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glenview's Hometown Newspaper GlenviewLantern.com • December 6, 2018 • Vol. 8 No. 12 • $1<br />

A<br />

Publication<br />

,LLC<br />

Holiday crafts,<br />

gifts take over<br />

one final time<br />

at The Grove<br />

Holiday Store,<br />

Page 8<br />

George Kljucaric (front) checks out a table covered in gifts, while Regina Kljucaric<br />

(rear) does some holiday shopping of her own. Jason Addy/22nd century media<br />

ice rink<br />

makeover<br />

Park District Board<br />

approves $23.4<br />

million bond for<br />

Ice Center projects,<br />

Page 3<br />

Slate set Residents’ group<br />

nominates candidates for<br />

Village Board, Page 12<br />

winter<br />

sale<br />

Wagner Farm<br />

transforms into<br />

winter wonderland<br />

for annual holiday<br />

sales, Page 25


2 | December 6, 2018 | The glenview lantern calendar<br />

glenviewlantern.com<br />

In this week’s<br />

lantern<br />

Pet of the Week8<br />

Police Reports 10<br />

Editorial 19<br />

Puzzles 24<br />

Faith 27<br />

Dining Out 30<br />

Home of the Week 31<br />

Athlete of the Week 34<br />

The Glenview<br />

Lantern<br />

ph: 847.272.4565<br />

fx: 847.272.4648<br />

Editor<br />

Jason Addy, x10<br />

jason@glenviewlantern.com<br />

Sports editor<br />

Michal Dwojak, x26<br />

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

Sales director<br />

Gail Eisenberg, x13<br />

g.eisenberg@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<br />

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.GlenviewLantern.com<br />

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

circulation inquiries<br />

circulation@22ndcenturymedia.com<br />

The Glenview Lantern (USPS# 14130)<br />

is published weekly by 22nd Century Media,<br />

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

Periodical Postage Paid at Northbrook, IL<br />

and at additional mailing offices.<br />

POSTMASTER: Send address changes to:<br />

The Glenview Lantern, 60 Revere Dr., Ste.<br />

888, Northbrook, IL 60062<br />

Published by<br />

www.22ndcenturymedia.com<br />

THURSDAY<br />

Glenview’s Got STEAM:<br />

Hour of Code<br />

4:30-6 p.m. Thursday,<br />

Dec. 6, at Glenview Public<br />

Library. Got STEAM?<br />

All workshops are<br />

developed and presented<br />

by the Glenbrook South<br />

Society of Women Engineers,<br />

whose mission is<br />

to inspire girls to develop<br />

confidence in STEAM<br />

fields and endeavors.<br />

No prior knowledge or<br />

experience required.<br />

Registration opens two<br />

weeks prior to program<br />

date. Grades 5-8.<br />

FRIDAY<br />

Helping Hands for the<br />

Homeless<br />

3:30 p.m. Friday,<br />

Dec. 7, at Glenview<br />

Public Library, 1930<br />

Glenview Road. Enjoy<br />

snacks and earn service<br />

hours by creating<br />

plarn (plastic yarn) for<br />

an upcoming service<br />

project. Just drop in.<br />

Grades 5-8.<br />

SATURDAY<br />

Restoration Work Days<br />

9 a.m., Saturday, Dec.<br />

8, at Fuller Air Station<br />

Prairie, 2400 Compass<br />

Road. Make a difference<br />

in the environment!<br />

Work parties may be<br />

cancelled in case of inclement<br />

weather. Meet<br />

at the Tyner Interpretive<br />

Center. Seasonal activities<br />

include brush cutting,<br />

weed removal and seed<br />

collection. Bring work<br />

gloves if you have them.<br />

Free event. No registration<br />

required.<br />

SUNDAY<br />

Breakfast with Santa<br />

9 a.m. and 11:30 a.m.,<br />

Sunday, Dec. 9, and Dec.<br />

15-16 at The Café at<br />

Glenview Park Golf Club,<br />

800 Shermer Road. Santa<br />

Claus is stopping by to<br />

enjoy breakfast with you<br />

and your family! The<br />

child-friendly buffet includes<br />

scrambled eggs,<br />

sausage, bacon, French<br />

toast, bagels, pastries,<br />

coffee, milk and assorted<br />

juices. Back again this<br />

year is a carving station,<br />

side dishes, and dessert<br />

table. $27.95 per adult,<br />

$14.95 per child 13 and<br />

under (plus tax & gratuity).<br />

Children under 2<br />

years free. Space is limited.<br />

Call The Cafe at 847-<br />

657-3200 to make your<br />

reservation.<br />

TUESDAY<br />

The Rule of Rum<br />

7 p.m. Tuesday, Dec.<br />

11, Glenview Public Library,<br />

1930 Glenview<br />

Road. From the Caribbean<br />

across the British<br />

Empire, discover how<br />

rum once ruled the world.<br />

Food historian Cynthia<br />

Clampitt shares its fascinating<br />

history — how<br />

pirates got involved, who<br />

really said “yo ho ho”<br />

(hint: it wasn’t the pirates!),<br />

and how it helped<br />

unite the 13 Colonies<br />

leading to the American<br />

Revolution. Limit 20.<br />

Please register online,<br />

call 847-729-7500 x7600<br />

or visit Reader Services.<br />

UPCOMING<br />

A Voice from the<br />

Holocaust: Reflections<br />

from a Survivor<br />

1 p.m. Friday, Dec.<br />

14, Glenview Public Library,<br />

1930 Glenview<br />

Road. Gdalina Novitsky,<br />

Holocaust survivor and<br />

member of the Illinois<br />

Holocaust Museum & Education<br />

Center’s Speakers’<br />

Bureau, recounts her<br />

family’s experiences in<br />

the former Soviet Union<br />

both during and after the<br />

Holocaust. Please register<br />

online, call 847-729-7500<br />

x7600 or visit Reader Services.<br />

Sing in the Season with<br />

the Irish Heritage Singers<br />

2 p.m. Sunday, Dec.<br />

16, Glenview Public Library,<br />

1930 Glenview<br />

Road. Sharing Ireland’s<br />

rich musical heritage is<br />

this group’s passion. This<br />

30+ all-ages choral group<br />

embraces the spirit of the<br />

season with a sparkling<br />

repertoire of traditional<br />

and contemporary Irish<br />

songs, including favorite<br />

sing-alongs and a selection<br />

of Irish Christmas<br />

carols. Please register online,<br />

call 847-729-7500<br />

x7600 or visit Reader Services.<br />

ONGOING<br />

City Kid Theatre Winter<br />

Camps/Classes<br />

“Drop-off” winter<br />

camps (half/full day Dec<br />

26-28/Jan 2-4), ages<br />

3-12 ($25/$45). Winter<br />

classes begin Jan. 7, ages<br />

3-12. Acting, Pre-K dropoff<br />

and improv classes.<br />

For more information<br />

on events, classes or<br />

themed birthday parties,<br />

go to citykidtheatre.com<br />

or call 847-529-2324.<br />

Historic Wagner Farm<br />

Winter Sales<br />

10 a.m.-6 p.m. Monday-Friday<br />

and 10 a.m.-5<br />

p.m. Saturday and Sunday<br />

at Historic Wagner Farm,<br />

1510 Wagner Road. Dress<br />

up your home and yard for<br />

the season with Wagner<br />

Farm’s beautiful selection<br />

of fresh-cut holiday trees<br />

and wreaths. All sales help<br />

to support the animals on<br />

the farm. Wagon rides<br />

for $1 on Saturdays from<br />

10 a.m.-12 p.m. Rides<br />

are subject to change.<br />

Call ahead for availability.<br />

For more information,<br />

call 847-724-5670.<br />

The Grove Holiday Store<br />

10 a.m.-5 p.m., every<br />

Thursday-Sunday through<br />

Dec. 23, at The Grove,<br />

1421 Milwaukee Ave.<br />

Escape the mall and find<br />

the holiday spirit at The<br />

Grove. Discover unique<br />

gift items for all those special<br />

people on your list.<br />

Shop for personalized<br />

ornaments, home accessories,<br />

gifts and<br />

crafts. Free admission.<br />

For more information,<br />

call 847-299-6096.<br />

Salvation Army Angel Tree<br />

Through Friday, Dec.<br />

14, at Glenview Ice Center,<br />

1851 Landwehr Road.<br />

Pick up a tag from the<br />

Salvation Army’s Angel<br />

Tree, located in the lobby<br />

of the Glenview Ice Center,<br />

and purchase holiday<br />

gifts for a child in need.<br />

Purchased gifts must be<br />

brought to the ice center<br />

by Dec. 14. For more information<br />

call 847-724-<br />

2800 or visit glenviewicecenter.org.<br />

LIST IT YOURSELF<br />

Reach out to thousands of daily<br />

users by submitting your event at<br />

GlenviewLantern.com/calendar<br />

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

chris@glenviewlantern.com<br />

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

Holiday Figure Skating<br />

Exhibition Registration<br />

The Glenview Ice Center<br />

at 1851 Landwehr<br />

kicks off the 2018 Winter<br />

Carnival with a free Holiday<br />

Figure Skating Exhibition<br />

on Friday, Dec. 21,<br />

beginning at 5 p.m. Watch<br />

soloists, synchronized<br />

skating teams and Glenview<br />

Skate School skaters<br />

showcase their talents.<br />

Glenview Skate School<br />

skaters who want participate<br />

must register at the<br />

Ice Center front office by<br />

Dec. 13 at 7 p.m. Participation<br />

fee is $5.<br />

Bicycle Donation<br />

Glenview Cycle is collecting<br />

bicycles in any condition<br />

for Working Bikes.<br />

Push, pull it or drag them<br />

to Glenview Cycle 1011<br />

Harlem Ave. Many of the<br />

bikes will be shipped to a<br />

3rd world country. You<br />

will receive a donation<br />

letter for your bike.<br />

Friday Night Meltdowns<br />

8:15-10:15 p.m., every<br />

Friday at Glenview Ice<br />

Center, 1851 Landwehr<br />

Road. Join us for an awesome<br />

skate and dance<br />

party! A DJ plays today’s<br />

hits and disco lighting<br />

shines on the ice throughout<br />

the night. Admission:<br />

$8 per person, or use<br />

your season skating pass!<br />

Bring your own skates or<br />

rent a pair for the evening.<br />

Rental skates are<br />

$4 per pair. For more<br />

information, visit www.<br />

glenviewparks.org or call<br />

847-724-2800.


glenviewlantern.com news<br />

the glenview lantern | December 6, 2018 | 3<br />

Taking form, shape<br />

Maple School construction update showcases<br />

‘nearly complete’ exterior<br />

The exterior shell of District 30’s new Maple School is nearly complete, according<br />

to Arcon & Associates, Inc., the planning, programming and design firm behind the<br />

project. Photos Submitted<br />

Glenview Park District Board<br />

$23.4 million bond approved for<br />

Ice Center renovation, expansion<br />

Neil Milbert<br />

Freelance Reporter<br />

ROUND IT UP<br />

A brief recap of Glenview Park Board action on<br />

Thursday, Nov. 29:<br />

• The board tabled discussion and a vote on the<br />

2018-21 tax ordinance of $18,750,468 until its<br />

next regular meeting, which has been rescheduled<br />

for Thursday, Dec. 13. The ordinance was on the<br />

Nov. 15 agenda but consideration was delayed in<br />

order to allow absent Commissioner Dave Tosh the<br />

opportunity to participate in the discussion and<br />

cast his vote.<br />

The Glenview Park District<br />

Board approved the<br />

issuance of 501c3 tax exempt<br />

bonds not to exceed<br />

$23,400,000 at a special<br />

meeting on Thursday, Nov.<br />

29, to pay for a portion of<br />

the cost of renovating,<br />

equipping and expanding<br />

the 44-year-old Glenview<br />

Ice Center.<br />

All commissioners present<br />

at the meeting voted<br />

in favor of the resolution.<br />

Commissioner Bob Patton<br />

was absent.<br />

A public hearing was<br />

held prior to the vote, but<br />

no members of the public<br />

commented and the<br />

board received no correspondence<br />

regarding<br />

the resolution.<br />

After a similarly unattended<br />

public hearing in<br />

October, the board approved<br />

issuing a bond of<br />

up to $10 million to pay<br />

for renovation and expansion<br />

projects at the center.<br />

The improved Ice Center<br />

will feature three skating<br />

rinks. The existing rink will<br />

Please see board, 6<br />

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6 | December 6, 2018 | The glenview lantern news<br />

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West Northfield D31 Board of Education<br />

Requested tax levy calls for 5.1 percent increase<br />

Neil Milbert<br />

Freelance Reporter<br />

West Northfield School<br />

District 31 is requesting<br />

a levy that is 5.1 percent<br />

higher than last year’s tax<br />

extension to ensure receipt<br />

of taxes from new property,<br />

including developments<br />

from the Provenance Development<br />

at Mission Hills.<br />

Chief School Business<br />

Official Cathy Lauria explained<br />

the proposed tax<br />

levy and the rationale behind<br />

it at the Thursday,<br />

Nov. 29 meeting of the<br />

Board of Education.<br />

The proposed 2019 levy<br />

request totals $17,295,608.<br />

This amount includes<br />

$820,788 for bond and<br />

interest purposes that is<br />

estimated to be levied or<br />

already has been levied.<br />

A breakdown of projected<br />

expenditures is: Educational<br />

fund $14,274,320,<br />

operations and maintenance<br />

$1,300,000, transportation<br />

$500,000, Illinois<br />

Municipal Retirement<br />

Fund $200,000, Social<br />

Security $200,000 and<br />

working cash $500.<br />

A public hearing on the<br />

proposed levy is scheduled<br />

to be held at 7 p.m. Thursday,<br />

Dec. 20, in Winkelman<br />

School prior to the<br />

regular board meeting at<br />

which the finalized version<br />

of the extension will be<br />

voted on.<br />

District schools earn<br />

‘commendable’ grade<br />

Field and Winkleman<br />

received grades of “commendable,”<br />

third-highest<br />

of the four assessments<br />

on the new Illinois School<br />

Report Card to evaluate<br />

public schools in the state.<br />

Field’s grade was 79 and<br />

Winkelman’s was 76.<br />

“Our schools consistently<br />

outperform other<br />

schools in the state,” Dr.<br />

Carrie De La Cruz, director<br />

of Curriculum and Instruction,<br />

told the board.<br />

“Math is an area of<br />

strength. Last year was<br />

a down year for English<br />

Language Arts.”<br />

Traffic study for Field,<br />

Winkelman approved<br />

Acting on the recommendation<br />

of Arcon, the architectural<br />

firm engaged in<br />

the construction projects at<br />

Winkelman and Field, the<br />

board approved the hiring<br />

MAKE YOUR<br />

WINTER BREAK BOARDING<br />

RESERVATIONS<br />

NOW!<br />

of Kimley-Horn to conduct<br />

a traffic study in hopes of<br />

alleviating student dropoff<br />

and pick-up problems<br />

and traffic congestion on<br />

Landwehr Road.<br />

Laurie said even though<br />

numerous adjustments<br />

have been made over the<br />

years in an attempt to rectify<br />

the situation, safety<br />

remains a concern.<br />

The district’s renovation<br />

plans include improvements<br />

to the parking lots at<br />

both schools.<br />

Three other school<br />

districts in the area —<br />

Northbrook/Glenview<br />

District 30, Glenbrook<br />

High Schools District 225<br />

and High School District<br />

211 — have used Kimley-<br />

Horn and all three provided<br />

positive feedback when<br />

contacted by Arcon.<br />

Kimley-Horn representatives<br />

have visited District<br />

225 for an initial meeting<br />

and to observe morning<br />

and afternoon traffic<br />

patterns and practices.<br />

ROUND IT UP<br />

A brief recap of Board of Education action on<br />

Thursday, Nov. 29:<br />

• The board accepted a $76,800 bid from<br />

Chicagoland Paving Contractors, of Lake Zurich,<br />

for an asphalt fire lane at Winkelman School. The<br />

board rejected higher bids from Abby Paving and<br />

Allstar Asphalt, as well as a nonconforming bid<br />

from Superior Paving.<br />

• Members approved payments of $2,081.881.14<br />

and $874,769.77 to cover warrants for the<br />

second half of October and first half of November,<br />

respectively. They also approved payments of<br />

$439,560.54 and $432,281.10 to cover payroll<br />

for the second half of October and first half of<br />

November, respectively.<br />

• Fifth-grade teacher Kelly Alleya and speech and<br />

language pathologist Karen McGrath had their<br />

requests for family medical leave approved by the<br />

board. Alleya’s leave will run from the beginning of<br />

May 2019 through the end of the school year, while<br />

McGrath’s will begin in May 2019 and end in mid-<br />

October 2019.<br />

• Board members accepted the resignations<br />

of Winkelman library media specialist Judith<br />

Lopez and Field instructional assistant Akhila<br />

Lakkamsani.<br />

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board<br />

From Page 3<br />

be renovated, while a small<br />

“studio rink” and a large<br />

rink will fill out the center.<br />

The first of the complex’s<br />

two floors will house locker<br />

rooms with direct access<br />

to the rink and a pro shop,<br />

as well as a spacious lobby<br />

area. The second floor will<br />

feature a restaurant, a gallery<br />

for spectators, a fitness<br />

training room and two<br />

multipurpose rooms.<br />

According to Frank<br />

Parisi of William Architects,<br />

the site will feature<br />

a drop-off area, 196 parking<br />

spots, including nine<br />

that meet the standards<br />

of the Americans with<br />

Disabilites Act, and a service<br />

drive for zambonis<br />

and other vehicles.<br />

The groundbreaking<br />

ceremony is scheduled for<br />

next spring and the tentative<br />

timetable calls for the<br />

project to be completed in<br />

the autumn of 2020.<br />

Synchronized Skaters star<br />

Teams of synchronized<br />

skaters from the Glenview<br />

Blades and individual<br />

competitors from the<br />

Glenview Ice Center and<br />

Glenview Skate School<br />

will perform in a free Holiday<br />

Figure Skating Exhibition<br />

from 5-8 p.m. on Dec.<br />

21 at the Ice Center, kicking<br />

off the Park District’s<br />

annual Winter Carnival.<br />

The skaters will showcase<br />

routines they performed<br />

on Nov. 10 at the<br />

Autumn Classic at Pleasant<br />

Prairie, Wisc. The<br />

competition evaluated<br />

skaters on their mastery of<br />

skills in the Learn to Skate<br />

USA program.<br />

Glenview Skate School<br />

performers who finished<br />

first in the individual<br />

competition:<br />

• Basic 2 program —<br />

Anna Machnicki<br />

• Basic 4 program —<br />

Audrey Kay<br />

• Free skate 2 compulsory<br />

moves — Ava Samaan<br />

• Free skate 6 compulsory<br />

moves and Free<br />

skate 6 program —<br />

Elizabeth Segel


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level. Second level of the home can accessed from three different staircases including a private entry for an in-law suite. Two very large bedrooms, loft, and full bathroom on<br />

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

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8 | December 6, 2018 | The glenview lantern community<br />

glenviewlantern.com<br />

Crafters say farewell to Holiday Store<br />

Lola<br />

The Rejmer family<br />

Hello! My name is Lola<br />

and I am a 1-year-old<br />

Pomapoo pup. My<br />

favorite food is peanut<br />

butter, and I am always<br />

up for a cuddly nap! I<br />

love taking walks with my<br />

mom, but I always make<br />

sure to stop and smell<br />

the flowers.<br />

I may be tiny, but I love<br />

playing with friends of<br />

any size. See you around<br />

Glenview!<br />

HELP! The Glenview Lantern is in search of more pets. To<br />

submit your own Pet of the Week, send a photo and info to<br />

jason@glenviewlantern.com or 60 Revere Drive Suite 888.<br />

Northbrook, IL 60062.<br />

Jacqueline Zeisloft<br />

Freelance Reporter<br />

The Grove’s Holiday<br />

Store celebrates its final<br />

run this December, offering<br />

local shoppers one last<br />

chance to enjoy the store’s<br />

seminal holiday shopping<br />

experience before it closes<br />

its doors to the Glenview<br />

community for good.<br />

The Holiday Store<br />

houses a sprawling,<br />

eclectic array of holiday<br />

crafts made by local artisans<br />

from across the<br />

Chicagoland area.<br />

Whether looking for<br />

homemade soap or handmade<br />

jewelry, miniature<br />

tree skirts or holly neckties,<br />

shoppers won’t need<br />

to look any further than<br />

The Holiday Store at The<br />

Grove to find the most<br />

original gift ideas for the<br />

season.<br />

Kris Van Voorhis, former<br />

program supervisor<br />

at The Grove, heads<br />

up the production of the<br />

Holiday Store each year.<br />

Last year, Van Voorhis<br />

retired from her role as<br />

program supervisor, but<br />

she’s back to manage the<br />

Holiday Store in its final<br />

year.<br />

Van Voorhis said the<br />

store’s closing is “bittersweet.”<br />

Among the reasons<br />

for shutting the annual<br />

event down is the need<br />

to preserve the store’s<br />

longtime venue, the<br />

historic Kennicott House.<br />

“Kennicott House was<br />

built in 1856, and we are<br />

still walking and working<br />

on the original floors,”<br />

Van Voorhis said. “It’s a<br />

lot of wear and tear on the<br />

house.”<br />

The Holiday Store is<br />

an extension of the iconic<br />

Grove Arts and Crafts<br />

Faire, another annual<br />

community event hosted<br />

at The Grove that closed<br />

Terri Wagner, of Lincolnwood, has been selling her handmade crafts at The Grove Holiday<br />

Store since the event started. photos by Jacqueline Zeisloft/22nd Century Media<br />

A look at the crafts and items on sale at the final Holiday Store at The Grove.<br />

earlier this year.<br />

The Craft Faire had its<br />

inaugural year in 1985,<br />

when it launched as a twoand-a-half<br />

day event. But<br />

due to high demand over<br />

the years, it grew into a<br />

two-weekend event, and<br />

eventually, officials decided<br />

to open The Holiday<br />

Store at Kennicott House<br />

as a space for the crafters<br />

to sell their festive<br />

items over the holiday<br />

season.<br />

The shop at Kennicott<br />

House is sponsored by<br />

The Grove Heritage Association<br />

and The Glenview<br />

Park District. Profits from<br />

the shop go to the preservation<br />

of The Grove, a<br />

145-acre nature and historic<br />

site on the western<br />

edge of Glenview.<br />

Van Voorhis has been a<br />

part of the Holiday Store<br />

and Arts and Craft Faire<br />

since their conception.<br />

“It has truly developed<br />

a life of its own,” she said.<br />

Van Voorhis described<br />

the once “tremendous<br />

crowds” at the events,<br />

lamenting the declining<br />

attendance over the past<br />

few years, which has led<br />

The Grove to gracefully<br />

Please see holiday, 10


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10 | December 6, 2018 | The glenview lantern news<br />

glenviewlantern.com<br />

Police Reports<br />

Social Security scam nets over $2,000 from resident<br />

A Glenview resident<br />

lost more than $2,000<br />

after falling victim to a<br />

Social Security scam, according<br />

to an incident report<br />

from the Glenview<br />

Police Department.<br />

A resident in the 2400<br />

block of Greenwood Road<br />

called police at 10 a.m.<br />

Nov. 21 to report they<br />

made a large payment to<br />

someone posing as a Social<br />

Security employee.<br />

The person threatened they<br />

would be arrested if they<br />

did not make a payment,<br />

according to police.<br />

In other police news:<br />

Nov. 27<br />

• Jane Kelly, 39, of Northbrook,<br />

was arrested at 7:03<br />

p.m. and charged with<br />

retail theft after police investigated<br />

a reported theft<br />

of electronics and cosmetics<br />

in the 2200 block of<br />

Willow Road.<br />

• Timothy Flagg, 39, of<br />

Chicago, was arrested at<br />

8:34 p.m. and charged<br />

with identity theft, six<br />

counts of possession of a<br />

fictitious/altered driver’s<br />

license and obstructing<br />

identification after police<br />

investigated a reported<br />

fraud in purchasing appliances<br />

in the 1200 block of<br />

Milwaukee Avenue.<br />

Nov. 26<br />

• Brian Hartfield, 33, of<br />

the 1800 block of Monroe<br />

Street, was arrested at 1:45<br />

p.m. and charged with retail<br />

theft and possession of<br />

drug paraphernalia after<br />

an investigation of a theft<br />

of clothing and medication<br />

in the 100 block of<br />

Waukegan Road.<br />

• Jennifer Wu, 60, of Chicago,<br />

was arrested at 2:18<br />

p.m. and charged with<br />

retail theft after police<br />

investigated a reported<br />

theft of jewelry and clothing<br />

in the 1900 block of<br />

Tower Drive.<br />

• At 9:43 a.m., a resident in<br />

the 3100 block of Mapleleaf<br />

Drive reported someone<br />

entered their house<br />

and stole jewelry. The<br />

reported loss is $4,000.<br />

• At 2:59 p.m., an employee<br />

in the 2000 block<br />

of Waukegan Avenue reported<br />

a license plate belonging<br />

to the dealership<br />

was lost or stolen. The<br />

reported loss is $100.<br />

• At 8:30 p.m., a resident in<br />

the 2600 block of Chestnut<br />

Avenue reported someone<br />

entered their apartment<br />

without permission and<br />

stole cash from inside. The<br />

reported loss is $100.<br />

Nov. 25<br />

• At 6:23 p.m., an employee<br />

in the 1200 block<br />

of Milwaukee Avenue reported<br />

someone attempted<br />

to buy an item from the<br />

store with a fraudulent<br />

$100 bill. There is no loss.<br />

Nov. 24<br />

• At 8:10 a.m., a resident<br />

in the 3200 block of Sandy<br />

Lane reported someone<br />

entered an unlocked vehicle<br />

parked on the driveway<br />

during the overnight<br />

hours and stole a garage<br />

door-opener and a small<br />

container. The reported<br />

loss is $100.<br />

• At 10 a.m., a resident in<br />

the 1800 block of West<br />

Ridgewood Lane reported<br />

someone entered an unlocked<br />

vehicle parked in<br />

the driveway and stole an<br />

iPhone from inside. The<br />

reported loss is $200.<br />

• At 12:18 p.m., a resident<br />

in the 1100 block of Pleasant<br />

Lane reported someone<br />

entered their unlocked vehicle<br />

parked in the driveway<br />

and went through the<br />

center console and glove<br />

compartment. There is no<br />

reported loss.<br />

• At 2:33 p.m., a resident<br />

in the 3600 block of Glenview<br />

Road reported someone<br />

fraudulently used their<br />

credit card information to<br />

purchase items at various<br />

retailers. The reported loss<br />

is $1,300.<br />

• At 2:56 p.m., a resident<br />

in the 800 block of Rolling<br />

Pass Road reported someone<br />

scratched their vehicle<br />

parked on the street with<br />

a sharp object damaging<br />

the paint. The reported<br />

loss is $500.<br />

Nov. 23<br />

• Jovana Mendenhall, 22,<br />

of Maywood, was arrested<br />

at 8:38 p.m. on an outstanding<br />

warrant for retail<br />

theft issued by the Aurora<br />

Police Department. Mendenhall<br />

was also cited for<br />

operating an uninsured<br />

motor vehicle after police<br />

investigated a traffic crash<br />

at East Lake Avenue and<br />

Patriot Boulevard.<br />

• At 9:59 a.m., a resident<br />

in the 1600 block of Glenview<br />

Road reported someone<br />

used their personal information<br />

to open a credit<br />

card account and purchase<br />

an Apple iPhone X. The<br />

reported loss is $1,100.<br />

• At 12:47 p.m., a resident<br />

in the 300 block of<br />

Lincoln Street reported<br />

someone spread dog feces<br />

on the front door of<br />

their home, overhead garage<br />

door and keypad for<br />

the garage. There was no<br />

reported loss.<br />

• At 1:50 p.m., a customer<br />

at a business in<br />

the 2800 block of Patriot<br />

Boulevard reported someone<br />

scratched their vehicle<br />

with a sharp object,<br />

damaging the paint. The<br />

reported loss is $500.<br />

• At 2:17 p.m., a resident<br />

in the 1700 block of<br />

Bluestem Lane reported<br />

someone stole art from<br />

their house. The reported<br />

loss is $600.<br />

• At 1:38 p.m., a resident<br />

in the 1800 block of Aberdeen<br />

Drive reported<br />

someone damaged a door<br />

and entered and ransacked<br />

the residence. There is no<br />

reported loss.<br />

• At 6:49 p.m., a resident<br />

in the 1500 block of<br />

Glenview Road reported<br />

someone damaged a door,<br />

then entered and ransacked<br />

their home during the day.<br />

There is no reported loss.<br />

• At 7:13 p.m., an employee<br />

in the 1700 block of<br />

Waukegan Road reported<br />

someone pried open the<br />

lock to a trailer in the parking<br />

lot and stole merchandise<br />

from inside. The reported<br />

loss • At 8:01 p.m.,<br />

an employee at a business<br />

in the 100 block of<br />

Waukegan Road reported<br />

someone was inside the<br />

store taking alcohol off<br />

the shelf and concealing<br />

the alcohol inside a<br />

shopping cart.<br />

Nov. 22<br />

• At 2:17 a.m., a resident in<br />

the 2400 block of Waukegan<br />

Road reported seeing a<br />

neighbor looking into their<br />

windows.<br />

• At 8:05 p.m., a resident in<br />

the 1000 block of Crystal<br />

Court reported someone<br />

entered their home through<br />

a window and took jewelry<br />

from inside earlier that<br />

evening. The reported loss<br />

is over $3,000.<br />

Nov. 21<br />

• At 9 a.m., a construction<br />

worker in the 1400 block<br />

of Hawthorne Lane reported<br />

a concrete saw was stolen<br />

from a worksite. The<br />

reported loss is $1,000.<br />

EDITOR’S NOTE: The<br />

Glenview Lantern’s Police<br />

Reports are compiled from<br />

official reports found on<br />

file at the Glenview Police<br />

Department headquarters in<br />

Glenview. Individuals named<br />

in these reports are considered<br />

innocent of all charges<br />

until proven guilty in a court<br />

of law.<br />

holiday<br />

From Page 8<br />

bow out of the holidaycraft<br />

market scene after<br />

this year.<br />

“We want to go out<br />

while we are on top,” Van<br />

Voorhis said.<br />

Despite being in its final<br />

year, the experience at the<br />

Holiday Store at The Grove<br />

is just as jolly as ever.<br />

The heartwarming<br />

soundtrack of Christmas<br />

carols encourages merrymaking.<br />

Kids and adults<br />

can snack on free samples<br />

of holiday candies while<br />

browsing a colorful selection<br />

of customizable<br />

ornaments for the whole<br />

family. The friendly group<br />

of crafters and volunteers<br />

greet shoppers with joy<br />

and help them find whatever<br />

their looking for.<br />

“It has been an institution,”<br />

Van Voorhis said.<br />

“People come from all<br />

over. Many are disappointed<br />

we’re leaving.”<br />

Terri Wagner, of<br />

Lincolnwood, has also<br />

been involved with The<br />

Grove’s Holiday Store<br />

throughout its lifespan and<br />

sells her homemade crafts<br />

at the shop.<br />

Wagner’s “eclectic”<br />

bunch of crafts includes<br />

woodburning, food favors,<br />

cross-stitching, intricate<br />

holiday bows and<br />

much more. She’s a selfprofessed<br />

“Grove groupie”<br />

and loves hanging out at<br />

the Holiday Store throughout<br />

the season.<br />

“What I love most about<br />

the store is the camaraderie<br />

among the crafters, the experience<br />

with the customers<br />

and being surrounded<br />

by beautiful things,” Wagner<br />

said.<br />

The event has been a pillar<br />

in the community. The<br />

space reflects the desire<br />

for a communal gathering<br />

place where people can<br />

bond over the Christmas<br />

spirit. With its closing, that<br />

space will be removed,<br />

saddening shoppers and<br />

crafters like Wagner.<br />

“Everything has its season,<br />

but I’m personally sad<br />

it see it go,” Wagner said.<br />

Nevertheless, the people<br />

who have produced the<br />

crafts and run the shop<br />

over the decades want<br />

to extend their gratitude<br />

to all the shoppers.<br />

“Thank you for all the<br />

years of faithful patronage,”<br />

Wagner said.<br />

Van Voorhis echoed her<br />

point.<br />

“We want to thank the<br />

readers for their long-time<br />

dedication and for making<br />

the shop the success it has<br />

been,” she said.<br />

The Holiday Store at<br />

The Grove is open from 10<br />

a.m. to 5 p.m. from Thursdays<br />

to Sundays every<br />

weekend until Dec. 23.


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12 | December 6, 2018 | The glenview lantern news<br />

glenviewlantern.com<br />

‘Citizens for Glenview’ backs three candidates for Village Board<br />

The April 2019<br />

municipal races<br />

are officially<br />

underway<br />

Jason Addy, Editor<br />

A group of village residents<br />

calling itself “Citizens<br />

for Glenview” threw<br />

its support behind a trio of<br />

Village Board candidates<br />

with a mix of experience at<br />

a meet-and-greet Saturday,<br />

Dec. 1, at Village Hall.<br />

Citizens for Glenview<br />

will nominate incumbent<br />

Trustee Mike Jenny,<br />

along with Mary Cooper<br />

and Chuck Gitles, both of<br />

whom are seeking a first<br />

term on the Board of Trustees,<br />

for the upcoming municipal<br />

election on April 2,<br />

2019.<br />

Citizens for Glenview<br />

is a nonpartisan political<br />

group that was formed to<br />

interview, select, nominate<br />

and elect candidates to the<br />

Village Board, according<br />

to the group’s website.<br />

The candidates backed<br />

by the group “pledge to<br />

represent all the constituents<br />

of Glenview and not<br />

to focus on single issues.”<br />

Mike Jenny<br />

Jenny boasts nearly<br />

eight years’ experience on<br />

the board, having served<br />

as trustee since 2011. He<br />

has also served as a subcommittee<br />

member for the<br />

Glenview Credit Union’s<br />

board of directors, helping<br />

the bank with issues<br />

surrounding a potential<br />

relocation and expansion<br />

within the area.<br />

Jenny works as an investment<br />

banker for Livingstone<br />

Partners, where<br />

he focuses on the metals<br />

and manufacturing sectors,<br />

and he has more than<br />

15 years of experience in<br />

NOTICE OF PROPOSED PROPERTY TAX INCREASE FOR<br />

AVOCA SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 37<br />

I. A public hearing to approve a proposed property tax increase for<br />

Avoca School District No. 37 for 2018 will be held on December 20,<br />

2018, at 6:15 p.m. at the Joseph M. Porto Community Center, 2921<br />

Illinois Road, Wilmette, Illinois.<br />

Any person desiring to appear at the public hearing and present testimony<br />

to the taxing district may contact Dr. Kevin Jauch, Superintendent<br />

(telephone<br />

847-251-3587).<br />

II. The corporate and special purpose property taxes extended or<br />

abated for the year 2017 were $12,986,189.<br />

The proposed corporate and special purpose property taxes to be levied<br />

for 2018 are $13,499,144. This represents a 3.95% increase over<br />

the previous year.<br />

III. The property taxes extended for debt service and public building<br />

commission leases for 2017 were $761,775.<br />

The estimated property taxes to be levied for debt service and public<br />

building commission leases for 2018 are $726,663. This represents a<br />

4.6% decrease over the previous year.<br />

IV. The total property taxes extended or abated for 2017 were<br />

$13,747,964.<br />

The estimated total property taxes to be levied for 2018 are<br />

$14,225,807. This represents a 3.5% increase over the previous year.<br />

mergers and acquisitions,<br />

restructuring and capitalraising<br />

transactions.<br />

At the announcement<br />

Sunday, Jenny said he<br />

thinks he, Cooper and Gitles<br />

will be ready to hit the<br />

ground running if they are<br />

all elected to the board in<br />

April.<br />

“I think that we can, if<br />

elected, proceed almost<br />

seamlessly and continue to<br />

improve life in the village<br />

and make it a good place to<br />

live and work,” said Jenny,<br />

who is seeking his third<br />

term on the board.<br />

He holds a Bachelor’s<br />

degree from Vanderbilt<br />

University and a Master<br />

of Business Administration<br />

from Washington<br />

University in St. Louis.<br />

Jenny has lived in the<br />

village since 2004, along<br />

with his wife and two<br />

children. The Jennys are<br />

active members of St. David’s<br />

Episcopal Church in<br />

the village.<br />

Chuck Gitles<br />

Though Gitles is seeking<br />

a first term on the<br />

Glenview Village Board,<br />

he is already a well-known<br />

public official in the area,<br />

as he serves as president of<br />

the Northbrook/Glenview<br />

School District 30 Board<br />

of Education for the past<br />

four years.<br />

He has more than a decade<br />

of experience on the<br />

school board, having been<br />

first elected to the school<br />

board in 2005 and re-elected<br />

in 2011 and 2015. Gitles<br />

also has experience as<br />

a member of the Congregation<br />

Beth Shalom Men’s<br />

Club Board, according to<br />

District 30’s website.<br />

After three terms on the<br />

school board, Gitles said<br />

he is still eager to serve<br />

Glenview.<br />

“I decided to seek a<br />

trustee position because<br />

… it continues my work<br />

in giving back to the community<br />

that’s given me so<br />

much,” Gitles said.<br />

Gitles serves as a senior<br />

vice president in the<br />

commercial lending department<br />

of First Bank of<br />

Highland Park.<br />

He holds a Bachelor’s<br />

degree from the University<br />

of Iowa and a Master of<br />

Business Administration<br />

from DePaul University.<br />

A graduate of Glenbrook<br />

North High School,<br />

Gitles moved to the village<br />

in 2002, where he<br />

lives with his wife and<br />

three children.<br />

Please see village, 19<br />

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421 Ridge Rd. • Wilmette • (847) 251-3601<br />

HOLIDAY GIFT BOXES<br />

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6-8 oz. ea. AGED PRIME FILLET MIGNON<br />

6-5 oz. ea. CHICKEN KIEV (3 varieties)<br />

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PLEASE PLACE YOUR ORDER EARLY!<br />

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glenviewlantern.com news<br />

the glenview lantern | December 6, 2018 | 13<br />

THE WILMETTE BEACON<br />

Wilmette fully opts into<br />

county paid sick leave,<br />

minimum wage ordinances<br />

Three weeks following<br />

the Nov. 6 election, the<br />

Wilmette Village Board<br />

unanimously voted to fully<br />

opt into the Cook County<br />

minimum wage and paid<br />

sick leave ordinances at its<br />

Nov. 27 meeting.<br />

On Nov. 6, the minimum<br />

wage referendum was approved<br />

by Wilmette voters<br />

76 to 24 percent and the<br />

paid sick leave referendum<br />

was approved 80 to<br />

20 percent. The sick leave<br />

ordinance mandates that<br />

employees who work at<br />

least 80 hours in a 120-day<br />

period accrue one hour of<br />

paid sick leave for every<br />

40 hours worked, up to<br />

a maximum of 40 hours<br />

per year. The minimum<br />

wage in Wilmette is currently<br />

$11. The minimum<br />

wage will further increase<br />

to $12 on July 1, 2019 and<br />

to $13 on July 1, 2020. On<br />

July 1, 2021 and beyond,<br />

the wage will increase by<br />

the Consumer Price Index<br />

(CPI), or 2.5 percent,<br />

whichever is less.<br />

“The Nov. 6 referenda<br />

correctly and accurately<br />

reflected the County’s ordinances<br />

and were both<br />

approved overwhelmingly<br />

by Wilmette voters,” Village<br />

President Bob Bielinski<br />

said. “Therefore, I<br />

believe the Village Board<br />

should implement the results<br />

of the referenda and<br />

fully opt in to both county<br />

ordinances.”<br />

The current county<br />

minimum wage of $11 is<br />

already in effect in Wilmette,<br />

while the paid sick<br />

leave ordinance will take<br />

effect in the Village on<br />

March 1.<br />

Reporting by Todd Marver,<br />

Freelance Reporter. Full<br />

story at WilmetteBeacon.<br />

com.<br />

THE <strong>GL</strong>ENCOE ANCHOR<br />

Turkey Bowl grows<br />

through the years in<br />

Glencoe<br />

On this year’s briskly<br />

cold Thanksgiving morning,<br />

about 70 people gathered<br />

at the Central School<br />

field for what has become<br />

an annual Glencoe tradition,<br />

the Turkey Bowl.<br />

This football tournament<br />

began about six<br />

years ago with some local<br />

families whose kids<br />

played AYSO soccer together,<br />

and the event has<br />

continued to expand, having<br />

as many as 100 participants<br />

in some years.<br />

This year, the group got<br />

even further into the<br />

Thanksgiving spirit and<br />

included a winter clothing<br />

collection to contribute<br />

to the Evanston Soup<br />

Kitchen Coat Drive.<br />

With hot cocoa, donuts<br />

and empanadas on<br />

Available For<br />

A Limited<br />

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the sidelines, eight teams<br />

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no official scoreboard and<br />

the only prize was bragging<br />

rights, though there<br />

wasn’t much boasting<br />

coming from the group.<br />

“It’s a great way for people<br />

to get together,” said<br />

organizer Danny Levin, of<br />

Glencoe. “There’s a warm<br />

feeling about it.”<br />

While the spirit of the<br />

game remains as genial<br />

as ever, the skill level<br />

continues to improve.<br />

Reporting by Christine Adams,<br />

Freelance Reporter. Full<br />

story at GlencoeAnchor.com.<br />

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14 | December 6, 2018 | The glenview lantern School<br />

glenviewlantern.com<br />

Avoca students weigh in on future plans in Northfield<br />

Alexa Burnell<br />

Freelance Reporter<br />

Students from Avoca<br />

School District 37 were<br />

visited by consultants<br />

from Houseal Lavigne on<br />

Nov. 12, who asked seventh-<br />

and eighth-grade students<br />

at Marie Murphy to<br />

give their input on the Village<br />

of Northfield’s Vision<br />

Plan 2040.<br />

Superintendent Kevin<br />

Jauch explained how<br />

the exciting opportunity<br />

made perfect sense<br />

to him, considering that<br />

these young students are<br />

the future of Northfield<br />

Glenview and the other<br />

surrounding areas that<br />

comprise District 37.<br />

“Today’s workshops<br />

are a great way to remind<br />

kids that they are capable<br />

of making positive change<br />

in their communities,”<br />

Jauch said. “Through these<br />

workshops, students learn<br />

about civic responsibility<br />

students. They’re not<br />

only part of the discussion<br />

but may also be part of the<br />

change. Think how empowered<br />

they will feel if<br />

some of their suggestions<br />

become incorporated into<br />

the final plan.”<br />

During their language<br />

arts and social studies<br />

classes, students put their<br />

Sara Maquera (seated) laughs as Brandon Neal, a consultant<br />

with Houseal Lavigne, delivers a presentation.<br />

scheduled assignments<br />

aside to become part of<br />

the long-term planning. In<br />

Hyung Ro’s social studies<br />

class, consultant Brandon<br />

Neal greeted the students,<br />

eager to hear what<br />

the young children had<br />

to say.<br />

“We are at the tail end<br />

of the gathering-information<br />

phase,” Neal said.<br />

“For about the past six<br />

months, we’ve been conducting<br />

workshops and<br />

public forums, encouraging<br />

everyone and anyone<br />

to come give us their<br />

thoughts and opinions.<br />

We are very interested in<br />

hearing from students because<br />

we believe they will<br />

give us a fresh perspective<br />

and helps us see the<br />

things that adults may not<br />

consider.<br />

“After all, many of<br />

these kids will return after<br />

college to raise families<br />

of their own either in<br />

Brandon Neal, a consultant with Houseal Lavigne,<br />

speaks to students at Marie Murphy about the role of<br />

urban planners Nov. 12. photos by Alexa Burnell/22nd<br />

Century Media<br />

Northfield or nearby, so<br />

it is important that their<br />

voices are heard and the<br />

that changes made are<br />

ones they hope to see<br />

long-term.”<br />

Entertain in<br />

As Neal began, he first<br />

taught students how urban<br />

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the glenview lantern | December 6, 2018 | 15<br />

SILENT NIGHT AT THE<br />

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In the midst of this busy season, this service<br />

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Parking available on Patriot Blvd., Chestnut Ave. & Attea Middle School<br />

Schedule your free design consultation<br />

(847) 641-2502<br />

*Limit one offer per household. Applies topurchases of 5ormore Classic or<br />

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December Specials:<br />

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Buy 2 get 3rd free on<br />

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16 | December 6, 2018 | The glenview lantern news<br />

glenviewlantern.com<br />

Northbrook salon giving back to Youth Services this holiday season<br />

Sumbitted Content<br />

Northbrook’s Andreas<br />

Hogue Salon will be supporting<br />

Youth Services<br />

of Glenview/Northbrook<br />

with its charitable efforts<br />

during the 2018 holiday<br />

season.<br />

Since the salon opened<br />

in February 2011, Andreas<br />

Hogue and his staff have<br />

made a continual effort<br />

to give back to the community<br />

and support local<br />

charities by supporting<br />

a worthy cause each<br />

year though in-salon<br />

fundraising events, volunteering<br />

in the community<br />

and donations.<br />

The salon, located<br />

at 840 Willow Road in<br />

Northbrook, has held successful<br />

fundraisers for<br />

Sister Paulanne’s Needy<br />

Family Fund, Baby Steps<br />

- Evanston/North Shore,<br />

Locks of Love, Alliance<br />

for the Great Lakes, St.<br />

Baldrick’s Foundation,<br />

Northfield Food Pantry,<br />

Wings, and Wigs For<br />

Kids.<br />

“Our goal is to raise<br />

funds to support Youth<br />

Services programming,<br />

as well as to supply them<br />

with some of the mostneeded<br />

items for the families<br />

who have applied for<br />

assistance,” said Hogue, a<br />

Glenview native. “There<br />

are a number of children<br />

and families right here in<br />

our community who need<br />

a lot of support, and we<br />

want to help brighten their<br />

holidays and make a difference<br />

in their lives.”<br />

Each year, Youth Services<br />

conducts an application<br />

and screening process<br />

to identify families most<br />

in need.<br />

“We know that they’ve<br />

done their due diligence<br />

and that our efforts will<br />

truly make a difference to<br />

people we live and work<br />

amongst us each day — it<br />

Dads learn how to braid their daughters’ hair at a<br />

fundraising event called “Beer and Braids” Oct. 7 at<br />

Andreas Hogue Salon in Northbrook. Photo submitted<br />

feels good to help out,”<br />

Hogue said.<br />

Over the next few<br />

weeks, salon guests will<br />

be invited to donate to the<br />

charity, and in exchange<br />

for their donation, the salon<br />

will gift them a coupon<br />

to use toward products<br />

in the salon.<br />

The salon will also<br />

have a donation box, in<br />

which employees are collecting<br />

new cosmetics,<br />

toiletries, coats, mittens,<br />

puzzles, children’s books<br />

and more. The being collected<br />

are among the most<br />

asked-for and needed, as<br />

identified by Youth Services.<br />

“With the collections<br />

box, we are placing a particular<br />

emphasis on collecting<br />

for the moms,”<br />

Hogue said. “The moms<br />

are the ones most often<br />

submitting the needs requests,<br />

and they almost<br />

never include themselves<br />

on the list. We want to<br />

make sure that the mothers<br />

are celebrated and<br />

remembered this holiday<br />

season.”<br />

Andreas Hogue Salon<br />

is located in Willow<br />

Festival Shopping<br />

Center in Northbrook.<br />

Make It Better magazine<br />

readers voted Andreas<br />

Hogue Salon “Best of<br />

Chicago” in 2014, 2015,<br />

2016, 2017 and 2018.<br />

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glenviewlantern.com glenview<br />

the glenview lantern | December 6, 2018 | 17<br />

TO DO:<br />

declutter<br />

paint walls<br />

call Marina<br />

sell home<br />

THINKING OF<br />

buying<br />

OR<br />

selling<br />

IN SPRING?<br />

IT MAY BE THE HOLIDAY SEASON, BUT NOW IS THE<br />

BEST TIME TO PREPARE FOR THE SPRING MARKET<br />

Did you know that the spring market starts in early February?<br />

Did you know that historically, more homes go under contract in February through June than at<br />

any other time of the year?<br />

For sellers making your home “show ready” often takes longer than you anticipate so it is important<br />

to have a plan of action. Listing your home early in the spring market will net the best results.<br />

As a buyer, the competition in the spring for the right home can be fierce. It is essential to be<br />

prepared with knowledge of the current market and to secure your financing early so that your<br />

offer is the “accepted offer” on your dream home.<br />

Contact me for a free comparative market analysis of your home and advice on how to make your<br />

house stand out in the market. If you are interested in purchasing, I will provide expert guidance<br />

through each and every step of the home buying process to secure the home of your dreams.<br />

MOBILE 847.401.1048<br />

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Don’t<br />

despair.<br />

All across Glenview, 55<br />

organizations are offering<br />

fantastic prizes—free. And<br />

what’s better than free? So pick<br />

yourself up, shop local, and aim<br />

for a $300 gift certificate to ABT<br />

and other surprises at Glenview<br />

Bank & Trust and Northview Bank<br />

& Trust.<br />

Final drawing, December 18.<br />

Win with<br />

The Bear<br />

More details at www.glenviewchamber.com<br />

Yes, Black Friday is over.<br />

But you can still Win with The Bear.


18 | December 6, 2018 | The glenview lantern glenview<br />

glenviewlantern.com<br />

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glenviewlantern.com sound off<br />

the glenview lantern | December 6, 2018 | 19<br />

Social snapshot<br />

Top Web Stories<br />

From www.GlenviewLantern.com as of<br />

Dec. 3:<br />

1. Martinelli, Glenbrook South boys<br />

basketball rolls past Evanston<br />

2. Video: GBS boys basketball’s Dom<br />

Martinelli on Evanston win<br />

3. Police Reports: Glenview business loses<br />

$6,200 in altered-check scam<br />

4. Glenview schools shut down for blizzard<br />

5. Coach Holocek leads Loyola past adversity<br />

Become a member: GlenviewLantern.com/Plus<br />

The Glenview Police Department posted this<br />

photo on its Facebook page Nov. 29 with:<br />

“We had a great morning at Willowbrook<br />

School Northbrook/Glenview School District<br />

30 for High Five Friday and a flag ceremony!<br />

#illinoisbicentennial #happybirthdayillinois”<br />

Like The Glenview Lantern: facebook.com/glenviewlantern<br />

From the Editor<br />

Jason Addy<br />

Editor<br />

Grab a pen and<br />

paper to take some<br />

notes. It’s that<br />

time of year again.<br />

Yes, it was “that time of<br />

year” last month — and<br />

many of the months preceding<br />

the Nov. 6 general<br />

village<br />

From Page 12<br />

Mary Cooper<br />

Cooper, a resident of<br />

Glenview for three decades,<br />

is also running for<br />

a seat on the Village Board<br />

for the first time.<br />

Cooper boasts more<br />

than 25 years of business<br />

experience advising<br />

Let the race begin<br />

election — but it is now<br />

time for us as voters to<br />

turn our attention closer<br />

to home.<br />

The 2019 municipal<br />

election in April is coming<br />

up on us quicker than<br />

most of us probably hope,<br />

but there is no better time<br />

than now to begin learning<br />

about the candidates seeking<br />

seats on the Glenview<br />

Village Board and a number<br />

of school district and<br />

other boards throughout<br />

the community.<br />

These are the people<br />

who will be making decisions<br />

on property taxes,<br />

community investments<br />

and municipal services,<br />

decisions that will arguably<br />

affect residents more<br />

regularly and more deeply<br />

than decisions being made<br />

in Springfield and Washington<br />

D.C.<br />

The unofficial launch<br />

of the local campaign<br />

season happened on<br />

Saturday, Dec. 1, at<br />

Glenview Village Hall as<br />

a residents’ group threw<br />

its support behind three<br />

candidates for the Village<br />

Board.<br />

From the board room,<br />

Citizens for Glenview<br />

nominated incumbent<br />

trustee Mike Jenny, Northbrook/Glenview<br />

District<br />

30 Board President Chuck<br />

consumer products organizations.<br />

She also has a<br />

wealth of experience in<br />

fundraising, serving on<br />

boards of local organizations<br />

and schools, and<br />

hands-on and strategic<br />

volunteering.<br />

Cooper has raised four<br />

kids in the village, two of<br />

whom graduated and two<br />

who are about to graduate<br />

from Glenbrook South<br />

High School.<br />

“Given that my kids are<br />

almost off the payroll, I<br />

have a little bit more bandwidth<br />

to do things, so i’m<br />

looking forward to channeling<br />

that energy,” Cooper<br />

said. “A lot of people<br />

who know me know I can’t<br />

sit still. I need to do something.”<br />

Gitles and political newcomer<br />

Mary Cooper for a<br />

seat on the board.<br />

A number of other local<br />

organizations will soon<br />

nominate their own candidates<br />

for local boards,<br />

meaning these slate<br />

announcements will start<br />

piling up.<br />

Take the time now to<br />

get to know Jenny, Gitles,<br />

Cooper and the other<br />

candidates so you are not<br />

racing at the last minute to<br />

learn how the candidates<br />

want to lead Glenview,<br />

your village.<br />

The last thing anyone<br />

wants is a surprise at the<br />

ballot box in April.<br />

Jenny, Gitles and Cooper<br />

will be on the ballot<br />

for the April 2 municipal<br />

election next<br />

spring. Early voting starts<br />

March 18.<br />

For more information<br />

about the candidates and<br />

Citizens for Glenview,<br />

visit the group’s website at<br />

www.citizensforglenview.<br />

org.<br />

Glenview District 34 (@glenview34) tweeted<br />

this photo on Nov. 30 with “Thanks to Natalia,<br />

who went to every @HenkingSchool class to<br />

encourage kids to write cards to soldiers, Mrs.<br />

Brown & Mrs. Rothschild’s class received a<br />

shout out on @US99Chicago this morning!<br />

#WeAreD34”<br />

Follow The Glenview Lantern: @glenviewlantern<br />

go figure<br />

$17,295,608<br />

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

The 2019 tax-levy amount<br />

requested by West Northfield<br />

School District 31. See Page 6<br />

for the full story.<br />

murphy<br />

From Page 14<br />

munity together to make<br />

changes for the better. He<br />

educated students on the<br />

types of planners, such as<br />

regional, transportation,<br />

economic, environmental<br />

and more. Neal explained<br />

his goal was to help the<br />

Village create a 10-15<br />

year plan that would<br />

bring out the best in the<br />

community.<br />

Neal then asked students<br />

to select five things<br />

they’d like to see fixed<br />

or improved in within<br />

the Village of Northfield.<br />

Some of the most popular<br />

suggestions included<br />

improving sidewalks for<br />

better walking and biking<br />

transportation; increasing<br />

the opportunity for entertainment<br />

with a bowling<br />

alley and arcades; and<br />

adding more open courtyards<br />

and public parks<br />

and spaces where families<br />

can participate in a wide<br />

variety of leisure sports<br />

and activities, such as<br />

recreational basketball,<br />

tennis and more.<br />

At the end of the presentation,<br />

Neal encouraged<br />

students to visit the Village<br />

of Northfield Website<br />

at http://www.hlplanning.<br />

com/portals/northfield/<br />

where they can contribute<br />

more ideas, learn about<br />

future public forums and<br />

workshops and to stay<br />

afloat to the next steps for<br />

the Village of Northfield<br />

Vision Plan 2040.<br />

The Glenview Lantern<br />

Sound Off Policy<br />

Editorials and columns are the opinions of the author. Pieces from<br />

22nd Century Media are the thoughts of the company as a whole.<br />

The Glenview Lantern encourages readers to write letters to Sound<br />

Off. All letters must be signed, and names and hometowns will be<br />

published. We also ask that writers include their address and phone<br />

number for verification, not publication. Letters should be limited<br />

to 400 words. The Glenview Lantern reserves the right to edit letters.<br />

Letters become property of The Glenview Lantern. Letters that are<br />

published do not reflect the thoughts and views of The Glenview<br />

Lantern. Letters can be mailed to: The Glenview Lantern, 60 Revere<br />

Drive ST 888, Northbrook, IL, 60062. Fax letters to (847) 272-4648<br />

or email to chris@glenviewlantern.com.<br />

www.glenviewlantern.com


20 | December 6, 2018 | The glenview lantern glenview<br />

glenviewlantern.com


glenviewlantern.com glenview<br />

the glenview lantern | December 6, 2018 | 21<br />

A Warm Thank You<br />

to Our 2018 Clients<br />

825 Redwood Lane 1616 Canterbury Lane 2110 Swainwood Drive 830 Eastwood Lane 1213 Spruce Drive 309<br />

Oxford Road 697 East Prairie Avenue 2123 Warrington Court 3516 Lawson Road 1550 West Cornelia Avenue<br />

Unit 305 3166 Valcour Drive 2662 West Lake Avenue 2456 Violet Street 508 Elm Street 1404 Royal Oak Lane<br />

2451 Saranac Lane 2018 Grove Street 500 Woodland Drive 1359 Kensington Court 916 Hunter Road 1566<br />

Kittyhawk Lane 2000 Linneman Street 2303 Dewes Street 727 Pleasant Lane 2004 Valley Lo Lane 2060<br />

Valor Court 1867 Admiral Court 947 Kensington Drive 50 North Plum Grove Road Unit 406 1227 Hathaway<br />

Circle 3601 Sigwalt Street 1021 Princeton Avenue 56 Roxbury Lane 2000 Chestnut Avenue Unit 410 1705<br />

Pavilion Way Unit 501 222 Telluride Lane 736 North Pine Avenue 1842 Admiral Court 2800 North Lincoln<br />

Avenue Unit 3N 1566 Kittyhawk Lane 1872 Butternut Lane 825 Lenox Road 1616 Canterbury Lane 3300<br />

Park Place 1877 Prairie Street 824 Winchester Lane 2858 Commons Drive 2632 Violet Street 2601 Glenview<br />

Road 1895 Admiral Court 1609 Del Ogier Drive 2245 Sussex Lane 2126 Chandler Lane 1601 Del Ogier Drive<br />

1643 Constitution Drive 1748 Primrose Lane 801 Timberline Drive 49 Briar Road 209 Sunset Ridge Road 2129<br />

Tuscany Court 1770 Harrison Street 702 Waukegan Road Unit 406A 1561 East Walnut Avenue<br />

Happy Holidays from the Jerfita Team<br />

Missy Jerfita<br />

847.813.7700<br />

missy@jerfitateam.com<br />

www.TheKeyToHomes.com<br />

JERFITA TEAM<br />

Compass Real Estate is a licensed real estate broker with a principal office in New York, NY and abides by all applicable Equal Housing Opportunity laws. All material presented herein is intended for informational purposes only. Information is compiled from sources deemed reliable but is subject to errors, omissions, changes in price, condition,<br />

sale, or withdrawal without notice. No statement is made as to the accuracy of any description. All measurements and square footages are approximate. This is not intended to solicit property already listed. Nothing herein shall be construed as legal, accounting or other professional advice outside the realm of real estate brokerage.


22 | December 6, 2018 | The glenview lantern glenview<br />

glenviewlantern.com<br />

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OCCUPATION: Master Stylist<br />

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the glenview lantern | December 6, 2018 | GlenviewLantern.com<br />

deli-zioso Lake Forest eatery dishing<br />

out essential Italian fare, Page 30<br />

Wagner Farm morphs into Winter<br />

Sale wonderland, Page 25<br />

Gavin Leahy, a part-time Wagner Farm<br />

employee, saws the stump off a newly bought<br />

tree before loading it onto a vehicle. Photo by<br />

Chris Pullam/22nd Century Media


24 | December 6, 2018 | The glenview lantern puzzles<br />

glenviewlantern.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. Santa ___ winds<br />

4. Bankbook abbr.<br />

8. Relaxed<br />

14. Debate side<br />

15. Qatar’s capital<br />

16. Lite<br />

17. Goes with head<br />

18. Negligible<br />

19. Builds<br />

20. ___ canal<br />

22. Paint ingredient<br />

24. Tie with a clasp<br />

25. Is of benefit<br />

29. Courtroom VIPs<br />

30. Wilmette institution<br />

supporting public<br />

causes, with a new<br />

building planned<br />

34. Hairdo<br />

36. Dentist<br />

qualification<br />

37. Tempe sch.<br />

38. Shout of adoration<br />

41. Burst forth<br />

43. “____ live and<br />

breathe!”<br />

44. NFL scores<br />

45. Cambodian<br />

currency<br />

46. Alabama town<br />

49. Spa sounds<br />

52. Bestow<br />

53. “___ as good a<br />

time as any”<br />

55. Philosophic<br />

58. Exactly<br />

59. “A Gentleman in<br />

Moscow” author who<br />

discussed his book at<br />

the Wilmette Junior<br />

HS<br />

64. Iridescent stone<br />

66. “Every child.<br />

One voice” org.<br />

67. Chastise<br />

68. Elders’ teachings<br />

69. World Series mo.<br />

70. Pictures<br />

71. Vortex<br />

72. Sounds of doubt<br />

Down<br />

1. Bitter tasting<br />

2. Call after a missed<br />

field goal<br />

3. African nation<br />

4. Banners, text<br />

links, e.g.<br />

5. Prof.’s employer<br />

6. ___ Pet (novelty<br />

item)<br />

7. Percussion<br />

instrument<br />

8. Egyptian city<br />

9. High up point<br />

10. Mrs. sheep<br />

11. Hotbed of NCAA<br />

basketball<br />

12. High school test<br />

13. Loop transports<br />

21. Puccini opera<br />

23. Eluders<br />

26. It’s debatable<br />

27. Bank gaurantee<br />

of a buyer’s credit,<br />

abbr.<br />

28. Thin strip<br />

30. Lifting machines<br />

31. Mediocre<br />

32. Application<br />

33. Stage of bloom<br />

35. Ready<br />

38. Fedora, for<br />

example<br />

39. Buckeyes’ sch.<br />

40. Emphatic assent<br />

in Acapulco<br />

42. Inside man<br />

47. Centimeter, abbr.<br />

48. Peter of “Lawrence<br />

of Arabia”<br />

50. Old World bird<br />

with fanlike crest<br />

51. Cloth sample<br />

54. Numbers, abbr.<br />

56. Tune player<br />

57. Diamond or<br />

heart, e.g.<br />

59. Prefix with<br />

angular<br />

60. Original manufactured<br />

item<br />

61. Ring org.<br />

62. Bicycle part<br />

63. Manage,<br />

with “out”<br />

65. A pewter<br />

<strong>GL</strong>ENVIEW<br />

Oil Lamp Theater<br />

(1723 Glenview Road,<br />

(847) 834-0738)<br />

■Multiple ■ showtimes<br />

until Dec. 30: Performances<br />

of “It’s a<br />

Wonderful Life” ($40<br />

adult, $25 student<br />

tickets)<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, Dec.<br />

7: Family Night and<br />

Karaoke<br />

■9 ■ a.m.. Saturday, Dec.<br />

8: Gene Lim<br />

■Noon ■ Sunday, Dec. 9:<br />

Sean Hefferan<br />

Curragh Irish Pub<br />

(1800 Tower Drive,<br />

(847) 998-1100)<br />

■7:30 ■ p.m. every<br />

Wednesday: Trivia<br />

NORTHBROOK<br />

Pinstripes<br />

(1150 Willow Road,<br />

(847) 480-2323)<br />

■From ■ open until close<br />

all week: bowling and<br />

bocce<br />

Glenbrook North High<br />

School<br />

(2300 Shermer Road,<br />

(847) 272-6400)<br />

■7 ■ p.m., Dec. 6, Dec.<br />

7 or Dec. 8: GBN<br />

Orchesis Dance<br />

Company presents<br />

“Devotion”<br />

LAKE FOREST<br />

Woodlands Academy<br />

(705 E. Westleigh Road,<br />

(847) 234-4300)<br />

■7-8:30 ■ p.m.<br />

Thursday, Dec. 6:<br />

Free Christmas<br />

Concert at Woodlands<br />

Academy<br />

Northcroft Park<br />

(1365 S. Ridge Road)<br />

■7-10 ■ p.m. Friday,<br />

Dec. 7: Cocktails with<br />

Claus’s<br />

To place an event in The<br />

Scene, email martin@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


glenviewlantern.com life & arts<br />

the glenview lantern | December 6, 2018 | 25<br />

Winter Sale underway at Wagner Farm<br />

Chris Pullam<br />

Freelance Reporter<br />

In just a matter of days,<br />

Wagner Farm’s main<br />

lawn transformed from an<br />

open field to a miniature<br />

evergreen forest.<br />

The occasion, the farm’s<br />

annual Winter Sale, draws<br />

Christmas-goers from<br />

across the North Shore to<br />

stroll among about 150<br />

pines, with another 200<br />

stored away, in search of<br />

their holiday centerpiece<br />

on the grounds of one of<br />

the last fully functioning<br />

dairy farms in Cook<br />

County.<br />

“Every purchase benefits<br />

Wagner Farm, and<br />

we’re a community park,<br />

so in the end, every sale<br />

benefits the community,”<br />

said Chris Just, the farm’s<br />

assistant manager. “We<br />

tie them to posts so you<br />

can get a 360-degree view<br />

of the tree without actually<br />

turning our touching<br />

them. We’re one of the<br />

only places around that<br />

does that.”<br />

The sale includes balsam<br />

and fraser fir trees<br />

ranging from four to 11<br />

feet tall; wreaths made<br />

with noble fir, fraser firs<br />

and boxwood, and decorated<br />

with pine cones<br />

and holly berries; roping<br />

to adorn railings; mantel<br />

pieces; and dogwood<br />

branches and spruce tips<br />

for decorative flair.<br />

Wagner Farm partners<br />

with a several small farms<br />

in northern Wisconsin for<br />

the trees and a distributor<br />

Wagner Farm Assistant Manager Chris Just (front)<br />

measures a tree for David Warner using a wooden<br />

plank Sunday, Dec. 2. Chris Pullam/22nd Century Media<br />

from Oregon for the rest.<br />

After choosing and<br />

purchasing a tree, Wagner<br />

Farm staff takes<br />

care of the rest.<br />

On Sunday, Dec. 2, Just<br />

and several part-time employees<br />

spent the day carrying<br />

chosen trees to the<br />

barn, removing loose pine<br />

needles with an electric<br />

“tree shaker,” sawing the<br />

bottoms of their stumps,<br />

bundling them in nets and<br />

securing them to their new<br />

owners’ vehicles.<br />

“We offer basically<br />

a full service with our<br />

Christmas trees,” Just<br />

said. “Basically, a customer<br />

points it out and we<br />

haul it around, give it a<br />

fresh cut, bag it and load it<br />

on the vehicle. They don’t<br />

have to do a thing.”<br />

According to Just,<br />

North Shore residents<br />

even pay professional<br />

photographers to take<br />

family pictures among the<br />

trees for the holidays.<br />

Proceeds from the<br />

event support Wagner<br />

Farm’s day-to-day operations,<br />

including feeding<br />

Artistica<br />

Italian Ceramics - Tuscan Pottery - Deruta Dinnerware<br />

Everyone Welcome to<br />

the animals and providing<br />

educational programs.<br />

Wagner Farm is one of<br />

the last operating dairy<br />

farms in Cook County<br />

and is open to the public<br />

for recreation and<br />

learning.<br />

Many local school districts<br />

partner with the<br />

farm to teach students,<br />

grades K-12, about modern<br />

agricultural and where<br />

food comes from.<br />

“The Heritage Center<br />

has plenty of interactive<br />

exhibits and is always<br />

open during the sale, so<br />

we encourage guests to<br />

stick around a little while<br />

and learn,” Just said.<br />

During the sale, families<br />

often took a break<br />

Please see farm, 26<br />

Friday & Saturday, 7 & 8 December 2018 (10 AM-5 PM)<br />

SAVE<br />

20%<br />

STORE WIDE<br />

Enter to win a Arte Italica vase<br />

+ +Juliska gift with purchase.<br />

1874 Johns Dr. Glenview, IL 60025<br />

www.artistica.com (847) 730-3783<br />

Refreshments<br />

and Hors<br />

d'oeuvre will<br />

be served.


26 | December 6, 2018 | The glenview lantern life & arts<br />

glenviewlantern.com<br />

for the<br />

holidays<br />

MARKETING SOLUTIONS<br />

ENGAGE<br />

GROW<br />

CONVERT<br />

<br />

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<br />

rating: PG-13 | genre: Fantasy/Science Fiction | run time: 1 hours 45 minutes<br />

‘The Grinch’ revamps holiday classic<br />

Kathy Clemens<br />

Contributing Columnist<br />

Glenview resident<br />

You first met him in a<br />

book. And you’ve seen him<br />

on TV. Now you can view<br />

the Grinch again on the big<br />

screen in full 3D.<br />

While the Seussian<br />

charm of the 1966 television<br />

special “How the<br />

Grinch Stole Christmas”<br />

will never be topped, the<br />

latest movie offering featuring<br />

Benedict Cumberbatch<br />

as the voice of the<br />

Christmas-hating green<br />

humbug does a fine job orchestrating<br />

the story of the<br />

lonely hermit in his cave<br />

gnashing his teeth over the<br />

holiday festivities celebrated<br />

by the Whos down in<br />

Whoville.<br />

The Grinch and his fulltime<br />

dog/part-time butler<br />

Max dwell atop Mount<br />

Crumpet overlooking the<br />

village chock full of Whos<br />

nestled into the valley below,<br />

who this year have<br />

decided to make Christmas<br />

three whole times<br />

bigger and better. For the<br />

Grinch, of course, this<br />

absolutely cannot be tolerated<br />

and he formulates<br />

his infernal plan to stop<br />

Christmas from coming.<br />

In order to flesh out the<br />

plot and fill a cinema-sized<br />

production, some background<br />

is provided on the<br />

Grinch but the majority<br />

of the action takes place<br />

in Whoville, and it’s here<br />

that the heart of the story<br />

resides.<br />

Fully formed and bristling<br />

with small town delights,<br />

from the first swoop<br />

in with tiny white birds<br />

on snow-ski feet through<br />

the homes and businesses<br />

of its denizens, Whoville<br />

is enchanting all the way<br />

around. Every scene overflows<br />

with holiday cheer<br />

and no detail is too small,<br />

from the twinkling lights<br />

on the homes to the giant<br />

garlanded fir tree and the<br />

many, many decorations<br />

festooning the streets.<br />

The animation is crisp,<br />

capturing the essence of<br />

the holidays and the emotions<br />

of the Whos wonderfully,<br />

and is lovely to behold.<br />

Rashida Jones voices<br />

Donna, harried mother of<br />

three, one of which happens<br />

to be Cindy Lou Who<br />

(Cameron Seely) and a<br />

little older than two in this<br />

version. Cindy Lou again<br />

has her encounter with<br />

the Grinch, which occurs<br />

a bit differently here but<br />

brings home the message<br />

effectively.<br />

Kenan Thompson is jolly<br />

Bricklebaum, who, with<br />

his wonder dog Mabel,<br />

embodies the Christmas<br />

spirit as an effervescent<br />

bearded bundle of joy and<br />

is pure fun.<br />

While no one can top<br />

the stentorian tones of Boris<br />

Karloff, Pharrell Williams<br />

ably narrates some<br />

of the original rhymes and<br />

a few new ones that update<br />

and mix in well with the<br />

material.<br />

The movie isn’t groundbreaking,<br />

but it does apply<br />

a fresh and entertaining<br />

twist on the story originally<br />

published in 1957.<br />

The basic premise remains<br />

the same: The Grinch,<br />

feeling left out of the<br />

festivities, elects to stop<br />

Christmas entirely by removing<br />

all vestiges of the<br />

revelries but finds surprise<br />

and then happiness when<br />

the residents of Whoville<br />

celebrate the holiday anyway,<br />

since it’s not about<br />

what is held in one’s hand<br />

but rather what is held in<br />

one’s heart.<br />

The Grinch and loyal<br />

Max (along with portly<br />

reindeer Fred) follow their<br />

paths to their own discoveries<br />

of the spirit of the<br />

holiday that doesn’t include<br />

all of the trappings.<br />

Life lessons about kindness<br />

to others and acceptance<br />

despite flaws<br />

abound, and the true meaning<br />

of Christmas shines<br />

through loud and clear.<br />

The Grinch may have<br />

started out as a rotter, but<br />

in the end, his heart grew<br />

three sizes that day.<br />

FOR MORE INFORMATION, VISIT:<br />

IMC.22NDCENTURYMEDIA.COM/HOLIDAYS<br />

farm<br />

From Page 25<br />

from the pine forest to<br />

crouch next to the nearby<br />

chicken coops or<br />

pig pen.<br />

The sale doesn’t have a<br />

hard end date. Instead, it<br />

stays open while supplies<br />

last. But according to Just,<br />

the farm usually has trees<br />

until a few days before<br />

Christmas, approximately<br />

Dec. 20.<br />

Winter sale hours are<br />

from 10 a.m.-6 p.m.<br />

Monday-Friday and 10<br />

a.m.-5 p.m. Saturday-Sunday.<br />

Wagon rides around<br />

the farm’s 18.6 acres run<br />

from 10 a.m.-noon on<br />

Saturdays.<br />

For more information,<br />

visit glenviewparks.org/<br />

historicwagnerfarm.


glenviewlantern.com faith<br />

the glenview lantern | December 6, 2018 | 27<br />

Faith Briefs<br />

Glenview New Church (74 Park Drive)<br />

Women Unwind<br />

Gather each Monday<br />

for a chance for women to<br />

connect socially. For more<br />

information, email jillb@<br />

glenviewnewchurch.org.<br />

Sunday Morning Sermon<br />

Discussion Circle<br />

Join this informal weekly<br />

drop-in gathering in the<br />

auditorium after the 9:30<br />

a.m. service to spiritually<br />

connect and further discuss<br />

the sermon topic. For<br />

more information, visit<br />

glenviewnewchurch.org.<br />

Sts. Peter and Paul Greek Orthodox Church<br />

(1401 Wagner Road)<br />

Coffee Connection:<br />

Connecting in Faith and<br />

Fellowship<br />

The Coffee Connection<br />

group meets twice a month<br />

and is an educational ministry<br />

for adults that aims<br />

to strengthen knowledge<br />

and further practice of<br />

the Orthodox faith. Once<br />

all are gathered, participants<br />

will move into the<br />

adjacent room for a presentation<br />

and discussion<br />

on the day’s topic. The<br />

presentation is an opportunity<br />

to learn more about<br />

the faith, while the discussion<br />

emphasizes how<br />

to practice Orthodox traditions<br />

in everyday life.<br />

For more information,<br />

visit ssppglenview.org.<br />

Parish Family Nights<br />

Join this opportunity for<br />

growth in faith, fellowship<br />

and fun for the entire<br />

family. The event includes<br />

dinner, crafts, activities<br />

and small group discussions<br />

over the course of an<br />

evening. The event gives<br />

the entire community a<br />

chance to come together<br />

while learning a little more<br />

about itself and faith. For<br />

more information, email<br />

mk@sspnglenview.org.<br />

St. David’s Episcopal Church<br />

(2410 Glenview Road)<br />

Men’s Fellowship Group<br />

Join this weekly fellowship<br />

gathering open to<br />

all men of the parish with<br />

discussion, audio tapes<br />

and video tapes geared toward<br />

helping the men of<br />

St. David’s become better<br />

Christians, husbands<br />

and fathers. The one-hour<br />

meetings are held at 7:30<br />

a.m. every Saturday.<br />

New Horizons<br />

Join this monthly fellowship<br />

group for people<br />

who are retired or planning<br />

retirement. Meetings<br />

are held the fourth Thursday<br />

of each month, with<br />

various outside activities<br />

planned at restaurants<br />

and cultural/educational<br />

locations.<br />

North Branch Bible Church<br />

(3030 Central Road)<br />

Bible Study<br />

Saturday Bible Study,<br />

consisting of members<br />

from various churches, has<br />

continued for more than<br />

10 years. This adult group<br />

meets at 8:30 a.m. every<br />

Saturday, September-May,<br />

except Thanksgiving week<br />

through December. Join<br />

for an in-depth study of<br />

scripture including friendly<br />

discussion, sharing, fellowship<br />

and free breakfast.<br />

All are welcome. Enter<br />

classroom from parking lot<br />

at the back, far left doors.<br />

For more information,<br />

call (847) 532-9605 or<br />

(847) 724-6912.<br />

Sunday Worship, Sunday<br />

School, Brunch<br />

Our Sunday Worship<br />

service is at 9:30 a.m.<br />

Adult Sunday School, with<br />

interesting insights and<br />

conversation, follows at 11<br />

a.m. On the third Sunday<br />

of each month, we share a<br />

delicious brunch at church,<br />

in place of Sunday School.<br />

For more information visit<br />

our Facebook Page or our<br />

website at NorthBranch-<br />

BibleChurch.org.<br />

Our Lady of Perpetual Help<br />

(1775 Grove St.)<br />

Knit for Life<br />

Knit for Life is a group<br />

of knitters who meet twice<br />

per month at the parish to<br />

make items for the poor and<br />

needy. Members can come<br />

to meetings or they can<br />

work from home whenever<br />

they have time. Their creativity<br />

benefits the homeless,<br />

needy seniors, and<br />

needy and sick children.<br />

For more information,<br />

call (847) 998-0073.<br />

Men’s Spirituality Group<br />

The group meets from<br />

7:30-9 a.m. on the second<br />

Saturday of the month<br />

in the Flavin Room. The<br />

group is geared toward<br />

male parishioners who<br />

have school-aged children.<br />

All are welcome to<br />

join in conversation and<br />

reflection.<br />

Gentle Yoga Class<br />

Join this group on the<br />

mat from 7:30-8:30 a.m.<br />

on Wednesdays in the<br />

Flavin Room. Donations<br />

are $10 per class, and all<br />

proceeds are forwarded<br />

to charity. Checks should<br />

be made out to Little By<br />

Little. Cash will also be<br />

accepted. For more information,<br />

call Annie Unger<br />

at (847) 401-0162.<br />

SoulCore<br />

Join SoulCore leader<br />

Michelle McGowan to<br />

nourish body, mind and<br />

soul with SoulCore — a<br />

prayer experience that<br />

combines the prayers of<br />

the Rosary with corestrengthening,<br />

stretching<br />

and functional movement.<br />

No fitness level or<br />

experience is required.<br />

All are welcome. Weekly<br />

classes take place from<br />

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

Email Michelle<br />

McGowan to reserve a<br />

spot and confirm location.<br />

There is no cost,<br />

but a donation benefitting<br />

OLPH Parish is suggested.<br />

Visit soulcore.com for<br />

more information.<br />

Glenview United Methodist Church<br />

(727 Harlem Ave.)<br />

Confirmation Class<br />

Confirmation class<br />

will meet from 5:30-<br />

7:30 p.m. every Sunday.<br />

Confirmands will meet<br />

with GUMYouth for the<br />

first part of the evening,<br />

which includes games<br />

and a light meal, and then<br />

break off into classes.<br />

For more information, call<br />

(847) 729-1015.<br />

The Disciple Fast Track<br />

New Testament Bible<br />

Study<br />

The bible study will<br />

take place at 10 a.m. on<br />

Wednesdays and 9 a.m. on<br />

Sundays. Please call the<br />

church office at (847) 729-<br />

1015 to register and order<br />

the study books. The book<br />

costs $15.<br />

Glenview Community Church<br />

(1000 Elm St.)<br />

Chancel Choir<br />

The Chancel Choir<br />

of the Glenview Community<br />

Church practices<br />

from 7:30-9:15 p.m. every<br />

Thursday. The choir<br />

offers its musical gifts<br />

in worship on Sunday<br />

mornings and other special<br />

occasions. For more<br />

information, please visit<br />

gccucc.org or call (847)<br />

724-2210.<br />

Submit information for The<br />

Lantern’s Faith page to<br />

Sports Editor Michal Dwojak<br />

at M.Dwojak@22ndcentury<br />

media.com. The deadline is<br />

noon on Thursday. Questions?<br />

Call (847) 272-4565<br />

ext. 26.<br />

In Memoriam<br />

Louis F. Cremers<br />

Louis Frans Cremers,<br />

92, a longtime resident<br />

of Glenview and member<br />

of St. Catherine Laboure<br />

parish, died Nov. 22.<br />

He was born in Sittard,<br />

Limburg, Netherlands,<br />

on Dec. 15, 1925, to the<br />

late Frans and Josephine<br />

Cremers. He was the loving<br />

father of Gemma and<br />

Lily (Bart) Henderson;<br />

devoted grandfather of<br />

Grace, Gemma, Sophie,<br />

Bobby and Audrey; beloved<br />

brother of Matthew<br />

(Denise), Mimy (Ge),<br />

Sjang (Claartje), Gertruda,<br />

Zef (Mary), Jose,<br />

Therese (Jan), Gertje<br />

(Piet), Marie-Louise<br />

(Niek), Frans (Lidwien),<br />

Elisabeth (Jim); cherished<br />

uncle and great-uncle to<br />

his many nieces and nephews;<br />

faithful friend to<br />

countless people.<br />

Cremers was the sixth<br />

child of 12 children. He<br />

moved from The Netherlands<br />

to the United<br />

States in 1951, graduated<br />

from University of<br />

Maryland with a Masters<br />

in Dairy Science and married<br />

Mary Franzinelli in<br />

1957, raising two daughters.<br />

Mary was the love of<br />

his life and together they<br />

loved to travel.<br />

Cremers worked at<br />

Kraft R&D and is a proud<br />

founder of the Kraft research<br />

Alumni Club. His<br />

strong Catholic faith led<br />

him to help build St Catherine<br />

Laboure Church and<br />

School, and to help found<br />

the Willows Academy.<br />

His family and faith were<br />

most important to him.<br />

He easily put people at<br />

ease with his sweet disposition<br />

and often made<br />

them laugh.<br />

Cremers was a kind and<br />

loving son, husband, father,<br />

grandfather, brother<br />

and friend. He will be<br />

deeply missed by all who<br />

knew him.<br />

In lieu of flowers, donations<br />

may be made in his<br />

memory to The Willows<br />

Academy-Endowment<br />

Fund, 1015 Rose Ave.,<br />

Des Plaines, IL 60016.<br />

Peter Z. Gavranovich<br />

Peter Z. Gavranovich, of<br />

Glenview, died Nov. 18.<br />

Esther N. Kaplan<br />

Esther N. Kaplan, 99, of<br />

Glenview, died Nov. 18.<br />

At the age of 17, the<br />

family moved to Sioux<br />

City and Esther graduated<br />

from Central High<br />

School.<br />

Have someone’s life you’d<br />

like to honor? Email Sports<br />

Editor Michal Dwojak at<br />

M.Dwojak@22nd<br />

centurymedia.com with<br />

information about a loved<br />

one who was part of the<br />

Glenview community.<br />

Advertise your<br />

RENTAL<br />

PROPERTY<br />

in the newspaper<br />

people turn to first<br />

CALL US TODAY: 708.326.9170<br />

www.22ndcenturymedia.com


28 | December 6, 2018 | The glenview lantern glenview<br />

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30 | December 6, 2018 | The glenview lantern dining out<br />

glenviewlantern.com<br />

Fresh is the name of the game for Visconti at R&V Market and Deli<br />

Michael Wojtychiw<br />

Sports Editor<br />

The restaurant business<br />

has always been a part of<br />

Frank Visconti’s life. After<br />

working for his dad as a<br />

child in the industry, it was<br />

only a matter of time before<br />

he would own his own restaurants.<br />

The Visconti name has<br />

been around in Little Italy<br />

restaurants in Highwood<br />

and Lake Forest for four<br />

generations. Eight years<br />

ago, he opened up R&V<br />

Market and Deli in Lake<br />

Forest. Visconti is also the<br />

owner of Visconti Foods,<br />

located next door to the deli,<br />

an importer and distributor<br />

of food directly from Italy.<br />

“My employees (at<br />

Visconti Foods) were going<br />

to lunch for an hour,<br />

hour-and-a-half, and when<br />

I’d ask why, they’d say,<br />

‘There’s nowhere to eat in<br />

the area,’” said Visconti, of<br />

Lake Forest.<br />

That’s when Visconti<br />

knew something had to<br />

change, especially since<br />

there are 4,800 people in<br />

the subdivision.<br />

When opening the deli, it<br />

was important to have everything<br />

fresh on the premises,<br />

Visconti said. It began<br />

with the hot meals, cold<br />

cuts and sandwiches and<br />

went from there.<br />

“Fresh is the only way to<br />

do it,” Visconti said. “A lot<br />

of people buy frozen chicken<br />

and more. Why? You<br />

take up five extra minutes<br />

of your time to clean up a<br />

piece of chicken and what<br />

are you doing? You’re giving<br />

a customer a fresh taste;<br />

you’re giving them really<br />

good food.<br />

“It doesn’t take much. A<br />

lot of people like to take<br />

shortcuts and it’s not worth<br />

it. You’re giving someone a<br />

fresh product; you’re giving<br />

them a great flavor.”<br />

The eggplant rollatini ($8.95) at Lake Forest’s R&V Market and Deli comes from a special Visconti family recipe.<br />

Photos by Eric DeGrechie/22nd Century Media<br />

The salmon ($9.95) with vegetables is marinated overnight<br />

in lemon and orange juice, as well as olive oil.<br />

Catering is also a big part<br />

of the business and Visconti<br />

said all you need to<br />

do is call a day in advance<br />

to place your order. Lunch<br />

delivery is also available.<br />

A pair of 22nd Century<br />

Media editors stopped by<br />

the Lake Forest deli and<br />

tried some of the more popular<br />

dishes that Visconti and<br />

his establishment have to<br />

offer. Visconti brought out<br />

all six dishes family-style.<br />

First we tried an Italian<br />

sub sandwich ($7.95)<br />

that, along with the normal<br />

ingredients for an Italian<br />

sandwich, included tomatoes,<br />

lettuce, oil and a<br />

vinegar dressing.<br />

The chicken Parmesan<br />

sandwich ($8.95), according<br />

to Visconti, is the deli’s<br />

biggest seller and another<br />

one of the meals made on<br />

premises. Like many of the<br />

other sandwiches and foods<br />

in the deli, chicken parm is<br />

also available as a meal-togo.<br />

Examples of other grab-and-go’s<br />

include salads,<br />

wraps and desserts.<br />

A third dish was a meat<br />

lasagna ($8.95) made with<br />

fresh pasta noodles, a homemade<br />

meat sauce, which has<br />

spinach in it, as well as Parmesan<br />

cheese. The ricotta<br />

cheese has Parmesan cheese<br />

mixed in it and all of the<br />

products are fresh.<br />

One dish that has a special<br />

place in Visconti’s<br />

heart is the eggplant rollatini.<br />

It is a dish that his<br />

mom made when he was a<br />

child and he continued to<br />

use the same recipe when<br />

he started selling it at the<br />

deli. One thing that sets this<br />

apart from others is that it<br />

is fried in vegetable and olive<br />

oils. The deli offers two<br />

eggplant sandwiches: rollatini<br />

and Parmesan. Both<br />

eggplant dishes are $8.95.<br />

The salmon ($9.95) with<br />

vegetables is marinated<br />

overnight in lemon and orange<br />

juice, as well as olive<br />

oil, and then drained the<br />

next day. The combination<br />

removes any true fish smell<br />

and taste from the dish.<br />

The last dish we tried<br />

was the pasta alfredo<br />

with vegetables, which is<br />

a side pasta that patrons<br />

can get with many of the<br />

sandwiches.<br />

Visconti, who was born,<br />

raised and still lives in Lake<br />

Forest, has been able to get<br />

more involved with the<br />

community in recent years,<br />

something he’s always<br />

aimed to do. This past year,<br />

R&V Market and deli<br />

13801 W. Laurel Drive,<br />

Lake Forest<br />

randvdeli.com<br />

(847) 816-6468<br />

9 a.m.-3 p.m.<br />

Monday-Friday<br />

Saturday-Sunday closed<br />

he was able to be a vendor<br />

at the city’s Fourth of July<br />

fireworks celebration.<br />

“This was the first year<br />

we did the fireworks,”<br />

Visconti said, “and I<br />

had a blast.”<br />

The Italian sub sandwich ($7.95) that, along with the<br />

normal ingredients for an Italian sandwich, included<br />

tomatoes, lettuce, oil and a vinegar dressing.<br />

The pasta alfredo with vegetables is a side pasta that<br />

patrons can get with many of the sandwiches.


glenviewlantern.com REAL ESTATE<br />

the glenview lantern | December 6, 2018 | 31<br />

The Glenview Lantern’s<br />

sponsored content<br />

of the<br />

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What: 4 Bedrooms, 3 Full Baths<br />

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

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Oct. 26<br />

• 3213 Brandess Drive, Glenview, 60026-1177 -<br />

Robert Wos to Harold Hess, Bora Hess, $620,000<br />

• 1572 Greenwood Road, Glenview, 60026-1514<br />

- Mary Ann Q. Urroz to Brian R. Corbett, Jolene M.<br />

Forestal, $249,000<br />

Oct. 25<br />

• 1775 Brush Hill Lane, Glenview, 60025-7604 -<br />

Alexander Sirlin to Joseph M. Giglio, Marguerite M.<br />

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Ratkus Trust to Christine A. Rayyan, Sarah N. Laue,<br />

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- James E. Ruiz to Jennifer Spence, $375,000<br />

The Going Rate is provided by Record Information<br />

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visit www.public-record.com or call (630)<br />

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32 | December 6, 2018 | The glenview lantern classifieds<br />

glenviewlantern.com<br />

CLASSIFIEDS<br />

Help Wanted · Garage Sales · Automotive<br />

Real Estate · Rentals · Merchandise<br />

Help<br />

Wanted<br />

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Assistant with experience<br />

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good communication &<br />

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people turn<br />

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1403 Parking Garages for Rent<br />

Business Directory<br />

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Want to<br />

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Before donating or before<br />

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designer clothes &<br />

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Carol is buying costume<br />

jewelry, oil paintings, old<br />

watches, silverplate, china,<br />

figurines, old<br />

furniture, & misc. antiques.<br />

Please call 847.732.1195.<br />

2703 Legal<br />

Notices<br />

Avoca School District 37<br />

Wilmette, Illinois<br />

ADVERTISEMENT FOR BID<br />

Avoca School District 37, Wilmette,<br />

IL 60091 will receive sealed<br />

bids for:<br />

2019 Mechanical Upgrades &<br />

Remodeling<br />

AVOCA SCHOOL DISTRICT<br />

37 AT AVOCA WEST SCHOOL<br />

& MARIE MURPHY SCHOOL-<br />

PROJECT # 2018.82<br />

ATTN: BETH DEVER<br />

This project involves work at<br />

Avoca West School and Marie<br />

Murphy School. The work in general<br />

includes, but is not limited to,<br />

demolition and removal ofcasework,<br />

walls, flooring, mechanical<br />

equipment, electrical service, etc.<br />

all as part of the upgrade of mechanical<br />

systems and equipment at<br />

each building. All work includes<br />

installation of new air handlers,<br />

unit vents, condensing units, boilers,<br />

electrical service, partition<br />

walls, casework, flooring and all<br />

associated mechanical, electrical,<br />

and plumbing work. Work is to be<br />

awarded as a single contract.<br />

The Bid Opening will beon Tuesday,<br />

January 8, 2018 at 10:00 am<br />

in the Joseph MPorto Community<br />

Room at Marie Murphy School,<br />

2921 Illinois Road, Wilmette IL<br />

60091. At this time the Bids will<br />

be publicly opened and read. A<br />

Bid Security of 10% of the Bid is<br />

required with the proposal. The<br />

Contractor must pay the Prevailing<br />

Wage Rates for all work per Illinois<br />

Law.<br />

There will be a<br />

Mandatory<br />

Help Wanted<br />

per line $13<br />

4 lines/<br />

7 papers<br />

2703 Legal<br />

Notices<br />

y<br />

Pre-Bid Meeting held on Monday,<br />

December 17, 2018 at 3:00<br />

pm commencing atthe front vestibule<br />

at Marie Murphy School to<br />

provide additional information<br />

about the project, answer questions<br />

and tour the buildings. All prospective<br />

bidders are required to attend.<br />

It is the policy ofthe District to<br />

provide equal opportunity to all<br />

qualified businesses inthe awarding<br />

ofcontracts and accordingly<br />

promotes the utilization ofdiversified<br />

businesses to the maximum<br />

extent feasible in any contract issued<br />

against the solicitation to bid.<br />

The Owner reserves the right to reject<br />

any or all bids, to waive irregularities<br />

in the bidding procedure,<br />

or accept Bid(s) that, in its<br />

opinion, will serve the best interest<br />

of the District. Any such decision<br />

shall be considered final. The<br />

Owner reserves the right to set<br />

aside aBid from a Contractor who,<br />

in the Owner's opinion, does not<br />

exhibit past experience equal tothe<br />

size and scope of this project.<br />

The bidder shall have a written<br />

sexual harassment policy inplace<br />

in full compliance with Section<br />

2-105 of the Illinois Human Rights<br />

Act.<br />

Copies of the Bid Documents including<br />

plans and specifications<br />

may be obtained by Pre-Qualified<br />

Bidders , beginning Thursday,<br />

December 6, 2018, after 2:00 PM<br />

from:<br />

BHFX Digital Imaging -Arlington<br />

Heights<br />

80 West Seegers Road<br />

Arlington Heights, IL 60005<br />

p 847.593.3161<br />

f 847.593.3129<br />

arlington@bhfx.net<br />

The documents and plan holders<br />

can be viewed onthe BHFX website.<br />

www.bhfx.net<br />

Paper bid documents will be available<br />

for purchase at cost to<br />

Pre-Qualified General Contractors<br />

only.<br />

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the glenview lantern | December 6, 2018 | 33<br />

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34 | December 6, 2018 | The glenview lantern sports<br />

glenviewlantern.com<br />

This Week In ...<br />

Titans Varsity<br />

Athletics<br />

GIRLS BASKETBALL<br />

■Dec. ■ 7 - at Niles North,<br />

7 p.m.<br />

■Dec. ■ 11 - at Deerfield,<br />

7 p.m.<br />

■Dec. ■ 13 - hosts New Trier,<br />

7 p.m.<br />

BOYS BASKETBALL<br />

■Dec. ■ 7 - hosts Niles North,<br />

7 p.m.<br />

■Dec. ■ 8 - at Glenbrook<br />

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

■Dec. ■ 12 - hosts New Trier,<br />

7 p.m.<br />

GIRLS GYMNASTICS<br />

■Dec. ■ 7 - at GBN Spartan<br />

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

■Dec. ■ 11 - hosts Niles<br />

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

WRESTLING<br />

■Dec. ■ 7 - at Evanston,<br />

6 p.m.<br />

■Dec. ■ 8 - at Buffalo Grove<br />

Invite, 9 a.m.<br />

■Dec. ■ 13 - hosts Niles<br />

West, 6 p.m.<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

Calling all<br />

PET BOUTIQUES<br />

WALKERS<br />

GROOMERS<br />

BOARDERS & MORE!<br />

BOYS HOCKEY<br />

■Dec. ■ 8 - hosts York,<br />

7:55 p.m.<br />

■Dec. ■ 12 - at Loyola Gold,<br />

8:50 p.m.<br />

BOYS SWIMMING AND<br />

DIVING<br />

■Dec. ■ 7 - hosts Glenbrook<br />

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

■Dec. ■ 8 - at GBN Sprint<br />

Classic, 9 a.m.<br />

GIRLS HOCKEY<br />

■Dec. ■ 9 - hosts Maine,<br />

9:20 p.m.<br />

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DOES YOUR BUSINESS<br />

PAMPER PETS?<br />

Contact the Classified Department<br />

708-326-9170 22ndcenturymedia.com<br />

Athlete of the Week<br />

10 Questions<br />

with Jake Gonzalez<br />

The Loyola senior recently<br />

became the school’s alltime<br />

leader in tackles<br />

Do you have any<br />

superstitions before,<br />

during, or after a<br />

game?<br />

Before games kind of. I<br />

like to wear the same undershirt<br />

and compression<br />

shorts and socks and then I<br />

always like to tie my cleats<br />

right as the last thing.<br />

What’s one item on<br />

your bucket list?<br />

I want to see the ancient<br />

pyramids in Egypt.<br />

What’s one of your<br />

biggest pet peeves?<br />

Biggest pet peeve I<br />

would say people who<br />

aren’t on time. I like to be<br />

on time.<br />

What’s the biggest<br />

difference between<br />

football and hockey?<br />

I would say the biggest<br />

difference is just the play.<br />

Like the actual, because<br />

hockey you get to, well<br />

actually hockey and football<br />

you both get breaks,<br />

but I think that the play<br />

of hockey, like I said like<br />

45 second shifts, and then<br />

for football seven seconds<br />

maximum is a play, so<br />

I think the difference of<br />

more short term vs. more<br />

long term energy.<br />

When and why did<br />

you start playing<br />

football?<br />

I started playing football<br />

in third grade and<br />

my dad was really into<br />

football, and he played in<br />

high school and college,<br />

so I just kinda wanted to<br />

do that. And then, also all<br />

my best friends in grade<br />

school played football, so<br />

it was a good idea.<br />

What’s the best part<br />

about being a Loyola<br />

athlete?<br />

The best part of being<br />

a Loyola athlete is knowing<br />

that balance between<br />

school and sports. I think<br />

that being a football player<br />

can kinda help you in<br />

school by knowing the<br />

different responsibilities<br />

on the football field carry<br />

over to school.<br />

What’s the best<br />

part about playing<br />

football?<br />

The best part about playing<br />

football is just playing<br />

with your best friends, and<br />

just having a great time.<br />

22nd Century Media File Photo<br />

If you could play<br />

another sport other<br />

than football or hockey<br />

what would it be?<br />

I would say baseball,<br />

because I played baseball<br />

when I was younger.<br />

There’s not many better<br />

feelings than hitting a<br />

home run.<br />

If you could travel<br />

anywhere in the<br />

world, where would<br />

you go and why?<br />

I would go to Rome.<br />

I’ve been there once, but<br />

just like going to the Colosseum<br />

was a really great<br />

experience.<br />

If you could have any<br />

superpower, what<br />

would you choose and<br />

why?<br />

I would choose being invisible<br />

because you can do<br />

a lot of sneaky things being<br />

invisible.<br />

Interview by Contributing<br />

Sports Editor Michael<br />

Wojtychiw


glenviewlantern.com sports<br />

the glenview lantern | December 6, 2018 | 35<br />

Athlete of the Month<br />

Orucevic helps Titans<br />

earn 2nd win of 2018<br />

Michal Dwojak, Sports Editor<br />

Glenbrook South’s Emsela<br />

Orucevic didn’t only<br />

have a successful November<br />

in the pool.<br />

The Titan swimmer<br />

made the Thanksgiving<br />

month memorable by winning<br />

22nd Century Media’s<br />

November Athlete<br />

of the Month competition,<br />

beating out some tough<br />

competitors. Orucevic<br />

won the monthly battle<br />

with 443 votes, edging<br />

out Loyola Academy girls<br />

swimmer Aidan Koconos-<br />

O’Malley, who finished<br />

with 349 votes, and New<br />

Trier boys cross-country<br />

runner Charlie Forbes,<br />

who finished with 130<br />

votes.<br />

Orucevic was a key<br />

leader for the Titans all<br />

season long and earned the<br />

support from Titans fans,<br />

helping the school earn<br />

its second Athlete of the<br />

Month win of 2018.<br />

Voting lasted from Nov.<br />

10-25. The Athlete of the<br />

December Athlete of<br />

the Month candidates<br />

Glenbrook South<br />

Kristin Ralston, girls<br />

basketball<br />

Michael Bukhalo, boys<br />

tennis<br />

Glenbrook North<br />

Grace Heywood, girls<br />

volleyball<br />

Nick Redstone, boys<br />

cross-country<br />

Christina Christos, girls<br />

basketball<br />

Brian Johnson, boys<br />

basketball<br />

Bridget Billig, girls<br />

gymnastics<br />

Loyola Academy<br />

Jack Fallon, football<br />

Mary Kate Lopez, girls<br />

volleyball<br />

Jake Gonzalez, football<br />

Month contest for athletes<br />

selected in the month of<br />

November gets underway<br />

New Trier<br />

Ellie Finnigan, girls<br />

cross-country<br />

Bobby Soudan, boys<br />

hockey<br />

Highland Park<br />

Sebastian Thomas, boys<br />

hockey<br />

Abby Smith, girls<br />

swimming<br />

Ireland Hieb, girls<br />

volleyball<br />

Alexandra Pielet,<br />

equestrian<br />

Ryan Foreman, girls ice<br />

hockey<br />

Lake Forest<br />

Elijah Fietsman, boys<br />

cross-country<br />

Lauren Garriques, girls<br />

cross-country<br />

Flynn McClellan, girls<br />

swimming<br />

Danny Fisher, boys golf<br />

on Dec. 10 and will end on<br />

Dec. 25. Vote at Glenview-<br />

Lantern.com.<br />

Glenbrook South girls swimmer Emsela Orucevic won November’s Athlete of the<br />

Month competition. 22nd Century Media File Photo<br />

Coach Talk<br />

Score one for the geese<br />

Jon ‘Coach’ Cohn<br />

Contributing Columnist<br />

Glenview Resident<br />

I<br />

knew they were laughing<br />

at me.<br />

Squawking, pecking<br />

the ground defiantly, strutting<br />

their stuff with chest<br />

puffed out. You can’t tell<br />

this particular writer that<br />

the huge swarm of geese<br />

patrolling the playground<br />

fields and soccer fields of<br />

Attea Junior High School<br />

and Gallery Park didn’t<br />

know what they were<br />

doing.<br />

They did, and to me, it<br />

was a sad, if not official<br />

sign, of the end of this<br />

year’s outdoor recreation<br />

season.<br />

Oh, I know there is<br />

always sledding, crosscountry<br />

skiing, snowball<br />

fights, ice-skating and the<br />

such, but I wasn’t quite<br />

ready for the dark pall of<br />

winter just yet.<br />

On this late November,<br />

early December, weekend<br />

I was still looking for<br />

some remnants of recent<br />

days gone by.<br />

I longed for seeing<br />

all the action and activity,<br />

the soccer games on<br />

weekends, packed with<br />

multi-colored AYSO<br />

youth teams playing and<br />

parents lining the sidelines<br />

cheering them on.<br />

The baseball and softball<br />

fields still filled with<br />

the last bastion of “fall<br />

ball“ games, which always<br />

starts out as a great idea<br />

(early September is beautiful<br />

for baseball), but by<br />

seasons end, frozen outfielders<br />

jumping around<br />

between pitches trying<br />

to stay warm indicate a<br />

diminishing enjoyment.<br />

I even miss the more<br />

casual activities.<br />

The impromptu touch<br />

football game, the game<br />

of frisbee between mom<br />

and son, or daughter and<br />

dad, or the dog owners<br />

playfully throwing sticks<br />

or balls to their chasing,<br />

happy tail weaving<br />

beloved pets. Man’s best<br />

friend, indeed, enjoying<br />

the final days of outside<br />

play.<br />

But on this late-November,<br />

early-December<br />

weekend, all had come to<br />

a close.<br />

The fields were barren;<br />

not a soul was stirring. It<br />

was quiet, a big old zilch<br />

when it came to human<br />

activity.<br />

Except for those geese,<br />

they were everywhere.<br />

There were dozens of<br />

them. No, make that hundreds<br />

of them. Dare I say<br />

thousands? Spreading out<br />

and completely infiltrating<br />

the soccer fields and<br />

softball fields of days<br />

gone by.<br />

A sad indication to<br />

me that human play had<br />

finally given in to the<br />

weather.<br />

The geese knew it. Oh<br />

yeah, they knew it, and<br />

they reveled in it.<br />

Normally the geese<br />

must scatter in fear on a<br />

moments notice. The mass<br />

hysteria of school recess<br />

will do that. Outdoor PE<br />

classes as well. Clearly<br />

weekend soccer games<br />

and ball games will make<br />

them instantly fly the<br />

coupe, leaving only their<br />

“droppings” as way of<br />

showing their displeasure.<br />

But now, revenge is<br />

theirs. The fields are all<br />

to their own. They roam<br />

the vast greenery in full<br />

regalia.<br />

They strut their stuff<br />

confidently. Those chests<br />

stick out as they walk confidently<br />

in their new found<br />

power. They know exactly<br />

what they are doing, as<br />

they claim their territory,<br />

not afraid of mocking me<br />

as I innocently stroll by.<br />

And the sounds? I don’t<br />

possess the vocabulary to<br />

describe “goose speak?”<br />

But to me, I had no doubt<br />

those squawking sounds<br />

were laughing, and it was<br />

directed at me the innocent<br />

passerby. Their way<br />

of saying, “our time hath<br />

finally come.”<br />

Yes, it is time to move<br />

indoors. Outdoor play<br />

must wait again, for a way<br />

too long winter to subside.<br />

And to the victor goes the<br />

spoils.<br />

To sum it up in prose:<br />

“The cold and snow and<br />

wind, have finally taken<br />

note, to outdoor sports we<br />

have to say, I think that’s<br />

all she wrote, baseball,<br />

soccer, running fun — to<br />

all you must now cease,<br />

the only way to say it ... is<br />

to score one for the geese”<br />

Cohn has been a coach,<br />

physical education teacher,<br />

sports announcer and<br />

athletic supervisor in the<br />

community for over 35 years.<br />

He can be reached at jcsportsandtees@aol.com.<br />

visit us online at <strong>GL</strong>ENVIEWLANTERN.com


36 | December 6, 2018 | The glenview lantern sports<br />

glenviewlantern.com<br />

Celebrating champions<br />

Loyola community comes together to honor Ramblers<br />

Staff Report<br />

The Loyola Academy<br />

community came together<br />

Nov. 27 to honor the<br />

football team after it won<br />

the 2018 8A State Championship<br />

on Nov. 24 in<br />

Champaign. Administration,<br />

coaches and players<br />

talked in front of students<br />

at a honor ceremony as<br />

they remembered a historic<br />

season where the Ramblers<br />

won eight straight<br />

games and rebounded<br />

from a 3-3 record to win<br />

the state title.<br />

The Varsity: North<br />

Shore Podcast<br />

Guys talk<br />

hockey, hoops<br />

Staff Report<br />

In this week’s episode of<br />

The Varsity: North Shore, the<br />

only podcast focused on North<br />

Shore sports, hosts Michal<br />

Dwojak and Michael Wojtychiw<br />

recap of fun hockey<br />

weekend, head from Glenbrook<br />

South boys basketball<br />

head coach Phil Ralston, play<br />

Way/No Way with hockey and<br />

talk about how the boys and<br />

girls basketball seasons have<br />

gone for area teams.<br />

Online content<br />

For the photo gallery<br />

from the celebration,<br />

visit GlenviewLantern.<br />

com.<br />

Loyola Academy football head coach John Holecek addresses the students at Loyola’s pep rally on Nov. 27 in<br />

Wilmette. Photos by Michal Dwojak/22nd Century Media<br />

First Quarter<br />

Michal Dwojak and Michael<br />

Wojtychiw recap a fun<br />

series of games between the<br />

Loyola Academy and New<br />

Trier hockey teams, all playing<br />

for a good cause.<br />

Second Quarter<br />

The guys hear from Glenbrook<br />

South’s boys basketball<br />

head coach Phil Ralston after<br />

his Titans upset a top-ranked<br />

Evanston squad.<br />

Third Quarter<br />

After almost a month-long<br />

absence, Way/No Way is back,<br />

and Wojtychiw makes some<br />

predictions about the area<br />

boys and girls hockey teams.<br />

ABOVE: The<br />

state championship<br />

trophy sits<br />

in the middle of<br />

the pep rally.<br />

LEFT: Loyola<br />

players (left to<br />

right) Joe Naselli,<br />

Jake Gonzalez,<br />

Jack Fallon<br />

and Rory Boos<br />

laugh during<br />

the ceremony.<br />

Loyola Principal Charles Heintz celebrates the team<br />

one last time.<br />

Fourth Quarter<br />

To finish things off, the guys<br />

talk about some interesting<br />

basketball storylines early in<br />

the season.<br />

Find The Varsity<br />

Twitter: @varsitypodcast<br />

Facebook: @<br />

thevarsitypodcast<br />

Website:<br />

GlenviewLantern.com/<br />

sports<br />

Download: Soundcloud,<br />

iTunes, Stitcher, TuneIn,<br />

PlayerFm, more


glenviewlantern.com sports<br />

the glenview lantern | December 6, 2018 | 37<br />

Warrior Update<br />

OLPH girls volleyball wins another league championship<br />

Submitted content<br />

Even without their accomplished<br />

and longtime<br />

coach Nancy Speers available<br />

to guide them, the<br />

Our Lady of Perpetual<br />

Help eighth-grade girls<br />

volleyball team held off a<br />

spirited Faith, Hope and<br />

Charity of Winnetka team<br />

to earn another Council II-<br />

3A championship on Nov.<br />

3 at Regina Dominican<br />

High School.<br />

Filling in admirably<br />

for Speers, were assistant<br />

coach Ruthie Van Kirk and<br />

seventh-grade coaches Bre<br />

Reveley and Briana Flanagan.<br />

In a match that went<br />

three sets, the Warriors defeated<br />

the Bulldogs 25-18,<br />

18-25, 25-19.<br />

“Having coached them<br />

last year, we knew they<br />

were a great group of girls<br />

and it was fun to see them<br />

finish with an exciting<br />

win,” Reveley said.<br />

This was the third<br />

League title for the Warriors<br />

in four years.<br />

RIGHT: The Our Lady of<br />

Perpetual Help eighthgrade<br />

girls volleyball team<br />

(left to right) coach Kasper,<br />

Julia Mae Sassaman, Shea<br />

Fullett, Chloe Fellinger, Haley<br />

Mcneil, Casey Horvath,<br />

Maria Stevens, Catherine<br />

Burke, Maggie Braasch,<br />

Mia DiVito, Mary Doran,<br />

Coach Flanagan, coach<br />

Ruthie Van Kirk and coach<br />

Bre Revely, pose on Nov. 3<br />

after winning the Council<br />

II-3A conference championship.<br />

Gabby Charlier (left)<br />

and Alexa Shagory hold<br />

the trophy. Photo submitted<br />

Warrior Update<br />

OLPH cross-country teams qualify for state<br />

Submitted content<br />

After their sectional meet in Wadsworth<br />

was postponed by the weather, the Our<br />

Lady of Perpetual Help cross-country<br />

teams decided to practice in the rain back<br />

in Glenview.<br />

According to head coach, Dave Zimmer,<br />

it was one of the best practices of the<br />

year, as the runners were motivated and<br />

ready to run, despite the conditions.<br />

Apparently, the dedication and extra<br />

work paid off, as both the boys and girls<br />

team sprinted to first place finishes at the<br />

rescheduled sectional on Oct. 9 at Millburn<br />

Middle School. The teams were<br />

paced with top-10 finishes by Emma<br />

Burke, Sophie Goldberg, Tara Wirtschoreck<br />

and Teegan Browe.<br />

This is the first time in school history<br />

that both teams have qualified, and now<br />

they’ll look to continue their season with<br />

a strong finish at the State Championship<br />

at Maxwell Park in Normal this Saturday<br />

morning.<br />

The Our Lady of Perpetual Help boys<br />

IESA state-qualifying team (left to<br />

right): Matthew Nugent, Matthew<br />

Conroy, Matt Barney, Teegan Browe,<br />

Chase Blanchard, Ryan Green, Owen<br />

Weisensel, Charlie Cox, Ryan Jackson<br />

and Joey Pieracci.<br />

The Our Lady of Perpetual Help girls IESA state-qualifying team (left to right): Tara<br />

Wirtschoreck, Gigi Zera, Katie Condon, Grace Stauder, Caylie Browe, Emma Burke,<br />

Sophia Goldberg, Josie Vasilj, Amelia Cole and Sophia Green. Photos submitted


38 | December 6, 2018 | The glenview lantern sports<br />

glenviewlantern.com<br />

Hoo Hoo<br />

is look’n<br />

at you?<br />

NORTH SHORE<br />

mediapodz.com<br />

FIND THE VARSITY: NORTH SHORE ON<br />

SOUNDCLOUD, ITUNES OR <strong>GL</strong>ENVIEWLANTERN.COM/SPORTS<br />

A 22ND CENTURY MEDIA PRODUCTION<br />

EXCLUSIVE<br />

ANALYSIS<br />

AND INTERVIEWS<br />

about your favorite high<br />

school teams. Sports<br />

editors Michal Dwojak<br />

and Michael Wojtychiw<br />

host the only North<br />

Shore sports podcast.<br />

Pieces align for South in<br />

important conference win<br />

Michal Dwojak, Sports Editor<br />

When the final buzzer<br />

rang at the end of Glenbrook<br />

South’s game against<br />

Evanston, it didn’t just<br />

mark the end of a game; it<br />

announced the Titans’ coming-out<br />

party to the rest of<br />

the state.<br />

Students stormed the<br />

court and players sprinted<br />

from the bench, coming together<br />

to not only celebrate<br />

a 61-52 win over the conference<br />

rival Wildkits, but<br />

also recognize the fruition<br />

of a year’s hard work to get<br />

to that point on Thursday,<br />

Nov. 29.<br />

The Titans knew the importance<br />

of this game and<br />

didn’t want to let the opportunity<br />

to slip away.<br />

“We thought this is the<br />

year for us,” Dom Martinelli<br />

said. “We thought this<br />

was the game we needed<br />

to win. This is a next-level<br />

win for us, and I’m proud<br />

of the team.”<br />

Martinelli used a career<br />

night to help lead the Titans<br />

to get that next-level win.<br />

The junior scored a careerhigh<br />

34 points in a night<br />

where the Wildkit players<br />

couldn’t match the Titans’<br />

intensity, or Martinelli’s<br />

performance, at the Titan<br />

Dome.<br />

Martinelli scored 10 of<br />

the team’s 12 points in the<br />

first quarter and 18 of the<br />

team’s 26 points in the first<br />

half.<br />

But all of this was despite<br />

the fact Evanston got GBS<br />

out of its groove. The Wildkits<br />

took the Titans away<br />

from their offense, switching<br />

up their styles for much<br />

of the game. But Martinelli<br />

and his teammates responded,<br />

using screens and<br />

Glenbrook South boys basketball player Will King<br />

defends an Evanston player on Thursday, Nov. 29, in<br />

Glenview. Michal Dwojak/22nd Century Media<br />

impressive passes to take<br />

away from the man-to-man<br />

defense Evanston changed<br />

to in hopes of curbing the<br />

Titans from scoring.<br />

“For us, this is new territory,”<br />

head coach Phil<br />

Ralston said. “We told<br />

the kids, sometimes you<br />

weather the storm against a<br />

good team.”<br />

Evanston continued to<br />

push but the GBS players<br />

would not fall. The Titans<br />

held a five-point lead<br />

before they showed the<br />

maturity needed to finish<br />

big games. Jimmy McMahon<br />

added 15 points, 11 of<br />

which came in the second<br />

half, to bury the Wildkits in<br />

the fourth quarter with critical<br />

3-pointers, taking away<br />

any hopes of a comeback in<br />

the final minutes.<br />

Moments like the win are<br />

what Ralston wanted his<br />

team to grow to. Much of<br />

last year, Ralston spent the<br />

season instilling his values<br />

to his new program, teaching<br />

players what to do in<br />

different situations.<br />

That resulted with plenty<br />

of losses last year. This<br />

year, there was a different<br />

ending.<br />

“We could not have been<br />

in this place last year,”<br />

Ralston said. “Our kids had<br />

Online content<br />

For the photo gallery<br />

and video from<br />

this game, visit<br />

GlenviewLantern.com.<br />

not had the maturity with<br />

the system that we run, and<br />

how we’re going to play to<br />

be able to step into a game<br />

like this and win. This year<br />

they were.”<br />

GBS started the season<br />

5-0 after the opening conference<br />

win and winning<br />

the Buffalo Grove tournament.<br />

Ralston believes his<br />

players have bought into<br />

the system, showing dividends<br />

in games early in the<br />

young season.<br />

While games like the<br />

late-November one against<br />

Evanston are important,<br />

they aren’t what Ralston<br />

and his players want to define<br />

their season.<br />

“Right now everyone’s<br />

going to think that we’re<br />

great; we’re not there yet,”<br />

Ralston said. “We’ve got to<br />

continue to get better, we’ve<br />

got to demand more of ourselves.<br />

We have to continue<br />

to improve. It’s still a young<br />

season, this is a great win,<br />

but if this is the highlight of<br />

our season, then what did<br />

we accomplish?”


glenviewlantern.com sports<br />

the glenview lantern | December 6, 2018 | 39<br />

Girls Hockey<br />

Glenbrook in different position with new team<br />

Michal Dwojak, Sports Editor<br />

22nd CENTURY MEDIA FILE PHOTO<br />

1st-and-3<br />

Athletes of the<br />

week<br />

1. Dom Martinelli<br />

(ABOVE) The<br />

Glenbrook South<br />

boys basketball<br />

player scored a<br />

career-high 34<br />

points in the<br />

Titans’ big upset<br />

over Evanston at<br />

home.<br />

2. Emsela Orucevic<br />

South’s girls<br />

swimmer<br />

finished a strong<br />

season by being<br />

named 22nd<br />

Century Media’s<br />

November Athlete<br />

of the Month.<br />

3. Jake Gonzalez<br />

The Loyola<br />

Academy football<br />

player finished<br />

his career with<br />

many Rambler<br />

defensive records.<br />

Glenbrook girls hockey player Lily Cataldo is one key player coaches and players are looking forward to<br />

returning this season. 22nd Century Media File Photo<br />

Steve Hamelin has made changes<br />

this season.<br />

The Glenbrook head coach is in<br />

a new position after spending the<br />

past few seasons leading his team<br />

to back-to-back championship appearances<br />

— and winning one.<br />

Now he has to focus on the future<br />

more than he did before.<br />

This season has been a different<br />

experience for Hamelin and some<br />

of his players who went through<br />

the glory years for the program.<br />

There are less wins and more<br />

learning moments, but he’s looking<br />

forward to the progress his<br />

team can make in the future, it’ll<br />

just take some time.<br />

“It’s a journey,” Hamelin said.<br />

“You don’t turn a ship around a<br />

corner, it’s a process.”<br />

While the season is a few<br />

months in, there are still plenty of<br />

things this year’s version of Glenbrook<br />

hockey has to learn. After<br />

winning a state championship in<br />

2017 and falling in the state championship<br />

game against New Trier<br />

this spring, Glenbrook players and<br />

coaches are going through growing<br />

pains and approaching games<br />

in a different matter than they<br />

have before.<br />

One of the key differences in this<br />

season’s team is the experience.<br />

The program lost seven seniors to<br />

graduation after last year — many<br />

of whom were state champions the<br />

year before — and replaced them<br />

with eight new players, seven of<br />

which are freshman.<br />

This youth movement forced<br />

Hamelin to change the way he’s<br />

approached games this season.<br />

For the past few seasons, especially<br />

last year, Hamelin played to<br />

win games. He wanted his players<br />

to have the best opportunity to<br />

succeed in the playoffs, and that<br />

meant increasing the amount of<br />

wins to improve the team’s seeding.<br />

He shortened his lines up<br />

when it came to critical moments<br />

in the game, which didn’t allow<br />

too much time to learn for the<br />

younger members of the team.<br />

This season is different.<br />

Hamelin is rolling with his lines<br />

so his young players learn about<br />

the fast tempo of the game. He<br />

knows the only way for the program<br />

to go back to its past success<br />

is to go through some growing<br />

pains at the moment.<br />

“These girls will never learn,<br />

never develop, unless we continue<br />

to put them out there.” Hamelin<br />

said. “This year is about getting<br />

the most development for our girls<br />

as we have.”<br />

The change in approach is also<br />

something senior players have<br />

had to adapt to. Captain Shannon<br />

Smith is now in her fourth year<br />

with the program and has been<br />

through the height of its success.<br />

Now, she and other players like<br />

Lily Cataldo, who’s missed the<br />

season with an injury, have to adjust<br />

to a different style of playing<br />

and what the team’s ultimate goal<br />

is. Hamelin believes his returning<br />

players have approached the difference<br />

in games this season very<br />

well, taking on a leadership role to<br />

help grow the program.<br />

“I think they understand now<br />

how hard it is to win a championship<br />

because they’ve been there<br />

and know what it takes,” Hamelin<br />

said. “They’ve bought into it.”<br />

Some of the fruit of their labor<br />

is already starting to show with<br />

the performances of some freshmen.<br />

Glenbrook North’s Molly<br />

Erickson has been all over the ice<br />

for her team according to the head<br />

coach, creating different scoring<br />

opportunities that he knows will<br />

eventually lead to large amount of<br />

scoring. GBN defenseman Natalie<br />

Peters has also been beyond her<br />

years this season, showing a collected<br />

side of herself to help lead<br />

on the defensive front.<br />

It took Glenbrook until the middle<br />

of November to win its first<br />

two games of the season, but all<br />

Hamelin and his staff want to see<br />

is progress. Once reseeding happens<br />

at the beginning of the new<br />

year, Glenbrook will fight to compete<br />

in the Founder Cup bracket,<br />

approaching each game with the<br />

hope of learning enough to get the<br />

program back to its past success.<br />

“We just want to be able to compete<br />

each and every night,” Hamelin<br />

said. “Hopefully we’ll be able<br />

to compete for the Founder Cup.”<br />

Listen Up<br />

“This is a next-level win for us, and I’m proud of<br />

our team.”<br />

Dom Martinelli — The Glenbrook South boys basketball<br />

player on his team’s win over Evanston.<br />

tunE in<br />

What to watch this week<br />

The Glenbrook South boys basketball team battles<br />

rival Glenbrook North on Saturday, Dec. 8.<br />

• 4:30 p.m., Saturday, Dec. 8, at GBN<br />

Index<br />

37 - OLPH<br />

35 - Coach Talk<br />

Fastbreak is compiled by Sports Editor<br />

Michal Dwojak. Send any questions or comments to<br />

m.dwojak@22ndcenturymedia.com


the glenview lantern | December 6, 2018 | GlenviewLantern.com<br />

New approach Glenbrook hockey<br />

faces a different type season, Page 39<br />

Celebrating a<br />

title Ramblers celebrate<br />

football title, Page 36<br />

Martinelli, Titans have career night in<br />

upset of Wildkits, Page 38<br />

Glenbrook South boys basketball player Dom Martinelli<br />

celebrates after a big play against Evanston on Thursday, Nov.<br />

29, in Glenview. Michal Dwojak/22nd Century Media<br />

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