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glenview's Hometown Newspaper<br />

GlenviewLantern.com • March 29, 2018 • Vol. 7 No. 28 • $1<br />

A<br />

Publication<br />

,LLC<br />

Bolstering<br />

defense D225<br />

adds unarmed security<br />

to protect both high<br />

schools, Page 6<br />

Glenview voters overwhelmingly support renovated ice<br />

center, Grove improvements, Page 3<br />

Mingling<br />

with media<br />

22nd Century Media<br />

appears at annual<br />

Meet Your Press event,<br />

Page 12<br />

The Glenview Park District’s referendum to<br />

renovate the ice center, improve safety at The<br />

Grove and purchase open space for park purposes<br />

passed with a two-thirds majority on March 20.<br />

Image Submitted<br />

Sharing their<br />

voice<br />

Glenview residents<br />

discuss local topics in<br />

Letters to the Editor,<br />

Page 14<br />

Sunday, April1-9&10:30 a.m.<br />

THEORCHARDNORTHFIELD.ORG<br />

Meeting at Christian Heritage Academy<br />

315 Waukegan Road, Northfield, IL 60093


2 | March 29, 2018 | The glenview lantern calendar<br />

glenviewlantern.com<br />

In this week’s<br />

lantern<br />

Pet of the Week6<br />

Police Reports 10<br />

Editorial 15<br />

Puzzles 18<br />

Faith 20<br />

Dining Out 23<br />

Home of the Week 24<br />

Athlete of the Week 27<br />

The Glenview<br />

Lantern<br />

ph: 847.272.4565<br />

fx: 847.272.4648<br />

Editor<br />

Chris Pullam, x10<br />

chris@glenviewlantern.com<br />

Sports editor<br />

Michal Dwojak, x26<br />

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

Sales director<br />

Gail Eisenberg, x13<br />

g.eisenberg@22ndcenturymedia.com<br />

Real Estate Sales<br />

John Zeddies, x12<br />

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

Classified sales,<br />

Recruitment Advertising<br />

Jess Nemec, 708.326.9170, x46<br />

j.nemec@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.GlenviewLantern.com<br />

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

circulation inquiries<br />

circulation@22ndcenturymedia.com<br />

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

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

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

Periodical Postage Paid at Northbrook, IL<br />

and at additional mailing offices.<br />

POSTMASTER: Send address changes to:<br />

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

888, Northbrook, IL 60062<br />

Published by<br />

www.22ndcenturymedia.com<br />

Thursday<br />

Family Board Game Night<br />

6:30-8:30 p.m. March<br />

29, Glenview Public Library,<br />

1930 Glenview<br />

Road. Bring the whole<br />

family and play one of<br />

the library’s many board<br />

games. Classic games like<br />

Monopoly and Sorry will<br />

be available, plus strategy<br />

games such as Catan,<br />

Pandemic and Ticket to<br />

Ride. Pastimes Comics &<br />

Games will join library<br />

staff to help get guests<br />

started. For more information,<br />

call (847) 729-7500.<br />

FRIDAY<br />

Stuffed Animal Slumber<br />

Party<br />

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

March 30, Glenview Public<br />

Library, 1930 Glenview<br />

Road. Bring a stuffed animal<br />

to the Youth Services<br />

Desk, kiss them goodnight<br />

and wave goodbye. Pick<br />

them up the next day to<br />

learn what happens when<br />

the librarians leave and the<br />

lights go out. For more information,<br />

call (847) 729-<br />

7500.<br />

SATURDAY<br />

Breakfast with the Bunny<br />

8-9:30 a.m. March 31,<br />

Park Center, 2400 Chestnut<br />

Ave. Hop into spring<br />

and meet the Bunny. Before<br />

the egg hunt at 10<br />

a.m., enjoy a buffet breakfast<br />

of fruit, scrambled<br />

eggs, French toast, hash<br />

browns, coffee and juice.<br />

There will be fun crafts<br />

available prior to breakfast.<br />

For more information,<br />

call (847) 724-5670.<br />

Eggstravaganza<br />

10-11 a.m. March 31,<br />

Park Center, 2400 Chestnut<br />

Ave. Children of all<br />

ages will have a hoppinggood<br />

time at an old-fashioned<br />

egg hunt. Everyone<br />

is welcome to this free<br />

event. The event will be<br />

held in the main gym. For<br />

more information, call<br />

(847) 724-5670.<br />

SUNDAY<br />

Easter Brunch<br />

10 a.m.-2:30 p.m. April<br />

1, The Café at Glenview<br />

Park Golf Club, 800<br />

Shermer Road. Get Easter<br />

bonnets ready for a<br />

delightful spring brunch<br />

featuring breakfast buffet<br />

favorites, a carving station,<br />

macaroni and cheese<br />

for the kids, a dessert<br />

table, and more. The cost<br />

is $24.95 for adults and<br />

$13.95 for children ages<br />

3-13. Children under age 2<br />

will eat for free. For more<br />

information, call (847)<br />

657-3200.<br />

MONDAY<br />

The Inspiration of Nature<br />

7-8 p.m. April 2, Glenview<br />

Public Library, 1930<br />

Glenview Road. In this living-history<br />

performance,<br />

historian Leslie Goddard,<br />

Ph.D., portrays a complex<br />

and legendary artist,<br />

reflecting on her long life<br />

and her intense closeness<br />

to the muted palette of<br />

the landscape around her<br />

homes in New Mexico.<br />

For more information, call<br />

(847) 729-7500.<br />

TUESDAY<br />

Literacy Class<br />

9:15 a.m.-12:15 p.m.<br />

April 3, Glenview Public<br />

Library, 1930 Glenview<br />

Road. Enjoy this opportunity<br />

for native and nonnative<br />

English speakers to<br />

improve their reading and<br />

writing skills. The small,<br />

friendly group led by a<br />

teacher and volunteer tutors<br />

meets twice weekly.<br />

For more information, call<br />

(847) 635-1426.<br />

WEDNESDAY<br />

Confident Painting Through<br />

Trial and Error<br />

7-8:30 p.m. April 4,<br />

Glenview Public Library,<br />

1930 Glenview Road. Join<br />

Art in the Library April exhibitor<br />

Deb Anderson for a<br />

Gallery Talk followed by<br />

a Painting Workshop. Students<br />

will paint a still life<br />

while Deb demonstrates<br />

her favorite techniques.<br />

Ages 15 and under are welcome.<br />

For more information,<br />

call (847) 729-7500.<br />

THURSDAY<br />

Groundbreaking ceremony<br />

10 a.m. April 5, athletic<br />

field adjacent to the current<br />

Maple School, 2370<br />

Shermer Road, Northbrook.<br />

If it rains, the ceremony<br />

will take place in<br />

Maple School’s west gymnasium.<br />

The new Maple<br />

School’s design employs<br />

green philosophies and includes<br />

111,000 square feet,<br />

as compared to the current<br />

Maple School’s 89,000<br />

square feet. For more information,<br />

visit www.district30.org.<br />

UPCOMING<br />

Bollywood Groove Dance<br />

Fitness Party<br />

7-8:30 p.m. April 6,<br />

Glenview Public Library,<br />

1930 Glenview Road.<br />

Come experience one of<br />

the hottest trends in fitness.<br />

The latest Bollywood<br />

hits provide the beats for<br />

this fun, high energy dance<br />

party. Admission is $10 for<br />

members and $15 for nonmembers.<br />

For more information,<br />

visit getfitglenview.org or<br />

call (224) 521-2608.<br />

Mega Connect Progressive<br />

Breakfast<br />

7:30–9:30 a.m. Tuesday,<br />

April 12, Holiday<br />

Inn Chicago North Shore<br />

5300 W. Touhy Ave.,<br />

Skokie. Members looking<br />

for a productive networking<br />

experience will enjoy<br />

the structured format of<br />

this program, which gives<br />

each participant an opportunity<br />

to speak to a receptive<br />

audience about his/<br />

her company’s products<br />

and services. The event includes<br />

informal networking<br />

over a buffet breakfast,<br />

and rotating small group<br />

presentations. The cost is<br />

$30 for members and $40<br />

for nonmembers. For more<br />

information, call (847)<br />

724-0900.<br />

Burger Day<br />

Sunday, April 15, Mc-<br />

Donald’s, 2800 Pfingsten<br />

Road. GBS and GBN will<br />

compete in the 14th annual<br />

Burger Day, a community<br />

event that pits the Titans<br />

and Spartans against each<br />

other in a burger-eating<br />

content in order to raise<br />

money for Ronald McDonald<br />

House Charities. Over<br />

the past 13 years, the Glenbrook<br />

students have raised<br />

more than $250,000. For<br />

more information, email<br />

burgerdaycharity@gmail.<br />

com.<br />

Sixth Annual Bites &<br />

Brews Event<br />

5-8 p.m. Thursday, April<br />

27, The Glen Club, 2901<br />

West Lake Ave. Enjoy beer<br />

and food samplings provided<br />

by more than 25 Glenview<br />

Chamber of Commerce<br />

restaurants, caterers,<br />

wine merchants and craft<br />

beer purveyors. A community<br />

event organized<br />

by the chamber, Bites &<br />

Brews is supported by local<br />

sponsors: Glenview and<br />

Northview Bank & Trust.<br />

For more information, call<br />

(847) 724-0900.<br />

2018 Annual Game Night<br />

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

May 3, Park Center, 2400<br />

Chestnut Ave. Enjoy canasta,<br />

mah-jongg, scrabble<br />

and other board games<br />

at this annual event. The<br />

costs is $50 before April<br />

20 and $60 after that. All<br />

proceeds will benefit The<br />

Perk Center Cafe, a nonprofit<br />

employing adults<br />

with intellectual and developmental<br />

disabilities.<br />

For more information,<br />

visit glenviewpl.org.<br />

ONGOING<br />

Accting and Improv Classes<br />

City Kid Theatre is currently<br />

holding open registration<br />

for its spring season.<br />

All drop-off Pre-K,<br />

acting and improv classes<br />

for children ages 3-12<br />

begin April 9. Themed<br />

birthday parties, rental<br />

and special events are also<br />

available. For more information,<br />

visit www.citykidtheatre.com.<br />

Movie Mayhem Bracket:<br />

’80s vs. ’90s Movies<br />

Through April 4. In<br />

honor of NCAA March<br />

Madness, the Glenview<br />

Public Library is hosting<br />

a movie-themed bracket.<br />

There’s an ’80s bracket<br />

and a ’90s bracket. Residents<br />

can vote for their<br />

favorites each week, with<br />

the finalists from each<br />

decade eventually facing<br />

off. For more information,<br />

visit glenviewpl.org.<br />

The Talking Points<br />

11 a.m. every Monday,<br />

Glenview Senior Center,<br />

2400 Chestnut Ave. Join<br />

every week for a discussion<br />

for men and women<br />

over the age of 55 that includes<br />

an open forum and<br />

different ways to share<br />

ideas. For more information,<br />

visit www.glenviewparks.org.<br />

Laughter Group<br />

7 p.m. every Wednesday,<br />

Glenbrook Hospital,<br />

2180 Pfingsten Road. The<br />

group is free of charge to<br />

anyone who is interested<br />

in benefiting from laughter.<br />

For more information,<br />

call (847) 571-7553.<br />

To submit an item for the<br />

community calendar, contact<br />

Editor Chris Pullam and<br />

Chris@GlenviewLantern.<br />

com or (847) 272-4565 ext.<br />

10. Entries are due by noon<br />

on the Thursday prior to<br />

publication date.


glenviewlantern.com news<br />

the glenview lantern | March 29, 2018 | 3<br />

Park District referendum passes with two-thirds majority<br />

Chris Pullam, Editor<br />

Glenview voters have<br />

spoken: They are overwhelmingly<br />

in favor of<br />

improvements to the Glenview<br />

Park District, according<br />

to unofficial results<br />

from the Cook County<br />

Clerk’s website.<br />

The referendum — which<br />

called for renovating the<br />

Glenview Ice Center, improving<br />

The Grove and<br />

purchasing open space for<br />

parks — passed Tuesday,<br />

March 20, without a hitch,<br />

as approximately 64.58 percent<br />

of voters approved of<br />

the District’s plan. Initial results<br />

showed 8,032 votes for<br />

the $17 million bond referendum<br />

to 4,405 against.<br />

On Wednesday, March<br />

21, the Glenview Park District<br />

thanked the Citizen<br />

Task Force and residents<br />

for their support leading up<br />

to the vote.<br />

“We are grateful to our<br />

taxpayers for their support<br />

of this important funding<br />

measure. The end result<br />

will be recreation facilities<br />

that are safer and more secure,<br />

energy efficient, more<br />

accessible for persons with<br />

disabilities, and positioned<br />

to better meet the needs<br />

of our district residents for<br />

generations to come,” said<br />

Mike McCarty, Park District<br />

executive director, in a<br />

statement.<br />

All three projects will<br />

cost an estimated total of<br />

$33.1 million, according<br />

to Katie Skibbe, deputy<br />

executive director at the<br />

Park District. Approximately<br />

half that amount<br />

will be raised through the<br />

referendum bonds. The<br />

remainder will come from<br />

alternate revenue source<br />

bonds that will not impact<br />

taxes ($10 million), current<br />

fund balances ($6.1<br />

million) and potential<br />

The Glenview Park District’s referendum to renovate the<br />

ice center, improve safety at The Grove and purchase<br />

open space for park purposes passed with a two-thirds<br />

majority on March 20. Image submitted<br />

community donations.<br />

The vast majority of the<br />

funds, $29.45 million, will<br />

go toward the ice center<br />

renovations, with another<br />

$2.65 million and $1 million<br />

allocated to The Grove<br />

improvements and openspace<br />

purchases, respectively.<br />

“[Hearing the referendum<br />

passed] was very exciting,”<br />

Skibbe said. “We<br />

have a lot of users at the<br />

ice center. It’s a very wellloved<br />

and -used facility.<br />

And The Grove is obviously<br />

very well-loved and<br />

-used. To be able to provide<br />

improvements to these<br />

facilities and give users a<br />

better experience is a really<br />

exciting thing.”<br />

As The Glenview Lantern<br />

reported late last year,<br />

the estimated annual tax<br />

impact of the bond measure<br />

would be $35.69 for a<br />

$500,000 home, or approximately<br />

$2.97 per month.<br />

Leading up to the vote,<br />

the Park District framed<br />

the issue as impacting the<br />

ice center in two different<br />

ways: either residents<br />

voted to renovate the fourdecade-old<br />

facility, thereby<br />

making it more profitable<br />

and reducing future costs,<br />

or the District would spend<br />

between $8-12.5 million to<br />

repair the current complex<br />

without any added benefits.<br />

But not everyone was<br />

convinced by the District’s<br />

proposal.<br />

Longtime Glenview resident<br />

Richard Day opposed<br />

the bond measure. In a Letter<br />

to the Editor submitted<br />

after The Lantern’s final<br />

deadline, he insinuated that<br />

the Park District added The<br />

Grove improvements and<br />

open-space purchases to<br />

the referendum as bait for<br />

yes votes.<br />

After the referendum<br />

passed, he elaborate further:<br />

“They already had<br />

enough money (through<br />

current fund balances) to<br />

make the repairs and fixes<br />

at The Grove, but they<br />

wanted to attach that [to<br />

the referendum] to attract<br />

the support of voters who<br />

wouldn’t have supported<br />

the ice center but who love<br />

The Grove and open space.<br />

The fact is, they had enough<br />

money to do both without<br />

raising another dime.”<br />

Day, a longtime political<br />

analyst, headed his own<br />

survey/market research<br />

firm for more than three decades,<br />

providing pre-election<br />

polling, exit polling<br />

and election night analysis<br />

for ABC 7. Through his<br />

business, he helped pass<br />

referendums for multiple<br />

nonprofit groups, including<br />

the Lake County Forest<br />

Preserve District’s successful<br />

attempt to set aside<br />

open land.<br />

“It’s a standard way that<br />

groups like this pass referendums,”<br />

Day said. “They<br />

have something that they<br />

want but they can’t pass, so<br />

they increase community<br />

support by combining it<br />

with other things so people<br />

don’t pay attention to the<br />

$29 million [cost of the ice<br />

center], they don’t pay attention<br />

to the fact that the<br />

district already has money<br />

for the other things.”<br />

On the opposite end of<br />

the spectrum was Glenview<br />

resident Cheryl Johnson,<br />

president of the Glenbrook<br />

girls hockey team that will<br />

face New Trier in the state<br />

championship on Saturday,<br />

March 24, at the United<br />

Center.<br />

“I’m ecstatic,” she<br />

said after the referendum<br />

passed. “I’m very happy.<br />

This is something that’s really,<br />

really good for Glenview.”<br />

According to Johnson,<br />

whose three children all<br />

played hockey in Glenview,<br />

the Glenbrook girls<br />

team hasn’t been able to<br />

practice on a full-size rink<br />

in town for several years.<br />

Instead, they practice on<br />

a smaller rink at the ice<br />

center, which poses safety<br />

concerns for the 19 highschool<br />

girls, and play their<br />

home games at the Northbrook<br />

Sports Center.<br />

“It would be awesome<br />

for them to play some<br />

games at the ice center,”<br />

Johnson said. “Thirteen of<br />

our girls are from GBS, and<br />

they’d love to play in front<br />

of their home crowd.”<br />

The referendum also<br />

found a supporter in Glenview<br />

resident Judy Beck —<br />

vice president of the Grove<br />

Project details<br />

Costs<br />

Ice center renovations: $29.45 million<br />

The Grove improvements: $2.65 million<br />

Open-space purchases: $1 million<br />

Revenue sources<br />

Referendum bonds: $17 million<br />

Other bonds: $10 million<br />

Park District savings: $6.1 million<br />

Community donations: remainder<br />

Ice center renovation timeline*<br />

• 03/23/2018 — Begin drafting design/<br />

engineering/construction documents<br />

• 03/23/2018 — Begin conditional use permit<br />

process through the Village of Glenview<br />

• 07/23/2018 — Begin construction project<br />

permitting through the Village of Glenview<br />

• 12/2018 — Bond issuance of $10 million nonreferendum<br />

alternate revenue bonds (does not<br />

affect taxes)<br />

• 1/3/2019 — Bid notice<br />

• 2/2019 — Bond issuance of $17 million<br />

referendum general obligation bonds (does affect<br />

taxes)<br />

• 2/14/2019 — Bid opening<br />

• 5/6/2019 — Groundbreaking<br />

• 5/6/2019-9/3/2019 — Full ice center operation<br />

shutdown<br />

• 6/29/2020-8/31/2020 — Partial ice center<br />

operation shutdown<br />

• 9/4/2020 — Construction complete<br />

• 9/16/2020 — Soft opening<br />

• 9/19/2020 — Grand opening<br />

* This information was provided by the Glenview Park District<br />

as a projection for construction-related milestones.<br />

Heritage Association,<br />

member of Glenview’s<br />

Natural Resources Commission,<br />

former 32-year<br />

commissioner of the Park<br />

Board, former president of<br />

the Illinois Association of<br />

Park Districts and namesake<br />

of Glenview’s Judy<br />

Beck Park at 735 Carriage<br />

Hill Drive.<br />

Beck, who also served<br />

on the committee that sent<br />

mailing to residents prior<br />

to the vote, supported<br />

the 1974 referendum that<br />

saved The Grove from a<br />

residential development<br />

project. That referendum,<br />

which passed 11-1, allowed<br />

the Glenview Park District<br />

to purchase and maintain<br />

the land to this day.<br />

“Back then, people realized<br />

it would be something<br />

very special for the community,”<br />

Beck said. “Now,<br />

to see that support again,<br />

it makes you feel really<br />

good. So many people in<br />

the community use and<br />

benefit from both these facilities.<br />

They’re both multigenerational<br />

hallmarks,<br />

and anytime a park district<br />

[supports] that, they’re doing<br />

something right.”


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6 | March 29, 2018 | The glenview lantern news<br />

glenviewlantern.com<br />

Bella<br />

The Gall family,<br />

of Glenview<br />

This is our dog<br />

Bella. We are<br />

not sure what<br />

she is, but we<br />

do know she is<br />

full of energy,<br />

she’s a great<br />

athlete and she<br />

loves to play<br />

with our boys.<br />

She is as much<br />

of a diva as she<br />

is a tomboy.<br />

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

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

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Glenbrook D225 Board of Education<br />

Unarmed security officers to monitor<br />

GBS, GBN past normal school hours<br />

Neil Milbert<br />

Freelance Reporter<br />

Starting April 2, when<br />

classes resume after spring<br />

break, there will be heightened<br />

security at Glenbrook<br />

South and Glenbrook<br />

North from 3 p.m.-7 a.m.<br />

on school days, on weekends<br />

and during the summer<br />

months.<br />

By a 6-0 vote at its<br />

March 19 meeting, the District<br />

225 Board of Education<br />

approved a proposal<br />

by the district’s assistant<br />

superintendent for Human<br />

Resources, Brad Swanson,<br />

to enter into an agreement<br />

with American Heritage<br />

Protective Services.<br />

The agreement calls<br />

for American Heritage to<br />

provide three unarmed officers<br />

in each building to<br />

work the 3-11 p.m. second<br />

shift Monday-Friday. Both<br />

schools already have an<br />

American Heritage officer<br />

working the third shift from<br />

11 p.m.-7 a.m.<br />

On Saturday, two will<br />

work the first shift from 7<br />

a.m.-3 p.m. and one will<br />

work the second shift. An<br />

officer will continue to<br />

work the third shift.<br />

On Sundays and holidays,<br />

one officer will work<br />

each shift. The summer<br />

schedule will duplicate the<br />

Sunday and holiday schedule.<br />

The cost of the additional<br />

security for the remaining<br />

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fiscal year is approximately<br />

$80,000, and the cost for an<br />

entire school year will be<br />

approximately $330,000.<br />

“Hiring is in the starting<br />

phase,” Swanson said.<br />

“They want local community<br />

members to be working<br />

in these jobs. These<br />

won’t be people watching<br />

a screen. They will be there<br />

as a visual presence and be<br />

very aware of all activities<br />

going on.”<br />

All will be equipped with<br />

radio communication devices,<br />

giving them the ability<br />

to immediately alert Police<br />

and Fire departments if<br />

they perceive a problem.<br />

According to District 225<br />

Superintendent Dr. Mike<br />

Riggle, “They’re going to<br />

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be there to be helpful and<br />

they’re going to be there<br />

to make sure our facilities<br />

stay safe. It prepares us for<br />

those things that are a little<br />

bit unusual. We wanted to<br />

get going just after spring<br />

break without any hesitation.<br />

“We want our buildings<br />

to be open to the community.<br />

We also want our buildings<br />

to be safe. It’s time to<br />

rethink, retool and reexamine.<br />

During the month of<br />

April, there will be a very<br />

heavy emphasis on the<br />

safety agenda. But we can’t<br />

discuss all aspects of our<br />

security publicly.”<br />

Plans also call for there<br />

to be specific entrances<br />

and exits for athletic events<br />

and for the athletic area to<br />

be sealed off from the academic<br />

area.<br />

Parents, students address<br />

board on safety<br />

Acting as a representative<br />

of a group of parents<br />

who have submitted a letter<br />

to the Board of Education,<br />

Melanie Berkowitz asked<br />

the board to form a collaborative<br />

safety panel to address<br />

school safety.<br />

“We are heartened by<br />

the steps you are taking,”<br />

Berkowitz said. “We request<br />

as the District moves<br />

forward that it consider the<br />

opinion of the parents.”<br />

Also addressing the<br />

board was Glenbrook<br />

North senior Suzanna<br />

Creasey, one of the student<br />

organizers of the 17-minute<br />

walkout at her school that<br />

honored the memory of the<br />

17 students who lost their<br />

lives in the Feb. 14 shooting<br />

at Marjory Stoneman<br />

Douglas High School in<br />

Parkland, Fla.


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8 | March 29, 2018 | The glenview lantern news<br />

glenviewlantern.com<br />

West Northfield D31 Board of Education<br />

Lease approval for Winkelman addition set for next month<br />

Todd Marver<br />

Freelance Reporter<br />

The West Northfield<br />

School District 31 Board<br />

will vote on approving<br />

a lease agreement for an<br />

eight-room modular addition<br />

to Winkelman School<br />

during its Thursday, April<br />

19 meeting.<br />

The board discussed the<br />

agreement with Innovative<br />

Modular Solutions at its<br />

Thursday, March 22 meeting.<br />

This addition would be<br />

ready for the start of the<br />

2018-19 school year. Superintendent<br />

Dr. Alexandra<br />

Nicholson explained<br />

why she felt Innovative<br />

Modular Solutions is the<br />

best choice for the project.<br />

“This company is unique<br />

because it builds these<br />

things with the same products<br />

that you would build<br />

a building with, whereas<br />

many of the other companies<br />

use different products<br />

— cheaper and more<br />

trailer-type products,” she<br />

said.<br />

Nicholson also explained<br />

the legality of<br />

signing a lease agreement,<br />

rather than going out to<br />

bid.<br />

“There is a way where<br />

you legally do not have<br />

to go out to bid and to do<br />

that, you sign a lease,” she<br />

said. “They build it for you<br />

custom, they put it in place<br />

and you set your first lease<br />

payment at Sept. 1, 2018.<br />

Then, instead of paying<br />

your first lease payment,<br />

you buy it outright.”<br />

Nicholson added that<br />

signing a lease agreement<br />

rather than going out to bid<br />

is the only way the addition<br />

would be ready for the<br />

start of next school year.<br />

“That’s how you buy<br />

time,” she said. “To go out<br />

to bid, it takes another six<br />

weeks to do that and then<br />

these units would not be<br />

up in time for the school<br />

year to begin.”<br />

The initial estimate the<br />

District received from Innovative<br />

Modular Solutions<br />

was $1.2 million for<br />

a six-room addition.<br />

But since receiving the<br />

original estimate, the District<br />

is now requesting an<br />

eight-room modular addition<br />

due to space considerations.<br />

This would cost around<br />

$2 million.<br />

“We want to be sure to<br />

have not just enough space<br />

for a year from now, but<br />

we want to have enough<br />

space for three years from<br />

now and five years from<br />

now,” Nicholson said. “I<br />

have had some serious<br />

conversations with the<br />

superintendent of NSSED<br />

and we are going to need<br />

more classrooms for those<br />

students.”<br />

The District is opting for<br />

a modular addition instead<br />

of a typical facility addition,<br />

as that’s estimated to<br />

be twice the cost.<br />

“The original estimate<br />

to put on a typical facility<br />

addition was over $4 million,”<br />

Nicholson said.<br />

Board President Bob<br />

Spector expressed the<br />

most concern with moving<br />

forward to approve the addition.<br />

“It feels too fast to me<br />

to say that we have to decide<br />

this tonight,” he said.<br />

“We’re looking at $2-plus<br />

million dollars. Personally<br />

I’m not comfortable at taxpayer’s<br />

expenses to try to<br />

save a calendar year when<br />

I feel like we’re missing a<br />

lot of information. To me<br />

that doesn’t seem responsible.”<br />

The rest of the board<br />

members besides Spector,<br />

including Jeffrey Steres,<br />

Melissa Choo Valentinas,<br />

Daphne Frank, Nancy<br />

Hammer, Laura Greenberg<br />

and Vice President Robert<br />

Resis supported moving<br />

forward with approving<br />

the lease.<br />

Valentinas responded<br />

to Spector’s criticism that<br />

“it feels too fast to decide<br />

tonight” by saying they’ve<br />

been working on this for<br />

close to a year.<br />

“We’ve been talking<br />

about this for nine months<br />

and pairing down a list,”<br />

Valentinas said. “The fact<br />

that it feels rushed right<br />

now is not enough for me<br />

to say right now to defer<br />

this decision.”<br />

Steres added that he felt<br />

waiting another month or<br />

two wouldn’t change the<br />

board’s decision to move<br />

forward with this.<br />

“I don’t want to delay<br />

something that we might<br />

need in the fall,” he said.<br />

“I’m not sure information<br />

we get over the next month<br />

or two months is going to<br />

materially change that this<br />

is the best idea.”<br />

Glenview Park District Board<br />

Board reflects and thanks voters for passed referendum<br />

NEIL MILBERT<br />

Freelance reporter<br />

Executive Director<br />

Mike McCarty expressed<br />

his appreciation to voters<br />

for approving the $17<br />

million bond referendum<br />

during the Glenview Park<br />

District Board’s Thursday,<br />

March 22 meeting.<br />

The measure, which<br />

will fund the renovation<br />

of the 44-year-old<br />

Glenview Ice Center, improvements<br />

to The Grove<br />

historic landmark and the<br />

purchase of open space,<br />

passed with a two-thirds<br />

majority.<br />

“I am definitely humbled<br />

and honored,” Mc-<br />

Carty said. “We are<br />

grateful to our taxpayers<br />

for their support. It<br />

truly shows we have an<br />

engaged community. It<br />

shows the community<br />

trusts and supports the<br />

board.”<br />

McCarty praised the<br />

Citizens Task Force,<br />

whose members volunteered<br />

their time for several<br />

months to conduct<br />

community outreach<br />

meetings and opinion surveys<br />

that enabled them to<br />

come up with a proposal<br />

that taxpayers would support,<br />

and Park District<br />

staff members for laying<br />

the groundwork through<br />

their fact-finding work.<br />

“We have an extremely<br />

strong staff that worked<br />

tirelessly and never let the<br />

things they normally do<br />

falter,” McCarty continued,<br />

citing Superintendent<br />

of Special Facilities Lori<br />

Lovell, Deputy Executive<br />

Director Katie Skibbe,<br />

Superintendent of Leisure<br />

Services Elsa Fischer, Superintendent<br />

of Park and<br />

Facilities Services Jim<br />

Warnstedt and Recording<br />

Secretary Joanne Capaccio.<br />

“We’ve already done<br />

the work to look at the next<br />

step. All of the spending<br />

will be disclosed on the<br />

district’s website. The end<br />

result will be recreational<br />

facilities that are safer and<br />

more secure, more energy<br />

efficient and more accessible<br />

for persons with disabilities<br />

that will position<br />

us to better meet the needs<br />

of our residents for many<br />

years to come.”<br />

According to McCarty,<br />

the 64.5 percent yes vote<br />

in a referendum to fund<br />

Park District projects<br />

was the third-highest in<br />

the history of the district,<br />

which was established in<br />

1927. The only two referendums<br />

that had more support<br />

from voters were the<br />

purchase of The Grove,<br />

which was approved by<br />

89 percent of voters in<br />

1974, and the purchase of<br />

the Glenview Park Golf<br />

Club and a small renovation<br />

of the Roosevelt pool,<br />

which had 85 percent approval<br />

in 1955.<br />

“Now we should work<br />

harder,” Board Member<br />

Dave Tosh said. “We have<br />

to show those who voted<br />

no (the benefits the community<br />

derives from the<br />

projects).”<br />

Radzialowski honored<br />

Fred Radzialowski, who<br />

has served as president<br />

of the Park Center’s East<br />

Wing Senior Center since<br />

2016, was presented the Illinois<br />

Association of Park<br />

Districts/Illinois Park and<br />

Recreation Association/<br />

Glenview Park District<br />

award for community service.<br />

Radzialowski joined the<br />

Senior Center in 2007. In<br />

2013, he was voted Super<br />

Senior by his fellow members.<br />

“I moved here in 1967<br />

and when I retired in 2006<br />

I was looking for something<br />

to do,” Radzialowski<br />

said. “I found it at the Senior<br />

Center.”<br />

Award for innovation<br />

Lovell and board member<br />

Angie Katsamakis gave<br />

an update on the award for<br />

employees that the Park<br />

District is instituting to recognize<br />

innovation. The field<br />

of 12 nominees has been<br />

reduced to five finalists,<br />

Lovell said. The winner will<br />

be honored at a luncheon.<br />

“This will be an engine<br />

for innovation within the<br />

district,” Board Member<br />

Dan Peterson said.<br />

Sensitivity training<br />

Prior to the meeting,<br />

attorney Jill O’Brien, a<br />

labor advisor to the Park<br />

District, conducted a sensitivity<br />

training session for<br />

board members. Her main<br />

focus was on the new state<br />

law on sexual harassment.


glenviewlantern.com glenview<br />

the glenview lantern | March 29, 2018 | 9


10 | March 29, 2018 | The glenview lantern news<br />

glenviewlantern.com<br />

Police Reports<br />

Man fondles himself at Techny Basin<br />

A man was seen masturbating<br />

near Techny<br />

Basin around 4:45 p.m.<br />

on March 19 in the 1800<br />

block of Westleigh Drive.<br />

According to the Glenview<br />

Police Department,<br />

a jogger reported that the<br />

30- to 35-year-old male<br />

ran out of the bushes west<br />

of the path, sat on a bench,<br />

pulled his pants down and<br />

began masturbating.<br />

The individual had left<br />

the scene by the time police<br />

arrived.<br />

In other police news:<br />

March 20<br />

• Tugsjargal Gantumar,<br />

27, of Glenview, was<br />

charged with driving<br />

without a valid driver’s license,<br />

operating an uninsured<br />

vehicle and no rear<br />

registration plate light at<br />

1:20 a.m.<br />

• Amen Altaf, 26, of<br />

Mount Prospect, was<br />

charged with possession<br />

of cannabis at 4:30 p.m.<br />

in the 3600 block of East<br />

Lake Avenue.<br />

• Quinton K. Hawkins,<br />

21, of Blue Island, was<br />

charged with driving<br />

while license suspended<br />

and speeding at 11:39<br />

p.m. after a traffic stop<br />

in the 1600 block of East<br />

Lake Avenue.<br />

March 19<br />

• Daniel Fernandez, 40,<br />

of Chicago, was charged<br />

with retail theft at 6:56<br />

p.m. after stealing a set of<br />

Astro headphones from a<br />

store in the 1200 block of<br />

Milwaukee Avenue.<br />

• Alcohol was stolen from<br />

a store at 7:30 p.m. in the<br />

0-100 block of Waukegan<br />

Road. The reported loss is<br />

$240.94.<br />

• Four juveniles were cited<br />

for disorderly conduct after<br />

banging on a resident’s<br />

doors and windows.<br />

• A person leaving the<br />

gym attached to residences<br />

in the 900 block<br />

of Church Street reported<br />

a man opened his car<br />

door, placed a hand on<br />

his shoulder and told him<br />

not to drop weights in the<br />

gym at 8:43 p.m.<br />

March 18<br />

• Lori Knoth, 56, of Northfield,<br />

was charged with<br />

driving under the influence<br />

of alcohol and driving under<br />

the influence (BAC<br />

.08 or more) at 12:28 a.m.<br />

after a traffic crash investigation<br />

in the 1700 block of<br />

Jefferson Avenue.<br />

• A wallet went missing<br />

at 10:17 a.m. in the 1300<br />

block of Somerset Drive.<br />

The reported loss is $150.<br />

• Someone visited a resident’s<br />

home and asked to<br />

check the water at 3:18<br />

p.m. in the 1100 block<br />

of Bette Lane. While the<br />

resident was distracted,<br />

another individual entered<br />

the house and stole $1,000<br />

in cash.<br />

• An unknown person<br />

called the police and said<br />

someone had a gun in<br />

the 2000 block of Tower<br />

Drive at 3:38 p.m. The<br />

call was determined to be<br />

a prank.<br />

• Clothing was stolen<br />

from a store at 5:01 p.m.<br />

in the 1900 block of Tower<br />

Drive. The reported<br />

loss is $36.<br />

• A customer made obscene<br />

gestures at 6:28<br />

p.m. in the 2400 block of<br />

Willow Road.<br />

• A cellphone was lost at a<br />

restaurant at 10:26 p.m. in<br />

the 500 block of Waukegan<br />

Road. The reported<br />

loss is $400.<br />

March 17<br />

• Jose Luis Ubano-Montes,<br />

48, of Glenview, was<br />

charged with driving<br />

with a suspended license,<br />

speeding and disobeying<br />

a traffic control light<br />

at 12:20 a.m. in the 1600<br />

block of East Lake Avenue.<br />

• Aragon Nunez Oscar,<br />

42, of Glenview, was<br />

charged with driving with<br />

a suspended license and<br />

no rear registration light<br />

at 1:04 a.m. in the 2600<br />

block of Shermer Road.<br />

• Donna Syverson, 57,<br />

of Chicago, was charged<br />

with driving under the influence<br />

of alcohol, driving<br />

under the influence (BAC<br />

.08 or more) and improper<br />

lane usage at 7:20 p.m.<br />

after a traffic crash investigation<br />

in the 1600 block<br />

of Patriot Boulevard.<br />

• Mary Janoski, 79, of<br />

Northfield, was charged<br />

with driving under the<br />

influence of alcohol and<br />

failure to signal when required<br />

at 7:45 p.m. in the<br />

200 block of Waukegan<br />

Road.<br />

• A resident’s name and<br />

address were used to have<br />

a stop put on mail delivery<br />

at 3:10 p.m.<br />

• A resident harassed another<br />

resident at 6:16 p.m.<br />

in the 1400 block of Patriot<br />

Boulevard.<br />

March 16<br />

• Alcohol was stolen<br />

from a store at 6 p.m. in<br />

the 2200 block of Willow<br />

Road. The reported loss is<br />

$72.98.<br />

• Derogatory and threatening<br />

statement were<br />

made about a resident via<br />

social media at 11:22 a.m.<br />

March 15<br />

• Money was stolen from<br />

a patron’s wallet at 2:54<br />

p.m. in the 3800 block of<br />

Willow Road. The reported<br />

loss is $190.<br />

• An iPad went missing<br />

at 3:25 p.m. in the 1700<br />

block of Sunset Ridge<br />

Road. The reported loss is<br />

$600.<br />

March 14<br />

• Packages of razor blades<br />

were stolen from a display<br />

at 9:25 a.m. in the 100<br />

block of Waukegan Road.<br />

The reported loss is $180.<br />

• A resident’s personal<br />

information was used to<br />

fraudulently open a credit<br />

line at 12:23 p.m. There is<br />

no reported loss.<br />

• A guest made rude comments<br />

while dressed only<br />

in underwear at 3:16 p.m.<br />

in the 1400 block of Milwaukee<br />

Avenue.<br />

March 13<br />

• A driver was yelling at<br />

another driver about his<br />

driving at 12:09 p.m. in<br />

the parking lot at 2900<br />

block of Patriot Boulevard.<br />

• Property was stolen<br />

from inside a house after<br />

the culprit broke through<br />

a window at 1:26 p.m. in<br />

the 600 block of Forest<br />

Road. The reported loss is<br />

$3,000.<br />

• A necklace went missing<br />

after it was left at a business<br />

at 5:15 p.m. in the<br />

1400 block of Waukegan<br />

Road. The reported loss is<br />

$250.<br />

EDITOR’S NOTE: The<br />

Glenview Lantern’s Police<br />

Reports are compiled from<br />

official reports found on<br />

file at the Glenview Police<br />

Department headquarters in<br />

Glenview. Individuals named<br />

in these reports are considered<br />

innocent of all charges<br />

until proven guilty in a court<br />

of law.<br />

THE LAKE FOREST LEADER<br />

Plan commission prohibits<br />

short-term rentals<br />

In a special meeting on<br />

Monday, March 19, the<br />

Lake Bluff Plan Commission<br />

and Zoning Board of<br />

Appeals came to a 4-3 decision<br />

for an ordinance to<br />

prohibit short-term rentals<br />

in the village. The Lake<br />

Bluff Board of Trustees,<br />

met on March 12, and<br />

reached a 3-3 split vote on<br />

the issue and sent it back<br />

to the PCZBA for their<br />

recommendation.<br />

PCZBA’s vote followed<br />

a public hearing and board<br />

discussion on the matter,<br />

which they noted first<br />

came to their attention in<br />

April 2017 and has divided<br />

Lake Bluff since then.<br />

The meeting began<br />

with Glen Cole, assistant<br />

to the village administrator,<br />

explaining that the<br />

commission had two decisions<br />

before them. One<br />

was whether to support an<br />

ordinance for a two-year<br />

pilot program for shortterm<br />

rentals or to support<br />

an ordinance prohibiting<br />

the operation of short-term<br />

rentals. If the Commission<br />

voted in favor of the<br />

two-year pilot program,<br />

it would give input on lot<br />

size requirements and intensity<br />

of use and life safety<br />

requirements.<br />

Ultimately, this vote is<br />

only a recommendation,<br />

and the Board of Trustees<br />

will make the binding decision<br />

on the ordinances.<br />

“This issue has become<br />

a runaway train in this village,”<br />

said board member<br />

Gary Peters, who noted<br />

his concerns about safety<br />

issues and the impact on<br />

property values if shortterm<br />

rentals are allowed.<br />

Reporting by Katie Copenhaver,<br />

Freelance Reporter.<br />

Full story at LakeForestLeader.com.<br />

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

Culture and charisma:<br />

Mexican folk dancers<br />

educate Glencoe youth<br />

South School students<br />

in first and second grade<br />

stepped away from their<br />

desks March 21 for a reallife<br />

lesson on culture and<br />

tradition.<br />

Students gathered in<br />

the gym for a colorful<br />

assembly featuring Ballet<br />

Folkorico Nacional<br />

— Mexican folk dancers<br />

who brought tradition,<br />

art, culture and history<br />

center stage. According to<br />

the group’s website, every<br />

performance, including<br />

Glencoe’s last week,<br />

brings dazzling costumes<br />

and colorful depictions of<br />

Mexico’s diverse culture<br />

and folklore. The group<br />

from Milwaukee offers an<br />

array of dances from different<br />

regions of Mexico.<br />

Ballet Folkorico was<br />

comprised of two folk<br />

dancers, Angelica Escamilla<br />

and Leyla Orozco,<br />

and Javier Escamilla, the<br />

2002 World Champion<br />

Trick Roper. Together,<br />

they traded off stage time<br />

to perform dances and<br />

tricks while featuring different<br />

Mexico regions.<br />

As a district, cultural<br />

and fine arts opportunities<br />

like this are highly valued,<br />

said Kelly Zonghetti, principal<br />

of South School.<br />

“The assembly today<br />

helps us to foster a community<br />

of well-rounded<br />

students with a love for<br />

learning and the arts,” she<br />

added.<br />

The special assembly<br />

was brought to the school<br />

by the Glencoe PTO. To<br />

learn more or to donate,<br />

visit www.glencoepto.org/<br />

spring-appeal.<br />

Reporting by Megan Bernard,<br />

Contributing Editor.<br />

Full story at GlencoeAnchor.<br />

com.


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12 | March 29, 2018 | The glenview lantern news<br />

glenviewlantern.com<br />

In Memoriam<br />

Former Loyola Academy coach,<br />

hall-of-famer suddenly dies<br />

Rebora was an ‘amazing<br />

teacher’ at GBN<br />

Alan P. Henry, Freelance Reporter<br />

“Quality is the<br />

result of discipline,”<br />

Loyola<br />

Academy Hallof-Famer<br />

Mark<br />

Rebora liked to<br />

tell his students<br />

over the course of Rebora<br />

his teaching and<br />

coaching career at Glenbrook<br />

North High School.<br />

That dedication to nurturing<br />

competitive drive and a strong<br />

sense of personal responsibility<br />

earned Rebora the deep respect<br />

and admiration of students and<br />

faculty alike, and was recalled<br />

with great fondness when word<br />

of his sudden death March 18<br />

spread throughout the school<br />

community.<br />

The 57-year-old Glen Ellyn<br />

resident suffered a fatal heart attack<br />

while riding his bike March<br />

18.<br />

Rebora attended Loyola, where<br />

he played football and wrestled<br />

for the Ramblers. In 2003, he was<br />

inducted into the school’s Hall of<br />

Fame. He continued wrestling at<br />

Cornell College in Iowa, then enjoyed<br />

a stint as a member of the<br />

United States wrestling team as it<br />

toured around Europe competing<br />

against teams from other countries.<br />

He also won a third-place<br />

finish in the Olympic trials.<br />

He began his coaching career<br />

at Gordon Tech and then moved<br />

on to Loyola. In 1992, after 10<br />

years at those schools, Rebora<br />

was hired as a physical education<br />

teacher by GBN. He was<br />

also named head coach of the<br />

winter wrestling team, a position<br />

he held through 2013.<br />

“Mark Rebora was an amazing<br />

teacher, coach and mentor<br />

who was very close to many of<br />

our students and staff,” GBN<br />

Principal Dr. John L. Finan said.<br />

“He was a strong fitness advocate<br />

and an extremely positive<br />

influence within in the P.E. and<br />

athletic departments. Not only<br />

did he preach about the importance<br />

of fitness, he lived it each<br />

day by working out with his<br />

students. Mr. Rebora worked<br />

tirelessly to help all students<br />

and athletes reach their personal<br />

goals. His passing is a tragic loss<br />

to our school. He will be deeply<br />

missed and long remembered by<br />

the GBN community.”<br />

In a 2012 interview with the<br />

GBN paper, the Torch, Rebora<br />

talked about his 40-year passion<br />

for wrestling.<br />

“I’ve always tried to encourage<br />

[a competitive spirit] with<br />

my wrestlers,” Rebora said.<br />

“High school sports are definitely<br />

competitive, and being<br />

the best you can be is going to<br />

make you a better person in the<br />

long run, both socially and in<br />

terms of a competitive nature.<br />

Our society is very competitive,<br />

but if they get that competitive<br />

edge from high school athletics,<br />

they can be successful in whatever<br />

endeavors they choose.”<br />

He also began coaching the<br />

boys water polo team in 2002,<br />

when it had only 10 players, and<br />

over the following 15 years built<br />

it into a popular sport. He noted<br />

in an interview in last year’s<br />

Torch that even though he had<br />

lost 14 players from the previous<br />

year’s team, he still had enough<br />

to field a competitive team.<br />

In addition to wresting and<br />

boys water polo, Rebora was<br />

assistant football coach since<br />

2014, head freshman football<br />

coach from 1997-2014 and head<br />

sophomore coach from 1992-<br />

1997. Rebora was also head<br />

coach of the girls water polo<br />

team from 1999-2002.<br />

As word of Rebora’s death<br />

Please see memoriam, 20<br />

Eric DeGrechie (center), editor of The Wilmette Beacon and managing editor of 22nd Century Media’s North<br />

Shore branch, shares insight into how nonprofits can expand their coverage at The Volunteer Center’s Meet<br />

Your Press Event March 21 at the Winnetka Community House. JACQUELINE <strong>GL</strong>OSNIAK/22ND CENTURY MEDIA<br />

Building publicity partnership<br />

22CM joins local media<br />

in sharing resources<br />

with local nonprofits<br />

Jacqueline Glosniak<br />

Contributing Editor<br />

When local readers flip through<br />

any of 22nd Century Media’s<br />

seven North Shore newspapers,<br />

they expect to see a variety of<br />

stories, from village meetings<br />

and school board updates to business<br />

profiles and sports features<br />

and everything in between.<br />

But while municipalities,<br />

school districts and businesses<br />

may have dedicated staffers and<br />

years of experience collaborating<br />

with media outlets, smaller entities<br />

may be left wondering about<br />

the most effective methods for<br />

sharing events and unique stories<br />

for the eyes of thousands.<br />

That’s where Winnetka-based<br />

The Volunteer Center stepped in,<br />

offering its fifth Meet Your Press<br />

event March 21 at the Winnetka<br />

Community House, 620 Lincoln<br />

Ave. in Winnetka.<br />

The networking event, which<br />

featured representatives from<br />

22nd Century Media, JWC Media,<br />

Make It Better, Modern<br />

Luxury, Chicago Tribune and<br />

Winnetka Living, offered leaders<br />

from dozens of North Shore<br />

nonprofits the chance to speak<br />

directly with local media leaders,<br />

learning about the process behind<br />

their publications and talking<br />

through the best avenues for<br />

enhancing visibility and increasing<br />

awareness of their groups.<br />

The event, which was first held<br />

in 2011 and 2012, was resurrected<br />

again last year in response to<br />

recent changes across the media<br />

landscape.<br />

“The Meet Your Press event<br />

that was sponsored by The Volunteer<br />

Center and the Winnetka<br />

Community House was an important<br />

training program designed<br />

to provide best practices<br />

to nonprofits in the northeast<br />

metro Chicago area to gain media<br />

coverage,” said Barb Tubekis,<br />

executive director of The<br />

Volunteer Center. “As nonprofits<br />

struggle to get their voices heard<br />

in the communities they serve,<br />

this was a critical educational<br />

event that will put them in front<br />

of their target audiences.”<br />

Eric DeGrechie, editor of The<br />

Lantern’s sister publication, The<br />

Wilmette Beacon, and managing<br />

editor of 22nd Century Media’s<br />

North Shore branch, briefed nonprofit<br />

leaders on daily operations<br />

of 22nd Century Media publications<br />

and the importance of<br />

teaming up with local groups of<br />

all sizes.<br />

“We have the seven newspapers<br />

as mentioned here in the<br />

North Shore and all of our papers<br />

are hyperlocal,” DeGrechie said.<br />

“When you open one of our papers<br />

with the name of the village<br />

on the front and you start flipping<br />

through the pages, the stories are<br />

centered on that community.<br />

Though we branch out a little,<br />

we really try to focus in on those<br />

communities.”<br />

After sharing a breakdown of<br />

the publication schedule for the<br />

North Shore papers, DeGrechie<br />

answered audience questions<br />

about company deadlines and<br />

the most effective ways to send<br />

in thorough press releases and<br />

photos about events.<br />

“Make sure that you really get<br />

that local hook to us, let us understand<br />

why this is important to<br />

us,” he said. “We like to think of<br />

[22nd Century Media and you]<br />

as a partnership, and we can<br />

definitely work with you to make<br />

sure you get in our publications.”<br />

Overall, Tubekis said she<br />

hoped that year two of bringing<br />

back the Meet Your Press<br />

program proved helpful for area<br />

groups.<br />

“As many nonprofits will say,<br />

‘The worst thing we can hear is<br />

that we are the best kept secret,’”<br />

she said. “Our hope is that we<br />

helped them try to solve that.”


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14 | March 29, 2018 | The glenview lantern sound off<br />

glenviewlantern.com<br />

Letters to the Editor<br />

Railroad impacts in<br />

Glenview<br />

Amtrack is currently<br />

proposing to increase the<br />

frequency of trains to and<br />

from Milwaukee. What is<br />

the impact?<br />

Currently, railroads are<br />

causing significant environmental<br />

impacts in Glenview.<br />

These are primarily<br />

in the form of pollution<br />

and public health impact,<br />

but also traffic congestion,<br />

noise and vibration. Until<br />

now, the impacts have<br />

been mostly unregulated as<br />

the track owners and users<br />

have been able to do what<br />

they want within the railroad<br />

rights of way.<br />

Now, federal funds are<br />

being requested. This<br />

changes the rules that apply.<br />

When large amounts of<br />

federal funds are involved,<br />

environmental aspects<br />

must be evaluated. The<br />

proposal must include an<br />

assessment of environmental<br />

impacts. The assessments<br />

are prepared by the<br />

entity proposing the project<br />

and are usually said to<br />

be favorable.<br />

The federal agency reviewing<br />

the assessment<br />

must decide whether there<br />

will be “significant environmental<br />

impacts.” If<br />

there are, then the agency<br />

must prepare an environmental<br />

impact statement<br />

(EIS). There are very specific<br />

requirements for an<br />

EIS, including a full assessment<br />

of alternatives<br />

together with full information<br />

and public involvement.<br />

The environmental impact<br />

on downtown Glenview<br />

and on neighborhoods<br />

on the west side<br />

have been increasing for<br />

years due to unregulated<br />

increases in passenger<br />

and freight traffic. Amtrack<br />

trains stopping in the<br />

downtown area cause prolonged<br />

gate closures with<br />

related traffic delays and<br />

pollution. The increasing<br />

number of idling and slowly<br />

accelerating freights<br />

cause increased pollution,<br />

noise and vibration together<br />

with added gate closures<br />

on West Lake Avenue.<br />

The proposed project<br />

would firmly establish<br />

those impacts and enable<br />

far more.<br />

Improved Amtrack service<br />

is a desirable thing,<br />

but environmental impacts<br />

must be addressed. Impacts<br />

on downtown could<br />

be mitigated by moving the<br />

Amtrack stop north to The<br />

Glen station, where there is<br />

no traffic conflict. As to the<br />

new holding track, moving<br />

some or all of the freight<br />

further west seems an obvious<br />

solution that must be<br />

considered, even if it is less<br />

profitable.<br />

The best, and required,<br />

way to address these issues<br />

is for the Federal Railroad<br />

Administration to acknowledge<br />

that the project<br />

will cause significant environmental<br />

impacts and to<br />

prepare an environmental<br />

impact statement.<br />

The next step is a public<br />

presentation of an expansion<br />

of the original<br />

inadequate environmental<br />

assessment. The Federal<br />

Railroad Administration<br />

will then make a decision<br />

as to whether to prepare an<br />

EIS, which they appear to<br />

be trying to avoid.<br />

Watch for the meeting<br />

date.<br />

Kent Fuller,<br />

US EPA retired,<br />

Glenview resident<br />

Understanding the walkout<br />

from a broader perspective<br />

On March 14 of this<br />

year, students of District<br />

225 participated in the nationwide<br />

walkout in an effort<br />

to both commemorate<br />

the lives lost in Parkland,<br />

Fla., a month before, as<br />

well as bring awareness to<br />

the issue of gun violence in<br />

the United States.<br />

Being a part of this<br />

walkout had an incredibly<br />

profound impact on me,<br />

but the discussion that was<br />

held in my English class<br />

afterward was truly eyeopening.<br />

Being able to hear<br />

the opinions of my peers<br />

and how the walkout impacted<br />

them allowed me to<br />

understand the event from<br />

a broader perspective.<br />

We discussed how the<br />

walkout made us realize<br />

that those students in<br />

Parkland weren’t very<br />

different from ourselves.<br />

In fact, as I talked about<br />

the walkout to a friend of<br />

mine, he said the walkout<br />

was “one of the most difficult<br />

things he’s ever had<br />

to do” because listening to<br />

the dreams and aspirations<br />

of those 17 children caused<br />

him to realize how similar<br />

he was to them.<br />

So, while we never really<br />

anticipate such events<br />

happening to us, the unfortunate<br />

reality is that we<br />

never know, and I think the<br />

walkout brought this to the<br />

attention of many students.<br />

But the most important<br />

portion of our discussion<br />

centered around the imminent<br />

need for change, how<br />

gun violence doesn’t need<br />

to be a partisan issue.<br />

We agree that school<br />

shootings must come to an<br />

end, but the difficulty lies in<br />

how to do so. In this way,<br />

I think that the walkout<br />

was incredibly powerful,<br />

demonstrating to lawmakers<br />

and those on Capitol<br />

Hill that the students of this<br />

country will not tolerate<br />

feeling unsafe at school.<br />

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glenviewlantern.com sound off<br />

the glenview lantern | March 29, 2018 | 15<br />

Social snapshot<br />

Top Web Stories<br />

From GlenviewLantern.com,<br />

as of March 26<br />

1. Former Loyola Academy coach, hall-offamer<br />

suddenly dies<br />

2. Coach Talk: Fire and ice return for Titan<br />

lacrosse<br />

3. Police Reports: Man fondles self at<br />

Techny Basin<br />

4. Park District referendum passes with twothirds<br />

majority<br />

5. D225 sends conflicting messages on<br />

student walkout<br />

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

GBS National Art Honors Society<br />

members recently hosted two Arts in the<br />

Community workshops for children in<br />

grades K-6.<br />

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

#Spring is calling, and it’s telling you to go be<br />

one with nature. Answer the call by visiting one<br />

of Glenview Park District’s many walking trails<br />

today! #glenviewpkdist #glenview #outdoors<br />

#outdoorsy #walk<br />

@GlenviewPkDist tweeted on March 21.<br />

Follow The Glenview Lantern: @glenviewlantern<br />

go figure<br />

17<br />

A<br />

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

two-thirds majority of voters<br />

passed the Glenview Park<br />

District’s $17 million bond<br />

referendum, Page 3<br />

From The Editor<br />

Get your news<br />

when you want it<br />

CHRIS PULLAM<br />

chris@glenviewlantern.com<br />

In the top-left corner<br />

of this page, only an<br />

inch from these very<br />

words, is a weekly tidbit<br />

of information that haunts<br />

my dreams.<br />

Top Web Stories only<br />

takes five seconds to<br />

compile. I simply copy<br />

and paste the headlines<br />

from the corresponding<br />

feature on The Lantern’s<br />

website every Monday<br />

morning. But, it serves as<br />

a medium for competition<br />

between Sports Editor<br />

Michal Dwojak and I for<br />

the other 604,795 seconds<br />

of the week.<br />

The prize: bragging<br />

rights. Basically, The<br />

Lantern’s website tracks<br />

the amount of post clicks,<br />

and the column on the<br />

right-hand side of the<br />

page lists our most popular<br />

stories. If most of the<br />

stories are from News and<br />

L&A, I win. If most are<br />

from Sports, Michal wins.<br />

I’ll even claim victory if I<br />

hold the top two spots but<br />

Michal holds the bottom<br />

three spots.<br />

At the end of the day,<br />

we work on the same<br />

team toward the same<br />

goal. But there’s nothing<br />

wrong with a little<br />

healthy competition.<br />

If you look at Top<br />

Web Stories in this issue,<br />

you’ll see four stories<br />

from News and one from<br />

Sports. So I win. Sorry<br />

Michal.<br />

Although, I will admit<br />

that Sports has dominated<br />

those spots for the<br />

past couple weeks, with<br />

three of our area hockey<br />

teams working their ways<br />

through the playoffs.<br />

But I digress. Enough<br />

about us.<br />

Let’s get to the main<br />

reason I wanted to write<br />

about Top Web Stories.<br />

If you take a look at<br />

that list, three of those<br />

stories appear in this<br />

issue of The Lantern.<br />

That’s pretty standard,<br />

but it also means a lot<br />

of Glenview residents<br />

saw those stories online<br />

before the print publication<br />

arrived in their<br />

mailboxes.<br />

While I admit that<br />

I prefer reading print<br />

newspapers (and books),<br />

Don’t just<br />

list your<br />

real estate<br />

property...<br />

Sell It!<br />

With a Classified Ad<br />

there’s definitely a value<br />

in seeing news sooner<br />

rather than later. And<br />

although The Lantern<br />

has found success as a<br />

weekly, there are a few<br />

obvious drawbacks to that<br />

business model.<br />

The most obvious, in<br />

my opinion, is the fact<br />

that something that happens<br />

on Monday, March<br />

26, a few days before<br />

you started reading this<br />

column, won’t appear in<br />

print until Thursday, April<br />

5. That’s a whopping nine<br />

or 10 days. Luckily, we<br />

post our stories online as<br />

soon as we have them,<br />

meaning you could read<br />

the April 5 issue’s News<br />

Cover Story more then a<br />

week before it arrives in<br />

your mailbox.<br />

All you have to do is<br />

visit GlenviewLantern.<br />

com. Better yet, follow us<br />

on Facebook or Twitter<br />

and we will basically tell<br />

you which stories you<br />

should read to stay in<br />

touch with the Glenview<br />

community.<br />

Now, our website is<br />

subscriber-based, meaning<br />

you need to pay in<br />

order to read our online<br />

content, but access for<br />

one month costs only<br />

about the same as a coffee.<br />

letters<br />

From Page 14<br />

While party divisions<br />

will always exist, the notion<br />

that children may not<br />

always feel comfortable<br />

at school is one that must<br />

be dispelled immediately,<br />

regardless of which party<br />

maintains a majority of<br />

seats in Congress. While<br />

neither I nor my classroom<br />

can speak for the entirety<br />

of students in Glenview, I<br />

think it is safe to say that<br />

change is necessary, and<br />

we won’t sit idly.<br />

Although not all of the<br />

kids at our schools participated,<br />

the need for safety<br />

in schools applies to each<br />

and every one of us, and I<br />

think that, in this way, the<br />

walkouts around the nation<br />

demonstrated our will to<br />

make this a reality.<br />

Sincerely,<br />

Aditya Bhalla<br />

Glenbrook South junior<br />

The Glenview<br />

Lantern<br />

Sound Off Policy<br />

Editorials and columns are the<br />

opinions of the author. Pieces<br />

from 22nd Century Media are<br />

the thoughts of the company as<br />

a whole. The Glenview Lantern<br />

encourages readers to write letters<br />

to Sound Off. All letters must be<br />

signed, and names and hometowns<br />

will be published. We also ask that<br />

writers include their address and<br />

phone number for verification,<br />

not publication. Letters should be<br />

limited to 400 words. The Glenview<br />

Lantern reserves the right to edit<br />

letters. Letters become property<br />

of The Glenview Lantern. Letters<br />

that are published do not reflect<br />

the thoughts and views of The<br />

Glenview Lantern. Letters can<br />

be mailed to: The Glenview<br />

Lantern, 60 Revere Drive ST 888,<br />

Northbrook, IL, 60062. Fax letters<br />

to (847) 272-4648 or email to<br />

chris@glenviewlantern.com.<br />

www.glenviewlantern.com<br />

See the Classified<br />

Section for<br />

more info, or call<br />

708.326.9170<br />

22ndCenturyMedia.com


16 | March 29, 2018 | The glenview lantern glenview<br />

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good decision. We love her!<br />

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Sharon couldn’t have been more helpful<br />

or kind while my wife and Isearched<br />

for ahome in Glenview and the<br />

surrounding cities.<br />

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She was very patient and really<br />

listened to what we liked in<br />

homes and didn’t like so that she<br />

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She explained what we needed<br />

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She was very<br />

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Besides being agreat agent, Sharon is a<br />

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with ahome purchase or sale.<br />

Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage | 1925 Cherry Lane | Northbrook, IL 60062<br />

Real estate agents affiliated with Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage are independent contractor agents and are not employees of the Company. ©2018 Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage. All Rights Reserved. Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage fully supports the principles of the Fair Housing<br />

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

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the glenview lantern | March 29, 2018 | GlenviewLantern.com<br />

Walkin’ down Bourbon street<br />

Bourbon Kitchen and Tap brings new flavors to Glenview,<br />

Page 23<br />

D30 students<br />

take on musical<br />

comedy<br />

inspired by<br />

popular comic<br />

strip, Page 19<br />

Maple School student Ben Witzel, playing Linus Van Pelt, hugs a blanket during the school’s performance of “You’re a Good Man, Charlie Brown” on March 16. PHOTO SUBMITTED


18 | March 29, 2018 | The glenview lantern puzzles<br />

glenviewlantern.com<br />

north shore puzzler CROSSWORD & Sudoku<br />

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

Crossword by Myles Mellor and Cindy LaFleur<br />

Across<br />

1. US women’s soccer<br />

star Mia<br />

5. Wire service<br />

(abbr.)<br />

8. Every 24 hours...<br />

13. Michigan lake<br />

14. Neighbor of<br />

Bulg.<br />

15. Crew member<br />

16. Building extensions<br />

17. Solicitors<br />

19. Indian tribe<br />

that lived in the<br />

North Shore area<br />

21. Board place<br />

22. Naval rank:<br />

abbr.<br />

23. Goes with 500<br />

for very successful<br />

companies<br />

25. Demolition<br />

debris<br />

29. Blend<br />

30. Wood sorrel<br />

33. Considering<br />

everything<br />

34. Observed<br />

36. Less ruddy<br />

37. Suffix with<br />

glycer-<br />

38. Stick-on<br />

39. Got bigger<br />

41. Wipe off the<br />

board<br />

42. Bake sale org.<br />

43. Is bedridden<br />

44. Entangler<br />

45. “Agnus ___”<br />

46. Show ___<br />

47. Taken advantage<br />

of<br />

51. Activity at the<br />

Trantina Farm<br />

57. Family entertainment<br />

59. Rent followers<br />

60. Enter cautiously<br />

61. Fawn’s mother<br />

62. Surrender<br />

63. Trite sentimentality<br />

64. Responder<br />

trained in CPR<br />

65. Notorious London<br />

gangster<br />

Down<br />

1. Dickens’s Uriah<br />

2. “Last train” singer,<br />

Guthrie<br />

3. Looney Tune’s composer,<br />

__ Franklin<br />

4. Table, geographically<br />

5. Polished<br />

6. Burns and Allen, e.g.<br />

7. The Pointer Sisters’<br />

“___ Excited”<br />

8. One of Snow White’s<br />

dwarves<br />

9. Sounds of contentment<br />

10. Parisian thought<br />

11. Former Italian coin<br />

12. Tomorrow’s opposite,<br />

abbr.<br />

15. Check<br />

18. Put out<br />

20. Knowledgeable<br />

24. Sideboard<br />

25. Lay into<br />

26. Unskilled<br />

27. Exceedingly light<br />

wood<br />

28. Made, a bubble<br />

29. Meal extras<br />

30. Designer de la<br />

Renta<br />

31. Shut down<br />

32. Grace, of Will and<br />

Grace<br />

34. Frank Lloyd<br />

Wright House in<br />

Highland Park<br />

35. Antitoxins<br />

40. “Telling __ America”<br />

‘97 Bacon film<br />

44. Official seal<br />

46. Shrub with yellow<br />

flowers<br />

47. People for whom a<br />

state is named<br />

48. A-line line<br />

49. Joy’s “Born Free”<br />

lioness<br />

50. Does and bucks<br />

52. Right-hand person<br />

53. “An Officer and a<br />

Gentleman” hero<br />

54. “Happy Birthday”<br />

writer<br />

55. Zip<br />

56. Neutral color<br />

58. Kick<br />

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

Johnny’s Kitchen<br />

(1740 Milwaukee Ave.<br />

(847) 699-9999)<br />

■7:30 ■ p.m. every Friday<br />

and Saturday: Live<br />

Music<br />

The Rock House<br />

(1742 Glenview Road<br />

(224) 616-3062)<br />

■6 ■ p.m. Friday, March<br />

30: Family Night and<br />

Karaoke<br />

■10 ■ a.m. Saturday,<br />

March 31: Piper Phillips<br />

Acoustic<br />

■8 ■ p.m. Saturday,<br />

March 31: 3rd Sunday<br />

String Band<br />

■10 ■ a.m. Sunday, April<br />

1: Owen Hemming<br />

■Noon, ■ Sunday, April 1:<br />

Sean Heffernan<br />

Oil Lamp Theater<br />

(1723 Glenview Road,<br />

(847) 834-0738)<br />

■Through ■ April 8:<br />

‘Mass Appeal’<br />

Curragh Irish Pub<br />

(1800 Tower Drive,<br />

(847) 998-1100)<br />

■7:30 ■ p.m. every<br />

Wednesday: Trivia<br />

LAKE BLUFF<br />

Lake Bluff Brewing<br />

Company<br />

(16 E. Scranton Ave.<br />

(224) 544-5179)<br />

■6-9 ■ p.m. Monday,<br />

April 9: Trivia Night<br />

NORTHBROOK<br />

Northbrook Theatre<br />

(3323 Walters Ave.<br />

(847) 291-2367)<br />

■5 ■ p.m. Saturday, April<br />

7: ‘Doo-Wop Red Riding<br />

Hood’<br />

■1 ■ p.m. Sunday, April<br />

8: ‘Doo-Wop Red Riding<br />

Hood’<br />

Pinstripes<br />

(1150 Willow Road,<br />

(847) 480-2323)<br />

■From ■ open until close<br />

all week: bowling<br />

<strong>GL</strong>ENCOE<br />

Writers Theatre<br />

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

242-6000)<br />

■Through ■ June 10:<br />

‘Smart People’<br />

To place an event in The<br />

Scene, email chris@GlenviewLantern.com<br />

answers<br />

How to play Sudoku<br />

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

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

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

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

1 to 9.<br />

LEVEL: Medium<br />

Crossword by Myles Mellor and Susan Flanagan


glenviewlantern.com life & arts<br />

the glenview lantern | March 29, 2018 | 19<br />

‘You’re a Good Man, Charlie Brown’ rocks Maple School<br />

Nathan Worcester<br />

Freelance Reporter<br />

As the curtains began to close<br />

after Maple School’s production<br />

of the school drama mainstay<br />

“You’re a Good Man, Charlie<br />

Brown” on March 16, a full<br />

house of guests delivered a rousing<br />

ovation.<br />

The play, which explores<br />

whether or not Charlie Brown is,<br />

in fact, a “good man,” consists of<br />

linked vignettes and high-energy<br />

musical numbers based on Charles<br />

Schulz’s “Peanuts” comic strip.<br />

Actors and actresses playing<br />

Charlie Brown, Linus Van<br />

Pelt, Lucy Van Pelt, Peppermint<br />

Patty, Snoopy and other classic<br />

characters sang, danced and<br />

delivered one-liners against a<br />

colorful backdrop reminiscent of<br />

Schulz’s own art.<br />

The production, which ran<br />

March 15-16, reflected the concerted<br />

efforts of numerous students,<br />

faculty and staff — which<br />

included members from other<br />

schools and districts.<br />

Parent Dr. Mohit Agarwal,<br />

whose seventh-grader Eashna<br />

Agarwal played Peppermint<br />

Patty, praised the school for<br />

ensuring that the cast included<br />

a spread of children from all<br />

grades within the school.<br />

“They’ve been putting all this<br />

effort for a few months now,”<br />

Agarwal said. “It’s really exciting<br />

for us, and I’m sure it is<br />

for them, because they’ve been<br />

working hard for it.”<br />

Attendees of the production<br />

included District 30 Superintendent<br />

Dr. Brian Wegley, who had<br />

already seen the preview of the<br />

show staged for fifth-graders.<br />

“Our kids are incredibly talented<br />

and energetic, and I’m<br />

proud of the hard work they<br />

put into it and excited to see it<br />

again,” Wegley said.<br />

Maple School student Alex McGarry, playing Charlie Brown,<br />

performs a scene in “You’re a Good Man, Charlie Brown!” on March<br />

16 at the school. PHOTO SUBMITTED<br />

Producer Debbie Hickey, who<br />

normally works with sixth-graders<br />

in the school, explained that<br />

the show grew out of meetings<br />

with administrators in September<br />

and with parents in November.<br />

The cast was put together<br />

after auditions in late November,<br />

and increasingly intensive rehearsals<br />

began in January.<br />

Glenview cast members<br />

• Nikki Steffen, as Amy<br />

• Maia Abrahms, as Clara<br />

• Gwin Kinzler, as Emily<br />

• Judy Marsh, as Eudora<br />

• Lauren Vuong, as Pigpen<br />

• Sarah Sommer, as Franklin<br />

• Katie Sander, as Frieda<br />

• Samantha Glaser, as Helen<br />

• Mimi Solomon, as Loretta<br />

• Sloan Greenfield, as Linus<br />

Van Pelt<br />

• Victoria Caputa, as Marcie<br />

• Sunny Wilkins, as Mary Jo<br />

• Michael Schick, as Roy<br />

• Sloane Shabelman, as Sally<br />

Brown<br />

• Emmy Kurcz, as Shirley<br />

• Olivia Thursby, as Violet<br />

“The neat thing is that [with]<br />

the sixth-graders, seventh-graders<br />

and the eighth-graders, you don’t<br />

know which is what grade because<br />

they intermix. The eighthgraders<br />

are in there now, giving<br />

kudos to the sixth-graders,”<br />

Hickey said. “The theater community<br />

is a unique community in<br />

and amongst itself. They are allinclusive.<br />

Anybody is welcome to<br />

be a part of it, and they have open<br />

arms and welcome you.”<br />

Full story at GlenviewLantern.com.<br />

Additional markdowns<br />

throughout the showroom during the<br />

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on distinctive designer samples for your home.<br />

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20 | March 29, 2018 | The glenview lantern faith<br />

glenviewlantern.com<br />

Faith Briefs<br />

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

Women Unwind<br />

Gather each Monday<br />

for a chance for women to<br />

connect socially. For more<br />

information, email jillb@<br />

glenviewnewchurch.org.<br />

Sunday Morning Sermon<br />

Discussion Circle<br />

Join this informal,<br />

weekly drop-in gathering<br />

in the auditorium after the<br />

9:30 a.m. service to spiritually<br />

connect and further<br />

discuss the sermon topic.<br />

For more information, visit<br />

glenviewnewchurch.org.<br />

Men’s Basketball<br />

The men of the parish<br />

are invited for pickup<br />

games for all skill levels<br />

at Penn Hall. Games<br />

take place from 7:45-9:30<br />

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

who are 18 years or older<br />

are welcome. For more<br />

information, visit glenviewnewchurch.org.<br />

Sts. Peter and Paul Greek Orthodox<br />

Church (1401 Wagner Road)<br />

Coffee Connection:<br />

Connecting in Faith and<br />

Fellowship<br />

The Coffee Connection<br />

group meets twice a month<br />

and is an educational ministry<br />

for adults that aims<br />

to strengthen knowledge<br />

and further practice of the<br />

Orthodox faith. Once all<br />

are gathered, participants<br />

will move into the adjacent<br />

room for a presentation<br />

and discussion on the<br />

day’s topic. The presentation<br />

is an opportunity to<br />

learn more about the faith,<br />

while the discussion emphasizes<br />

how to practice<br />

Orthodox traditions in<br />

everyday lives. For more<br />

information, visit www.<br />

ssppglenview.org.<br />

Parish Family Nights<br />

Join this opportunity for<br />

growth in faith, fellowship<br />

and fun for the entire family.<br />

The event includes dinner,<br />

crafts, activities and<br />

small group discussions<br />

over the course of an evening.<br />

The event gives the<br />

entire community a chance<br />

to come together while<br />

learning a little more about<br />

itself and faith. For more<br />

information, email mk@<br />

sspnglenview.org.<br />

St. David’s Episcopal Church (2410<br />

Glenview Road)<br />

Men’s Fellowship Group<br />

Join this weekly fellowship<br />

gathering open to all<br />

men of the parish with discussion,<br />

audio tapes and<br />

video tapes geared toward<br />

assisting the men of St.<br />

David’s in becoming better<br />

Christians, husbands<br />

and fathers. The one-hour<br />

meetings are held at 7:30<br />

a.m. every Saturday.<br />

New Horizons<br />

Join this monthly fellowship<br />

group for people<br />

who are retired or planning<br />

retirement. Meetings<br />

are held the fourth Thursday<br />

of each month, with<br />

various outside activities<br />

planned at restaurants and<br />

cultural/educational locations.<br />

North Branch Bible Church (3030<br />

Central Road)<br />

Bible Study<br />

Saturday Bible Study<br />

started 10 years ago and<br />

has carried on throughout<br />

the years. The group meets<br />

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

This in-depth study of<br />

scripture includes friendly<br />

discussion, sharing, fellowship<br />

and breakfast.<br />

For more information, call<br />

(847) 724-6912.<br />

Sunday Brunch<br />

Participants can enjoy<br />

brunch every third Sunday<br />

following the church<br />

service. For more information,<br />

visit www.northbranchbiblechurch.com.<br />

Finding New Hope and Joy<br />

in our Twilight Years<br />

Join every second and<br />

fourth Wednesday of the<br />

month to talk about how<br />

to stay active during the<br />

twilight years. The group<br />

meets at the Chestnut<br />

Square Retirement Village<br />

and the session starts<br />

at 7 p.m. For more information,<br />

visit www.northbranchbiblechurch.com.<br />

Our Lady of Perpetual Help (1775<br />

Grove St.)<br />

Men’s Spirituality Group<br />

The group meets from<br />

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

Saturday of the month<br />

in the Flavin Room. The<br />

group is geared toward<br />

male parishioners who<br />

have school-aged children.<br />

All are welcome to join in<br />

conversation and reflection.<br />

Gentle Yoga Class<br />

Join this group on the<br />

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

on Wednesday mornings<br />

in the Flavin Room. Donations<br />

are $10 per class,<br />

and all proceeds are forwarded<br />

to charity. Checks<br />

should be made out to<br />

Little By Little. Cash<br />

will also be accepted. For<br />

more information, contact<br />

Annie Unger at (847) 401-<br />

0162.<br />

SoulCore<br />

Join SoulCore leader<br />

Michelle McGowan to<br />

nourish body, mind and<br />

soul with SoulCore — a<br />

prayer experience that<br />

combines the prayers of<br />

the Rosary with corestrengthening,<br />

stretching<br />

and functional movement.<br />

No fitness level or experience<br />

is required. All are<br />

welcome. Weekly classes<br />

take place from 9:30-10:30<br />

a.m. on Fridays. Email<br />

Michelle McGowan to reserve<br />

a spot and confirm<br />

location. There is no cost,<br />

but a donation benefitting<br />

OLPH Parish is suggested.<br />

Visit soulcore.com for<br />

more information.<br />

Glenview United Methodist Church (727<br />

Harlem Ave.)<br />

Confirmation Class<br />

Confirmation class<br />

will meet from 5:30-7:30<br />

p.m. every Sunday. Confirmands<br />

will meet with<br />

GUMYouth for the first<br />

part of the evening, which<br />

includes games and a light<br />

meal, and then break off<br />

into classes. For more information,<br />

call (847) 729-<br />

1015.<br />

The Disciple Fast Track<br />

New Testament Bible<br />

Study<br />

The bible study will<br />

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

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

Sundays. Please call the<br />

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

1015 to register and order<br />

the study books. The book<br />

costs $15.<br />

Glenview Community Church (1000<br />

Elm St.)<br />

The Resale Shop<br />

All the profits from<br />

sales are distributed to<br />

local women and children<br />

charities. The store<br />

is open 9 a.m.-1 p.m. on<br />

Wednesday, Friday and<br />

Saturday and 9 a.m.-5 p.m<br />

on Thursday.<br />

Chancel Choir<br />

The Chancel Choir of<br />

the Glenview Community<br />

Church practices 7:30-<br />

9:15 p.m. every Thursday.<br />

The choir offers its<br />

musical gifts in worship<br />

on Sunday mornings and<br />

other special occasions.<br />

For more information,<br />

please visit www.gccucc.<br />

org or call (847) 724-<br />

2210.<br />

Submit information for The<br />

Lantern’s Faith page to<br />

Sports Editor Michal Dwojak<br />

at M.Dwojak@22ndcentury<br />

media.com. The deadline is<br />

noon on Thursday. Questions?<br />

Call (847) 272-4565<br />

ext. 26.<br />

memoriam<br />

From Page 12<br />

spread, many current and<br />

former students took to social<br />

media to express their<br />

gratitude for this talents as<br />

a teacher, coach and mentor.<br />

Eldon W. Bergstrom<br />

Eldon W. “Bill” Bergstrom,<br />

87, of Glenview,<br />

died March 1.<br />

He was the beloved husband<br />

of Judy; loving father<br />

of Stephen (Nicole), Liz<br />

Korniczky (Paul), Cindy<br />

Kipp (Scott) and Carrie Ragan<br />

(Creston); and proud<br />

grandfather of Grace, Paul,<br />

Amanda, Grant, Sloane,<br />

Davis, Whitaker and<br />

Beatrix.<br />

Bergstrom was born and<br />

raised in Evanston. He<br />

graduated from Evanston<br />

High School in 1949, University<br />

of Illinois Urbana-<br />

Champaign in 1953 and<br />

University of San Diego<br />

Law school in 1962. He<br />

served in the Air Force as a<br />

1st Lieutenant and pursued<br />

a career at the Continental<br />

Bank (Bank of America).<br />

Bergstrom will be remembered<br />

as an avid<br />

sportsman, in both hunting<br />

and fishing, and for his<br />

thoughtfulness and devotion<br />

to his family and his<br />

many friends.<br />

James P. Cummings<br />

James P. Cummings, 64,<br />

of Glenview, died March 2.<br />

He was the beloved and<br />

cherished son of the late<br />

Santa and George Cummings,<br />

and the dear cousin<br />

of many. He will also<br />

be missed greatly by his<br />

friends and the staff at Kiley<br />

Developmental Center<br />

in Waukegan.<br />

In lieu of flowers, memorials<br />

may be made to<br />

Friends of Ann Kiley Center,<br />

1401 W. Dugdale Road,<br />

Waukegan, IL 60085.<br />

Sheldon Wolfe<br />

Sheldon Wolfe, 87, of<br />

Glenview, died March 5.<br />

He was the beloved husband<br />

of the late Rochelle;<br />

loving father of Jody and<br />

Mark (both deceased); devoted<br />

step father of Jennifer<br />

Bitton and Jill Lowy;<br />

cherished grandfather of<br />

Jane Lowy, Adee Bitton,<br />

Noa Bitton, Ziv Bitton and<br />

Guy Bitton; and cousin to<br />

Marcia Spira, Ed Schwartz,<br />

Barbara Schwartz and Bobby<br />

Schwartz.<br />

Fond memories and<br />

expressions of sympathy<br />

may be shared at berkowitzkuminbookatzfunerals.com<br />

for the Wolfe<br />

family.<br />

Jeannette Dritz<br />

Jeannette Dritz (nee Albert),<br />

of Glenview, died.<br />

She recently celebrated<br />

her 100th birthday with<br />

all her family. She was an<br />

internationally acclaimed<br />

classical concert pianist;<br />

beloved wife for 65 years<br />

of the late Dr. Irwin Dritz;<br />

loving mother of Robert<br />

(Phyllis) Dritz, Neil (late<br />

Ruth) Dritz and Dr. Steven<br />

(Barbara) Dritz; adored<br />

Grandma Jeannette of Dr.<br />

Jay (Dr. Michelle) Dritz,<br />

Ruth (Dan) Levin, Josh<br />

(Emily) Dritz, Jeff (fiancée<br />

Gabi Sulman) Dritz, Lauren<br />

(Mike) Leach and Eric<br />

(Alana) Dritz; proud great<br />

grandmother of Hannah,<br />

Jonah, Jeremiah, Sarah,<br />

Hayden, Jaxon and Ellie;<br />

devoted daughter of the late<br />

Irving and the late Freda<br />

Albert; and the dear sister<br />

of the late Philip Albert<br />

and the late Manny (Rita)<br />

Albert.<br />

In lieu of flowers, contributions<br />

can be made<br />

to the charity of your<br />

choice.<br />

Have someone’s life you’d<br />

like to honor? Email Assistant<br />

Editor Michal Dwojak at<br />

M.Dwojak@22ndcentury<br />

media.com with information<br />

about a loved one who was<br />

part of the Glenview community.


glenviewlantern.com glenview<br />

the glenview lantern | March 29, 2018 | 21<br />

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FAVORITE MOVIE: The Shawshank Redemption<br />

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22 | March 29, 2018 | The glenview lantern glenview<br />

glenviewlantern.com<br />

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glenviewlantern.com dining out<br />

the glenview lantern | March 29, 2018 | 23<br />

Glenview eatery blends Southern, Midwest flavors<br />

Michael Wojtychiw<br />

Contributing Sports Editor<br />

When Delta Hotels<br />

opened in Glenview last<br />

April, it had a partner in<br />

crime starting up with it:<br />

Bourbon Kitchen and Tap.<br />

The hotel restaurant,<br />

nestled in the northwest<br />

corner of the lobby, brings<br />

in both locals and hotel<br />

guests alike.<br />

“We get good local support<br />

from the community,”<br />

said Michael Zwolinski,<br />

the hotel’s general manager.<br />

“We recently worked<br />

with Ten Ninety Brewing<br />

Company. We have loyal<br />

Marriott guests that are<br />

here, and their average<br />

stay might be three, four,<br />

five nights, so they might<br />

want to load up on something<br />

heavy one night, but<br />

we’ve mixed in some salads<br />

and lighter foods.”<br />

“The idea is for you to<br />

see a couple things on the<br />

menu you might really<br />

want and to have you come<br />

back a couple nights in a<br />

row,” said Matt Mockler,<br />

executive chef and food<br />

and beverage director.<br />

Mockler comes to Bourbon<br />

Kitchen and Tap with<br />

15 years experience as an<br />

executive chef for various<br />

hotels, owning a French<br />

bistro in Chicago and<br />

working as a corporate<br />

chef for various sized organizations.<br />

He brings all<br />

of what he learned from<br />

those stops to his current<br />

location at Bourbon Kitchen.<br />

“From all the time I was<br />

in Chicago, San Diego,<br />

L.A., you pick up things<br />

here and there and it’s exciting,<br />

you get to try stuff<br />

new and when you get<br />

there it’s great,” he said.<br />

“You want to keep reinventing<br />

yourself. I wrote<br />

the menus, they just gave<br />

me the concept.”<br />

Bourbon Kitchen and<br />

Tap<br />

1400 Milwaukee Ave.,<br />

Glenview<br />

(847) 803-9800<br />

6:30-10 a.m., 5-10<br />

p.m. Monday-Friday<br />

7-11 a.m., 4-10 p.m.<br />

Saturday<br />

7-11 a.m., 5-10 p.m.<br />

Sunday<br />

When 22nd Century<br />

Media editors paid the<br />

restaurant a visit, the staff<br />

showcased Brie and apple<br />

flatbread, red bean hummus,<br />

Death By Brisket<br />

sandwich, pan-seared pork<br />

tenderloin, grilled salmon,<br />

and banana bread pudding<br />

dishes.<br />

“Our ownership company<br />

is based out of North<br />

Carolina, the owner is a<br />

bourbon fan and that’s<br />

where he was going with<br />

the bourbon concept,”<br />

Zwolinski said. “Delta is a<br />

new hotel and the slogan<br />

is ‘Simple made perfect.’<br />

With our restaurant, it’s<br />

tied in with the hotel side in<br />

that we keep it simple. People<br />

want good food, a good<br />

cocktail and good service.”<br />

“It’s kind of like a<br />

southern Americana.<br />

It’s comfort food, good<br />

scratch-made food and<br />

not overbearing,” Mockler<br />

added.<br />

We started with the flatbread<br />

($12) and hummus<br />

($6). The hummus packed<br />

a bit of heat and was<br />

served with homemade<br />

cumin pita chips, just one<br />

of many homemade items<br />

the restaurant makes. The<br />

flatbread, on the other<br />

hand, featured sliced green<br />

apple, creamy Brie cheese,<br />

crisp arugula and a sherry<br />

vinaigrette.<br />

The brisket sandwich<br />

($15) was made of sliced<br />

brisket, bacon, “buffaque”<br />

The pan-seared pork tenderloin ($21) is served on a bed of cubed sweet potato, corn and dried cherry succotash<br />

and is drizzled with a bourbon barbecue sauce. Photos by Xavier Ward/22nd Century Media<br />

The red bean hummus ($6) is a southern spin on the<br />

Mediterranean favorite. The appetizer comes complete<br />

with house-made pita chips tossed in cumin.<br />

sauce and New York white<br />

cheddar. The sauce was<br />

another one of the homemade<br />

items on the menu.<br />

Mockler and Zwolinski<br />

mentioned that some of<br />

the most popular dishes<br />

were the pork dishes, hummus<br />

dish, grilled salmon,<br />

burgers and wings, which<br />

they felt were some of the<br />

best around. We also got to<br />

try the salmon ($22) and<br />

pork dishes ($21) during<br />

our visit.<br />

The pork tenderloin,<br />

served with sweet potato,<br />

corn and dried cherry succotash<br />

with a barbecue<br />

bourbon drizzle, melted in<br />

our mouths. The salmon,<br />

which came with a roasted<br />

veggie hash, had the right<br />

combination of fish and<br />

vegetables so as not to<br />

make the dish too fishy.<br />

“We started off with one<br />

flatbread on the original<br />

menu, but it was pretty<br />

popular so we expanded<br />

to three or four,” Mockler<br />

said. “You can do so many<br />

things with flatbread, so<br />

why not try some new<br />

The Brie and apple flatbread ($12) is a traditional<br />

flatbread topped with pesto, Brie, sliced green apple<br />

and fried arugula tossed in a sherry vinaigrette.<br />

ones? The Moroccan beef<br />

one derived from a love<br />

of Mediterranean food,<br />

and the filet we butcher<br />

in house. A caprice one is<br />

one that’s more recognizable<br />

for travelers and they<br />

know they can eat it. You<br />

have to play both sides of<br />

the fences.”<br />

Unlike some of the places<br />

Mockler has worked, Delta<br />

Hotels allows him to have<br />

freedom with his menu and<br />

doesn’t interfere with his<br />

plans in the kitchen.<br />

“He lets me taste and I<br />

share my feedback,” Zwolinski<br />

said. “I’ve worked<br />

with numerous chefs that<br />

might not enjoy feedback,<br />

but it speaks volume on<br />

his character that he’s testing<br />

things out and making<br />

changes. We’re a team and<br />

always been on the same<br />

page and that doesn’t happen<br />

everywhere.”<br />

With the first anniversary<br />

coming up next month,<br />

it will be exciting to see<br />

what Delta Hotels and<br />

Bourbon Kitchen and Tap<br />

have in store for the future.


24 | March 29, 2018 | The glenview lantern real estate<br />

glenviewlantern.com<br />

The Glenview Lantern’s<br />

sponsored content<br />

of the<br />

WEEK<br />

What: 5 bedroom, 4.1<br />

bathroom<br />

Where: 1534 Sunset<br />

Ridge Road<br />

Amenities: Stunning<br />

newer construction in<br />

East Glenview. Beautifully<br />

designed and constructed<br />

with exquisite mill<br />

work, hardwood floors,<br />

abundant windows,<br />

tons of natural light,<br />

impeccable maintenance<br />

and the perfect floor plan. The circular flow of the main floor incorporates lovely<br />

formal rooms with wonderful casual spaces highlighted by the vaulted family room<br />

that opens to a cooks kitchen and a charming outdoor pergola-covered living<br />

space. There is a first floor office, handy mudroom/laundry and attached garage.<br />

The second floor houses the exceptional master suite, with an additional three<br />

large sized bedrooms, two bathrooms and a second floor laundry. the lower level<br />

boasts a large fireplace, exercise area and fifth bedroom with a full bath. The<br />

professional landscape outstanding. The East Glenview location is convenient to<br />

schools, shopping and transportation. It’s all perfect!!<br />

Asking price: $999,000<br />

Listing agent: Shaun Raugstad, spr247@gmail.com, (847) 331-3288<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 ext. 12<br />

Jan. 2<br />

• 1526 Crown Drive, Glenview, 60025-1229 -<br />

Michael B. Brander to Scott A. Chance, Bernita G.<br />

Chance, $635,000<br />

• 1768 Camden Drive, Glenview, 60025-7616 -<br />

Sewook Oh to Andrew Curz Jimenez, Maria Luise<br />

Jimenez, $560,000<br />

• 1805 Wildberry Drive D, Glenview, 60025-1793 -<br />

Yelena Sokolova to Muris Silie, Izeta Silie, $455,000<br />

Brought to you by:<br />

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• 1834 Prairie St., Glenview, 60025-2922 - Skahen<br />

Trust to Christopher Johnson, Dongjun Jhao,<br />

$438,000<br />

• 2033 Wagner Road, Glenview, 60025-1945 - John<br />

V. Vitale to Webhua Liu, Ping Hu, $600,000<br />

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

Services, Inc. For more information,<br />

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

557-1000.


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the glenview lantern | March 29, 2018 | 25<br />

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26 | March 29, 2018 | The glenview lantern classifieds<br />

glenviewlantern.com<br />

CLASSIFIEDS<br />

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Sale<br />

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OFCOOK<br />

COUNTY, Illinois, County Department,<br />

Chancery Division. McCormick 103,<br />

LLC, asassignee of ColFin Bulls Funding<br />

A, LLC ("McCormick"), Plaintiff<br />

vs. Stephen A. Kropp; Rosemary J.<br />

Kropp, individually; Rosemary J.<br />

Kropp, as Trustee u/t/a Dated February<br />

14, 2008; Non-Record Claimants and<br />

Unknown Owners, Defendants. Case<br />

No. 12 CH 30844.<br />

NOTICE OF SALE. PUBLIC NOTICE<br />

IS HEREBY GIVEN that pursuant to a<br />

Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale and<br />

Other Relief entered in the above cause<br />

on March 4, 2016, The Judicial Sales<br />

Corporation will, onMay 1, 2018, at<br />

10:30 a.m. at One South Wacker Drive,<br />

24th Floor, Chicago, Illinois 60606, sell<br />

at public auction to the highest bidder<br />

for cash, as set forth below, the following<br />

described real estate and the personal<br />

property related thereto owned by<br />

Defendants Stephen A.Kropp, Rosemary<br />

J.Kropp a/k/a Rosemary Kropp,<br />

and Rosemary J.Kropp as Trustee u/t/a<br />

Dated 2/14/08, jointly and severally, described<br />

in the complaint:<br />

Address of Property: 1248 Elm<br />

Court, Glenview, Illinois 60025<br />

Permanent Index Number:<br />

04-34-209-027-0000<br />

The real estate is a single family home.<br />

Together with all existing or subsequently<br />

erected or affixed buildings, improvements<br />

and fixtures; all easements,<br />

rights of way, and appurtenances; all<br />

water, water rights, watercourses and<br />

ditch rights (including stock in utilities<br />

with ditch orirrigation rights); and all<br />

other rights, royalties, and profits relating<br />

tothe real property, including without<br />

limitation all minerals, oil, gas, geothermal<br />

and similar matters.<br />

McCormick’s judgment amount was<br />

$489,508.60.<br />

Sale shall be under the following terms:<br />

10% down by certified funds balance by<br />

certified funds within 24 hours.<br />

Sale shall be subject togeneral taxes<br />

and any prior first mortgages or liens, if<br />

any.<br />

Premises will not be open for inspection.<br />

For Information: Thompson Coburn<br />

LLP, Attorneys for McCormick, LLC,<br />

55 East Monroe Street, 37th Floor, Chicago,<br />

IL 60603. Tel. No. (312)<br />

346-7500.<br />

This is an attempt tocollect adebt pursuant<br />

to the Fair Debt Collection Practices<br />

Act and any information obtained<br />

will be used for that purpose.<br />

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF<br />

COOK COUNTY, ILLINOIS<br />

COUNTY DEPARTMENT -<br />

CHANCERY DIVISION<br />

WATERFALL FINANCE 10<br />

GRANTOR TRUST, SERIES I<br />

Plaintiff,<br />

-v.-<br />

1870 ELMDALE, L.L.C., JAZ<br />

CLEANERS, INC., LAURENS<br />

RESTORATION, INC., JONA-<br />

THAN LAURENS, UNKNOWN<br />

OWNERS, AND NON-RECORD<br />

CLAIMANTS<br />

Defendants<br />

17 CH 02338<br />

1870 ELMDALE AVENUE<br />

Glenview, IL 60026<br />

NOTICE OF SALE<br />

PUBLIC NOTICE IS<br />

HEREBY GIVEN that pursuant to<br />

a Judgment of Foreclosure and<br />

Sale entered inthe above cause on<br />

January 25, 2018, an agent for The<br />

Judicial Sales Corporation, will at<br />

10:30 AM on April 11, 2018, at<br />

The Judicial Sales Corporation,<br />

One South Wacker Drive, CHI-<br />

CAGO, IL, 60606, sell at public<br />

auction to the highest bidder, as set<br />

forth below, the following described<br />

real estate:<br />

Commonly known as 1870<br />

ELMDALE AVENUE, Glenview,<br />

IL 60026<br />

Property Index No.<br />

04-28-101-018-0000.<br />

The real estate is improved with a<br />

commercial property.<br />

The judgment amount was<br />

$2,762,302.88.<br />

Sale terms: 25% down ofthe<br />

highest bid by certified funds at the<br />

close of the sale payable to The Judicial<br />

Sales Corporation. No third<br />

party checks will be accepted. The<br />

balance in certified funds/or wire<br />

transfer, is due within twenty-four<br />

(24) hours. The subject property is<br />

subject togeneral real estate taxes,<br />

special assessments, or special<br />

taxes levied against said real estate<br />

and is offered for sale without any<br />

representation as to quality or<br />

quantity of title and without recourse<br />

to Plaintiff and in “AS IS”<br />

condition. The sale is further subject<br />

to confirmation by the court.<br />

Upon payment in full ofthe<br />

amount bid, the purchaser will receive<br />

aCertificate of Sale that will<br />

entitle the purchaser to adeed to<br />

the real estate and abill of sale to<br />

the personal property after confirmation<br />

of the sale.<br />

The property will NOT be open<br />

for inspection and plaintiff makes<br />

no representation astothe condition<br />

of the property. Prospective<br />

bidders are admonished tocheck<br />

the court file to verify all information.<br />

If this property isacondominium<br />

unit, the purchaser ofthe unit atthe<br />

foreclosure sale, other than amortgagee,<br />

shall pay the assessments<br />

and the legal fees required by The<br />

Condominium Property Act, 765<br />

ILCS 605/9(g)(1) and (g)(4). If<br />

this property is a condominium<br />

unit which is part of acommon interest<br />

community, the purchaser of<br />

the unit at the foreclosure sale<br />

other than amortgagee shall pay<br />

the assessments required byThe<br />

Condominium Property Act, 765<br />

ILCS 605/18.5(g-1).<br />

IF YOU ARE THE MORTGA-<br />

GOR (HOMEOWNER), YOU<br />

HAVE THE RIGHT TOREMAIN<br />

IN POSSESSION FOR 30 DAYS<br />

AFTER ENTRY OFANORDER<br />

OF POSSESSION, IN ACCOR-<br />

DANCE WITH SECTION<br />

15-1701(C) OF THE ILLINOIS<br />

MORTGAGE FORECLOSURE<br />

LAW.<br />

You will need a photo identification<br />

issued by a government<br />

agency (driver's license, passport,<br />

etc.) in order togain entry into our<br />

building and the foreclosure sale<br />

room in Cook County and the same<br />

identification for sales held atother<br />

county venues where The Judicial<br />

Sales Corporation conducts foreclosure<br />

sales.<br />

For information, contact Plaintiff’s<br />

attorney: JEAN SOH,<br />

POLSINELLI PC, 150 N. RIVER-<br />

SIDE PLAZA, SUITE 3000, Chicago,<br />

IL 60606, (312) 873-3628<br />

THE JUDICIAL SALES CORPO-<br />

RATION<br />

One South Wacker Drive, 24th<br />

Floor, Chicago, IL 60606-4650<br />

(312) 236-SALE<br />

You can also visit The Judicial<br />

Sales Corporation at www.tjsc.com<br />

for a7day status report ofpending<br />

sales.<br />

JEAN SOH<br />

POLSINELLI PC<br />

150 N. RIVERSIDE PLAZA,<br />

SUITE 3000<br />

Chicago, IL 60606<br />

(312) 873-3628<br />

E-Mail: jsoh@Polsinelli.com<br />

Attorney Code. 47375<br />

Case Number: 17 CH 02338<br />

TJSC#: 38-2063<br />

NOTE: Pursuant to the Fair Debt<br />

Collection Practices Act, you are<br />

advised that Plaintiff’s attorney is<br />

deemed to be adebt collector attempting<br />

to collect adebt and any<br />

information obtained will be used<br />

for that purpose.<br />

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OFCOOK<br />

COUNTY, ILLINOIS<br />

COUNTY DEPARTMENT -CHAN-<br />

CERY DIVISION<br />

BMO HARRIS BANK, N.A. F/K/A<br />

HARRIS N.A.<br />

Plaintiff<br />

-v.-<br />

KIMBERLY DEGAND, LEE DE-<br />

GAND, VILLAGE OF <strong>GL</strong>ENVIEW,<br />

UNKNOWN OWNERS AND<br />

N ON-RECORD CLAIMANTS<br />

Defendants<br />

17 CH 12171<br />

914 WEDEL LANE<br />

Glenview, IL 60025<br />

NOTICE OF SALE<br />

PUBLIC NOTICE ISHEREBY GIVEN<br />

that pursuant to aJudgment ofForeclosure<br />

and Sale entered in the above cause<br />

on February 5, 2018, an agent for The<br />

Judicial Sales Corporation, will at 10:30<br />

AM on May 7, 2018, at The Judicial<br />

Sales Corporation, One South Wacker<br />

Drive, CHICAGO, IL, 60606, sell at<br />

public auction to the highest bidder, as<br />

set forth below, the following described<br />

real estate:<br />

Commonly known as 914 WEDEL<br />

LANE, Glenview, IL 60025<br />

Property Index No.<br />

04-33-410-001-0000.<br />

The real estate is improved with asingle<br />

family residence.<br />

The judgment amount was $106,064.29.<br />

Sale terms: 25% down of the highest bid<br />

by certified funds at the close of the sale<br />

payable to The Judicial Sales Corporation.<br />

No third party checks will beaccepted.<br />

The balance in certified funds/or<br />

wire transfer, is due within twenty-four<br />

(24) hours. The subject property issubject<br />

to general real estate taxes, special<br />

assessments, or special taxes levied<br />

against said real estate and is offered for<br />

sale without any representation as to<br />

quality or quantity of title and without<br />

recourse to Plaintiff and in “AS<br />

IS” condition. The sale is further subject<br />

to confirmation by the court. The<br />

sale is made subject to a first mortgage.<br />

Upon payment in full ofthe amount bid,<br />

the purchaser will receive aCertificate<br />

of Sale that will entitle the purchaser to<br />

adeed to the real estate after confirmation<br />

of the sale.<br />

The property will NOT be open for inspection<br />

and plaintiff makes no representation<br />

astothe condition ofthe property.<br />

Prospective bidders are admonished<br />

to check the court file to verify all<br />

information.<br />

If this property isacondominium unit,<br />

the purchaser ofthe unit atthe foreclosure<br />

sale, other than amortgagee, shall<br />

pay the assessments and the legal fees<br />

required by The Condominium Property<br />

Act, 765 ILCS 605/9(g)(1) and (g)(4).<br />

If this property isacondominium unit<br />

which ispart ofacommon interest community,<br />

the purchaser ofthe unit atthe<br />

foreclosure sale other than amortgagee<br />

shall pay the assessments required by<br />

The Condominium Property Act, 765<br />

ILCS 605/18.5(g-1).<br />

IF YOU ARE THE MORTGAGOR<br />

(HOMEOWNER), YOU HAVE THE<br />

RIGHT TO REMAIN IN POSSESSION<br />

FOR 30 DAYS AFTER ENTRY OF<br />

AN ORDER OF POSSESSION, IN AC-<br />

CORDANCE WITH SECTION<br />

15-1701(C) OF THE ILLINOIS<br />

MORTGAGE FORECLOSURE LAW.<br />

You will need a photo identification issued<br />

by a government agency (driver's<br />

license, passport, etc.) in order togain<br />

entry into our building and the foreclosure<br />

sale room in Cook County and the<br />

same identification for sales held at<br />

other county venues where The Judicial<br />

Sales Corporation conducts foreclosure<br />

sales.<br />

For information, contact Plaintiff’s<br />

attorney: EGAN &ALAILY LLC, 321<br />

NORTH CLARK STREET, SUITE<br />

1430, Chicago, IL 60654, (312)<br />

253-8640<br />

THE JUDICIAL SALES CORPORA-<br />

TION<br />

One South Wacker Drive, 24th Floor,<br />

Chicago, IL 60606-4650 (312)<br />

236-SALE<br />

You can also visit The Judicial Sales<br />

Corporation at www.tjsc.com for a7<br />

day status report of pending sales.<br />

EGAN & ALAILY LLC<br />

321 NORTH CLARK STREET, SUITE<br />

1430<br />

Chicago, IL 60654<br />

(312) 253-8640<br />

E-Mail: clerk@ea-atty.com<br />

Attorney Code. 44451<br />

Case Number: 17 CH 12171<br />

TJSC#: 38-1211<br />

NOTE: Pursuant to the Fair Debt Collection<br />

Practices Act, you are advised<br />

that Plaintiff’s attorney is deemed to<br />

be a debt collector attempting to collect<br />

adebt and any information obtained will<br />

be used for that purpose.<br />

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OFCOOK<br />

COUNTY, ILLINOIS<br />

COUNTY DEPARTMENT -CHAN-<br />

CERY DIVISION<br />

WELLS FARGO BANK, NA<br />

Plaintiff,<br />

-v.-<br />

PAM URSO, RICHARD URSO, BMO<br />

HARRIS BANK NATIONAL ASSO-<br />

CIATION S/I/I TO HARRIS BANK,<br />

N.A., UNKNOWN OWNERS AND<br />

NON-RECORD CLAIMANTS<br />

Defendants<br />

2017 CH 3500<br />

4715 LAUREL AVENUE<br />

<strong>GL</strong>ENVIEW, IL 60025<br />

NOTICE OF SALE<br />

PUBLIC NOTICE ISHEREBY GIVEN<br />

that pursuant to aJudgment ofForeclosure<br />

and Sale entered in the above cause<br />

on September 12, 2017, an agent for<br />

The Judicial Sales Corporation, will at<br />

10:30 AM on May 4, 2018, at The Judicial<br />

Sales Corporation, One South<br />

Wacker Drive, CHICAGO, IL, 60606,<br />

sell at public auction to the highest bidder,<br />

as set forth below, the following described<br />

real estate:<br />

Commonly known as 4715 LAUREL<br />

AVENUE, <strong>GL</strong>ENVIEW, IL 60025<br />

Property Index No.<br />

04-30-409-005-0000.<br />

The real estate is improved with asingle<br />

family residence.<br />

Sale terms: 25% down of the highest bid<br />

by certified funds at the close of the sale<br />

payable to The Judicial Sales Corporation.<br />

No third party checks will be accepted.<br />

The balance in certified funds/or<br />

wire transfer, is due within twenty-four<br />

(24) hours. The subject property issubject<br />

to general real estate taxes, special<br />

assessments, or special taxes levied<br />

against said real estate and is offered for<br />

sale without any representation asto<br />

quality or quantity of title and without<br />

recourse toPlaintiff and in AS IS condition.<br />

The sale is further subject to confirmation<br />

by the court.<br />

Upon payment in full ofthe amount bid,<br />

the purchaser will receive aCertificate<br />

of Sale that will entitle the purchaser to<br />

adeed tothe real estate after confirmation<br />

of the sale.<br />

The property will NOT be open for inspection<br />

and plaintiff makes no representation<br />

astothe condition ofthe property.<br />

Prospective bidders are admonished<br />

to check the court file to verify all<br />

information.<br />

If this property isacondominium unit,<br />

the purchaser ofthe unit atthe foreclosure<br />

sale, other than amortgagee, shall<br />

pay the assessments and the legal fees<br />

required by The Condominium Property<br />

Act, 765 ILCS 605/9(g)(1) and (g)(4).<br />

If this property isacondominium unit<br />

which is part of acommon interest community,<br />

the purchaser ofthe unit atthe<br />

foreclosure sale other than amortgagee<br />

shall pay the assessments required by<br />

The Condominium Property Act, 765<br />

ILCS 605/18.5(g-1).<br />

IF YOU ARE THE MORTGAGOR<br />

(HOMEOWNER), YOU HAVE THE<br />

RIGHT TO REMAIN IN POSSESSION<br />

FOR 30 DAYS AFTER ENTRY OF<br />

AN ORDER OF POSSESSION, IN AC-<br />

CORDANCE WITH SECTION<br />

15-1701(C) OF THE ILLINOIS<br />

MORTGAGE FORECLOSURE LAW.<br />

You will need a photo identification issued<br />

by a government agency (driver's<br />

license, passport, etc.) in order togain<br />

entry into our building and the foreclosure<br />

sale room in Cook County and the<br />

same identification for sales held at<br />

other county venues where The Judicial<br />

Sales Corporation conducts foreclosure<br />

sales.<br />

For information: Visit our website at<br />

service.atty-pierce.com. between the<br />

hours of 3and 5pm. McCalla Raymer<br />

Leibert Pierce, LLC, Plaintiff's Attorneys,<br />

One North Dearborn Street, Suite<br />

1200, Chicago, IL 60602. Tel No. (312)<br />

416-5500. Please refer to file number<br />

260945.<br />

THE JUDICIAL SALES CORPORA-<br />

TION<br />

One South Wacker Drive, 24th Floor,<br />

Chicago, IL 60606-4650 (312)<br />

236-SALE<br />

You can also visit The Judicial Sales<br />

DRIVE CAR BUYERS<br />

TO YOUR DOOR WITH<br />

A CLASSIFIED AUTO AD<br />

CALL US TODAY at 708.326.9170<br />

Corporation atwww.tjsc.com for a7<br />

day status report of pending sales.<br />

McCalla Raymer Leibert Pierce, LLC<br />

One North Dearborn Street, Suite 1200<br />

Chicago, IL 60602<br />

(312) 416-5500<br />

E-Mail: pleadings@mccalla.com<br />

Attorney File No. 260945<br />

Attorney Code. 61256<br />

Case Number: 2017 CH 3500<br />

TJSC#: 38-2499<br />

Advertise<br />

your<br />

RENTAL<br />

PROPERTY<br />

in the<br />

newspaper<br />

people turn<br />

to first<br />

CALL US TODAY:<br />

708.326.9170


glenviewlantern.com sports<br />

the glenview lantern | March 29, 2018 | 27<br />

Athlete of the Week<br />

10 Questions<br />

with Greer Bireley<br />

The Glenbrook South<br />

junior is a major contributor<br />

for the girls lacrosse<br />

team and has committed<br />

to play at Butler University.<br />

When and why did<br />

you start lacrosse?<br />

I started playing in third<br />

grade at this house league<br />

with a bunch of friends because<br />

it seemed fun. Starting<br />

in seventh grade I started<br />

playing club and I’ve<br />

loved it since third grade.<br />

Do you have any<br />

superstitions before a<br />

game?<br />

I like to do a handshake<br />

with one of my friends on<br />

the team and we’ve been<br />

doing it for the past two<br />

or three years before field<br />

hockey games too,<br />

What do you like most<br />

about lacrosse?<br />

I like how it’s a team<br />

sport. In order to play the<br />

best game possible, everyone<br />

has to be playing their<br />

best and working together.<br />

I’ve also made a lot of close<br />

friends at GBS and my club<br />

team playing the sport<br />

What is one thing<br />

people don’t know<br />

about you?<br />

I used to do ballet as<br />

a younger, younger kid.<br />

Now, I am not a dancer at<br />

all.<br />

What is your favorite<br />

sports moment?<br />

Last year when it was<br />

the game to get into the final<br />

four and we were playing<br />

Lyons Township and<br />

it was a one-goal game,<br />

which we ended up winning<br />

in the last minute. It<br />

was super exciting and the<br />

first time I was in the final<br />

four. It was just such an<br />

awesome feeling winning<br />

such a close game like that.<br />

What is one thing on<br />

your bucket list?<br />

I want to live in Ireland<br />

for a certain period of<br />

time, maybe after college.<br />

I want to get closer to people<br />

there.<br />

If you were a<br />

superhero, what<br />

superpower would you<br />

want?<br />

I would want to be able<br />

to fly. I feel like that would<br />

be so cool because you<br />

could go wherever you<br />

want so easily.<br />

What would you do if<br />

Photo submitted.<br />

you won the lottery?<br />

I would probably travel<br />

around the world and take<br />

all my friends wherever we<br />

would want to go. I would<br />

want to go to Ireland and<br />

other places in Europe,<br />

maybe go to the Caribbean.<br />

If you could play<br />

another sport, what<br />

would it be?<br />

They don’t have it in the<br />

U.S. but they play it in Ireland<br />

called hurling. I saw a<br />

match when I went to Ireland<br />

with my family and<br />

it’s basically like lacrosse,<br />

baseball and football. It<br />

seems like it could be a lot<br />

of fun to play.<br />

If you could be any<br />

animal, which would<br />

you choose?<br />

I would want to be a dog<br />

because they’re always so<br />

happy and everyone loves<br />

them. They’re always loyal<br />

to their owners.<br />

Interview by Sports Editor<br />

Michal Dwojak<br />

This Week In...<br />

Titans Varsity<br />

Athletics<br />

BOYS GYMNASTICS<br />

■March ■ 22 - at Niles North,<br />

6 p.m.<br />

GIRLS SOCCER<br />

■April ■ 3 - at Lane Tech,<br />

7 p.m.<br />

■April ■ 5 - hosts Maine<br />

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

GIRLS LACROSSE<br />

■April ■ 3 - hosts Oak Park-<br />

River Forest, 7 p.m.<br />

■April ■ 5 - hosts Vernon<br />

Hills, 5 p.m.<br />

BOYS LACROSSE<br />

■April ■ 3 - at Libertyville,<br />

4:45 p.m.<br />

■April ■ 5 - hosts New Trier,<br />

7 p.m.<br />

SOFTBALL<br />

■April ■ 3 - at Glenbrook<br />

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

BASEBALL<br />

■March ■ 29 - Mufreesboro,<br />

TBA<br />

■March ■ 30 - Mufreesboro,<br />

TBA<br />

■March ■ 31 - Mufreesboro,<br />

TBA<br />

■April ■ 2 - at Fremd,<br />

5:30 p.m.<br />

■April ■ 3 - hosts Loyola,<br />

4:30 p.m.<br />

BOYS TENNIS<br />

■March ■ 31 - at Rolling<br />

Meadows Invite,<br />

8:30 a.m.<br />

■April ■ 3 - at Oak Park-River<br />

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

Gear up for baseball season with the<br />

latest cleats from New Balance.<br />

Two new styles for pro performance.<br />

Vote for Athlete of the Month<br />

Help support young athletes.<br />

Vote Vote online April March 10-25 - at: 25 at:<br />

glenviewlantern.com<br />

GIRLS WATER POLO<br />

■April ■ 3 - at Mundelein,<br />

6 p.m.<br />

■April ■ 5 - hosts Evanston,<br />

6 p.m.<br />

BOYS WATER POLO<br />

■April ■ 5 - at Evanston,<br />

6 p.m.<br />

BOYS TRACK AND FIELD<br />

■April ■ 4 - hosts Glenbrook<br />

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

GIRLS TRACK AND FIELD<br />

■April ■ 4 - hosts Titan Quad,<br />

4:30 p.m.<br />

BOYS VOLLEYBALL<br />

■April ■ 4 - at Lincoln-Way<br />

Central, 6 p.m.<br />

■April ■ 5 - hosts Glenbrook<br />

North, 6 p.m.<br />

Congratulations to this week’s<br />

Athlete of the Week.<br />

We’re pleased to be a<br />

sponsor of this program.<br />

New Balance North Shore<br />

610 Central Avenue • Port Clinton Square<br />

Downtown Highland Park<br />

847-266-8323 • Open 7 Days • ShopNewShoes.com


28 | March 29, 2018 | The glenview lantern sports<br />

glenviewlantern.com<br />

Softball<br />

March 17 - Palatine 9,<br />

GBS 3<br />

Megan Chin was a major<br />

offensive contributor<br />

for the Titans, driving in<br />

two runs.<br />

Baseball<br />

March 18 - Loyola 5, St.<br />

Patrick 0<br />

The Ramblers received<br />

stellar pitching to help shut<br />

out the Shamrocks in the<br />

season opener.<br />

March 19 - Loyola 13,<br />

Niles North 1<br />

A huge fourth inning<br />

helped propel the Ramblers<br />

past the Vikings.<br />

March 19 - Stevenson 7,<br />

GBS 2<br />

Stevenson used a big<br />

sixth inning to hand the<br />

Titans their first loss of the<br />

high school highlights<br />

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

season.<br />

Boys Volleyball<br />

March 20 - Vernon Hills 2,<br />

GBS 1<br />

The Titans tried to make<br />

a push late in the third set,<br />

but fell 26-24.<br />

Girls Lacrosse<br />

March 15 - Loyola 18,<br />

Fenwick 1<br />

Multiple Ramblers<br />

scored more than a couple<br />

goals to help start the season<br />

off with a win.<br />

March 16 - Loyola 15, St.<br />

Ignatius 1<br />

The Ramblers had a<br />

10-0 lead at the half and<br />

never looked back against<br />

the Wolfpack.<br />

March 17 - Loyola 16,<br />

Do you suffer from<br />

vertigo,<br />

dizziness or<br />

loss of balance?<br />

Mother McAuley 1<br />

Loyola continued to<br />

put on an offensive clinic<br />

while not allowing a second<br />

goal for the third game<br />

in the year.<br />

March 19 - Loyola 15,<br />

Lake Forest 1<br />

The Ramblers continued<br />

another hot start to the season<br />

with another offensive<br />

clinic.<br />

March 20 - Loyola 17,<br />

Maine South 0<br />

Loyola secured its first<br />

shutout of the season with<br />

an impressive win over<br />

Maine South.<br />

Boys Water Polo<br />

March 16 - GBS 9, St.<br />

Viator 5<br />

Brendan Chang scored 6<br />

goals.<br />

Glenview, Highland Park,<br />

Vernon Hills, Bloomingdale & Hinsdale<br />

847.243.6444<br />

Coach Talk<br />

Glenview family<br />

gets a big ‘high five’<br />

Jon ‘Coach’ Cohn<br />

Contributing Columnist<br />

Glenview Resident<br />

Call them Team<br />

Tuchman: A rare<br />

threesome of male<br />

machismo that have put<br />

together what is now a<br />

long-standing and successful<br />

sports enterprise.<br />

The grand puba, big<br />

daddy and master of<br />

ceremonies of the clan is<br />

dad Marv, who started the<br />

Hi-5 Sports Club some 28<br />

years ago after a successful<br />

stint as a trader downtown.<br />

Sons Danny and Ryan<br />

joined forces after college,<br />

thus forming the potent<br />

Team Tuchman contingent.<br />

To say this Glenview<br />

gang have been successful<br />

and the business has<br />

boomed is like saying the<br />

Cubs have doing pretty<br />

well the past two years.<br />

Hi-Five Sports Clubs<br />

may have started small,<br />

but it has exploded,<br />

becoming a multi-faceted<br />

sports operation with<br />

more branches than an<br />

octopus has tentacles.<br />

In addition to the sports<br />

camps (we will get to<br />

those), Hi-5 now offers<br />

programming year round<br />

from flag football, to soccer,<br />

to lacrosse to birthday<br />

parties and just about<br />

everything in between.<br />

Maybe their biggest<br />

impact has come to<br />

Glenview in the sport of<br />

basketball. For over a<br />

decade now, they have also<br />

run the Glenbrook Junior<br />

Titans basketball program,<br />

a highly successful feeder<br />

program for the boys and<br />

girls teams at the high<br />

school. The past few year’s<br />

teams have won championships<br />

in the league in a<br />

number of different age<br />

groups. They have grown<br />

from two teams when they<br />

started and now have 22.<br />

But make no mistake<br />

the sports camps, which<br />

many Glenview kids have<br />

so much enjoyed over the<br />

years, have been there<br />

bread and butter.<br />

The Hi-5 Sports Camps<br />

have always been known<br />

for high energy, fun, competitive<br />

and spirited participation.<br />

Much like dad<br />

and the brothers, Tuchman<br />

used to have playing<br />

hoops amongst themselves<br />

in their driveway back in<br />

the day.<br />

Some things never<br />

change.<br />

“We have all kinds<br />

of sports competition at<br />

camp,” said Danny a 2001<br />

Glenbrook South graduate.<br />

“But most important<br />

is we emphasize to the<br />

kids sportsmanship and<br />

having fun.”<br />

The camp features<br />

numerous special events<br />

which the kids enjoy, including<br />

NFL week, NCAA<br />

week, Colors week, Olympic<br />

week and “the battle for<br />

the Cup” — NHL week.<br />

“We even have a talent<br />

show called Hi-5 Idol,”<br />

Danny added. “At each<br />

sessions end, we invite<br />

parents for a special<br />

highlight film presentation<br />

on the camp, put together<br />

in part, by the campers<br />

themselves.”<br />

How successful has<br />

Glenview’s Team Tuchman<br />

been with their Hi-5<br />

camps? Well, as Mr.<br />

Shakespeare might say, let<br />

us count thy ways.<br />

What started as exactly<br />

one under dad Marv has<br />

grown just a bit. The<br />

sports camp first expanded<br />

to a second Chicago location<br />

awhile back. Following<br />

that, locations opened<br />

in Gurnee, Naperville and<br />

Mount Prospect, but this<br />

one-way roller coaster<br />

ride was just beginning.<br />

Son Ryan, a 1996 Glenbrook<br />

South graduate, took<br />

over the franchising part<br />

of the business and they<br />

soon expanded nationwide.<br />

Locations are now open<br />

across the country including<br />

Scottsdale, Tucson,<br />

San Francisco, New York<br />

City, Colorado Springs,<br />

Richmond and Houston,<br />

just to name a few.<br />

Through all the growth<br />

and all the different locations,<br />

one constant has<br />

remained: love of the<br />

game, love of sports and a<br />

desire to pass that passion<br />

on to young kids.<br />

Not bad for a small<br />

family business, one that<br />

started out as just an idea<br />

some 28 years ago.<br />

Cohn has been a coach,<br />

physical education teacher,<br />

sports announcer and<br />

athletic supervisor in the<br />

community for over 35 years.<br />

He can be reached at jcsportsandtees@aol.com.


glenviewlantern.com glenview<br />

the glenview lantern | March 29, 2018 | 29<br />

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Pristine and highly-upgraded 2br, 2baranch<br />

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Classic brick 4br, 2.5 ba with modern updates,<br />

vintage charm. Huge lot. $649,000<br />

Missy Jerfita 847.510.5000<br />

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Highly upgraded Glen 4br, 3.5 ba townhome.<br />

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30 | March 29, 2018 | The glenview lantern SPORTS<br />

glenviewlantern.com<br />

Ramblers battle, finish at top<br />

Michael Wojtychiw<br />

Contributing Sports Editor<br />

Loyola Academy Gold hockey player Jacob Gonzalez looks to move the puck against Stevenson defenders on Saturday, March 24, at the United<br />

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

The game of hockey is<br />

one of bounces. Sometimes<br />

the puck bounces<br />

your way, sometimes it<br />

doesn’t.<br />

The puck bounced<br />

Loyola Gold’s way Saturday,<br />

March 24,in the state<br />

championship game at the<br />

United Center as a re-directed<br />

shot off of a Stevenson<br />

defender’s stick gave<br />

the Ramblers a 3-2 lead<br />

with 4 minutes, 24 seconds<br />

remaining, en route to a<br />

4-2 win.<br />

“It’s pretty crazy,” Nicholas<br />

Liebers, who scored<br />

the game-winner, said.<br />

“Earlier this week I working<br />

with a coach of mine,<br />

putting shots on goal and it<br />

was exactly like practice.<br />

I’m really happy about that<br />

one. Right after it hit that<br />

(Stevenson) stick, I knew<br />

it was in.<br />

“My initial reaction was<br />

‘now we’re up, now we’re<br />

up, we can actually win<br />

this thing.’ With four minutes<br />

left, that’s a lot of time<br />

especially for a team like<br />

Stevenson but we needed<br />

to recuperate but we hadn’t<br />

do anything yet.”<br />

The state title is Loyola’s<br />

first since 1996.<br />

“The big thing is one<br />

of things we preached for<br />

the last week was distractions,”<br />

Loyola Gold coach<br />

DJ Lavarre said. “You understand<br />

why we’re here,<br />

soak up every moment,<br />

but once that puck drops,<br />

we’re here for a reason.<br />

And that’s to play hockey.<br />

“We have a proud tradition.<br />

This is our 12th or<br />

13th state championship<br />

game and third title at the<br />

varsity level. It does immense<br />

things for the Academy<br />

and the program.<br />

Twenty-two years is a long<br />

time.”<br />

Loyola (53-10-2) got off<br />

to a fast start, peppering the<br />

Stevenson goaltender, forcing<br />

him to make save after<br />

save, but not finding ways<br />

to finish. Stevenson goalie<br />

had 13 shots in the first period<br />

alone, dominating the<br />

play, but were only scored<br />

once, when Aidan Finegan<br />

scored with 5:53 remaining<br />

in the period off of assists<br />

by Christian Dunne and<br />

Eamon O’Brien.<br />

“The first 10 minutes of<br />

the game, we were playing<br />

pretty good, peppering<br />

him, but these are the two<br />

best goalies in the state for<br />

a reason,” the coach said.<br />

“There were some great<br />

saves and everybody got<br />

their money’s worth.”<br />

As well as the Ramblers<br />

started, it was Stevenson<br />

that recovered thanks to<br />

the stick of senior Jackson<br />

Leptich, who scored<br />

his 74th and 75th goals of<br />

the season in the first and<br />

second periods, giving the<br />

Patriots their first lead with<br />

9:58 remaining in the second<br />

period when he scored<br />

on an unassisted goal.<br />

The Ramblers recovered<br />

to score on a Declan Darcy<br />

goal just seconds into a<br />

Loyola power play, tying<br />

the score at 2 with 7:31<br />

remaining in the second<br />

period.<br />

Going into the third period<br />

tied at two, it all came<br />

down to the final period<br />

and boy did it live up to<br />

the billing.<br />

Hugh Brady, Loyola’s<br />

All-State goalie and the<br />

Scholastic Hockey League<br />

Player of the Year, stood<br />

on his head, thwarting<br />

away shot after shot, keeping<br />

the score even. Brady<br />

would finish with 24<br />

saves, including 12 in the<br />

final period.<br />

“Hugh’s huge,” Liebers<br />

said. “That’s another thing<br />

that put our team ahead<br />

of everyone, that’s Hugh<br />

Brady. He got all these<br />

honors and he deserves<br />

them, he’s the best goalie<br />

in the state.”<br />

The Ramblers went almost<br />

wire-to-wire the entire<br />

season as the state’s topranked<br />

team, something that<br />

their players were aware of<br />

but seemed to embrace.<br />

“We’ve got a really fast<br />

squad, “Liebers said. “We<br />

knew that, especially after<br />

last year, we couldn’t<br />

look past any game. This<br />

year every game was the<br />

biggest game of the year,<br />

every game was bigger<br />

than the last and everyone<br />

bought into the process.<br />

“After the loss last year,<br />

every one of our guys was<br />

saying ‘we’re going to win<br />

next year.’ Before tryouts<br />

were even over, winning<br />

state was what was motivating<br />

this team.”<br />

Loyola, which won its<br />

Online content<br />

For the photo gallery<br />

from this game, visit<br />

GlenviewLantern.com.<br />

third state title in program<br />

history, hadn’t been back<br />

to the title game since<br />

2010, and Lavarre was<br />

proud of not only what his<br />

team did, but what the title<br />

means to the entire Loyola<br />

community and those that<br />

came before them.<br />

“I’m so proud and happy<br />

for the Loyola Academy<br />

hockey program,” he said.<br />

“We’ve had way too many<br />

second-place finishes and<br />

for all of those who had<br />

second-place finishes, this<br />

one is for them.”


glenviewlantern.com SPORTS<br />

the glenview lantern | March 29, 2018 | 31<br />

Girls hockey<br />

Glenbrook can’t fulfill repeat dream<br />

22nd century media File photo<br />

1st-and-3<br />

Players of the<br />

week<br />

1. Hannah Jensen<br />

(ABOVE) The<br />

Glenbrook senior<br />

scored the lone<br />

goal for her<br />

team in the state<br />

championship, in<br />

which the team<br />

lost 5-1 to New<br />

Trier and failed<br />

to repeat as<br />

champions.<br />

2. Hugh Brady<br />

The Loyola Gold<br />

boys hockey<br />

goaltender proved<br />

to be a difference<br />

in Loyola’s state<br />

championship<br />

win.<br />

3. Nicholas Liebers<br />

Loyola Gold’s<br />

forward scored<br />

the game-winning<br />

goal to help his<br />

team win the state<br />

championship.<br />

Michal Dwojak, Sports Editor<br />

It’s hard to have a target<br />

on your back all season.<br />

Defending champions in<br />

any sport and any league<br />

wear one all season after<br />

winning it all. Opponents<br />

have a little pep in their<br />

step when playing a defending<br />

champion; they<br />

give their all.<br />

Glenbrook has been<br />

playing everyone’s best all<br />

season after skating off the<br />

United Center ice with the<br />

championship trophy last<br />

spring. There have been<br />

bumps along the road,<br />

but the Glenbrook players<br />

fought adversity all<br />

the way back to the United<br />

Center on Saturday, March<br />

24, for a chance to repeat.<br />

But New Trier was too<br />

much, scoring early and<br />

defeating Glenbrook 5-1<br />

in its effort to accomplish<br />

a feat few can.<br />

“They came out and<br />

looked like they wanted<br />

it more,” Glenbrook head<br />

coach Steve Hamelin said.<br />

“They won the foot battles<br />

early in the game. … At the<br />

end of the day, we wanted<br />

to pressure them and they<br />

did a good job with that.”<br />

Glenbrook dug itself into<br />

a hole early after it seemed<br />

like the team would have<br />

an opportunity to make its<br />

mark early in the game.<br />

New Trier committed a<br />

too-many-men-on-the-ice<br />

penalty a couple minutes<br />

into the game. But the Trevians<br />

took advantage of a<br />

turnover at center ice and<br />

Kate McLaughlin ended<br />

up scoring on a breakaway<br />

against Glenbrook goaltender<br />

Lauren Abraham.<br />

Much of the focus for the<br />

Trevians heading into the<br />

game was finding a way<br />

to limit the Glenbrook offense<br />

from taking off. New<br />

Trier’s defense limited any<br />

opportunity Glenbrook<br />

tried to create when it had<br />

the puck or was in its zone.<br />

Glenbrook responded<br />

in the second period when<br />

Hannah Jansen scored,<br />

but New Trier came right<br />

back, with sophomore<br />

Mae Olshansky scored two<br />

minutes later.<br />

McLaughlin scored<br />

again in the third period to<br />

put the cherry on top of a<br />

perfect, championship performance.<br />

“Hats off, the better team<br />

won today,” Hamelin said.<br />

“I talked before the game,<br />

you make mistakes, they’re<br />

going to make you pay.”<br />

Hamelin looked to his<br />

leaders to find a way to<br />

work their magic like they<br />

had in many games before,<br />

but this time, New<br />

Trier proved to be too<br />

much. Captain Chloe Carroll<br />

knew her teammates<br />

were disappointed when<br />

they were in the locker<br />

room between the second<br />

and third periods, but they<br />

Glenbrook’s Hannah Jensen skates ahead of a New Trier defender during the state<br />

championship game Saturday, March 24, at the United Center. Carlos Alvarez/22nd<br />

Century Media<br />

talked about how they’re<br />

going to put together a<br />

performance they would<br />

make them proud.<br />

While Glenbrook<br />

couldn’t come back, they<br />

showed the will Carroll<br />

talked about. They worked<br />

hard for the puck and gave<br />

it their best shot, but ultimately<br />

came up empty.<br />

“We are disappointed,”<br />

Hamelin said. “We had<br />

high expectations for ourselves,<br />

but hats off to New<br />

Trier for playing a great<br />

game. We knew we had<br />

our hand full today.”<br />

Glenbrook ends the season<br />

with a 16-7-3 record<br />

after competing for a repeat<br />

this season. While they lost<br />

a couple of players from<br />

last season’s team, Glenbrook<br />

competed its best as<br />

a champion should.<br />

Glenbrook couldn’t<br />

complete its goal this season,<br />

but that doesn’t mean<br />

the season was a failure.<br />

The team returned to play<br />

at the United Center almost<br />

a year after the players<br />

skated off its ice with a<br />

championship trophy.<br />

This year, it they fell a<br />

little short.<br />

“I’m really proud of everyone<br />

on this team,” Carroll<br />

said. “They’re unbelievable,<br />

talented players.<br />

I’m going to miss them so<br />

much. But I’m really proud<br />

of everyone. We played<br />

our hearts out and I’m sure<br />

they’re going to the same.”<br />

Glenbrook loses six seniors<br />

to graduation, but the<br />

outgoing players are excited<br />

about what the future<br />

holds for next year’s team.<br />

“It’s sad, but bitter<br />

sweet,” Carroll said. “I<br />

know that next year they’re<br />

going to be amazing.”<br />

Next year, there won’t<br />

be a target.<br />

Listen Up<br />

“I’m proud and happy for the Loyola<br />

Academy hockey program.”<br />

DJ Lavarre — The Loyola Academy Gold boys<br />

hockey coach on the championship win.<br />

tunE in<br />

What to watch this week<br />

The Glenbrook South boys tennis team continues its<br />

young season at the Rolling Meadows Invite.<br />

8:30 a.m., Saturday, March 31.<br />

Index<br />

28 - High School Highlights<br />

27 - Athlete of the Week<br />

Fastbreak is compiled by Sports Editor<br />

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

to m.dwojak@22ndcenturymedia.com


the glenview lantern | March 29, 2018 | GlenviewLantern.com<br />

Falling short Glenbrook falls<br />

in championship game, Page 31<br />

Family affair Glenview family<br />

builds sport enterprise, Page 28<br />

Ramblers end 22-year<br />

championship drought, Page 30<br />

The Loyola Academy Gold boys hockey team celebrates after<br />

winning the state championship against Stevenson on Saturday,<br />

March 24, at the United Center. Carlos Alvarez/22nd Century Media

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