yards for the touchdown<br />

that came on the last play of<br />

the first quarter.<br />

As it turned out this was<br />

the only touchdown they<br />

needed.<br />

The Ramblers’ first and<br />

last possessions of the<br />

game were the only time<br />

they were effective in running<br />

the football, making<br />

them overly reliant on<br />

the passing of Schiltz. He<br />

completed 15-of-26 passes<br />

for 169 yards but the four<br />

interceptions curtailed his<br />

effectiveness.<br />

Unlike the Mount Carmel<br />

game in which he<br />

continually threw to Rory<br />

Boos, this time Schiltz<br />

frequently connected with<br />

other receivers, successfully<br />

targeting Artie Collins,<br />

Matthew Mangan and<br />

Jared Lombardi in addition<br />

to his primary receiver.<br />

“Matt is a good quarterback,”<br />

Holecek said. “We<br />

just have to do a better job<br />

with our blocking and running<br />

to make it easier for<br />

him.”<br />

Next up for Loyola is<br />

another road game against<br />

St. Ignatius (3-1).<br />

“Loyola is a good football<br />

team — John will have<br />

them ready and they’ll<br />

compete week in and week<br />

out,” predicted Brother Rice<br />

coach Brian Badke. “Their<br />

starting quarterback (Jack<br />

Fallon) is hurt and so is one<br />

of their top receivers (Noah<br />

Jones). We know how that<br />

feels. We had that last year<br />

(when the Crusaders finished<br />

with a 2-7 record).”<br />

Girls swimming<br />

Trevians take down Ramblers in early-season meet<br />

Todd Marver<br />

Freelance Reporter<br />

Familiar faces competed<br />

alongside one another<br />

when the Trevians and<br />

Ramblers faced off in the<br />

pool on Friday, Sept. 14,<br />

in Winnetka. New Trier<br />

emerged victorious in the<br />

early-season rivalry dual<br />

meet, 127-56.<br />

“Loyola has always been<br />

a rivalry,” Trevians senior<br />

Ceola Halloran said. “As a<br />

team we were a little bit excited<br />

for today just because<br />

it’s Loyola and we have a<br />

lot of friends on the other<br />

team.”<br />

After competing together<br />

during the club season, New<br />

Trier and Loyola swimmers<br />

now faced off against<br />

one another as members of<br />

opposing teams.<br />

“I grew up with a lot of<br />

the people on New Trier<br />

and I swim club with all<br />

of them so it’s not a weird<br />

experience for me,” Loyola<br />

junior Chloe Brown said.<br />

“We all learn off each other.<br />

We’re all in the same club,<br />

so we’re growing together<br />

the whole time.”<br />

Loyola sophomore Ally<br />

Mulvey placed fourth in the<br />

200-yard individual medley<br />

(2:27.92) and second in<br />

the 100-yard breaststroke<br />

(1:12.19). Brown placed<br />

fourth in the 100-yard butterfly<br />

(1:03.48) and second<br />

in the 100-yard backstroke<br />

(1:04.70). Halloran took<br />

second in the 100 butterfly<br />

(1:02.33) and New Trier<br />

senior Kasey Venn placed<br />

first in the 100 backstroke<br />

(1:00.79). Halloran and<br />

Venn were at state last year<br />

as juniors, while Mulvey<br />

and Brown are the lone<br />

Ramblers who competed at<br />

state last year.<br />

“I think it would be awesome<br />

to go to state again<br />

this year, but I feel like<br />

we’re just trying to have a<br />

positive environment this<br />

year,” Brown said.<br />

Loyola graduated a successful<br />

senior class last<br />

year, which has resulted<br />

in Mulvey and Brown being<br />

leaders of the team this<br />

year.<br />

“I feel like it really humbled<br />

me being with a bunch<br />

of seniors who were experienced<br />

leaders,” Mulvey<br />

said. “Since we’re older<br />

girls on the team, we can be<br />

role models for the younger<br />

girls. Our seniors last year<br />

were super energetic and<br />

really loved swimming. It<br />

inspires the rest of us to be<br />

like them.”<br />

New Trier took fifth<br />

place at the state meet last<br />

year and looks to improve<br />

upon that performance<br />

this time around by taking<br />

home the state title.<br />

“We want to win this<br />

year,” Venn said. “That’s<br />

the goal. We have an amazing<br />

freshman class. They’re<br />

big competitors. The goal<br />

is to win and we’re really<br />

pumped. That’s what we’re<br />

looking forward to. The<br />

boys did it last year so we<br />

really want to take it home<br />

this year.”<br />

Despite shooting for the<br />

stars with their long-term<br />

end of the season goals,<br />

Halloran said the Trevians<br />

focused on enjoying themselves<br />

in the meet against<br />

their rivals.<br />

Venn added that they’re<br />

at the juncture of the season<br />

where getting the best<br />

time is not the top priority.<br />

The state finals are still two<br />

months away.<br />

“We’re at a really tiring<br />

point in the season where<br />

the training is hard and<br />

school has amped itself<br />

up,” she said. “We swam<br />

pretty well, but I’d definitely<br />

say we can do a lot<br />

better.”


34 | September 20, 2018 | The glencoe anchor sports<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

Offense carries New Trier to win<br />

Michael Wojtychiw<br />

Sports Editor<br />

It’s important for a team<br />

to finish the nonconference<br />

portion of its schedule on<br />

a high note, something that<br />

helps give it confidence<br />

going into conference play.<br />

Coming off of a win<br />

against Fremd on Sept. 7,<br />

New Trier looked to do<br />

just that and win its second<br />

straight against a Mid-<br />

Suburban League squad.<br />

The Trevians walked out<br />

of its Friday, Sept. 14, road<br />

game against Palatine with<br />

a 37-25 win.<br />

“This is the first time<br />

we’ve finished nonconference<br />

play 3-1, because we<br />

were always 2-2,” New<br />

Trier coach Brian Doll<br />

said. “Once the MSL deal<br />

started, we’d never been<br />

better than 2-2 so this is a<br />

big deal for us to get out<br />

of this. We’ve won three<br />

games against MSL teams<br />

in a row and we feel like<br />

we’re starting to compete,<br />

starting to get better.”<br />

What ended up being<br />

somewhat of a shootout<br />

didn’t always look<br />

that way. In a first half<br />

that included five punts,<br />

New Trier’s Jonathan Taylor runs in for a touchdown against Palatine Friday, Sept.<br />

14, in Palatine. Scott Margolin/22nd Century Media<br />

more points were scored<br />

off of field goals (nine)<br />

than touchdowns (seven).<br />

Luckily for the Trevians,<br />

they did most of the scoring,<br />

with a 13-yard touchdown<br />

run by Jonathan<br />

Taylor and two field goals,<br />

of 42 and 40 yards, from<br />

Graham Dable to take a<br />

13-3 lead to the half.<br />

“Those are the longest<br />

field goals I’ve ever had<br />

in a game,” Dable said.<br />

“When I’m going up there,<br />

I’m just thinking to have<br />

a clean, fluid motion and<br />

trying not to kill the ball.<br />

Every kick should be the<br />

same kick.”<br />

The second half was an<br />

entirely different story,<br />

however, as both team’s<br />

offenses came to life. The<br />

Trevians scored on all four<br />

of their possessions, including<br />

the opening drive,<br />

which was highlighted by<br />

a 51-yard run by quarterback<br />

Carson Ochsenhirt<br />

(161 yards rushing on 24<br />

carries), who also punched<br />

the ball in from eight yards<br />

to extend the Trevians lead<br />

to 20-3.<br />

On the next possession,<br />

after a 20-yard run, Taylor<br />

went down with an<br />

injury that would cause<br />

him to miss the rest of<br />

the game. Already down<br />

to their fourth running<br />

back because of injuries,<br />

the Trevians got an unexpected<br />

boost from one of<br />

NEW TRIER VS. PALATINE<br />

1 2 3 4 F<br />

NT 7 6 14 10 37<br />

PALATINE 0 3 7 15 25<br />

Top Performers<br />

1. Thomas Criswell, RB – 48 rushing yards on 13 carries, 2<br />

touchdowns.<br />

2. Carson Ochsenhirt, QB – 161 rushing yards on 24<br />

carries, 1 touchdown.<br />

3. Graham Dable – the kicker connected on field goals of<br />

42-, 40-, and 35-yards.<br />

the players that normally<br />

wouldn’t see much playing<br />

time: junior Thomas<br />

Criswell. Criswell would<br />

finish with 48 yards and<br />

two touchdowns rushing<br />

on 13 carries.<br />

“We’ve got a lot of kids<br />

working hard,” Doll said.<br />

“Criswell had been our<br />

scout team running back<br />

all the time and just runs<br />

hard. We were like ‘let’s<br />

go. Next guy up.’<br />

“He knows the plays,<br />

he knows what we do. We<br />

kept it simple, we kept<br />

it basic and he did what<br />

he needed to do to get us<br />

downfield.”<br />

Dable added another<br />

field goal, a 35-yarder in<br />

the second half as well.<br />

Both he and Doll said the<br />

team talked about what<br />

they had to do in the second<br />

half to secure the win<br />

at halftime.<br />

“Our coaches were just<br />

trying to fire us up, get us<br />

focused,” able said. “We<br />

were able to do so well<br />

because everyone started<br />

to do their job even better.”<br />

“They (Palatine) gave<br />

us some different looks<br />

than we were planning<br />

on, based on scouting reports<br />

and were we able to<br />

make adjustments from<br />

those looks,” Doll said.<br />

“They gave us those same<br />

looks in the second half, so<br />

we were able to see some<br />

things we were able to take<br />

advantage of up front and<br />

we let Ox read some of the<br />

plays in the second half,<br />

where in the first half we<br />

weren’t reading as much.”<br />

New Trier heads to<br />

Skokie Friday, Sept. 21, to<br />

face Niles West and start<br />

Central Suburban League<br />

South play. The Wolves<br />

are 0-4 and have given up<br />

at least 47 points in three<br />

of their four losses.<br />

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glencoeanchor.com sports<br />

the glencoe anchor | September 20, 2018 | 35<br />

Field hockey<br />

Lauber’s debut sparks New Trier to shootout victory<br />

1st-and-3<br />

22CM FILE PHOTO<br />

Three STARS of the<br />

week<br />

1. Graham Dable<br />

(above). The<br />

New Trier kicker<br />

connected on<br />

field goals of 42,<br />

40 and 35 yards<br />

in the Trevians’<br />

win.<br />

2. Emma Lauber.<br />

The New Trier<br />

field hockey<br />

goalie came in<br />

off the bench and<br />

saved three shots<br />

in a shootout<br />

win over Lake<br />

Forest.<br />

3. Ryan Savarie.<br />

The Loyola boys<br />

golfer was the<br />

medalist at the<br />

Mundelein Invite<br />

after shooting<br />

a two-under par<br />

70.<br />

Michael Wojtychiw<br />

Sports Editor<br />

When two of the best<br />

teams in the state face off,<br />

the play on the field gets<br />

elevated and makes it seem<br />

like a postseason game<br />

that’s going to decide a<br />

state championship.<br />

That was the feeling<br />

Sept. 12 when Lake Forest<br />

visited Northfield to take<br />

on New Trier in the teams’<br />

first matchup of the season.<br />

“That was exciting for<br />

you, but my heart was skipping<br />

a beat,” New Trier<br />

coach Stephanie Nykaza<br />

said.<br />

The reason for that was<br />

her Trevians had to hold off<br />

the visiting Scouts for a 5-4<br />

shootout win.<br />

With New Trier up 2-1<br />

with over a minute left,<br />

Lake Forest was looking<br />

to tie the game and give it<br />

Game of the Week:<br />

• Glenbrook North (3-1) at Maine West (3-1)<br />

Other matchups:<br />

• Highland Park (2-2) hosts Vernon Hills (2-2)<br />

• Lake Forest (2-2) hosts Warren (3-1)<br />

• Loyola (2-2) at St. Ignatius (3-1)<br />

• New Trier (3-1) at Niles West (0-4)<br />

• Glenbrook South (0-4) hosts Niles North (1-3)<br />

• Maine South (3-1) at Evanston (4-0)<br />

an opportunity to win the<br />

game in regulation or overtime.<br />

That’s when Maggie<br />

Mick put in a shot from in<br />

front of the goal to tie the<br />

game with 1 minute, 1 second<br />

remaining.<br />

“Addie (Sidles) in the<br />

middle, she had a wide<br />

open space, so she just hit<br />

it and I was like ‘I’m just<br />

going to go for the tip,’”<br />

Mick said.<br />

The Scouts looked as if<br />

they had actually tied the<br />

game 30 seconds earlier,<br />

but had a goal waved off.<br />

After a scoreless overtime<br />

session and a brief delay<br />

after the stadium lights<br />

shut off, the game headed<br />

to a shootout, where Nykaza<br />

made a bold move: she<br />

inserted goalie Emmaliese<br />

Lauber into the cage. Lauber<br />

hadn’t played all season,<br />

as she was recovering from<br />

20-8<br />

JOE COUGHLIN |<br />

Publisher<br />

• Glenbrook North 34, Maine<br />

West 31<br />

A CSL title could hang in the balance.<br />

GBN scores late for the win.<br />

• Highland Park<br />

• Lake Forest<br />

• Loyola<br />

• New Trier<br />

• Glenbrook South<br />

• Maine South<br />

19-9<br />

New Trier’s Paige Baldwin follows the ball downfield Sept.<br />

12 in Northfield. Michael Wojtychiw/22nd Century Media<br />

a torn labrum and had just<br />

started practicing a couple<br />

days ago. Her sister Isabella<br />

had played goalie during<br />

regulation.<br />

“Our senior (Emmaliese)<br />

just came back to practice<br />

yesterday, she had a torn<br />

hip labrum, but she came<br />

back yesterday and she’s<br />

done a lot of 1v1’s and said<br />

she could do it,” the NT<br />

coach said.<br />

BRITTANY KAPA |<br />

Contributing Sports Editor<br />

• Glenbrook North 21, Maine<br />

West 14<br />

West gives GBN a run for its money<br />

but GBN scores late for the win.<br />

• Vernon Hills<br />

• Warren<br />

• St. Ignatius<br />

• New Trier<br />

• Niles North<br />

• Maine South<br />

18-10<br />

MICHAL DWOJAK |<br />

Contributing Sports Editor<br />

• Glenbrook North 17, Maine<br />

West 14<br />

GBN holds off Maine West to beat a<br />

team reeling after its first loss.<br />

• Vernon Hills<br />

• Warren<br />

• Loyola<br />

• New Trier<br />

• Glenbrook South<br />

• Maine South<br />

19-9 21-7<br />

MICHAEL WOJTYCHIW |<br />

Sports Editor<br />

• Maine West 28, Glenbrook<br />

North 24<br />

The Spartans hang with the defending<br />

champs but a late score gives<br />

Maine West the win.<br />

• Highland Park<br />

• Warren<br />

• Loyola<br />

• New Trier<br />

• Glenbrook South<br />

• Maine South<br />

You wouldn’t be able<br />

to tell that the elder Lauber<br />

hadn’t played until that<br />

night, as the senior saved<br />

the first two shots she faced<br />

from Mick and Logan<br />

Hanekamp.<br />

“Going into the shootout,<br />

a lot of us are nervous, but<br />

we know it’s not the end of<br />

the world,” Mick said.<br />

While she was keeping<br />

the Scouts off of the scoreboard,<br />

Kathryn McLaughlin<br />

and Paige Baldwin<br />

were getting the Trevs on<br />

the board with goals in the<br />

team’s first two shootout<br />

attempts. McLaughlin had<br />

scored the game’s first goal<br />

of the night when she put<br />

the ball past the LF goalie<br />

minutes into the contest.<br />

After not converting on<br />

their first two shots, the<br />

next two Scouts to shoot,<br />

Julia Hander and Gracie<br />

McGowan, scored, giving<br />

the visitors life in the shootout.<br />

An NT miss, followed<br />

by a Hillary Cox conversion<br />

meant that the Scouts’<br />

hopes were down to Sarah<br />

Considine. If she made the<br />

shot, the Trevs would need<br />

to convert their next shot to<br />

win. if not, the game would<br />

be over.<br />

Lauber made the save,<br />

sending the Trevians off to<br />

celebrate the big win.<br />

MARTIN CARLINO |<br />

Contributing Editor<br />

• Glenbrook North 28, Maine<br />

West 24<br />

With last year’s 42-17 defeat still<br />

on their minds, GBN flips the script<br />

this year and hands West a loss.<br />

• Highland Park<br />

• Lake Forest<br />

• Loyola<br />

• New Trier<br />

• Glenbrook South<br />

• Maine South<br />

Listen Up<br />

“Last year we had no expectations, we did not<br />

know we were going to win state.”<br />

Claudia Miller — North Shore Country Day School girls<br />

tennis player on the 2017 team.<br />

tunE in<br />

What to watch this week<br />

GIRLS VOLLEYBALL: The Trevians look for revenge from the<br />

team that ruined its perfect CSL season in 2017.<br />

• New Trier travels to Niles West at 6 p.m. Monday,<br />

Sept. 24, in Skokie.<br />

Index<br />

32 - This Week In<br />

31 - Athlete of the Week<br />

Fastbreak is compiled by Sports Editor Michael<br />

Wojtychiw, m.wojtychiw@22ndcenturymedia.com.


the glencoe anchor | September 20, 2018 | glencoeanchor.com<br />

Extra time New Trier field hockey<br />

holds off Lake Forest in shootout, Page 35<br />

Rough trip south<br />

Loyola football loses 35-3 to<br />

Brother Rice, Page 33<br />

New Trier’s Graham Dable lines up for a 42-yard field goal in<br />

the Trevians’ win over Palatine Friday, Sept. 14, in Palatine.<br />

Scott Margolin/22nd Century Media<br />

Dable, Criswell lead New Trier to win, Page 34<br />

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