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Election 2019 Part 2<br />

Hear from the Glencoe Village Board<br />

candidates, Page 3<br />

Stepping down<br />

Glencoe couple to leave Village<br />

positions, Page 6<br />

‘Grateful for the path I<br />

took’ Divvy House business started by<br />

North Shore native, Page 6<br />

Glencoe’s Hometown Newspaper GlencoeAnchor.com • March 21, 2019 • Vol. 4 No. 29 • $1<br />

A<br />

Publication<br />

,LLC<br />

New Trier’s senior-led<br />

Winter Carnival benefits<br />

Habitat for Humanity,<br />

Page 4<br />

Adrien Lana, 18, of Wilmette, rolls Vale<br />

Jameson, 3, visiting from Kansas City, toward<br />

the bowling pins on a scooter at the Winter<br />

Carnival Friday, March 15, at New Trier High<br />

School. Rhonda Holcomb/22nd Century Media<br />

NORTH SHORE<br />

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2 | March 21, 2019 | The glencoe anchor calendar<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

In this week’s<br />

anchor<br />

Police Reports.......................7<br />

Pet of the Week........................8<br />

Editorial......................................15<br />

Puzzles18<br />

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

Dining Out23<br />

Home of the Week24<br />

Athlete of the Week27<br />

The Glencoe<br />

Anchor<br />

ph: 847.272.4565<br />

fx: 847.272.4648<br />

Editor<br />

Megan Bernard, x24<br />

megan@glencoeanchor.com<br />

sports Editor<br />

Michael Wojtychiw, x25<br />

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

Sales director<br />

Peter Hansen, x19<br />

p.hansen@22ndcenturymedia.com<br />

real estate sales<br />

John Zeddies, x12<br />

j.zeddies@22ndcenturymedia.com<br />

Legal Notices<br />

Jeff Schouten, 708.326.9170, x51<br />

j.schouten@22ndcenturymedia.com<br />

PUBLISHER<br />

Joe Coughlin, x16<br />

j.coughlin@22ndcenturymedia.com<br />

Managing Editor<br />

Eric DeGrechie, x23<br />

eric@wilmettebeacon.com<br />

AssT. Managing Editor<br />

Megan Bernard, x24<br />

megan@glencoeanchor.com<br />

President<br />

Andrew Nicks<br />

a.nicks@22ndcenturymedia.com<br />

EDITORIAL DESIGN DIRECTOR<br />

Nancy Burgan, 708.326.9170, x30<br />

n.burgan@22ndcenturymedia.com<br />

22 nd Century Media<br />

60 Revere Drive Suite 888<br />

Northbrook, IL 60062<br />

www.GlencoeAnchor.com<br />

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

circulation inquiries<br />

circulation@22ndcenturymedia.com<br />

The Glencoe Anchor (USPS #18720) is published<br />

weekly by 22nd Century Media, LLC, 60<br />

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

Periodical paid postage at Northbrook, IL and<br />

additional mailing offices.<br />

POSTMASTER: send address changes to<br />

The Glencoe Anchor 60 Revere Dr Ste. 888<br />

Northbrook, IL 60062<br />

Published by<br />

www.22ndcenturymedia.com<br />

THURSDAY<br />

Orchid After Hours<br />

4-8 p.m. March 21,<br />

Chicago Botanic Garden,<br />

1000 Lake Cook Road,<br />

Glencoe. See 10,000 orchids<br />

in bloom and taste<br />

tropics-inspired drinks<br />

and other light fare for<br />

purchase. In addition the<br />

Garden Shop will be open<br />

late on Thursdays, and will<br />

offer special deals.<br />

SATURDAY<br />

Family Concert: Cielito<br />

Lindo<br />

10-11 a.m. March 23,<br />

Glencoe Library, 320 Park<br />

Ave. Cielito Lindo is a<br />

modern, Latino mariachistyle<br />

band formed by the<br />

Lucero family of 9. The<br />

family performs the traditional<br />

music of Mexico,<br />

with the occasional<br />

musical surprise.<br />

MONDAY<br />

Movie and Pizza Party<br />

5 p.m. March 25, Glencoe<br />

Library, 320 Park Ave.<br />

A screening of Marvel’s<br />

hit “Ant-Man and the<br />

Wasp” while munching on<br />

pizza and movie treats. All<br />

who show up will be eligible<br />

for a random drawing<br />

with the winner receiving<br />

an AMC gift card. Please<br />

note that this movie is<br />

rated PG-13.<br />

TUESDAY<br />

Movie Screening<br />

1:30 p.m. March 26,<br />

Glencoe Library, 320 Park<br />

Ave. Enjoy “Ralph Breaks<br />

the Internet” and snack at<br />

the library.<br />

WEDNESDAY<br />

Legend of the Golden<br />

Piano<br />

10 a.m. March 27, Glencoe<br />

Library, 320 Park<br />

Ave. Grab your spurs and<br />

journey to the Wild West,<br />

where a legendary bankrobbing<br />

outlaw is back<br />

in town, about to strike<br />

again! Volunteers from<br />

the audience will use awesome<br />

science experiments<br />

to bring key parts of the<br />

story to life.<br />

Behind the Scenes: Escape<br />

Room<br />

2 p.m. March 27, Glencoe<br />

Library, 320 Park Ave.<br />

Curious about the behind<br />

the scenes magic that goes<br />

into the library’s escape<br />

rooms? In this workshop,<br />

you’ll test puzzles and<br />

create clues to become a<br />

master Escape Artist.<br />

UPCOMING<br />

Crime Scene Science<br />

2-3 p.m. March 28,<br />

Glencoe Library, 320 Park<br />

Ave. Experiment with doit-yourself<br />

forensic science<br />

at the library. Learn<br />

how to lift fingerprints, extract<br />

your own DNA, and<br />

complete a chromatography<br />

test with materials you<br />

can find in your home.<br />

Tabletop Party<br />

7-8:30 p.m. March 28,<br />

Glencoe Library, 320 Park<br />

Ave. Unleash your inner<br />

adventurer. Play a Dungeons<br />

and Dragons campaign<br />

or try out one of<br />

the library’s role playing<br />

games.<br />

Flag Raising and Birthday<br />

Party<br />

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

29, Village Hall, 675 Village<br />

Court, Glencoe. The<br />

Village’s 150th birthday is<br />

officially on Friday, March<br />

29. Stop by Village Hall<br />

anytime between 8 a.m.<br />

and 4:30 p.m. for a free<br />

balloon and cupcake to<br />

celebrate. Also, you’re invited<br />

to join us for a Flag<br />

Raising Ceremony at 2<br />

p.m. Please register for the<br />

ceremony online.<br />

Family Storytime<br />

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

Glencoe Library, 320 Park<br />

Ave. Celebrate the weekend<br />

with family stories.<br />

Join Glencoe librarians for<br />

books, songs and activities<br />

featuring a seasonal<br />

theme. All ages are welcome<br />

to attend, however,<br />

stories and songs will be<br />

aimed at a preschool-aged<br />

audience.<br />

Feed My Starving Children<br />

1:15-4:30 p.m. April 6,<br />

Takiff Center, 999 Green<br />

Bay Road, Glencoe. Volunteers<br />

are essential in<br />

getting nutritious meals to<br />

starving kids around the<br />

world. Spend the afternoon<br />

preparing packaged<br />

meals at Feed My Starving<br />

Children. Minimum<br />

age to volunteer is 5 years<br />

old and everyone under<br />

the age of 18 must be accompanied<br />

by an adult.<br />

Glencoe Park District will<br />

provide transportation.<br />

Please register by March<br />

30.<br />

Illinois Featured Author<br />

7 p.m. April 11, College<br />

of Lake County, Grayslake.<br />

Glencoe resident<br />

Bob Boone was selected<br />

by Willow Review magazine<br />

to be the Featured<br />

Illinois writer of the year.<br />

Free and open to the community.<br />

The Willow Review<br />

reading will be held<br />

in room A013.<br />

Unearth Science Festival<br />

April 13-14, Chicago<br />

Botanic Garden,<br />

1000 Lake Cook Road,<br />

Glencoe. Participate in<br />

drop-in activities, indepth<br />

workshops, and a<br />

film screening, and get<br />

a climate change update<br />

from WGN-TV’s chief<br />

meteorologist Tom Skilling.<br />

This year’s themes<br />

and activities feature<br />

pollinators, flowers,<br />

fruits and seeds. Most<br />

programs and activities<br />

are free; fees apply<br />

for Science After Hours<br />

and science workshops.<br />

Parking fee applies.<br />

Egg Hunt<br />

10-11 a.m. April 13,<br />

Watts Park, Glencoe.<br />

Bring your basket and<br />

get ready for an egg hunt.<br />

The Park District is hiding<br />

eggs filled with surprises<br />

for kids AND dogs<br />

throughout Watts Park.<br />

After the hunt, there<br />

will be crafts, games and<br />

photos with the Spring<br />

Bunny. In case of inclement<br />

weather, the egg<br />

hunt will be on April<br />

20. For Special Event<br />

weather information, call<br />

(847) 258-9050.<br />

Midwest Daffodil Society<br />

Show<br />

April 27-28, Chicago<br />

Botanic Garden, 1000<br />

Lake Cook Road, Glencoe.<br />

The Midwest Daffodil<br />

Society’s show<br />

features hundreds of daffodils<br />

on display that will<br />

be judged by the society.<br />

The show includes cut<br />

blooms, floral design,<br />

and photography competitions.<br />

The show will<br />

LIST IT YOURSELF<br />

Reach out to thousands of daily<br />

users by submitting your event at<br />

GlencoeAnchor.com/calendar<br />

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

megan@glencoeanchor.com<br />

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

Corrections<br />

• Brad McLane was<br />

incorrectly named<br />

in his Election 2019<br />

questionnaire in The<br />

Anchor’s March 14<br />

issue. McLane is<br />

running for New Trier<br />

District 203 Board of<br />

Education.<br />

• In the March 14<br />

issue, the article titled<br />

“Martinelli stays true to<br />

himself in big season”<br />

incorrectly spelled<br />

Dom Martinelli’s name.<br />

The Anchor recognizes<br />

and regrets these errors.<br />

include floral designs<br />

inspired by the gardens<br />

at the Chicago Botanic<br />

Garden.<br />

ONGOING<br />

The Orchid Show<br />

10 a.m.-4 p.m. Feb.<br />

9-March 24, Chicago Botanic<br />

Garden, 1000 Lake<br />

Cook Road, Glencoe. This<br />

year’s Orchid Show, “In<br />

The Tropics,” captures the<br />

spirit of islands, beaches<br />

and rainforests in places<br />

like the South Pacific and<br />

the Amazon.<br />

Sesquicentennial Planning<br />

Every other Tuesday,<br />

Glencoe Village Hall, 675<br />

Village Court. The Sesquicentennial<br />

Planning Committee<br />

meets in the First<br />

Floor Conference Room.


glencoeanchor.com election 2019<br />

the glencoe anchor | March 21, 2019 | 3<br />

Glencoe Village Board (4-year term, vote for 3)<br />

Name: T. Joseph Halwax<br />

Age: 47<br />

Residence: Glencoe<br />

Occupation: Managing<br />

Director, PNC<br />

Past local government/<br />

relative experience:<br />

I have not worked in local<br />

government before,<br />

Halwax<br />

but have experience with nonprofit<br />

board including Evans Scholars and<br />

El Valor. With Evans Scholars I serve<br />

on the alumni committee and with El<br />

Valor I serve on the finance committee<br />

and am the chair of the endowment<br />

committee. Also, at PNC my team in<br />

asset management works closely with<br />

our public finance group, providing<br />

ideas to local nonprofits and governments<br />

around assets and their operating<br />

businesses. These have provided<br />

great experiences that I hope to bring to<br />

the village.<br />

Name: Jonathan Vree<br />

Age: 46<br />

Residence: Glencoe<br />

Occupation: Investment<br />

Advisor<br />

Past local government/<br />

relative experience:<br />

Glencoe Village Trustee<br />

Vree<br />

What do you think is the biggest issue<br />

facing your coverage area and how do<br />

you plan to approach it to improve<br />

your constituents’ quality of life?<br />

The Village of Glencoe is a wonderful<br />

place to live and raise a family. The<br />

people who work for the village provide<br />

outstanding services and attention to its<br />

residents. I think one of biggest issues<br />

is making sure that the Village will be<br />

able to afford to continue as such a great<br />

place to live. The state of Illinois has a<br />

litany of fiscal issues facing it that will<br />

have an effect on the financial state of<br />

Glencoe. The Village Board will have<br />

What do you think is the biggest issue<br />

facing your coverage area and how<br />

do you plan to approach it to improve<br />

your constituents’ quality of life?<br />

My goal as a potential trustee is<br />

to maintain and improve the level of<br />

transparency of the board to the constituents<br />

of Glencoe. I would also like to see<br />

more people in the village get involved,<br />

utilizing all of the great channels that are<br />

available to help people know all that is<br />

happening in our community. On a personal<br />

note I believe our village should<br />

remain focused on creating a sense of<br />

community which will have a direct<br />

and positive impact on our constituent’s<br />

lives.<br />

What makes you the best/a top candidate<br />

for this position?<br />

It is an honor to be considered as a<br />

candidate to serve the village of Glencoe.<br />

I have a broad skill set across capital<br />

markets and asset management from my<br />

time at Northern Trust and PNC, managing<br />

client facing teams and with complex<br />

boards as clients. I understand the<br />

complexities of boards and the need for<br />

collaboration and transparency. My best<br />

attributes are that I am authentic (what<br />

you see if what you get) honest, ethical,<br />

with no personal agenda for this position.<br />

Glencoe is a wonderful village and<br />

has been a great place to raise my family<br />

for the last 10 years. I want to do my part<br />

to help keep it the special place it is for<br />

decades to come.<br />

to help navigate potential reductions<br />

in revenue received from the state. I<br />

plan to approach this issue by making<br />

sure Glencoe is prepared for the changing<br />

environment by discussing and<br />

planning for contingencies that could<br />

negatively affect Village finances.<br />

What makes you the best/a top candidate<br />

for this position?<br />

My experience as investment advisor<br />

and Village Trustee prepares me<br />

well for the planning aspect of Village<br />

finances. In my career, I work with investors<br />

to help them meet their financial<br />

goals through personalized investment<br />

management and financial planning. In<br />

my role as Village Trustee for the last<br />

four years, I have used that experience<br />

to help the Village plan for its own specific<br />

financial goals and needs. I think<br />

the combination of experiences prepare<br />

me well for the next four years as a<br />

Village Trustee.<br />

visit us online at GLENCOEANCHOR.com<br />

Name: Peter Mulvaney<br />

Age: 50<br />

Residence: Glencoe<br />

Occupation: Water Resource Engineer<br />

Past local government/relative experience: Responsibility for the<br />

City of Chicago sewer system, water conservation, and stormwater<br />

sustainability initiatives; Consulting assignments to dozens of government<br />

and agency projects across the globe regarding the management<br />

of water resources to serve drinking, energy, irrigation and eco-<br />

Mulvaney<br />

logical demands; and approximately 3.5 years as Trustee of the Village of Glencoe<br />

What do you think is the biggest issue facing your coverage area and how do<br />

you plan to approach it to improve your constituents’ quality of life?<br />

Maintaining the high quality of services currently provided while finding<br />

the resources to modernize infrastructure and our Public Safety<br />

Department.<br />

What makes you the best/a top candidate for this position?<br />

An appreciation of the long-view while identifying areas of improvement in today’s<br />

processes, and my ability to bridge social, economic and ecological issues to<br />

form meaningful policy.<br />

Join us Tuesday<br />

through Friday<br />

Closed Sunday & Monday<br />

Froggys<br />

French Cafe<br />

Monthly Special for March<br />

Available for Lunch or Dinner<br />

$18 per person BEFORE 6:30pm<br />

ENTREE CHOICE OF...<br />

Roasted Veal Cordon Bleu<br />

or<br />

Grilled Atlantic Salmon<br />

w/ tarragon sauce or provencale<br />

or<br />

Steak Frittes<br />

or<br />

Pasta Primavera<br />

All main courses are served with three vegetables and a starch<br />

FOR RESERVATIONS CALL 847.433.7080<br />

WWW.FROGGYSRESTAURANT.COM<br />

306 GREEN BAY ROAD, HIGHWOOD<br />

Not available for parties of 6 or more. Monthly Specials not valid on Holidays.


4 | March 21, 2019 | The glencoe anchor news<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

25 years of fundraising<br />

Winter Carnival<br />

provides ‘huge<br />

rewards’ for Habitat<br />

for Humanity<br />

Alexa Burnell<br />

Freelance Reporter<br />

The 25th annual New<br />

Trier Senior Class Winter<br />

Carnival held Friday,<br />

March 15, kept hundreds<br />

of local children blissfully<br />

happy with everything<br />

from bounce houses and<br />

balloon artists to root beer<br />

floats and raffles. But, the<br />

best prize of all was knowing<br />

that proceeds from<br />

the beloved community<br />

event benefit Habitat for<br />

Humanity.<br />

The annual tradition is<br />

part of the Senior Class<br />

Service Project’s yearlong<br />

initiative, teaching<br />

students valuable lessons<br />

while providing for the<br />

less fortunate.<br />

Boys senior advisor<br />

Chris Pearson explained<br />

the many learning lessons<br />

that emerge from the various<br />

aspects of the project.<br />

“At the beginning of the<br />

year, a family in need is<br />

identified through Habitat<br />

for Humanity. The students<br />

help in a number<br />

of ways. They work onsite<br />

at the house located<br />

in Waukegan, providing<br />

hands-on assistance by<br />

painting and constructing<br />

certain parts of the home,”<br />

Pearson said. “Here at<br />

school, the students host<br />

a number for fundraisers<br />

throughout the year, with<br />

one of the largest ones being<br />

the Winter Carnival.”<br />

Through it all, he<br />

added, students learn<br />

lessons they can’t learn in<br />

the classroom, like issues<br />

surrounding affordable<br />

housing.<br />

“They also see what it’s<br />

like for a family to struggle,”<br />

he said, “and what<br />

life can be like outside<br />

the confines of the North<br />

Shore.”<br />

For senior Chris Kuhn,<br />

of Wilmette, the opportunity<br />

has taught him to be<br />

grateful for what he has<br />

and to pay it forward.<br />

“Let’s face it, most<br />

of us here at New Trier<br />

come from some level of<br />

privilege; for me, it was<br />

meaningful to know we<br />

are helping others who are<br />

March 21 through May 5<br />

To reserve tickets - oillamptheater.org<br />

Or (847) 834-0738<br />

Hope Bukta (center), 8, of Winnetka, gets blue hair from advisor Leslie Skizas and<br />

Maddy Aron at the Winter Carnival Friday, March 15, at New Trier. Photos by Rhonda<br />

Holcomb/22nd Century Media<br />

Madeline Krashin (left), 7, of Wilmette, and Ava Wilson, 4,<br />

of Winnetka, make their way up the rock climbing wall.<br />

not as fortunate; it’s great<br />

to know that we can make<br />

change and turn someone<br />

else’s life around,” Kuhn<br />

said.<br />

Wilmette’s Lexie Kaplan,<br />

agreed, adding that<br />

they learned “just how difficult<br />

it can be for a family<br />

struggling to even be<br />

granted a loan, let alone<br />

keep up with payments<br />

and interest.”<br />

“These are things that<br />

most kids don’t think of;<br />

we are lucky to be given<br />

the chance to gain an understanding<br />

of these topics<br />

at such a young age,” she<br />

added.<br />

Along with expanding<br />

students’ world-view,<br />

they learn valuable lessons<br />

about executing grandscale<br />

fundraising events<br />

from start to finish.<br />

For example, prior to<br />

the carnival, students<br />

must solicit local businesses<br />

and organization<br />

in hopes of securing donations.<br />

Students reach out<br />

to food vendors too and<br />

come up with clever and<br />

engaging activities for all<br />

age groups. They make<br />

posters and decorate the<br />

school, relying on grassroots<br />

efforts to market and<br />

promote.<br />

“I’m not going to lie, it<br />

can be a little intimidating<br />

cold-calling businesses,<br />

but fortunately we receive<br />

great business coaching at<br />

school, making the task a<br />

little easier. And, after a<br />

while, it seems like second<br />

nature,” Kuhn said.<br />

For Wilmette’s Kelly<br />

McNulty, the fact that<br />

the Winter Carnival requires<br />

the help of every,<br />

single senior class member<br />

is unique, making for a<br />

memorable experience.<br />

“It’s a very exciting<br />

time, because each senior<br />

must play a part decorating,<br />

promoting, selling<br />

tickets, volunteering at the<br />

event; there is a job for<br />

everyone,” McNulty said.<br />

“The event really pulls<br />

everyone together. Clubs<br />

too participate, so we are<br />

often working with students<br />

from other grades.<br />

The carnival really takes<br />

a lot of manpower; most<br />

are excited to be part of it<br />

all, knowing a night of fun<br />

means huge rewards for a<br />

family in need.”


glencoeanchor.com glencoe<br />

the glencoe anchor | March 21, 2019 | 5<br />

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6 | March 21, 2019 | The glencoe anchor news<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

Husband, wife to step down from<br />

Village positions after relocating<br />

Submitted by Village of<br />

Glencoe<br />

Village of Glencoe<br />

Trustee Dale Thomas and<br />

Plan Commission Chairwoman<br />

Caren Thomas<br />

have notified Village President<br />

Lawrence R. Levin<br />

that they will step down<br />

from their respective positions<br />

effective March<br />

29. Both roles require that<br />

they reside in the corporate<br />

boundaries of the Village<br />

of Glencoe and the Thomas<br />

family is relocating to a<br />

nearby suburb after having<br />

lived in Glencoe for 30<br />

years.<br />

“That Dale and Caren<br />

are leaving is a major loss<br />

for Glencoe, as both have<br />

been true leaders in our<br />

community,” Village President<br />

Levin said. “Their<br />

contributions to the Village<br />

Board, Golf Advisory<br />

Committee, Golf Clubhouse<br />

Task Force, Street<br />

Ends Task Force and Plan<br />

Commission have been<br />

tremendous. Both are<br />

leaving a legacy of selfless<br />

public service and dedication<br />

to the betterment of<br />

Glencoe. Our community<br />

owes them a great debt of<br />

gratitude.”<br />

Trustee Dale Thomas<br />

was elected to the Board of<br />

Trustees in 2013 and since<br />

that time has also served<br />

as the Chairman of the<br />

Golf Advisory Committee<br />

and as a member of the<br />

Finance Committee.<br />

Prior to his election to<br />

the Village Board, Dale<br />

served on the Golf Advisory<br />

Committee from<br />

2004-2010, as well as on<br />

the Street Ends Task Force<br />

which recommended a<br />

series of improvements<br />

to the Village’s shoreline<br />

adjacent street ends from<br />

2011-2012. Dale played<br />

an integral role in the Village’s<br />

efforts to enter into<br />

a new land use agreement<br />

with the Cook County<br />

Forest Preserve District,<br />

which will ensure the<br />

long-term preservation of<br />

Glencoe’s 126-acre publically<br />

owned golf course.<br />

Dale also has been supportive<br />

of efforts to plan<br />

future capital improvements<br />

to the Glencoe Golf<br />

Club clubhouse through<br />

his work on the Clubhouse<br />

Task Force, which convened<br />

from 2010-2012.<br />

On the Village Board, he<br />

thoughtfully collaborated<br />

on the development of the<br />

Village’s Strategic Plans,<br />

approved in 2014 and<br />

2018. Through his work<br />

on the Finance Committee,<br />

he has helped to safeguard<br />

the Village’s excellent<br />

financial position, ensuring<br />

growth of the reserve<br />

funds and passage of two<br />

bond referenda in 2015.<br />

His leadership contributed<br />

to the preservation of the<br />

Village’s coveted AAA<br />

bond rating by Standard &<br />

Poor’s.<br />

In addition to his service<br />

to the Glencoe community,<br />

Dale enjoyed a successful<br />

career in law with a focus<br />

on telecommunications<br />

and energy regulation, recently<br />

retiring as Senior<br />

Counsel at the law firm of<br />

Sidley Austin, LLP.<br />

Plan Commission<br />

Chairmwoman Caren<br />

Thomas, a land-use attorney<br />

and strategic planning<br />

consultant, has served<br />

on the Plan Commission<br />

for 24 years (15 years as<br />

chair) with numerous accomplishments<br />

that have<br />

positively impacted the<br />

Glencoe community.<br />

Most recently, Caren<br />

led the process to redraft<br />

the Village’s Appearance<br />

Guide which details design<br />

standards for residential<br />

and business districts.<br />

From 2014-2016, she<br />

provided leadership, guidance<br />

and oversight of the<br />

Downtown TuneUp engagement<br />

process that<br />

led to the creation and<br />

adoption of the Village’s<br />

Downtown Plan. Already,<br />

the Downtown Plan’s<br />

recommendations are being<br />

implemented, as seen<br />

through the current Tudor<br />

Court Design review process,<br />

the goal of which<br />

is to build on the arts<br />

core that is developing in<br />

Glencoe’s downtown.<br />

Caren served as an expert<br />

advisor to Village<br />

Board and staff during the<br />

special use review and approval<br />

of the new Writers<br />

Theatre building, completed<br />

in 2016. She was also<br />

heavily involved in the design<br />

review and approval<br />

of all three automobile<br />

dealerships on Frontage<br />

Road, thereby helping to<br />

achieve a long-term economic<br />

development goal<br />

of the Village.<br />

Also thanks to Caren’s<br />

leadership, the Village<br />

considered and approved<br />

an updated subdivision ordinance<br />

in addition to an<br />

impervious surface ordinance<br />

and comprehensive<br />

steep slope legislation,<br />

aimed at protecting Glencoe’s<br />

unique natural physical<br />

environmental while<br />

applying land use best<br />

practices. Prior to her service<br />

on the commission,<br />

Caren was involved in the<br />

development of the Plan<br />

Commission’s 1996 Comprehensive<br />

Plan which she<br />

then helped to update as<br />

a commission member in<br />

2004.<br />

“My long term goal as<br />

Plan Commission Chairman<br />

was to bring the Village’s<br />

canon of land use<br />

law into the modern age,”<br />

Caren said. “Having seen<br />

multiple projects through<br />

to conclusion, while it<br />

is personally difficult —<br />

even painful — to leave, I<br />

do so without regret. With<br />

the active participation<br />

of superb Plan Commissioners<br />

and an outstanding<br />

staff, we have accomplished<br />

everything I hoped<br />

we would.”<br />

“Glencoe is, and will<br />

always be, our home community,”<br />

wrote the Thomases<br />

in a farewell note. “We<br />

look forward to continued<br />

opportunities to be of service<br />

to Glencoe, a Village<br />

served by an extraordinary<br />

professional staff and devoted<br />

volunteer public<br />

officials. It is an honor<br />

to be a part of Glencoe’s<br />

history.”<br />

Per State statute, an appointment<br />

to a vacancy on<br />

the Board of Trustees may<br />

be made by the Village<br />

President and confirmed<br />

by the Village Board of<br />

Trustees. Should an appointment<br />

be made, the<br />

replacement trustee will<br />

serve through the end<br />

of Dale’s current term,<br />

ending in April 2021.<br />

The vacancy left by<br />

Caren on the Plan Commission<br />

will be filled by an<br />

appointment by the Village<br />

President. Levin has begun<br />

the process of considering<br />

individuals for both roles<br />

and any interested candidates<br />

should contact him<br />

via e-mail at larrylevin@<br />

villageofglencoe.org.<br />

Glencoe resident<br />

behind Divvy House<br />

Interiors and Design<br />

Alexa Burnell<br />

Freelance Reporter<br />

Anyone who tunes into<br />

an HGTV show will hear<br />

plenty of trendy home renovation<br />

and design terms,<br />

but Glencoe’s Amy Erb,<br />

founder of Divvy House,<br />

said that when it comes<br />

to creating a home that<br />

will evoke joy for years<br />

to come, it is a personal,<br />

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

design that will truly stand<br />

the test of time.<br />

Erb has lived in various<br />

places both domestic<br />

and abroad, spending her<br />

high school years in Lake<br />

Forest. Despite her love<br />

for design and studies<br />

in architecture, she pursued<br />

a career in marketing<br />

at DDB Chicago — a<br />

choice that may have left<br />

her longing for more creativity,<br />

but also gave her<br />

a leg-up when it came to<br />

business matters.<br />

“Once I had a family, I<br />

realized spending time at<br />

a career that didn’t leave<br />

me completely fulfilled,<br />

no longer made sense. So,<br />

I went back to school at the<br />

Harrington School of Design,<br />

obtained a master’s<br />

degree and began working<br />

in home staging,” she said.<br />

“Not long after, I founded<br />

Divvy House, starting off<br />

with remodeling and renovations<br />

and evolving along<br />

the way.<br />

“As Divvy grew, I could<br />

see how my past career<br />

experiences positively<br />

impacted my business.<br />

I’m grateful for the path I<br />

took.”<br />

Along with Erb’s own<br />

personal evolution is the<br />

evolution of her business.<br />

Throughout the years,<br />

Amy Erb, of Glencoe,<br />

is the founder of Divvy<br />

House Interiors and<br />

Design. Photo Submitted<br />

Erb has hired additional<br />

designers, all who have<br />

their own specialties. She<br />

ensures that clients are<br />

partnered with someone<br />

who can understand their<br />

wants and needs, all the<br />

while infusing some of<br />

Divvy’s core values.<br />

“Our approach is not<br />

corporate, it’s personal,”<br />

Erb said. “I always start<br />

by interviewing a client<br />

to get a sense of who they<br />

are and where they are at.<br />

I help them identify family<br />

heirlooms that may enhance<br />

the style and design<br />

they crave. We blend modern<br />

with traditional pieces,<br />

and I always work with the<br />

idea of repurposing materials<br />

found within the clients<br />

home. Not only is this<br />

better for our environment<br />

and surrounding communities,<br />

but it personalizes<br />

the project. I also believe<br />

in renovating versus tearing<br />

down. Older homes are<br />

rich in history and quality<br />

materials. So much<br />

of what we already have<br />

can be used in an entirely<br />

different way.”<br />

And, while glitz and<br />

Please see divvy, 15


glencoeanchor.com news<br />

the glencoe anchor | March 21, 2019 | 7<br />

police reports<br />

Traffic offenses lead to three<br />

drug charges for Chicagoan<br />

James D. Burrell, 34, of Chicago,<br />

was arrested on three<br />

counts of possession of controlled<br />

substance, uninsured<br />

motor vehicle, suspended registration,<br />

no rear plate light and<br />

no front plate light at 4:20 a.m.<br />

March 7 at Interstate 94 and<br />

Dundee Road.<br />

Burrell possessed crack cocaine<br />

and amphetamine salts,<br />

according to Deputy Police<br />

Chief Rich Weiner.<br />

His court date is to be<br />

determined.<br />

In other police news:<br />

March 10<br />

• An unknown offender egged a<br />

victim’s residence at 2:13 p.m.<br />

in the 800 block of Bluff Street.<br />

• Three rings were reported stolen<br />

at 8:05 p.m. from a victim’s<br />

booth at a jewelry show in the<br />

1600 block of Frontage Road.<br />

March 7<br />

• Tracy D. Walker, 47, of Libertyville,<br />

was cited for possession<br />

of cannabis and driving with<br />

only one headlight at 8:24 p.m.<br />

at the intersection of Green Bay<br />

Road and Temple Court.<br />

March 6<br />

• John T. Burke, 58, of the 400<br />

block of Oakdale Avenue, was<br />

arrested for driving under the influence,<br />

BAC more than .08, improper<br />

lane usage and speeding<br />

at 7:39 p.m. at the intersection of<br />

Green Bay Road and Jefferson<br />

Avenue. His court date is April 1.<br />

EDITOR’S NOTE: The Glencoe<br />

Anchor’s Police Reports are<br />

compiled from official reports<br />

found on file at the Glencoe Police<br />

Department headquarters in Glencoe.<br />

Individuals named in these<br />

reports are considered innocent of<br />

all charges until proven guilty in a<br />

court of law.<br />

New Trier Township Annual Town<br />

Meeting scheduled for April 9<br />

Submitted by New Trier Township<br />

The 170th Annual Town Meeting<br />

of New Trier Township is<br />

scheduled for April 9 at the Township<br />

Hall located at 739 Elm St.,<br />

Winnetka.<br />

This year’s meeting theme is<br />

“Caring In Action,” a phrase that<br />

captures the spirit of the North<br />

Shore, neighbor-helping neighbor.<br />

A reception and open house begins<br />

at 6:30 p.m. The meeting will<br />

begin promptly at 7:30 p.m.<br />

“I hope our residents will attend<br />

the meeting and take part in shaping<br />

the future of the township.<br />

We encourage feedback about our<br />

work and invite suggestions on<br />

ways we can strengthen our services,”<br />

New Trier Township Clerk<br />

Jerome Hoynes said.<br />

Township Supervisor Alan<br />

Goldberg and Hoynes will present<br />

several service awards and recognize<br />

the Peer Jury Scholarship<br />

winner as part of the evening’s<br />

business.<br />

A new award in honor of the<br />

late Harriet Hahn, the Lifetime<br />

Service Award will be presented<br />

posthumously to the late Paddie<br />

Brennen, former Supervisor of<br />

New Trier Township. A member<br />

of Paddie’s family will accept the<br />

award.<br />

Trustee Elliott Robbins will<br />

also address the group regarding<br />

the work of township social service<br />

committees.<br />

Township Assessor Jan Churchwell<br />

will present her annual report<br />

and update attendees on the latest<br />

Triennial Reassessment news.<br />

Photo Op<br />

These photos were submitted to The Glencoe Anchor by Katy Kletzel and Elsabé Schimmelpenninck on March 10 with the caption: “Today we, two Glencoe friends,<br />

took a Plastic Plunge into Lake Michigan at the Glencoe beach. We did this as a personal challenge and to raise awareness about the plastic that is found on the beach<br />

and in the lake. We hope that people will think twice before leaving things behind and will help pick-up trash before it ends up in the lake.” Did you snap a photo of a<br />

beautiful, funny or newsworthy moment? Send it in as a Photo Op to Editor Megan Bernard at megan@glencoeanchor.com


8 | March 21, 2019 | The glencoe anchor Community<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

Josie<br />

Dana Weiss and<br />

Steven Bernard,<br />

of Glencoe<br />

Little miss Josie is<br />

a Cockapoo. All of<br />

our children are<br />

grown and she is<br />

our new princess.<br />

She’s very<br />

adorable and very<br />

bossy, and has us<br />

wrapped around<br />

her little paw! She<br />

absolutely loves<br />

her walks around<br />

our Glencoe neighborhood and insists on stopping<br />

to greet every dog or human that we meet. She’s<br />

looking for new fluffy friends and is open to<br />

playdates!<br />

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

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

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

IL 60062.<br />

WINNER:<br />

Best Groomer in<br />

Chicagoland<br />

Pet of the Week<br />

Sponsored by<br />

Love Fur Dogs<br />

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

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

THE HIGHLAND PARK LANDMARK<br />

City denies alterations to Central<br />

Avenue landmark<br />

With a vocal crowd in attendance,<br />

the City of Highland Park’s Historic<br />

Preservation Commission denied a<br />

Certificate of Appropriateness for alterations<br />

to the landmarked William<br />

Walter Witten House, 1014 Central<br />

Ave., at its March 14 meeting.<br />

The developer, Capital Senior<br />

Housing Development, bought the<br />

house and others in the surrounding<br />

area and had razed all but the<br />

Witten House because of its landmark<br />

status. Instead, the developer<br />

was considering removing the parquet<br />

flooring and woodwork in the<br />

house and placing it publicly in its<br />

new Highland Park Capital Senior<br />

Housing Development. The house<br />

would be moved to another location,<br />

all of which would require a<br />

COA.<br />

The flooring pieces, made by Witten,<br />

were first used for a dance floor<br />

at the 1893 Chicago World’s Fair.<br />

He then removed his woodwork after<br />

the exposition and placed them<br />

in his house, a Victorian farmhouse<br />

built in 1894. The house was designated<br />

a landmark in 1985, citing the<br />

parquet flooring and woodwork as<br />

historically significant.<br />

Reporting by Eric Bradach, Freelance<br />

Reporter. Full story at HPLandmark.com.<br />

THE NORTHBROOK TOWER<br />

Date of Dundee Road closure finalized<br />

Dundee Road will completely<br />

close to thru-traffic, between Skokie<br />

Boulevard and Waukegan Road,<br />

from April 15 to Oct. 31.<br />

In mid-April, the Illinois Department<br />

of Transportation will begin<br />

replacing a culvert at the intersection<br />

of Dundee and Lee roads that “has<br />

reached the end of its useful life.”<br />

To circumvent the construction<br />

area during that six-month period,<br />

traffic will be directed north on either<br />

Waukegan Road or Skokie Boulevard,<br />

east or west on Lake Cook<br />

Road, and then back south. Shermer<br />

Road will remain open to local traffic<br />

for the duration of the project.<br />

Reporting by Chris Pullam, Freelance<br />

Reporter. Full story at Northbrook-<br />

Tower.com<br />

THE WILMETTE BEACON<br />

Residents express frustration with<br />

speed of Wilmette stormwater<br />

project<br />

The Wilmette Park Board held its<br />

first of three public hearings on the<br />

stormwater project at its Monday,<br />

March 11 meeting.<br />

This first hearing focused on Community<br />

Playfield, although residents<br />

who spoke talked about the project<br />

as a whole. Underground storage<br />

is proposed at three parks: Community<br />

Playfield (Phase I), Hibbard<br />

Park (Phase II) and Thornwood Park<br />

(Phase III). The plan results in 98<br />

percent of structures being afforded<br />

10-year rain event protection. Four<br />

residents, including Village Trustee<br />

Joel Kurzman, spoke in favor of the<br />

project with a desire for the project to<br />

be completed as quickly as possible.<br />

“Do your process, do it as fast<br />

as you can and let’s get to work in<br />

service to West Wilmette,” he said.<br />

Reporting by Todd Marver, Freelance<br />

Reporter. Full story at WilmetteBeacon.<br />

com.<br />

THE WINNETKA CURRENT<br />

Founder’s Day reflects on ‘the<br />

beauty,’ history of Winnetka<br />

Residents united March 10 at<br />

the Winnetka Community House<br />

for the Founder’s Day celebration,<br />

recognizing the 150th anniversary<br />

of the Village by celebrating the<br />

“People, Places and Progress” that<br />

make Winnetka a great place to<br />

live.<br />

During the celebration, WTTW’s<br />

Emmy Award-winning television<br />

host Geoffrey Baer discussed the<br />

history of the Village, touching upon<br />

topics, such as the railway systems<br />

and the impact of prohibition.<br />

Most importantly, Baer discussed<br />

the 1921 Bennett plan — a groundbreaking<br />

report that set the vision on<br />

how Winnetka would develop over<br />

time. The plan took into consideration<br />

the construction of Village Hall<br />

and other buildings, while also respecting<br />

the desire to maintain Winnetka’s<br />

green spaces and keep the<br />

Village a quaint community.<br />

Reporting by Alexa Burnell, Freelance<br />

Reporter. Full story at WinnetkaCurrent.<br />

com.<br />

THE GLENVIEW LANTERN<br />

Maple School start, end times<br />

bumped back after D225 schedule<br />

change<br />

The impact on Maple School students<br />

will be minimal when their<br />

next-door neighbors at Glenbrook<br />

North align their daily schedule<br />

with that of their District 225<br />

bedfellows at Glenbrook South,<br />

starting with the 2019-20 school<br />

year.<br />

Northbrook/Glenview District 30<br />

Superintendent Dr. Brian Wegley detailed<br />

the new schedule at the Thursday,<br />

March 14 meeting of the board<br />

of education.<br />

When next year’s classes begin<br />

on Aug. 21, GBN will transition<br />

from its current 7:40 a.m. starting<br />

time and 2:45 p.m. dismissal to an<br />

8 a.m. starting time and 3:15 p.m.<br />

dismissal.<br />

However, Maple School will have<br />

to make morning and afternoon adjustments<br />

of only five minutes when<br />

its school year starts on Sept. 3.<br />

Reporting by Neil Milbert, Freelance<br />

Reporter. Full story at GlenviewLantern.com.<br />

THE LAKE FOREST LEADER<br />

LB Park District Board Commissioner<br />

Brock Gordon dies at 61<br />

Brock Gordon, the vice president<br />

of the Lake Bluff Park District Board<br />

of Commissioners, died March 12,<br />

according to a press release from the<br />

Lake Bluff Park District.<br />

Gordon’s obituary says he died<br />

due to complications from Multiple<br />

Myeloma.<br />

“Our entire Lake Bluff Park District<br />

family mourns this unfortunate<br />

loss, and our thoughts and deepest<br />

sympathies are with Brock’s wife,<br />

Kim, and sons, Ryan and Grant,” the<br />

release says.<br />

It is unknown at this time if his<br />

passing was sudden. A memorial<br />

service will be held for Gordon at 11<br />

a.m. Saturday, March 23, at Union<br />

Church of Lake Bluff, 525 E. Prospect<br />

Ave., Lake Bluff. A reception<br />

will follow immediately for friends<br />

and family to celebrate Gordon’s<br />

incredible life.<br />

Staff report. Full story at LakeForestLeader.com.


glencoeanchor.com glencoe<br />

the glencoe anchor | March 21, 2019 | 9<br />

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member registration March 18 -non-member registration March 25


10 | March 21, 2019 | The glencoe anchor school<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

School News<br />

Colby College<br />

Swimmer makes dean’s list<br />

Hillary E. Swimmer, of Glencoe, was<br />

recently named to the highly selective<br />

Dean’s List at Colby College in Waterville,<br />

Maine, for outstanding academic<br />

achievement during the fall semester of<br />

the 2018-19 academic year. Swimmer is<br />

one of 538 Colby students — or 26 percent<br />

of the qualified student body — to<br />

qualify for the Dean’s List last semester.<br />

Swimmer, a member of the Class of<br />

2022, attended North Shore Country Day<br />

School and is the daughter of Alan and<br />

Linda Swimmer, of Glencoe. Swimmer<br />

earned a semester grade point average of<br />

3.77 or higher last fall to be included on<br />

Colby’s Dean’s List.<br />

DePauw University<br />

Roddy makes honor roll<br />

Quinn Roddy, of Glencoe, a member<br />

of DePauw Men’s Lacrosse team has<br />

been named to the Tiger Pride Honor<br />

Roll. Roddy is one of 189 DePauw student-athletes<br />

named to the Tiger Pride<br />

Honor Roll for achieving at least a 3.40<br />

grade point average for the 2018 fall<br />

semester.<br />

You're invited to the<br />

North Shore Women in<br />

Business Networking Breakfast!<br />

7-9 a.m. Wednesday, June 5<br />

The Happ Inn<br />

305 N. Happ Road, Northfield<br />

Join us for the NS Women In Business Awards nomination kickoff and<br />

network with some of the top business women in the North Shore!<br />

Continental breakfast available.<br />

Limited early bird tickets now available!<br />

Early Bird ticket sales end March 29!<br />

22ndCenturyMedia.com/networking<br />

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

The Honor Roll, started in the 2012 fall<br />

semester by Stevie Baker-Watson, De-<br />

Pauw’s Associate Vice President for Campus<br />

Wellness and Theodore Katula Director<br />

of Athletics and Recreational Sports,<br />

recognizes DePauw student-athletes who<br />

are members of an NCAA varsity athletics<br />

team and have a semester grade point<br />

average of 3.40 or higher.<br />

Summer Explorations Registration<br />

Online registration for Glencoe School<br />

District 35 Summer Explorations 2019<br />

opened March 4 at 9 a.m. and continues<br />

through April 5th at 8 p.m. All Summer<br />

Explorations programming will be hosted<br />

at Central School from June 17-July<br />

12.<br />

Visit http://summerschool.glencoeschools.org<br />

to register your child(ren) for<br />

engaging classes. They have a new and<br />

improved registration and catalog system<br />

this year. The new system allows you to<br />

add your child to a waitlist when a desired<br />

class is full. If you have questions, please<br />

contact Ben Baird at (847) 835-7803 or<br />

bairdb@glencoeschools.org.<br />

School News is compiled by Editor Megan<br />

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

New Trier presents ‘The<br />

Addams Family,’ new musical<br />

Submitted by New Trier<br />

The New Trier Performing<br />

Arts Division presented<br />

a new musical, “The<br />

Addams Family,” from<br />

March 7-10 in the Winnetka<br />

Campus Gaffney<br />

Auditorium.<br />

The original story of a<br />

father’s worst nightmare<br />

is based on the book by<br />

Marshall Brickman and<br />

Rick Elice, and characters<br />

created by Charles<br />

Addams. “The Addams<br />

Family” is presented by<br />

special arrangement with<br />

Elephant Eye Theatrical,<br />

and music and lyrics are<br />

by Andrew Lippa.<br />

Wednesday Addams,<br />

the ultimate princess of<br />

darkness, has grown up<br />

and fallen in love with a<br />

sweet, smart young man<br />

from a respectable family<br />

whom her parents<br />

have never met. If that<br />

weren’t upsetting enough,<br />

Wednesday confides in<br />

her father and begs him<br />

not to tell her mother.<br />

Now, Gomez Addams<br />

must do something he’s<br />

never done before; Keep<br />

a secret from his beloved<br />

wife, Morticia. Everything<br />

will change for the<br />

whole family on the fateful<br />

night they host a dinner<br />

for Wednesday’s ‘normal’<br />

boyfriend and his<br />

parents.<br />

“I’m excited to work<br />

with our students to bring<br />

these iconic characters<br />

to life,” Director<br />

and Performing Arts<br />

Coordinator Anne James-<br />

Noonan said before the<br />

show. “We’ve especially<br />

enjoyed working on this<br />

contemporary music;<br />

Andrew Lippa’s music is<br />

infectious, fun and leaves<br />

you humming.”<br />

Rebecca Smith (left), as Pugsley Addams, is tortured<br />

by his sister Wednesday Addams, as played by Cammi<br />

Avery, in New Trier’s “The Addams Family Musical.”<br />

Photos by Lois Bernstein/22nd Century Media<br />

Emily Colitte (left) and James Owen are the madly-inlove<br />

couple, Morticia and Gomez Addams.<br />

The Addams household (left to right) has a litany of<br />

characters, including Butler Lurch, played by Ben<br />

Ancell, Grandma, played by Carly Martin, and Pugsley<br />

Addams, played by Rebecca Smith.<br />

In the finale of Act I, the family sings “Full Disclosure.”


glencoeanchor.com glencoe<br />

the glencoe anchor | March 21, 2019 | 11<br />

Join Glencoe Chamber of Commerce Trip for an adventure to...<br />

CHINA $2,499<br />

Oct. 12 - 20, 2019<br />

9-day trip ORD departure, only<br />

Beijing • Shanghai • Suzhou • Hangzhou<br />

• Roundtrip international airfare & Chinese domestic airfare & Tax • 4-and 5-star hotel accommodations • 3 meals each day<br />

• Deluxe bus tours • Fluent English-speaking tour guides • Entrance fees for attractions<br />

Your Trip Includes:<br />

Day 1 - ORD/Bejing<br />

Check in at ORD International Airport for an afternoon flight. Your adventure begins as you cross the<br />

international date line.<br />

Day 2 - Beijing<br />

Arrive in Beijing, the Capital of China by midnight. You will be met at the airport by your tour guide and<br />

transferred to the hotel.<br />

Day 3 - Beijing<br />

Visit the Tian An Men Square, the largest square in the world,<br />

and the Temple of Heaven, built in 1420 A.D., where the emperors prayed to the heavens for a good<br />

harvest.<br />

Sightseeing today will continue with a tour of the Palace Museum, also known as the Forbidden City,<br />

home of 24 emperors with a total space of 9,999 rooms, and the Summer Palace, featuring the Long<br />

Corridor with painted gallery, Kunming Lake and Longevity Hill, Seventeen Arch Bridge and the Marble<br />

Boat.<br />

Day 4 - Beijing<br />

Tour bus excursion to the Great Wall, the 4,000 mile long and 2,000 year old construction is said to be<br />

Price reflects Double occupancy<br />

Add $500 for single occupancy<br />

Add $200 to take Terra-Cotta Warriors itinerary<br />

Add $100 for passenger with non-Chamber membership<br />

Free business conference included if passenger requires<br />

Valid passport and visa required<br />

English speaking tour guide on each tour bus<br />

Including Post Departure Travel insurance<br />

the only man-made structure visible by the naked eye from the moon. Visit the Ming Tombs. One of the<br />

13 Ming Emperors’ Tombs is fully excavated and open for exploration.<br />

Day 5 - Beijing/Shanghai/Suzhou<br />

Fly to Shanghai, followed by a bus trip to Suzhou for the Lingering Garden,Tiger Hill, HanshanTemple<br />

and the National Embroidery Institute to see silk embroidery, a local craft with thousands of years of<br />

history. Dinner this evening will include a show featuring traditional Chinese music.<br />

Day 6 - Suzhou/Hangzhou<br />

Morning tour bus excursion to Hangzhou for a visit to the Economic Development Zone and the<br />

centuries-old Lingyin Temple, featuring a 64.3 foot high camphor-wood carving of Buddha.<br />

Day 7 - Hangzhou/Shanghai<br />

Morning boat cruise on West Lake with relaxing stopover at jewel-like pagodas and tea houses.<br />

Afternoon tour bus trip to Shanghai.<br />

Day 8 - Shanghai<br />

Visit the Yu Garden, a maze of marvelous pavilions, ponds, rocky works and over arching trees. Also visit<br />

the Bund, Shanghai’s famous waterfront park. Tour the Pudong Economic Development Zone.<br />

Day 9 - Shanghai/Beijing/ORD<br />

Morning for free. The afternoon flight will depart by 1:30pm for ORD where you will arrive at 10:30am<br />

on the same day.<br />

2 orientation meetings will be held<br />

Monday, Mar. 25 & Thursday, Apr. 25, 5:30 - 7:00 pm<br />

Ramada Plaza Chicago North Shore<br />

1090 S. Milwaukee Ave., Wheeling, IL 60090<br />

Please call Sally at Chamber 847-835-3333<br />

Plan now to join Glencoe Chamber of Commerce group for this once in a lifetime China Adventure. Space is limited.<br />

Call Sally at the Chamber for Details 847-835-3333, please send your registration form to glencoechamber@yahoo.com<br />

Web www.glencoechamber.org Tour Operator: Citslinc 1-844-262-1100, email citslinc@yahoo.com Website: www.citslinc.org<br />

There is no obligation to sign up for the trip when you attend an information meeting; however, it’s valuable to attend as you’ll be able to receive more information about the trip and have your questions<br />

answered right then and there. While the trip is sponsored by the Glencoe Chamber, the trip is not limited to Glencoe Chamber members; Glencoe residents, their family and friends are welcome!! Please<br />

feel free to contact the Glencoe Chamber of Commerce at glencoechamber@yahoo.com with any questions you have.


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12 | March 21, 2019 | The glencoe anchor sound off<br />

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Glencoe Historical<br />

Society<br />

Contributing Columnist<br />

March is International<br />

Women’s<br />

month which<br />

offers an opportunity to<br />

reflect on the accomplishments<br />

of Glencoe’s many,<br />

extraordinarily talented<br />

women.<br />

The inaugural class of<br />

the new Glencoe Hall of<br />

Fame included 36 women<br />

who excelled in all areas<br />

of community life —<br />

government, education,<br />

business, science and<br />

the arts. Their stories are<br />

generally well known or<br />

at least well documented<br />

with perhaps one notable<br />

exception — a fascinating<br />

woman by the name of<br />

Grace Fuller.<br />

Fuller first came to the<br />

attention of the Glencoe<br />

Historical Society<br />

in connection with the<br />

centennial anniversary of<br />

our community’s Frank<br />

Lloyd Wright structures.<br />

In 1905, Wright prepared<br />

drawings for a house<br />

for Miss Grace Fuller in<br />

Glencoe. The house has<br />

been the subject of much<br />

debate. Many Wright<br />

experts believe that it was<br />

never built. One author<br />

even went so far as to say<br />

that “no evidence has been<br />

found to confirm … that<br />

any Fullers lived in Glencoe<br />

around this time.”<br />

However, one of Wright’s<br />

trusted Taliesin fellows<br />

Grace Fuller was inducted into the inaugural Glencoe<br />

Hall of Fame class, which included 36 women, this year.<br />

The Glencoe Historical Society helped trace Fuller’s<br />

roots back to the village. photo submitted<br />

who grew up in Evanston<br />

remembers driving by the<br />

house as a young boy.<br />

Although there is scant<br />

evidence of the existence<br />

of the Wright house, there<br />

is plenty of evidence<br />

that Fuller was a leader<br />

among women in the<br />

Glencoe community in<br />

the late 1800s and early<br />

1900s. Ironically, the first<br />

connection GHS found<br />

between Fuller and Glencoe<br />

came from a gossip<br />

column in a Louisiana<br />

newspaper in 1897. The<br />

item indicated that a pretty<br />

girl who had been private<br />

secretary to Chicago real<br />

estate magnate Potter<br />

Palmer for 10 years had<br />

given up her position to<br />

nurse a wealthy resident<br />

of Glencoe named<br />

Thomas Allen.<br />

When Mr. Allen died<br />

in December 1897, he<br />

left the bulk of his estate<br />

to this young woman<br />

— named Grace Fuller.<br />

Fuller had been engaged<br />

to Allen’s son who died<br />

suddenly of a heart attack<br />

before the couple married.<br />

Allen said Fuller was<br />

like a daughter to him.<br />

Included in the estate was<br />

the title to his home which<br />

was located on the northeast<br />

corner of Sheridan<br />

Road and Hazel.<br />

Allen also left $5,000<br />

to the Women’s Library<br />

Club. The money was<br />

used to purchase the lot<br />

at Hazel and Greenleaf<br />

where the first Woman’s<br />

Library Clubhouse was<br />

built in 1906. A review of<br />

the Club’s records reveals<br />

that Fuller was a witness<br />

to the incorporation of<br />

the club in 1893 and was<br />

President of the Club from<br />

1897 to 1898. The 1900<br />

Census shows that Fuller<br />

was living in Glencoe<br />

Please see history, 15


glencoeanchor.com glencoe<br />

the glencoe anchor | March 21, 2019 | 13<br />

Wake up.<br />

Shower.<br />

Breakfast.<br />

Coffee.<br />

Local News.<br />

News happens every day. Why wait?<br />

Make GlencoeAnchor.com part of your daily routine.<br />

Subscribe today at<br />

GlencoeAnchor.com/Plus<br />

or scan the QR for a direct link


14 | March 21, 2019 | The glencoe anchor sound off<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

City Girl Confessions<br />

A new hobby brings<br />

a reversal of roles<br />

Kelly Anderson<br />

Contributing Columnist<br />

I<br />

first glimpsed the<br />

fascination when my<br />

son brought home<br />

library books about chess<br />

and then proceed to bring<br />

the books everywhere.<br />

The books were propped<br />

open during breakfast,<br />

positioned sweetly next to<br />

his toast. They were read<br />

quietly during long and<br />

short car rides. They even<br />

joined us at restaurants.<br />

I relish all of this<br />

behavior because I know<br />

precisely what it’s like to<br />

be enraptured by a new<br />

hobby. Once I learned<br />

to read, I couldn’t tear<br />

through books fast<br />

enough. I would retrieve<br />

stacks from the library<br />

and read dutifully with<br />

a flashlight every night,<br />

long after I had been told<br />

to go to sleep. If I was<br />

caught staying up too late,<br />

my parents would chastise<br />

me and I would cleverly<br />

retort, “You’ve got to be<br />

kidding. Do you know<br />

how many parents wished<br />

their kids would read for<br />

hours a day?”<br />

I’m pleased to share<br />

that my sarcastic wit is<br />

still alive and well. And<br />

though I am much older,<br />

I am still retrieving stacks<br />

of books from the library<br />

to tear through at a quick<br />

pace.<br />

The other day, as my<br />

son assembled the chess<br />

board and its intricate<br />

pieces, a question was<br />

posed: “Mom, do you<br />

know how to play chess?”<br />

Hmm. Sort of. I think.<br />

The truth of the matter<br />

is that my only real go at<br />

chess took place about 20<br />

years ago. I used to mess<br />

around with Chessmaster<br />

6000, a 3D relic from<br />

the years of Microsoft<br />

Windows, MineSweeper<br />

and dial-up Internet. I<br />

wouldn’t call this chess<br />

practice authentic nor<br />

would I claim that knowledge<br />

today; whatever<br />

I learned then has long<br />

since escaped me.<br />

Then another question:<br />

“Mom, what if I teach<br />

you how to play?” Hmm.<br />

Well, hmm.<br />

I’ll confess: my<br />

schedule is fairly packed,<br />

my responsibilities are<br />

long and my interest in<br />

chess is low. But I will<br />

not turn away an opportunity<br />

to learn with my<br />

child assuming the role of<br />

educator. In saying yes, I<br />

will relish the chance to<br />

challenge my own brain,<br />

which often makes rapid<br />

decisions about what I<br />

like, dislike or find uninteresting.<br />

Pushing against<br />

a set-in-my-ways attitude<br />

is what allows true growth<br />

to prosper. Plus, it sets<br />

a pretty cool tone for<br />

children: the notion that<br />

they, too, have plenty of<br />

valuable lessons to impart<br />

on us grown-ups.<br />

I’m grateful to live in<br />

an area that can foster<br />

a child’s curiosity and<br />

create beautiful hobbies.<br />

How wonderful was it<br />

that my son’s interests<br />

aligned with Park District<br />

programming? And how<br />

incredible is it to have<br />

libraries stocked with<br />

resources and helpful<br />

librarians?<br />

Say yes. That seems<br />

to be the answer here. If<br />

you are ready to learn and<br />

grow, and the opportunity<br />

arises, just say yes.<br />

I also recognize the fun<br />

that comes from being a<br />

parent and just encouraging<br />

those hobbies to grow.<br />

So it should not have surprised<br />

me when the Park<br />

District booklet arrived in<br />

the mail, and my son took<br />

it upon himself to locate<br />

a Chess Scholars after<br />

school program.<br />

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

photographer and former<br />

Chicagoan. She pens blogs<br />

and books from her home in<br />

Glencoe, which she shares<br />

with her husband, son,<br />

daughter and Boston terrier.<br />

visit us online at www.GLENCOEANCHOR.com


glencoeanchor.com SOUND OFF<br />

the glencoe anchor | March 21, 2019 | 15<br />

Social snapshot<br />

Top Stories<br />

from GlencoeAnchor.com as of March 18:<br />

1. Pilot project to help protect Glencoe<br />

Beach<br />

2. Election 2019: David Napier for D35<br />

Board<br />

3. Police Reports: Reckless driver causes<br />

hundreds in damage at NSCI<br />

4. Husband, wife to step down from Village<br />

positions after relocating<br />

5. Boys hockey: Forecheck, power play,<br />

help lead New Trier Green back to the<br />

state finals<br />

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

From the Editor<br />

Be prepared for Election Day<br />

Megan Bernard<br />

megan@glencoeanchor.com<br />

Throughout the past<br />

two weeks in The<br />

Glencoe Anchor,<br />

you’ve heard from candidates<br />

from the Glencoe<br />

Village Board, Glencoe<br />

District 35 School Board<br />

and the New Trier District<br />

203 School Board.<br />

There’s been a lot of<br />

information to read, but I<br />

hope you’ve been able to<br />

sift through it and learn<br />

more about your public<br />

officials. This marks our<br />

last pre-election 2019 issue<br />

before the polls on April 2.<br />

While we won’t have<br />

any more election stories<br />

via print, you can always<br />

turn to our social media<br />

pages (@GlencoeAnchor)<br />

and our site, glencoeanchor.com,<br />

to find the latest<br />

news and letters to the<br />

editor.<br />

During this grace period<br />

before we publish our<br />

post-election stories, I<br />

urge you to finish reading<br />

about the candidates<br />

presented to you and come<br />

to the polls as an informed<br />

voter.<br />

On Election Day, tune<br />

into our socials and site to<br />

find up-to-date information<br />

as polls close, as well.<br />

I also found some<br />

helpful Election Day tips<br />

for you on the Village of<br />

Glencoe site:<br />

• Registered voters<br />

should note that there are<br />

multiple polling locations<br />

in Glencoe. Please confirm<br />

your polling location prior<br />

to election day.<br />

• The three polling<br />

places in Glencoe include:<br />

Am Shalom (840 Vernon<br />

Ave.), Central School (620<br />

Greenwood Ave.) and<br />

Watts Center (305 Randolph<br />

St.).<br />

• For full information<br />

about your voting district,<br />

early voting and elections,<br />

visit the Cook County<br />

Clerk’s Office website or<br />

call (312) 603-0906.<br />

• Polls will be open from<br />

6 a.m. until 7 p.m. on Election<br />

Day.<br />

For more information,<br />

visit www.villageofglencoe.org.<br />

Glencoe Community Garden posted this photo<br />

on March 14 with the caption: “Building our expansion<br />

ourselves and enjoying doing it! Excited<br />

our new fence is finished as well our 5 new<br />

accessible planters. Come join the fun contact@<br />

glencoecommunitygarden.com”<br />

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

“#ThrowbackThursday to an earlier time on the<br />

police force. Any car, automotive or police car enthusiasts<br />

out there that can identify our squad cars<br />

for us?!?! #GlencoePoliceFireEms #Glencoe150”<br />

@GlencoePS, Glencoe Public Safety, posted<br />

March 14<br />

Follow The Glencoe Anchor: @GlencoeAnchor<br />

go figure<br />

25<br />

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

How many years the New Trier<br />

Winter Carnival has been held<br />

to raise money for Habitat for<br />

Humanity. (Page 4)<br />

history<br />

From Page 12<br />

with her mother and her<br />

grandmother at the home<br />

she inherited from Allen.<br />

Apparently comfortable<br />

with her newfound wealth,<br />

Fuller listed her occupation<br />

in the census as<br />

“Capitalist.”<br />

Records indicate that<br />

Fuller served on the<br />

School Board during this<br />

time and later moved<br />

to Ypsilanti, Mich. to<br />

become first an instructor<br />

divvy<br />

From Page 6<br />

glamour may fulfill some<br />

clients’ wish lists, Erb always<br />

talks about functionality<br />

with her clients.<br />

“I firmly believe the design<br />

should reflect the client’s<br />

personality and that<br />

it should be functional,”<br />

Erb said. “People want to<br />

come home to a space that<br />

is not only beautiful, but<br />

that is practical; a place<br />

in Domestic Science (later<br />

known as Home Economics)<br />

and then Dean of<br />

Women at what is now<br />

Eastern Michigan University.<br />

The 1910 yearbook at<br />

the college was dedicated<br />

to Fuller and provides the<br />

first known photo of her.<br />

Did capitalist Fuller<br />

ever build the house<br />

that Frank Lloyd Wright<br />

designed for her in 1906?<br />

Records indicate that her<br />

mother and grandmother<br />

initially remained in<br />

Glencoe when Grace was<br />

that can be used with ease<br />

and comfort.”<br />

Because Erb’s business<br />

has been going strong for<br />

so long, she considers Divvy<br />

to be a one-stop-shop.<br />

She has relationships with<br />

contractors, architects and<br />

others who collaborate on<br />

projects. Above all, Erb<br />

said she derives joy from<br />

putting a smile on a client’s<br />

face with a completed<br />

project that meets their<br />

needs from top to bottom.<br />

teaching in Michigan.<br />

Did she build the house<br />

for them? If it was built,<br />

where was it located?<br />

When and why was it<br />

demolished?<br />

GHS continues to look<br />

for clues and welcomes<br />

any ideas or information<br />

our enterprising residents<br />

may have to help definitely<br />

resolve these questions,<br />

but for now, these details<br />

from the life of a remarkable<br />

Glencoe woman<br />

remain a mystery.<br />

Glencoe: Yesterday and<br />

“I look at a project as<br />

a puzzle and think, ‘OK,<br />

how do I put all these pieces<br />

together?’” Erb said.<br />

“There is no better feeling<br />

than knowing I am able<br />

to make those pieces become<br />

a picture that reflects<br />

exactly what the client<br />

was hoping to see. When<br />

someone says, ‘I’m so<br />

happy, this is exactly what<br />

I wanted,’ I’m overjoyed.”<br />

For more information,<br />

visit www.divvyhouse.com.<br />

Today is a biweekly column<br />

submitted by the Glencoe<br />

Historical Society. Go to<br />

www.glencoehistory.org or<br />

www.glencoe150.org.<br />

The Glencoe<br />

Anchor<br />

Sound Off Policy<br />

Editorials and columns are<br />

the opinions of the author.<br />

Pieces from 22nd Century<br />

Media are the thoughts of<br />

the company as a whole. The<br />

Glencoe Anchor encourages<br />

readers to write letters<br />

to Sound Off. All letters<br />

must be signed, and names<br />

and hometowns will be<br />

published. We also ask that<br />

writers include their address<br />

and phone number for<br />

verification, not publication.<br />

Letters should be limited<br />

to 400 words. The Glencoe<br />

Anchor reserves the right to<br />

edit letters. Letters become<br />

property of The Glencoe<br />

Anchor. Letters that are<br />

published do not reflect the<br />

thoughts and views of The<br />

Glencoe Anchor. Letters can<br />

be mailed to: The Glencoe<br />

Anchor, 60 Revere Drive ST<br />

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

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

4648 or email to megan@<br />

glencoeanchor.com.<br />

www.glencoeanchor.com


16 | March 21, 2019 | The glencoe anchor Glencoe<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

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NEW LISTING |OPEN SUNDAY 2-4PM<br />

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608 EARLSON ROAD,KENILWORTH |$1,195,000<br />

Versatile home. Perfect for entertaining. Spacious yardwith<br />

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The property information herein is derived from various sources that may include,but not be limited to,county records and the Multiple Listing Service,and it may include approximations.Although the information is believed to be accurate,itisnot warranted and you should not rely upon it without personal verification. Real estate agents affiliated<br />

with Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage are independent contractor agents and are not employees of the Company.©2019 Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage.All Rights Reserved. Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage fully supports the principles of the Fair Housing Act and the Equal Opportunity Act. Owned by asubsidiaryofNRT LLC.<br />

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


the glencoe anchor | March 21, 2019 | glencoeanchor.com<br />

Second location<br />

Tacos Guanajuato is a spin-off<br />

of Glencoe restaurant, Page 22<br />

A pizza history<br />

Il Forno Pizzeria stands the test of time<br />

in Highland Park, Page 23<br />

Glencoe Park District launches its first-ever Youth Art Show, Page 19<br />

Glencoe resident Sarna<br />

Goldenberg (left) stands<br />

with her daughter Nora,<br />

9, while looking at<br />

her ceramic cupcake<br />

Friday, March 15, at<br />

the Youth Art Show at<br />

the Takiff Center. Gerri<br />

Fernandez/22nd Century<br />

Media


18 | March 21, 2019 | The glencoe anchor puzzles<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

north shore puzzler CROSSWORD & Sudoku<br />

Glencoe, Glenview, Highland Park, Highwood, Northbrook, Wilmette, Kenilworth, Winnetka, Northfield, Lake Forest and Lake Bluff<br />

Crossword by Myles Mellor and Cindy LaFleur<br />

Across<br />

1. Nil<br />

5. First or neutral<br />

9. Litmus reddener<br />

13. Pink-slips<br />

14. Terrible<br />

16. Scarce<br />

17. “___, vidi, vici”<br />

18. Switzerland’s capital<br />

19. Family<br />

20. Betwixt<br />

21. “The Marvelous<br />

Mrs. Maisel” star who<br />

was raised in Highland<br />

Park, Rachel ___<br />

23. Son of Mary Stuart<br />

25. Third word in<br />

“America”<br />

26. Badly, at first<br />

28. Come-___ (inducements)<br />

29. Units of force<br />

32. Club with maps<br />

33. Collectibles<br />

34. Sea eagle<br />

35. Rock that stands out<br />

37. Compass point<br />

38. Rental car agency<br />

39. Jolly good fellow<br />

40. Existing: Lat.<br />

42. Pops<br />

43. Put off indefinitely<br />

45. German pronoun<br />

48. ___- fi<br />

49. “Hanging __ __ star”<br />

1978 film<br />

50. One of the most successful<br />

protesters of 20th<br />

century politics<br />

52. Northbrook’s<br />

Unger family house<br />

is renowned for their<br />

eerie displays for this<br />

56. Paddles<br />

57. “Lovely” Beatles girl<br />

58. Three-time Masters<br />

winner<br />

59. Not that<br />

60. Get ___ the ground<br />

floor<br />

61. Genius<br />

62. Wine choice<br />

63. Meanie<br />

64. Joint with a cap<br />

65. Cornerstone abbr.<br />

Down<br />

1. Hogan dweller<br />

2. Feller<br />

3. Casual wear<br />

4. Parenthetical<br />

comment<br />

5. More garrulous<br />

6. The America’s<br />

Cup trophy, e.g.<br />

7. Hendrix hairdo<br />

8. Deteriorates<br />

9. St. Louis attraction<br />

10. Squid<br />

11. Tabriz residents<br />

12. Hideout<br />

15. Reds’ revolutionary<br />

22. Jennet<br />

24. Tucked in<br />

27. Freelancer’s<br />

enclosure<br />

30. Triumph easily<br />

31. Metric unit<br />

33. Top<br />

34. First lady<br />

35. “I’m about to<br />

get paid!”<br />

36. Engine cooler<br />

38. On the water<br />

39. D.J.’s stack<br />

41. Italian title<br />

43. Mexican sun<br />

44. Go ___ the<br />

deep end<br />

45. Some potatoes<br />

46. New Testament<br />

Messiah<br />

47. Showed contempt<br />

51. ___ Dame<br />

53. Highway division<br />

54. Enthusiasm<br />

55. Real estate<br />

agent on “Desperate<br />

Housewives”<br />

57. Brazilian city,<br />

familiarly<br />

GLENCOE<br />

Chicago Botanic Garden<br />

(1000 Lake Cook Road)<br />

■10 ■ a.m.-4 p.m. running<br />

until March 24:<br />

In the Tropics: The<br />

Orchid Show<br />

Writers Theatre<br />

(325 Tudor Court)<br />

■7:30 ■ p.m. Friday,<br />

March 22: “A Number”<br />

WINNETKA<br />

Avli Restaurant<br />

(566 Chestnut St.)<br />

■7 ■ p.m. Tuesday, April<br />

2: The Winnetka Comedy<br />

Series at Avli<br />

WILMETTE<br />

The Rock House<br />

(1150 Central Ave.,<br />

(847) 256-7625)<br />

■6-9 ■ p.m. Friday,<br />

March 22: Family<br />

Karaoke Night<br />

Wilmette Bowling Center<br />

(1901 Schiller<br />

Ave.,(847) 251-0705)<br />

■11 ■ a.m.-9 p.m. (10<br />

p.m. on Friday, Saturday):<br />

Glow bowling<br />

and pizza all week<br />

long<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 />

GLENVIEW<br />

Johnny’s Kitchen<br />

(1740 Milwaukee Ave.<br />

(847) 699-9999)<br />

■7:30 ■ p.m. every Friday<br />

and Saturday: Live<br />

Music<br />

The Rock House<br />

(1742 Glenview Road<br />

(224) 616-3062)<br />

■5 ■ p.m. Friday, March<br />

22: Family Night and<br />

Karaoke<br />

■8 ■ p.m. Saturday,<br />

March 23: Trent<br />

Snyder<br />

Ten Ninety Brewing Co.<br />

(1025 N. Waukegan<br />

Road, (224) 432-5472)<br />

■7-9 ■ p.m. every Thursday:<br />

Trivia Night<br />

To place an event in The<br />

Scene, email martin@<br />

northbrooktower.com.<br />

answers<br />

How to play Sudoku<br />

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

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

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

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

1 to 9.<br />

LEVEL: Medium<br />

Crossword by Myles Mellor and Susan Flanagan


glencoeanchor.com life & arts<br />

the glencoe anchor | March 21, 2019 | 19<br />

Inaugural Glencoe Youth Art Show exhibits 75 artists<br />

Hilary Anderson<br />

Freelance Reporter<br />

Creativity, ingenuity and<br />

artistic talent were widely<br />

apparent at the Glencoe<br />

Park District’s first Youth<br />

Art Show held last Friday,<br />

March 15, at the Takiff<br />

Center.<br />

It was an exhibition of<br />

Glencoe students’ work<br />

from kindergarten through<br />

high school, who attend the<br />

park district’s arts classes.<br />

More than 75 artistic<br />

paintings, drawings and<br />

crafts were on display in<br />

the center’s lower lobby<br />

and a wide variety of amazing<br />

sculptures and functional<br />

creations in the two<br />

ceramics rooms.<br />

About 160 parents, relatives,<br />

friends and Glencoe<br />

neighbors came for the<br />

event.<br />

This was not an ordinary<br />

art show. It could easily<br />

have competed with many<br />

adult galleries.<br />

Two Glencoe neighbors<br />

came shortly before it<br />

closed because they heard<br />

from yet another neighbor<br />

the Youth Art Show was<br />

a must-see to believe the<br />

quality of the works on exhibition.<br />

“How did you do that?”<br />

was among the many comments<br />

heard. “Amazing,”<br />

was another. “You did that<br />

all by yourself?” asked yet<br />

another grandparent.<br />

“I am so proud of you,”<br />

parents were heard saying.<br />

Some students had more<br />

than one item in the exhibition.<br />

Many had additional<br />

crafts but space limited<br />

placing all their creative<br />

treasures in the show.<br />

Talented and experienced<br />

teachers guided the<br />

young artists: Kim Bloomberg<br />

— Crafts with Kim;<br />

Carole Pearlman — After<br />

School Art Club; and<br />

Natalie Steinmetz and Ana<br />

Spencer — Ceramics.<br />

A series of clay plates<br />

decorated the back wall<br />

of the lower lobby. They<br />

were anything but ordinary.<br />

Their designs, color and<br />

unique approaches could<br />

only be fully appreciated<br />

in person.<br />

New Trier freshman Hailey<br />

Steinback titled one of<br />

her’s, “Mountain Range.”<br />

It seemed incomprehensible<br />

that a wet ball of clay<br />

could become what she had<br />

created but it is understandable<br />

why she now is one of<br />

Steinmetz’s studio assistants.<br />

“I have been taking<br />

classes here at Takiff since<br />

I was in third grade,” Steinback<br />

said. “I love doing<br />

this.”<br />

On the other end of the<br />

age spectrum was Hayes<br />

Levovic, 6, who titled his<br />

plate, “The Fire,” which<br />

had little hearts surrounding<br />

a figure.<br />

“I love everyone in<br />

my family,” Levoic said.<br />

“Those little hearts are my<br />

family.”<br />

Audra Sahn, 10, proudly<br />

showed her crafts that were<br />

standing on a shelf inside a<br />

glass cabinet.<br />

One was a creatively designed<br />

snowman.<br />

“I took an old sock,<br />

filled it with rice, put on a<br />

hat and scarf using things<br />

from around my house and<br />

then put the eyes, nose and<br />

mouth on him,” she said.<br />

“Then I used feathers for<br />

his arms.”<br />

Also on display was Ana<br />

Styles lunch bag made entirely<br />

of colorful duct tape.<br />

Hanging overhead were<br />

what looked like Chinese<br />

lanterns.<br />

“Students took large<br />

balls, dipped string into wet<br />

glue and then put the string<br />

around each ball. Once the<br />

glue dried, they deflated the<br />

balls and we have colorful<br />

lanterns,” teacher Kim<br />

Bloomberg said.<br />

On a wall perpendicular<br />

to the plates and crafts<br />

were paintings and drawings<br />

made by youngsters in<br />

the After School Drawing<br />

Club.<br />

Ryan Wu did a pen drawing<br />

that unless told otherwise<br />

was so good it seemed<br />

an experienced adult artist<br />

drew it.<br />

Nearby was Maya<br />

Ponce’s colorful springtime<br />

drawing of flowers in<br />

a vase.<br />

Visitors to the ceramic<br />

rooms were awestruck by<br />

Ilana Styles, 11, of Glencoe, puts her hand on the plate<br />

she made at the Glencoe Park District’s Youth Art<br />

Show opening Friday, March 15. Gerri Fernandez/22nd<br />

Century Media<br />

the many creative things<br />

they saw there — some<br />

sculptures, other functional<br />

ones.<br />

Freshman student Vivienne<br />

Miller amazed everyone<br />

who saw her ceramic<br />

version of a miniature art<br />

studio — dollhouse size.<br />

There were cans of paint on<br />

a shelf, brushes and chairs.<br />

There was not one person<br />

who saw it who didn’t<br />

marvel at Miller’s creativity<br />

and abilities.<br />

“The art program at<br />

Takiff is growing and expanding,”<br />

Steinmetz said.<br />

THE SPRING<br />

“The kids love it. It seems<br />

to be an alternative to playing<br />

with electronics. Many<br />

high school kids tell us this<br />

place is a break from their<br />

rigorous academic programs.<br />

They say they come<br />

here to relax and create<br />

things.”<br />

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20 | March 21, 2019 | The glencoe anchor FAITH<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

Faith briefs<br />

North Shore Congregation Israel (1185 Sheridan<br />

Road, Glencoe)<br />

Beyond Borders: The History of<br />

the Israeli-Arab Conflict<br />

This discussion-based class<br />

will challenge everything you<br />

thought you knew or believed<br />

about this complex conflict, using<br />

materials representing many<br />

different points of view from the<br />

19th century through today. This<br />

is a Florence Melton School of<br />

Adult Learning class. To register<br />

contact rolly@bjechicago.org.<br />

The class goes from 10-11:30<br />

a.m. March 21, 28, April 4, 11<br />

and 18, and May 2, 9, 16 and 23.<br />

Coffee, Bagels & Prayer<br />

Come enjoy coffee & bagels<br />

and learn about the parts and<br />

pieces of the Shabbat morning<br />

service and their deeper meaning.<br />

Together with Rabbi Daniels,<br />

we will explore original Hebrew<br />

texts and discuss the major<br />

themes of each prayer. The next<br />

sessions will be from 11:15 a.m.-<br />

12:15 p.m. Saturday, March 23<br />

and April 6.<br />

North Shore Alateen<br />

Worried about someone’s<br />

drinking? You are not alone.<br />

NSCI hosts meetings from 7-8<br />

p.m. on Mondays for teens ages<br />

12-19 whose life has been affected<br />

by someone else’s drinking.<br />

For more information on<br />

Alateen, visit www.niafg.org or<br />

call 312-409-7245<br />

Adult Jewish Learning<br />

The Melton Core class provides<br />

a high-quality, meaningful<br />

adult Jewish learning opportunity.<br />

This class is held at the Board<br />

of Jewish Education Campus<br />

for Jewish Learning, Northbrook<br />

from 7-9:15 on Tuesdays<br />

through April 2019. To register<br />

contact Rolly Cohen at rolly@<br />

bjechicago.org.<br />

Holy Chanters<br />

In this class you will learn to<br />

chant Torah and Haftarah with<br />

traditional cantillation. This<br />

year’s class begins with Torah<br />

cantillation in the fall and moves<br />

to Haftarah in the spring. A basic<br />

knowledge of Hebrew is helpful.<br />

Classes run from 6-7 p.m. Monday<br />

April 1, 8 and 29.<br />

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

An American in Paris<br />

Join Cantor Staple, and friends<br />

from Am Shalom, for An American<br />

in Paris. Experience this<br />

classic movie musical as you<br />

never have before on the big<br />

screen with the timeless music<br />

of George Gershwin performed<br />

by the Chicago Symphony Orchestra.<br />

This showing is from<br />

3-6 p.m. Sunday, March 24.<br />

Pack & Deliver Shabbat Bags<br />

Make a difference for your fellow<br />

congregants! One Friday a<br />

month, we deliver Shabbat bags<br />

to congregants who have been ill<br />

or lost a loved one. To receive<br />

email reminders about Shabbat<br />

Bag Packing days, or to sign<br />

up, contact Laurie Levin at laurielevin@gmail.com.<br />

The next<br />

packing days will be from 9-9:30<br />

a.m. Friday, April 5 and May 10.<br />

Share the Care<br />

All ages are welcome for this<br />

mitzvah opportunity. Spend the<br />

hour getting to know the residents<br />

of Brookdale Northbrook.<br />

Play games, listen to music, create<br />

crafts and more. The next<br />

events are from 1:30-2:30 p.m.<br />

Sunday, April 14 and May 19.<br />

Yoga with Claudia<br />

Join Am Shalom for Yoga with<br />

Claudia from noon-1:30 p.m. on<br />

Thursdays.<br />

“Almost Daily” Minyan<br />

The “Almost Daily” Minyan<br />

takes place at 5:45 p.m. on<br />

Mondays and Thursdays during<br />

the school months, and runs for<br />

approximately 15 minutes. This<br />

quiet and intimate service, held<br />

in the serene worship space of<br />

the Rosenfield Chapel, is the<br />

perfect setting to remember a<br />

Yahrzeit, to pray for healing,<br />

and to calm and refresh your<br />

soul.<br />

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

Ave.)<br />

Maundy Thursday<br />

On Maundy Thursday, April<br />

18, the Lay Readers are hosting<br />

an informal Agape (love) Supper<br />

in the Dining Room. This recalls<br />

Jesus’ last meal with his friends<br />

and appeals to all ages. Children<br />

will find the food to be friendly<br />

and the symbols accessible. The<br />

supper starts at 6:30 p.m.<br />

LGBTQ Meeting<br />

The LGBTQ team invites anyone<br />

who is interested to join at<br />

the next meeting at 6:30 p.m.<br />

on Wednesday, March 27, at<br />

church. Among other things, we<br />

are planning a day of service at<br />

the Center on Halsted plus a concert<br />

featuring LGBTQ themes<br />

and performers. Come help us<br />

plan our special events for the<br />

coming year.<br />

North Shore United Methodist Church (213<br />

Hazel Ave)<br />

Family Promise<br />

North Shore United Methodist<br />

Church regularly provides overnight<br />

accommodations, meals,<br />

and companionship to families<br />

with young children who are<br />

homeless, or at risk for becoming<br />

homeless. Volunteers are needed<br />

to provide food, dine and spend<br />

the evening with our guests, or<br />

serve as overnight hosts.<br />

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

4th Tuesday Volunteering Day at<br />

a Just Harvest<br />

Every fourth Tuesday of each<br />

month, our church donates food<br />

for suppers at A Just Harvest<br />

https://ajustharvest.org/ in Rogers<br />

Park and members of our<br />

congregation volunteer to serve<br />

the meal to homeless families<br />

and individuals. Contact Colin<br />

at colin@glencoeunionchurch.<br />

org to be part of this giving opportunity.<br />

Gentle Yoga<br />

Join the church from 9-10 a.m.<br />

every Monday and Wednesday<br />

for yoga.<br />

Submit information to<br />

m.wojtychiw@22ndcenturymedia.<br />

com.<br />

In Memoriam<br />

Marguerite Remien<br />

Remien Cleary McNulty Remien,<br />

101, of Glencoe, died<br />

March 7 at her residence. Remien<br />

was the beloved wife of<br />

the late C. Jack Remien and Lt.<br />

James J. McNulty, Jr., USN;<br />

loving mother of Patrick (Betsy<br />

Collins) McNulty; cherished<br />

step-mother of Carol (Larry)<br />

Hunsicker and the late C. Jack<br />

(Eunice) Remien, Jr.; dearest<br />

grandmother of Devin (Jennifer<br />

Thaler) and Brennan McNulty;<br />

fond sister of Dorothy A. (the<br />

late Lathrop) Hoffman, James<br />

M. (Ann) Cleary, Jr., Michael<br />

(Laura) Cleary, the late Mary<br />

Evelyn (the late Bill) Sundlof<br />

and the late Jeanne (the late<br />

Mick) Goessling. As her father<br />

was asked to take different executive<br />

positions in different cities,<br />

Remien moved frequently in<br />

her youth, attending seven different<br />

high schools. She was one<br />

of the few to attend St. Mary’s<br />

in Indiana both for grade school<br />

and in college, but she graduated<br />

with a degree in journalism from<br />

Northwestern University. An<br />

editor at the Chicago Journal of<br />

Commerce then assured her that<br />

he wouldn’t hold that against her<br />

and hired her. Remien initially<br />

encountered Jim McNulty, her<br />

first husband, in second grade at<br />

Sacred Heart School in Hubbard<br />

Woods. With changing school<br />

enrollments, they did not meet<br />

again until senior year at New<br />

Trier High School, where they<br />

eyed each other warily across<br />

the corridor. Their first actual<br />

friendship was spawned later,<br />

when they accompanied their<br />

respective parents to a book discussion<br />

group. By the time they<br />

finally married, Jim was a Navy<br />

pilot. About 10 days after the<br />

birth of their son, he was lost at<br />

sea in the Aleutian Islands. Her<br />

second husband, Jack Remien,<br />

was a wonderfully kind and patient<br />

man. After “courting” Remien<br />

for over 10 years, she finally<br />

agreed to marry him in time<br />

for the “Parent’s Weekend” of<br />

her son, then a sophomore in college.<br />

They lived happily together<br />

for 27 years until Jack’s passing<br />

in 1990. Remien remained<br />

for her final twenty-eight years<br />

in the same house in Glencoe,<br />

welcoming several hundreds of<br />

friends and family to stay on visits.<br />

She remained there until her<br />

death, as she was determined to<br />

do. Friends and family were the<br />

most important thing to Remien,<br />

and friends were typically promoted<br />

to family whenever she<br />

could find a plausible connection.<br />

Other things Remien loved<br />

were music and books. For music,<br />

she sang in the church choir<br />

at Sts. Faith, Hope, and Charity<br />

parish until she was 97. (She<br />

drove herself to rehearsals, the<br />

State of Illinois finally declining<br />

to renew her driver’s license at<br />

the age of 99.) For reading and<br />

writing, she was an enthusiastic<br />

member of the Winnetka Fortnightly,<br />

where she could listen<br />

to the writing of others and<br />

read her own writing in her turn.<br />

Predictably, her writings were<br />

usually entertaining anecdotes<br />

about friends and family. For<br />

many years she wrote and edited<br />

the annual Appeal for Funds<br />

for St. Vincent’s Orphanage in<br />

Chicago, as a volunteer. A Memorial<br />

Gathering and Memorial<br />

Mass was held Tuesday, March<br />

19 at Sts. Faith, Hope & Charity<br />

Catholic Church, 191 Linden<br />

St., Winnetka. In lieu of flowers,<br />

contributions may be made to<br />

Saint Mary’s College Development<br />

Office, 110 Le Mans Hall,<br />

Notre Dame, IN 46556.<br />

Have someone’s life you’d like to<br />

honor? Email Michael Wojtychiw at<br />

m.wojtychiw@22ndcenturymedia.<br />

com with information about a loved<br />

one who was part of the Glencoe<br />

community.


glencoeanchor.com glencoe<br />

the glencoe anchor | March 21, 2019 | 21<br />

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with elegant woodwork. The wide limestone foyer and hallways allow grand entryways to every room of the home including an arched entry into the stunning<br />

great room with coffered barrel ceiling and a limestone fireplace flanked by French doors leading to the blue stone patio. Top-of-the-line white kitchen with large<br />

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master bedroom with fireplace, separate exercise room/office/nursery, spa-like bathroom with separate tub room, and a massive organized walk-in closet. First<br />

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

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

contractor agents and are not employees of the Company.©2019 Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage. All Rights Reserved. Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage fully supports the principles of the Fair<br />

Housing Act and the Equal Opportunity Act. Owned by a subsidiary of NRT LLC. Coldwell Banker and the Coldwell Banker Logo are registered service marks owned by Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC.<br />

THE ANNE ADVANTAGE TEAM


22 | March 21, 2019 | The glencoe anchor life & arts<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

Guanajuato opens second eatery<br />

Megan Bernard, Editor<br />

After 11 successful years in the<br />

Village of Glencoe, Guanajuato<br />

Contemporary Mexican and Tequila<br />

Bar is spreading its wings.<br />

The restaurant opened up a second<br />

location this February in Kildeer<br />

in the northwest suburbs, offering<br />

a scaled back menu focusing<br />

on tacos, its owner Margarita Challenger<br />

said.<br />

“We love what we do and we love<br />

our customers in Glencoe,” Challenger<br />

said. “People tell me that<br />

if you make it in the North Shore,<br />

you’re good; plus, we’ve never had<br />

a bad experience here. So, we’re<br />

extremely grateful to keep doing<br />

this in the same business.”<br />

The second location, Tacos Guanajuato,<br />

took about three months to<br />

open at 20771 North Rand Road,<br />

Kildeer, and “it has been a seamless<br />

transition,” Challenger added.<br />

“We have been talking and thinking<br />

about this for a long time,” she<br />

said. “Duplicating what [Guanajuato]<br />

is was never going to happen.<br />

We thought about just doing tacos<br />

because there’s not a lot of places<br />

that reflect real Mexican street<br />

Anne Loucks Gallery to exhibit ‘Silent Shores’<br />

Submitted by Anne Loucks Gallery<br />

Anne Loucks Gallery is pleased<br />

to announce the opening of “Victoria<br />

Adams and Leslie Wu: Moment<br />

In Time,” an exhibition of 25 of the<br />

artists’ recent landscape paintings.<br />

The show will open April 5 and<br />

run through June 15 at 309 Park<br />

Ave., Glencoe. Both artists will be<br />

present at the opening reception<br />

from 5-7 p.m. April 5.<br />

Victoria Adams paintings are inspired<br />

by the panoramic vistas and<br />

reflective waters that surround her<br />

Pacific Northwest studio, as well<br />

as the traditions of the American<br />

Luminist and Hudson River School<br />

painters. Her ethereal landscapes<br />

include grand views, sweeping<br />

horizons and dramatic skies which<br />

combine to present the viewer with<br />

Guanajuato Contemporary<br />

Mexican and Tequila Bar opened<br />

a second location, Tacos<br />

Guanajuato, in Kildeer, where it<br />

makes fresh tortillas for traditional<br />

tacos. Photo Submitted<br />

food. So we’re doing just that with<br />

more of a modern take on it.”<br />

Two experienced chefs lead the<br />

kitchen at Tacos Guanajuato — or<br />

“Baby G,” as Challenger calls it.<br />

Challenger herself is taking more<br />

of an ownership/management role,<br />

leaving the kitchen.<br />

At Tacos Guanajuato, there is a<br />

“nice selection” of tacos, she said,<br />

an almost dreamlike connection to<br />

the natural world.<br />

Leslie Wu’s work explores the<br />

emotional response to place, as<br />

gleaned from memory, experience<br />

and observation. Her paintings reflect<br />

a combination of places and<br />

elements from the natural world, filtered<br />

through memory, experience<br />

and identity. With glistening waters,<br />

misty atmospheric light, and nostalgic<br />

figures, her compositions suggest<br />

the passing of time, influence of generations,<br />

and a distinct sense of place.<br />

Anne Loucks Gallery specializes<br />

in contemporary American painting,<br />

sculpture and works on paper.<br />

The gallery is located at the corner<br />

of Green Bay Road and Park<br />

Avenue in Glencoe. Gallery hours<br />

are from 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Tuesday-<br />

Saturday.<br />

ranging from steak and chicken to<br />

fish and vegetarian.<br />

“We also brought a machine there<br />

from Mexico to make the tortillas,”<br />

Challenger said. “They are freshly<br />

made. That’s the whole idea so our<br />

tacos are made traditionally starting<br />

with the corn tortilla.<br />

“It’s a fresh take on tacos and<br />

street food, making it fresher all<br />

around. It’s a place you want to be<br />

seen and eat food.”<br />

The restaurant also serves burritos<br />

and quesadillas, plus sides,<br />

soups and margaritas.<br />

The physical space has the same<br />

type of aesthetic as Glencoe’s Guanajuato<br />

with bright, festive wall<br />

colors and decor.<br />

Looking forward, Challenger<br />

said they will have Taco Tuesday<br />

specials and will be planning something<br />

for Cinco de Mayo at Tacos<br />

Guanajuato. In Glencoe, they currently<br />

have a celebration for Day of<br />

the Dead.<br />

For more information, visit<br />

tacosg.com or call (847) 847-1056.<br />

Tacos Guanajuato is open for lunch<br />

and dinner from 11 a.m.-9 p.m.<br />

Monday-Saturday. It is closed Sunday.<br />

Victoria Adams’ artwork called<br />

“Eastern Shore.” Photos Submitted<br />

Writers Theatre announces<br />

new season’s show lineup<br />

Submitted by Writers<br />

Theatre<br />

Writers Theatre Artistic<br />

Director Michael Halberstam<br />

and Executive Director<br />

Kathryn M. Lipuma<br />

announce the company’s<br />

2019/20 six play season,<br />

opening with “Into the<br />

Woods,” with music and lyrics<br />

by Stephen Sondheim,<br />

book by James Lapine, and<br />

directed by Gary Griffin in<br />

the Alexandra C. and John<br />

D. Nichols Theatre.<br />

The season will continue<br />

with “The Niceties,” written<br />

by Eleanor Burgess and directed<br />

by Marti Lyons; Lydia<br />

R. Diamond’s “Stick Fly,”<br />

directed by Ron OJ Parson;<br />

and “Mementos Mori,” created<br />

by Manual Cinema. A<br />

new adaptation of Henrik<br />

Ibsen’s “A Doll’s House,”<br />

adapted by Sandra Delgado<br />

and Michael Halberstam<br />

and directed by Lavina Jadhwani,<br />

will open the season<br />

in the Gillian Theatre, followed<br />

by Anna Ziegler’s<br />

“The Last Match,” directed<br />

by Keira Fromm.<br />

The 2019/20 Season<br />

marks the fourth full season<br />

in the company’s awardwinning<br />

new home at 325<br />

Tudor Court in Glencoe, designed<br />

by Studio Gang Architects.<br />

Productions will be<br />

presented in two spaces in<br />

the theater complex including<br />

the 255-seat Alexandra<br />

C. and John D. Nichols Theatre,<br />

as well as the Gillian<br />

Theatre, a 50 to 99-seat flexible<br />

theatre space.<br />

From its very first year,<br />

Writers Theatre has brought<br />

quality and excellence to the<br />

stage while maintaining the<br />

company’s hallmark intimacy.<br />

The last 27 years have<br />

seen unprecedented growth<br />

in both the artistic and business<br />

arenas as the company<br />

has garnered national<br />

acclaim and recognition,<br />

marked by the celebrated<br />

opening of the theater’s new<br />

facility in February of 2016.<br />

With a longstanding reputation<br />

for consistent artistic excellence<br />

and with strong ties<br />

to the community, the theater<br />

has built an award-winning<br />

repertoire and serves as a<br />

vital and highly regarded<br />

company in the Chicagoland<br />

theatre community.<br />

“We are delighted to present<br />

to you the 2019/20 lineup<br />

for Writers Theatre,” Artistic<br />

Director Michael Halberstam<br />

said. “With a refreshing<br />

mix of revitalized classics<br />

and exciting new voices, we<br />

have compiled a season that<br />

captures the essential conversations<br />

we are having as a<br />

nation right now. Art has the<br />

primary function of holding<br />

the mirror up to nature but,<br />

in doing so, it must also entertain<br />

and engage. The messages<br />

we share with you this<br />

coming season are essential<br />

and necessary. But they will<br />

arrive skillfully and delightfully<br />

crafted to draw you into<br />

worlds of theatrical magic<br />

that encourage you to think<br />

about the world with nuance,<br />

empathy and, perhaps most<br />

importantly, imagination. In<br />

other words, we have compiled<br />

six must-see productions<br />

and have invited the<br />

Chicago area’s most exciting<br />

storytellers to bring them to<br />

thrilling and sophisticated<br />

life.”<br />

Season packages are<br />

available at the Box Office,<br />

325 Tudor Court, Glencoe,<br />

(847) 242-6000 and www.<br />

writerstheatre.org.<br />

Writers Theatre is pleased<br />

to welcome back BMO Harris<br />

Bank as the distinguished<br />

2019/20 Season Sponsor,<br />

marking the Bank’s ninth<br />

consecutive year as season<br />

sponsor.


glencoeanchor.com dining out<br />

the glencoe anchor | March 21, 2019 | 23<br />

Pizzeria’s Italian history keeps restaurant around for generations<br />

Alyssa Groh<br />

Contributing Editor<br />

Il Forno Pizzeria in<br />

Highland Park has a rich<br />

history spanning generations,<br />

which has in part,<br />

kept it in business despite<br />

the “changing dynamic in<br />

the pizza business,” according<br />

to owner Mike Rudolph.<br />

Il Forno, meaning “the<br />

oven” in Italian, was a<br />

concept created in 1953 by<br />

Bruno Pupolo, who wanted<br />

to bring a relatively new<br />

concept to Chicago, according<br />

to Il Forno’s website.<br />

Pupolo combined his<br />

family’s pizza sauce recipe,<br />

fresh ingredients, homemade<br />

dough and pizza<br />

sausage with the idea of<br />

offering a place in Chicago<br />

where families could sit<br />

down, listen to music and<br />

eat pizza.<br />

Later that year, Bruno’s<br />

son-in-law Lou Bonelli and<br />

his mother-in-law Phyllis<br />

Tancredi, purchased Il<br />

Forno in Chicago’s West<br />

Rogers Park neighborhood.<br />

Within a few years, a few<br />

more locations opened in<br />

Highland Park, Wilmette,<br />

Skokie and Morton Grove.<br />

Rudolph began working<br />

at the Highland Park location<br />

in 1972, and soon after<br />

purchased the location in<br />

1985 to support his growing<br />

family.<br />

To stay true to its rich<br />

history, Rudolph said he<br />

didn’t change much when<br />

he took over.<br />

“The recipes were passed<br />

on through the ages and we<br />

stuck with it,” Rudolph<br />

said. “Italian’s don’t measure<br />

with cups, they measure<br />

with their hands — a<br />

little bit of this, a little bit<br />

of that.”<br />

Since Il Forno opened<br />

in 1953, Rudolph said the<br />

opening of a variety of<br />

chain pizza places changed<br />

The Antipasto Bolognese salad ($6.95) features<br />

three meats, two cheeses, lettuce, onion olive and<br />

pepperoncini.<br />

For those seeking a classic alternative to pizza, Il Forno<br />

also offers burger options.<br />

Il Forno’s thin-crust sausage and pepperoni pizza ($11.35) is one of the many<br />

fan-favorite pizza options at the longtime community eatery. Photos by Martin<br />

Carlino/22nd Century Media<br />

Il Forno’s Italian beef sandwich ($6.95) is served with a choice of sweet or hot<br />

peppers — or a mixture of both.<br />

the dynamic of the pizza<br />

business, which has been<br />

a bit challenging. But, to<br />

overcome that challenge,<br />

Il Forno has stuck to its<br />

roots and remained the<br />

“mom-and-pop shop” that<br />

it is, offering fresh, quality<br />

ingredients, according to<br />

Rudolph.<br />

Il Forno prides itself on<br />

always using fresh mozzarella<br />

cheese for its pizzas,<br />

fresh veggies and meat. Il<br />

Forno doesn’t stop at pizzas,<br />

it also offers a variety<br />

of other menu items and<br />

make its own meatballs and<br />

lasagna.<br />

22nd Century Media editors<br />

stopped in to try some<br />

of the signature items at Il<br />

Forno Pizzeria.<br />

We dove right into two<br />

pizzas, eager to try the<br />

signature pizza sauce. We<br />

indulged in a medium thin-<br />

Il Forno Pizzeria<br />

496 Old Elm Rd.,<br />

Highland Park<br />

(847) 432-2440<br />

www.ilfornopizza.com<br />

11 a.m.-8 p.m.<br />

Monday-Tuesday<br />

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

Wednesday-Thursday<br />

11 a.m.-10 p.m. Friday-<br />

Saturday<br />

4 p.m.-8 p.m. Sunday<br />

crust cheese pizza ($11.35)<br />

and a medium thin-crust<br />

pizza topped with pepperoni<br />

and sausage ($14.85).<br />

We also tried Il Forno’s<br />

famous lasagna ($9.75),<br />

which is a great entree to<br />

share with another person<br />

or eat as a meal.<br />

Next up was the Italian<br />

beef sandwich ($6.95)<br />

loaded with sweet and hot<br />

peppers. We tried the Italian<br />

beef with a side of curly<br />

fries.<br />

Il Forno’s menu also offers<br />

a variety of burgers<br />

including its traditional<br />

cheese burger ($5.75).<br />

The cheese burger can be<br />

topped with a choice of<br />

American, cheddar, mozzarella<br />

or Swiss cheese. The<br />

burgers are topped with<br />

lettuce, tomato and pickles.<br />

Make it a deluxe burger<br />

and add fries and coleslaw.<br />

Finally, we tried out a<br />

healthier option, the Antipasto<br />

Bolognese salad<br />

($6.95) made with three<br />

meats, two cheeses, lettuce,<br />

onion olive and pepperoncini.<br />

Il Forno Pizzeria offers<br />

dine-in, delivery and carryout<br />

options for all of its<br />

menu items.<br />

What has kept Rudolph<br />

around all these years?<br />

The people.<br />

Working in a restaurant<br />

that has been around since<br />

the early 1950’s and has<br />

served generations, helped<br />

create a loyal following.<br />

Rudolph said he frequently<br />

has people come<br />

into the restaurant who are<br />

in their 90’s and tell him<br />

they “grew up on the pizza,”<br />

and are now there to<br />

share the experience with<br />

their grandchildren.<br />

“Hearing people come in<br />

and tell me they grew up on<br />

our pizza is heartwarming,”<br />

Rudolph said.


24 | March 21, 2019 | The glencoe anchor real estate<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

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a lift for 4th car and stairs down to lower level- no need to bring items in through<br />

the house! The floor to ceiling windows bring in the lush<br />

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in the surroundings. So conveniently located<br />

one can walk to town and the beach. THERE IS<br />

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Listing Agent:<br />

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cbexchange.com, 847-<br />

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Agents Brokerage:<br />

Coldwell Banker<br />

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

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


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the glencoe anchor | March 21, 2019 | 25<br />

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glencoeanchor.com SPORTS<br />

the glencoe anchor | March 21, 2019 | 27<br />

Athlete of the Week<br />

The Varsity: North Shore Podcast<br />

Guys hear from former Bear, preview hockey title games<br />

10 Questions<br />

22nd Century Media File Photo<br />

Staff Report<br />

In this week’s episode of The Varsity:<br />

North Shore, the only podcast focused<br />

on North Shore sports, hosts Michal<br />

Dwojak, Michael Wojtychiw and Nick<br />

Frazier recap the indoor track and field<br />

conference championships, hear from a<br />

former Chicago Bear and new Loyola<br />

athletics staffer Mark Carrier, play Way/<br />

No Way with football and preview the<br />

hockey boys and girls state championships.<br />

First Quarter<br />

The three recap the indoor track championships<br />

from the weekend.<br />

Second Quarter<br />

Find the varsity<br />

Twitter: @varsitypodcast<br />

Facebook: @thevarsitypodcast<br />

Website: GlencoeAnchor.com/sports<br />

Download: Soundcloud, iTunes,<br />

Stitcher, TuneIn, PlayerFM, more<br />

The guys hear from new Loyola athletics<br />

staffer Mark Carrier.<br />

Third Quarter<br />

With half a year to go, it’s perfect time<br />

to play Way/No Way with football.<br />

Fourth Quarter<br />

To finish things off, the guys preview<br />

the hockey state championship games.<br />

with Meghan Dwyer<br />

The New Trier senior<br />

goalie helped lead the<br />

Trevians to a runner-up<br />

finish at state last year.<br />

When and why did<br />

you start playing<br />

soccer?<br />

I started playing soccer<br />

when I was 5, I<br />

played AYSO and my<br />

dad coached us. I started<br />

playing because my older<br />

brother also played.<br />

Do you have any<br />

superstitions before,<br />

during or after a<br />

game?<br />

When we warm up we<br />

jog around our half of the<br />

field and I always have to<br />

jump and touch the crossbar<br />

when we pass it.<br />

What’s one thing<br />

people don’t know<br />

about you?<br />

I played hockey until<br />

last year.<br />

What’s one item on<br />

your bucket list?<br />

I want to bungee jump<br />

or sky dive.<br />

If you could travel<br />

anywhere, where<br />

would you go?<br />

I would want to go anywhere<br />

tropical that is out<br />

of the country. Fiji sounds<br />

really cool.<br />

If you had $3 at<br />

Walgreens, what<br />

would you buy?<br />

I would buy a blue Gatorade<br />

and Reese’s.<br />

What’s the best part<br />

about being a New<br />

Trier athlete?<br />

The best thing about<br />

being a New Trier athlete<br />

is that you get to be on a<br />

team with people who are<br />

younger and older than<br />

you which is really cool<br />

because you make relationships<br />

with people you<br />

wouldn’t normally hangout<br />

with.<br />

What’s the best advice<br />

you’ve gotten and<br />

who’s it from?<br />

The most important<br />

thing is how you get back<br />

up after falling down. My<br />

dad has always told me<br />

this.<br />

What’s been your<br />

favorite moment at<br />

New Trier?<br />

So far at New Trier, my<br />

favorite moment was definitely<br />

winning the state<br />

championship at the United<br />

Center for hockey last<br />

year.<br />

If you could have a<br />

superpower, what<br />

would it be and why?<br />

To be able to go back in<br />

time so I could fix my mistakes.<br />

Interview by Sports Editor<br />

Michael Wojtychiw


28 | March 21, 2019 | The glencoe anchor sports<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

Spartan FC excited to provide North Shore<br />

youth soccer ‘alternative’ experience<br />

Michal Dwojak<br />

Contributing Sports Editor<br />

Yianny Caparos and<br />

John Soltani want to give<br />

North Shore families a new<br />

opportunity when it comes<br />

to youth soccer.<br />

The two leaders of Northbrook’s<br />

Spartan FC soccer<br />

club have watched youth<br />

soccer in the area transform<br />

into a business rather than<br />

a place for young soccer<br />

players to grow.<br />

That’s why the two announced<br />

Spartan FC and<br />

the Eclipse Select Soccer<br />

Club have agreed to an<br />

elite and youth development<br />

partnership to establish<br />

Eclipse North.<br />

“A lot of people are looking<br />

for an alternative opportunity<br />

just to play for a<br />

soccer club, not just about<br />

business,” Caparos said.<br />

“They miss that personal<br />

touch, personal communication.”<br />

The move comes a<br />

year after youth soccer in<br />

the North Shore area has<br />

seen different headlines<br />

and drastic changes to the<br />

area’s lone soccer club<br />

FC United. Former coach<br />

Craig Snower left the club<br />

after players at Loyola<br />

Academy made allegations<br />

against the coach for<br />

inappropriate comments.<br />

Glenbrook South and FC<br />

United coach Seong Ha departed<br />

the school and club<br />

for personal reasons, but a<br />

22nd Century Media investigation<br />

found parents had<br />

made complaints about the<br />

coach before his departure.<br />

Caparos and Soltani<br />

started Spartan FC in 2008<br />

as its own entity that was<br />

affiliated with the Northbrook<br />

Park District, elevating<br />

it from a travel soccer<br />

team to club. The club<br />

became affiliated with FC<br />

United four years ago, with<br />

the importance placed on<br />

having Spartan FC represented.<br />

FC United made good<br />

on its word, according to<br />

the two, before there was a<br />

change in ownership a year<br />

and a half ago. That’s when<br />

new leadership released<br />

Soltani from his position<br />

with FC United and the club<br />

made changes to its organization<br />

from top to bottom.<br />

“We looked at that in August<br />

and realized in more<br />

ways than one, we weren’t<br />

aligned,” Caparos said. “It<br />

was important for us to figure<br />

what kind of pathway<br />

we can put together for our<br />

kids to make sure they’re<br />

successful with youth soccer.”<br />

Caparos decided Eclipse<br />

would be the perfect partnership<br />

for Spartan FC this<br />

past winter. He had a long<br />

relationship with the owner<br />

and knew there was a market<br />

in the North Shore given<br />

the recent changes.<br />

“I think FC United took<br />

things for granted,” Caparos<br />

said. “I think adding an<br />

Eclipse vehicle in the North<br />

Shore is healthy for everybody.<br />

The most important<br />

thing is to give people options.<br />

If you want to play<br />

soccer, don’t feel like you<br />

have to play somewhere<br />

because you don’t have any<br />

other options. It’s about<br />

finding the right need for<br />

you.”<br />

One of the advantages<br />

Spartan FC hopes to have is<br />

that it will allow members<br />

of its teams to play high<br />

school soccer, something<br />

many at FC United cannot<br />

do. During the past four<br />

years, Caparos and Soltani<br />

learned many youth soccer<br />

players wanted to be a part<br />

of their high school team but<br />

couldn’t. They believe high<br />

school soccer is an important<br />

variable in their development<br />

and learning apart<br />

from playing the game.<br />

As a father of a high<br />

school junior, Caparos<br />

watched how important it<br />

was for youth soccer players<br />

to have the opportunity<br />

to play high school soccer.<br />

“High school, you get to<br />

play stress-free, you have<br />

the competition, you’re<br />

playing for your school colors,<br />

your playing with your<br />

fiends,” Caparos said. “It’s<br />

not about the level of play,<br />

it’s about playing together<br />

and learning how to succeed<br />

together.”<br />

The club alliance will begin<br />

this fall. This will be the<br />

third Eclipse satellite location<br />

added to the club in<br />

Chicagoland. Caparos and<br />

Soltani hope to have a town<br />

hall meeting in the near future<br />

to address the changes<br />

to the club and any questions<br />

players and parents<br />

might have. They also want<br />

to have a new leader named<br />

by March 24 at the latest.<br />

While there might be<br />

some challenges down the<br />

way, Spartan FC is excited<br />

to provide the North Shore<br />

soccer scene an alternative<br />

they think families deserve.<br />

“[Eclipse] is a great vehicle<br />

for us to be a part<br />

of. We’re ecstatic. It’s an<br />

honor for us to be with<br />

them,” Caparos said. “I do<br />

know we’re going to have<br />

a competitive club and a<br />

good pool of players that<br />

can make our teams strong<br />

from the start.”<br />

This Week In...<br />

Trevian varsity<br />

athletics<br />

Badminton<br />

■March ■ 21 - host Maine<br />

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

Baseball<br />

■March ■ 21 - at Notre<br />

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

■March ■ 23 - at St. Rita, 11<br />

a.m.<br />

■March ■ 25 - vs. Valley<br />

Catholic (Ore.) (at Greenway<br />

Baseball Festival), 10 a.m.<br />

■March ■ 26 - vs. Mountain<br />

Range (Colo.) (at Greenway<br />

Baseball Festival), 1 p.m.<br />

■March ■ 27 - vs. Glenwood<br />

Springs (Ariz.) (at Greenway<br />

Baseball Festival), 10 a.m.<br />

■March ■ 28 - vs. Evergreen<br />

(Colo.) (at Greenway<br />

Baseball Festival), 4 p.m.<br />

Boys lacrosse<br />

■March ■ 27 - at St. Xavier<br />

(Ohio), 7 p.m.<br />

Girls lacrosse<br />

■March ■ 21 - host Vernon<br />

Hills, 6:15 p.m.<br />

■March ■ 23 - host Kentucky<br />

Country Day School (Ky.),<br />

10 a.m.<br />

Girls soccer<br />

■March ■ 21 - host Niles<br />

North, 4:45 p.m.<br />

Softball<br />

■March ■ 21 - host Lane,<br />

4:45 p.m.<br />

■March ■ 22 - host Young,<br />

4:45 p.m.<br />

■March ■ 23 - at Beecher, 11<br />

a.m./1 p.m.<br />

■March ■ 25 - vs.<br />

Resurrection (at The Dome),<br />

11 a.m./1 p.m.<br />

Girls lacrosse<br />

Loyola 18, Resurrection 0<br />

Annabelle Burke had six<br />

goals in a win over Resurrection<br />

Saturday, March<br />

16, in Glenview.<br />

New Trier 20, Lyons 2<br />

Lucy Murray had six<br />

Boys volleyball<br />

■March ■ 21 - at Mundelein,<br />

6 p.m.<br />

Girls water polo<br />

■March ■ 21 - at Mundelein,<br />

6 p.m.<br />

Rambler varsity<br />

athletics<br />

Baseball<br />

■March ■ 21 - host<br />

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

■March ■ 23 - at De La Salle,<br />

11 a.m.<br />

■March ■ 25 - host Notre<br />

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

■March ■ 26 - at Lane, 4:30<br />

p.m.<br />

■March ■ 27 - host Maine<br />

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

Boys lacrosse<br />

■March ■ 21 - at Bullis<br />

School (Md), 4 p.m.<br />

■March ■ 22 - at Georgetown<br />

Prep (Md.), 11 a.m.<br />

■March ■ 24 - at Calvert Hall<br />

College (Md.), 11 a.m.<br />

Girls lacrosse<br />

■March ■ 24 - host Kentucky<br />

Country Day School, 11 a.m.<br />

Girls soccer<br />

■March ■ 22 - at Evanston,<br />

6 p.m.<br />

Softball<br />

■March ■ 22 - host Niles<br />

West, 4:45 p.m.<br />

■March ■ 25 - host Niles<br />

North, 4:45 p.m.<br />

■March ■ 26 - host Evanston,<br />

4:30 p.m.<br />

Boys track and field<br />

■March ■ 23 - at Illinois<br />

Top Times Invite (at Illinois<br />

high school highlights<br />

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

goals and five assists in a<br />

win Thursday, March 14.<br />

Girls soccer<br />

New Trier 1, Prospect 1<br />

Alex Wirth scored<br />

Thursday, March 14, in<br />

Mount Prospect.<br />

Wesleyan University), 2:30<br />

p.m.<br />

Boys tennis<br />

■March ■ 21 - vs. Providence,<br />

4:30 p.m.<br />

■March ■ 26 - host De La<br />

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

■March ■ 28 - host Marmion,<br />

4:30 p.m.<br />

Boys volleyball<br />

■March ■ 22 - at Vernon Hills<br />

Invite, TBA<br />

■March ■ 23 - at Vernon Hills<br />

Invite, TBA<br />

■March ■ 26 - at Brother<br />

Rice, 6 p.m.<br />

■March ■ 27 - host St.<br />

Ignatius, 6 p.m.<br />

■March ■ 28 - Wheaton-<br />

Warrenville South Invite, TBA<br />

Boys water polo<br />

■March ■ 25 - at De La Salle,<br />

4:30 p.m.<br />

■March ■ 27 - at St. Patrick,<br />

6 p.m.<br />

Panther varsity<br />

athletics<br />

Girls lacrosse<br />

■March ■ 23 - host Trinity,<br />

11 a.m.<br />

■March ■ 26 - at Marist, 4:30<br />

p.m.<br />

■March ■ 27 - host Mother<br />

McAuley, 5 p.m.<br />

Girls soccer<br />

■March ■ 21 - host Guerin,<br />

5 p.m.<br />

■March ■ 28 - host Zion-<br />

Benton, 5 p.m.<br />

Softball<br />

■March ■ 21 - host Taft, 4:30<br />

■March ■ 23 - host Maine<br />

West, 10 a.m./noon<br />

New Trier 1, Warren 1<br />

Emma Weaver scored<br />

March 12 in Northfield..<br />

Regina 6, Intrinsic 0<br />

Anelise Leahy and Abbey<br />

Farmer both scored<br />

two goals for the Panthers<br />

Thursday, March 14.


glencoeanchor.com sports<br />

the glencoe anchor | March 21, 2019 | 29<br />

Loyola tabs former Chicago<br />

Bear for new athletic position<br />

Michael Wojtychiw<br />

Sports Editor<br />

Football has always<br />

been a part of Mark Carrier’s<br />

life for as long as he<br />

can remember.<br />

After playing as a defensive<br />

back in the National<br />

Football League from<br />

1990-2000 — including<br />

a stint with the Chicago<br />

Bears from 1990-96 —<br />

Carrier coached in the<br />

NFL and college football<br />

from 2004-2016.<br />

After his coaching career<br />

ended, he knew he<br />

wanted to stay involved<br />

with sports, and that dream<br />

continued when Loyola<br />

Academy named Carrier<br />

as its new associate athletic<br />

director on March 13.<br />

“What led me to it (the<br />

Loyola position) is the<br />

ability to be around kids,”<br />

Carrier said. “My love for<br />

sports, love for high school<br />

sports and being a positive<br />

influence on kids going<br />

forward is what would<br />

draw me to this.”<br />

Carrier’s path to the new<br />

role is actually a bit of an<br />

ironic one, as he originally<br />

applied for and pursued<br />

the role of vice president<br />

of athletics and fitness, a<br />

position the school awarded<br />

Genevieve Baisley<br />

Atwood. His relationship<br />

with some people affiliated<br />

with the school, as well as<br />

his knowledge of Loyola<br />

— Carrier said Loyola is<br />

most likely where his kids<br />

would have attended high<br />

school if they were here<br />

for their high school years<br />

— helped him in his pursuit<br />

of the position.<br />

When the thought of<br />

adding another person in<br />

the athletic department<br />

would be a good idea, Carrier’s<br />

name came up and<br />

the rest is history.<br />

Loyola Academy named Mark Carrier its associate<br />

athletic director March 13. Photo submitted<br />

Even though the Pro<br />

Bowl safety has been<br />

around sports his entire<br />

life, moving into the athletic<br />

administration and<br />

athletic director roles was<br />

not something he saw himself<br />

getting into.<br />

“Actually I did in the<br />

sense, not because this is<br />

what I wanted to do,” he<br />

said. “To me it was more<br />

what I thought I needed<br />

to do because I think I’ve<br />

always reached out and<br />

helped others, through<br />

charity, through others,<br />

through my own family.<br />

“I was helping kids<br />

in the community. I was<br />

helping friends and friends<br />

of kids and find out what’s<br />

the best choices for them<br />

in life and through sports<br />

and benefit for it. And also<br />

not just being a former<br />

player but being a former<br />

coach and how tough that<br />

can be on coaches.”<br />

His role and his duties<br />

are still a work in progress<br />

but he knows it will<br />

involve mentoring students<br />

as well as working<br />

with parents and discussing<br />

things they can do to<br />

help their children going<br />

forward. He will also<br />

work with administration<br />

to move the school going<br />

forward into the future and<br />

what it needs to do to make<br />

it even better.<br />

Carrier isn’t the only<br />

one excited about his arrival<br />

at the school.<br />

“Mark is a leader and<br />

team player who has extensive<br />

experience in athletics<br />

as both a coach and<br />

a player,” Atwood says in<br />

a press release. “Mark is<br />

passionate about positively<br />

impacting young people<br />

through sports. He will be<br />

an outstanding addition<br />

to the Loyola Academy<br />

Athletics Department, and<br />

he will provide additional<br />

support for all athletic programs.<br />

Mark will also assist<br />

the department as we<br />

develop and implement a<br />

strategic plan for athletics<br />

and fitness that can even<br />

better serve our student<br />

athletes.”<br />

Carrier officially starts<br />

his time at Loyola on<br />

March 25.<br />

NORTH SHORE<br />

FIND THE VARSITY: NORTH SHORE ON<br />

SOUNDCLOUD, ITUNES OR GLENCOEANCHOR.COM/SPORTS<br />

A 22ND CENTURY MEDIA PRODUCTION<br />

Media Podz knows trending<br />

media made simple<br />

mediapodz.com<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.


30 | March 21, 2019 | The glencoe anchor sports<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

New Trier’s Davis wins prestigious national award<br />

Michael Wojtychiw<br />

Sports Editor<br />

Jim Davis helped start<br />

the powerlifting program<br />

at New Trier about seven<br />

years ago. The New<br />

Trier alumnus, who is the<br />

strength and conditioning<br />

coordinator at the school,<br />

started the program when<br />

a wrestler, Scott Schwartz<br />

came into his office to talk<br />

to Davis about starting a<br />

club.<br />

“He had been in the<br />

weight room essentially<br />

daily trying to get ready<br />

for his wrestling season,”<br />

Davis said. “He was a<br />

very strong kid and he, I<br />

guess, had been talking to<br />

someone in his math class<br />

or something about maybe<br />

getting a club going of<br />

strong kids, a powerlifting<br />

club. And then so he came<br />

to me, we talked through<br />

it, we filled out all the paperwork,<br />

we went through<br />

all the necessary steps.<br />

“It’s been fantastic.<br />

That first year we were<br />

lucky to have 10 kids.<br />

Now we’ve got a 50 person<br />

roster. We’re bringing<br />

25 of those kids down to<br />

Oklahoma City to compete<br />

in nationals and it’s<br />

just been growing ever<br />

since.”<br />

The National Athlete<br />

Strength Association<br />

(NASA) has taken notice<br />

and recently named Davis<br />

its Co-National Coach of<br />

the year.<br />

“I’m very humbled by<br />

it, very grateful for it, and<br />

I can’t help but think that<br />

there are plenty of other<br />

coaches out there that are<br />

doing the same kind of<br />

work and are, without trying<br />

to be falsely humble,<br />

doing it as well or better<br />

than I’m doing it,” Davis<br />

said. “So winning something<br />

on kind of a national<br />

level is humbling for me.<br />

“I don’t know if I deserve<br />

it or not, but I know I<br />

work really hard at what I<br />

do and I care a lot about it. I<br />

can say that without pause.<br />

I care a lot about the kids.<br />

Myself and my staff, we<br />

spent a lot of time working<br />

on this and we lose sleep<br />

over it. We really do put<br />

in a lot. So to receive a pat<br />

on the back for that, it does<br />

feel good. It does feel nice<br />

to know that some of the<br />

efforts are seeing the real<br />

value of the work that we<br />

do, comes from the kids<br />

enjoying their experience,<br />

learning really important<br />

life lessons, and carrying<br />

those ideals forward for a<br />

lifetime of health and wellness.<br />

But to have someone<br />

see it and recognize it, it<br />

does feel pretty good.”<br />

For some coaches, no<br />

matter what sport, coaching<br />

is all about wins and<br />

losses and how successful<br />

he or she or the team are.<br />

While winning championships<br />

and being out on top<br />

is always something that’s<br />

great, it’s not what matters<br />

the most to Davis and his<br />

staff.<br />

What matters most are<br />

the kids they coach and<br />

the relationships that are<br />

able to be built inside and<br />

outside of the sport.<br />

“I think, like a lot of<br />

young coaches, when I<br />

first started I was more interested<br />

in pure numbers,”<br />

Davis said. “I wanted to<br />

work hard and see big<br />

squat numbers, big bench<br />

press numbers. That for<br />

me felt like validation to<br />

a lot of the work that we<br />

were doing both for ourselves<br />

as coaches, for the<br />

kids, to show them, quantify<br />

that they were improving<br />

in terms of numbers,<br />

“So it’s a really fun<br />

thing to be a part of, to see<br />

some of the lessons that<br />

we were hoping to teach<br />

sort of have grounded<br />

themselves in the development<br />

of these people and it<br />

PLUMBING MADNESS!<br />

New Trier’s strength and conditioning Coordinator Jim Davis talks to a New Trier<br />

powerlifter during a training session. Photo submitted<br />

appeared in certain ways<br />

down the road. I feel really<br />

lucky that as I grow,<br />

evolve as a coach and I see<br />

the people I used to coach<br />

evolve as people, getting<br />

that feedback down the<br />

road is ... I mean no award,<br />

as grateful as I am to receive<br />

this recognition, no<br />

award could top that.”<br />

The New Trier powerlifting<br />

team will take part<br />

in the 2019 NASA High<br />

School Powerlifiting Nationals<br />

Saturday-Sunday,<br />

March 23-24, in Oklahoma<br />

City.<br />

Lic. 055-004618<br />

BRATSCHI PLUMBING<br />

801 OAK STREET, WINNETKA<br />

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the glencoe anchor | March 21, 2019 | 31<br />

Boys hockey<br />

Loyola Gold making return trip to state<br />

Boys hockey<br />

Brittany Kapa<br />

Freelance Reporter<br />

22nd Century Media FILE PHOTO<br />

1st-and-3<br />

Teams of the Winter.<br />

1. Emma Weaver<br />

(above). The New<br />

Trier junior girls<br />

soccer player<br />

scored the team’s<br />

first goal of the<br />

season in a 1-1<br />

tie with Warren<br />

March 12 in<br />

Northfield.<br />

2. Preston Watt.<br />

The New Trier<br />

Green goalie<br />

made 12 saves in<br />

the Trevians’ 5-1<br />

semifinal win over<br />

St. Viator.<br />

3. Ellie Lazzaretto.<br />

The Loyola<br />

sophomore girls<br />

lacrosse player<br />

scored 12 goals<br />

in three games<br />

last week.<br />

Providence Catholic<br />

needed seven seconds to<br />

turn the momentum of the<br />

AHAI state semifinal game<br />

to its favor, but Loyola<br />

Academy Gold proved<br />

why its the defending state<br />

champions.<br />

The Ramblers and Celtics<br />

battled it out March 11<br />

at the Edge Ice Arena in<br />

Bensenville for a chance to<br />

play on the state stage at the<br />

United Center on March<br />

22. Despite Providence<br />

evening the playing field<br />

early in the second period,<br />

Loyola regained control<br />

and closed out the game to<br />

win 4-2.<br />

“We told the guys before<br />

playoff time that it’s a process,”<br />

Loyola Gold coach<br />

DJ Lavarre said. “Whether<br />

you continue to advance,<br />

you’re always in the moment.<br />

We will cherish the<br />

moment right now, together,<br />

and tomorrow’s a new<br />

day.”<br />

The journey to defending<br />

their state title started with<br />

two quick goals in the first<br />

period to give the Ramblers<br />

a 2-0 advantage going into<br />

the second. Loyola forward<br />

Andrew Buck broke<br />

through first, with Cole<br />

Corrigan and Christian<br />

Dunne picking up the first<br />

and second assists. Matthew<br />

Schauwecker, assisted<br />

by Jake Gonzalez, made<br />

it 2-0 roughly two minutes<br />

later, and Loyola Gold held<br />

Loyola goalie Matthew Choate makes a save. BRITTANY<br />

KAPA/22ND CENTURY MEDIA<br />

that lead through the first.<br />

The Celtics came out<br />

with fire to start the second<br />

period, and after switching<br />

up their lines evened the<br />

score in record time.<br />

Colin Reis broke through<br />

first just a minute and a<br />

half into second-period<br />

play. Peyton Botich’s shot<br />

dribbled past Loyola’s<br />

goaltender, Matthew Choate,<br />

seven seconds later,<br />

and tied the game with 15<br />

minutes, 18 seconds left in<br />

the period.<br />

It wasn’t Loyola’s best<br />

hockey in the first minute<br />

and a half of the second,<br />

and Lavarre knew that.<br />

“We fell asleep there for<br />

a minute and a half, it happens,”<br />

Lavarre said. “It’s<br />

unfortunate, but you didn’t<br />

really hear me say much.<br />

It’s about how you adapt<br />

to a little adversity, and our<br />

backs were against the wall<br />

there for a minute and a<br />

half, two minutes.”<br />

Loyola stayed calm under<br />

pressure, but the score<br />

stayed even until the last<br />

two minutes of the period<br />

when Aidan Finegan’s<br />

rebound popped out in<br />

Cooper Prawdzik’s wheelhouse.<br />

Prawdzik took just<br />

a second to line up on a<br />

wide-open stick-side net,<br />

and took the lead back for<br />

the Ramblers.<br />

Penalty trouble hurt a<br />

young Providence team at<br />

the start of the third, and<br />

a veteran Loyola squad<br />

didn’t waste time turning<br />

that into their advantage.<br />

Gonzalez, assisted by<br />

Finegan, scored the insurance<br />

goal early in the third<br />

period.<br />

Loyola stayed strong,<br />

and went back to basics<br />

blocking shots, taking their<br />

time with the puck and<br />

fended off the Celtic’s advances,<br />

ultimately punching<br />

their ticket to state.<br />

“We took a couple of<br />

penalties there that were of<br />

concern, but again with a<br />

little adversity we bent but<br />

we didn’t break,” Lavarre<br />

said. “At the end of the day<br />

that’s all that matters.”<br />

Henry Freedman brings the puck around the net<br />

Monday, March 11, in Bensenville. Brittany Kapa/22nd<br />

Century Media<br />

Forecheck, power play,<br />

help lead New Trier<br />

Green to the state finals<br />

Brittany Kapa<br />

Freelance Reporter<br />

New Trier Green is hungry<br />

for a title this season.<br />

Last season’s squad<br />

lost out on their chance<br />

to make a third consecutive<br />

trip to the AHAI state<br />

championship title game at<br />

the United Center, it didn’t<br />

sit well with the team.<br />

New Trier Green redeemed<br />

itself this year,<br />

and coasted to an easy 5-1<br />

win March 11 over St. Viator<br />

at the Edge Ice Arena in<br />

Bensenville.<br />

“St. Viator is a good<br />

team, they won the Kennedy<br />

Cup,” New Trier coach<br />

Robert Melton said. “We<br />

had played them twice earlier<br />

this season, but that was<br />

so long ago. At this time of<br />

year we don’t take anyone<br />

lightly. It’s more about how<br />

we play than our opponent.”<br />

New Trier’s Mac<br />

Zelazny set the tone late<br />

in the first period with a<br />

short-handed unassisted<br />

goal, following a too-many-men<br />

penalty.<br />

New Trier closed out the<br />

first period with a 1-0 lead,<br />

and it didn’t take long before<br />

a scoring onslaught<br />

put the team ahead for<br />

good in the second period.<br />

New Trier scored four unanswered<br />

goals before St.<br />

Viator could get on the<br />

board Monday night.<br />

Mark Ashmore and Henry<br />

Freedman connected on<br />

a second period powerplay<br />

goal with 13 minutes<br />

and four seconds left in the<br />

period for the team’s second<br />

goal of the night.<br />

For full story, visit GlencoeAnchor.com.<br />

Listen Up<br />

“I think 20 seniors going into the third period<br />

knew their season was on the line.”<br />

DJ Lavarre — Loyola Gold boys hockey coach after his<br />

team’s state semifinal win over Providence.<br />

tunE in<br />

What to watch this week<br />

HOCKEY: The season comes to an end at the United Center.<br />

• New Trier‘s girls face Fenwick for the state title at<br />

4:30 p.m. Friday, March 22, at the United Center.<br />

Loyola Gold faces New Trier Green at 7:30.<br />

Index<br />

28 - This Week In<br />

27 - Athlete of the Week<br />

Fastbreak is compiled by Sports Editor Michael<br />

Wojtychiw, m.wojtychiw@22ndcenturymedia.com.


the glencoe anchor | March 21, 2019 | glencoeanchor.com<br />

Finals matchup set New Trier Green,<br />

Loyola Gold win semifinal games, Page 31<br />

New face<br />

Loyola hires Mark Carrier as<br />

associate athletic director, Page 29<br />

New Trier’s Jim Davis wins national powerlifting award, Page 30<br />

Jim Davis talks to a group of powerlifters at<br />

a previous national powerlifting tournament<br />

in Oklahoma City. Photo submitted<br />

<br />

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