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Glencoe’s Hometown Newspaper GlencoeAnchor.com • April 18, 2019 • Vol. 4 No. 33 • $1<br />

A<br />

Publication<br />

,LLC<br />

Families get up close with science at<br />

Unearth Festival in Glencoe, Page 4<br />

Maya Carson, 2, of Highland Park, gets a look at how pollination works at the<br />

Unearth Science Festival, which ran Saturday-Sunday, April 13-14, at Chicago<br />

Botanic Garden in Glencoe. Rhonda Holcomb/22nd Century Media<br />

for<br />

danny<br />

Local students<br />

add mileage<br />

to 100 Miles<br />

For Danny<br />

fundraiser,<br />

Page 6<br />

seasonal<br />

fun<br />

Kids hunt<br />

for eggs<br />

with perfect<br />

spring-like<br />

temperatures,<br />

Page 8<br />

marking a<br />

century<br />

New Trier’s Girls<br />

Club celebrates<br />

100 years, invites<br />

alumni for high<br />

school tour,<br />

Page 11


2 | April 18, 2019 | The glencoe anchor calendar<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

In this week’s<br />

anchor<br />

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

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

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

Puzzles 18<br />

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

Dining Out 21<br />

Home of the Week 24<br />

Athlete of the Week 27<br />

The Glencoe<br />

Anchor<br />

ph: 847.272.4565<br />

fx: 847.272.4648<br />

Editor<br />

Megan Bernard, x24<br />

megan@glencoeanchor.com<br />

sports Editor<br />

Michael Wojtychiw, x25<br />

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

Sales director<br />

Peter Hansen, x19<br />

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

real estate sales<br />

John Zeddies, x12<br />

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

Legal Notices<br />

Jeff Schouten, 708.326.9170, x51<br />

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

PUBLISHER<br />

Joe Coughlin, x16<br />

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

Managing Editor<br />

Eric DeGrechie, x23<br />

eric@wilmettebeacon.com<br />

AssT. Managing Editor<br />

Megan Bernard, x24<br />

megan@glencoeanchor.com<br />

President<br />

Andrew Nicks<br />

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

EDITORIAL DESIGN DIRECTOR<br />

Nancy Burgan, 708.326.9170, x30<br />

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

22 nd Century Media<br />

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Northbrook, IL 60062<br />

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Published by<br />

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FRIDAY<br />

Earth Day Clean-Up<br />

9:30 a.m.-noon, April<br />

19, Village of Glencoe.<br />

Celebrate Earth Day by<br />

volunteering to help cleanup<br />

various sites throughout<br />

Glencoe. This is a collaborative<br />

effort between<br />

District 35, Glencoe Park<br />

District and the Village’s<br />

Department of Public<br />

Works. Lunch will be provided<br />

to District 35 students.<br />

Paint and Sip<br />

6:30-8:30 p.m. April 19,<br />

Takiff Center, 999 Green<br />

Bay Road, Glencoe. Instructors<br />

will guide you<br />

through the process of<br />

creating your own masterpiece.<br />

No experience or<br />

supplies necessary; new<br />

and seasoned artists are<br />

welcome. Must be 21 or<br />

older to attend.<br />

SATURDAY<br />

Family Story Time<br />

10:30-11 a.m. April 20,<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 />

MONDAY<br />

Appreciating Our<br />

Neighbors Around Us<br />

7-8:30 p.m. April 22,<br />

Glencoe Library, 320<br />

Park Ave. “Appreciating<br />

Our Neighbors Around<br />

Us: What You’ve Always<br />

Wondered About America’s<br />

Jews — The Heritage<br />

of Jewish-Americans” reveals<br />

what is possible in<br />

our country. Join “America’s<br />

Rabbi” for a look into<br />

the history and customs<br />

of Jewish-Americans and<br />

what contributions they<br />

have made for people of<br />

all faiths and cultures.<br />

Ask the questions you’ve<br />

always had and dispel the<br />

myths you’ve wanted to<br />

explore.<br />

WEDNESDAY<br />

Heritage Baking<br />

7-8 p.m. April 24, Glencoe<br />

Library, 320 Park Ave.<br />

Down on Dempster Street<br />

in Evanston, the artisanal<br />

bakery Hewn turns out<br />

hearty, flavorful bread the<br />

way it was made hundreds<br />

of years ago. The store has<br />

become a major presence<br />

in the Chicago food scene<br />

and recognized nationally<br />

for its farmer-miller-baker<br />

advocacy. On April 24,<br />

the library will welcome<br />

Hewn’s head baker, Ellen<br />

King, to speak about the<br />

ingredients and techniques<br />

she has revived to produce<br />

extraordinary loaves.<br />

There will be samples.<br />

UPCOMING<br />

Mom and Me Magical Date<br />

5-7 p.m. April 27, Takiff<br />

Center, 999 Green Bay<br />

Road, Glencoe. Bring<br />

your special someone for a<br />

night of fun. Enjoy a buffet<br />

dinner, dancing and entertainment.<br />

Recommended<br />

for boys, ages 2-7, with a<br />

special adult. Advanced<br />

registration required by<br />

April 24; registration will<br />

close when event capacity<br />

is reached. Day of registration<br />

will not be accepted.<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 features<br />

hundreds of daffodils on<br />

display that will be judged<br />

by the society. The show<br />

includes cut blooms, floral<br />

design, and photography<br />

competitions. The show<br />

will include floral designs<br />

inspired by the gardens at<br />

the Chicago Botanic Garden.<br />

Daffodil growers of<br />

all skill levels are invited<br />

to participate.<br />

Malott Japanese Garden<br />

Spring Festival<br />

10 a.m.-3 p.m. April<br />

27-28, Chicago Botanic<br />

Garden, 1000 Lake Cook<br />

Road, Glencoe. Learn<br />

about children’s celebrations<br />

in Japan during this<br />

special weekend of activities.<br />

Listen to koto harp<br />

and shakuhachi flute music,<br />

and try your hand at<br />

the ancient Japanese art of<br />

suminagashi. Visitors are<br />

invited to participate in a<br />

tea tasting ceremony while<br />

supplies last.<br />

Earth Day Walk<br />

2 p.m. April 27, Chicago<br />

Botanic Garden, 1000<br />

Lake Cook Road, Glencoe.<br />

Take a special guided walk<br />

through the McDonald<br />

Woods to celebrate Earth<br />

Day.<br />

3D Office Hour<br />

10-11 a.m. April 27,<br />

Glencoe Library, 320 Park<br />

Ave. Justin Franklin, the library’s<br />

3D printing expert,<br />

will be on hand to answer<br />

questions and troubleshoot<br />

design challenges. Open to<br />

all ages. Registration is encouraged,<br />

but drop-ins are<br />

welcome as well.<br />

From Page to Stage<br />

7 p.m. April 29, Writers<br />

Theatre, 325 Tudor Court,<br />

Glencoe. At this special<br />

From Page to Stage event,<br />

experts from Family Service<br />

of Glencoe and WT<br />

guest artists will join together<br />

to unpack the reallife<br />

issues dramatized in<br />

“Next to Normal” through<br />

music and dialogue. This<br />

event is free and open to<br />

the public, but a response<br />

is requested in order to<br />

help FSG and Writers<br />

Theatre keep an accurate<br />

head count. To RSVP, visit<br />

http://bit.ly/FSGatWT.<br />

Make Your Own Superhero<br />

4:15-5 p.m. April 30,<br />

Glencoe Library, 320 Park<br />

Ave. Use your creativity<br />

to invent your very own<br />

superhero. Write their<br />

origin story, design their<br />

costume, and more in this<br />

super-powered class. Register<br />

online.<br />

Spring Bird Walk<br />

9-11 a.m. May 1, Shelton<br />

Park at the Green Bay<br />

Trail, Glencoe. Join Tim<br />

Joyce, of Glenview’s Wild<br />

Bird Unlimited, to identify<br />

and observe local residents<br />

and migrating birds. Dress<br />

for the weather, wear comfortable<br />

shoes and bring<br />

binoculars. Rain date: May<br />

8.<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 />

Photography Workshop<br />

3:30-5:30 p.m. May 3,<br />

Takiff Center, 999 Green<br />

Bay Road, Glencoe. Work<br />

with an award winning<br />

Film Director, Rino Liberatore,<br />

to learn how to take<br />

better photos. Composition,<br />

lighting, lenses and<br />

angles will be the emphasis<br />

during this fun session<br />

for location photography.<br />

Simple hints will take you<br />

to a new level of photography.<br />

You must have a<br />

digital camera and basic<br />

knowledge of your camera<br />

functions.<br />

California Wine Tasting<br />

2-5 p.m. May 11, Binny’s,<br />

85 Green Bay Road,<br />

Glencoe. California wine<br />

continues to reinvent itself<br />

vintage after vintage. Established<br />

and iconic wineries<br />

continuously push<br />

themselves to create better<br />

wines, while a new generation<br />

of talented winemakers<br />

seek out new regions,<br />

explore forgotten patches,<br />

and experiment with special<br />

varietals. All will be<br />

on display in this special<br />

tasting of reds, whites,<br />

roses and bubbles from the<br />

Golden State. Open house<br />

free of charge with Binny’s<br />

card. No RSVP required.<br />

ONGOING<br />

Sesquicentennial Planning<br />

Committee<br />

Every other Tuesday,<br />

Glencoe Village Hall, 675<br />

Village Court. The Sesquicentennial<br />

Planning Committee<br />

meets in the First<br />

Floor Conference Room.<br />

For the schedule and agenda,<br />

visit www.villageofglencoe.org.


glencoeanchor.com news<br />

the glencoe anchor | April 18, 2019 | 3<br />

New Trier Township<br />

Growth of peer jury program spans two decades<br />

Discussed at<br />

170th annual town<br />

meeting<br />

Daniel I. Dorfman<br />

Freelance Reporter<br />

When a New Trier<br />

Township teenager finds<br />

themselves in criminal<br />

trouble, their destination<br />

is not necessarily juvenile<br />

court. In some cases, they<br />

may wind up in front of a<br />

jury of their peers as part<br />

of a program that has now<br />

been in place for more<br />

than 20 years.<br />

The peer jury program<br />

was a main focus of conversation<br />

Tuesday, April 9,<br />

at the New Trier Township<br />

170th annual town meeting.<br />

Brian Leverenz, a<br />

community service administrator<br />

and peer jury coordinator<br />

described the program<br />

that he said started<br />

in 1997 with the first cases<br />

heard in September 1998.<br />

When an arrest is made,<br />

the police officer makes a<br />

decision about what cases<br />

are appropriate for peer<br />

jury, Leverenz explained.<br />

In order to participate,<br />

the offending party has to<br />

plead guilty, sign a waiver<br />

of confidentiality and they<br />

have to agree to show<br />

up with a parent or legal<br />

guardian in court.<br />

Instead of having a brief<br />

appearance in front of a<br />

judge, in a peer jury, the<br />

offenders appear before<br />

a group of eight to 10 of<br />

high school-age jurors at<br />

the New Trier Township<br />

building who meet the first<br />

Wednesday of each month,<br />

according to Leverenz.<br />

Applicants have to go<br />

through an orientation<br />

process to become jurors.<br />

Leverenz said between 15<br />

– 20 children apply each<br />

year.<br />

“Peer jury is something<br />

that takes kids and police<br />

away from the complexities<br />

of the courtroom and<br />

the legal system with<br />

prosecuting attorneys,<br />

defense attorneys and<br />

judges which is an adversarial<br />

process,” Leverenz<br />

said. “It puts them all into<br />

a room where they have<br />

to admit their guilt and<br />

makes them take responsibility<br />

for their actions<br />

and makes an effort to<br />

redress the crime in their<br />

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6:15 A.M. Sunriseservice on church lawn<br />

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Community breakfast after worship<br />

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and amazing music<br />

Egg Hunt immediatelyafter worship<br />

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hearts and restorative actions.”<br />

Leverenz acknowledged<br />

there was some resistance<br />

from certain New Trier<br />

law enforcement agencies<br />

at the start of the program<br />

over two decades<br />

ago. Back then, there were<br />

roughly 200 peer juries<br />

nationwide, now there<br />

are now more than 2,000<br />

across the country.<br />

“This is a concept that<br />

is here to stay,” Leverenz<br />

said. “It is one that many<br />

communities support.”<br />

Join us Tuesday<br />

Leverenz said the township<br />

peer juries have had<br />

699 cases from all the New<br />

Trier Township through<br />

the end of 2018 with approximately<br />

one third<br />

being drugs and alcohol<br />

related, another third being<br />

criminal damage or<br />

criminal trespass and the<br />

rest being miscellaneous.<br />

He added the growth of<br />

technology has led to new<br />

types of crimes such as cyberbullying,<br />

transmission<br />

of pornographic material<br />

or recently he has seen a<br />

rise in vaping with THC<br />

cases.<br />

“Just when I think I have<br />

seen everything I’m sure<br />

something new will come<br />

along soon,” he said.<br />

He said the program has<br />

enjoyed a 96 percent success<br />

rate as the offenders<br />

completed their community<br />

service requirements<br />

with a good evaluation.<br />

As for the punishments<br />

the young offenders receive,<br />

many times they involve<br />

a community service<br />

through Friday<br />

Closed Sunday & Monday<br />

Froggys<br />

French Cafe<br />

Monthly Special for April<br />

Available for Lunch or Dinner<br />

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

ENTREE CHOICE OF...<br />

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

FOR RESERVATIONS CALL 847.433.7080<br />

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Please see Growth, 12<br />

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


4 | April 18, 2019 | The glencoe anchor news<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

Second Unearth Festival attracts larger crowds this year<br />

Christine Adams<br />

Freelance Reporter<br />

The Chicago Botanic<br />

Garden hosted its second<br />

Unearth Science Festival<br />

from Saturday-Sunday,<br />

April 13-14, inviting<br />

guests of all ages to take a<br />

closer look at plant science<br />

at the interactive event.<br />

Dozens of stations, exhibits<br />

and activities were<br />

set up throughout the Regenstein<br />

Center, allowing<br />

visitors to get a hands-on<br />

experience with each of<br />

the four major themes:<br />

seeds, pollinators, flowers<br />

and fruits. Much of what<br />

was displayed is a precursor<br />

to CBG’s upcoming<br />

“Bees and Beyond”<br />

exhibit, which will look<br />

more closely at pollinators<br />

and their necessity in plant<br />

reproduction.<br />

A real bee colony encased<br />

in a glass display<br />

showcased the worker<br />

bees gathering sugar-water<br />

and bringing it back<br />

to their habitat. Visitors<br />

could also recreate wind<br />

pollination using a fan and<br />

some cotton balls that flew<br />

through the air, or even<br />

create their own “seeds”<br />

from craft materials that<br />

could be dropped from a<br />

pulley-contraption to see<br />

how the wind helps disperse<br />

them.<br />

The festival was created<br />

last year when CBG<br />

decided to act on its desire<br />

to better communicate the<br />

scientific work of the garden.<br />

While many come to<br />

appreciate the beauty of<br />

the gardens, “not so many<br />

know the garden is a scientific<br />

institution,” said<br />

Jennifer Schwarz Ballard,<br />

vice president of learning<br />

and engagement.<br />

All departments at the<br />

Maggie Schoenecker (left), 5, makes a living seed necklace with the help of volunteer<br />

Sue McFaul at the Unearth Science Festival Sunday, April 14, at Chicago Botanic<br />

Garden in Glencoe. Schoenecker was visiting from Virginia. Photos by Rhonda<br />

Holcomb/22nd Century Media<br />

garden came together to<br />

create accessible entry<br />

points for visitors to learn<br />

more about plant research<br />

and science.<br />

The AV department<br />

displayed large screens<br />

Sofia Stone, 2, of Highland Park, looks at bees.<br />

showing high-definition<br />

time-lapse images of<br />

blooming plants on all four<br />

walls, and a center screen<br />

hanging from the ceiling<br />

showed a compilation of<br />

time-lapse plant photography<br />

by John Nash Ott, who<br />

pioneered the practice and<br />

hailed from Winnetka.<br />

Volunteers and employees<br />

also worked at stations<br />

where visitors could create<br />

seed necklaces, bird feeders<br />

and more.<br />

“It’s been amazing,”<br />

Schwarz Ballard said.<br />

On Saturday, 3,000<br />

guests came — which is<br />

already more than attended<br />

the entire weekend in<br />

2018 — and Sunday’s late<br />

spring snowfall did not deter<br />

as many as feared from<br />

attending.<br />

The Friday night adultsonly<br />

event that kicked off<br />

the festival was sold out<br />

and saw grown-ups getting<br />

a thrill from the same<br />

activities and observations<br />

that children did later in<br />

the weekend, whether that<br />

was looking at seeds under<br />

microscopes or learning<br />

more about the science behind<br />

making fruit jams.<br />

When asked what he<br />

liked about festival, Noah<br />

Carson, 10, of Highland<br />

Park, said he liked the experiments<br />

and new experiences.<br />

“I’ve never tried a jackfruit<br />

before today,” he said.<br />

But kids weren’t the<br />

only ones who appreciated<br />

all of CBG’s offerings.<br />

“I am a bit of a science<br />

nerd,” said Shawna Wood,<br />

of Deerfield. “I absolutely<br />

love it here. We’ve been<br />

engaged at every turn.”<br />

On Sunday, the festival<br />

also screened a new documentary,<br />

“The Guardians,”<br />

about monarch butterflies<br />

and an indigenous community<br />

in Mexico.<br />

While spring may be<br />

trudging its feet this year,<br />

this festival revealed that<br />

both Chicago Botanic<br />

Garden and the public are<br />

ready to embrace all of<br />

the new life that will be<br />

blooming shortly, as well<br />

as the science that keeps<br />

that life going.<br />

Silas Panall, 8, of Chicago, learns about flower<br />

pollination.<br />

The Voss family, Neil Voss, Heather Volkman and Lyra<br />

Voss, pose for a photo.


glencoeanchor.com glencoe<br />

the glencoe anchor | April 18, 2019 | 5<br />

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6 | April 18, 2019 | The glencoe anchor news<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

Local hockey teams skate in 100 Miles for Danny, raise awareness for epilepsy<br />

Neil Milbert, Freelance Reporter<br />

Loyola Academy and Sacred<br />

Heart School, along with various<br />

organizations from surrounding<br />

communities, participated in a<br />

fundraising event for The Danny<br />

Did Foundation to raise awareness<br />

for epilepsy on Sunday,<br />

April 7.<br />

The Danny Did Foundation<br />

was started after the sudden<br />

death of Mike and Mariann Stanton’s<br />

4-year-old son on Dec. 12,<br />

2009. Their son, Danny, died because<br />

of a sudden epileptic seizure.<br />

Mike Stanton wrote at the<br />

conclusion of his son’s obituary,<br />

“Please go out and enjoy your<br />

life. Danny did.”<br />

Danny’s story made national<br />

news, which inspired Mike and<br />

Mariann Stanton to start the<br />

Danny Did Foundation. Their<br />

hope was that the foundation<br />

would be “...his continued place<br />

in the world.”<br />

The Danny Did Foundation’s<br />

primary mission is to prevent<br />

deaths caused by seizures. The<br />

foundation attempts to prevent<br />

deaths caused by seizures by<br />

advancing public awareness of<br />

epilepsy and sudden unexpected<br />

death in epilepsy (SUDEP), by<br />

striving to improve communication<br />

about SUDEP between<br />

medical professionals and families<br />

affected by seizures and<br />

advocating for the mainstream<br />

acceptance and use of seizure<br />

detection and prevention devices<br />

that may assist in preventing seizure-related<br />

deaths.<br />

The foundation’s first venture<br />

was pizza and beer after a<br />

Loyola University basketball<br />

game in February of 2010.<br />

That was the start of something<br />

big: in the intervening<br />

years the Danny Did Foundation,<br />

co-founded by Mike and<br />

Mariann Stanton, has raised<br />

more than $5 million and has<br />

assisted families in all 50 states<br />

and 11 countries.<br />

Mike Stanton’s brother, Tom<br />

Stanton, is the foundation’s executive<br />

director. The other fulltime<br />

employee is Mary Duffy,<br />

A group of Sacred Heart School students were the youngest group<br />

to participate in 100 Miles for Danny, a fundraising event for The<br />

Danny Did Foundation, on April 7, at Lake Forest Academy. Photo<br />

Submitted<br />

The Loyola girls Hockey team takes the ice. Scott Margolin/22nd<br />

Century Media<br />

whose son, Charlie, was one of<br />

Danny’s friends.<br />

Playing a supporting role as<br />

volunteers at foundation events<br />

are the three other Stanton<br />

brothers, Liam, Pete and Paddy,<br />

and three sisters, Katie, Megan<br />

(Stanton-Anderson) and Anne<br />

(Colassanto) and their families.<br />

The foundation held a major<br />

event at Lake Forest Academy’s<br />

MacKenzie Ice Arena April 7, in<br />

which a variety of local communities<br />

and school participated.<br />

The event, 100 Miles for<br />

Danny, consisted of 20 teams<br />

skating legs of five miles — 55<br />

laps of the rink — from 9 a.m.-<br />

7 p.m.<br />

Mike Stanton headed the<br />

Friends of Danny team that skated<br />

miles 96-100.<br />

Each team raised a minimum<br />

of $1,000 for the foundation.<br />

Among the participating hockey<br />

teams from the North Shore,<br />

were the Lake Forest Academy<br />

Prep Hockey team, Lake Forest<br />

Falcons, Loyola Academy girls<br />

hockey team, Wilmette Braves<br />

and Tribe NS Winnetka Sacred<br />

Heart.<br />

Skating on behalf of Sacred<br />

Heart was Jake Skelly (first<br />

grade), Cal Schachman (kindergarten),<br />

Scarlett Schachman<br />

(second), Anna Goering (first),<br />

Jack Goering (first), James Levoy<br />

(kindergarten) and Emmett<br />

Levoy (fourth). Out of the 20<br />

groups that participated, they<br />

were youngest group to complete<br />

the five miles — 55 laps<br />

around the rink.<br />

Providing some big-time atmosphere<br />

were Blackhawks’<br />

mascot Tommy Hawk, the<br />

Blackhawks’ Ice Crew, the<br />

Blackhawks’ Street Team and<br />

former Blackhawk player Brandon<br />

Bollig, who won a Stanley<br />

Cup with the Blackhawks.<br />

“We do these events in the<br />

spirit of Danny,” said Tom Stanton.<br />

“If he was here this was the<br />

kind of day he would love.”<br />

100 Miles for Danny was the<br />

brain child of Nick Curley, a Taft<br />

High School freshman from Chicago’s<br />

Norwood Park neighborhood,<br />

who in 2012 conceived<br />

an earlier fund-raising bonanza<br />

by the same name for the Danny<br />

Did Foundation.<br />

“My parents went to a Danny<br />

Did fundraiser and I had no clue<br />

what it was about,” Curley said.<br />

“I asked them about it. They explained<br />

to me the whole story<br />

about Danny and the foundation<br />

his parents and family had created.<br />

My cousin has the same<br />

disease and I didn’t want what<br />

happened to Danny happen to<br />

her. I wanted to do something.<br />

“Being a 7-year-old at the time<br />

my options were kind of limited.<br />

What I was good at was hockey. I<br />

asked my parents: ‘What if I used<br />

hockey as a fundraiser?’ And my<br />

parents gave me the idea of skating<br />

100 miles over the summer.<br />

Obviously, I couldn’t do it all<br />

in one day so they contacted a<br />

bunch of different rinks.”<br />

Not only did 20 rinks respond,<br />

they helped generate publicity<br />

for 100 Miles for Danny, first in<br />

Illinois and then nation-wide.<br />

Curley began his tour at the<br />

Glenview Ice Center and it concluded<br />

between periods of a Chicago<br />

Wolves game in Allstate<br />

Arena.<br />

According to Tom Stanton,<br />

Curley raised almost $40,000.<br />

Last September the thought<br />

of a different format for the<br />

100-mile skate crossed Curley’s<br />

mind:<br />

“Instead of having all this publicity<br />

generated from one person<br />

going a total of 100 miles at 20<br />

different rinks, why not have 20<br />

different teams go a total of 100<br />

miles at one rink?” Curley said.<br />

“That way they would tell their<br />

friends and their friends would<br />

tell other friends. I told Tom and<br />

he thought it was a great idea so<br />

my parents and I reached out to<br />

all of our friends from different<br />

teams in the hockey community.”<br />

Again, the response was excellent.<br />

In addition to the contingents<br />

from the North Shore, the list<br />

of teams that were represented<br />

included Notre Dame College<br />

Prep, Saint Ignatius College<br />

Prep, the Skokie Flyers’ Bantams,<br />

Nick and his teammates on<br />

the Lincolnwood Bulldogs, the<br />

McFetridge Bulldogs from Chicago,<br />

the Chicago Fire Department<br />

and the Ozaukee Ice Dogs<br />

from Wisconsin.<br />

Among the other sports undertakings<br />

under the auspices of the<br />

Danny Did Foundation are sponsorship<br />

of a 60-member team in<br />

the Chicago Martathon, a kids’<br />

kickball tournament in the Edgebrook<br />

neighborhood of Chicago<br />

and a youth basketball tournament<br />

in Niles.<br />

The Foundation’s major social<br />

event is the Hearts and Hugs gala<br />

at Theatre On the Lake in Lincoln<br />

Park on Nov. 9.<br />

“I also want to thank Darrin<br />

Madeley, the former NHL<br />

goalie who directs and coaches<br />

the hockey team at Lake Forest<br />

Academy, for having us here and<br />

donating the ice for the entire<br />

day.<br />

“We’re going to keep the fundraising<br />

for 100 Miles for Danny<br />

open until the end of April.”<br />

To make a donation, visit the<br />

Danny Did Foundation at www.<br />

dannydid.org.


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8 | April 18, 2019 | The glencoe anchor community<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

On the hunt<br />

Children, dogs enjoy annual Spring Egg<br />

and Doggie Treat Hunt<br />

Becky and Buddy<br />

The Burnham family, of Glencoe<br />

We are Becky and Buddy otherwise known on<br />

Instagram as @buddyandbecky! Becky is a<br />

puppy mill rescue from Greater Chicago Cavalier<br />

Rescue, and Buddy was an owner release from<br />

a breeder in Mettawa. Both are 13, though not<br />

related, and love snacks, snoozing and snuggling<br />

with each other, and their humans.<br />

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

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

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

Northbrook, IL 60062.<br />

Park District Executive Director Lisa Sheppard<br />

announces the start of the hunt.<br />

WINNER:<br />

Best Groomer in<br />

Chicagoland<br />

Pet of the Week<br />

Sponsored by<br />

Love Fur Dogs<br />

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Bennett Billmeyer collects eggs at the Glencoe Park<br />

District’s Spring Egg and Doggie Treat Hunt Saturday,<br />

April 13, at Watts Park in Glencoe. Photos by Mark<br />

Blank/22nd Century Media<br />

A large group of children begin the hunt.<br />

Children collect eggs at the park.<br />

Siena Maras poses with the Easter bunny.


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10 | April 18, 2019 | The glencoe anchor news<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

police reports<br />

Glencoe resident<br />

threatens FedEx<br />

driver over<br />

delivery location<br />

Faga A. Nettles, 26, of<br />

the 1000 block of Forest<br />

Avenue, was arrested on<br />

an assault charge after<br />

threatening a delivery<br />

man at 11:02 a.m. April 2<br />

at his residence.<br />

According to Deputy<br />

Chief Rich Weiner, Nettles<br />

threatened the FedEx<br />

driver after he delivered<br />

some equipment and<br />

Nettles asked for him to<br />

bring it inside the residence.<br />

By company policy,<br />

the driver could only<br />

leave it with the resident.<br />

Nettles’ court date is<br />

May 2.<br />

In other police news:<br />

April 9<br />

• Miscellaneous property,<br />

worth less than $500, was<br />

reported stolen in the 200<br />

block of Dennis Lane.<br />

The owner did not wish to<br />

pursue criminal charges at<br />

this time.<br />

April 7<br />

• Marcus L. Printis, 34, of<br />

Evanston, was arrested for<br />

disobeying a traffic control<br />

signal and a suspended<br />

driver’s license at 1:58<br />

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

Dundee Road. His court<br />

date is May 16.<br />

April 6<br />

• An unknown offender<br />

made several phone calls<br />

to a victim without saying<br />

anything. The case is under<br />

investigation.<br />

April 5<br />

• An unknown offender<br />

gained access to a resident’s<br />

credit account and<br />

made purchases worth<br />

less than $500 at Auto<br />

Zone and Jewel.<br />

April 4<br />

• A resident was notified<br />

by LifeLock that an unknown<br />

offender attempted<br />

to open accounts with their<br />

information at Menards,<br />

Comenity Bank, Kay Jewelers,<br />

AT&T and Best Buy.<br />

No accounts were opened<br />

and there was no loss.<br />

• A set of Bose wireless<br />

headphones, worth less<br />

than $500, were reported<br />

stolen at 9:09 p.m. in the<br />

600 block of Greenwood<br />

Avenue.<br />

April 3<br />

• Sergio Jimenez, 18, of<br />

Maywood, was arrested<br />

for possession of cannabis,<br />

possession of fireworks<br />

and no valid driver’s<br />

license at 10:13 p.m.<br />

at the intersection of Sheridan<br />

Road and Woodlawn<br />

Avenue. His court date is<br />

May 16.<br />

EDITOR’S NOTE: The<br />

Glencoe Anchor’s Police<br />

Reports are compiled from<br />

official reports found on<br />

file at the Glencoe Police<br />

Department headquarters in<br />

Glencoe. Individuals named<br />

in these reports are considered<br />

innocent of all charges<br />

until proven guilty in a court<br />

of law.<br />

Glencoe’s Sustainability<br />

Task Force hits three years<br />

Submitted by Hall Healy,<br />

Glencoe Sustainability Task<br />

Force<br />

In 2018, the Glencoe<br />

Sustainability Task Force<br />

continued identifying and<br />

implementing a variety<br />

of activities to enhance<br />

Glencoe’s environmental<br />

and financial sustainability.<br />

These efforts were<br />

successful in large part<br />

due to collaborating between<br />

the Village Board<br />

and staff, School District<br />

35, Glencoe Park District,<br />

Glencoe Public Library,<br />

Chamber of Commerce,<br />

Glencoe Rotary, Glencoe<br />

Community Garden and<br />

local businesses.<br />

Of major significance,<br />

the Active Transportation<br />

Alliance, a Chicagobased<br />

nonprofit organization,<br />

conducted an<br />

in-depth study to identify<br />

crossings, roads and sidewalks<br />

considered unsafe<br />

for students, other pedestrians,<br />

bikers and drivers.<br />

The study, paid for<br />

by the Village, District<br />

35 and the Park District,<br />

included numerous public<br />

meetings and analysis<br />

by transportation experts.<br />

The result was a<br />

very inclusive process<br />

and a report making specific<br />

recommendations as<br />

to which areas could be<br />

improved from a safety<br />

perspective. Some of the<br />

steps are being implemented<br />

in 2019.<br />

The Task Force and<br />

staff worked with the Village’s<br />

residential waste<br />

hauler, LRS, to develop<br />

stickers to put onto recycling<br />

bins, describing<br />

what materials can go in<br />

them. These stickers are<br />

being sent to residents<br />

with a letter explaining<br />

their purpose and providing<br />

additional sources of<br />

information. As part of<br />

redoing certain downtown<br />

areas, Staff is looking<br />

at where best to put<br />

recycling bins, along with<br />

improved signage designating<br />

what goes in them.<br />

Bins also are being placed<br />

in strategic locations during<br />

special events such as<br />

the recent Sesquicentennial<br />

kick-off.<br />

LRS is contracted with<br />

to pick up compostables<br />

during spring, summer<br />

and fall; Resident Fred<br />

Miller is spear-heading a<br />

program to have Glencoe<br />

Community Garden pick<br />

up composting from local<br />

businesses, which now<br />

From the Village<br />

Semi-Annual Clean-Up<br />

Day scheduled May 8<br />

Doing some household<br />

cleaning? Dispose of your<br />

large household items that<br />

are not included as part<br />

of normal garbage collection<br />

on the next Clean-Up<br />

Day on May 8. Items may<br />

include furniture, appliances<br />

and boxes. Unaccepted<br />

items include:<br />

electronics, hazardous<br />

waste (oil-based paint,<br />

gas, chemicals, etc.),<br />

building material (wood,<br />

lumber, drywall, etc.) and<br />

landscape waste (trees,<br />

branches, logs, leaves,<br />

etc.). Please place items<br />

at the curb no sooner the<br />

Sunday, May 5.<br />

includes the Guildhall<br />

Restaurant, Hometown<br />

Coffee and Writers Theatre.<br />

A “ravine alliance” was<br />

created to address ravine<br />

degradation on one specific<br />

ravine. Meetings were<br />

held to discuss causes<br />

of deterioration, reasons<br />

for addressing them, and<br />

what to do about the situation,<br />

including a study<br />

to identify current conditions<br />

and costs of repair.<br />

Recently, the Village was<br />

approached by the Lake<br />

County Stormwater Management<br />

District to fund<br />

such studies for all Glencoe<br />

ravines.<br />

As one step to assist<br />

residents in reducing energy<br />

usage, a “Meatless<br />

Monday” campaign was<br />

initiated by presenting<br />

information to Glencoe<br />

restaurants. Some have<br />

already responded enthusiastically,<br />

with meatless<br />

offerings.<br />

A window sticker and<br />

information campaign<br />

was developed to present<br />

to Glencoe’s businesses<br />

to encourage environmentally<br />

sustainable<br />

management. Over thirty<br />

businesses have now<br />

completed a survey and<br />

Arbor Day Planting<br />

Celebrate Arbor Day<br />

with the Village and District<br />

35! Join a special tree<br />

planting ceremony on Friday,<br />

April 26, at 2:15 p.m.<br />

at South School, 266 Linden<br />

Ave. This event is just<br />

one of the many ways the<br />

Village shows its commitment<br />

to Glencoe's special<br />

received stickers. Look<br />

for them and thank the<br />

business when shopping<br />

there.<br />

The Task Force has<br />

looked at various ways to<br />

reinforce water conservation<br />

and reduce negative<br />

impacts of stormwater,<br />

the latter including bioswales<br />

and rain gardens.<br />

The Task Force now has<br />

two student volunteers<br />

from Central School.<br />

They are contributing<br />

very positively to our efforts,<br />

most notably with<br />

their opinions about how<br />

best to motivate students<br />

regarding sustainability.<br />

The Task Force is currently<br />

evaluating how to<br />

further focus and leverage<br />

activities most beneficially<br />

for the community,<br />

through goal-setting<br />

and reviewing results.<br />

Awareness building is<br />

part of each initiative and<br />

a variety of methods are<br />

being employed, including<br />

regular updates in the<br />

The Glencoe Anchor, on<br />

the Village’s website and<br />

social media, presence<br />

at Village events such as<br />

the French Market, Sesquicentennial<br />

activities,<br />

and special events at the<br />

library.<br />

urban canopy. Thanks to<br />

the Village's dedication,<br />

the Village has been designated<br />

a Tree City USA<br />

by the Arbor Day foundation<br />

for more than 30<br />

years.<br />

From the Village is compiled<br />

from Glencoe's Village<br />

eNews.


glencoeanchor.com news<br />

the glencoe anchor | April 18, 2019 | 11<br />

New Trier Girls Club’s longevity celebrated at open house<br />

Alexa Burnell<br />

Freelance Reporter<br />

While the weather was<br />

unusually cold, snowy and<br />

uninviting Sunday, April<br />

14, the atmosphere inside<br />

New Trier High School<br />

was quite the opposite.<br />

As visitors entered the<br />

building, members of the<br />

Girls Club warmly welcomed<br />

guests, giving a tour<br />

of the building while celebrating<br />

100 years of helping<br />

other deserving girls<br />

receive the financial boost<br />

they need to attend college.<br />

“It’s easy to assume that<br />

all New Trier students have<br />

the means to attend college,<br />

but there are many families<br />

that need some help,” said<br />

senior Alice Beberdick, of<br />

Wilmette, who serves as<br />

the club’s president. “Our<br />

main fundraising occurs at<br />

sporting events, where we<br />

sell concessions, donating<br />

all proceeds to the New<br />

Trier Educational Scholarship<br />

Fund. In addition,<br />

we reach out to family,<br />

friends and the community<br />

throughout the year, selling<br />

wrapping paper, candles<br />

and other gifts, ensuring<br />

that fundraising efforts occur<br />

all year long.”<br />

Along with learning<br />

how to run successful fundraising<br />

initiatives, the<br />

members of the club learn<br />

valuable leadership skills<br />

too. The executive board<br />

in particular, which along<br />

with Beberdick includes<br />

officers Julia Goldish, of<br />

Glencoe, Halle Nelson, of<br />

Wilmette, and Lily Nicolaides,<br />

of Kenilworth,<br />

meet weekly at the Activities<br />

Leadership Practicum<br />

Seminar. The seminar is<br />

a full credit course that<br />

unites student leaders of<br />

various extracurricular organization<br />

to discuss their<br />

roles as leaders within<br />

Past Girls Club president Betsy Owens (back right), of<br />

Winnetka, enjoys a tour of the school from current Girls<br />

Club members.<br />

their respective organizations.<br />

“We have learned so<br />

much by participating in<br />

ALPS. We discuss the<br />

various ways to be leaders<br />

and discover our strengths<br />

and weaknesses,” Goldish<br />

said. “We also learn how<br />

to collaborate with leaders<br />

of other groups, supporting<br />

each other’s missions.”<br />

“Through ALPS, we<br />

have come to realize that<br />

each of us have different<br />

leadership styles, but that<br />

they complement one another.<br />

Understanding this<br />

makes us most effective,”<br />

Nicolaides added.<br />

For Nelson, seeing her<br />

own self-growth over her<br />

four-year commitment to<br />

Girls Club, along with developing<br />

friendships over<br />

the shared goal of helping<br />

other students, has been<br />

most rewarding.<br />

“I first joined my freshman<br />

year and immediately<br />

made friends with other<br />

girls who wanted to be in<br />

the club for all the right<br />

reasons,” Nelson said. “I<br />

was new to this school district,<br />

so it made my transition<br />

that much easier. Since<br />

then, I’ve seen myself and<br />

others transition from club<br />

members to club leaders.”<br />

During the day of celebration,<br />

guests were eager<br />

to meet the current members<br />

and leaders. Many<br />

of the visitors, like Winnetka’s<br />

Betsy Owens, was<br />

not only a member during<br />

her time at New Trier, but<br />

a past president, as well.<br />

“Girls Club is a great<br />

way to gain leadership<br />

skills and help others all<br />

at the same time,” Owens<br />

said. “It’s truly amazing to<br />

have a club with this longevity,<br />

but also not surprising<br />

because each year their<br />

fundraising efforts add up<br />

to a significant amount<br />

that is used to help others<br />

make the dream of college<br />

a bit more realistic and less<br />

stressful.”<br />

Overseeing the club is<br />

special education teacher<br />

Melissa Gonzalez and science<br />

teacher Lauren Meyer.<br />

For Gonzalez, watching<br />

the girls grow into leaders<br />

is the most rewarding part<br />

of being a sponsor.<br />

“I just love seeing these<br />

girls work together every<br />

day for the good of others,”<br />

Gonzalez said. “They<br />

are all truly committed<br />

to the mission of raising<br />

funds for the Scholarship<br />

Fund. Watching them embrace<br />

their roles as leaders<br />

is really wonderful.”<br />

Devlin Guthrie, of Kenilworth, gives a tour of New Trier as part of the Girls Club’s<br />

100th anniversary Sunday, April 14, at the Winnetka campus. Photos by Alexa<br />

Burnell/22nd Century Media<br />

March 21 through May 5<br />

To reserve tickets - oillamptheater.org<br />

Or (847) 834-0738


12 | April 18, 2019 | The glencoe anchor news<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

Good Through April 24, 2019<br />

<br />

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<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

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<br />

<br />

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<br />

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<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 />

$ .39<br />

4 LB.<br />

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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 />

TICKETS $20<br />

Use promo code PAPER to take $5 off!<br />

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

Annual Trevian Trot 5K returns<br />

May 5 with new features<br />

Submitted by New Trier<br />

Registration is now<br />

open for the 2019 Trevian<br />

Trot hosted by New<br />

Trier High School’s Kinetic<br />

Wellness Department<br />

on Sunday, May 5.<br />

The annual walk and run<br />

now features B-Tags, a<br />

timing device that records<br />

each race participant’s net<br />

time, and a special registration<br />

discount is available<br />

for current New Trier<br />

Booster Club members.<br />

Participants can sign up<br />

online, through the mail<br />

or in person for the 5K<br />

race, formerly known as<br />

the Run to Remember.<br />

Registration and T-shirt<br />

pick-up opens at 7 a.m.<br />

and closes at 7:50 a.m.<br />

the morning of the run at<br />

the Northfield Campus, 7<br />

Happ Road near the stadium.<br />

An opening ceremony<br />

and raffle will be held at<br />

7:55 a.m. The 5k run begins<br />

at 8 a.m., and the 5k<br />

walk begins at 8:05 a.m.<br />

After the race, runners and<br />

walkers will participate in<br />

an awards ceremony with<br />

refreshments.<br />

Growth<br />

From Page 3<br />

component, such as working<br />

for a local park district<br />

or youth center.<br />

He recalled one case<br />

where a teenager pushed<br />

over a portable toilet, he<br />

had to work at the Wilmette<br />

Park District cleaning<br />

up cake and ice cream.<br />

“I learned when you<br />

make a mess someone<br />

you have to clean it up,”<br />

Leverenz recalled of what<br />

the offender had to say.<br />

Leverenz said the offenders<br />

– who often may<br />

be lacking in social outlets<br />

— can work at places<br />

where they can meet fellow<br />

teenagers.<br />

“I see no problem with<br />

sending a kid to where<br />

they might have some<br />

fun and might make new<br />

friends and develop some<br />

new interests,” he said.<br />

He also noted in some<br />

cases the organization<br />

where they were sent to<br />

perform community service,<br />

eventually hired<br />

The race began in 2001,<br />

when New Trier’s Wellness<br />

Week featured a 5K<br />

RUNdezvous focusing<br />

on health and wellness in<br />

the community and the<br />

school. In 2003, the RUNdezvous<br />

became the Run<br />

to Remember in memory<br />

of Shea Fitzgerald, Sam<br />

Farmer and Julie Sorkin,<br />

three graduates who died<br />

in a Chicago porch collapse<br />

that summer. In<br />

2012, Jan Borja, former<br />

principal and an avid supporter<br />

of the run, passed<br />

away after a long illness,<br />

and the run was also dedicated<br />

to her memory. The<br />

name of the 5K race was<br />

changed to the Trevian<br />

Trot in 2013.<br />

“The Trevian Trot continues<br />

to donate proceeds<br />

from the Fun Run/Walk<br />

to scholarship funds and<br />

charities in memory of Jan<br />

and the three graduates,”<br />

Race Director Jennifer Tricoli<br />

said. Trevian Trot beneficiaries<br />

include the Jan<br />

Borja Scholarship Fund,<br />

the NorthShore University<br />

Neonatal Unit, Misericordia,<br />

and the Shea Fitzgerald<br />

Wrestling Scholarship.<br />

Trevian Trot pre-race<br />

day registration is $25 for<br />

adults and $20 for students,<br />

and race day registration<br />

is $30 for adults<br />

and $25 for students. For<br />

Booster Club members,<br />

pre-race day registration<br />

is $15 for adults and $10<br />

for students, and race<br />

day registration is $20<br />

for adults and $15 for<br />

students. Sign up online<br />

now at newtrier.k12.il.us/<br />

treviantrot. Registrations<br />

are also accepted through<br />

the mail with the completed<br />

form (found on the<br />

website) and payment to<br />

New Trier High School,<br />

Attn: Jennifer Tricoli, 7<br />

Happ Road, Northfield IL<br />

60093. Make checks payable<br />

to New Trier High<br />

School. In-person registrations<br />

can be completed<br />

in Room F111 at the<br />

Northfield Campus during<br />

school hours.<br />

For more information, visit<br />

newtrier.k12.il.us/treviantrot<br />

or follow @NTTrevianTrot<br />

on Twitter and @Trevian-<br />

Trot5k on Instagram.<br />

them for their staff.<br />

While the offending juveniles<br />

identity remains confidential,<br />

there is occasionally<br />

an opportunity for victim’s<br />

impact statements to be read<br />

in court and the offenders<br />

have to write apology letters<br />

to the victim or their family.<br />

“It is a different way<br />

of thinking about crime<br />

and our response to crime<br />

in that we focus on the<br />

harm that has been done,”<br />

Leverenz said.<br />

For full story, visit GlencoeAnchor.com.


glencoeanchor.com news<br />

the glencoe anchor | April 18, 2019 | 13<br />

Scouts<br />

fundraise<br />

for township<br />

pantry with<br />

tradition<br />

Staff Report<br />

Former Boy Scout Devan Miller, of Glencoe, enjoys his dinner.<br />

Scout Nathan Heftman, 12, takes two plates to serve attendees.<br />

Glencoe Boy Scout<br />

Troop 28 served hundreds<br />

of guests during its annual<br />

Spaghetti Dinner April 8 at<br />

Glencoe Union Church.<br />

The troop has held this<br />

fundraiser for more than<br />

30 years to help support<br />

the New Trier Township<br />

Food Pantry with the proceeds.<br />

It’s part of the Boy<br />

Scouts of America Annual<br />

“Scouting for Food” efforts.<br />

Troop 28 Scouts John Hayek (left) and Ryan Hostert, both 14 years<br />

old, collect dinner tickets.<br />

Glencoe Public Safety lieutenants Lee Weinzimmer (left) and Matt<br />

Esposito pose for a photo together at the event.<br />

Troop committee member<br />

Brian Hoffman serves<br />

spaghetti April 8 at<br />

the annual Spaghetti<br />

Dinner at Glencoe Union<br />

Church. Photos by Gerri<br />

Fernandez/22nd Century<br />

Media


14 | April 18, 2019 | The glencoe anchor sound off<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

City Girl Confessions<br />

So much more than a candy store<br />

Kelly Anderson<br />

Contributing Columnist<br />

A<br />

few years ago I<br />

covered the grand<br />

opening of The<br />

Sweet Buddha in Glencoe.<br />

I shot photos, interviewed<br />

owner Sarah Miller and<br />

had a sugar-filled day at<br />

her cheery candy store.<br />

But here’s the thing:<br />

I just walked into The<br />

Sweet Buddha this past<br />

week and found myself<br />

taken aback. Everything<br />

was different. Is the candy<br />

still there? Yes, delicious<br />

candy is still present<br />

and accounted for. But<br />

the vibe of the shop has<br />

evolved. I suspect its<br />

growth can be traced to<br />

the evolution most local<br />

businesses adapt to —<br />

tailoring your shop and<br />

its products to consumer<br />

demand and laboriously<br />

tweaking that formula to<br />

stay fresh and current.<br />

Fresh and current are<br />

two words that came to<br />

mind when I walked into<br />

The Sweet Buddha. There<br />

is a lovely display of jewelry<br />

that runs the gamut<br />

of easy, everyday bracelet<br />

stacks to delicate rings<br />

and earrings with a bit of<br />

sparkle. I noticed several<br />

handbags, scarves, and zip<br />

pouches along with go-to<br />

gift items like glassware<br />

and candles. I grinned<br />

when I saw a whimsical<br />

station of the store<br />

in which shoppers could<br />

make customized dorm<br />

room signs using letters<br />

from old license plates.<br />

My youngest child, who<br />

happened to be tagging<br />

along, busiest herself<br />

by making friends with<br />

stuffed animal unicorns.<br />

A quick glance let me<br />

see that the store was a<br />

treasure trove for young<br />

ones and their bright<br />

imaginations — colorful<br />

backpacks, rainbow reading<br />

pillows, notebooks,<br />

glittery signs, etc.<br />

When I gestured to the<br />

brightly lit event space,<br />

Sarah passed along information<br />

on birthday parties,<br />

personalized candy<br />

baskets and event hosting<br />

(not just for children<br />

either — think jewelry<br />

making or painting).<br />

The genius herein is that<br />

the store owner is a parent<br />

and knows how to balance<br />

the shopping harmony<br />

among the age groups.<br />

Sarah wisely set up a<br />

couch, coffee table and<br />

TV so kids are welcome<br />

to hang out, relax, and<br />

enjoy a sweet treat while<br />

parents shop for a few<br />

blissfully uninterrupted<br />

minutes. Yes, you read<br />

that correctly: this store<br />

has a spot specifically for<br />

your kids so you can shop<br />

in peace.<br />

I’ll confess: I thought I<br />

had this local shop figured<br />

out. I had written about<br />

it long ago, I had known<br />

its story. The problem<br />

was that I didn’t check<br />

back in — something that<br />

often happens when we<br />

consumers get busy with<br />

and opt for convenience<br />

over shopping local. What<br />

I learned is that The Sweet<br />

Buddha still satisfies a<br />

sugar fix but it shines as a<br />

fresh specialty store.<br />

As my visit came to an<br />

end, I made a promise to<br />

myself that I would not<br />

fall into this kind of trap<br />

again; the trap that removes<br />

curiosity from our<br />

daily lives. Small business<br />

owners work exhaustive<br />

hours to ensure a positive<br />

consumer experience in<br />

our community. Let’s stay<br />

curious about how these<br />

stores are doing. Let’s<br />

walk in and look around<br />

when we have an extra<br />

five minutes. Let’s share<br />

the secret of what makes a<br />

local business so great. In<br />

doing so, you might<br />

learn, as I certainly did,<br />

Sweet Buddha is located at<br />

660 Vernon Ave., Glencoe.<br />

Photo by Sarah Miller<br />

that this is so much more<br />

than a candy store.<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 />

THE LAKE FOREST LEADER<br />

Driver in stable condition<br />

after jumping out of<br />

moving car, off overpass in<br />

Lake Bluff<br />

A driver suffering from<br />

a mental health crisis<br />

jumped out of his moving<br />

vehicle and then off an<br />

overpass around 6:10 p.m.<br />

on April 8 in unincorporated<br />

Lake Bluff, according<br />

to the Lake County<br />

Sheriff’s Office.<br />

The driver, a 28-yearold<br />

Libertyville man, traveled<br />

westbound on Route<br />

137, just east of Interstate<br />

94 in unincorporated Lake<br />

Bluff, and had one passenger<br />

in the car, a 42-yearold<br />

man from Grayslake.<br />

The driver, who is not<br />

being identified, opened<br />

his car door and intentionally<br />

fell out of the moving<br />

vehicle on the roadway,<br />

for an unknown reason,<br />

according to the passenger.<br />

Witnesses reported the<br />

driver got up and jumped<br />

off the overpass, falling<br />

onto the railroad tracks<br />

approximately 30-feet below<br />

the roadway, per the<br />

release.<br />

The driver sustained<br />

serious injuries and was<br />

transported to Advocate<br />

Condell Medical Center in<br />

Libertyville.<br />

Sgt. Christopher Covelli,<br />

of the Lake County<br />

Sheriff’s Office, said the<br />

driver is in stable condition<br />

at the hospital as of<br />

April 9.<br />

The passenger of the<br />

vehicle — who is a friend<br />

of the driver — was not injured<br />

when the car struck<br />

the guardrail, Covelli added.<br />

“The passenger was<br />

completely taken off guard<br />

and taken by surprise when<br />

the driver jumped out of<br />

the moving vehicle,” Covelli<br />

told The Lake Forest<br />

Leader.<br />

“It appears the driver<br />

was in mental health crisis<br />

and attempted to inflict<br />

self-harm,” the release<br />

says. “In addition to treatment<br />

for his injuries, medical<br />

personnel will evaluate<br />

the man’s mental health.”<br />

Reporting by Alyssa Groh,<br />

Contributing Editor. Full<br />

story at LakeForestLeader.<br />

com.<br />

THE WILMETTE BEACON<br />

Resident suggests<br />

proposal to save<br />

cottonwood trees at<br />

Community Playfield<br />

After attending the Wilmette<br />

Park Board meeting<br />

the day before to speak<br />

about the stormwater project,<br />

resident Herb Engelhard<br />

attended the Village<br />

Board meeting the next<br />

day to speak about the<br />

same topic.<br />

Engelhard and fellow<br />

resident Rick Prohov arrived<br />

to the Village Board<br />

meeting on Tuesday, April<br />

9, after the designated public<br />

comment time, as they<br />

were not familiar with the<br />

Village Board’s practice<br />

of public comment taking<br />

place near the beginning of<br />

the meeting. Immediately<br />

upon the board adjourning<br />

the meeting, Engelhard<br />

and Prohov indicated they<br />

wanted to speak. All board<br />

members except trustee<br />

Joel Kurzman voted in favor<br />

of reopening the meeting<br />

to allow them to speak.<br />

Kurzman voiced his displeasure<br />

that the residents<br />

were allowed to speak outside<br />

of the designated public<br />

comment time.<br />

“There needs to be consistency,”<br />

he said. “There<br />

have been 11 years of<br />

meetings on this, and I<br />

have sat in those seats (in<br />

the audience) and wanted<br />

to get that mic and I wait<br />

for the appropriate time<br />

and juncture to do it.”<br />

Trustee Kathy Dodd<br />

defended the residents, as<br />

public comment time takes<br />

place at different points in<br />

the meeting depending on<br />

the body they’re speaking<br />

in front of.<br />

“It is confusing that the<br />

park district has public<br />

comment at a different<br />

time,” she said. “Even in<br />

some of our committee<br />

meetings, public comment<br />

is at the end of the<br />

discussion. I want to acknowledge<br />

if you’re not a<br />

resident who is constantly<br />

attending these meetings<br />

that it can be confusing for<br />

them.”<br />

Reporting by Todd Marver,<br />

Freelance Reporter. Full<br />

story at WilmetteBeacon.<br />

com.<br />

Please see nfyn, 15


glencoeanchor.com SOUND OFF<br />

the glencoe anchor | April 18, 2019 | 15<br />

Social snapshot<br />

Top Stories<br />

from GlencoeAnchor.com as of April 15:<br />

1. Nominations accepted for new Glencoe<br />

exhibit<br />

2. Police Reports: Fugitive nabbed on six<br />

charges in Glencoe<br />

3. Police Reports: Resident threatens FedEx<br />

driver over delivery<br />

4. Woman’s Library Club celebrates 145<br />

years of ‘improving the lives of others’<br />

5. Girls hockey: Babnik takes home Player<br />

of the Year award<br />

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

From the Sports Editor<br />

Area kids skate for a good cause<br />

Michael Wojtychiw<br />

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

On April 7, students<br />

and hockey players<br />

from numerous<br />

local schools and hockey<br />

programs took part in<br />

the 100 Miles for Danny<br />

event, an event featuring<br />

20 teams who skated five<br />

miles per leg or a total of<br />

55 laps of the rink.<br />

I've written in the past<br />

about the effect the Danny<br />

Did Foundation has had<br />

on my life and to see the<br />

amount of people that<br />

continually come out to<br />

support the organization is<br />

truly heartwarming. A lot<br />

of what we hear about in<br />

today's world is the bad,<br />

but to not only hear about,<br />

but witness the good, is<br />

definitely something that<br />

helps gives you faith in<br />

the future.<br />

Hockey players from<br />

Loyola Academy girls<br />

team, the Wilmette Braves<br />

and Tribe, and Sacred<br />

Heart School were all part<br />

of the group that took part<br />

in the event, which was<br />

held at Lake Forest Academy.<br />

Each participating<br />

team raised at least $1,000<br />

for the event.<br />

Witnessing all the kids<br />

having fun, being able to<br />

skate again on the ice for<br />

a good cause and even<br />

getting the chance to meet<br />

Tommy Hawk, the Chicago<br />

Blackhawks mascot,<br />

was a sight to see.<br />

I was able to attend the<br />

event and help volunteer<br />

with the group. Another<br />

great thing to see was<br />

the curiosity of the kids<br />

participating. The number<br />

of skaters who would<br />

ask their parents what<br />

the event was for, what<br />

epilepsy was or just had a<br />

plain curiosity of the day,<br />

you could see made their<br />

parents feel good because<br />

they were able to explain<br />

to their children and help<br />

educate them about what<br />

made that day so special.<br />

To the Danny Did<br />

Foundation, congratulations<br />

again on throwing<br />

another fun, successful<br />

event. To the local skaters<br />

who took part in the event,<br />

thank you for coming out<br />

to support such a good<br />

cause. It's nice to see such<br />

a young group learning at<br />

such a young age. Here's<br />

to hoping that thirst for<br />

knowledge and curiosity<br />

continues as you get older.<br />

Loyola Academy posted this photo April 11<br />

with the caption: “On Sunday, more than 200<br />

parents and students gathered for Loyola’s<br />

annual Family Mass and Day of Service sponsored<br />

by the Mothers’ Club, Fathers’ Network<br />

and Campus Ministry.”<br />

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

“#ThrowbackThursday Glencoe’s #PoliceK9, Keno<br />

doing a demonstration for the local children. #K9”<br />

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

April 11<br />

Follow The Glencoe Anchor: @GlencoeAnchor<br />

go figure<br />

100<br />

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

The amount of miles skated in<br />

100 Miles for Danny, an event by<br />

the Danny Did Foundation to raise<br />

awareness about epilepsy. (Page 6)<br />

nfyn<br />

From Page 14<br />

THE GLENVIEW LANTERN<br />

67-year-old man killed in<br />

head-on crash<br />

A 67-year-old man was<br />

killed in a head-on collision<br />

the morning of April<br />

9 on West Lake Avenue in<br />

Glenview, according to the<br />

Glenview Police Department.<br />

Police have identified<br />

the man as Raul Gonzalez,<br />

of Schiller Park.<br />

The two-car crash occurred<br />

at 5:28 a.m. in the<br />

4700 block of West Lake<br />

Avenue.<br />

Gonzalez and the driver<br />

of the other vehicle were<br />

transported to Lutheran<br />

General Hospital in Park<br />

Ridge, where Gonzalez<br />

was pronounced dead at<br />

6:51 a.m. the same day,<br />

according to a press release.<br />

The second driver was<br />

treated at Lutheran General<br />

Hospital for non-lifethreatening<br />

injuries.<br />

Police cleared the roadway<br />

for traffic after the<br />

Glenview Police Department<br />

and the Major Crash<br />

Assistance Team investigated<br />

the cause of the<br />

crash for several hours that<br />

morning.<br />

Staff Report. Full story at<br />

GlenviewLantern.com.<br />

THE HIGHLAND PARK LANDMARK<br />

City Council approves Red<br />

Oak and Windy Hill Lane<br />

subdivision<br />

A new four-lot subdivision<br />

will be coming to the<br />

northwest corner of Red<br />

Oak and Windy Hill Lane<br />

as City Council gave it<br />

the go-ahead at its Monday,<br />

April 8, meeting with<br />

some development skepticism<br />

by council members<br />

and contention from the<br />

area’s residents.<br />

One concern shared by<br />

council members was the<br />

preservation of a heritage<br />

tree, which is in the<br />

middle of the subdivision.<br />

A consideration to amend<br />

the resolution to reduce<br />

the subdivision to three<br />

lots was shot down and<br />

the resolution received<br />

a unanimous 7-0 vote.<br />

Council members echoed<br />

each other, stating that all<br />

procedures and protocols<br />

have been met, therefore it<br />

should be approved.<br />

David Meek, the applicant’s<br />

attorney, asked that<br />

City Council adhere to<br />

their procedures that the<br />

applicant has followed. He<br />

added that while there are<br />

no final plans for the subdivision,<br />

there are multiple<br />

configurations to avoid removing<br />

the heritage tree.<br />

“As much as we’re<br />

sending a clear message<br />

… I think what we’re being<br />

asked here is something<br />

that the applicant is<br />

allowed to do by right,”<br />

Councilman Adam Stolberg<br />

said.<br />

Reporting by Eric Bradach,<br />

Freelance Reporter. Full<br />

story at HPLandmark.com.<br />

The Glencoe Anchor<br />

Sound Off Policy<br />

Editorials and columns are the opinions of the author. Pieces from 22nd<br />

Century Media are the thoughts of the company as a whole. The Glencoe<br />

Anchor encourages readers to write letters to Sound Off. All letters must<br />

be signed, and names and hometowns will be published. We also ask<br />

that writers include their address and phone number for verification, not<br />

publication. Letters should be limited to 400 words. The Glencoe Anchor<br />

reserves the right to edit letters. Letters become property of The Glencoe<br />

Anchor. Letters that are published do not reflect the thoughts and views<br />

of The Glencoe Anchor. Letters can be mailed to: The Glencoe Anchor, 60<br />

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

4648 or email to megan@glencoeanchor.com.<br />

www.glencoeanchor.com


16 | April 18, 2019 | The glencoe anchor Glencoe<br />

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NEED REAL ESTATE HELP? JUST ASK Julie!<br />

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568 Lincoln Avenue | Winnetka, IL 60093<br />

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

agents and are not employees of the Company.©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.Coldwell Banker and the Coldwell Banker Logo are registered service marks owned by Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC.


the glencoe anchor | April 18, 2019 | glencoeanchor.com<br />

Fresh-food facelift<br />

Trattoria Oliverii adds new options to classic Italian menu, Page 21<br />

North Shore Congregation Israel’s gift shop is one of<br />

few remaining Judaica outlets in area, Page 19<br />

Judaica Gift Shop managers Nancy Mantynband (left) and Karen Kohn oversee the space at North Shore Congregation Israel in Glencoe. Photo Submitted


18 | April 18, 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. Salute<br />

5. Big brass<br />

9. Cheesy sandwiches<br />

14. “The Sun ___<br />

Rises”<br />

15. Isabel Allende’s<br />

“___ of My Soul”<br />

16. Absinthe flavoring<br />

17. Martian ships<br />

18. Lt. Kojak<br />

19. Madison Avenue<br />

worker<br />

20. North Shore golf<br />

club<br />

22. Poetic preposition<br />

23. Mysterious, alt.<br />

spelling<br />

24. Storm heading,<br />

abbr.<br />

26. Most artful<br />

29. Mrs. sheep<br />

30. Vienna’s land, abbr.<br />

33. Mimics<br />

34. Exhaust<br />

36. City near Anaheim<br />

37. Toyota ____ 4<br />

38. Diatribe<br />

39. “Zumanity” players<br />

____ soleil<br />

42. Book before Nahum<br />

43. 116 is one<br />

44. Warriors’ grp.<br />

45. ____ Lagoons,<br />

near Glencoe<br />

47. San Francisco hill<br />

48. Earth sci.<br />

49. Pub offering<br />

51. Alexander the<br />

Great’s kingdom area<br />

56. Hymn start<br />

58. Heater<br />

59. Coquette<br />

60. Irish poet Oscar<br />

61. Lightsaber user<br />

62. Excessively orderly,<br />

informally<br />

63. The ‘new’ ketchup<br />

64. Fashion designer<br />

Cassini<br />

65. Education by<br />

memorization<br />

Down<br />

1. Spoils<br />

2. Romeo starter<br />

3. It’s fine<br />

4. Squander<br />

5. Dukes and so on<br />

6. O.K.<br />

7. Like muscle<br />

magazine models<br />

8. Starting from<br />

9. Plaintive cry<br />

10. Furnish with a<br />

fund<br />

11. Beer garnish<br />

12. Boris or Alexander<br />

13. Capitol Hill<br />

V.I.P., abbr.<br />

21. Hive group<br />

24. Personal ad abbr.<br />

25. Catch on<br />

26. Sail extender<br />

27. Knowing looks<br />

28. A 1991 war zone<br />

29. Ltr. holder<br />

30. Old adders<br />

31. Arm bones<br />

32. Son of Adam and<br />

Eve<br />

33. Kindergarten<br />

lesson<br />

34. It’s bottled in<br />

Cannes<br />

35. The Phantom of<br />

the Opera<br />

37. Food stat.<br />

40. A, in Acapulco<br />

41. Diminish<br />

42. Jello frame<br />

45. Break away<br />

46. Chekov player on<br />

“Star Trek”<br />

47. Social rejects<br />

48. Judges mallet<br />

49. Et or inter follower<br />

50. Allow to hang<br />

51. Austin Powers’<br />

power<br />

52. Actor Sharif<br />

53. Boy, to his madre<br />

54. “For those listening<br />

___ home ...”<br />

55. Car bar<br />

56. Cries of pain<br />

57. Raiding grp.<br />

GLENCOE<br />

Writers Theatre<br />

(325 Tudor Court)<br />

■2 ■ p.m. Sunday, April<br />

21: “A Number” (additional<br />

showtimes<br />

throughout the weekend)<br />

Glencoe Park District<br />

(999 Green Bay Road)<br />

■5-7 ■ p.m. Saturday,<br />

April 27: Mom and Me<br />

Magical Date Night<br />

WILMETTE<br />

The Rock House<br />

(1150 Central Ave.,<br />

(847) 256-7625)<br />

■6-9 ■ p.m. Friday, April<br />

19: Family Karaoke<br />

Night<br />

■9:30 ■ a.m. Saturday,<br />

April 20: DewDropper<br />

Jazz Quartet<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 />

Wilmette Theatre<br />

(1122 Central<br />

Ave.,(847) 251-7424)<br />

■9:30 ■ p.m. Thursday,<br />

April 25: First<br />

Contact: Featuring<br />

Black’s Backbone<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 />

Village Presbyterian<br />

Church<br />

(1300 Shermer Road)<br />

■10 ■ a.m. Saturday,<br />

April 20: Easter Egg<br />

Hunt<br />

GLENVIEW<br />

The Glen Club<br />

(1460 Paddock Drive)<br />

■5-8 ■ p.m. Thursday,<br />

April 18: Bites and<br />

Brews<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 | April 18, 2019 | 19<br />

Glencoe-based Judaica Gift Shop readies for Passover<br />

Libby Elliott<br />

Freelance Reporter<br />

As 15-year veteran comanagers<br />

of North Shore<br />

Congregation Israel’s<br />

small, in-house Judaica<br />

Gift Shop, Karen Kohn<br />

and Nancy Mantynband<br />

know a thing or two about<br />

what customers purchase<br />

in the busy weeks before<br />

Passover.<br />

From ornate Seder plates<br />

and intricately embroidered<br />

silk matzah covers<br />

to toys, books, tzedakah<br />

boxes, hand-painted candles<br />

and elegant kiddush<br />

cups, Kohn and Mantynband<br />

have spent nearly<br />

two decades scouring the<br />

global marketplace for the<br />

artisanal pieces of Judaica<br />

that function as essential<br />

components of Passover<br />

and other traditional Jewish<br />

rituals and celebrations<br />

like Shabbat, Rosh Hashanah,<br />

and Hanukah.<br />

Throughout the years,<br />

the pair has developed a<br />

reputation for stocking<br />

one of the most diverse,<br />

thoughtfully-curated collections<br />

of Judaica in Chicagoland,<br />

taking pride in<br />

sourcing unusual products<br />

from across the United<br />

States, Israel, South Africa<br />

and beyond.<br />

“We’ve actually met<br />

many of the artists represented<br />

in this store,” Kahn<br />

said. “In some cases, we’ve<br />

built lasting relationships<br />

with them.”<br />

The Glencoe-based<br />

NSCI Judaica Gift Shop is<br />

well known for its extensive<br />

collection of mezuzot,<br />

stocking pieces from over<br />

a dozen designers, including<br />

popular Pennsylvaniabased<br />

Judaica artist, Joy<br />

Stember.<br />

A small vessel typically<br />

made of metal, porcelain<br />

or wood, a mezuzah contains<br />

a prayer written on<br />

a small parchment scroll,<br />

and is typically affixed to<br />

the doorways of Jewish<br />

homes.<br />

The store also stocks a<br />

special car mezuzah, designed<br />

to fit inside a glove<br />

compartment.<br />

“We find that car mezuzot<br />

sell very well in the<br />

spring when lots of teenagers<br />

get their driver’s licenses,”<br />

Mantynband said.<br />

Kohn and Mantynband,<br />

both residents of Highland<br />

Park, are also committed to<br />

fair trade and socially conscious<br />

buying practices.<br />

The shop carries a line of<br />

fabric jewelry called Ficklesticks,<br />

based in Little<br />

Rock, Ark., made by people<br />

with disabilities. The<br />

shop’s best-selling beaded<br />

bracelets are handmade<br />

by a women’s collective in<br />

Nepal.<br />

“We see these products<br />

as a kind of mitzvah,” said<br />

Kahn, referring to the Jewish<br />

religious tradition of<br />

doing good deeds.<br />

Kohn and Mantynband<br />

also stock products crafted<br />

by Michael Aram, an Armenian<br />

artist well known<br />

for his high-end metalwork<br />

Judaica, tableware, jewelry<br />

and home accessories.<br />

And while Aram sells<br />

only a limited selection<br />

of his products through<br />

department stores like<br />

Bloomingdales and Neiman<br />

Marcus, as an NSCI’s<br />

gift shop established itself<br />

as an independent retailer,<br />

and therefore uniquely able<br />

to source everything in Aram’s<br />

thick product catalog.<br />

“We had a customer in<br />

here last week who ordered<br />

an entire set of Michael<br />

Aram plates for her daughter<br />

as a wedding gift,”<br />

Mantynband said.<br />

Many brick and mortar<br />

Judaica stores have been<br />

forced to close under pressure<br />

from online megastores,<br />

making NSCI’s tiny<br />

250-square-foot gift shop<br />

one of the few remaining<br />

Chicago-area Judaica outlets<br />

where customers can<br />

touch and feel a product<br />

before buying it.<br />

Teens often visit the gift<br />

shop with their parents<br />

to select a tallit, the silk<br />

prayer shawl traditionally<br />

worn during Bar and Bat<br />

Mitzvah ceremonies. The<br />

shawls are hand sewn in<br />

Israel and range in price<br />

from $50 to $350.<br />

“When you order a garment<br />

online, you don’t always<br />

know how it will fit,”<br />

Kohn said.<br />

Kohn, Mantynband and<br />

the gift shop’s rotating staff<br />

The Judaica Gift Shop is located inside North Shore<br />

Congregation Israel in Glencoe and offers diverse<br />

collections. Photo Submitted<br />

of six sales associates are<br />

all volunteers with the congregation’s<br />

auxiliary organization,<br />

Women of NSCI.<br />

Profits from NSCI’s Judaica<br />

Gift Shop support the<br />

ongoing work of the congregation<br />

and help maintain<br />

it’s iconic, Minoru Yamasaki-designed<br />

lakefront<br />

synagogue, built in 1964.<br />

Kohn began volunteering<br />

for NSCI’s gift shop<br />

shortly after joining the<br />

synagogue in 1994 with<br />

her family.<br />

STARTS NOW<br />

“I do this because I love<br />

the merchandise, the institution<br />

and connecting to<br />

people,” she said.<br />

North Shore Congregation<br />

Israel is located at<br />

1185 Sheridan Road, Glencoe.<br />

THETILESALE<br />

Lowest Prices of the Season Now Through June 4th<br />

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847.835.2400<br />

www.lewisfloorandhome.com


20 | April 18, 2019 | The glencoe anchor FAITH<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

In Memoriam<br />

Marilyn Reukauf<br />

Glencoe resident Marilyn<br />

Moreland Reukauf,<br />

born in Los Angeles and<br />

moved with her family<br />

to Cincinnati, Ohio,<br />

when her father, the Rev.<br />

Edward Moreland, was<br />

recruited as the minister<br />

for a larger Disciples Of<br />

Christ Church, died march<br />

26. After graduating from<br />

Skidmore College, Reukauf<br />

moved to New York<br />

City, where she worked at<br />

Simplicity Pattern company<br />

until she met and<br />

married her husband John<br />

Reukauf. She raised their<br />

children, Henry and Julia,<br />

in Manhattan. In the<br />

middle 1970s, Reukauf<br />

returned to work as an<br />

executive recruiter for the<br />

insurance industry until<br />

retiring in the mid-2000s.<br />

She was very involved at<br />

St. Luke’s Church in the<br />

Fields in Greenwich Village,<br />

serving on the vestry<br />

and as warden. Henry and<br />

Julia were educated at the<br />

affiliated church school.<br />

Reukauf was widowed<br />

in 2009. As her health<br />

declined, she moved to<br />

Glencoe in 2016 to live<br />

with Henry, daughter-inlaw<br />

Kathleen Marrin and<br />

granddaughter Heidi. As<br />

often as she could, she<br />

attended St. Elisabeth’s<br />

and made it her spiritual<br />

home. A small family eucharist<br />

was held in Glencoe,<br />

with a larger service<br />

for extended family and<br />

friends being planned in<br />

Buffalo over Memorial<br />

Day weekend.<br />

Edmund Horsch,<br />

Jr.<br />

Edmund<br />

Adam Horsch, Jr.. a former<br />

Glencoe resident,<br />

died peacefully on Saturday,<br />

April 6, at Evanston<br />

Hospital. He was<br />

born March 13, 1932, son<br />

of the late Edmund and<br />

Helen (West) Horsch in<br />

Saint Paul, Minn. Horsch<br />

moved to Wilmette as a<br />

child and later, his parents<br />

settled in Winnetka. He<br />

graduated from New Trier<br />

High School in 1950 and<br />

earned a degree in economics<br />

from Yale University<br />

in 1954. While there<br />

in the ROTC and shortly<br />

thereafter he spent two<br />

years as a 1st Lieutenant.<br />

He was promoted and<br />

flew drone airplanes for<br />

the army in Wisconsin and<br />

Texas. It was final days<br />

of the Korean War. After<br />

that, Horsch moved back<br />

to Winnetka and established<br />

Horsch, Inc. with<br />

his father, Edmund Sr.,<br />

developing commercial<br />

and residential properties<br />

and building custom<br />

homes. Horsch, Inc. built<br />

houses throughout the<br />

North Shore for the next<br />

30 years. He was married<br />

to Joan Krasberg at Saints<br />

Faith Hope and Charity<br />

Church in Winnetka on<br />

Sept. 15, 1962. The couple<br />

raised three children<br />

in Glencoe. He was active<br />

coaching youth baseball<br />

and hockey teams. Horsch<br />

was an enthusiastic golfer<br />

as a lifelong member of<br />

Skokie Country Club. He<br />

was a classic car enthusiast<br />

and spent many summer<br />

days visiting with<br />

friends at Classic Car<br />

Club of America events.<br />

Horsch was also an avid<br />

duck and pheasant hunter<br />

and a longtime member of<br />

the Senachwine Club in<br />

Hennepin, Ill., where he<br />

held the positions of secretary,<br />

treasurer, vice president<br />

and president of the<br />

club. In 1997, Joan succumbed<br />

to pancreatic cancer.<br />

He then met Virginia<br />

Coath Cleary at a mutual<br />

friend’s party and they instantly<br />

clicked. They married<br />

at Saints Faith Hope<br />

and Charity Church in<br />

Winnetka, Illinois on October<br />

2nd, 1999. Virginia<br />

and Ed loved evenings out<br />

with friends and family<br />

as well as spending time<br />

at the Chicago Lyric Opera<br />

and Writers Theater in<br />

Glencoe. They wintered<br />

in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida.<br />

Horsch is survived by<br />

his wife, Virginia Cleary<br />

Horsch (nee Coath), and<br />

his three children, Michael<br />

(Arian), James, and Katherine<br />

(William) Jones, as<br />

well as adored step children<br />

Robert Cleary, Douglas<br />

and Jennifer Cleary,<br />

Carolyn Coath Cleary,<br />

Norine and Christopher<br />

Baker and grandchildren<br />

Caroline C. Horsch, Edmund<br />

Adam Horsch II,<br />

Greta M. Horsch, Nicholas<br />

J. Horsch, William<br />

Hugh Jones III, Gretchen<br />

E. Jones, Mary Bridget<br />

Jones, Douglas E. Jones,<br />

Robert M. Cleary III and<br />

his twin Alexa D. Cleary,<br />

Emily D. Cleary, Charlotte<br />

K. Cleary, Aileen<br />

C. Cleary, Elizabeth G.<br />

Cleary, Ford E. Baker,<br />

Cecilia Virginia Baker,<br />

and Todd M. Baker.<br />

Visitation was Saturday,<br />

April 13, at Divine Mercy<br />

Parish at Sacred Heart<br />

Church, 1077 Tower<br />

Road, Winnetka, IL 60093<br />

followed by Funeral<br />

Mass. Interment Sacred<br />

Heart Cemetery. In lieu<br />

of flowers please send donations<br />

to Lambs Farm,<br />

a community for the developmentally<br />

disabled<br />

14245 W. Rockland Road,<br />

Libertyville, IL 60048 in<br />

honor of his step daughter.Info:<br />

847-675-1990 or<br />

www.donnellanfuneral.<br />

com.<br />

Have someone’s life you’d<br />

like to honor? Email<br />

Michael Wojtychiw at<br />

m.wojtyychiw@22nd<br />

centurymedia.com with information<br />

about a loved one<br />

who was part of the Glencoe<br />

community.<br />

Faith briefs<br />

North Shore Congregation Israel (1185<br />

Sheridan Road, Glencoe)<br />

Community Recovery<br />

Seder<br />

This alcohol-free experiential<br />

Seder (Passover<br />

meal and ritual) is intended<br />

for all who are journeying<br />

toward recovery, those in<br />

recovery, and their loved<br />

ones and allies, to celebrate<br />

Passover in a safe<br />

environment among others<br />

who speak the language of<br />

recovery. For more information<br />

on this 6-7:30 p.m.<br />

Saturday, April 20 event,<br />

contact Rabbi Ryan Daniels<br />

at rabbidaniels@nsci.<br />

org or 847-835-0724.<br />

Beyond Borders: The<br />

History of the Israeli-Arab<br />

Conflict<br />

This discussion-based<br />

class will challenge everything<br />

you thought you<br />

knew or believed about<br />

this complex conflict, using<br />

materials representing<br />

many different points of<br />

view from the 19th century<br />

through today. To register<br />

contact rolly@bjechicago.<br />

org. The class goes from<br />

10-11:30 a.m. April 18.<br />

Living a Life of Meaning<br />

From a Jewish perspective<br />

we can choose to live<br />

our lives with meaning and<br />

purpose or with despair<br />

and cynicism. Join Rabbi<br />

Geffen from 7-8 p.m. on<br />

both April 24 in an exploration<br />

of Judaism’s most<br />

import principles and values<br />

and how their understanding<br />

can improve our<br />

lives, our relationships and<br />

our world.<br />

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

Family Seder<br />

Join Rabbi Phyllis Sommer<br />

and her family from<br />

5:30-9 p.m. Friday, April<br />

19, for a fun and interactive<br />

family seder! All are<br />

welcome! $50/adult, $25/<br />

child<br />

Our meals are ordered<br />

from Allergy Friendly<br />

vendors and specified to<br />

be nut-free. If you have<br />

questions or special food<br />

needs, please contact our<br />

office and with adequate<br />

notice we will do our best<br />

to accommodate.<br />

Passover Service and<br />

Matzah Brei Cook Off<br />

Rabbi Steve and Rabbi<br />

Phyllis will face off once<br />

again: whose matzah cuisine<br />

will reign supreme in<br />

this 9-11 a.m. event on Saturday,<br />

April 20?! Find out<br />

at our matzah brei cookoff,<br />

followed by the Passover<br />

service. Breakfast is<br />

free, but please register so<br />

we can make sure to have<br />

enough food for all.<br />

Fanchon Simons’ Feeding<br />

the Hungry<br />

Each month, volunteer<br />

members of Am Shalom<br />

gather in the kitchen<br />

to pack 400 lunches for<br />

people in need. It just<br />

takes about an hour and<br />

is rewarding for folks of<br />

any age! Additional volunteers<br />

are needed to<br />

deliver the food. Please<br />

contact Nina Schroeder at<br />

ninas8888@gmail.com or<br />

847.835.7025. The next<br />

one will take place at 9<br />

a.m. Sunday, April 21.<br />

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

Vernon Ave.)<br />

Maundy Thursday<br />

On Maundy Thursday,<br />

April 18, the Lay Readers<br />

are hosting an informal<br />

Agape (love) Supper in the<br />

Dining Room. The supper<br />

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

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

Maundy Thursday, April 18<br />

We gather for a 6:30<br />

p.m. service of remembrance<br />

of the final evening<br />

Jesus, with his friends, celebrated<br />

the Passover meal.<br />

A full meal will be shared<br />

along with Communion -<br />

all in the Cornell Room.<br />

Meal and worship service<br />

will conclude by 8:30 p.m.<br />

This is an event for the<br />

whole family. RSVP the<br />

church office: 847-835-<br />

1111, info@glencoeunionchurch.org<br />

Good Friday. April 19<br />

With readings, prayer<br />

and song, we commemorate<br />

the suffering and death<br />

of Jesus. This is a meditative<br />

and profoundly hopeful<br />

service at 7:30 p.m..<br />

Easter Sunrise, April 21<br />

Come celebrate Easter<br />

Communion at the rising<br />

of the Sun on Glencoe<br />

Beach at 6:00 a.m. Dress<br />

is casual. We’ll gather to<br />

read the Easter story as the<br />

Sun rises on Easter Day.<br />

Easter Sunday Worship<br />

This is the most sacred<br />

Sunday of the Church<br />

year! Together, at 10 a.m.,<br />

we will proclaim in word<br />

and song the Resurrection<br />

of Jesus and remember<br />

again what this means for<br />

our lives and the world.<br />

Submit information to<br />

m.wojtychiw@22ndcentury<br />

media.com.


glencoeanchor.com dining out<br />

the glencoe anchor | April 18, 2019 | 21<br />

Trattoria Oliverii mixes tradition<br />

with fresh spin on Italian classics<br />

Eric DeGrechie, Managing Editor<br />

Spring can be a challenging time of<br />

year for local residents as the weather<br />

seems to change every day, even by the<br />

hour at times.<br />

Katie Keefe and Ali Clark, owners of<br />

Northbrook’s Trattoria Oliverii, are especially<br />

excited for better weather to roll<br />

into town.<br />

“We’re ready to put our patio out,”<br />

said Clark, adding that eight tables with<br />

24 seats total will soon be available for<br />

seating on the sidewalk located in front of<br />

the restaurant. “We need to stop getting<br />

teased every day.”<br />

Keefe, and Clark bought Trattoria Oliverii<br />

in November of last year. Keefe has<br />

worked at the downtown establishment<br />

since it opened in 1991. Keefe and Clark<br />

are cousins.<br />

While some of Trattoria Oliverii’s signature<br />

dishes have remained intact from<br />

years past, the current owners have also<br />

put their own spin on things.<br />

“We gave the menus a facelift. We’ve<br />

changed up the lunch menus, too,” Clark<br />

said.<br />

Clark said they’ve also worked on expanding<br />

the wine list by bringing in some<br />

fresh selections. Last month, Trattoria Oliverii<br />

introduced new options on its daily<br />

special menu with the goal to incentivise<br />

customers to return frequently.<br />

Trattoria Oliverii is a popular spot for<br />

families with a kids menu recently added.<br />

“We encourage people to bring their<br />

kids in. We’re located right near the train<br />

station, so kids love to watch the trains,”<br />

Clark said.<br />

Recently, several 22nd Century Media<br />

editors made a visit to Trattoria Oliverii<br />

to try some dishes and take in the entire<br />

culinary experience.<br />

First up, we sampled the Bruschetta Romana<br />

($7) on the antipasti menu featuring<br />

chopped tomatoes, fresh mozzarella,<br />

garlic, and parmigiana, served on Italian<br />

bread. The bruschetta is topped with extra<br />

virgin olive oil. After taking our first few<br />

bites, we knew instantly we were in for a<br />

good meal.<br />

All entrees include a choice of soup or<br />

salad. We tried the minestrone soup. The<br />

Italian soup was chock-full of hearty vegetables<br />

and included some pasta.<br />

Next, we were brought out a dish of the<br />

The Oliverii Special pizza ($22 for a<br />

large pie) is made with cheese, sausage,<br />

pepperoni, bacon, mushrooms, onions,<br />

green peppers and black olives. Michael<br />

Wojtychiw/22nd Century Media<br />

Trattoria Oliverii<br />

1358 Shermer Road, Northbrook<br />

(847) 559-8785<br />

www.oliveriis.com<br />

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

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

4-10 p.m. Saturday<br />

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

Pasta Prosciutto ($18), featuring rolled<br />

pasta, ham, basil, cheese and a tomato<br />

cream sauce.<br />

“It’s definitely one of our best sellers,<br />

people love it,” Clark said.<br />

Pizza is another go-to. The Oliverii Special<br />

($22 for a large) is made with cheese,<br />

sausage, pepperoni, bacon, mushrooms,<br />

onions, green peppers and black olives.<br />

Another popular pizza is the Guido’s<br />

Special ($18.50 for a large) featuring<br />

cheese, tomato, onions, garlic and hot<br />

giardiniera.<br />

Seafood, like everything on the menu<br />

according to Clark, is fresh and ordered<br />

locally. We tried the Lemon Sole ($14)<br />

made with a fillet of sole, fresh tomato,<br />

white wine and a side of capellini, or thin<br />

pasta like spaghetti.<br />

Last, but certainly not least, we were<br />

served housemade tiramisu ($8). The<br />

coffee-flavored dessert tantalized our taste<br />

buds and we were still raving about the<br />

dish days after our visit.<br />

“The fact that this restaurant has been<br />

open for 30 years really helps. The location<br />

is fantastic,” Clark said. “People have<br />

been coming here for a long time and now<br />

their kids are coming here. We’re seeing<br />

generations of families from Northbrook<br />

come in, which is fun.”


22 | April 18, 2019 | The glencoe anchor Glencoe<br />

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glencoeanchor.com real estate<br />

the glencoe anchor | April 18, 2019 | 23<br />

The Glencoe Anchor’s<br />

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• 710 Bluff St., Glencoe,<br />

60022-1505 — Phyllis L. Berning<br />

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March 11<br />

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• 225 Lincoln Drive,<br />

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done to keep more traditional layout with a smaller dining room and<br />

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Listing Price:<br />

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Listing Agent:<br />

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Agents Brokerage:<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.


24 | April 18, 2019 | The glencoe anchor classifieds<br />

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VILLAGE OF GLENCOE<br />

GLENCOE, ILLINOIS<br />

ZONING BOARD<br />

OF APPEALS<br />

NOTICE OF<br />

PUBLIC HEARING<br />

MAY 6, 2019<br />

Notice is hereby given that a public<br />

hearing is to be conducted on Monday,<br />

May 6, 2019, at 7:30 p.m., before<br />

the Zoning Board of Appeals<br />

of the Village of Glencoe, Cook<br />

County, Illinois, in the Council<br />

Chambers of the Village Hall, 675<br />

Village Court, Glencoe, Illinois, to<br />

consider an appeal of Christopher<br />

and Christina Hostert from a decision<br />

by the Community Development<br />

Administrator in denying a<br />

permit to build a detached garage<br />

at 948 Vernon Avenue, Glencoe,<br />

Illinois in the R-C Single Family<br />

Residential Zoning District (Permanent<br />

Real Estate Index Number<br />

05-06-308-045-0000).<br />

Legal Description: The southerly<br />

34.00 feet of Lot 5 and Lot 6 (except<br />

the southerly 50.00 feet<br />

thereof, measured on Vernon Avenue)<br />

in Block 46 in the 1st Addition<br />

to Glencoe in Section 6,<br />

Township 42 North, Range 13, east<br />

of the third principal meridian, in<br />

Cook County, Illinois, (except<br />

therefrom the following described<br />

premises commencing at a point in<br />

the west line of Lot 6 of its junction<br />

with the northerly line of Sunset<br />

Lane as now laid out; thence<br />

northeasterly 20.00 feet, along the<br />

northerly line of said Sunset Lane;<br />

thence in a northerly direction to a<br />

point in the west line of Lot 5,<br />

where the north line of the southerly<br />

34.00 feet, of said Lot 5 intersects<br />

said west line; thence south<br />

along the west line of said Lot 5<br />

and 6 to the place of beginning,<br />

situated in the Village of Glencoe,<br />

in Cook County, Illinois.<br />

The appeal requests that approval<br />

be granted for one variation:<br />

1. To reduce by 12% the required<br />

corner side yard setback from 25<br />

feet to 22 feet along Sunset Lane.<br />

All persons interested are urged to<br />

be present and will be given an opportunity<br />

to be heard.<br />

Nathan Parch<br />

Community Development Administrator<br />

April 15, 2019<br />

Real Estate<br />

$50<br />

6 lines/<br />

7 papers<br />

2703 Legal Notices<br />

Merchandise<br />

$30<br />

4 lines/<br />

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VILLAGE OF GLENCOE<br />

GLENCOE, ILLINOIS<br />

ZONING BOARD<br />

OF APPEALS<br />

NOTICE OF<br />

PUBLIC HEARING<br />

MAY 6, 2019<br />

Notice is hereby given that a public<br />

hearing is to be conducted on Monday,<br />

May 6, 2019, at 7:30 p.m., before<br />

the Zoning Board of Appeals<br />

of the Village of Glencoe, Cook<br />

County, Illinois, in the Council<br />

Chambers of the Village Hall, 675<br />

Village Court, Glencoe, Illinois, to<br />

consider an appeal of Kelly Appleton<br />

from a decision by the Community<br />

Development Administrator<br />

in denying a permit to rebuild<br />

the existing north sun porch and<br />

add a second floor above and to<br />

construct a dormer to the attic level<br />

along the west building elevation at<br />

180 Randolph Street, Glencoe, Illinois<br />

in the R-C Single Family<br />

Residential Zoning District (Permanent<br />

Real Estate Index Number<br />

05-18-214-011-0000).<br />

Legal Description: Lot 1 in Block<br />

7 in Chicago Northshore Land<br />

Company’s Subdivision in Sections<br />

17 and 18, Township 42<br />

North, Range 13 east of the third<br />

principal meridian, in Cook<br />

County, Illinois.<br />

The appeal requests that approval<br />

be granted for four variations:<br />

1. To reduce by 16.11% the required<br />

front yard setback along<br />

Drexel Avenue from 35.0 feet to<br />

29.36 feet to rebuild the existing<br />

sun porch and add a second floor<br />

above;<br />

2. To reduce by 14.63% the required<br />

west side yard setback from<br />

8.0 feet to 6.87 feet to rebuild the<br />

existing sun porch and add a second<br />

floor above;<br />

3. To vertically extend the<br />

non-conforming west exterior wall<br />

of the existing home in order to<br />

add a dormer to the attic level. The<br />

west exterior wall of the home is<br />

4.51 feet from the west side property<br />

line. The minimum required<br />

side yard is 8 feet; and<br />

4. For the new dormer on the west<br />

side of the home to intercept the<br />

setback plane.<br />

All persons interested are urged to<br />

be present and will be given an opportunity<br />

to be heard.<br />

Nathan Parch<br />

Community Development Administrator<br />

April 15, 2019<br />

...to place your<br />

Classified Ad!<br />

708.326.9170


glencoeanchor.com classifieds<br />

the glencoe anchor | April 18, 2019 | 25<br />

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$52<br />

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

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

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

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26 | April 18, 2019 | The glencoe anchor sports<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

The Varsity: North Shore Podcast<br />

Guys recap baseball, predict tennis<br />

Staff Report<br />

In this week’s episode<br />

of The Varsity: North<br />

Shore, the only podcast<br />

focused on North Shore<br />

sports, hosts Michal<br />

Dwojak, Michael Wojtychiw<br />

and Nick Frazier<br />

recap some baseball, hear<br />

from Glenbrook North<br />

alumnus Billy Donlon on<br />

his new role as the University<br />

of Missouri-Kansas<br />

City’s men’s basketball<br />

program, play Way/<br />

No Way with boys tennis<br />

and finish things off<br />

previewing some water<br />

polo.<br />

First Quarter<br />

The three talk some baseball<br />

to start the episode off.<br />

Second Quarter<br />

The guys hear from<br />

Donlon about his new<br />

role.<br />

Third Quarter<br />

With the ball bouncing,<br />

the guys play some<br />

Way/No Way with boys<br />

tennis.<br />

Find the varsity<br />

Twitter: @varsitypodcast<br />

Facebook: @<br />

thevarsitypodcast<br />

Website:<br />

GlencoeAnchor.com/<br />

sports<br />

Download: Soundcloud,<br />

iTunes, Stitcher, TuneIn,<br />

PlayerFM, more<br />

Fourth Quarter<br />

To finish things off, the<br />

guys talk some boys water<br />

polo.<br />

<br />

<br />

Athlete of the Week<br />

10 Questions<br />

with Kenny Sajnaj<br />

The senior water polo<br />

player is the captain of<br />

the 2019 Loyola Academy<br />

team.<br />

When did you start<br />

playing water polo<br />

and why?<br />

I started playing my<br />

freshman year. My whole<br />

family plays. I watched<br />

my older sisters and I had<br />

never played it before, so I<br />

wanted to try it out.<br />

Do you have any<br />

superstitions before,<br />

during or after a<br />

match?<br />

I always have to do a<br />

cannonball before a match.<br />

What’s the best part<br />

about playing water<br />

polo?<br />

Definitely my teammates.<br />

I have the best<br />

teammates; it’s been nice<br />

building a relationship<br />

with all them.<br />

What’s the hardest<br />

part about playing<br />

water polo?<br />

The amount of time we<br />

put into the fundamentals.<br />

What’s the best part<br />

about being a Loyola<br />

athlete?<br />

Because Loyola is such<br />

a powerhouse, a lot of<br />

teams want to beat Loyola<br />

and there’s so much competition.<br />

If you could play<br />

another sport, what<br />

would it be?<br />

Volleyball because I<br />

have always been intrigued<br />

but I went out for<br />

water polo instead.<br />

What’s one thing<br />

people don’t know<br />

about you?<br />

I love to play the piano. I<br />

have been playing for two<br />

and a half years.<br />

photo submitTed<br />

What’s your biggest<br />

pet peeve?<br />

When I’m out with<br />

people eating and they are<br />

on their phones the whole<br />

time.<br />

If you could have<br />

dinner with anyone,<br />

who would it be and<br />

why?<br />

It would have to be<br />

Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson.<br />

He’d have some real<br />

interesting stories.<br />

If you could have a<br />

superpower, what<br />

would it be and why?<br />

It would be the ability<br />

to fly. I wouldn’t have to<br />

take my car anywhere and<br />

it would be easier.<br />

Interview by Editor Megan<br />

Bernard<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

Kaskey<br />

From Page 30<br />

the table. We're watching<br />

film for hours and hours a<br />

week.<br />

When I was in high<br />

school, you never viewed<br />

a game, and then that was<br />

basically it. I'd say the<br />

place I've improved most<br />

is just, my knowledge of<br />

the game, and my football<br />

IQ, and knowing what's<br />

going on out there."<br />

While playing for the<br />

hometown team would be<br />

great, the Winnetka native<br />

doesn't really care what<br />

team he gets drafted or<br />

signs with, as long as he<br />

gets a chance to play. He<br />

jokingly said he'd even<br />

long snap or kick.<br />

During the season, all<br />

30 NFL teams stopped by<br />

Dartmouth practices to<br />

check Kaskey out and talk<br />

to him. Through that and<br />

other feedback he's gotten,<br />

scouts really like his<br />

run-blocking ability, how<br />

he stays low, moves his<br />

feet and his attitude on the<br />

field.<br />

"It's super gratifying,"<br />

he said about all the<br />

teams showing an interest<br />

in him. "It's just nice<br />

to know that all the work<br />

you put in for the past 12<br />

years is paying off, and<br />

people are recognizing<br />

that you're doing good<br />

things. Not only on the<br />

field, but off the field, in<br />

the weight room, and in<br />

the locker rooms.<br />

"It's just really nice to<br />

have some people express<br />

interest in me. Because it's<br />

been a lot of work, and<br />

it's nice to have some pay<br />

off."


glencoeanchor.com sports<br />

the glencoe anchor | April 18, 2019 | 27<br />

Baseball<br />

Small ball carries New<br />

Trier past Highland Park<br />

David Jaffe<br />

Freelance Reporter<br />

When runners are in<br />

scoring position, most<br />

baseball players would like<br />

to drive them in with a big<br />

hit.<br />

But being able to bring<br />

runners in on sacrifice flies<br />

or on groundouts is just as<br />

important a way for a baseball<br />

team to score runs.<br />

Tuesday, April 9, New<br />

Trier took a big step forward<br />

in that regard winning<br />

their opening Central Suburban<br />

League conference<br />

game of the season 11-2<br />

over Highland Park.<br />

The visiting Trevians<br />

put up six runs in the top<br />

of the first inning, initially<br />

through small ball and then<br />

with the long ball.<br />

Patrick Jodloman was hit<br />

by a pitch with the bases<br />

loaded putting New Trier<br />

(6-4) on the board. He was<br />

the third straight batter hit<br />

by a pitch. Sam Harvey’s<br />

sacrifice fly increased the<br />

lead to 2-0 and then an infield<br />

hit by Donald Stricklin<br />

added another run.<br />

“We did a good job<br />

moving runners over and<br />

bringing them home,” New<br />

Trier coach Mike Napoleon<br />

said. “We’ve struggled to<br />

this point bringing runners<br />

in the way we did today.<br />

So we’ve been preaching<br />

about how important<br />

scoring runs on outs can<br />

be. We also didn’t strike<br />

out much today and didn’t<br />

have many popups. So having<br />

those things along with<br />

some miscues on their side<br />

allowed us to take advantage<br />

when we had runners<br />

on base.”<br />

New Trier didn’t score<br />

just on the fundamental<br />

plays either. Eddie Harvey<br />

broke the game open in the<br />

first crushing a three-run<br />

home run to left field.<br />

“I had been battling and<br />

fouling balls off in the atbat,”<br />

Eddie Harvey said. “I<br />

got a pitch that I was able<br />

to stay on a little longer<br />

and once I got a hold of it, I<br />

could tell it was gone.”<br />

John Miller’s RBI<br />

groundout allowed New<br />

Trier to tack on another<br />

run in the second. Jodloman’s<br />

RBI double made it<br />

8-0 in the fourth. The variety<br />

of ways the Trevians<br />

brought in runs continued<br />

in the fifth as Brett Johnson<br />

reached on an error<br />

that scored Stricklin. Eddie<br />

Harvey then scored when<br />

Henry Pelinski grounded<br />

into a double play.<br />

“Honestly it wasn’t just<br />

the fact that we brought<br />

runners in through a variety<br />

of ways, it was that we kept<br />

it up the whole game, even<br />

after the first inning,” Eddie<br />

Harvey said. “We put<br />

ourselves in scoring position<br />

so if we had flyouts<br />

or groundouts, we still had<br />

a chance at adding more<br />

runs.”<br />

It also wasn’t just the offense<br />

that stood out. Pitcher<br />

Andrew Kost had a no-hitter<br />

through four-and two-thirds<br />

innings before the Giants’<br />

Jason Bernstein broke it up<br />

with an infield hit. Sammy<br />

Dubin put Highland Park<br />

on the board with a two-run<br />

single. But Kost only allowed<br />

three hits and walked<br />

two with five strikeouts<br />

through five innings.<br />

“Andrew was locked in<br />

and he kept getting better as<br />

the game went on,” Eddie<br />

Harvey said. “He’s a very<br />

strong pitcher and someone<br />

we’ve been able to rely on<br />

when he’s out there.”<br />

“He got out of some situations<br />

early in the game and<br />

then in the middle innings<br />

he was great,” Napoleon<br />

said. “He almost had a nohitter.<br />

It was a really strong<br />

performance. Our pitching<br />

and defense have led us and<br />

hopefully we took a step<br />

forward today on offense<br />

with how we were able to<br />

bring in runners.”<br />

Highland Park (5-6) got<br />

in a big early hole. But the<br />

Giants appeared to settle<br />

down for a couple of innings.<br />

The issue for the Giants<br />

is being able to string<br />

together strong innings.<br />

“We’ll have a couple of<br />

innings both defensively<br />

and at the plate where<br />

we’re playing well. But we<br />

haven’t really been able<br />

to keep that going for the<br />

entire game,” Highland<br />

Park coach Jason Newburger<br />

said. “You have to<br />

be consistent if you want to<br />

compete in a conference as<br />

good as this one.”<br />

Offensively for a good<br />

portion of the game, the Giants<br />

were able to get some<br />

runners on but couldn’t<br />

move them over.<br />

“We had a lot of innings<br />

where we stung the baseball<br />

really hard but just<br />

hit it in the wrong spots,”<br />

Newburger said. “I liked<br />

that we kept fighting and<br />

were able to put a couple<br />

of runs up late. The last inning<br />

Jeremy (Frankel) had<br />

a hard hit but we got unfortunate<br />

it was a lineout<br />

that turned into a double<br />

play. It still comes down<br />

to consistency though and<br />

the third and fourth innings<br />

we struck out five times.<br />

We need to string together<br />

good innings.”<br />

22ND CENTURY MEDIA is looking<br />

for local FREELANCE REPORTERS<br />

and PHOTOGRAPHERS to cover events,<br />

meetings and sports in the area.<br />

Interested individuals should send<br />

an email with a resume and any clips to<br />

jobs@22ndcenturymedia.com<br />

www.22ndcenturymedia.com<br />

CHICAGO SOUTHWEST<br />

CHICAGO NORTHSHORE<br />

MALIBU


28 | April 18, 2019 | The glencoe anchor sports<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

This Week In...<br />

Trevian varsity<br />

athletics<br />

Badminton<br />

■April ■ 18 - at Deerfield,<br />

4:30 p.m.<br />

■April ■ 20 - at Hinsdale<br />

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

■April ■ 23 - host Stevenson,<br />

4:45 p.m.<br />

Baseball<br />

■April ■ 18 - at Niles North,<br />

4:45 p.m.<br />

■April ■ 20 - host Barrington,<br />

10 a.m./noon<br />

■April ■ 23 - at Glenbrook<br />

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

■April ■ 25 - host Glenbrook<br />

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

Boys lacrosse<br />

■April ■ 23 - host Highland<br />

Park, 7 p.m.<br />

■April ■ 24 - at Evanston, 7<br />

p.m.<br />

Girls lacrosse<br />

■April ■ 25 - at Evanston,<br />

6:15 p.m.<br />

Girls soccer<br />

■April ■ 20 - host Conant<br />

(Naperville Invite), noon<br />

■April ■ 23 - at Maine South,<br />

7 p.m.<br />

Softball<br />

■April ■ 18 - at Niles West,<br />

4:45 p.m.<br />

■April ■ 20 - at Elk Grove, 11<br />

a.m.<br />

■April ■ 20 - at Elk Grove, 1<br />

p.m.<br />

■April ■ 23 - host Glenbrook<br />

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

■April ■ 24 - host Vernon<br />

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

■April ■ 25 - at Niles North,<br />

4:45 p.m.<br />

Boys tennis<br />

■April ■ 18 - host Glenbrook<br />

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

■April ■ 20 - at Latin Invite,<br />

8 a.m.<br />

■April ■ 20 - at Hinsdale<br />

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

■April ■ 23 - host Niles North,<br />

4:30 p.m.<br />

■April ■ 23 - host Highland<br />

Park, 7 p.m.<br />

■April ■ 25 - at Evanston,<br />

4:30 p.m.<br />

Boys track and<br />

field<br />

■April ■ 20 - at Wheaton-<br />

Warrenville South Invite,<br />

10:30 a.m.<br />

■April ■ 23 - at Glenbrook<br />

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

Girls track and<br />

field<br />

■April ■ 20 - at Lake Park<br />

Invite, noon<br />

Boys volleyball<br />

■April ■ 18 - vs. TBA (at<br />

Downers Grove South<br />

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

■April ■ 20 - vs. TBA (at<br />

Downers Grove South<br />

Invite), 9:30 a.m.<br />

■April ■ 20 - vs. TBA (at<br />

Downers Grove South<br />

Invite), TBA<br />

■April ■ 23 - at Niles West,<br />

6 p.m.<br />

■April ■ 24 - host Glenbrook<br />

South, 6 p.m.<br />

Boys water polo<br />

■April ■ 18 - vs. Hersey (at<br />

Glenbrook South Invite),<br />

4:50 p.m.<br />

■April ■ 18 - vs. Palatine (at<br />

Glenbrook South Invite),<br />

7:20 p.m.<br />

■April ■ 20 - vs. TBA (at<br />

Glenbrook South Invite),<br />

TBA<br />

Girls water polo<br />

■April ■ 20 - at East<br />

Kentwood Invite (Mich.),<br />

TBA<br />

■April ■ 25 - at Lake Forest,<br />

6 p.m.<br />

Rambler varsity<br />

athletics<br />

Baseball<br />

■April ■ 18 - at Brother Rice,<br />

4:30 p.m.<br />

■April ■ 20 - at Stagg, 11<br />

a.m.<br />

■April ■ 22 - host Glenbrook<br />

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

■April ■ 23 - host Marmion,<br />

4:30 p.m.<br />

■April ■ 25 - at Marmion, 5<br />

p.m.<br />

Boys lacrosse<br />

■April ■ 23 - at Chaminade<br />

(N.Y.), 10 a.m.<br />

■April ■ 24 - at St. Anthony’s<br />

(N.Y.), 10 a.m.<br />

■April ■ 25 - at Garden City<br />

(N.Y.), 1 p.m.<br />

Girls lacrosse<br />

■April ■ 24 - at Cathedral<br />

(Ind.), 4 p.m.<br />

■April ■ 25 - at New Albany<br />

(Ohio), 6 p.m.<br />

Girls soccer<br />

■April ■ 25 - vs. TBA<br />

(Naperville Invite), TBA<br />

Softball<br />

■April ■ 23 - host Montini,<br />

4:45 p.m.<br />

■April ■ 24 - host Lane, 4:45<br />

p.m.<br />

Boys tennis<br />

■April ■ 20 - at Latin Invite,<br />

8 a.m.<br />

Boys volleyball<br />

■April ■ 18 - vs. TBA (at<br />

Downers Grove South<br />

Invite), TBA<br />

■April ■ 20 - vs. TBA (at<br />

Downers Grove South<br />

Invite), TBA<br />

Boys water polo<br />

■April ■ 23 - at Glenbrook<br />

South, 6 p.m.<br />

Raider varsity<br />

athletics<br />

Baseball<br />

■April ■ 18 - host Lake Forest<br />

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

■April ■ 22 - host Parker,<br />

4:30 p.m.<br />

Girls soccer<br />

■April ■ 23 - host Willows,<br />

4:30 p.m.<br />

Boys tennis<br />

■April ■ 18 - host Lisle, 4:30<br />

p.m.<br />

■April ■ 23 - at Latin, 4:30<br />

p.m.<br />

■April ■ 24 - host Walther<br />

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

high school highlights<br />

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

Baseball<br />

Loyola 6, Providence 4<br />

Jake Novak's G-W 2<br />

RBI single in the seventh<br />

gave Loyola a road win<br />

Saturday, April 13, in New<br />

Lenox.<br />

Loyola 6, Providence 4<br />

Michael Ellingsen<br />

struck out 10 in the Thursday,<br />

April 11, home win.<br />

Michael Bednarek drove<br />

in three.<br />

Loyola 21, St. Rita 17<br />

Charlie Owens went<br />

5-for-5 with 5 RBI and<br />

three doubles. The teams<br />

combined to score 19 runs<br />

in the fourth inning.<br />

New Trier 9, Ridgewood 4<br />

Sam Harvey and Drew<br />

Robinson both drove in<br />

two in a Friday, April 12,<br />

win.<br />

North Shore Country Day<br />

19, Christian Liberty Co-<br />

Op 1<br />

Alex Probst drove in<br />

three and two others had<br />

two RBI apiece in a Friday,<br />

April 12, win.<br />

North Shore Country Day<br />

8, Northridge 3<br />

Five different Raiders<br />

had RBI in a conference<br />

win April 11.<br />

Softball<br />

Loyola 10, Resurrection 1<br />

Kathryn Kinsella had<br />

three RBI and three other<br />

Ramblers had two each as<br />

the Ramblers picked up a<br />

road win April 9.<br />

Loyola 4, DePaul Prep 1<br />

Kathryn Kinsella struck<br />

out 13 in a win Thursday,<br />

April 11, in Glenview.<br />

New Trier 20, Niles North<br />

4<br />

Beth Fisher went 4-for-<br />

4 with three RBI and three<br />

runs scored in the Trevians’<br />

rout April 9 in Winnetka.<br />

Regina 15, De La Salle 10<br />

Kathryn McDarrah had<br />

two doubles and a home<br />

run in a conference win<br />

Thursday, April 11.<br />

Girls soccer<br />

Loyola 2, Fremd 1 (5-4<br />

PKs)<br />

Kate Murtagh, Maggie<br />

Brett, Meredith Phillips,<br />

Claire Kelly and Eleanor<br />

Jackson all scored in penalty<br />

kicks for the Ramblers<br />

April 9. Madeline Prassas<br />

scored the Ramblers’ regulation<br />

goal.<br />

New Trier 2, Lyons 1, OT<br />

Emma Weaver scored<br />

the G-W goal in overtime<br />

in a Lou Malnati's Deep<br />

Dish Classic semifinal Saturday,<br />

April 12.<br />

New Trier 3, St. Francis 1<br />

Weaver had a hat trick<br />

Thursday, April 11, in<br />

Northfield.<br />

New Trier 2, Stevenson 1<br />

Heidi Bianucci and<br />

Emma Weaver scored for<br />

the Trevians in their Lou<br />

Malnati’s Deep Dish Classic<br />

game April 9.<br />

North Shore Country Day<br />

7, Trinity 0<br />

Paige Forester and<br />

Edith Edwards-Mizel both<br />

scored for the Raiders in a<br />

PepsiCo Showdown match<br />

April 9 in Winnetka.<br />

Regina 4, Woodlands 0<br />

Kathleen Rabbitt, Anelise<br />

Leahy, Lilly Rausch<br />

and Laura Strenk all<br />

scored in the Saturday,<br />

April 13, win.<br />

Regina 4, St. Joseph 0<br />

Abbey Farmer scored<br />

two goals in the Panthers’<br />

win April 9 in Wilmette.<br />

Boys volleyball<br />

Loyola d. Montini 25-19,<br />

25-20<br />

Jack Howard led the way<br />

with 10 kills in a Catholic<br />

League win April 9.<br />

Loyola d. Fenwick 25-18,<br />

25-23<br />

Howard led the way<br />

with seven kills.<br />

New Trier d. Maine South<br />

25-16, 26-24<br />

Zach Salberg had 19<br />

kills to lead the way for<br />

the Trevians April 10.<br />

Aaron Schatz added 22<br />

digs.<br />

Girls lacrosse<br />

Loyola 11, Rockford<br />

(Mich.) 5<br />

Ellie Lazzaretto led the<br />

way with four goals, while<br />

Brynn Holohan added<br />

two Saturday, April 13, in<br />

Glenview.<br />

New Trier 18, East Grand<br />

Rapids (Mich.) 5<br />

Claudia Shevitz scored<br />

four goals and had two<br />

assists, while three others<br />

each scored three goals<br />

Saturday, April 12, in<br />

Northfield.<br />

Boys water polo<br />

Loyola 9, St. Ignatius 5<br />

Kenny Sajnaj had six<br />

goals in an April 10 road<br />

win.<br />

Glenbrook South 6, New<br />

Trier 4, OT<br />

Danni Zhukov scored<br />

twice and Will Clark and<br />

Eli Cohen each scored one<br />

in an overtime loss April 9<br />

in Glenview. For the full<br />

recap, visit GlencoeAnchor.com.


glencoeanchor.com sports<br />

the glencoe anchor | April 18, 2019 | 29<br />

Girls lacrosse<br />

New Trier wins easily in cancer awareness game<br />

Gary Larsen<br />

Freelance Reporter<br />

New Trier senior lacrosse<br />

player Lucy Murray<br />

put it best in describing<br />

the extra effort put<br />

forth by her team during<br />

this year’s annual cancer<br />

awareness game against<br />

Glenbrook South.<br />

“We played hard and<br />

fought, just like every person<br />

who has cancer does<br />

every day,” Murray said.<br />

“We have a couple girls<br />

on the team whose moms<br />

had breast cancer and we<br />

all came together and rallied<br />

around the cause.”<br />

The different colors<br />

connected to various types<br />

of cancer were on full<br />

display at this year’s 8th<br />

annual cancer awareness<br />

game, played at Glenbrook<br />

South on Thursday,<br />

April 12.<br />

New Trier wore pink<br />

jerseys for breast cancer,<br />

Glenbrook South wore<br />

purple jerseys for leukemia<br />

and lymphoma, and both<br />

teams wore gold shoelaces<br />

for childhood cancer.<br />

Players, former players,<br />

mothers of players, and<br />

coaches from both teams<br />

have all been affected<br />

by some form of the disease.<br />

When asked about<br />

his girls’ play on the field<br />

during a 19-6 New Trier<br />

win, Trevians coach Pete<br />

Collins wanted to first<br />

talk about the importance<br />

of the annual game.<br />

“We were playing for<br />

a bigger cause tonight,”<br />

Collins said. “We raised<br />

money for breast cancer<br />

and we wore yellow shoelaces<br />

for children’s cancer.<br />

We had a bake sale today<br />

and we got pledges for today’s<br />

game. The goal was<br />

to raise a couple thousand<br />

dollars but we won’t find<br />

out until tomorrow how<br />

much we raised.”<br />

New Trier (6-0-1) broke<br />

fast from the gate in Glenview,<br />

playing aggressive<br />

lacrosse from front to<br />

back and jumping out to<br />

a 6-1 lead over Glenbrook<br />

South (7-2-0).<br />

With the Trevians’ Lydia<br />

Kaup vocally directing<br />

traffic in leading the defense,<br />

Glenbrook South’s<br />

attack struggled to find an<br />

answer as New Trier’s offense<br />

shined.<br />

“Usually we are a very<br />

good freelancing team,<br />

not running set plays in<br />

order to score,” Titans<br />

coach Annie Lesch said.<br />

“But New Trier gave us a<br />

couple different defenses<br />

so we had to adjust and<br />

think at game speed, and I<br />

think that was challenging<br />

for us.”<br />

New Trier never let up<br />

in building a 13-3 halftime<br />

lead.<br />

“It was awesome. We’ve<br />

been preparing for this<br />

game because every time<br />

we play GBS we know<br />

it’s a competitive game,”<br />

Murray said. “They’re a<br />

good team and they come<br />

out here and compete. But<br />

we also know that we’ve<br />

got to live up to our New<br />

Trier name. So we’ve<br />

been preparing for this in<br />

practice all week.”<br />

New Trier finished with<br />

four goals apiece from<br />

Charley Meier and Olivia<br />

Zaban, and three apiece<br />

from Murray and Claudia<br />

Shevitz, who also had two<br />

assists.<br />

“Lucy Murray and<br />

Claudia Shevitz are both<br />

explosive players, whether<br />

in midfield or running<br />

the offense,” Collins said.<br />

“Those two did a nice job.<br />

“We also had a lot of<br />

kids take of the draw today,<br />

which was nice. Katie<br />

Bush, Macy Zaban,<br />

and Ella Huber all did a<br />

really nice job.”<br />

Thursday’s loss aside,<br />

Glenbrook South is having<br />

a fine season in 2019.<br />

Belle Tiesi scored three<br />

goals against New Trier,<br />

Greer Bireley scored two,<br />

and Lila Frick scored one.<br />

“On attack, Meg Bireley,<br />

Greer Bireley, and<br />

Belle Tiesi have all been<br />

really stepping up,” Lesch<br />

said. “On defense, Mary<br />

Grace Reynolds, Kate<br />

Brennan, and Jasmine<br />

Marval have been doing a<br />

really nice job.<br />

“New Trier plays a really<br />

tenacious defense<br />

so even when we tried to<br />

slow the ball down, and<br />

have a longer possession<br />

on attack, they came out<br />

and gave us pressure. So<br />

they don’t ever let you<br />

rest.”<br />

NORTH SHORE<br />

EXCLUSIVE<br />

ANALYSIS<br />

AND INTERVIEWS<br />

about your favorite high<br />

school teams. Sports<br />

editors Michal Dwojak<br />

and Michael Wojtychiw<br />

host the only North<br />

Shore sports podcast.<br />

FIND THE VARSITY: NORTH SHORE ON<br />

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

New Trier’s Lucy Murray (left) on the attack against Glenbrook South’s Mary Grace<br />

Reynolds at Glenbrook South on Thursday, April 12. Gary Larsen/22nd Century Media<br />

A 22ND CENTURY MEDIA PRODUCTION


30 | April 18, 2019 | The glencoe anchor sports<br />

glencoeanchor.com<br />

NT grad Kaskey readies himself for NFL Draft<br />

Michael Wojtychiw<br />

Sports Editor<br />

For many football players, the<br />

dream is to ultimately play in the<br />

National Football League. Some<br />

players realize that dream later<br />

in life, some have it right away<br />

when they start playing.<br />

For Dartmouth College senior<br />

offensive lineman and New<br />

Trier graduate Matt Kaskey, it<br />

wasn't something that came to<br />

him until after his college career<br />

was over.<br />

"The way I operate, I don't<br />

really set these lofty goals for<br />

myself, and think about being in<br />

the NFL every day since I was<br />

in high school. But obviously, in<br />

the back of my head, I was like,<br />

'Man, that'd be cool,'" he said.<br />

"I never thought I'd actually do<br />

it, but I dreamed about doing it.<br />

You set these incremental goals<br />

for yourself and you've really<br />

got to go step by step. You can't<br />

skip anything.<br />

"And that's kind of the way<br />

that I like to work. I like to<br />

set short term goals that I can<br />

achieve, and then once I achieve<br />

them, look on to the next thing."<br />

For players hoping to go to the<br />

draft, there isn't much rest after<br />

the season is over. For Kaskey<br />

and his Dartmouth teammates,<br />

Dartmouth offensive lineman Matt Kaskey, a New Trier graduate, goes up against a defensive player<br />

from the University of Pennsylvania in a game earlier this year. Tom McNeill/Dartmouth College<br />

their season ended on November<br />

17 with a win over Brown. After<br />

a couple weeks of rest to try to<br />

heal up his injuries and taking<br />

his time in picking an agent to<br />

help him get to the next level,<br />

it was back to working out and<br />

preparing for the draft.<br />

However, draft workouts<br />

aren't the same as ones you'll go<br />

through during the offseason or<br />

in-season. Draft workouts are<br />

more specialized, especially<br />

in speed and agility drills, two<br />

things that will be looked at during<br />

the workouts and pro days<br />

the hopeful draftees will go<br />

through.<br />

"As an offensive lineman, I<br />

don't normally have to train to<br />

be fast on a 40-yard stretch, or<br />

anything like that," Kaskey said.<br />

"Starting this process, you have<br />

to work on different things, and<br />

the workouts are really unique<br />

to what you find in other football<br />

programs, and other times during<br />

your football career."<br />

Kaskey completed his collegiate<br />

career with a bevy of<br />

awards and achievements.<br />

The offensive tackle was<br />

named a second-team All-<br />

American by both the AFCA<br />

and STATS and a third-team<br />

All-American by the Associated<br />

Press. He was also named<br />

an All-Ivy League First Team<br />

member in both his junior and<br />

senior seasons, as well as to the<br />

Division I All-New England<br />

Team this season.<br />

Most players would say that<br />

the biggest change between high<br />

school football and college football<br />

is the speed of the game.<br />

Not Kaskey, though.<br />

"I haven't really felt that way<br />

at all," he said. "I feel like the<br />

biggest difference is the intelligence<br />

you have to bring to<br />

Please see Kaskey, 26<br />

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glencoeanchor.com sports<br />

the glencoe anchor | April 18, 2019 | 31<br />

Boys volleyball<br />

New Trier comes back to take down Loyola in three sets<br />

22nd Century Media FILE PHOTO<br />

1st-and-3<br />

THREE STARS OF THE<br />

WEEK.<br />

1. Emma Weaver<br />

(above). The New<br />

Trier junior girls<br />

soccer player<br />

scored five goals<br />

in three games,<br />

including a hat<br />

trick against St.<br />

Francis and the<br />

game-winner<br />

against Lyons.<br />

2. Kathryn Kinsella.<br />

The Loyola<br />

softball player<br />

had three RBI<br />

against Res and<br />

struck out 13<br />

against DePaul.<br />

3. Greyson<br />

Schneider. The<br />

Loyola junior<br />

took second in<br />

the 110- and<br />

300-meter<br />

hurdles and the<br />

1,600-meter<br />

relay team at the<br />

Bartlett Invite.<br />

Michael Wojtychiw<br />

Sports Editor<br />

There's not much better<br />

than playing your rival in<br />

a playoff-like atmosphere<br />

nearly a month prior to the<br />

beginning of state playoffs.<br />

Throw in the fact the<br />

game's on a Friday night<br />

and you get exactly what<br />

New Trier coach Sue Ellen<br />

Haak and Loyola coach<br />

Lionel Ebeling were hoping<br />

for when they started<br />

doing it a couple years ago.<br />

"This is a great environment,"<br />

Ebeling said. "Sue<br />

and I were talking about<br />

that this is really the only<br />

thing that replicates a sectional<br />

matchup with the<br />

crowd, intensity.<br />

"It's great for us to experience<br />

it. We've got to<br />

learn from it, be calm, so<br />

the first time this doesn't<br />

happen is the playoffs."<br />

But the game isn't fun<br />

for only the coaches.<br />

"This is awesome, so<br />

fun to play in," New Trier's<br />

Peter Brown said. "Huge<br />

crowd, the gym is ecstatic,<br />

it's a real blast."<br />

Brown and his teammates<br />

had plenty to celebrate<br />

after starting their<br />

weekend with a 16-25, 25-<br />

21, 25-19 win over Loyola<br />

Friday, April 12, in Winnetka.<br />

After seeing Loyola take<br />

the first set easily thanks<br />

to 13 Trevian errors, New<br />

Trier (8-2) did something<br />

its become accustomed to<br />

doing: playing three-set<br />

matches. The match with<br />

Loyola (15-4) made it<br />

eight times in the team's<br />

10 matches that New Trier<br />

has played three sets.<br />

And it did it thanks to the<br />

powerful arm of Brown.<br />

The junior had 10 of his<br />

match-high 15 kills in the<br />

third set, giving his setter<br />

a go-to option when things<br />

got close in the deciding<br />

set.<br />

"I really think it was just<br />

the sets were there," Brown<br />

said. "In the third set, we<br />

did a great job of spreading<br />

the ball around, keeping<br />

them on their toes."<br />

After committing several<br />

errors in the first set,<br />

Haak, Brown and the rest<br />

of the New Trier squad<br />

knew something had to<br />

happen to get back on<br />

track.<br />

"We talked about becoming<br />

more diverse in<br />

our hitting," Haak said.<br />

"Everything that happened<br />

in that first set was something<br />

we can control and<br />

fix it, so there was nothing<br />

to be afraid of.<br />

"We're kind of a fighting<br />

team because we've played<br />

three sets almost every<br />

time, so they've got that<br />

instilled in them and that<br />

makes it easy for me as a<br />

coach."<br />

Ebeling gave credit to<br />

New Trier but also was<br />

able to pinpoint what went<br />

wrong for the Ramblers in<br />

the final two sets.<br />

Loyola’s John Hitt (right) battles Emmett Burnside at the net Friday, April 12, in<br />

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

"I think they (New<br />

Trier) calmed down and<br />

started playing more consistently,"<br />

Ebeling said.<br />

"We started making blocking<br />

errors, which again is<br />

credit to them, but blocking<br />

errors really made the<br />

difference."<br />

Both Loyola and New<br />

Trier have gotten off to hot<br />

starts this season and for<br />

almost identical reasons,<br />

a major one being having<br />

multiple hitting options<br />

available at their disposal.<br />

Last year, the Ramblers<br />

relied heavily on Drake<br />

Johnson, now a freshman<br />

in college, especially when<br />

Jack Howard missed a<br />

good portion of the beginning<br />

of the season with an<br />

injury. This year, however,<br />

a healthy Howard is joined<br />

by Henry Clemons, Liam<br />

Roberts, Gavin Elliott and<br />

Jake Soucheray as hitting<br />

options for setter John Hitt.<br />

"It's fantastic to have,"<br />

the Loyola coach said.<br />

"We've got so many options,<br />

it's hard to scout<br />

against us because you<br />

don't know where the ball<br />

is coming from.<br />

“What's going to key us<br />

though is our defense. Our<br />

defense gets our offense<br />

going, where we've got<br />

those multiple hitters."<br />

New Trier also has a lot<br />

more options this year to<br />

spread the ball around to.<br />

In addition to Brown, outside<br />

hitters Colin Heath<br />

and Jay Saravis, both of<br />

whom saw action on the<br />

varsity squad last year, as<br />

well as middle hitters Emmett<br />

Burnside and Eli Lieberman<br />

and outside hotter<br />

Connor Pochetti all give<br />

the Trevians multiple hitters<br />

to get the ball to.<br />

"It's a wonderful thing<br />

as a coach to know we can<br />

attack all along the net, all<br />

different guys," Haak said.<br />

"It gives our guys great<br />

confidence and allows our<br />

setter to get creative, while<br />

also making us hard to defend."<br />

Pochetti added eight<br />

kills and three aces and<br />

Burnside had five kills and<br />

five blocks for New Trier,<br />

while Clemons had 12<br />

kills to lead the Ramblers,<br />

and Howard added 10 kills<br />

of his own.<br />

Listen Up<br />

“It’s a wonderful thing as a coach to know we<br />

can attack all along the net, all different guys.”<br />

Sue Ellen Haak — New Trier boys volleyball coach on<br />

having multiple hitting options.<br />

tunE in<br />

What to watch this week<br />

BOYS WATER POLO: A sectional primer goes down in Glenview<br />

as New Trier travels for the GBS invite.<br />

• New Trier participates in the Glenbrook South invite<br />

Thursday and Saturday, April 18 and 20, in Glenview.<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 | April 18, 2019 | glencoeanchor.com<br />

Rally Time<br />

New Trier boys volleyball stuns Loyola, Page 31<br />

Playing for others<br />

New Trier, GBS girls lax play in annual<br />

cancer awareness game, Page 29<br />

Dartmouth<br />

College lineman<br />

Matt Kaskey,<br />

a New Trier<br />

graduate, is<br />

hoping to latch<br />

on with a team<br />

during the NFL<br />

Draft. Gil Talbot/<br />

Dartmouth<br />

College<br />

New Trier<br />

graduate Kaskey<br />

prepares for NFL<br />

Draft, Page 30

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