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NO. 122 | A JWC MEDIA PUBLICATION
NEWS
To The Moon and Back to the North Shore BY LIBBY ELLIOTT DAILYNORTHSHORE.COM
She’s a critically acclaimed writer, college professor and world traveler, but best-selling author Mary Morris still makes time for regular visits to her childhood roots on the North Shore. On June 2 and 3, Morris will read excerpts from her latest novel, Gateway to the Moon, in Wilmette and Northbrook as a featured speaker in the popular North Shore Books ‘n’ Bottles series, where book lovers meet notable authors in a social, intimate setting. “I left (Highland Park) at 18 for college, but the pull of home has never left me,” said Morris in a telephone conversation from her home in Brooklyn, New York. “I go back whenever I can. It’s my charging station.” Morris is the author of numerous novels, including The Jazz Palace, A Mother’s Love, and House Arrest, and the travel memoir Nothing to Declare: Memoirs of a Young Woman Traveling Alone. She is the recipient of the Rome Prize in literature and the 2016 Anisfield-Wolf Award for fiction. Gateway to the Moon is set in 1492 during the Spanish Inquisition, when Jewish and Muslim populations were expelled from Spain and Christopher Columbus had set sail for the New World. The book tells the story of the Spanish Jews who chose not to flee persecution, resolving instead to convert to Christianity in name and continue Continued on PG 6
Family Practice NORTHBROOK ATTORNEY CLIMBS STATE BAR ASSOCIATION LADDER BY LIBBY ELLIOTT DAILYNORTHSHORE.COM
This May, Anna Krolikowska, a Northbrook-based family law attorney, won the hotly contested seat for third vice-president of the Illinois State Bar Association (ISBA), the largest voluntary state bar association in the country. Krolikowska will move up the organization’s ranks to second and first vice president over the course of the next three years and ascend to the IBSA presidency in 2021, making her the fifth female president of ISBA since it was founded in 1877. Krolikowska won the annual election by a landslide, earning 2,196 votes - more votes than her two male opponents combined. “I wasn’t expecting that result, but it tells me that my campaign message resonated,” said Krolikowska, who campaigned intensely for several months, traveling thousands of miles and giving more than 60 speeches to ISBA’s constituents in communities across the state. “Women can bring a different perspective and voice if we have a seat at the table.” At 37, Krolikowska will also be one of the youngest ISBA presidents in the organization’s 141-year history. “Anna will bring a new vision and focus to the ISBA during her leadership,” said supporter Emily Masalski, a Chicago-based environmental law attorney. “She’s aware of the many issues facing lawyers from all disciplines in Illinois and she’ll be a tireless advocate for each and every one of them.” A voluntary organization of 28,000 members, the Illinois State Bar Association’s primary focus is to assist Illinois lawyers in the practice of law and to promote improvements in the administration of justice. ISBA members receive benefits such as 15 hours of free continuing education, free access to online legal research, and career assistance. ISBA presidents often take a stand on issues during their elected, one-year term. Krolikowska, a Chicago native who received both her undergraduate and law degrees from
Northbrook-based family law attorney Anna Krolikowska. PHOTOGRAPHY BY JOEL LERNER
Loyola University of Chicago, has ambitious plans to be a voice for young, female and underrepresented minority attorneys in Illinois. “It’s important that we mentor and create a pipeline for future leaders,” she said. Although many of ISBA’s Chicago, Springfield and Peoria-based members work in large law practices, Krolikowska plans to advocate for the large contingent of association members who are solo and small-firm practitioners in rural parts of the state. Saddled with heavy law school debt but unable to charge Chicago prices for legal services, many downstate attorneys are finding it difficult to make a living, Krolikowska said. At the same time, parts of Illinois are now defacto attorney deserts, where the local population has limited access to professional legal services. “My mission is to support these solo and small-firm attorneys by helping them market their services and manage their practices,” said
Krolikowska. Krowlikowska, who lives with her husband in Palatine, immigrated to the United States from Poland as a teenager, settling on the northwest side of Chicago with her family. After quickly learning English, Krolikowska tested into Lane Tech College Preparatory High School before heading off to Loyola University to earn her B.A. and J.D. It was an interesting, nuanced class in law school that convinced Krolikowska to pursue family law. “I felt I could help people at a difficult time in their lives,” said Krolikowska. “That’s always the goal.” Krolikowska is now a partner in the Northbrook law firm of K&R Family Legal Services, where, as a litigator and trained mediator, she works to offer her clients diverse, creative approaches to resolving marital disContinued on PG 6
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