17.09.2019 Views

GA_091919

GA_091919

GA_091919

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

Create successful ePaper yourself

Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.

®<br />

we remember<br />

The Village and Am Shalom honor Patriot<br />

Day with Sept. 11 ceremony, Page 3<br />

local deployed<br />

New Trier graduate heads to Afghanistan with<br />

Illinois National Guard, Page 6<br />

65th anniversary<br />

New Trier Class of 1954 reunites throughout<br />

the years, Page 10<br />

Glencoe’s Hometown Newspaper GlencoeAnchordaily.com • September 19, 2019 • Vol. 5 No. 3 • $1<br />

A<br />

Publication<br />

,LLC<br />

Kids battle the obstacles while having fun in annual Mud Run, Page 4<br />

Maxx Bowyer, 9, of Glencoe, comes out of the trenches during the annual Glencoe Park<br />

District Mud Run on Saturday, Sept. 14. Rhonda Holcomb/22nd Century Media<br />

Thomas Turner<br />

benefiting<br />

NorthShore University HealthSystem<br />

September 20–22, 2019<br />

Chicago Botanic Garden<br />

americancraftexpo.org


2 | September 19, 2019 | The glencoe anchor calendar<br />

glencoeanchordaily.com<br />

In this week’s<br />

anchor<br />

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

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

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

Puzzles18<br />

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

Dining Out23<br />

Home of the Week24<br />

Athlete of the Week27<br />

The Glencoe<br />

Anchor<br />

ph: 847.272.4565<br />

fx: 847.272.4648<br />

Editor<br />

Megan Bernard, x24<br />

megan@glencoeanchor.com<br />

sports Editor<br />

Michael Wojtychiw, x25<br />

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

Sales director<br />

Peter Hansen, x19<br />

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

real estate sales<br />

John Zeddies, x12<br />

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

Legal Notices<br />

Jeff Schouten, 708.326.9170, x51<br />

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

PUBLISHER<br />

Joe Coughlin, x16<br />

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

Managing Editor<br />

Eric DeGrechie, x23<br />

eric@wilmettebeacon.com<br />

AssT. Managing Editor<br />

Megan Bernard, x24<br />

megan@glencoeanchor.com<br />

President<br />

Andrew Nicks<br />

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

EDITORIAL DESIGN DIRECTOR<br />

Nancy Burgan, 708.326.9170, x30<br />

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

22 nd Century Media<br />

60 Revere Drive Suite 888<br />

Northbrook, IL 60062<br />

www.GlencoeAnchor.com<br />

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

circulation inquiries<br />

circulation@22ndcenturymedia.com<br />

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

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

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

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

additional mailing offices.<br />

POSTMASTER: send address changes to<br />

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

Northbrook, IL 60062<br />

Published by<br />

www.22ndcenturymedia.com<br />

SATURDAY<br />

Tails and Ales<br />

2-6 p.m. Sept. 21, Glencoe<br />

Beach. Enjoy a family-friendly<br />

happy hour<br />

with your dog at Glencoe<br />

Beach. The event includes<br />

beer, wine, cider, entertainment<br />

and playtime for<br />

your pup! Food will be<br />

available for purchase.<br />

Family Story Time<br />

10:30 a.m. Sept. 21,<br />

Glencoe Library, 320 Park<br />

Ave. Enjoy family stories<br />

and a simple craft project.<br />

All ages are welcome to attend,<br />

however, stories and<br />

songs will be aimed at a<br />

preschool-aged audience.<br />

SUNDAY<br />

Open Doors Glencoe<br />

Sept. 22, Village of<br />

Glencoe. Join the Sesquicentennial<br />

Planning Committee<br />

and discover your<br />

community at this special<br />

behind-the-scenes look<br />

into Glencoe. A full list of<br />

participating businesses,<br />

organizations and homes<br />

is coming soon. Event is<br />

free and open to the public.<br />

Animal Adoption<br />

1-3 p.m. Sept. 22, Glencoe<br />

Golf Club, 621 Westley<br />

Road. Meet adoptable<br />

furry friends from Heartland<br />

Animal Shelter at the<br />

Glencoe Golf Club. Info:<br />

glencoegolfclub.com/<br />

event/heartland-adoptionevent.<br />

WEDNESDAY<br />

Leadership Recognition<br />

Luncheon<br />

11:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m.<br />

Sept. 25, Skokie Country<br />

Club, 500 Washington<br />

Ave. Join the Glencoe<br />

Chamber of Commerce for<br />

its first Leadership Recognition<br />

Luncheon. Tickets<br />

are $45 each, or $40 each<br />

for groups of four or more.<br />

Please contact the Chamber<br />

at (847) 835-3333 to<br />

purchase tickets before<br />

Sept. 20.<br />

UPCOMING<br />

The Everyday<br />

Environmentalist<br />

7:30-8:30 p.m. Sept. 26,<br />

Glencoe Library, 320 Park<br />

Ave. Come learn about<br />

simple, everyday ways<br />

you can positively affect<br />

the environment while<br />

maintaining your lifestyle.<br />

Presented by Tina Hostert,<br />

a Glencoe resident and the<br />

founder of ReCommitted<br />

Supplies Co. Cosponsored<br />

with the Village of Glencoe<br />

Sustainability Task<br />

Force and Go Green Glencoe.<br />

Art Opening<br />

6-8 p.m. Sept. 27, Takiff<br />

Center, 999 Green Bay<br />

Road, Glencoe. Join for<br />

Opening Night of the<br />

Glencoe Park District’s<br />

seasonal Art Show. Paintings,<br />

drawings and ceramics<br />

pieces by adult students<br />

and instructors will be on<br />

display. Light refreshments<br />

will be served.<br />

Inaugural Beach Party<br />

6:30-10 P.M. Sept.<br />

28, Trellis at the Glencoe<br />

Beach. The Woman’s<br />

Club hosts its inaugural<br />

Beach Party. Tickets are<br />

$50 members, $65 nonmembers.<br />

Included: beer<br />

and wine, full BBQ dinner,<br />

desserts, live music, beach<br />

shuttle. Register online.<br />

Visiting Professor<br />

7:30-8:30 p.m. Oct.<br />

2, Glencoe Library, 320<br />

Park Ave. Ellen Green, a<br />

field archaeologist for Pre-<br />

Construct Archaeology,<br />

returns to discuss recent<br />

excavations in Tottenham,<br />

London, and how we can<br />

build a picture of a rapidly<br />

changing country from the<br />

ruins left behind.<br />

Buckthorn Barbecue<br />

6 p.m. Oct. 3, Chicago<br />

Botanic Garden, 1000<br />

Lake Cook Road, Glencoe.<br />

Featuring “Tracks on the<br />

Trail: A Moving History<br />

of the Green Bay Trail” by<br />

WTTW TV producer and<br />

actor Geoffrey Baer. This<br />

is the largest Friends of<br />

the Green Bay Trail event.<br />

Info and tickets: www.gbtrail.org/bbq.<br />

Harvest Fest<br />

10 a.m.-1 p.m. Oct. 5,<br />

Kalk Park, Glencoe. Come<br />

celebrate fall at one of the<br />

best free community spirit<br />

events of the year! Spend<br />

the morning at Kalk Park<br />

enjoying family friendly<br />

games, attractions and entertainment.<br />

Halloween<br />

pumpkins will be available<br />

for purchase. All ages welcome.<br />

Coffee with the Boards<br />

10 a.m.-noon, Oct. 5,<br />

Kalk Park, Glencoe. Stop<br />

by one of the following<br />

“Coffee with the Boards”<br />

events to meet with local<br />

officials from the Village,<br />

Glencoe Park District,<br />

District 35 and the Glencoe<br />

Public Library over a<br />

cup of coffee.<br />

Doggie Dip<br />

3-4 p.m. Oct. 6, Glencoe<br />

Beach. Bring your pub to<br />

the Glencoe Beach for a<br />

whole lotta doggone fun.<br />

Owners can watch their<br />

pup swim in Lake Michigan<br />

while enjoying the<br />

company of other dogs in<br />

this fun-filled free event.<br />

Semi-Annual Clean-up Day<br />

Oct. 12, Village of Glencoe.<br />

Dispose of your large<br />

household items that are<br />

not included as part of<br />

normal garbage collection<br />

on the next Semi-Annual<br />

Clean-Up Day. Rescheduled<br />

due to Yom Kippur<br />

holiday.<br />

Public Safety Open House<br />

9 a.m.-noon, Oct. 12,<br />

Village Hall, 675 Village<br />

Court. Bring the whole<br />

family for a fun morning at<br />

Village Hall. Meet Public<br />

Safety Officers, take a tour<br />

of the Fire Apparatus Bay<br />

and participate in a junior<br />

firefighter obstacle course.<br />

ONGOING<br />

Glencoe French Market<br />

7:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.<br />

Saturdays until Oct. 19,<br />

Wyman Green. Stop by the<br />

Glencoe French Market<br />

throughout the Summer<br />

for fresh local produce,<br />

baked goods and flowers.<br />

Model Railroad Garden<br />

May 11-Oct. 13, Chicago<br />

Botanic Garden,<br />

1000 Lake Cook Road,<br />

Glencoe. Visit the garden’s<br />

landmarks of America<br />

model railroad celebrating<br />

20 years. Visit www.chicagobotanic.org.<br />

Monthly Senior Discussion<br />

Groups<br />

1-2:30 p.m. third Thursday<br />

of each month, Hammond<br />

Room, Glencoe<br />

Public Library. Starting in<br />

September, facilitated by<br />

Joan Merlo, LCSW, Family<br />

Service of Glencoe<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 />

therapist, FSG’s monthly<br />

senior discussion groups<br />

meet the third Thursday of<br />

each month. Each meeting<br />

addresses various topics<br />

such as mindfulness, being<br />

a role model and healthy<br />

ways to handle challenges<br />

of aging. Occasionally the<br />

group welcomes a guest<br />

speaker. All meetings<br />

are held in the Hammond<br />

Room at the Glencoe Public<br />

Library (Please Note:<br />

the Sept. 19, 2019 meeting<br />

will be held in Council<br />

Chamber, Village Hall,<br />

due to construction at the<br />

library). For questions<br />

please contact Joan – (847)<br />

835-5111 or joan@familyserviceofglencoe.org.<br />

Sesquicentennial Planning<br />

Committee<br />

Every other Tuesday,<br />

Glencoe Village Hall, 675<br />

Village Court. The Sesquicentennial<br />

Planning Committee<br />

meets in the First<br />

Floor Conference Room.<br />

For the schedule and agenda,<br />

visit www.villageofglencoe.org.<br />

North Shore Chess Club<br />

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

Starbucks, 347 Park<br />

Ave., Glencoe. The North<br />

Shore Chess Club meets<br />

with players at all levels<br />

of chess skill, beginner,<br />

intermediate, advanced.<br />

Very friendly, casual atmosphere.<br />

No fees. Open<br />

to teens and adults. Bring<br />

your chess set if you have<br />

one.


glencoeanchordaily.com news<br />

the glencoe anchor | September 19, 2019 | 3<br />

Remembering the fallen<br />

Village of Glencoe, Am Shalom partner for Patriot Day service<br />

8<br />

Glencoe first responders lower the American flag and<br />

fold it during the ceremony.<br />

ABOVE: Public Safety<br />

officer Hubert Dziekan<br />

tolls the bell to honor the<br />

lives lost Sept. 11, 2001.<br />

The Village of Glencoe and Am Shalom hosted a public remembrance ceremony<br />

Sept. 11 for Patriot Day in Glencoe. Photos by Mark Blank/22nd Century Media<br />

LEFT: The shofar is blown<br />

by Am Shalom Rabbi<br />

Steven Stark Lowenstein.<br />

OPENING SPRING 2020!<br />

Rent starting from only $2,0 &<br />

FREE garage parking for 1 year<br />

Call us at 847-- to schedule an appointment and meet our lifestyle advisors.


4 | September 19, 2019 | The glencoe anchor news<br />

glencoeanchordaily.com<br />

Here to<br />

Help<br />

When You<br />

Need It<br />

3<br />

seniorchecksandbalances.com | 773-457-1952<br />

Mimi Drost, 8, of Glencoe, smiles during the annual Mud Run on Saturday, Sept. 14,<br />

at Watts Park in Glencoe. photos BY RHONDA HOLCOMB/22ND CENTURY MEDIA<br />

Children overcome several new<br />

obstacles during third Mud Run<br />

benefiting<br />

NorthShore University HealthSystem<br />

September 20–22, 2019<br />

Chicago Botanic Garden<br />

americancraftexpo.org<br />

Lilly Fitzgerald<br />

Alexa Burnell<br />

Freelance Reporter<br />

Mud was no match for<br />

the young athletes who<br />

participated in the third<br />

annual Glencoe Park District<br />

Mud Run Saturday,<br />

Sept. 14, at Watts Park.<br />

The event was conceived<br />

by Special Events<br />

Program Manager Liz<br />

Visteen, who caught wind<br />

of the idea from other<br />

nearby park districts.<br />

When she learned of the<br />

opportunity to bring a little<br />

dirt to the picturesque<br />

Village of Glencoe, she<br />

jumped at the chance.<br />

“Park district officials<br />

talk and when I heard<br />

about the growing trend<br />

of Tough Mudder-like obstacle<br />

courses and races<br />

for children, I just knew<br />

we had to bring the event<br />

to Glencoe,” Visteen said.<br />

“What kid doesn’t like<br />

Please see mud run, 6<br />

Children climb down from a race obstacle.


glencoeanchordaily.com glencoe<br />

the glencoe anchor | September 19, 2019 | 5<br />

Call now for thebest CD<br />

Rates on theNorth Shore!<br />

5YearCD 3.30% APY*<br />

3YearCD 2.80% APY*<br />

14 MonthsCD 2.60% APY*<br />

Promotional rates available for limited time only.<br />

Call (847) 234-8484tospeak with aPersonal Banker today!<br />

Diana Muresan<br />

Vice President, NMLS# 1436578<br />

direct: (312) 871-3038<br />

Celestina Kwiecien<br />

Personal Banker<br />

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

Now Hiring Loan Originators!<br />

Bernie Miller<br />

Fmr. U.S. Army Captain<br />

Executive Vice President, NMLS# 210808<br />

direct: (312) 738-6262<br />

/thefederalsavingsbank<br />

/thefedsavbank<br />

664N.Western Avenue,LakeForest, IL 60045<br />

Copyright 2019 ©The Federal Savings Bank | All rights reserved | TheFederalSavingsBank.com | Co. NMLS# 411500<br />

*Annual Percentage Yield (APY) is accurate as of 09/18/2019 and issubject to change. $10,000 minimum deposit to open and earn the stated CD APY, assumes interest remains ondeposit<br />

until maturity. Offer valid for funds not currently ondeposit with The Federal Savings Bank. Apenalty may be imposed for early withdrawal, which would reduce earnings. For additional<br />

terms and conditions, call (312) 667-1980 or send anemail to contact us@thefederalsavingsbank.com. Based on asearch ofBankrate.com amongst banks with physical locations for 5Year,<br />

3Year, 14 Months CDs inthe Chicago, IL area on09/18/2019.


6 | September 19, 2019 | The glencoe anchor news<br />

glencoeanchordaily.com<br />

police reports<br />

Truck driver leaves<br />

vehicle idling on parkway<br />

3<br />

Samir Yahya Nasser,<br />

32, of Michigan, was<br />

cited for three traffic violations,<br />

including damage<br />

to property, parked<br />

on a parkway and parked<br />

on Sheridan Road at 6<br />

p.m. Sept. 10 at the intersection<br />

of Beach and<br />

Sheridan roads. The citations<br />

came after police<br />

responded to a call of a<br />

semi-truck parked on the<br />

pawkway, running and<br />

with no one around the<br />

truck. His court date is<br />

Oct. 23.<br />

Announcements<br />

New Trier graduate deployed to<br />

Afghanistan with Illinois National Guard<br />

Steven Tetzlaff, a native of Wilmette,<br />

is set to travel to Afghanistan with<br />

the Illinois National Guard as part of<br />

Operation Freedom.<br />

Tetzlaff attended McKenzie Elementary,<br />

Higcrest and Wilmette Junior High<br />

School before graduating from New<br />

Trier High School in 2016. He joined<br />

the Illinois Army National Guard in fall<br />

of his senior year.<br />

Tetzlaff was assigned to the 178th<br />

Infantry Regiment. On July 28, he left<br />

for Ft. Bliss in Texas for more training<br />

prior to deployment to Afghanistan. He<br />

will be deployed in Afghanistan with<br />

400 fellow guardsmen for 400 days.<br />

“We as a family are so very proud of<br />

Steven. We miss him terribly but know<br />

he will come home safe,” said Katie<br />

Tetzlaff, Steven’s mother. “Steven is well<br />

trained as are the soldiers that are with<br />

him. Please keep all of them in your<br />

thoughts.”<br />

To submit birth, birthday, engagement, wedding,<br />

anniversary, military advancement or<br />

any other announcement, send a photo and information<br />

to megan@glencoeanchor.com or 60<br />

Revere Drive ST 888, Northbrook, IL 60062.<br />

In other police news:<br />

Sept. 10<br />

• An unknown offender<br />

struck the victim’s 2006<br />

Jeep Laredo and fled<br />

the scene at 2:35 p.m. in<br />

the 900 block of Green<br />

Bay Road. The hit-andrun<br />

caused $1,500 in<br />

damage.<br />

• An unlocked 2010 Jeep<br />

Wrangler was entered in a<br />

theft attempt at 11:55 a.m.<br />

in the 300 block of Woodlawn<br />

Avenue. The vehicle<br />

was rummaged through,<br />

but nothing was stolen.<br />

Sept. 6<br />

• A victim’s identity was<br />

used to purchase a car<br />

from an out-of-state car<br />

dealership.<br />

EDITOR’S NOTE: The Glencoe<br />

Anchor’s Police Reports<br />

are compiled from official<br />

reports found on file at the<br />

Glencoe Police Department<br />

headquarters in Glencoe. Individuals<br />

named in these reports<br />

are considered innocent<br />

of all charges until proven<br />

guilty in a court of law.<br />

Race finishers (left to right) Allegra Weisman, 8, John Ledinsky, 8, and Luma<br />

Weisman, 7, all of Glencoe. rhonda holcomb/22nd century media<br />

mud run<br />

From Page 4<br />

knowing they can wake<br />

up on a Saturday morning<br />

just to get muddy and<br />

messy? Best of all is seeing<br />

the smile on all the<br />

kids faces as they cross<br />

the finish line. They’re<br />

so proud and so are their<br />

moms and dads, who love<br />

taking photos of the whole<br />

experience.”<br />

Upon making their<br />

way to the starting line,<br />

runners jogged in place,<br />

stretched and prepared<br />

themselves mentally to<br />

physically accomplish the<br />

task at hand. Climbing<br />

walls and through mud<br />

pits and rope courses,<br />

there were a variety of<br />

obstacles that brought out<br />

everyone’s best inner athlete.<br />

This year, two new obstacles<br />

upped the ante. A<br />

slingshot, allowing kids<br />

to hit non-human targets<br />

with mud, and the<br />

hamster wheel, giving<br />

youngsters a run for their<br />

money.<br />

Some came solo, while<br />

others participated as a<br />

team, like a group from<br />

Sacred Heart School.<br />

This particular Mud Run<br />

posse included Addy and<br />

Ella Darragh, Emma and<br />

Claire Smylie, Ainsley<br />

Schachman, and Nora<br />

Murdoch. The girls reported<br />

that while the challenges<br />

kept them on their<br />

toes, the joy of getting<br />

completely covered in<br />

mud, made it all worth it.<br />

“At the end, we all<br />

agree that we feel so<br />

proud of ourselves for<br />

accomplishing the race,”<br />

Murdoch said, speaking<br />

for the group. “It was a<br />

lot of fun to come as a<br />

team and watch everyone<br />

get covered in mud<br />

together.”<br />

Dad Scott Glauberman,<br />

of Glencoe, came<br />

to support his 10-yearold<br />

daughter, Caroline.<br />

He gave two thumbs-up<br />

to the experience and to<br />

the host, the Glencoe Park<br />

To view more<br />

photos, visit<br />

glencoeanchor<br />

daily.com.<br />

District.<br />

“This was a really great<br />

event. The whole process<br />

was well organized and a<br />

lot of fun for all the kids<br />

involved,” he said.<br />

Hours after the event,<br />

the following race results<br />

were reported:<br />

Ages 7-8 Girls: Sydney<br />

Kletzel (first place), Murphy<br />

Gamse (second place)<br />

and Maddie Swender<br />

(third place).<br />

Ages 7-8 Boys: Axel<br />

Iden, John Ledinsky and<br />

Griffen Degen.<br />

Ages 9-11 Girls: Onyka<br />

Rosien, Reese Meyers and<br />

Abby Morton.<br />

Ages 9-11 Boys: Colton<br />

Stiller, Dylan Sears and<br />

Graham Howard.<br />

Ages 12-14 Girls: Mallory<br />

Jaberg, Chloe Snyder<br />

and Lucia Serrano.<br />

Ages 12-14 Boys: Aerik<br />

Jahangiri, Connor Gamse<br />

and Max Kaplan.


glencoeanchordaily.com glencoe<br />

the glencoe anchor | September 19, 2019 | 7<br />

At NorthShore, we’re transforming your healthcare byanalyzing your DNA to identify future health<br />

risks for you—and working with you to stop illness before itbegins. When you’re aNorthShore<br />

patient, your Advanced Primary Care physician offers the latest genetic science as part ofyour<br />

everyday care, making it easier to take the right steps today to prevent illnesses tomorrow.<br />

All to keep you healthier, longer.<br />

ADVANCED PRIMARY CARE<br />

See how we’re redefining the routine checkup at<br />

northshore.org/apc or call (847) 570-GENE<br />

Healthcare for what’s next.


8 | September 19, 2019 | The glencoe anchor community<br />

glencoeanchordaily.com<br />

1<br />

Biggie<br />

The Merlo family,<br />

of Glencoe<br />

Meet Biggie,<br />

a 5-month-old<br />

rescue Mastiff<br />

mix (boxer?<br />

cane corso?).<br />

Our first family<br />

dog! Loves<br />

peeing in the<br />

house, eating cement, chasing our two cats (Isabel<br />

and Autumn, who were previously featured),<br />

following mom around and sleeping under the<br />

desk at Reach Yoga.<br />

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

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

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

IL 60062.<br />

The 35 New Trier High School students that have been named as National Merit semifinalists. photo submitted<br />

35 New Trier students named<br />

as National Merit semifinalists<br />

Submitted by New Trier<br />

Thirty-five New Trier<br />

High School students<br />

have been named as semifinalists<br />

in the prestigious<br />

National Merit Scholarship<br />

competition.<br />

Of about 1.5 million juniors<br />

in about 21,000 high<br />

schools across the country<br />

who entered the 2020 program<br />

by taking the 2018<br />

Preliminary SAT/National<br />

Merit Scholarship<br />

Qualifying Test (PSAT/<br />

NMSQT), only approximately<br />

16,000 earned the<br />

semifinalist designation.<br />

This nationwide pool<br />

of semifinalists represents<br />

less than 1 percent of all<br />

U.S. high school seniors<br />

and includes the highest<br />

scoring entrants of the<br />

state, who will have the<br />

opportunity to continue in<br />

the competition for 7,600<br />

National Merit Scholarships<br />

worth more than $31<br />

million.<br />

To become a finalist,<br />

a semifinalist must have<br />

an outstanding academic<br />

record throughout high<br />

school, be endorsed and<br />

recommended by a high<br />

school official, write an<br />

essay and earn SAT or<br />

ACT scores that confirm<br />

the student’s earlier performance<br />

on the qualifying<br />

test. The semifinalist’s<br />

participation in school<br />

and community activities,<br />

demonstrated leadership<br />

abilities, employment,<br />

and honors and awards<br />

received must also be submitted.<br />

Approximately 15,000<br />

semifinalists are expected<br />

to advance to the finalist<br />

level, and Merit Scholar<br />

designees will be selected<br />

based on their skills, accomplishments<br />

and potential<br />

for success in rigorous<br />

college studies.<br />

New Trier’s 2020 National<br />

Merit Semifinalists<br />

are:<br />

Anna Arthur; Pearce<br />

Bailey; Ayah Bajwa; Mira<br />

Becker; Maggie Cao; Patrick<br />

Condon; Nadharm<br />

Dhiantravan; Phillip Ellison;<br />

Elizabeth Fisher; Jacob<br />

Furfine; Colin Glew;<br />

Kathryn Hemmer; Tinah<br />

Hong; Taylor Jones; Lydia<br />

Kaup; Andrew Kearney;<br />

Maia Law; Margaret Lin;<br />

Erin McNally; Alexander<br />

Nagel; Aryoman Patel;<br />

Kathryn Pickens; Emilie<br />

Rivkin; Jane Rosin; Talia<br />

Schacht; Alina Scholz;<br />

Finja Scholz; Thomas Serrino;<br />

Karthik Srinivasan;<br />

Shivam Tailor; Markus<br />

Tam; Jacob Wachtel; Keyler<br />

White; Jesse Yang; and<br />

Jason Yuan.


glencoeanchordaily.com glencoe<br />

the glencoe anchor | September 19, 2019 | 9<br />

Northfield Mews<br />

ALuxuryTownhome Rental Community<br />

Pre-leasing formove-insbeginning November 1st!<br />

NorthfieldMews.com |847.232.3586


10 | September 19, 2019 | The glencoe anchor news<br />

glencoeanchordaily.com<br />

3<br />

New Trier Class of 1954 celebrates its 65th anniversary<br />

50 classmates<br />

unite to ‘relive old<br />

times’ in Winnetka<br />

Alan P. Henry<br />

Freelance Reporter<br />

There weren’t a lot of<br />

the bells and whistles that<br />

enlivened many of their<br />

previous high school reunions,<br />

but that was just<br />

fine with the room full of<br />

83-year-olds who gathered<br />

at the Indian Hill Club in<br />

Winnetka last Saturday<br />

night, Sept. 14, to mark the<br />

65th anniversary of their<br />

graduation from New Trier<br />

High School.<br />

“When you hang around<br />

with 83-year-olds, we<br />

are happy to be here. We<br />

are happy to anywhere,”<br />

smiled Bernie Rinella, one<br />

of the reunion organizers<br />

and president of the senior<br />

class of 1954. “My uplifting<br />

message is that we<br />

have basically survived to<br />

this age and are prospering<br />

in a many instances.”<br />

Like high school reunions<br />

everywhere, curiosity<br />

was a big draw. Or, as<br />

Debby Hollingbery Roth<br />

put it: “I like to see my<br />

old buddies, and see how<br />

they’ve changed.”<br />

Of the 562 graduates<br />

of the Class of 1954, 50<br />

enjoyed the cocktail hour<br />

and dinner at the club<br />

alongside 25 partners. The<br />

number was down from<br />

roughly 100 for their 60th<br />

five years ago.<br />

“It gets tougher and<br />

tougher to get people together<br />

because of health<br />

problems,” Rinella said.<br />

More than 160 of their<br />

classmates have died, including<br />

close to a dozen<br />

whose relatives responded<br />

to the reunion invitation<br />

with the sad news.<br />

The gathering included<br />

a smattering who traveled<br />

from states across the<br />

country, including Charley<br />

Trense, who flew in from<br />

Atlanta.<br />

“I came in just for this,”<br />

said the retired publishing<br />

industry executive. “It’s<br />

reuniting with your classmates,<br />

reliving old times<br />

and it is just a good time<br />

for camaraderie.”<br />

Trense noted when he<br />

got married in 1960, classmates<br />

Rinella, John Madigan<br />

and Neil Stearns were<br />

in his wedding party.<br />

“I had some pretty good<br />

support,” he said.<br />

Like the other attendees,<br />

Trense had nothing but<br />

praise for his alma mater.<br />

“It opened doors for me<br />

later on in life and in getting<br />

me a job because my<br />

resume also read New Trier<br />

High School, and that<br />

was very meaningful to<br />

employers,” he said.<br />

Richard Simonds, a retired<br />

CPA, gave a specific<br />

shout out to his advisor,<br />

biology teacher Mr. Hoyt.<br />

“I remember freshman<br />

year, the first day we were<br />

there he said, ‘You’ve got<br />

to start hitting the books<br />

now and getting good<br />

grades because when you<br />

become a senior and all of<br />

a sudden you decide you<br />

want to go to a good college<br />

and you haven’t gotten<br />

very good grades there<br />

will be no way to come<br />

back from that.’”<br />

Simonds heeded that advice,<br />

and went on to Yale.<br />

“It was a great education<br />

and an experience I<br />

will never forget and it<br />

set me on the road to success,”<br />

said Rinella, who<br />

practiced family law for<br />

58 years. “They gave me<br />

great confidence in what I<br />

was doing. In a lot of ways<br />

the quality of teaching was<br />

superior to college.”<br />

Apart from the educational<br />

aspects, New Trier<br />

was just a great place to<br />

develop lifelong friends,<br />

classmates agreed.<br />

“I met some of the best<br />

people in the world and<br />

I still see many of them.<br />

Sixty-five years later we<br />

still have great relationships<br />

even though we are<br />

in all different walks of<br />

life,” said Carl Paletti, who<br />

was in the real estate and<br />

paving business.<br />

Every July, Paletti is<br />

one of about 35 classmates<br />

who come on from all over<br />

the country for a party at<br />

Hackneys and some poker.<br />

“The relationships just<br />

seem to be really for real.<br />

It is just a really good feeling<br />

to see these people,” he<br />

said.<br />

Betsy Barnett said class<br />

reunions also give her a<br />

chance to connect with<br />

new people.<br />

“I’ll meet someone who<br />

I really haven’t talked to<br />

much since New Trier and<br />

I will think, ‘Why haven’t<br />

we talked before?’” said<br />

Barnett, who works at the<br />

Glencoe Public Library<br />

Full story at GlencoeAnchor.com.<br />

OPEN HOUSE | SEPTEMBER 22 ND<br />

| 2:30-4:30 PM<br />

516WalnutStWinnetka,IL60093<br />

4Bed | 3.2 Bath | $1,499,000<br />

Exceptional custom home inprime east Winnetka offers<br />

grand rooms and fabulous renovations! Thoughtful floor<br />

plan includes first floor master suite, inviting living and dining<br />

rooms, spectacular great room and beautiful kitchen. All<br />

rooms enjoy views of the gorgeous grounds -all just steps<br />

from town, train, Village Green and Lake Michigan.<br />

Joanne Hudson Group is ateam of Real Estate agents affiliated with Compass. Compass is alicensed Real Estate broker with aprincipal office inChicago, IL and abides byall applicable Equal Housing Opportunity<br />

laws. All material presented herein is intended for informational purposes only, iscompiled from sources deemed reliable but is subject toerrors, omissions, and changes without notice. All measurements and square<br />

footages are approximate. This is not intended to solicit property already listed. Nothing herein shall be construed as legal, accounting or other professional advice outside the realm ofReal Estate brokerage.<br />

Joanne Hudson | 847.971.5024


glencoeanchordaily.com glencoe<br />

the glencoe anchor | September 19, 2019 | 11<br />

OPEN SUNDAY, SEPT22, 1-3PM<br />

160 N. SHERIDAN ROAD|GLENCOE |$1,089,000<br />

Avery special Sheridan Road beauty designedbyrenownedarchitect Arthur Heun.<br />

5bedrooms, 3.1 bath offering afantastic value to the discerning buyer.<br />

SALLY O’DONNELL<br />

314.422.5215<br />

sally.odonnell@cbexchange.com<br />

CATHRYN LOPEZ<br />

312.339-7095<br />

cathryn.lopez@cbexchange.com<br />

FULL TIME — FULL SERVICE<br />

Call Sally &Cathryn today for ANY Real Estate Needs<br />

WINNETKA OFFICE | 568 LINCOLN AVENUE | WINNETKA, IL 60093 |COLDWELLBANKERHOMES.COM<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<br />

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

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


12 | September 19, 2019 | The glencoe anchor glencoe<br />

glencoeanchordaily.com<br />

INDEPENDENT BOARDING SCHOOL FAIR<br />

WEDNESDAY,OCTOBER 2, 2019 •6:30 –8:30 PM<br />

Lake Forest Country Day School invites you<br />

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

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

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

each with adistinctive educational approach.<br />

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

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

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

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


glencoeanchordaily.com glencoe<br />

the glencoe anchor | September 19, 2019 | 13<br />

OPEN HOUSE<br />

SUNDAY 9/22, 12-2PM<br />

QUALITY, THOUGHTFULNESS &CRAFTSMANSHIP<br />

399Grove Street,Glencoe<br />

5BEDROOM | 5.2 BATHROOM | $2,300,000<br />

312.929.7356 • katieturner.info • katieturner@atproperties.com


14 | September 19, 2019 | The glencoe anchor sound off<br />

glencoeanchordaily.com<br />

City Girl Confessions<br />

Subscribing to hyperlocal engagement<br />

Kelly Anderson<br />

Contributing Columnist<br />

Did you know<br />

that all sorts of<br />

‘Happy…” greetings<br />

are in order?<br />

5 years ago, The Glencoe<br />

Anchor launched as<br />

your local paper. Crazily<br />

enough, I’ve been along<br />

for the ride since those<br />

early days which means<br />

that I, too, am celebrating<br />

five years of community<br />

storytelling. Sometimes<br />

I forget that it’s been that<br />

long, that my face and<br />

words have been familiar<br />

to our community. But I’ll<br />

never forget the morning<br />

I went out for a run and<br />

in turning a corner, had a<br />

resident wave enthusiastically<br />

from her yard and<br />

yell out, “Hey, I love your<br />

column!” I was so stunned<br />

that I tripped over the curb.<br />

Writing for local media<br />

has given me a wonderful<br />

gift: I have permission<br />

to full immerse myself<br />

in everything local: the<br />

people, the government,<br />

the businesses. One time I<br />

wrote about a great shopping<br />

experience at 312<br />

Tudor and the store owner<br />

reached out in gratitude.<br />

Turns out that many of you<br />

read my story and decided<br />

to walk into her boutique<br />

for the first time.<br />

In taking in a deeply<br />

moving show at The<br />

Writer’s Theatre, I wrote<br />

about the transformative<br />

experience one gets when<br />

sitting in a dark room,<br />

alone with story tellers,<br />

only to emerge back into<br />

“real life” a few hours<br />

later. An executive at the<br />

theatre sent me the kindest<br />

email — he was excited<br />

that I captured a meaningful<br />

experience from a<br />

show they had worked so<br />

meticulously on.<br />

Telling stories and sharing<br />

my life with you over<br />

the past five years has been<br />

wildly fun. It’s humorous<br />

for me to even consider<br />

how it all fell into place.<br />

Back in 2014, I had a little<br />

baby, a new suburban<br />

address, and a Journalism<br />

degree that wasn’t getting<br />

much use. When the very<br />

first issue of The Glencoe<br />

Anchor arrived at my doorstep,<br />

I sat on my patio and<br />

pored through the pages. In<br />

its debut issue, the editor<br />

was encouraging writers<br />

to reach out and share the<br />

stories they wished to tell.<br />

It was the nudge I didn’t<br />

know I needed. That day,<br />

I emailed a ‘guest column’<br />

about my transition from<br />

city living to Glencoedwelling.<br />

I titled it, “Finding<br />

Solace in Suburbia.”<br />

The editor gently let me<br />

know that ‘guest columns’<br />

were not what they were<br />

looking for…but that what<br />

I sent was well-written<br />

and intriguing. Would I be<br />

interested in a regular gig<br />

among these pages?<br />

Together, we decided on<br />

a name (‘City Girl Confessions’)<br />

and a schedule (bimonthly).<br />

My photo and<br />

my words have been with<br />

you ever since.<br />

The way we receive<br />

news and stories continues<br />

to evolve. Whether scrolling<br />

an iPad, watching a<br />

broadcast, or opening an<br />

App, we are still engaging<br />

the world around us. But I<br />

must confess: hyper-local<br />

engagement is such a<br />

uniting force. Knowing the<br />

names of your neighbors,<br />

saying hello to shop owners,<br />

subscribing to local<br />

media, and showing up<br />

for Village events allows<br />

us to create this powerful<br />

bond. It’s friendship, it’s<br />

unique, and it’s a feeling<br />

of hey-we’re-all-in-thistogether.<br />

Happy birthday<br />

to the Anchor — may the<br />

stories of our community<br />

continue for many more<br />

years to come.<br />

Kelly Q. Anderson is a<br />

writer, photographer and<br />

former Chicagoan. She pens<br />

blogs and books from her<br />

home in Glencoe, which she<br />

shares with her husband,<br />

son and daughter.<br />

Sustainable Living<br />

D35 teaches strong stewardship, sustainability<br />

Sandy Culver<br />

Contributing Columnist<br />

From small steps like<br />

eliminating plastic<br />

ketchup packets in<br />

the cafeteria to big projects<br />

like installing solar<br />

panels, Glencoe’s three<br />

schools are continually<br />

becoming more energy efficient<br />

and reducing their<br />

carbon footprints.<br />

Each school models an<br />

extensive recycling system<br />

of bins in classrooms<br />

to sort waste collected<br />

by Lakeshore Recycling<br />

Systems and partnering<br />

companies, (e.g., Trex,<br />

which takes all varieties<br />

of plastic bags and bottles<br />

and turns them into ecofriendly<br />

outdoor products;<br />

TerraCycle, which repurposes<br />

energy bar wrappers;<br />

and Crayola, which<br />

recycles/upcycles crayons<br />

and colored markers).<br />

The lunchroom culture<br />

reinforces earth-friendly<br />

practices.<br />

“We use more of a ‘sort<br />

your lunch’ system instead<br />

of a ‘dump your trash’<br />

approach,” South School<br />

Principal Dr. Kelly Zonghetti<br />

said.<br />

All three schools offer<br />

only compostable utensils<br />

that will soon be collected<br />

by a commercial composter<br />

to ensure a faster and<br />

complete breakdown of<br />

the materials.<br />

“We work hard with<br />

lunch vendors and our<br />

PTO to look for ways to<br />

reduce our waste stream,”<br />

Superintendent of District<br />

35 Dr. Catherine Wang<br />

said. “We replaced plastic<br />

straws with paper straws<br />

for kindergartners and we<br />

have eliminated all straws<br />

for the older grades.”<br />

A grant from the Solid<br />

Waste Agency of Northern<br />

Cook County allowed<br />

school lunchrooms to buy<br />

big condiment pumps and<br />

small paper containers,<br />

eliminating the need for<br />

plastic packets.<br />

West and Central<br />

School students are<br />

composting their food<br />

waste, which is picked<br />

up by Collect Resources<br />

in Evanston. Catherine<br />

Procopi, an eighth-grader<br />

at Central School who<br />

also serves on the Glencoe<br />

Sustainability Task Force,<br />

is pleased that her school<br />

offers composting but<br />

thinks students could do<br />

more.<br />

“Most people only do<br />

the bare minimum to<br />

help,” she said. “They<br />

could pay more attention<br />

to ‘green’ reminders<br />

around the school and do<br />

their best to follow what<br />

they say. Last year we had<br />

to stop collecting compost<br />

because students kept putting<br />

pizza and other oily<br />

foods in the compost. It<br />

doesn’t hurt to go above<br />

and beyond.”<br />

Introduced by the STF<br />

last year, D35 adopted<br />

“Meatless Mondays” in<br />

the lunchrooms. Next<br />

week, South School<br />

will launch “Waste-Free<br />

Wednesdays,” challenging<br />

students to bring snacks<br />

and lunches that leave<br />

A West School fourth-grader displays the compostable<br />

utensils used in the lunchroom. Photo Submitted<br />

nothing behind.<br />

Outside of recycling<br />

and composting, D35 has<br />

invested significantly in<br />

larger sustainability projects,<br />

such as converting<br />

Central and West schools<br />

to geothermal heating and<br />

cooling systems, and outfitting<br />

both schools with<br />

solar panels for greatly<br />

improved energy efficiency.<br />

According to Wang,<br />

Please see d35, 15


glencoeanchordaily.com sound off<br />

the glencoe anchor | September 19, 2019 | 15<br />

Social snapshot<br />

Top Stories<br />

from GlencoeAnchor.com as of Sept. 16:<br />

1. Instant success leads Hometown Coffee<br />

to expand location<br />

2. Arepie brings flavors of Venezuela to<br />

downtown Glencoe<br />

3. Glencoe Historical society unveils The<br />

Sesquicentennial Exhibit<br />

4. Photo Gallery: Village of Glencoe, Am<br />

Shalom partner for Patriot Day service<br />

5. Home of the Week: 7 Rockgate Lane,<br />

Glencoe<br />

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

From the Editor<br />

Five years of storytelling in Glencoe<br />

Megan Bernard<br />

megan@glencoeanchor.com<br />

In case you missed it,<br />

last week we featured<br />

North Shore Country<br />

Day School’s 100th anniversary.<br />

North Shore Country<br />

Day’s birthday was an<br />

exciting story to share<br />

since school officials are<br />

thrilled to be hosting a<br />

variety of events throughout<br />

the entire year for the<br />

community. The excitement<br />

is contagious.<br />

This year, we’ve also<br />

been sharing news on the<br />

Village of Glencoe’s sesquicentennial<br />

(150 years)<br />

and the celebrations that<br />

come with that.<br />

Since we are in the<br />

birthday mood, we have<br />

another one big one to<br />

celebrate this week: The<br />

Glencoe Anchor’s!<br />

While the paper hasn’t<br />

made it quite as far as<br />

NSCDS or the Village<br />

of Glencoe, we still are<br />

extremely excited to say<br />

that we’ve been in business<br />

for five years!<br />

With the evolving<br />

world of media and<br />

digital push these days,<br />

there have been many<br />

changes to our day-today<br />

operations, but one<br />

thing’s been constant: our<br />

weekly print publication<br />

in your mailbox, and I’m<br />

proud to say we’ve never<br />

skipped a beat!<br />

Throughout the past<br />

five years, we’ve been<br />

your source of community<br />

journalism from<br />

breaking news and business<br />

stories to longer Life<br />

& Arts features and sports<br />

coverage. I hope you<br />

have found The Anchor to<br />

be a valuable news source<br />

between it all.<br />

In my opinion, hyperlocal<br />

news is such a<br />

valuable resource. It’s<br />

important because it’s<br />

what’s happening right<br />

here in your hometown<br />

and impacting you. All<br />

of these stories may not<br />

make it to larger-scaled<br />

papers, but we know they<br />

are still need a voice.<br />

It has been my pleasure<br />

being that voice to your<br />

great stories in recent<br />

years and working with<br />

our wonderful team of<br />

community reporters,<br />

columnists and photographers<br />

to keep this ship<br />

afloat.<br />

I hope you’ve enjoyed<br />

your neighborhood news<br />

in The Anchor as we continue<br />

serving you the best<br />

product possible.<br />

Glencoe Community Garden posted this photo<br />

Sept. 3 with the caption: “Singing “raindrops<br />

keep falling on our heads” and harvesting 58+<br />

pounds.”<br />

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

“A big thanks to #AmShalom for inviting us to<br />

lunch today. It’s wonderful to have such a great<br />

community partner. The cookies are as good as<br />

they look!! #OurTownGlencoe #Blessed #GlencoePoliceFireEms”<br />

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

Sept. 10<br />

Follow The Glencoe Anchor: @GlencoeAnchor<br />

d35<br />

From Page 14<br />

capital improvements<br />

that include a geothermal<br />

system for South School<br />

are on the horizon.<br />

District 35 also collaborated<br />

with the Village<br />

Board and STF to create<br />

the first Active Transportation<br />

Plan aimed at<br />

improving safe walking,<br />

biking and transit to destination<br />

areas.<br />

“One of the outgrowths<br />

of that collaborative project<br />

was a Safe Routes to<br />

School grant,” Wang said.<br />

“We’ve been really pleased<br />

to share that with students<br />

and parents and see that<br />

kids are using it to map out<br />

the safest way to school.”<br />

Central School created a<br />

Walk/Bike to School Day<br />

in support of the ATP plan.<br />

“Our Green Club made<br />

a Walk/Bike to School video,<br />

which I think had a big<br />

impact on our participation<br />

for that day,” said Gray<br />

Drobny, a seventh-grader<br />

at Central School and also<br />

member of the STF.<br />

Across D35, students<br />

engage in a number<br />

of environmental issues<br />

through interactive<br />

activities. West School’s<br />

third- and fourth-graders<br />

participated in an Innovation<br />

STEAM challenge<br />

to reduce food waste in<br />

the cafeteria. As part of a<br />

“We Care for Our World”<br />

project, students came up<br />

with a creative rooftop<br />

garden design intended for<br />

West School.<br />

Drobny and Procopi<br />

are working with Central<br />

School and the STF to initiate<br />

an “Adopt-A-Drain”<br />

project to keep storm<br />

sewer drains free of grass<br />

clippings, leaves, pesticides,<br />

fertilizers, gasoline,<br />

motor oil and animal<br />

waste that runs directly<br />

into Lake Michigan.<br />

Glencoe schools continue<br />

to look for ways to<br />

improve the foundational<br />

4R’s – Reduce, Reuse,<br />

Recycle and Refuse – and<br />

teach students to take accountability<br />

for their own<br />

footprints.<br />

“We have to make environmental<br />

sustainability a<br />

lifelong habit and we can’t<br />

stop giving attention to<br />

it,” Wang said. “We must<br />

keep finding new ways to<br />

go figure<br />

35<br />

stretch and grow and reevaluate<br />

what we’re doing<br />

in every area.”<br />

Sustainable Living is a<br />

column from the Sustainability<br />

Task Force featuring<br />

different green initiatives in<br />

the village.<br />

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

New Trier students<br />

named as National<br />

Merit semifinalists.<br />

(Page 8)<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 | September 19, 2019 | The glencoe anchor glencoe<br />

glencoeanchordaily.com<br />

UNLIMITED<br />

REINVENTED<br />

PLUS, CHOOSE ONE OF THESE PREMIUM SERVICES<br />

WITH THE AT&T UNLIMITED &MORE SM PREMIUM PLAN * .<br />

CALL NOW and ask about Next Day Installation.<br />

Iv Support Holdings LLC<br />

500 West Putnam Ave, Greenwich, CT 06830<br />

877-803-6297<br />

*Add to AT&T Unlimited &More Premium plan. Video may be ltd to SD. Must add TV benefits & Premium Add-on option at attwatchtv.com/verifywatchtv. Streaming limits apply.<br />

Content, programming and channels subj. to change. Add’l charges, usage, speed & other restr’s apply. See below for details.<br />

AT&T UNLIMITED &MORE PREMIUM PLAN: Avail. to elig. customers only. Plan starts at $80/mo. after autopay & paperless bill discount w/in 2 bills. Enroll in both to get discount. Multiple Phone Line Discount: Monthly $15 (3 lines) or $30 (4 or more lines) discount applied to plan charge w/in 2 bills. Limits: After 22GB of data usage on a line in a bill cycle, for the remainder of the cycle, AT&T may temporarily slow data speeds on that line during<br />

times of network congestion. Select devices only, 10/plan. See att.com/unlimited for plan details & pricing. Wireless Streaming: Plan includes Stream Saver which limits wireless streaming to max of 1.5 Mbps (to stream in HD (up to 1080p) when avail., turn Stream Saver off). Details at att.com/streamsaver. Streaming ability & resolution vary and are affected by other factors. Tethering/Mobile Hotspot: Includes up to 15GB per line/mo. After 15GB,<br />

tethering speed will be slowed to max of 128 Kbps except for Connected Cars. WATCHTV: Add to &More Premium plan. To add, you must create account at attwatchtv.com/verifywatchtv, verify your wireless account & then you can access through WatchTV app or compatible browser. May require verification via text msg. Req’s compatible device (sold separately). WatchTV subject to its own terms & conditions, see attwatchtv.com/terms-and-conditions for<br />

details. Included channels, programming & content subj. to change & benefit may be terminated. Lost Eligibility: If you cancel elig. wireless svc, you lose access to WatchTV. Limits: Access to one WatchTV acct/wireless acct. Limit 1 concurrent stream with WatchTV. May not be stackable. Use only in the DCA. CHOOSE ONE: Elig. customers can add to AT&T Unlimited &More Premium for no extra charge. Use only in the DCA. Must create acct at attwatchtv.com/verifywatchtv,<br />

verify your wireless acct & then select your one add-on. Music apps not avail. to Puerto Rico or U.S. Virgin Islands customers. May require verification via text msg. Req’s compatible device (sold separately). May require acct creation and acceptance of third-party terms & conditions for certain add-on choices. Access to add-on is for 12 months; then may select new add-on option for next 12 months. Customers w/ elig. AT&T TV svc also get Premium<br />

movie channel selection on that platform, which is billed & credited w/in 2 bills. Premium movie channel access ltd to WatchTV app only for customers in Puerto Rico and U.S. Virgin Islands, and for certain MDU customers. Included channels, programming and/or content subject to change and benefit may be terminated. Lost Eligibility: Upon cancellation of elig. wireless plan you may lose access. Limits: Access to one add-on per elig. wireless account. May<br />

not be stackable. AT&T employees, retirees & IMO consumers are not eligible for the autopay & paperless bill discount, adding WatchTV at no extra charge or the &More Premium add-on. Offer, programming, pricing, channels, terms & restrictions subject to change and may be discontinued at any time without notice. GEN. WIRELESS: Subj. to Wireless Customer Agmt at att.com/wca. Svc not for resale. Credit approval, deposit, active and other fees, monthly<br />

& other charges per line apply. See plan details & att.com/additionalcharges for more. Coverage & svc not avail. everywhere. International & domestic off-net data may be at 2G speeds. Other restr’s apply & may result in svc termination. AT&T svc is subj. to AT&T network management policies, see att.com/broadbandinfo for details. HBO,® Cinemax® and related channels and service marks are the property of Home Box Office, Inc. SHOWTIME® is a registered<br />

trademark of Showtime Networks Inc., a CBS company. You must be a SHOWTIME subscriber to get SHOWTIME ANYTIME® and watch programs online. STARZ® and related channels and service marks are the property of Starz Entertainment, LLC. Visit starz.com for airdates/times. Amazon, Amazon Music, and all related logos and motion marks are trademarks of Amazon.com, Inc. or its affiliates. The Walking Dead: ©2018 AMC Network Entertainment LLC. All<br />

Rights Reserved. ©2018 Viacom International Inc. All Rights Reserved. ©2018 AT&T Intellectual Property. All Rights Reserved. AT&T, Globe logo, DIRECTV and all other DIRECTV marks contained herein are trademarks of AT&T Intellectual Property and/or AT&T affiliated companies. All other marks are the property of their respective owners.


the glencoe anchor | September 19, 2019 | glencoeanchordaily.com<br />

Hopping into new territory<br />

Glenview brewery branches out with new kitchen, Page 23<br />

Annual North Shore Art<br />

League exhibition features works<br />

from residents, Page 19<br />

The annual North Shore Art League exhibit includes works from artists (top to bottom row, left<br />

to right) Anne McNerney, Ladd Mengele and Susan Underwood. Photos Submitted


18 | September 19, 2019 | The glencoe anchor puzzles<br />

glencoeanchordaily.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. Sewing line<br />

5. Recipe direction<br />

10. Domesticate<br />

14. London park<br />

15. Trunks<br />

16. Gemstone<br />

17. Pitcher Hershiser<br />

18. Aggregate<br />

19. Obscures, with<br />

“up”<br />

20. Frank Lloyd designed<br />

structure in<br />

Highland Park, goes<br />

with 22 across<br />

22. See 20 across<br />

24. Fruit tray goody<br />

25. Car club<br />

26. Affection, briefly<br />

28. Compass direction<br />

29. Disheveled<br />

33. In the manner of<br />

34. Application of<br />

language<br />

35. Not very much<br />

36. Female legislative<br />

member<br />

41. Certain choir<br />

member<br />

42. Sovereign decree<br />

43. Former space<br />

station<br />

44. Chaperone<br />

47. Civil War letters<br />

50. Big section in a<br />

dictionary<br />

51. Certain theater,<br />

for short<br />

52. Whitish<br />

54. First name of the<br />

mayor of Highland<br />

Park<br />

56. Operating<br />

58. Vicky Lawrence<br />

role<br />

59. Generator part<br />

62. Tennis great,<br />

Arthur<br />

63. Grade<br />

64. Gibson garnish<br />

65. Earth sci.<br />

66. Kennedy and<br />

Nugent<br />

67. Residences<br />

68. Some cameras,<br />

abbr.<br />

Down<br />

1. Missourian’s demand<br />

2. Eagle houses<br />

3. Nutrition author<br />

Davis<br />

4. ___ Yello (soft<br />

drink)<br />

5. R.B.I., e.g.<br />

6. Big gobblers<br />

7. Gothic, for one<br />

8. Prime example of<br />

stubbornness<br />

9. Bad luck<br />

10. Protein source<br />

11. Traitor<br />

12. Portuguese navigator<br />

13. Chicago trains<br />

21. Being worked with<br />

23. Granola ingredient<br />

25. Dawn time<br />

27. Heel<br />

30. Site of Asian war<br />

of the 70s<br />

31. Cold war grp.<br />

32. Conger catcher<br />

34. G.I. entertainers<br />

35. Invoice fig.<br />

36. Estrange<br />

37. Ran<br />

38. Football gains,<br />

abbr.<br />

39. Golfer Michelle<br />

40. Bounding main<br />

41. Cable inits.<br />

44. Tolkien beast<br />

45. A beautiful Bugatti<br />

46. Old record<br />

47. Swindle<br />

48. Portuguese “Sir”<br />

49. 2002 World Series<br />

champs<br />

53. Annoying things<br />

to hit<br />

55. Daytime sleeps<br />

56. Cheer (for)<br />

57. Garden decorations<br />

58. Colo. is on it<br />

60. Uncommon<br />

61. “___ the season ...”<br />

GLENCOE<br />

Writers Theatre<br />

(325 Tudor Court)<br />

■Ongoing: ■ Performances<br />

of “Into the<br />

Woods”<br />

Tudor Wine Bar<br />

(1528, 338 Tudor<br />

Court)<br />

■7 ■ p.m. Sept. 19:<br />

Captain Beerheart<br />

(acoustic pirate duo)<br />

■7 ■ p.m. Sept. 25: The<br />

Love (Beatles and<br />

Beyond)<br />

■7 ■ p.m. Sept. 26: 2 Jay<br />

Way (60s and 70s<br />

piano vocal duo)<br />

Glencoe Beach<br />

■2 ■ p.m. Saturday,<br />

Sept. 21: Tails & Ales<br />

Henry J. Kalk Park<br />

(298 Park Ave.)<br />

■10 ■ a.m. Saturday,<br />

Oct. 5: Harvest Fest<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 />

Wood Oaks Junior High<br />

(1250 Sanders Road)<br />

■8 ■ a.m. Saturday, Sept.<br />

21: District 27 5K<br />

GLENVIEW<br />

Johnny’s Kitchen<br />

(1740 Milwaukee Ave.<br />

(847) 699-9999)<br />

■7:30 ■ p.m. every Friday<br />

and Saturday: Live<br />

Music<br />

Ten Ninety Brewing Co.<br />

(1025 N. Waukegan<br />

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

■7-9 ■ p.m. every Thursday:<br />

Trivia Night<br />

The Curragh Glenview<br />

(1800 Tower Drive)<br />

■9 ■ p.m. Saturday, Sept.<br />

21: Hot Rocks rocks<br />

Curragh Glenview<br />

Potato Creek Johnny’s<br />

(1850 Waukegan Road)<br />

■9 ■ p.m. Saturday,<br />

Sept. 21: Evo<br />

Oil Lamp Theater<br />

(1723 Glenview Road)<br />

Please see the scene, 20<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


glencoeanchordaily.com life & arts<br />

the glencoe anchor | September 19, 2019 | 19<br />

Nearly 200 pieces on<br />

display at NSAL art show<br />

Eric DeGrechie<br />

Managing Editor<br />

Susie Williams enjoys<br />

creating art. The works<br />

of the Wilmette botanical<br />

artist have been shown<br />

and sold at juried exhibitions<br />

across the country<br />

over the last decade.<br />

While Williams is proud<br />

of seeing the fruits of her<br />

labor on display, she does<br />

admit the beginning phase<br />

of creation can be challenging.<br />

“The most difficult<br />

stage is to start,” Williams<br />

said. “First, I decide on<br />

my palate, mix my colors<br />

and try them out on<br />

a watercolor scrap of paper,<br />

comparing them to<br />

the actual specimen. Then<br />

I delineate form on my<br />

painting by using lights<br />

and darks first. If the form<br />

isn’t right, the painting<br />

isn’t right. Lights and<br />

darks give the specimen<br />

depth, preventing a flat<br />

painting.”<br />

Williams is a member<br />

of the North Shore Art<br />

League. The organization’s<br />

95th Annual Members’<br />

Art Show began<br />

Sept. 6 at the Winnetka<br />

Community House, 620<br />

Lincoln Ave. The show<br />

runs through Sept. 30.<br />

“This stellar art display<br />

showcases the work of<br />

over 100 of our member<br />

artists and NSAL faculty<br />

whose talents and support<br />

have sustained the<br />

organization for over nine<br />

decades,” said Linda Nelson,<br />

executive director<br />

of the NSAL. “The vast<br />

array of talent, mediums<br />

and subject matter make<br />

this show a must-see exhibit<br />

of over 180 pieces.”<br />

A members’ show benefit<br />

reception and preview<br />

party was held Sept. 6.<br />

Guests were the first to<br />

browse among the outstanding<br />

fine art in the<br />

gallery space on the first<br />

and second floors of the<br />

Winnetka Community<br />

House.<br />

“The NSAL considers<br />

this exhibition its major<br />

event and benefit of the<br />

year,” Nelson said.<br />

Williams is also a longtime<br />

member of the Philanthropic<br />

Educational<br />

Organization’s Wilmette<br />

chapter. P.E.O. is an international<br />

organization that<br />

provides education grants,<br />

scholarships and loans.<br />

Williams majored in art<br />

in college but spent her<br />

career over decades teaching<br />

in those with learning<br />

disabilities, most recently<br />

at DePaul University. It<br />

was after retiring from<br />

teaching that she returned<br />

to her love of art.<br />

Having always been<br />

drawn to nature, she focuses<br />

her art on botanicals.<br />

“I enjoy the details that<br />

they require,” Williams<br />

said. “It is important to<br />

note the difference between<br />

what I do — which<br />

is botanical art that focuses<br />

on details and accuracy<br />

and can include imperfections<br />

— and botanical illustration,<br />

that has a scientific<br />

purpose and acts as<br />

Local artists at NSAL<br />

show<br />

• Jennifer Black,<br />

Glencoe<br />

• Susan Holtz,<br />

Glencoe<br />

• Cathy Naro, Glencoe<br />

• Sally Wille, Glencoe<br />

a record of a plant specimen.”<br />

Williams can take up to<br />

three weeks — painting<br />

around four hours a day,<br />

five or six days a week —<br />

to complete a single painting.<br />

Her paintings range<br />

from flowers and bulbs to<br />

birds’ nests to fruits and<br />

vegetables. William’s original<br />

paintings and drawings<br />

can be seen on her<br />

website: www.susiewilliamsbotanicalart.com.<br />

To learn more about<br />

P.E.O., its educational<br />

philanthropies and to<br />

view stories of women<br />

who have benefited from<br />

the programs, visit peointernational.org.<br />

Proceeds for the NSAL<br />

art show will be dedicated<br />

to funding NSAL operations<br />

and annual scholarship<br />

programs recognizing<br />

the achievements of area<br />

high school art students.<br />

The League is a 501(c)<br />

(3) organization. Gallery<br />

hours for the show are<br />

9 a.m.-8 p.m. daily. For<br />

more information regarding<br />

the Members’ Show or<br />

classes, please contact the<br />

North Shore Art League<br />

office at (847) 446-2870<br />

or e-mail at info@northshoreartleague.org.<br />

visit us online at GLENCOEANCHORdaily.com<br />

2<br />

LIVING IS EASY<br />

VINYLPLANK FLOORS<br />

100% KID PROOF –100% PET PROOF –100% WATERPROOF<br />

1840 Skokie Boulevard<br />

Northbrook, IL60062<br />

847.835.2400<br />

www.lewisfloorandhome.com<br />

Wilmette<br />

artist<br />

Susie<br />

Williams<br />

shows<br />

off her<br />

original<br />

greeting<br />

card<br />

creation.<br />

Photo<br />

submitted<br />

FLOORING • TILE • RUGS • CABINETRY<br />

COUNTERTOPS • WINDOW TREATMENTS


20 | September 19, 2019 | The glencoe anchor faith<br />

glencoeanchordaily.com<br />

Annual Glencoe rummage sale set for Oct. 5<br />

Submitted Content<br />

the scene<br />

From Page 18<br />

■Starting ■ Sept. 26: Ongoing<br />

performances of<br />

“Murder on the Nile”<br />

LAKE FOREST<br />

Little Tails Bar and Grill<br />

(840 S. Waukegan Road)<br />

■Live ■ music every Friday<br />

night<br />

City Hall<br />

(220 E. Deerpath)<br />

■3 ■ p.m. Saturday, Sept.<br />

21: Fall Festival<br />

WINNETKA<br />

Fred’s Garage<br />

(574 Green Bay Road)<br />

■Every ■ Friday: Fred’s<br />

The North Shore United<br />

Methodist Church invites<br />

you to “Find your Light”<br />

at their Annual Rummage<br />

Sale celebrating the theme<br />

of “Go Green in Glencoe”<br />

from 8 a.m.-1 p.m. Saturday,<br />

Oct. 5, at 213 Hazel<br />

Ave.<br />

This year’s sale will<br />

prove to be one of the largest<br />

with merchandise gathered<br />

from the local community.<br />

“This is a wonderful way<br />

to gather our congregation<br />

to implement our mission<br />

of: Love, Serve, Renew,”<br />

The Rev. Scott S. Himel<br />

said. “The camaraderie of<br />

our members to ‘Go Green<br />

in Glencoe’ with their recycling,<br />

as they gather,<br />

sort and sell for this fundraiser<br />

truly embodies the<br />

values of our church.”<br />

The Rummage Sale offers<br />

incredible bargains on<br />

new and gently used merchandise<br />

that draws shoppers<br />

from the surrounding<br />

Chicagoland for these<br />

amazing deals.<br />

From antique furniture<br />

to designer gowns and<br />

shoes, shoppers are encouraged<br />

to arrive early<br />

to take advantage of the<br />

best selection. Doors will<br />

be opening at 8 a.m. with<br />

rooms designated for the<br />

wide variety of merchandise<br />

to include: Men’s<br />

clothing, women’s clothing,<br />

children’s department,<br />

furniture, housewares, art,<br />

books and holiday department,<br />

shoes and linens.<br />

There will also be refreshments<br />

available for<br />

purchase to include coffee,<br />

donuts, hot dog plates as<br />

well as a Bake Sale featuring<br />

cookies, cakes, pies<br />

and brownies.<br />

“All our items are priced<br />

to sell,” The Rev. Dr. Barbara<br />

Javore said. “Funds<br />

raised from the Rummage<br />

Sale make it possible to enrich<br />

the ministry of North<br />

Shore United Methodist<br />

Church through outreach<br />

efforts in our community<br />

Garage Fish Fry Fridays<br />

Winnetka Village Hall<br />

(510 Green Bay Road)<br />

■7:30 ■ a.m. on Saturdays:<br />

Winnetka Farmers<br />

Market<br />

Winnetka Historical<br />

Society Museum<br />

(411 Linden St.)<br />

■2 ■ p.m. Sunday, Sept.<br />

22: Winnetka Sesquicentennial<br />

Celebrations<br />

— People, Places<br />

& Progress<br />

NORTHFIELD<br />

Stormy’s Tavern and Grille<br />

(1735 Orchard Lane)<br />

■Barbecue ■ every Sunday<br />

Tapas Gitana<br />

4<br />

and the world.”<br />

Donations can be<br />

dropped off at the church<br />

at 2 p.m. Sunday, Sept.<br />

29. Volunteers are always<br />

needed to help prepare,<br />

sort and price items. If<br />

you are interested in volunteering,<br />

please contact<br />

the Church Office at (847)<br />

835-1227 or email info@<br />

northshoreumc.com.<br />

North Shore United<br />

Methodist Church is an<br />

inclusive community of<br />

faith in Jesus Christ guided<br />

by the Holy Spirit. We<br />

are committed to providing<br />

support, healing, and<br />

inspiration to all. Our missions<br />

encompass worship,<br />

service, the arts, education<br />

and fellowship. We participate<br />

in interfaith activities<br />

that serve to further world<br />

understanding and peace.<br />

We believe in the power of<br />

prayer and strive to be of<br />

help to our members, our<br />

community and those in<br />

need. We invite you to join<br />

us for Worship Services<br />

every Sunday at 10 a.m.<br />

(310 N. Happ Road)<br />

■6 ■ p.m. every other<br />

Sunday: Live music<br />

WILMETTE<br />

Wilmette Bowling Center<br />

(1901 Schiller Ave.,(847)<br />

251-0705)<br />

■11 ■ a.m.-9 p.m. (10<br />

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

Glow bowling and<br />

pizza all week long<br />

Wilmette Wine Cellar<br />

(1100 Central Ave.)<br />

■4 ■ p.m. Saturday, Sept.<br />

21: Books ‘n’ Bottles<br />

To place an event in The<br />

Scene, email martin@northbrooktower.com<br />

Faith briefs<br />

North Shore Congregation Israel (1185<br />

Sheridan Road, Glencoe)<br />

North Shore Alateen<br />

Meeting<br />

This meeting is open to<br />

all teens aged 12-19 and<br />

takes place every Wednesday<br />

from 6-7 p.m. Pizza<br />

and popsicles are provided<br />

as well.<br />

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

Pack & Deliver Shabbat<br />

Bags<br />

Make a difference for<br />

your fellow congregants!<br />

From 9-9:30 a.m. Friday,<br />

Sept. 20, we deliver Shabbat<br />

bags to congregants<br />

who have been ill or lost<br />

a loved one. To receive<br />

email reminders about<br />

Shabbat Bag Packing days,<br />

or to sign up, contact Laurie<br />

Levin at laurielevin@<br />

gmail.com.<br />

JAmSY Meeting #1 (5th-<br />

8th graders)<br />

Do you have an awesome<br />

idea for a youth<br />

event? Do you want to<br />

come and hang in the<br />

youth lounge with other<br />

Am Shalom kids? Do you<br />

enjoy Shake Shack? What<br />

about Super Smash Bros.<br />

and Mario Kart?<br />

If you answered yes to<br />

any of these questions,<br />

you should join Am Shalom<br />

for the first JAmSY<br />

meeting this year. JAmSY<br />

stands for JUNIOR Am<br />

Shalom Youth. JAmSY<br />

will meet several times<br />

throughout the year to help<br />

“plan” youth events for the<br />

5th-8th grade group at Am<br />

Shalom. You will pitch<br />

your ideas, and as a group<br />

(those in attendance on<br />

meeting days) we will vote<br />

for the most popular option!<br />

(Kadi and Danny will<br />

work to make the magic<br />

happen) Each meeting<br />

will also be themed with<br />

something fun, so it’s not<br />

all work!<br />

The first meeting will<br />

be from 1-3 p.m. Sunday,<br />

Sept. 22. We will meet in<br />

the youth lounge for Shake<br />

Shack and a Super Smash/<br />

Mario Kart Tournament.<br />

(Don’t like those games?<br />

No worries, we have<br />

TONS of other games and<br />

things to do in the youth<br />

lounge - pop a shot, board<br />

games, giant jenga/connect<br />

four, etc.) Come ready<br />

to share your ideas for<br />

youth events, and ready to<br />

vote on your favorite! We<br />

will be picking an event<br />

for Oct. 20.<br />

JAmSY 5780 Meetings:<br />

Sept. 22 (Shake Shack<br />

and Super Smash), Dec. 4<br />

(TBD) and March 1 (Hamentaschen<br />

bake)<br />

JAmSY 5780 events:<br />

Oct. 20, Feb. 2, and Apr.<br />

19<br />

Women’s Spirituality<br />

Women’s Spirituality is<br />

a group that meets for a<br />

potluck and for study and<br />

reflection led by a member<br />

of the group. The group<br />

meets on the second Saturday<br />

of each month at 11:30<br />

a.m. For more information,<br />

please call Lynn Tatar<br />

at 847-831-3754.<br />

GCG Harvest/Workdays<br />

Join us for a Harvest/<br />

Workday on Tuesday and<br />

Thursday mornings at 7:30<br />

a.m. until Halloween. Sessions<br />

will also be from 10<br />

a.m.-noon on Saturdays.<br />

Yoga with Claudia<br />

Join Am Shalom for<br />

Yoga with Claudia from<br />

noon-1:30 p.m. Thursdays.<br />

“Almost Daily” Minyan<br />

The “Almost Daily”<br />

Minyan takes place at<br />

5:45 p.m. on Mondays<br />

and Thursdays during the<br />

school months, and runs<br />

for approximately 15 minutes.<br />

This quiet and intimate<br />

service, held in the<br />

serene worship space of<br />

3<br />

the Rosenfield Chapel, is<br />

the perfect setting to remember<br />

a Yahrzeit, to pray<br />

for healing, and to calm<br />

and refresh your soul.<br />

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

Vernon Ave.)<br />

Search Committee for New<br />

Rector<br />

The vestry will appoint<br />

a search committee<br />

in September. The church<br />

encourage members of the<br />

congregation to recommend<br />

potential people to<br />

serve on this committee!<br />

Ideally committee members<br />

will reflect a diversity<br />

of age, gender and skills.<br />

Nominate yourself or another<br />

church member by<br />

letting Senior Warden Rich<br />

Lesperance or Junior Warden<br />

Anne Tuohy know.<br />

Potluck Picnic<br />

Potluck Picnic to welcome<br />

The Rev. Kevin M.<br />

Goodman after the 10<br />

a.m. service on Sept. 22.<br />

There will be a sign-up<br />

sheet to help set up, bring<br />

items for the picnic and<br />

to clean up afterwards.<br />

Please contact Anne Tuohy<br />

for details and answers<br />

to questions.<br />

Altar Flowers<br />

There are open dates<br />

available to dedicate flowers<br />

on the Altar. If you<br />

have any questions, please<br />

contact Polly Baur.<br />

North Shore United Methodist Church<br />

(213 Hazel Ave)<br />

Family Promise<br />

North Shore United<br />

Methodist Church regularly<br />

provides overnight<br />

accommodations, meals,<br />

and companionship to<br />

families with young children<br />

who are homeless, or<br />

at risk for becoming homeless.<br />

Volunteers are needed<br />

to provide food, dine and<br />

spend the evening with our<br />

guests, or serve as overnight<br />

hosts.


glencoeanchordaily.com glencoe<br />

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

Glenview Blocktoberfest<br />

Saturday<br />

September 28, 2019<br />

11 am –10:30 pm<br />

Downtown Glenview<br />

on Glenview Road<br />

between Pine &Church Streets<br />

GlenviewBlocktoberfest.com<br />

Performers from<br />

ROCK HOUSE &TERRA SOUNDS<br />

Main Stage lineup<br />

DIE MUSIKMEISTERS l SINCERELY, SARLACC<br />

VICTOR BROWN BAND l FUNKTASTIC l HOOPLA!<br />

TRIBUTOSAURUS becomes THE ROLLING STONES<br />

LIVE MUSIC l BEER<br />

FOOD l FUN<br />

Supporting Sponsors<br />

TenNinety Brewing Co. l Morning Glory Flower Shop<br />

Mandarine Home l Twisted Trunk<br />

Glenview Grind l Oil Lamp Theater<br />

Edward Jones/Greg Goodsitt l DDK Kitchens<br />

Glenview Coin &Collectibles l Antiques &Porcelain by GK<br />

Presented by the Merchants of Downtown Glenview, Friends of Downtown Glenview, Glenview Chamber of Commerce


22 | September 19, 2019 | The glencoe anchor glencoe<br />

glencoeanchordaily.com<br />

Daily reading...<br />

Stay informed on your schools and your sports teams every day<br />

with unmatched coverage at GlencoeAnchor.com<br />

...With extra credit<br />

Access to 7 local-news sites, Breaking News alerts, Best-of emails and more<br />

Support your favorite hometown news for just $3.25/month<br />

Starting at $3 25 a month!<br />

Subscribe today at GlencoeAnchor.com/Plus<br />

or scan the QR for a direct link


glencoeanchordaily.com dining out<br />

the glencoe anchor | September 19, 2019 | 23<br />

Ten Ninety opens new kitchen on the fly<br />

1<br />

Nick Frazier<br />

Contributing Sports Editor<br />

If you want something<br />

done well, you’ve got to do<br />

it yourself.<br />

That’s why Glenview’s<br />

Ten Ninety Brewing Company<br />

recently started serving<br />

food made from scratch<br />

in their own kitchen, a<br />

change owner Brian Schafer<br />

says has been well-received<br />

among North Shore<br />

residents.<br />

Ten Ninety was originally<br />

founded in 2012 in Zion<br />

but moved to Glenview<br />

four years later. Schafer,<br />

a former CFO, was determined<br />

to bring the food inhouse.<br />

That meant building<br />

a brand new kitchen, hiring<br />

chefs and trying out new<br />

recipes.<br />

A brewery first, Schafer<br />

said the company keeps the<br />

flavors of the food in mind<br />

to best accompany the beer.<br />

“A lot of beers that<br />

we’ve brewed in the past<br />

and in the current and the<br />

future, we think about flavor<br />

profiles first and brew<br />

the beer, where a lot of<br />

breweries brew the beer<br />

and think about what food<br />

to pair it with,” Schafer<br />

explained. “A lot of our inspiration<br />

comes from food<br />

when we’re brewing. It’s a<br />

natural progression that we<br />

have the food now.”<br />

Previously, Ten Ninety<br />

was serving traditional bar<br />

food. Now, the restaurant<br />

wants residents to know<br />

they can order food off a<br />

diverse menu to pair with<br />

their favorite pints.<br />

“We want to let people<br />

know that we’re not just a<br />

brewery serving bar food,”<br />

Schafer said. “We have<br />

salmon, we have mussels,<br />

we’ve got different salads.<br />

We still have a mighty tasty<br />

burger, we’re doing pizza,<br />

Ten Ninety’s Drunken Mussels ($15) are P.E.I. mussels<br />

braised in Juice God butter sauce with spicy chorizo<br />

and lemon served with crostini.<br />

Ten Ninety Brewing<br />

Company<br />

1025 N Waukegan<br />

Road, Glenview<br />

(224) 432-5472<br />

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

Friday<br />

12-10 p.m. Saturday<br />

12-6 p.m. Sunday<br />

www.ten-ninety.com<br />

because we don’t want to<br />

turn our back on some of<br />

the biggest sellers and most<br />

popular foods in the country.<br />

We’re doing it with<br />

unique twists; we incorporate<br />

our beer in every menu<br />

item.”<br />

Ten Ninety began rolling<br />

out a food menu a few<br />

months ago on the fly. A<br />

few dishes, like the Ten<br />

Ninety Burger and the Beer<br />

Tachos (tater tots, beer<br />

cheese sauce, crumbled bacon,<br />

and chive with a fried<br />

egg on top) are already fan<br />

favorites.<br />

There are a few constant<br />

staples in the menu, but<br />

there’s also a lot of experimenting<br />

with dishes to find<br />

the next crowd favorite.<br />

“We’re a brewery, so<br />

we like to experiment,”<br />

Schafer said. “I tell everybody<br />

here, ‘If you’ve got a<br />

good idea and people like<br />

it, we’ll go with it.’ Good<br />

ideas can come from anywhere<br />

at any level in the<br />

organization.”<br />

The cooks in the kitchen<br />

have free range to come up<br />

with new ideas, and if it<br />

passes the taste test, it will<br />

end up on the menu.<br />

“That gets people excited<br />

about the job,” Schafer<br />

said. “More ownership.<br />

There’s pride because they<br />

know this is what I’m doing,<br />

there’s a little bit of me<br />

going out in every dish.”<br />

A few lucky 22nd Century<br />

Media editors got to<br />

sample a wide range of Ten<br />

Ninety’s new dishes.<br />

We started with the<br />

famed Ten Ninety Burger<br />

($15), which features two<br />

grass-fed beef patties with<br />

sharp American cheese,<br />

cucumber and diced white<br />

onion. The burger is cooked<br />

with Rancorous III, a craft<br />

beer brewed at Ten Ninety.<br />

Next up were the Drunken<br />

Mussels ($15), with<br />

P.E.I. mussels sauteed in<br />

Juice God, a New Englandstyle<br />

IPA. Included were<br />

spicy chorizo and lemon,<br />

and the appetizer was<br />

served with crostini.<br />

Another popular dish<br />

the 22CM editors tried was<br />

The Roosevelt pizza ($16),<br />

a dish Schafer’s daughter<br />

came up with. The dough<br />

is made with one of Ten<br />

Ninety’s lagers, and The<br />

Roosevelt is a white pizza<br />

made of gouda, caramelized<br />

onions, sauteed mushrooms<br />

and olive oil.<br />

The next dish was the<br />

Buffalo Chicken Sammich<br />

($13), an 8-ounce fried<br />

chicken breast with crumbled<br />

blue cheese, tossed in<br />

MPF Buffalo sauce with<br />

mixed greens and ranch<br />

dressing on the side.<br />

Lastly, we enjoyed the<br />

mixed greens salad ($8),<br />

which featured cherry tomatoes,<br />

cucumber, blue<br />

cheese crumbles, croutons<br />

and the Rancorous III vinaigrette.<br />

The salmon on top<br />

of the salad was a classy<br />

touch.<br />

Ten Ninety is now open<br />

seven days a week, and<br />

The seared salmon dinner ($20, here shown as a<br />

salad) is a healthy option with a 6-ounce pan-seared<br />

salmon filet served on field greens, quinoa and brown<br />

rice, drizzled with a blackberry sharp wit and butter<br />

emulsion and finished with fresh parsley and lemon.<br />

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

the taproom hosts trivia<br />

on Thursdays and even offers<br />

bags lessons. Schafer<br />

enjoys getting to show his<br />

creative side at the restaurant.<br />

September 19 th to October 6 th<br />

35 %– 70 %<br />

OFF<br />

IN STOCK OR ORDERED IN. SOME EXCLUSIONS APPLY<br />

“I’ve always had that.<br />

It’s something you’ve got<br />

to suppress a little more as a<br />

CFO,” Schafer said. “Coming<br />

into work in shorts and<br />

a T-shirt is pretty nice.”<br />

847-699-9090 · 1120 N. Milwaukee Ave., Glenview<br />

Monday-Friday 10:00 am-6:oo pm • Saturday 10:00 am-5:00 pm<br />

Sunday 11:00 am-5:00 pm<br />

www.lightingbyfox.com


24 | September 19, 2019 | The glencoe anchor real estate<br />

glencoeanchordaily.com<br />

The Glencoe Anchor’s<br />

SPONSORED CONTENT<br />

of the<br />

WEEK<br />

What: 6 beds, 5.1 baths<br />

Where: 684 Greenleaf,<br />

Glencoe<br />

Amenities: Spectacular<br />

Glencoe signature home<br />

on over 1/2 acre in a<br />

premier loc. 1 Blk. East of<br />

town/train & 2 1/2 blks<br />

from beach. This historic,<br />

award-winning home,<br />

designed by architect E.<br />

E. Roberts was recently, compl. & meticulously expanded & rebuilt to offer all of<br />

the amenities of a newer home, while preserving the authenticity & character of<br />

the original design. Architectural features include 9’ beamed ceilings, chevron<br />

arched doorways, 7-piece crown molding, quarter-sawn oak floors & cabs, leaded<br />

art glass wndws. Lrg. open floor-plan with great flow. Welcoming foyer, big gourmet<br />

top-of-the-line ktchn. open to FR & deck, paneled study w/ wet Bar, bright<br />

sunroom leading to 2 decks, huge inviting LR w/ fplc, sep. DR w/ wainscoting,<br />

incred. mstr. ste. w/ sitting rm/fplc, 2 wlk-in custom-fitted clsts, beaut. compart.<br />

master BA w/ lrg soaker tub, steam shwr, 2-sink vanity, yoga Rm, 4 addtl.<br />

large BR’s up. 2nd flr. lndry. Deep LL w/ game rm, wet bar, wine cellar,<br />

excer rm, studio/theater & 6th BR.<br />

Listing Price:<br />

$2,694,779<br />

Listing Agent:<br />

Hot Property The Chaz<br />

Walters Group,<br />

(773) 868-3080,<br />

chaz@chazwalters.com<br />

Agents Brokerage:<br />

Coldwell Banker<br />

Residential Brokerage<br />

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

j.zeddies@22ndcenturymedia.com or call (847) 272-4565.<br />

Aug. 12<br />

• 461 South Ave., Glencoe,<br />

60022-1666 — Adam P.<br />

Yeloushan to Macadam Glinn,<br />

Denise Glinn, $837,500<br />

Aug. 9<br />

• 532 Madison Ave., Glencoe,<br />

60022-1813 — Brian Fay to<br />

Cory Fishman, Elianna Bodner<br />

Brought to you by:<br />

FOR ALL YOUR<br />

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

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

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

thefederalsavingsbank.com<br />

Fishman, $858,000<br />

Aug. 6<br />

• 754 Strawberry Hill Drive,<br />

Glencoe, 60022-1456 —<br />

Gross Trust to Rebecca A.<br />

Berkheimer, $622,500<br />

July 26<br />

• 334 Sheridan Road, Glencoe,<br />

60022-1946 — Mark J.<br />

Kosminskas to Rony C. Kordahi,<br />

Helen Marzouk Kordahi,<br />

$1,470,000<br />

The Going Rate is provided<br />

by Record Information<br />

Services, Inc. For more<br />

information, visit www.<br />

public-record.com or call<br />

(630) 557-1000


glencoeanchordaily.com classifieds<br />

the glencoe anchor | September 19, 2019 | 25<br />

CLASSIFIEDS<br />

Help Wanted · Garage Sales · Automotive<br />

Real Estate · Rentals · Merchandise<br />

JOB FAIR<br />

Saturday, Sept. 21st<br />

11AM-2PM<br />

Sunrise of Highland Park<br />

1601 Green Bay Road,<br />

Highland Park<br />

(847) 681-1620<br />

Care Givers, Nurses,<br />

Housekeepers, Cooks,<br />

Servers<br />

2002 Yamaha (Star) Cruiser<br />

6,300 miles, ridden very little<br />

Almost new!<br />

$5,100 or best offer<br />

Call Michael 847-505-8426<br />

Help<br />

Wanted<br />

1003 Help Wanted<br />

Buy<br />

It!<br />

SELL<br />

It!<br />

Automotive<br />

1065 Motorcycles<br />

FIND<br />

It!<br />

DRIVE CAR BUYERS<br />

TO YOUR DOOR WITH<br />

A CLASSIFIED AUTO AD<br />

708.326.9170<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

in the<br />

CLASSIFIEDS<br />

CALL<br />

708.326.9170<br />

Rental<br />

1403 Parking Garages for Rent<br />

2489 Merchandise Wanted<br />

Carol is buying costume<br />

jewelry, oil paintings, old<br />

watches, silverplate, china,<br />

figurines, old<br />

furniture, & misc. antiques.<br />

Please call 847.732.1195.<br />

Sell It 708.326.9170<br />

Fax It 708.326.9179<br />

Charge It<br />

DEADLINE -<br />

Friday by Noon<br />

Automotive<br />

$52<br />

4 lines/<br />

7 papers<br />

Merchandise<br />

Directory<br />

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

Before donating or before<br />

your estate sale. I buy<br />

jewelry, china, porcelain,<br />

designer clothes &<br />

accessories, collectibles,<br />

antiques, etc. Call today:<br />

224-616-7474<br />

Help Wanted<br />

per line $13<br />

7 papers<br />

VILLAGE OF GLENCOE<br />

GLENCOE, ILLINOIS<br />

ZONING BOARD OF<br />

APPEALS<br />

NOTICE OF PUBLIC<br />

HEARING<br />

OCTOBER 7, 2019<br />

Notice is hereby given that a public<br />

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

October 7, 2019, at 7:30 p.m.,<br />

before the Zoning Board of Appeals<br />

of the Village of Glencoe,<br />

Cook County, Illinois, in the Council<br />

Chambers of the Village Hall,<br />

675 Village Court, Glencoe, Illinois<br />

to consider an appeal of Scott<br />

and Evie Rooth from a decision of<br />

the Director of Public Works denying<br />

a permit for the construction of<br />

a single family residence of at 348<br />

W. Elm Court, Glencoe, Illinois,<br />

in the RB Single Family Residential<br />

Zoning District (Permanent<br />

Real Estate Index Number<br />

05-06-300-023-0000).<br />

Legal Description: LOT 9 IN<br />

GREEN MEADOW SUBDIVI-<br />

SION OF PART OF THE<br />

NORTHWEST 1/4 OF THE<br />

SOUTHWEST 1/4 OF SECTION<br />

6, TOWNSHIP 42 NORTH,<br />

RANGE 13, EAST OF THE<br />

THIRD PRINCIPAL MERIDIAN,<br />

IN THE VILLAGE OF GLEN-<br />

COE, ILLINOIS.<br />

The appeal requests that approval<br />

be granted for one variation:<br />

1. To construct a single family<br />

residence with a Total Ground<br />

Coverage of 3,831.15 s.f., whereas<br />

a maximum of 3,443 s.f. is permitted,<br />

a variation of 388.65 s.f., or<br />

11.3 %.<br />

All persons interested are urged to<br />

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

to be heard.<br />

Dave Mau<br />

Public Works Director<br />

September 11, 2019<br />

Calling all<br />

Real Estate<br />

$50<br />

6 lines/<br />

7 papers<br />

2703 Legal Notices<br />

Merchandise<br />

$30<br />

4 lines/<br />

7 papers<br />

VILLAGE OF GLENCOE<br />

GLENCOE, ILLINOIS<br />

ZONING COMMISSION<br />

NOTICE OF PUBLIC<br />

HEARING<br />

OCTOBER 7, 2019<br />

Notice is hereby given that a public<br />

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

October 7, 2019, at 7:30 p.m.,<br />

before the Zoning Commission of<br />

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 amendments to the Village’s<br />

Zoning Ordinance regarding<br />

the appropriate definitions, zoning<br />

districts, and regulations for cannabis<br />

business establishments in the<br />

Village of Glencoe.<br />

All persons interested are urged to<br />

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

to be heard.<br />

Dave Mau<br />

Public Works Director<br />

September 16, 2019<br />

Buy It! FIND It!<br />

SELL It!<br />

in the<br />

CLASSIFIEDS<br />

708.326.9170<br />

<br />

<br />

Sell It!<br />

With a Classified Ad<br />

See the Classified Section for more info, or call<br />

<br />

Want to<br />

See<br />

Your<br />

Business<br />

in the<br />

Classifieds?<br />

Call<br />

708-326-9170<br />

for a FREE<br />

Sample Ad<br />

and Quote!


26 | September 19, 2019 | The glencoe anchor classifieds<br />

glencoeanchordaily.com<br />

CLASSIFIEDS<br />

Help Wanted · Garage Sales · Automotive<br />

Real Estate · Rentals · Merchandise<br />

Sell It 708.326.9170<br />

Fax It 708.326.9179<br />

Charge It<br />

DEADLINE -<br />

Friday by Noon<br />

Automotive<br />

$52<br />

4 lines/<br />

7 papers<br />

Help Wanted<br />

per line $13<br />

7 papers<br />

Real Estate<br />

$50<br />

6 lines/<br />

7 papers<br />

Merchandise<br />

$30<br />

4 lines/<br />

7 papers<br />

Advertise<br />

your<br />

RENTAL<br />

PROPERTY<br />

in the<br />

newspaper<br />

people turn<br />

to first<br />

Looking to have a<br />

garage sale this year?<br />

Call the classified department or fax in your form below!<br />

• Goes in all 7 North Shore newspapers<br />

• 4 lines of information (28 characters per line)<br />

$42.00<br />

Single Family<br />

Payment Method<br />

̌ Check enclosed<br />

̌ Money Order<br />

̌ Credit Card<br />

Please cut this form out and<br />

mail or fax it back to us at:<br />

$44.00<br />

Multi Family<br />

Ad Copy Here (print)<br />

Name<br />

Address<br />

City/State/Zip<br />

Phone<br />

• Additional lines only a $1.95<br />

• Borders only an additional $1.00<br />

$47.00<br />

Subdivision<br />

$52.00<br />

Estate Sale<br />

CALL US TODAY: 708.326.9170<br />

www.22ndcenturymedia.com<br />

22 nd Century Media<br />

11516 W. 183 rd St<br />

Suite #3 Unit SW<br />

Orland Park, IL 60467<br />

Credit Card Orders Only<br />

Circle One<br />

Card #<br />

Signature<br />

Phn: 708.326.9170 • Fax: 708.326.9179<br />

www.22ndcenturymedia.com<br />

Exp.


glencoeanchordaily.com sports<br />

the glencoe anchor | September 19, 2019 | 27<br />

Athlete of the Week<br />

10 Questions<br />

with Ali Benedetto<br />

The New Trier senior will<br />

continue her tennis career<br />

at Brown University next<br />

season.<br />

Do you have any<br />

superstitions before,<br />

during or after a<br />

match?<br />

I try to have a prematch<br />

routine where I like to<br />

jump rope and do some<br />

band exercises, sort of<br />

take my time away from<br />

my phone and from everybody.<br />

It gets me in a<br />

mindset for when I step on<br />

the court, not to have any<br />

distractions.<br />

When and why did<br />

you start playing<br />

tennis?<br />

I played competitive<br />

soccer until seventh grade<br />

and I was really, really<br />

small at the time. I played<br />

defense and was just getting<br />

beat up by everyone.<br />

I had been playing tennis<br />

for fun and tried to put my<br />

time into that more and<br />

loved it.<br />

What’s one thing<br />

people don’t know<br />

about you?<br />

I didn’t play tennis until<br />

the end of seventh grade.<br />

What’s the best part<br />

about playing tennis?<br />

I like the individuality.<br />

It’s just me and i think<br />

it’s fun to problem solve<br />

on the court and not have<br />

to rely on anyone else. I<br />

have total control over everything.<br />

What’s the hardest<br />

part about playing<br />

tennis?<br />

Also the individuality.<br />

Being alone on the court<br />

has its ups and downs, because<br />

you are alone and<br />

there’s no one else there if<br />

you’re struggling to help<br />

you through it.<br />

What’s been your<br />

favorite moment at<br />

New Trier?<br />

Taking third at state<br />

in the doubles competition<br />

my sophomore year<br />

with my teammate Amia<br />

Ross.<br />

If you could play<br />

another sport, what<br />

would you play?<br />

Soccer. I definitely<br />

miss it. I miss the team<br />

aspect and our team was<br />

really good, traveling all<br />

22nd Century Media File Photo<br />

around the country.<br />

If you won the lottery,<br />

what would you do<br />

with the money?<br />

I’d donate a bunch of<br />

money and then travel<br />

around the world, go to<br />

Wimbledon.<br />

If you could travel<br />

anywhere in the<br />

world, where would<br />

you go?<br />

I’ve always wanted to<br />

go to Australia. I’d go to<br />

the Australian Open and<br />

my dream for a long time<br />

has to scuba dive on the<br />

Great Barrier Reef, so I’d<br />

probably do that.<br />

If you had $5 at<br />

Walgreens, what<br />

would you buy?<br />

Ben and Jerry’s halfbaked<br />

ice cream.<br />

Interview by Sports Editor<br />

Michael Wojtychiw<br />

The Varsity: North Shore Podcast<br />

Guys recap second week of football<br />

Staff Report<br />

In this week’s episode of<br />

The Varsity: North Shore,<br />

the only podcast focused<br />

on North Shore sports,<br />

hosts Michal Dwojak,<br />

Nick Frazier and Michael<br />

Wojtychiw recap the third<br />

week of football. They recap<br />

each of the area team’s<br />

games, are joined by Highland<br />

Park head football<br />

coach David Lindquist,<br />

play Way/No Way, preview<br />

next week’s action<br />

and talk some girls volleyball<br />

to finish the episode.<br />

First Quarter<br />

The three recap the third<br />

swimming<br />

From Page 28<br />

in 2:16.37 and feels she<br />

improved on one stroke in<br />

particular.<br />

“My breaststroke was<br />

definitely a lot better than<br />

it has been. It wasn’t as<br />

good as Ally Mulvey’s but<br />

I’m getting a better feel for<br />

it,” Udzielak said. “I had<br />

been swimming it with my<br />

arms straight out. But I’ve<br />

learned I have to bring my<br />

palms forward. I’ve learned<br />

a lot of specific techniques<br />

TWI<br />

From Page 28<br />

Girls swimming<br />

■Sept. ■ 20 - at New Trier,<br />

5:30 p.m.<br />

Girls tennis<br />

■Sept. ■ 21 - at GBS Quad,<br />

8 a.m.<br />

■Sept. ■ 26 - host Latin,<br />

4:30 p.m.<br />

Girls volleyball<br />

■Sept. ■ 24 - at De La Salle,<br />

6 p.m.<br />

■Sept. ■ 26 - host Marian<br />

week of action.<br />

Second Quarter<br />

Giants coach Lindquist<br />

joins the guys to talk about<br />

the third game against<br />

Buffalo Grove.<br />

Third Quarter<br />

The guys move on to<br />

Way/No Way, where they<br />

make some predictions<br />

with girls swimming and<br />

diving.<br />

Fourth Quarter<br />

With week four next, the<br />

three preview and make<br />

some predictions on the<br />

next set of games.<br />

that have helped me get<br />

better in the breast.”<br />

“Stephanie had a very<br />

nice IM. It’s not an event<br />

she usually swims but we<br />

kind of wanted to break<br />

things up and give her<br />

something different to<br />

swim,” Hengelmann said.<br />

“She is still working hard<br />

on her backstroke. She<br />

came close to qualifying<br />

for state in the back and we<br />

want to get her back to that<br />

level.”<br />

Jenna Loquercio won<br />

diving with a score of 229.<br />

The Ramblers received<br />

Central, 6 p.m.<br />

Panther varsity<br />

athletics<br />

Girls golf<br />

■Sept. ■ 19 - host Taft (at<br />

Willow Hill Golf Course),<br />

4:30 p.m.<br />

■Sept. ■ 24 - host Niles<br />

West (at Prairie Club), 4:30<br />

p.m.<br />

■Sept. ■ 26 - at<br />

Resurrection and Montini<br />

(at Willow Hill Golf Course),<br />

4:30 p.m.<br />

Find the varsity<br />

Twitter:<br />

@varsitypodcast<br />

Facebook:<br />

@thevarsitypodcast<br />

Website:<br />

GlencoeAnchorDaily.<br />

com/sports<br />

Download:<br />

Soundcloud, iTunes,<br />

Stitcher, TuneIn,<br />

PlayerFM, more<br />

Overtime<br />

Our hosts go to overtime<br />

and talk about the start of<br />

the girls volleyball season.<br />

second from the 200 medley<br />

relay of Udzielak,<br />

Mulvey, Maddy Reed and<br />

Kathleen Wannemacher<br />

(1:55.43), Reed in the 100<br />

butterfly (1:01.42), the<br />

200 free relay of Wannemacher,<br />

Olivia Rucker,<br />

Maggie Heintz and Annie<br />

Leinenweber (1:46.21)<br />

and Mulvey in the breast<br />

(1:12.66). Coming in third<br />

were Wannemacher in the<br />

50 free (25.82) and Rucker<br />

in the 100 free (56.22).<br />

St. Ignatius won the meet<br />

126-60.<br />

Girls tennis<br />

■Sept. ■ 19 - at<br />

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

■Sept. ■ 23 - at Trinity, 4:30<br />

p.m.<br />

■Sept. ■ 26 - host Taft, 4:30<br />

p.m.<br />

Girls volleyball<br />

■Sept. ■ 19 - host Vernon<br />

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

■Sept. ■ 24 - at St. Joseph,<br />

6 p.m.<br />

■Sept. ■ 26 - host<br />

Resurrection, 6 p.m


28 | September 19, 2019 | The glencoe anchor sports<br />

glencoeanchordaily.com<br />

Girls Swimming and Diving<br />

Loyola opens up fall season in new pool<br />

5<br />

David Jaffe<br />

Freelance Reporter<br />

It had been a long time<br />

since the Loyola Academy<br />

girls swim team had been<br />

able to compete in a home<br />

meet.<br />

It’s been since the 2017<br />

season to be exact.<br />

Over the last year, the<br />

pool at Loyola had undergone<br />

complete renovations<br />

and the long wait to have a<br />

home meet has turned out<br />

to be well worth it.<br />

The Ramblers now have<br />

a state-of-the art pool and<br />

scoreboard and they competed<br />

in their first home<br />

meet since 2017 on Sept.<br />

11 against St. Ignatius.<br />

“It’s amazing to be back<br />

swimming at Loyola and<br />

we were really excited to<br />

swim and compete for the<br />

school here,” Loyola’s<br />

Stephanie Udzielak said.<br />

“There was a lot of fundraising<br />

that went into<br />

making this pool and after<br />

competing today, the year<br />

we had to swim and practice<br />

away from school was<br />

worth it.”<br />

“There was a lot of work<br />

and steps that went on behind<br />

the scenes to get to<br />

this point,” Loyola coach<br />

Mike Hengelmann said.<br />

“A lot of little preparations<br />

that the coaching staff and<br />

maintenance did to get all<br />

of this ready. There was a<br />

lot of effort and we’re real<br />

thankful for that. The boys<br />

and girls athletes put up<br />

with a year of not having a<br />

pool. This is my 16th year<br />

coaching and I also went to<br />

high school here so seeing<br />

the pool the way it is now<br />

is very surreal.”<br />

There’s a lot to enjoy<br />

about the new pool and facility.<br />

“Honestly I really like<br />

having the light,” Udzielak<br />

said. “Our old pool was<br />

pretty dark before. And<br />

when we’re practicing in<br />

the morning, you can see<br />

the sun rising from outside.<br />

It’s much more open. It<br />

gives you another reason to<br />

want to swim in this pool.”<br />

“The fact that there are<br />

more lanes and more space<br />

has really helped us,” Hengelmann<br />

said. “The girls<br />

teams here have always<br />

had large numbers which<br />

is a blessing but because of<br />

the issues with the old pool<br />

at times was a curse. But<br />

having the extra space with<br />

the bigger lanes has been a<br />

huge help to our team.”<br />

Udzielak took second in<br />

the 100-yard backstroke<br />

Loyola Academy girls swimmer Stephanie Udzielak<br />

swims in the 200-yard varsity medley on Sept. 11 in<br />

Wilmette. David Kraus/22nd Century Media<br />

in 1 minute, 2.26 seconds.<br />

The key to her success was<br />

pretty simple for her.<br />

“I’ve worked really<br />

hard on my underwaters,”<br />

Udzielak said. “Sixty percent<br />

of the back is underwaters.<br />

You have to push<br />

through the kicks underwater<br />

and I think for most of<br />

the race I did that well. My<br />

last wall could have been<br />

better but otherwise I was<br />

happy with how I swam.”<br />

She also took second in<br />

the 200 individual medley<br />

Please see swimming, 27<br />

high school highlights<br />

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

Boys soccer<br />

New Trier 6, Maine West<br />

1<br />

Aidan Crowder and Will<br />

Franzen both scored two<br />

goals in this CSL crossover<br />

Thursday, Sept. 12, in<br />

Des Plaines.<br />

New Trier 3, Niles North 1<br />

Peter Norehad, Jake<br />

Krueger and Crowder each<br />

scored Sept. 10 in Skokie.<br />

Boys golf<br />

Providence Invitational<br />

Ryan Banas shot a fourunder<br />

68 to win medalist<br />

honors Saturday, Sept. 14.<br />

Zion-Benton Invite<br />

New Trier, led by Davis<br />

Johnson’s 73, took home<br />

the invite title Saturday,<br />

Sept. 14.<br />

Field hockey<br />

New Trier 5, North Shore<br />

Country Day 2<br />

Kate McLaughlin scored<br />

three goals to lead the Trevians<br />

past their rivals Sept.<br />

11 in Northfield.<br />

2019 Football Standings<br />

Central Suburban League South Division<br />

Glenbrook North 3-0 Niles West 0-3, 0-0<br />

overall, 0-0 conference<br />

Evanston 1-2, 0-0 CCL/ESCC Blue Division<br />

Maine South 1-2, 0-0 Mount Carmel 3-0, 0-0<br />

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

Glenbrook South 0-3, Loyola Academy, 2-1, 0-0<br />

0-0<br />

Marist 2-1, 0-0<br />

This Week In...<br />

Trevian varsity<br />

athletics<br />

Boys cross-country<br />

■Sept. ■ 21 - at Libertyville<br />

Invite, 9 a.m.<br />

■Sept. ■ 24 - at Glenbrook<br />

North, 5 p.m.<br />

Girls cross-country<br />

■Sept. ■ 21 - at Libertyville<br />

Invite, 9 a.m.<br />

■Sept. ■ 24 - at Evanston,<br />

5 p.m.<br />

Field hockey<br />

■Sept. ■ 20 - vs. Sacred<br />

Heart Academy (Ky.) (at<br />

Conshohocken, Pa.), 5 p.m.<br />

■Sept. ■ 21 - vs. Eastern<br />

Regional High School (N.J.)<br />

(at Conshohocken, Pa.), 11<br />

a.m.<br />

■Sept. ■ 21 - vs. Academy of<br />

Notre Dame de Namur (Pa.)<br />

(at Conshohocken, Pa.), 5<br />

p.m.<br />

■Sept. ■ 24 - vs. Glenbard<br />

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

■Sept. ■ 26 - host Latin,<br />

6:15 p.m.<br />

Boys golf<br />

■Sept. ■ 19 - host Niles<br />

West (at Winnetka Park<br />

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

■Sept. ■ 21 - at Mundelein<br />

Invite (at Steeple Chase<br />

Golf Course), TBD<br />

Girls golf<br />

■Sept. ■ 19 - at Glenbrook<br />

South (at Glenview Park<br />

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

■Sept. ■ 21 - at Decatur<br />

Eisenhower Invite (at<br />

Hickory Point Golf Club), 9<br />

a.m.<br />

■Sept. ■ 23 - at Conway<br />

Farms Golf Club High<br />

School Invitational (at<br />

Conway Farms Golf Club),<br />

2 p.m.<br />

■Sept. ■ 26 - at Highland<br />

Park (at Sunset Valley Golf<br />

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

Boys soccer<br />

■Sept. ■ 19 - host Glenbrook<br />

North, 7 p.m.<br />

■Sept. ■ 21 - host Round<br />

Lake, noon<br />

■Sept. ■ 24 - host Maine<br />

South, 7 p.m.<br />

■Sept. ■ 26 - host Niles<br />

West, 7 p.m.<br />

Girls swimming and<br />

diving<br />

■Sept. ■ 20 - at Highland<br />

Park, 5 p.m.<br />

■Sept. ■ 20 - host Loyola,<br />

5:30 p.m.<br />

■Sept. ■ 21 - host St.<br />

Ignatius, 10 a.m.<br />

Girls tennis<br />

■Sept. ■ 19 - host Glenbrook<br />

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

■Sept. ■ 21 - host Highland<br />

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

■Sept. ■ 24 - at Evanston,<br />

4:30 p.m.<br />

■Sept. ■ 26 - host<br />

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

Girls volleyball<br />

■Sept. ■ 19 - host Glenbrook<br />

South, 6 p.m.<br />

■Sept. ■ 23 - host Lake<br />

Forest, 6 p.m.<br />

■Sept. ■ 24 - host Glenbrook<br />

North, 6 p.m.<br />

■Sept. ■ 26 - at Evanston,<br />

6 p.m.<br />

Rambler varsity<br />

athletics<br />

Boys cross-country<br />

■Sept. ■ 21 - at Peoria Notre<br />

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

■Girls ■ cross-country<br />

■Sept. ■ 21 - at Peoria Notre<br />

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

Field hockey<br />

■Sept. ■ 20 - at Arrowhead<br />

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

■Sept. ■ 25 - host St.<br />

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

Boys golf<br />

■Sept. ■ 21 - at Mundelein<br />

Invite (at Steeple Chase<br />

Golf Course), TBD<br />

■Sept. ■ 21 - at Wheeling<br />

Invite (at Chevy Chase Golf<br />

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

■Sept. ■ 23 - at Conway<br />

Farms Golf Club High<br />

School Invitational (at<br />

Conway Farms Golf Club),<br />

2 p.m.<br />

■Sept. ■ 23 - at Evanston (at<br />

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

■Girls ■ golf<br />

■Sept. ■ 19 - host Glenbrook<br />

North (at Glencoe Golf<br />

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

■Sept. ■ 21 - at Decatur<br />

Eisenhower invite (at<br />

Hickory Point Golf Course),<br />

9 a.m.<br />

■Sept. ■ 23 - at Conway<br />

Farms Golf Club High<br />

School Invitational (at<br />

Conway Farms Golf Club),<br />

2 p.m.<br />

■Sept. ■ 24 - vs. Maine<br />

South, St. Viator (at park<br />

Ridge country Club), 4 p.m.<br />

■Sept. ■ 26 - host Lake<br />

Forest (at Glencoe Golf<br />

Course), 4:15 p.m.<br />

Boys soccer<br />

■Sept. ■ 19 - host Marmion,<br />

5:30 p.m.<br />

■Sept. ■ 24 - host St.<br />

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

■Sept. ■ 26 - at DePaul<br />

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

Please see TWI, 27


glencoeanchordaily.com sports<br />

the glencoe anchor | September 19, 2019 | 29<br />

football<br />

Turnovers, mistakes<br />

hurt New Trier in loss<br />

Bill McLean<br />

Freelance Reporter<br />

Sean McNeely’s New<br />

Trier football helmet catapulted<br />

off his head as if it<br />

had been a champagne bottle’s<br />

cork shortly after midnight<br />

on New Year’s Day.<br />

That was the scene near<br />

the end of the first half<br />

of host Barrington High<br />

School’s 35-0 defeat of<br />

New Trier on Friday, Sept.<br />

13. Broncos senior defensive<br />

back Adam Brokke<br />

had delivered the vicious<br />

— but clean — hit, resulting<br />

in a 2-yard loss.<br />

But the 6-foot-2-inch,<br />

165-pound McNeely, a<br />

senior wide receiver/linebacker,<br />

popped right back<br />

up, returned the helmet to<br />

his head, marched to his<br />

huddle. He exuded a positive,<br />

next-play mindset on<br />

Motor Werks Auto Group<br />

Field.<br />

Barrington coach Joey<br />

Sanchez briefly lost his<br />

headwear, too — figuratively.<br />

The 18th-year grid<br />

boss tipped his hat to New<br />

Trier’s effort and personnel<br />

after his squad improved to<br />

2-1 with its second straight<br />

shutout.<br />

“That’s a young, scrappy<br />

team,” said Sanchez, who<br />

had guided BHS to the<br />

500th win in program history<br />

the previous weekend.<br />

“Their quarterback [sophomore<br />

Nevan Cremascoli]<br />

had a tough night [three<br />

interceptions], but he’s talented,<br />

and he’ll get better.<br />

Their No. 26 [junior running<br />

back Brody Roth] is<br />

tough, runs hard.”<br />

The game on Barrington’s<br />

Senior Night<br />

started inauspiciously for<br />

Max Dancey makes a big tackle against Barrington<br />

Friday, Sept. 13, in Barrington. Scott Margolin/22nd<br />

Century Media<br />

NEW TRIER versus BARRINGTON<br />

1 2 3 4 F<br />

NEW TRIER 0 0 0 0 0<br />

BARRINGTON 7 7 21 0 35<br />

Top Performers<br />

1. Brian Smith, RB — rushed for 2 TD<br />

2. Tommy Fitzpatrick, QB — 179 passing yards, passing<br />

TD, rushing TD<br />

3. Lucas Kozlowski, DB — 2 INT<br />

the visitors. On the first<br />

play from scrimmage, from<br />

the New Trier 25-yard line,<br />

Brokke returned an interception<br />

to NT’s 3. Two<br />

plays later Barrington senior<br />

running back Quinn<br />

Ketel (14 rushes, 56 yards)<br />

ran for a 1-yard touchdown.<br />

Barrington scored again<br />

at the 4:52 mark of the<br />

second quarter, capping an<br />

87-yard trip with a 2-yard<br />

burst from senior quarterback<br />

Tommy Fitzpatrick<br />

(179 yards passing, 31<br />

yards rushing).<br />

New Trier (1-2) fell 12<br />

yards short of cutting the<br />

Broncos’ advantage in half<br />

on the ensuing possession.<br />

Cremascoli completed<br />

three straight passes, the<br />

lengthiest a 27-yarder to<br />

senior Drew Robinson.<br />

4<br />

That connection put the<br />

ball on the Barrington 35.<br />

McNeely came down with<br />

a 9-yard reception four<br />

plays later.<br />

But the drive ended on<br />

the first of senior DB Lucas<br />

Kozlowski’s two interceptions<br />

with 33 ticks left in<br />

the first half.<br />

“We definitely have to<br />

clean up our mistakes,”<br />

said New Trier junior wideout/defensive<br />

back/punter<br />

Tyler Hardin, a hard-hitting,<br />

do-everything gridder<br />

who finished with team<br />

highs of five catches and<br />

54 receiving yards, rushed<br />

for 13 yards on Friday the<br />

13th, booted a 50-yard punt<br />

and even threw a pass.<br />

For the full story, visit GlencoeAnchorDaily.com.<br />

football<br />

Loyola shows full performance<br />

in win over St. Rita<br />

Neil Milbert<br />

Freelance Reporter<br />

Maybe it was junior<br />

Nate Van Zelst’s 49-yard<br />

field goal with 69 seconds<br />

to play in the third quarter<br />

that enabled Loyola Academy<br />

to get its message<br />

across to St. Rita.<br />

It was a different football<br />

game from then on.<br />

Thanks to a relentless<br />

running attack and an opportunistic<br />

defense, the<br />

Ramblers finally took control<br />

in the fourth quarter of<br />

the game that was played<br />

in the friendly confines of<br />

Hoerster Field on Saturday,<br />

Sept. 14, and subdued the<br />

stubborn Mustangs 24-7.<br />

Returning from a week<br />

NORTH SHORE<br />

St. Rita versus Loyola Academy<br />

1 2 3 4 F<br />

Rita 7 0 0 0 7<br />

LA 0 7 3 14 24<br />

Top Performers<br />

1. Vaughn Pemberton, RB — rushed for 120 yards, 2 TD<br />

2. Nate Van Zelst, K — hit a 49-yard field goal<br />

3. Daniel O’Flaherty, S — 1 INT<br />

off to rest a badly bruised<br />

knee, junior running back<br />

Vaughn Pemberton led<br />

the ground game with 120<br />

yards in 17 carries and<br />

scored on touchdown runs<br />

of one and 16 yards in the<br />

second and fourth quarters.<br />

The final touchdown<br />

came on a 4-yard pass from<br />

junior quarterback Perrion<br />

McClinton to sophomore<br />

FIND THE VARSITY: NORTH SHORE ON<br />

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

A 22ND CENTURY MEDIA PRODUCTION<br />

4<br />

James Kyle.<br />

In the fourth quarter,<br />

juniors Artist Benjamin,<br />

Braden Mullen, Dan Naselli<br />

and Liam Conaghan and<br />

seniors Daniel O’Flaherty<br />

and Luke Desherow made<br />

the big plays on defense.<br />

For the complete story, visit<br />

GlencoeAnchorDaily.com.<br />

EXCLUSIVE<br />

ANALYSIS<br />

AND INTERVIEWS<br />

about your favorite high<br />

school teams. Sports<br />

editors Michal Dwojak,<br />

Michael Wojtychiw, and<br />

Nick Frazier host the only<br />

North Shore sports podcast.


30 | September 19, 2019 | The glencoe anchor sports<br />

glencoeanchordaily.com<br />

Yau spearheads Loyola in showdown with New Trier<br />

Gary Larsen<br />

|Freelance Reporter<br />

Loyola senior volleyball<br />

player Jackie Yau has<br />

been the dominant middle<br />

on the team this year but<br />

if you ask her, that dominance<br />

requires a very specific<br />

fuel.<br />

“A lot of it has to do<br />

with the hype my team<br />

gives me, all the time,”<br />

Yau said. “I want to lead<br />

us to wins all the time and<br />

I think having their support<br />

helps me play my<br />

best.”<br />

Yau helped spearhead a<br />

team-wide night of exceptional<br />

volleyball against<br />

New Trier, four days after<br />

the Trevians beat Yau’s<br />

Ramblers in three sets.<br />

History repeated itself<br />

this year in the rivalry<br />

between the two schools.<br />

Host New Trier beat<br />

Loyola in the title game<br />

of their annual Summer’s<br />

End Tournament, and<br />

four days later the Ramblers<br />

exacted revenge in<br />

a straight-set win in Winnetka<br />

on Sept. 11.<br />

Loyola (12-3) won 25-<br />

16, 25-12 over New Trier<br />

(6-3) and all it took was<br />

everything the Ramblers<br />

had in their tool kit.<br />

“That was by far our<br />

best match of the season,”<br />

Loyola coach Mallory<br />

Thelander said. “They<br />

played awesome.”<br />

Loyola made adjustments<br />

for Wednesday’s<br />

match and New Trier<br />

anticipated those adjustments,<br />

but a night of topshelf<br />

serving by Loyola<br />

and better execution by<br />

the Ramblers made the<br />

difference.<br />

New Trier senior hitter<br />

Katie Merk pointed to another<br />

potential difference<br />

that always seems to come<br />

into play between the two<br />

teams.<br />

“I think a lot of it when<br />

we play Loyola is just<br />

mental,” Merk said. “It’s<br />

the rivalry so it’s always<br />

the team that’s most focused<br />

that’s going to win<br />

that day. We’re both really<br />

good teams so it’s more<br />

about the mental game<br />

than the physical game.<br />

“They also did a really<br />

good job serving. They<br />

served really deep and we<br />

struggled with that a little<br />

bit tonight. They really<br />

executed tonight.”<br />

BRATSCHIPLUMBING<br />

801 OAK STREET, WINNETKA<br />

www.bratschiinc.com<br />

847.446.1421<br />

FOUR GENERATIONS<br />

FAMILY OWNED &<br />

OPERATED<br />

CELEBRATING<br />

82 YEARS on the<br />

NORTH SHORE!<br />

CALL<br />

BRATSCHI<br />

TO CLEAN<br />

YOUR SEWER<br />

TODAY!<br />

Loyola’s Mia McGrath rises up for a hit.<br />

New Trier coach Hanna<br />

Hsieh noted the difference<br />

between the two nights of<br />

competition between the<br />

rivals.<br />

“We were able to take<br />

better advantage of their<br />

defensive scheme and we<br />

were passing better on<br />

Saturday,” Hsieh said. “It<br />

comes down to serving<br />

and passing and I thought<br />

they served much tougher<br />

and we just weren’t executing.”<br />

Loyola’s chief concern<br />

in the rematch was New<br />

Trier middle Maggie Bodman,<br />

who blocked well<br />

and earned kills throughout<br />

the Trevians’ 25-23,<br />

23-25, 25-21 win over the<br />

Ramblers on Saturday.<br />

Loyola knew it needed<br />

to neutralize Bodman in<br />

the rematch.<br />

“We did a lot of stuff in<br />

practice where we’d move<br />

with the setter because we<br />

knew Maggie would come<br />

into the setter,” Yau said.<br />

“So our outside would<br />

line up with the setter and<br />

I would line up with Maggie,<br />

and then just get up<br />

early and press.”<br />

Both sets were close<br />

early before Loyola went<br />

on runs that put the Ramblers<br />

in control. New<br />

New Trier’s Cat Flood attempts to smash a ball past<br />

several defenders. Photos by Gary Larsen/22nd Century<br />

Media<br />

Trier tried to mount a late<br />

comeback but a kill from<br />

Loyola’s Mia McGrath<br />

ended the 25-16 win.<br />

“We let them go on a<br />

small little run at the end<br />

of the first set, because<br />

we got a little too comfortable,”<br />

Thelander said,<br />

“but then they cut that<br />

run short, too. Other than<br />

that — because I’m going<br />

to always have something<br />

to be mad about — they<br />

played awesome. Every<br />

single person on the court<br />

was ready to compete.”<br />

New Trier led 6-5 in the<br />

Lic. 055-004618<br />

7<br />

second set before Loyola<br />

again grabbed control of<br />

the set en route to a 25-12<br />

win.<br />

Loyola’s stat line reflected<br />

team-wide contributions.<br />

Yau finished with<br />

two kills and four blocks,<br />

while McGrath had nine<br />

digs and a team-leading<br />

six kills. Chloe Tierney<br />

had 12 assists and Grace<br />

Anello had 14 digs, while<br />

Sarine Kalayjian finished<br />

with four kills and five assists.<br />

Josie Fronczak also<br />

had four kills and two<br />

blocks for Loyola.<br />

DON’T WAIT<br />

UNTIL IT’S TOO<br />

LATE!<br />

MAINTAIN YOUR<br />

PROPERTY AND<br />

PREVENT BACKUP<br />

PROBLEMS<br />

•Sanitary Sewers<br />

•Storm Sewers<br />

•Downspouts<br />

•WindowWell<br />

Drains<br />

•Area Yard Drains


glencoeanchordaily.com sports<br />

the glencoe anchor | September 19, 2019 | 31<br />

22nd Century Media FILE PHOTO<br />

1st-and-3<br />

THREE STARS OF THE<br />

WEEK<br />

1. Vaughn<br />

Pemberton<br />

(above). The<br />

Loyola running<br />

back ran for 120<br />

yards and two<br />

touchdowns in a<br />

win over St. Rita.<br />

2. Kate McLaughlin.<br />

The New Trier<br />

field hockey<br />

player continued<br />

her impressive<br />

season by scoring<br />

hat tricks in wins<br />

over North Shore<br />

Country Day and<br />

Lakes.<br />

3. Nate Van Zelst.<br />

The junior Loyola<br />

kicker hit a 49-<br />

yard field goal in<br />

the Ramblers’ win<br />

over St. Rita.<br />

Baseball<br />

Loyola names Wilmette’s Ackels new head coach<br />

Michael Wojtychiw<br />

Sports Editor<br />

Two things that Loyola’s<br />

Chris Ackels is most definitely<br />

passionate<br />

about are<br />

baseball and<br />

the Jesuit<br />

beliefs/education.<br />

So it was Ackels<br />

only natural<br />

for the Dallas native,<br />

who went to Dallas Jesuit<br />

High School and St. Louis<br />

University — both Jesuit<br />

institutions — to apply for<br />

the varsity baseball head<br />

coaching position when<br />

coach Nick Bridich decided<br />

to step down at the beginning<br />

of July.<br />

Ackels, who also teaches<br />

English at the school, will<br />

get to continue the love of<br />

both those things after being<br />

named Loyola’s varsity<br />

Game of the Week:<br />

• Loyola (2-1) at Mount Carmel (3-0)<br />

Other matchups:<br />

• Conant (3-0) at New Trier (1-2)<br />

• Prospect (3-0) at Highland Park (1-2)<br />

• Hersey (3-0) at Glenbrook North (3-0)<br />

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

• Barrington (2-1) at Glenbrook South (0-3)<br />

• Warren (3-0) at Libertyville (1-2)<br />

16-5<br />

JOE COUGHLIN |<br />

Publisher<br />

• Mount Carmel 20, Loyola 17.<br />

Caravan make a statement to prove<br />

they’re a title contender.<br />

• New Trier<br />

• Prospect<br />

• Hersey<br />

• Lake Forest<br />

• Barrington<br />

• Warren<br />

12-9<br />

baseball coach Sept. 11.<br />

“So really this was born<br />

out of wanting to be at that<br />

particular kind of school<br />

and getting to Loyola and<br />

loving that community,”<br />

Ackels said. “I mean just<br />

loving what Loyola is<br />

about and the tradition of<br />

educating the whole person.<br />

It’s not just a school.<br />

It’s a place that focuses on<br />

educating the whole young<br />

man or young woman.<br />

That’s what I’m passionate<br />

about, and I wanted to be at<br />

a place like that.<br />

“And now I get an opportunity<br />

to do that in the<br />

context of a head baseball<br />

coach. But our job is primarily<br />

to form young men<br />

and we get to do that playing<br />

the best game on earth.”<br />

Ackels has served as the<br />

sophomore coach for the<br />

past couple years and has<br />

also been Loyola’s freshman<br />

coach while he was<br />

getting his master’s degree<br />

from DePaul University. In<br />

a year between coaching<br />

the Loyola freshmen and<br />

sophomores, he was the<br />

head sophomore coach at<br />

St. Patrick High School in<br />

Chicago.<br />

The Wilmette resident<br />

never had the idea of going<br />

into coaching though. His<br />

original plan, after studying<br />

journalism at SLU, was<br />

to pursue a career in journalism<br />

but after volunteering<br />

for a year at Marquette<br />

High School in Milwaukee<br />

and getting his teaching<br />

and coaching feet wet, he<br />

was hooked. He abandoned<br />

his potential journalistic<br />

career and decided to be an<br />

educator.<br />

“So I go up to Milwaukee<br />

and when I was up<br />

there, I actually coached<br />

football, basketball and<br />

NICK FRAZIER |<br />

Contributing Sports Editor<br />

• Loyola 21, Mount Carmel 18. The<br />

Ramblers earn their third win<br />

in a row.<br />

• New Trier<br />

• Highland Park<br />

• Hersey<br />

• Lake Forest<br />

• Barrington<br />

• Libertyville<br />

17-4<br />

MICHAL DWOJAK |<br />

Contributing Sports Editor<br />

• Mount Carmel 24, Loyola 17.<br />

The Caravan take advantage of<br />

homefield advantage.<br />

• New Trier<br />

• Prospect<br />

• Hersey<br />

• Lake Forest<br />

• Barrington<br />

• Warren<br />

baseball,” he said. “I completely<br />

fell in love with all<br />

of it, with teaching, with<br />

coaching and particularly<br />

of course the baseball side<br />

because that’s been in my<br />

blood since I was a kid.<br />

“I didn’t grow up with<br />

a dream of being a coach<br />

per se. But basically what<br />

happened was I became a<br />

coach and realized pretty<br />

quickly not only do I love<br />

doing it, but this is a way<br />

that I can be a role model.<br />

This is a way that I can pass<br />

on my love for the game for<br />

a whole new crop of kids.<br />

Since then, it’s become a<br />

central part of my career.”<br />

Ackels has some big<br />

shoes to fill taking over for<br />

a coach who in his seven<br />

years led Loyola to its first<br />

sectional title in a decade.<br />

But that doesn’t mean that<br />

much is going to change, as<br />

the lifelong Texas Ranger<br />

6<br />

fan said he learned so much<br />

about baseball, the art of<br />

coaching and so many other<br />

things from the previous<br />

manager.<br />

“We’re a very healthy<br />

program both on and off<br />

the field,” Ackels said. “So<br />

it’s a healthy culture and<br />

we’re moving in the right<br />

direction from a talent perspective.<br />

Big picture wise,<br />

we’re moving in the right<br />

direction and my hope is to<br />

continue us moving in that<br />

direction.<br />

“From an on the field<br />

perspective, there may be<br />

some tactical changes. We<br />

want to make, and when<br />

I say we, we talked with<br />

staff about this. We want<br />

to make some adjustments<br />

to our offense and really be<br />

ready to use multiple tools<br />

to win a game.”<br />

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

15-6 15-6<br />

MICHAEL WOJTYCHIW |<br />

Sports Editor<br />

• Loyola 24, Mount Carmel 17. The<br />

Caravan upset the Ramblers at<br />

home last year. Loyola repays the<br />

favor this year.<br />

• New Trier<br />

• Prospect<br />

• Hersey<br />

• Lake Forest<br />

• Barrington<br />

• Warren<br />

MARTIN CARLINO |<br />

Contributing Editor<br />

• Mount Carmel 24, Loyola 21. In<br />

a back-and-forth game, Mount<br />

Carmel’s Justin Lynch leads the<br />

Caravan on a late, game-winning<br />

drive.<br />

• New Trier<br />

• Prospect<br />

• Hersey<br />

• Lake Zurich<br />

• Barrington<br />

• Warren<br />

Listen Up<br />

“That was by far our best match of the<br />

season.”<br />

Mallory Thelander — Loyola girls volleyball coach after her<br />

team’s win over New Trier.<br />

tunE in<br />

What to watch this week<br />

GIRLS SWIMMING: It’s a battle of two neighborhood rivals in<br />

the confines of New Trier’s Winnetka campus.<br />

• New Trier hosts Loyola at 5:30 p.m. Friday, Sept. 20,<br />

in Winnetka.<br />

Index<br />

28 - This Week In<br />

27 - Athlete of the Week<br />

Fastbreak is compiled by Sports Editor Michael<br />

Wojtychiw, m.wojtychiw@22ndcenturymedia.com.


the glencoe anchor | September 19, 2019 | glencoeanchordaily.com<br />

BIG WIN Loyola football<br />

takes down St. Rita, Page 29<br />

NEW DIGS Loyola girls swimming<br />

opens new pool vs. St. Ignatius, Page 28<br />

Ramblers come back<br />

to defeat Trevians in<br />

second rival match<br />

of fall, Page 30<br />

Loyola Academy’s<br />

Jackie Yau (left)<br />

and Sarine<br />

Kalayjian give<br />

instruction during<br />

a match on the<br />

road versus<br />

New Trier Sept.<br />

11 at Winnetka.<br />

Gary Larsen/22nd<br />

Century Media<br />

OPEN HOUSE<br />

FORPROSPECTIVE FAMILIES<br />

SATURDAY,SEPTEMBER 21 FROM 10:00 AM -12:00 PM<br />

EARLY REGISTRATION<br />

ENDS SEPTEMBER 30<br />

847.295.4900 • BANNERDAYCAMP.COM

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!